A fifth installment of icicles
On December 25th I spent nearly four hours photographing icicles hanging along a cliff in Great Hills Park just half a mile from home. In posts on December 28th, December 31st, January 8th, and January 14th you’ve seen how I tried out various approaches, both with and without flash. Now here are some more icicles from that productive session. The upside-down dead tree in the top photograph was an Ashe juniper, Juniperus ashei.
The second portrait is an artsy abstraction.
It’s almost monochrome, with a slight brown tinge in the lower left.
Icebergs often look blue. Icicles can appear that way, too:
Lots of the icicles that morning had a gnarly look. You might consider the ones below a sort of
bas-relief, given that they didn’t hang completely free of the vertical rock face behind them.
Once again the ice could almost pass for melted wax that had dripped and then congealed.
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Last year I wrote a commentary about Marva Collins, an elementary school teacher in the poor Garfield Park neighborhood of Chicago. I quoted parts of an article by Carrie-Ann Biondi in the Spring 2019 issue of The Objective Standard, including this one:
Observers in Collins’s classroom repeatedly were astonished by the high-level curriculum she developed for students ages three to thirteen. She began each year with essays such as Ralph Waldo Emerson’s “Self-Reliance” and fables such as “The Little Red Hen.” Students soon moved on to poetry, including works by Rudyard Kipling and [Henry] Wadsworth Longfellow. In time, they progressed to Plato’s dialogues. By second and third grade, they were reading William Shakespeare’s plays (Macbeth and Hamlet were student favorites) and reciting Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. With these under their belts, it was not uncommon for students to dive headlong into a seemingly unquenchable reading frenzy. And Collins kept hundreds of books on hand, suggesting just the right one for each student to read next. Each student wrote a report every two weeks about his latest book, presented it to the class, and answered questions raised by the other students. This sparked so much interest in reading that book that students vied to be next on the waiting list.
This week I finished reading the 1982 (and updated in 1990) book Marva Collins’ Way, by the teacher herself and Civia Tamarkin, with a foreword by Alex Haley of Roots fame. Here’s a line that stood out:
The longer I taught in the public school system, the more I came to think that schools were concerned with everything but teaching.
That’s unfortunately as true today as it was in the 1970s and ’80s. This past November, people in Austin (but of course not me) approved a school bond package of $2,439,000,000 (that’s $2.4 billion!) mostly for school modernization projects, security improvements and other upgrades. None of that fortune will lead a single child to read better or do math better or know more about history, geography, or science. It’s a disgrace.
A big reason that so many children don’t learn much in schools is the ineffective methods that teachers have been trained to use. Here again Marva Collins was on to that half a century ago:
Over the years, I have come to believe that some of the problems plaguing modern education are the result of the emphasis placed on “progressive” teaching methods. In an effort to follow John Dewey’s notion of a student-centered rather than subject-centered approach to learning, schools have too often sacrificed subject matter, being more concerned with how they taught rather than what they taught. During the late 1960s and the 1970s, when our society was becoming fascinated with pop psychology, many young men and women entered the teaching profession thinking “As long as I can relate to a child, what difference does it make if he or she can’t spell cat?
If you’re interested in education, check out Marva Collins’ Way. In addition to dealing with effective approaches to teaching, the book includes many endearing stories about the children Marva Collins taught.
© 2023 Steven Schwartzman
As always, your work is breathtaking, and I thank you again for being the kind of person you are, doing what you do and sharing it, because it brings me joy, and makes it a little easier for me to go on. trying to be better. Cheers!
Rei Clearly
January 19, 2023 at 4:59 AM
Then we’ll call it nice ice. Thanks.
Steve Schwartzman
January 19, 2023 at 5:45 AM
so very pretty
beth
January 19, 2023 at 5:07 AM
That’s why I’ve gotten such good mileage from it. Five down, two to go (as of now).
Steve Schwartzman
January 19, 2023 at 5:46 AM
The soft green and yellow set off your blue ice wonderfully well; that’s my favorite of the group, although the last image is appealing for different reasons. The combination of ‘globs’ and elongated frozen drips brought to mind a collection of humans: strange, elongated forms William Blake might have imagined.
shoreacres
January 19, 2023 at 7:43 AM
Last night I almost moved the blue icicle picture to the top; out of inertia (and the late hour) I left the post alone. I understand why it’s your favorite of the four. I don’t think I’d ever have made the jump from the last picture to the elongated forms in William Blake’s paintings; candle wax was my limit.
Steve Schwartzman
January 19, 2023 at 8:10 AM
I would’ve guessed that second shot was a metal casting. The final shot might be a cake by a confectioner who’s poured melted sugar over the icing. I’m a fan of Wm. Blake and prone to pareidolia so I’m sorry not to see the human forms that Linda has seen.
Robert Parker
January 19, 2023 at 8:20 AM
Ice as metal: that’s a shining example of metaphor. Now that you mention melted sugar in connection with the last picture, I think I’ve occasionally eaten sweet confections like that. Perhaps your pareidolia took a nap to freshen up for bigger and better visions.
Steve Schwartzman
January 19, 2023 at 8:35 AM
Love the blue in the ice – cold but beautiful!
Ann Mackay
January 19, 2023 at 9:21 AM
I was quite willing to brave the cold for the sake of all those icicles. Actually when I started out that morning the temperature was only around freezing, and by the time I finished nearly four hours later it had probably warmed up 5°C.
Steve Schwartzman
January 19, 2023 at 9:32 AM
I am still waiting to take pictures of icicles again. In next week’s post, I have nothing of that kind to show except raindrops
Peter Klopp
January 19, 2023 at 11:15 AM
Let’s hope more icicles come your way up there. Last year and in 2021 we had ice here in February, so there’s still a possibility for more here.
Steve Schwartzman
January 19, 2023 at 11:43 AM
Icicles certainly are beautiful in their many forms.
Lavinia Ross
January 19, 2023 at 1:14 PM
And those many forms led to many photographs.
Steve Schwartzman
January 19, 2023 at 2:17 PM
No two icicles are alike. I imagine the same is true for pupils. I can’t imagine how difficult it is to teach children from widely diverse backgrounds with differing levels of understanding and different ways of learning.
Marva Collins sounds like a remarkable person and teacher, but I think she lived in a different reality. She likely didn’t have to worry about children bringing guns or bombs to her classroom, about being asked to carry a gun (imagine!), or about having an armed security officer stand in the corner of her room (which is just as unthinkable). Or face as many divisive discussions surrounding subject matters and teaching methods.
These are, of course, an outsider’s thoughts about the complexity and challenges surrounding education, but I think it’s amazing that there are still people willing to consider a teaching career.
tanjabrittonwriter
January 19, 2023 at 9:16 PM
Your analogy is excellent, but I should have expected as much because your writing usually floors me, I am so glad I came across it. Thank you for sharing.
Rei Clearly
January 20, 2023 at 4:33 AM
When I got to the word pupils in your second sentence I thought about the pupil of an eye, which reminded me of how irises now used as a form of identification because no two are alike.
The things you mention in your second paragraph do make teaching more difficult now than 40 years ago. Even so, Marva Collins lived in and taught in a run-down part of Chicago where poverty and gangs were facts of life. The “culture wars” in education were already well under way, as I remember all too well from my own experiences with public schools back then.
This morning’s post has links to several videos about Marva Collins in case you want to learn more about her and her teaching methods.
Steve Schwartzman
January 20, 2023 at 5:38 AM
Very special set of excellent photos!
harrienijland
January 20, 2023 at 1:39 AM
Thank you. How could I go wrong with such willing subjects?
Steve Schwartzman
January 20, 2023 at 5:39 AM
Thanks for the info about Ms. Collins. I’ll look for that book over here. Her system sounds a lot like the one I grew up with in a private school in Texarkana, Texas.
Wish I could send you some pics from our recent trip to Underworld Adventures in Charleston, NZ. The stalagmites and stalactites in the cave looked a lot like your icicles.
Jenny Meadows
January 20, 2023 at 3:13 AM
I also thought about stalactites (mostly) and stalagmites when I worked with the icicles. I don’t remember hearing about Underworld Adventures when we were in New Zealand. I looked at online pictures to get a bit of a feel for the place. I think we must have driven through Charleston on Highway 6. I remember Punakaiki, which isn’t far from there.
This morning’s post has links to several videos about Marva Collins in case you want to learn more about her and her teaching methods. You were fortunate if you grew up with similar ones in Texarkana.
Steve Schwartzman
January 20, 2023 at 5:48 AM
[…] year and yesterday I mentioned Marva Collins, who for decades worked wonders of education with black children in a […]
An early-in-the-season yet late-in-the-year drive along the Possumhaw Trail | Portraits of Wildflowers
January 20, 2023 at 4:27 AM
The abstract photos in color, particularly the one before the last, are pleasing. I like the blue cast and have observed that myself when I try to photograph ice.
Alessandra Chaves
January 20, 2023 at 8:11 PM
I think all the photographs of icicles I got in which the ice came out looking pale blue or a pale shade of a warm color were taken without flash. I used both flash and natural light so I’d get different sorts of icicle pictures.
Steve Schwartzman
January 21, 2023 at 6:48 AM
That’s brilliant!
Rei Clearly
January 21, 2023 at 7:14 AM
It’s natural to try out different approaches. Sometimes they work and sometimes they don’t.
Steve Schwartzman
January 21, 2023 at 7:17 AM
“That’s unfortunately as true today as it was in the 1970s and ’80s. This past November, people in Austin (but of course not me) approved a school bond package of $2,439,000,000 (that’s $2.4 billion!) mostly for school modernization projects, security improvements and other upgrades. None of that fortune will lead a single child to read better or do math better or know more about history, geography, or science. It’s a disgrace.” I hear you! Higher education has also been plagued with this distortion. During my college years in Brazil we had very precarious classrooms and the teachers had a blackboard to teach. We also had labs for anatomy and experiments. But our classrooms never had more than 50 students and we had the professors’ full attention. Fast forward 10 years, when I was a TA at a university back east in the USA, classrooms had 400 students in an auditorium that was fully equipped with projectors and computers and capabilities for streaming. But the learning curve was flat, it was too technologically cold and sterile an environment. How can you be motivated if you’re in a classroom with 399 other students and the professor is out there on a pedestal showing PowerPoint slides? Technology, not teaching, was the priority, and the students suffered immensely.
Alessandra Chaves
January 20, 2023 at 8:20 PM
You say that the students in that huge class in the auditorium suffered immensely. Do you know if they agreed with you that the environment was too sterile and impersonal? I ask because I’m wondering if students today are so addicted to their phones and technology more generally that they suffer psychologically in non-technological environments.
As you look back to your early life in Brazil, I look back to my time teaching math in Honduras. In my first year the students didn’t even have a textbook. All I had was chalk, a blackboard, and access to a hand-cranked ditto machine. But I had my brain and I soon came up with ways to teach without a lot of supplies.
Steve Schwartzman
January 21, 2023 at 6:59 AM
I like your first image here a lot! The color, texture, lines and addition of the dead, droopy tree all come together nicely.
denisebushphoto
January 23, 2023 at 11:18 AM
Thanks. I’m thrilled when I get a chance to play with things that are normally part of your cold domain but absent from my warmer one.
Steve Schwartzman
January 23, 2023 at 11:34 AM
[…] half a mile from home. In posts on December 28th, December 31st, January 8th, January 14th, and January 19th you’ve seen how I tried out various approaches, both with and without flash. Now here are […]
A sixth installment of icicles | Portraits of Wildflowers
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