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Thank you for listening to this talk produced by the Art Gallery of South Australia. Did you know the Art Gallery of South Australia has a significant historic dress collection? Ingrid Goetz, Vernon-Roberts Assistant Curator of Decorative Arts & Design, will discuss this tartan dress from 1860-65, currently on display in Gallery 2, and talk about the ongoing project to research and photograph the historic dress collection. For more information visit agsa.sa.gov.au Image: Tartan dress, worn by Mrs Josephine Geyer 1860-65, cotton, silk, wood, metal, 83.0 cm (diam) (bust), 60.0 cm (diam) (waist), 55.5 cm (diam) (front length), 10.0 cm (depth); Gift of Miss G.J. Madigan 1937, Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide
Melky, Eastgate, and Cuzin P are dribbling their way into the NBA's opening night, hyped to assist all you Raptors fans on what's ahead this season. Their court vision? All eyes on the Raptors as they look to dunk on the Eastern Conference! From airballs to missed dunks, they've got you covered. It's time for the tipoff!
Chassidus Morning Class: This class, the third one on the Maamar Ki Ka'asher Hashamyim (Torah Or Bereshis), was presented on Monday, 3 Cheshvan, 5784, November 4, 2024, Parshas Lech Lecha, at Bais Medrash Ohr Chaim in Monsey, NY.
In the Kansas City rap scene, TaMeka Miss G Griswold stands out with her catchy phrase "I'm from Kansas City," blending nostalgia and comedy into her music. Her track "On My Lonely" transcends with cinematic storytelling, reflecting themes of freedom and belief, and showcasing her multifaceted talent. - go find her accolades as an actress and talk about her film. Learn to let go and love your work. Miss G shares about her life as an artist breaking multiple fields and how she is learning to enjoy life along the way. Welcome to the #liveandcreate podcast, hosted by Miguel Antonio, singer-songwriter, speaker and Lead Vocalist of the band Run With It . In this podcast, Miguel engages in meaningful conversations with artists and entrepreneurs, delving into the essence of living a great life and creating great things. Our discussions revolve around the personal stories and inspirations of our guests, touching on practical aspects of both business and artistic creation. These conversations evolve into philosophical explorations, encompassing the art of life, music, and the pursuit of a better world. to be a guest on the show email booking@runwithitband.net To check out Miguel's band Run With It https://runwithitband.net
Sue Stoney has been on the podcast a few times and this was her first podcast where we met her on the podcast in 2020. This episode is number 12 in the Top 20 Countdown. You heard Sue Stoney in the Magam Sewalong episode with Suzy and Helene. This episode is where we focussed on Sue only. Sustainability and careful use of our resources are important to Sue. She's also one of her local 3 sewing friends with Meggipeg and sewblooms on Instagram and Sue has always been there for Sarah Pondevie. Sue's global collaboration skills are varse These days Sue's adorable clothes and toy making for Miss G are what I love pop up on my feed.
Hi Everyone, We're a little late with this episode and it's all my fault! As I mentioned in my May 1st blog post (sign up here for updates), for the first time in four years, I conducted an amazing interview with Sheila Kohler and forgot to hit record on Zoom. Sheila--the most gracious person on Earth--forgave me for wasting 45 minutes of her time and agreed to re-record the episode. Thank you to Sheila for sitting down with me twice! After I recovered from the shame, I realized this might be a great boon for readers. I loved Cracks—the short story, the novel, and the movie! You will find links to all three below. It was fascinating to talk about Sheila's adaptation from short story to novel and to hear about the making of the movie and the decision to set the movie in England rather than South Africa. I hope you have had time to read the short story and the novel. What did you think of the movie? Let me know if you have any follow-up questions or comments. I would love to hear. Here are the links: Content Warning: Sexual Assault Cracks, the short story, by Sheila Kohler Cracks, The Novel by Sheila Kohler, available at Bookshop and Amazon. Cracks, The Movie In other news... I am taking a sabbatical from the podcast this summer to rest, regroup, and figure out what direction to take this show in in the future. I love doing it, but every now and then, I think it's a good idea to reevaluate and hone in on what has been valuable and what parts need to go. My first guest in the fall is Tim Tomlinson. Although I will be talking to him about one of his short stories, he has a new book coming out this month. It looks terrific! Check out kellyfordon.com for a picture of the cover and publication information from Nirala. Cheers! Kelly Sheila Kohler Bio: Sheila Kohler was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, the younger of two girls. Upon matriculation at 17 from Saint Andrews, with a distinction in history (1958), she left the country for Europe. She lived for 15 years in Paris, where she married, did her undergraduate degree in literature at the Sorbonne, and a graduate degree in psychology at the Institut Catholique. After raising her three girls, she moved to the USA in 1981, and did an MFA in writing at Columbia. In the summer of 1987, her first published story, “The Mountain,” came out in “The Quarterly” and received an O.Henry prize and was published in the O.Henry Prize Stories of 1988. It also became the first chapter in her first novel, “The Perfect Place,” which was published by Knopf the next year. Knopf also published the first volume of her short stories, “Miracles in America,” in 1990. Kohler has won two O.Henry prizes for “The Mountain” 1988 and “The Transitional Object” 2008. She has been short-listed in the O.Henry Prize Stories for three years running: in 1999 for the story, “Africans”; in 2000 for “Casualty,” which had appeared in the Ontario Review; and 2001 for “Death in Rome,” a story which had appeared in The Antioch Review. “Casualty” was also included in the list of distinguished stories in The Best American Short Stories of 2001. In 1994 she published a second novel, “The House on R Street,” also with Knopf, about which Patrick McGrath said, in “The New York Times Book Review: ” “Sheila Kohler has achieved in this short novel a remarkable atmosphere, a fine delicate fusion of period, society and climate.” In 1998 she published a short story, “Africans,” in Story Magazine, which was chosen for the Best American Short Stories of 1999, was read and recorded at Symphony Space and at The American Repertory Theatre in Boston and was translated into Japanese. It was also included in her second collection of stories,” One Girl,” published by Helicon Nine, which won the Willa Cather Prize in 1998 judged by William Gass. In 1999 she published her third novel, “Cracks,” with Zoland, which received a starred review from Kirkus, was nominated for an Impac award in 2001, and was chosen one of the best books of the year by Newsday and by Library Journal.” Cracks” also came out with Bloomsbury in England, was translated into French and Dutch, and will come out in Hebrew. It has been optioned six times by Killer films and Working Track 2. The film premiered at the Toronto Film Festival in September, 2009, and at the London film festival and came out here in the summer of 2010 and is now on Netflix. It is directed by Jordan Scott, with Eva Green in the role of Miss G. In 2000 Kohler received the Smart Family Foundation Prize for “Underworld,” a story published in the October “Yale Review.” In 2001 she published her fourth novel,” The Children of Pithiviers,” with Zoland, a novel about the concentration camps during the Vicky Period in France in Pithiviers and Beaune la Rolande. In 2003 she was awarded a fellowship at the Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Institute to work on a historical novel based on the life on the Marquise de la Tour du Pin, a French aristocrat who escaped the Terror by bringing her family to Albany, New York. Also that year she published her third volume of short stories, “Stories from Another World” with the Ontario Review Press. She won the Antioch Review Prize in 2004 for work in that magazine. Both “ The Perfect Place” and “Miracles in America” came out in England with Jonathan Cape and in paperback with Vintage International. “The Perfect Place” was translated into French, German, Japanese, and Portuguese. Her fifth novel, “Crossways,” came out in October, 2004, also, with the Ontario Review Press edited by Raymond Smith and Joyce Carol Oates. It received a starred Kirkus Review and is out in paperback with the Other Press as well as “The Perfect Place.” Kohler has published essays in The Boston Globe, Salmagundi (summer 2004, 2009), The Bellevue Literary magazine, and O Magazine,”The Heart Speaks” ( May 2004), “What Happy Ever After Really Looks Like” (2008) and reviews in The New Leader and Bomb as well as essays in The American Scholar in 2014 and 2015. Kohler began teaching at The Writer's Voice in 1990, going on from there to teach at SUNY Purchase, Sarah Lawrence, Colgate, CCNY , Bennington and Columbia. She has taught creative writing at Princeton since 2008 and now teaches freshman seminars there . Sheila's sixth novel, “Bluebird or the Invention of Happiness” was published in 2007, and the paperback was published with Berkely in 2008. “The Transitional Object” in Boulevard won an O.Henry prize and is included in the 2008 volume. Her tenth book, “Becoming Jane Eyre” came out with Viking Penguin in December, 2009, and was a New York Times editor's pick. Casey Cep wrote in the Boston Globe about this novel: “With an appreciation for their craft and sympathy for their difficult profession, Kohler's “Becoming Jane Eyre'' is a tender telling of the Brontë family's saga and the stories they told.” Her eleventh book “Love Child” was published by Penguin in America and by La Table Ronde in France. In June of 2012, her twelfth book “The Bay of Foxes,” was published by Penguin. “Dreaming for Freud” was published by Penguin in 2014. It will be translated into Turkish In 2013 the story, “Magic Man” was published in Best American Short Stories. Sheila Kohler published her memoir “Once we were sisters” in 2017 with Penguin in America and with Canongate in England and Alba in Spain. Sheila's latest novel is “Open Secrets” published by Penguin in July 2020. Kohler currently lives in New York and Amagansett. ***
Today on the podcast, we're sitting down with Abby Gross from Write on with Miss G, who has become known for her thriving reading program and the wonderful tools she has developed to support other teachers with their own reading programs. After spending the first part of her career teaching high school English, Abby unexpectedly fell in love with teaching middle school ELA. With her switch to the middle came a new goal of creating a community of readers and helping all of her students find books they enjoy. For the last four years, she has built a classroom library and independent reading program from the ground up, watching her readers flourish with choice, time, The co-author of a guidebook for teachers, Keeping the Wonder, and a picture book for young readers, The Magic of Wonder, Abby is committed to fostering joy in learning and literacy. In addition to being an advocate for independent reading, Abby is a big believer in the power of curiosity and student-centered learning. support, and good books. I enjoyed our conversation so much - this is truly a value-packed episode. I think you'll love Abby's practical, doable (and fun) advice for building more reading and book PR into your weekly routine. Get ready for quickly actionable tips on building strong Book Trailer and First Chapter programs, creating book posters and brochures, selecting and organizing your classroom library, and rolling out fun hybrid book tastings on the regular. Connect with Abby When she's not teaching, you can find Abby creating resources, blogging on writeonwithmissg.com, hanging out on Instagram, presenting workshops for Keeping the Wonder, and reading. Check out her blog posts on Why You Should Try a Book Tasting, 10 Ways to Use Book Recommendation Posters, and Book Trailer Tuesday: How to Hook Students on Books in 3 Minutes to go even deeper on this subject. And be SURE to grab her FREE Book Trailer Tuesday Links for the Entire Year. Go Further: Explore alllll the Episodes of The Spark Creativity Teacher Podcast. Join our community, Creative High School English, on Facebook. Come hang out on Instagram. Enjoying the podcast? Please consider sharing it with a friend, snagging a screenshot to share on the ‘gram, or tapping those ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ to help others discover the show. Thank you!
This week I want to share a super simple strategy for building more book recommendations into your classes in just two or three minute installments, book trailers. I first heard the idea of “Book Trailer Tuesdays” from Abby Gross, over at Write On with Miss G. I loved the idea right away, as a companion to First Chapter Friday or as its own unique program. But even if you're not doing Book Trailer Tuesdays, book trailers are an amazing thing to build into your class. Maybe you have a bookmarked list of trailers ready for those odd days when your lesson randomly ends five minutes earlier than you expect. Maybe you change up your book talk routine now and then and show a trailer for a book or two that you have featured in your library. Maybe you show a few trailers to help introduce a new genre, like novels-in-verse, or graphic novels. Maybe after all this book trailer fun, you have students make book trailers of their own and start building a collection you can show to your students in future years! I hope you give book trailers a try this year! Go Further: Explore alllll the Episodes of The Spark Creativity Teacher Podcast. Join our community, Creative High School English, on Facebook. Come hang out on Instagram. Enjoying the podcast? Please consider sharing it with a friend, snagging a screenshot to share on the ‘gram, or tapping those ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ to help others discover the show. Thank you!
After the Civil War, the simultaneous shift in the labor economy of the Southern United States and the second industrial revolution led to a growing interest in labor organizing. Newly formed labor organizations led a combined 23,000 strikes between 1881 and 1900. Employers noticed, and fought back, sometimes literally, employing Pinkerton agents to break strikes, rounding up and imprisoning or deporting union employees, and using various forms of intimidation against workers. Joining me to help us learn much more about the story of employers and elites resisting labor rights is Dr. Chad. Pearson, a lecturer at the University of North Texas and author of Capital's Terrorists: Klansmen, Lawmen, and Employers in the Long Nineteenth Century. Our theme song is Frogs Legs Rag, composed by James Scott and performed by Kevin MacLeod, licensed under Creative Commons. The mid-episode audio is “Labor Day” by Dick Wright & The Wright Trio, in the Public domain and available via the Internet Archive. The episode image is: “The labor troubles at Homestead, Pa. - Attack of the strikers and their sympathizers on the surrendered Pinkerton men,” drawn by Miss G.A. Davis, from a sketch by C. Upham. Pennsylvania Homestead, 1892, available via the Library of Congress with no known restrictions on publication. Additional Sources: “Labor Movement,” History.com. “The Second Industrial Revolution, 1870-1914,” by Ryan Engelman, U.S. History Scene “Founding of the National Labor Union and the 1st National Call for a 8-Hour Work Day,” Library of Congress. “The Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor (1869-1949),” by Michael Barga, Social Welfare History Project. “The Haymarket Affair,” Illinois Labor History Society. “Our Labor History Timeline,” AFL-CIO. “The Battle of Homestead Strike – July, 1892,” The Battle of Homestead Foundation. “Coeur d'Alene Mining Insurrection: Topics in Chronicling America,” Library of Congress. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A week of great sporting happenings - The Comrades has been run, the golfing scene is looking great, thanks to Paula Reto and lions on the fairway in Skukuza, Stage 9 of the Vuelta went to a Saffer, and the Sevens did us proud. If you're into finding out the back stories and lovely things happening around these events - and around the SA World - then have a listen and discover more. Jen and Mel break it all down for you! Do you know about the Soap Sisters being DEVOtees? About Disco Pants? About an 11 year Miss G walking in NY fashion week? About one woman's lone attempt to pick up rubbish (not men :D) on a KZN beach? Or missing home and wanting to find out what you can watch on Showmax International and Netflix that will make you feel a little closer....? Then SAPeople.com is where to find it all.
A week of great sporting happenings - The Comrades has been run, the golfing scene is looking great, thanks to Paula Reto and lions on the fairway in Skukuza, Stage 9 of the Vuelta went to a Saffer, and the Sevens did us proud. If you're into finding out the back stories and lovely things happening around these events - and around the SA World - then have a listen and discover more. Jen and Mel break it all down for you! Do you know about the Soap Sisters being DEVOtees? About Disco Pants? About an 11 year Miss G walking in NY fashion week? About one woman's lone attempt to pick up rubbish (not men :D) on a KZN beach? Or missing home and wanting to find out what you can watch on Showmax International and Netflix that will make you feel a little closer....? Then SAPeople.com is where to find it all. SAPeople.com · Solid Gold Podcasts
Episode Summary“Knowing the history of my family, knowing what my grandparents decided to do, changed my life.” On this episode of The Sydcast, a story of Hispanic culture in America and how Marcela Gómez connected the dots in a way that others seldom did. Her journey, from Bogota, Colombia to Miami, Atlanta, Nashville, and New York City.Sydney Finkelstein Syd Finkelstein is the Steven Roth Professor of Management at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College. He holds a Master's degree from the London School of Economics and a Ph.D. from Columbia University. Professor Finkelstein has published 25 books and 90 articles, including the bestsellers Why Smart Executives Fail and Superbosses: How Exceptional Leaders Master the Flow of Talent, which LinkedIn Chairman Reid Hoffman calls the “leadership guide for the Networked Age.” He is also a Fellow of the Academy of Management, a consultant and speaker to leading companies around the world, and a top 25 on the Global Thinkers 50 list of top management gurus. Professor Finkelstein's research and consulting work often relies on in-depth and personal interviews with hundreds of people, an experience that led him to create and host his own podcast, The Sydcast, to uncover and share the stories of all sorts of fascinating people in business, sports, entertainment, politics, academia, and everyday life.Marcela GómezA native of Bogotá, Colombia, Marcela graduated from high school in Charlotte, North Carolina, and earned a bachelor's degree in advertising from Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano in Bogotá. Following graduation, Marcela moved to Miami, Florida to work as an advertising coordinator with Editorial Unilit and as a member of Expolit's (Spanish-language Christian literature trade show) leadership team. In 1996 she joined Thomas Nelson Publisher's Spanish language division in Nashville, Tennessee as a sales representative and later was promoted to marketing director.Her life as an entrepreneur started in 2002 with Hispanic Marketing Group; in 2017, she became a founding partner of the Culture Shift Team. Marcela has also been a partner and investor in other entrepreneurship ventures, most recently with Mi Tribu, an import and retail business of arts and crafts handmade by disenfranchised women in Latin American countries.Miss Gómez specializes in connecting effectively with the diverse and continuously changing Multicultural markets, helping Culture Shift Team clients understand the diversity of the U.S. consumer. Marcela has worked with packaged goods companies, universities, public utilities, consumer, corporate, nonprofit, and business-to-business clients in wireless, sports, transportation, education, government, banking and finance, food, healthcare, and the arts. She plays a key role in developing multicultural and multilingual marketing, communications, and grassroots campaigns, from conception and brand development to production.In early 2021 she relocated to New York City, where she continues to lead the multicultural marketing, advertising, and public relations division of the Culture Shift Team. She enjoys traveling, films, theater, ballet, opera, and symphony. She is a member of the National Speakers Association New York City Chapter, the Statewide Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of New Jersey, the Manhattan Chamber of Commerce, the NYC Hispanic Chamber, and PRSA New York City. Marcela has a 31-year-old son, Esteban Pedraza, an award-winning film director and musician residing in New York City.Insights from this episode: Marcela Gómez's life growing upHow her grandmother has shaped her view of lifeHow her life experiences influenced her careerMarcela moving back to the U.S from BogotaWhy she moved to NashvilleHow the Hispanic marketing group came to beOvercoming imposter syndromeThe importance of diversity in board membersWhat led Marcela to the cultural shiftQuotes from the show:“My mother was actually fully bilingual. My mother had had the chance to go to high school in Atlanta, Georgia, so we grew up fully bilingual, not only because my mother would speak to us in English at home but because we were going to fully bilingual schools in Bogota” –Marcela Gómez [6:18]“We asked nanny [Marcela's grandmother] why did she say yes to come to the U.S, and she said because of education. Education for women and the abundance that this country had” –Marcela Gómez [7:27]“Knowing the history of my family, knowing what my grandparents decided to do changed my life” –Marcela Gómez [12:25]“High school is challenging for everyone and I guess when you are different in any way, it's even more challenging ” –Syd Finkelstein [16:12]“I realized that part of what I do in advertising, public relations and marketing is through the lens of culture, and that's where it starts” –Marcela Gómez [18:53]“If you did not grow up here, if you do not know about the U.S culture, why do I call 911? I immediately realized there is a need for my services from a cultural perspective, marketing perspective and not only from a language perspective, and that's when I decided to launch Hispanic marketing group” –Marcela Gomez [31:17]“I had proven myself to be a good person in marketing, but no one opened the door. So, that's when you know that's not where you are supposed to go” –Marcela Gomez [33:35]“You bring something very different to the table than everybody else does. Your experience is not the same not even as your siblings” –Marcela Gomez [43:03]“The reason why I like history, the reason why I would like to know where I come from is because I would also like to remember who I am and what I have accomplished in life” –Marcela Gomez [44:40]“The entire company is based on the platinum rule that says treat others the way they want to be treated, and in order for me to do that, I need to know who they are and what they like, and how they want to be treated” –Marcela Gomez [1:00:46]Stay connected:Sydney FinkelsteinWebsite: http://thesydcast.comLinkedIn: Sydney FinkelsteinTwitter: @sydfinkelsteinFacebook: The SydcastInstagram: The SydcastMarcela GomezLinkedIn: Marcela Gómez Personal Website: Marcela Gómez Twitter: Marcela Gómez Subscribe to our podcast + download each episode on Stitcher, iTunes, and Spotify.This episode was produced and managed by Podcast Laundry.
Being a performer at the age of 11 is no easy feat. But for local rising star Gizelle, aka Miss G, on stage is where she feels most at home. The Mossel Bay-based and Centurion-born starlet has just returned from a trip to the States, where she took part in the International Modeling and Talent Association (IMTA), the largest talent convention in the world. It is here that she was scouted and invited to walk the runway for renowned designer Amelia Tuu at New York Fashion Week on 11 September.
Martin Bester and the team spoke about an 11-year-old South African model who will be walking during New York Fashion Week this year. According to her agent and her parents, it is Gizelle's passion, but some believe she might be too young.
On this podcast episode, Mr O is out (so please be patient and understanding with our lower quality production), so Miss H and her friend Miss G will be here to discuss Season 9 Episode 17 of 90 Day Fiancé. On this Episode, we've got the rest of the weddings as Jibri and Miona have arch drama, Emily and Kobe try to keep a secret, Bilal and Shaeda have to do everything three times, and Patrick and Thais have a guy in a Gucci tracksuit marry them. Miss H and Mr O will both be back next week to cover the Tell All (if there is one, no previews were shown). If you watch Love After Lockup, check out our other podcast channel Love After Lockup Haha, mmkay. New episodes have started so we'll be covering them there https://lalmmkay.podbean.com/ If you like what you hear, please support us by subscribing and give us a rating. We also welcome constructive feedback at 90daymmkay@gmail.com.
Listen to Miss G tell her tales of her time in-between the sheets
Listen to Miss G and her tales of her time inbetween the sheets.
Today I'll be chatting with the lovely Miss G and how she got started in the industry.
My fist 2 grade Writing project. Thank you Miss G.
Today's episode goes over Miss G's progress (coming along nicely with humorous things as always) and then a discussion about a not uncommon problem in dogs who retrieve formally - mouth issues. This can be a lot of dropping, holding by a thread, crunching down on what is being carried, not releasing, etc. Before attacking the symptom of the problem head on, it's usually best to step back and realize you're looking at a symptom of a problem. It's always a good idea to try and figure out where the problem started and how. That can help you design an approach to address it if you can. Audiobook is in the hands of the Audible folks. When they release it, it will be available on iTunes, Audible, with a link on my website: www.Batesworks.net The book Training the Pointing Labrador is also for sale on the website and this podcast is linked as well. People interested in training can fill out their information and express their interest on the website as well. I'm working (albeit slowly) to get it up and functioning very interactively... so please be patient.
Een bevlogen dame die zichzelf heeft ontwikkeld tot een inspirerende docent. Golan, ook wel Miss G genoemd, staat dagelijks voor de klas om jongeren van alle culturen te inspireren iets van hun leven te maken, zoals ze zelf ook doet. Naast haar activiteit in de klas schrijft ze ook graag over haar ervaringen en meer. Ze deelt haar visie en geeft ons een kijkje in haar werkwijze. Voor iedereen die werkt met jongeren een gesprek vol weetjes en anekdotes om uit te putten. Meer van Golan: https://www.linkedin.com/in/golanm/
The latest on Miss G, Training the Pointing Labrador will be coming out in Audiobook form, and in this episode, we go over some approaches to training problems. How do you look at them, how do you decide what caused them and then come up with a good, effective approach to eliminate them?
A little update on where Miss G is these puppy days and then we discuss ways to prepare our dogs and ourselves for their competitive adventures. Complication is approach is usually not nearly as successful and simplicity in approach, so we discuss ways to get our dogs and ourselves ready after paying hefty entry fees... It's not as hard as you think.
My guest for this podcast is someone I had not worked with before, but our paths had crossed. She is originally from Montreal and currently resides in Newfoundland. She is also the co-founder and administrator of the largest EXGO site on Facebook with 8.1K members, The Official Club Med EXGO Facebook Group, everyone, Miss G.A! G.A. recounts one of the best of not THE best G.M. to G.O. stories I've ever heard that takes places in 1989 in Club Med Martinique. I don't want to spoil a minute of this amazing story so you'll really have to listen if you want to hear more and man, is it worth it! G. A. also co-founded Kitchen 4 Missions along with EXGO Katie McGowan and the description for K4M is below: Kitchens 4 Missions (K4M) was sparked by Anthony's Bourdain's loss to his battle with depression. The suicide of this culinary hero drew attention to mental health challenges not just within the hospitality industry, but the world over. Knowing that 1 in 5 Canadians will be faced with a mental health crisis in any given year, yet stigma and limited access to care means many won't get the help they need, K4M emerged to help meet this need. Through our "food philanthropy" event, we work to raise funds for accessible counselling services and normalize conversations about mental wellness. If you'd like to know more, please visit the link below: www.kitchens4missions.com
In today's episode, I tell on Miss G and all the things she's doing this week. We also break down 4 listener questions about the training of a puppy at this age, centered on when to begin 'discipline', live bird introduction, the real purpose of basic obedience and why working on retrieving is so important.
In today's episode, we talk about how Miss G makes me have to think a lot about what we're doing; outlandish behavior on the walk and retrieves without any return. We also discuss how the training aspects now are important to future behaviors, so it helps to keep in mind how quickly these little guys learn and grow.
On this episode, Brittany and Sara interview, Miss G, an energy healer, healing movement practitioner, teaching artist, and performing artist. We learn more about REIKI, and how Miss G uses her background in dance and healing to promote mental wellness in creative and holistic ways. If you are interested in booking a REIKI session with Miss G: Web: www.alightmovement.com/reiki IG: @alightmovement Facebook: www.facebook.com/AlightMovement If you are interested in shopping Miss G's line of REIKI-infused jewelry: Web: www.alightmovement.com/shop IG: @alighthealing Mindful Grooving Podcast - An Egun Artist Collective Production Hosted & Produced By: Brittany Harlin (@brittanyharlin) Sara Maslanka (@goodstuffsara) Music Provided By: Kenneth Leftridge Mateo Mendoza Boyang Matsapola Josh Luis For more Mindful Grooving, follow us on Instagram! @mindfulgrooving Check out our new website!!! www.egunartist.org Movement & Wellness Classes with Brittany & Sara: www.egunartists.org/academy --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mindfulgrooving/message
Meet Kelly Griffin! Most of her 500 students call her Miss G!! Miss G rocks the schoolhouse by teaching social-emotional and character development skills at an elementary school in San Diego. She has a master’s degree in elementary education from Rockhurst University (back home in the Midwest) and a certification in Social-Emotional and Character Development from Rutger’s University online program. She is the co-creator of a program that provides universal SEL instruction to all students. Miss G is passionate about emotional literacy! In today’s world, she believes it is more important than ever. Much of what she does is give a voice to the emotional lives of her students. She builds community and helps create a space where students feel emotionally safe, connected and cared for. This is where the magic happens. Walls come down, hearts open up and students can express their feelings and connect as human beings. These are moments of growth, moments of change that create ripples in our school--ripples of belonging. As said best by L.R. Knost, “It is not our job to toughen children up to face a cruel and heartless world. It’s our job to raise children who will make the world a little less cruel and heartless.” Much of her focus right now is on how her students are feeling. She imagines something roller-coaster-ish…When those feelings of anxiety, loneliness and frustration come up, we tend to conceal them rather than feel them. But this only holds us back, when we name our emotions and acknowledge them we can then figure out coping strategies on how to manage them (Marc Brackett, Permission To Feel).
The boys head out to DomLife and Celebrate Weed_perfect 10k followers party. We touch basis with the MMJ community with interviews with Tangie Angie, Dr.Zane, Hempful Farms, MTC3D Printing, Miss G, Keeping It Blunt with Shalena and much more! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/roachclippodcast/support
I let students socialize the first day of school. Read on to find out why… After reading this important article by Write On with Miss G (which I highly recommend you read), I thought back to my first day of school, last year. https://writeonwithmissg.com/ Here's what's written in my plan book 8/14/2017: introduce self, read My Name by Sandra Cisneros, go over routines/procedures and record names. The last activity, “record names” ended up being brilliant. Originally, I just planned to record names of students who felt their name was hard to pronounce with the voice recorder app on my iPhone. I wanted to make sure I pronounced my students' names correctly. https://amandawritenow.com/what-im-doing-the-very-first-day-of-school-might-surprise-you-and-why-you-should-try-it-too/
Thank you for listening! Please leave us a 5-star rating and review. What do you need for the first day of school? These syllabus strategies! We especially appreciate feedback of what you liked and suggestions of topics you'd like to hear discussed. We are husband and wife educators in So Cal and we also are an interracial couple and our personal and professional experiences inform and shape our views on education, and we want to share them with you. And as we said earlier, we want to hear back from you! Join us as we break down the issues, resources and actions you need to understand to maximize the time you spend covering your syllabus in the first days of school Klein ISD blog article on Syllabus ideas Klein ISD's Twitter Make a copy of the 4 Corners Game Slide Deck Write On with Miss G blog article --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/because-were-teachers/message
Véronique reçoit Nathalie Paré de Miss Gâteaux, une entreprise établie au Lac St-Jean depuis 7 ans. Elle te raconte son parcours et comment elle s'adapte avec son offre de produits. Un parcours inspirant et la réalité d'être en région. Pour poursuivre la conversation, viens nous rejoindre sur le groupe Facebook. Pour suivre Nathalie : Site web Facebook Instagram ---- Pour suivre Véronique : Site web Facebook Instagram Pinterest
Vil tidligere straffedømte ha en fordel som politi? Gutta i Oslo fengsel diskuterer fengselsmyter. Geir deler sine erfaringer med å sone i Nederland, Preben kommer med tips til deg som skal møte i retten og Miss G snakker med fengselsleder Nils Leyell Finstad om taushetsplikt bak murene.
Ava Gardner saves this picture. There's no question that without her, it would have gone down in the annals of cringeworthy productions. Forget about the Spanish Civil War and a bounty on priests. Instead, read this picture as an allegory for how Hollywood wasted her in simple sexy dame parts. At the end, I read a brief passage from Mearene Jordan's book Living with Miss G. Mearene lived with Ava for decades as her friend and personal assistant.
Nomad Casey Sheppard travels across the US in search of rare and interesting art & bike communities. Through curiosity and a talent to connect with strangers, she is able to see into the heart of others witnessing the inner workings of community. A Nebraska native, Casey is a self-taught award winning metalsmith, who has exhibited worldwide. Her jewelry has been featured in American Craft Magazine, Art Jewelry Magazine, Crafthaus and more. She is also a freelance writer. While in Los Angeles, Casey worked with headdress maker Miss G and jeweler Michael Schmidt Studios. She was trained at Bestia, in classic cocktails, by Julian Cox. Having her Level 1 IMBA (International Mountain Biking Association) ICP (Instructor Certification Program) Certification, Casey has also coached with Kat Sweet and Rebecca Rusch. Casey lectures professionally about her travels, art and life. She is also a brand ambassador for like-minded companies Biolite, Big Agnes, Zuke’s and Fearless Women of Dirt. She continues to live in her portable home/studio “Jones….Full of Grace” traveling with her metalsmithing studio, India the Adventure Dog and mountain bike, Skidmark.
本专辑Miss主要介绍一些音标的故事,绝密级,喜欢的话,欢迎订阅,关注主播Miss哟!微信/qq:1035354770
Episode 85: Middle School Drama Teacher Alana Gushuliak-Soldan What is it like to teach Middle School drama? Alana Gushuliak-Soldan became a middle school drama teacher because that was the job available. But now five years later she's still at it and love it. She's come along way in those five years, listen to her story. Show Notes Vignette Plays Florida State Thespian Festival Episode Transcript Welcome to TFP, The Theatrefolk Podcast. I am Lindsay Price, resident playwright for Theatrefolk. Hello, I hope you're well. Thanks for listening. Okay. Here we are at Episode 85. You can catch the links for this episode in the show notes at theatrefolk.com/episode85. So, what is it like to teach middle school drama? Right. Alana Gushuliak-Soldan – kids call her “Miss G” – became a middle school drama teacher because, well, that was the job that was available. I've got to tell you, the more I talk to middle school teachers, the more common this situation is. And, if you're one of those folks out there sort of in the wilderness, not quite sure where to turn, you know, this podcast is for you because, five years later, Alana is still at it and she loves it and she's come a long way in those five years – like, mistakes and triumphs galore. So, okay. So, let's listen to her story! Okay. I'm going to talk in the story because, you know, it wouldn't be much of a conversation with just one person speaking. That would be a podcast monologue. You can listen. I'm going to talk, okay? That's… Now I'm digressing. But, okay, here's our conversation with two people. Stop digressing! Lindsay: Hello, everybody! Thank you for joining us on the Theatrefolk Podcast today. I am really happy to talk to Alana Gushuliak-Soldan. How are you? Alana: I'm well. Thank you very much. Lindsay: Awesome. Thank you for joining me today. And, first off, tell everybody where you are in the world. Alana: I am at a school called Dr. Donald Massey in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Lindsay: Awesome. Canadians represent. We love that. And what level do you teach? Alana: I teach grade seven, eight, and nine. Lindsay: Oh! So, that's a neat junior high, middle school level. It actually includes grade nine, huh? Alana: That's right, yeah. The school is K through nine – kindergarten through grade nine – but we have probably about a quarter of our students are junior high aged. Lindsay: Yeah, cool! And how long have you been a teacher? Alana: Five years. Lindsay: Ahh! And what made you choose to be teacher? Why did you decide to do this? Alana: My father was a teacher and I grew up overseas in a country called Papua New Guinea. So, schooling was quite different. I went to an international school but had fantastic teachers. And then, we traveled around the world for a year, backpacking with my family, and did correspondence at that time, and got to really appreciate my dad's teaching style. And then, moved back to Canada in sort of our junior high years, and I have just wanted to share the world, I guess. I wanted to… I'm excited about the world and how it works and how big it is, and teaching seemed to be a great place to share that. Lindsay: Well, how wonderful that you actually got to see the world. Did you realize how wonderful and lucky that was when you were experiencing it? Alana: I think my parents took me at a really good age. I moved first when I was five and the culture in Papua New Guinea is so completely different. I mean, you're living in the rainforest on a house that is on stilts and, you know, school is cancelled because the weather is too hot as opposed to too cold. Lindsay: The complete difference from where you are now, right? Alana: Exactly! Exactly. So, I think that I understood how different it was. And then, the country went into a civil war and that's when we left and I think that helped me realize how safe most of our lives are in most countries and that, you know,
Special Set TRIBUTE TO MISS G Playlist: http://www.troublej.com/ New Compilation of Groovecafe Selected by Cristian Trouble J. COVERED IN THE LOUNGE EDITION - Buy on ITUNES ONLY 9,99 € http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?id=296637888 Support Groovecafe Podacast - Use Paypal Donate on http://www.groovecafe.it