Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

Monday, May 26, 2014

Busy Spring

Life is busy!

All of my class requirements are DONE for grad school...the last box to check is walking across the stage for the last time on Friday, and hearing VP Biden congratulate me at Commencement on Saturday. I have loved grad school, and I will love being done and never going back.


We went down to the beach last weekend with some friends. While it was still too chilly to get in the water, it was sunny and warm enough to sit out. We stayed at a condo right on the beach, and the weekend went too fast.



 We also celebrated Josh's 30th birthday this weekend! We kept it pretty low key this year. He went for a bike ride on Saturday, then we got lunch and went for a walk/picnic at the reservoir. That night, we got dinner at the mall, visited some friends, got ice cream, and fell asleep watching the NBA Finals. We are such crazy party animals.

On Sunday, I made french toast with strawberries and whipped cream for breakfast, salmon and asparagus for dinner, and we had cheesecake at a friend's house.


The picture below was taken 2 weeks ago at 21 weeks pregnant. The bump keeps getting bigger! Right now, I am right at the point where my normal shirts are starting to not quite fit anymore, and the only comfortable pants have elastic waists. It's probably time to get a few more maternity pieces :)


We are pretty excited for baby, but also not wanting to rush the next 4 months. There is still a lot to do, and we are enjoying our last few months having Josh and Sarah time. The best part of being pregnant so far is feeling baby move! It's always a nice reminder that she is there and doing ok. 

Sunday, June 9, 2013

School Must Be Out...

You know it's been too long since you blogged when you don't even remember the last thing you wrote about! Now that the semester is out, I can live the life of a more balanced person and have some time to do fun things again. One of these is trying to stay more up to date with my blog!

Lots of big things have been happening lately.
#1 School
I finished my last semester of classes...EVER! Unless I decide in the future to get a Ph.D., which is highly unlikely, knowing myself like I do. Next year I have a full-year internship, most likely working in an elementary school 3 days/week and a middle or high school 2 days/week. I also have one more class to take next year, but it is not really an academic class, more just a check-in to make sure everything is on track with the internship. I'm super excited about my internship for several reasons:
  1. I love school psychology and kids, and I will get to do that full-time now. 
  2. I am hoping to be able to help coach a sport (girl's basketball?? or Girls on the Run!)
  3. I am one step closer to graduating for real and becoming a real adult! 
Number 3 is equal parts exciting and terrifying because that also means I am one step closer to having to look for a job and not having a supervisor to guide me through difficult situations. Alas, life is full of pluses and minuses.

I also had my last official day working at the ACCESS Project, which has been my assistantship for the past two years. It was a great experience where I learned a lot and met some great people!
ACCESS Project Staff
#2 Birthday
Josh had a birthday and is 29 now! The morning started off with presents. One of the presents I made for Josh this year was to take some of his bike pictures that he loves to take and transferred them onto wood so he can decorate his bike room with rustic bike pictures! I found the instructions on Pinterest from this website, and it was super easy and awesome! The best part was wiping the paper off and finding a beautiful picture underneath! I would highly recommend it for a unique, personal gift.

Another present I put together was a notebook full of notes from friends and family with favorite memories or special notes for Josh.



Then we went to breakfast at a local diner that he has been wanting to go to for the past 2 years.
 

 It was everything you would want in a diner-old people, lots of food, lots of grease, and cheap prices.

We also went to see IronMan 3 (we liked it) and then had some friends over for Bocci Ball, charades, and Costco's chocolate cake that night.


#3 Memorial Day 
Originally, the plan for Josh's birthday was to go kayaking with a LivingSocial deal that I bought, but the weather didn't cooperate on Josh's actual birthday, so we had to extend the birthday celebration (shucks!) and go kayaking two days later, which just happened to be Memorial Day. We went to French Creek State Park in PA. The lake was a little small for 2 hours of kayaking and there were a lot of other people who had the same idea as we did, but it was still fun to do something different.
                     

 We also had a campout in our backyard with our favorites, Emily, Erik, and Alyssa. We bought a firepit for this event and it was awesome. Everyone should have a firepit in their backyard!





#4 Summer Plans
We are going back to good Ol' Miss this week. Mixed emotions on this one-looking forward to relaxing and reading, not looking forward to the imminent isolation that is bound to occur while
there (as in, isolation from friends and fun). We have no cross country road trip to start us off with a bang this year, either. My summer plans include the following:

  • take the School Psychology Praxis Exam
  • read
  • make greeting cards
  • watch The West Wing and other movies in my Netflix Instant Queue. 

#5 Running
I'm back at it again. After a nice lazy couple of months, I found motivation to run again. For the first time ever, I am trying to get faster. In the past, I have just run for the fun of it and focused on finishing, but now that I have successfully completed 4 half marathons and 1 full marathon, I know I can finish and I need something else to work towards.

I'm starting off nice and easy though and doing a flat half marathon in Ft. Worth in June (http://jalapenohalf.com/) and one in PA in September (http://www.bihhalf.com/). Yes, this means I'll be training in MS in the summer months. As the ever wise Kelly Clarkson once said, "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger."I am using the free Hal Higdon Intermediate Half Marathon Training Schedule. I used the novice 1 for the previous half marathons I've done and the novice 1 for the marathon and was very happy with them.

This is what running in 90% humidity looks like! 


Look forward to more frequent updates! 







Monday, January 21, 2013

Inclusion


Over the past week, I had the chance to attend two conferences. The first one was Maryland's Inclusion Conference and had Paula Kluth as the featured speaker. The second one was Delaware's LIFE Conference. The featured speaker was Aaron Bishop, the executive director for the National Council on Disability. In addition, I attended three breakout sessions:
1) Unbreakable Drive: two guys who are both in wheelchairs shared their life stories to help motivate kids with disabilities and the people that work with them;
2) Delaware's Accessible Instructional Materials: provides textbooks and other curriculum materials in different formats for kids who have a print disability; and
3) the project I work for, the Delaware ACCESS Project, who provides training and support for teachers to help kids with severe disabilities gain access to the general education curriculum.

Before I started down the career path I am on, I did not think much about the world of disabilities. Unfortunately, I did not know many people with disabilities and my life was not very much affected by it. I am grateful for all that I have learned over the past 1.5 and regret that I did not know more before.

Special education looks different in every state, and to some extent, in every district. Sometimes kids with disabilities are included in the general education setting for most of the day, sometimes for only part of the day, sometimes just for lunch and specials, and sometimes not at all. The type and severity of the disability often plays a big role in this placement as well. The biggest thing that I believe after working in this community for the short time I have is that all students have the ability to learn and succeed.

As a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, I believe that we are all sons and daughters of a Heavenly Father who loves us, knows us, and wants us to succeed. This applies to me, to you, and to everyone. We all have different strengths and weaknesses while we are on Earth, some of which are more apparent than others. Some are physical, some are emotional, some have to do with relationships, etc. But we all have great potential and we can help or hinder one another in that effort to reach our greatest potential. Does it make a difference to you when someone believes in you and thinks you can achieve something versus when someone writes you off as a failure? It is those people who believe in us no matter what that help us most believe in ourselves, keep trying, and eventually help us succeed.

Unfortunately, this belief and assumption about everyone having great potential and ability is not always the case with people with disabilities. Historically, people with disabilities were often institutionalized and seen as inferior. Today, there is still sometimes a mindset in education that certain kids need to be separated from the others, but inclusion benefits kids with and without disabilities socially, emotionally, and academically.

Our society is too often focused on competition and winning, which can often leave people out and create a harsh learning and working environment. If we could focus instead on cooperation and learning from each other's differences, our learning and working environments would be a happier and safer place for everyone.

I am sure as I continue down this road, I will continue to learn and grow and develop these ideas even more, but for now, I wanted to share some of what I do every day and the passion that is developing for this field of work.




Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Oh yea...and I got a master's degree

This post is meant to clear up confusion associated with my most recent graduation and degree. To practice school psychology, you need an educational specialist degree. To get this, you also get a master's degree. The master's degree without the Ed.S. degree will not get you very far. At the University of Delaware, it is a three year program. The first two years include coursework and practicum experiences. The third year is an internship. After the first year, you receive your master's degree, and then you keep going to school for two more years until you get your Ed.S. and actually become a school psychologist. The M.A. is more of a pat on the back for completing the first year. So yea, I guess it's kind of cool to get to put two letters after my name, and yea, it was fun to celebrate, but no I'm not done with school yet. 
Happy my hubs could actually stay for the entire ceremony this time....
The lovely ladies of the class of 2014
 Jumping for joy


Celebration picnic-Big thanks to all the mothers (and fathers?) who helped plan it! 
 
                                    Big lips courtesy of Lindsey's mom                                              Silly boys courtesy of.....?
It was a day of parties-after the party with my cohort, our wonderful friend from church insisted on having a joint party for Josh and I because my graduation was also on Josh's birthday. She has a new frozen yogurt shop that just opened up called Yolicious (and it's delicious!)
so I agreed only in the hopes that it would be good for her business!  

And that was that! 3 degrees down, 1 more to go! I'm tied with Joshy now. Ha!

Monday, April 11, 2011

Acceptance, Annoyance, Anxiety, and Peace

Whew! This week has been crazy and exciting and noteworthy.
1. Acceptance.
I got accepted into the University of Delaware School Psychology Specialist Program!! I will officially be a blue hen (weird) starting Fall 2011! I am so excited. It was so frustrating to be moving somewhere when I had no idea what I was going to be doing with my life.

I knew it was the right place for us to be going, but that didn't get rid of the big question mark on my mind all the time. Luckily, I know that the next 3 years of my life I'll be in school! And I can't think of anything that would make me happier. I have always loved school, probably because it is one of the few things I have always felt really good at. And who doesn't like doing something they're good at? I just wasn't quite ready to give that up yet.

2. Annoyance.
Many of you have probably seen the latest Carl's Jr. commercial starring Miss Turkey. For those of you who have not seen it, look it up, but I don't want to put it on my blog because I hate it. Or, even better, read a great blog about it and other awful fast food ads here. I had a mix of emotions when I first saw it, including disgust, disbelief, and outrage. There are so many things I disagree with in this commercial. First of all, a woman in a bikini has nothing to do with a turkey burger. That seems to be obvious. Second of all, not only is she 90% naked, but there are close-ups of her butt and boobs! As if the bikini itself wasn't enough. Third, there is a mother covering her son's eyes when she walks by...so if a mother wouldn't want her son to see this, should it really be on TV at all? And last, THIS DOES NOT MAKE ME WANT TO EAT AT CARL'S JR! Clearly, you can see the impact this commercial has had on me. Ugh. I just feel gross and mad whenever it comes on.
Needless to say, I feel very strongly that this commercial, and others like it, are unacceptable and wrong. Which is why I am boycotting Carl's Jr. And I love Carl's Jr (even after I discovered my meal had 1000 calories in it)! And even though my $10 probably won't make a difference to them, it makes me feel better to feel like I'm doing something. If you are also disgusted by this, you can also boycott Carl's Jr, you can write them, and dislike the video on youtube (I stole these ideas from the BYU WSR).

3. Anxiety
...is what I have been filled with until Saturday, when we signed a lease on an apartment! Finally! Even though it is not our ideal place, it is a place. And it has a washer, dryer, and dishwasher, which make it 100% better than where we live now! We are allowed to get a pet, so we are already planning what kind of dog to get :) These are the options so far:
Golden Retriever: Too bad the puppies cost $2000.
Jack Russell Terrier.

All of this (minus Carl's Jr.) had led to...

4. Peace!
Josh and I both feeling a lot better now that we know where we're going, where we'll live, what we'll be doing, and how we'll get by (for the most part). I know there is still a lot more learning and change ahead of us, but for now, I will enjoy this momentary peace.