Sunday, May 29, 2011

Memorial Day weekend in the garden: planting and blooming



From your urban farmer:  I put in 4 tomato plants today...4 more will go in tomorrow. I always get a good crop.  Those are strawberries plants up in the front.
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Posted by Picasa"I associate the garden with the whole experience of being alive,
and so, there is nothing in the range of human experience
that is separate from what the garden can signify
its eagerness and its insistence
and in its driving energy to live — to grow, to bear fruit."

Stanley Kunitz, "The Wild Braid"

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Saturday, May 28, 2011

The last day of school picnic at Golden Gate Park

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Friday, May 27, 2011

Lady Gaga acapella: Born This Way. She can really sing!



This great acapella song comes at the end of the HBO film of Lady Gaga's concert, Monster Ball Tour, at Madison Square Garden, NYC.  It's not even part of the concert, but better than the entire concert for me.

Here are the lyrics to the way she sings it here:

My mama told me when I was young
We are all born superstars
She rolled my hair and put my lipstick on
In the glass of her boudoir

There's nothin' wrong with lovin' who you are
She said, 'cause He made you perfect, babe
So hold your head up, girl and you you'll go far
Listen to me when I say

I'm beautiful in my way
'Cause God makes no mistakes
I'm on the right track, baby
I was born this way

Don't hide yourself in regret
Just love yourself and you're set
I'm on the right track, baby
I was born this way

Ooh, there ain't no other way, baby, I was born this way
Baby, I was born this way
Ooh, there ain't no other way, baby, I was born this way
I'm on the right track, baby, I was born this way

Give yourself prudence and love your friends
Subway kid, rejoice your truth
In the religion of the insecure
I must be myself, respect my youth

A different lover is not a sin
Believe capital H-I-M
I love my life, I love this record and
Mi amore vole fe yah (Love can not exist without trust)

I'm beautiful in my way,
'Cause God makes no mistakes
I'm on the right track, baby
I was born this way

Don't hide yourself in regret,
Just love yourself and you're set
I'm on the right track, baby
I was born this way

Ooh, there ain't no other way, baby, I was born this way
Baby, I was born this way
Ooh, there ain't no other way, baby, I was born this way
I'm on the right track, baby, I was born this way

No matter gay, straight or bi
Lesbian, transgendered life
I'm on the right track, baby
I was born to survive

No matter black, white or beige
Chola or orient made
I'm on the right track, baby
I was born to be brave

Thursday, May 26, 2011

The last days of 7th grade...and fun with a camera

Posted by PicasaFiona and Grace:  go Grace with your self-timer!

Posted by PicasaFiona, Grace and Georgia

Posted by Picasamore self-timing fun

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Speaking in Tongues: a film about Grace's immersion education



From the PBS website:

Speaking in Tongues begins with an ordinary first day of public school kindergarten—except that the teacher speaks only Chinese. Most of her primarily white and Asian American students look confused but curious; a few nod knowingly. They are all in a language immersion class, where, from day one, they will receive 90% of their instruction in Cantonese. Remarkably, their school will test first in English and math among their district's 76 elementary schools.

The film's four protagonists come to language immersion programs for very different reasons. Jason is a first generation Mexican-American whose immigrant family embraces bilingualism as the key to full participation in the land of opportunity. Durrell is an African-American kindergartner whose mom hopes that learning Mandarin will be a way out of economic uncertainty and into possibility. Kelly is a Chinese-American recapturing the Cantonese her parents sacrificed to become American. Julian is a Caucasian 8th grader eager to expand his horizons and become a good world citizen. Together, they represent a nexus of challenges facing America today: economic and academic inequities, de facto segregation, record numbers of new immigrants, and the need to communicate across cultures. Using a verité story-telling approach, the film follows our characters as they enter the portal of language and open their minds to new ways of thinking and being in the world. In a time of globalization and changing demographics, bilingualism offers them more than an opportunity to join the global job market. Language becomes a metaphor for breaking down barriers between ourselves and our neighbors—be they around the corner or across the world.

While the kids grow in ease and skill with their second tongue, the grown-ups argue. Durrell orders his first Chinatown meal in Mandarin; an uncle at a family dinner prasies bilingualism, citing the needs of the global economy. Kelly learns traditional cooking from her Chinese-speaking grandma; yet her great aunt scoffs at any form of bilingual education, citing tax burdens. Jason becomes the first in his family to read, write, and graduate elementary school; meanwhile at a school enrollment fair, a concerned Latino father asks where his daughter can learn more English. Julian travels to China and bargains for clothes in Mandarin at a Beijing marketplace; an angry Chinese dad at a school meeting bellows, "We are in America! We need English!"


To explore these contentious debates at the national level, Speaking in Tongues turns to Ling-chi Wang, a community activist who pioneered efforts to establish multilingual education in the United States. He takes us on a brief You Tube tour of the national discourse: critics bemoan a loss of national identity and warn of an impending Balkanization of the United States, while others warn of the national security risks of having too few Arabic speakers. Lingchi laments the nation's stubborn attachment to monolingualism, a phenomenon that masks deeper social tensions about diversity and difference. His rallying cry is that the United States is a nation whose linguistic richness is among its greatest assets. Employers need multilingual skills, universities spends millions teaching foreign languages, and our national security apparatus pours millions into teaching "strategic languages." Yet the U.S. congress routinely considers "English-only" legislation, and 31 states have already passed such laws.

But Ling-chi doesn't have time for hand wringing; A gavel brings us to a packed school board meeting where he's spearheading an initiative to offer every public school child in San Francisco the opportunity that Jason, Durrell, Kelly, and Julian have. Will one city's bold experiment become a model for transforming Americans into global citizens?

Speaking in Tongues was produced by Marcia Jarmel and Ken Schneider, who also created a related http://www.speakingintonguesfilm.info/.

For more information, please visit www.speakingintonguesfilm.info
With your help, we can ensure that more children have the option to become bilingual.

Sunday, May 01, 2011

Grace and Blackjack

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Jumping!
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