I spent most of my time working on this sign... my cup of tea for sure. (Note: a few families left before we hung the sign because all the kids were hot and dirty to say the least!)
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Sprucing up the Schoolyard
Last weekend Neighborhood Church had our second Weekender, which is one of three weekends a year that we spend together learning, worshiping, praying, eating, serving, etc. Neighborhood Church has been an adopter of Peabody Elementary, especially the playground. We spent Saturday afternoon raking mulch, pulling weeds, and giving the playground a new face before school starts again.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Outdoor Fun
Although it's HOT, summer means drinking lots of water with outdoor activities on the side in Memphis. The 2nd annual Lonnaroo was held on the Georgian Woods lawn. Per tradition, the dress code is "Sexy Casual" which I translated to "No sleeves." We didn't have quite 100% participation, but many attendees showed up without sleeves:
Also a summertime favorite: Concerts at the Levitt Shell
Also a summertime favorite: Concerts at the Levitt Shell
The last show of the season brought out friends from many parts of my life: Arkansas, MTR, and Neighborhood Church.
Labels:
callie,
GW,
Levitt Shell,
Lonnaroo,
MTR,
neighborhood church,
Sarah
Monday, June 27, 2011
STJ & STL
After living with a native for a year, I had to go see St. Joseph, Michigan myself. Mike and I were not prepared for the cool weather, so we borrowed sweatshirts that just happened to be identical for the weekend. We put MTR's mark on Lake Michigan.
Campus is beautiful and it was really fun to connect stories with places.
We piled up the mini-van and road-tripped from St. Joe to Holland, home of Hope College. Holland is a very picturesque town and Mike found a few reminders of home at the Peanut Shop.
Campus is beautiful and it was really fun to connect stories with places.
Sunset on the Beach:
I broke the long drive up by spending the night in St. Louis with Mike both ways. Mike took me to see the Cathedral Basilica Saint Louis, which made me feel like I was in Europe again.
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Hoedown
All the 2012 residents moved in at the beginning of June and we welcomed them properly with a Hoedown, MTR-style.
Appropriate attire was required and we provided BBQ, Cotton Candy, Corn Hole, a photobooth, 3-legged race, country line dancing, urban line dancing, and prizes (dates with graduates).
Appropriate attire was required and we provided BBQ, Cotton Candy, Corn Hole, a photobooth, 3-legged race, country line dancing, urban line dancing, and prizes (dates with graduates).
And, these are two of my fellow Power Center Academy 9th grade team members! Stu is teaching history and Erin is teaching art. I'm really looking forward to working with them!
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Martha the Triathlete
On our way back from the wedding in Cookeville, we stopped in Nashville for Martha to complete her 2nd triathlon.
She rocked it (well, except for leaving a few necessary things in the car, so I got to make just a few extra uphill trips to the car).
She rocked it (well, except for leaving a few necessary things in the car, so I got to make just a few extra uphill trips to the car).
Yay Martha!
The Ordu's I Dos
Brittany, a fellow 2011 MTR graduate (doesn't that sound better than resident?) got married a few of weekends ago in Cookeville, TN. Her husband Kelechi played football for Tennessee Tech. I saw him play versus Arkansas last fall.
Kelechi is Nigerian, and they did an awesome job of integrating Nigerian customs with American during the ceremony and reception.
We had a caravan from Memphis and stopped to change clothes and eat at Chick-fil-a.
Brittany's Initials went from BS to BO. What an improvement!
Congrats Mr. & Mrs. Ordu!
Kelechi is Nigerian, and they did an awesome job of integrating Nigerian customs with American during the ceremony and reception.
We had a caravan from Memphis and stopped to change clothes and eat at Chick-fil-a.
Brittany's Initials went from BS to BO. What an improvement!
Congrats Mr. & Mrs. Ordu!
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
MTR in the Commercial Appeal
The day of graduation, The Commercial Appeal printed an article in the Faith in Memphis section about the MTR. David Waters has written about Neighborhood Church, and was present when David came to NC to share more about the vision of MTR. He interviewed me along with David and Robin to write this article.
Here are a few exerpts:
Virginia Boyd wants to serve God and Memphis by becoming the best math teacher any city school kid has ever had.
David Montague and Robin Scott want to serve God and Memphis by helping Virginia do that.
"You don't have to talk about the love and compassion and mercy of Christ to demonstrate it," said Montague, a former stockbroker turned public school evangelist. "Becoming the best math teacher a kid's ever had is a valid response to the gospel."
Montague and Scott are leading the Memphis Teacher Residency, one of many nonprofit organizations that have responded to the Gates Foundation's $90-million challenge to put an effective teacher in every Memphis City Schools classroom.
Like Teach for America and the Memphis Teaching Fellows, MTR seeks to recruit, train and support outstanding urban educators in Memphis. What makes MTR different is its mission to do that "within a Christian context."
MTR's "Christian context" comes in the motivation, not the implementation.
"It's a shared mission, that's the heart of it," said Scott, a former Indiana public school teacher and MTR's director of education. Teaching in large, urban systems "is too hard, too demanding not to have a sense of mission about it," Scott said. "You have to see urban education as a calling."
MTR recruits and accepts only candidates who believe that teaching in large, urban public schools systems is a Christian calling, not just a career. But candidates also must believe they should not discuss their faith in a public school setting.
"America is not short on information about the gospel," said Montague, a former Christian missionary who directs MTR's work from offices in the basement of Union Avenue Baptist Church. "It is short on demonstrations of the power of the gospel."
....
"So far, we can't prove that MTR has any value whatsoever, but I swear I believe what I'm about to say," Montague said.
"What's happening in Memphis City Schools is the greatest opportunity to bring glory to God since Jesus Christ was raised from the dead. Everyone really is watching Memphis. The president is watching. Bill and Melinda Gates are watching. The whole nation is watching.
"I believe the MTR has this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to transform education one school and one feeder pattern at a time. And in doing so, we have the opportunity and potential to transform and redeem public education in Memphis for God's glory. We have the opportunity to do the impossible, and by doing so, prove that God is real and powerful and faithful to His promises to those in need.
"And the whole world will know of it."
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Masters Graduation
Now that I have completed my Capstone Project:
My students have thrown me a surprise party:
I have chaperoned Senior Prom:
Friends and Sisters have come into town to celebrate...
My Masters Graduation!
As I told my sisters, just call me Master V!
My students have thrown me a surprise party:
I have chaperoned Senior Prom:
Friends and Sisters have come into town to celebrate...
My Masters Graduation!
As I told my sisters, just call me Master V!
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)






















