Participating in the “Slice of Life” challenge for the first time this month reminded of how important it is to keep the creative well going. It also reminded me of two questions that serve as useful reminders for what matters.
All posts by “Tricia Ebarvia”
Slice of Life 7: The Tyranny of Lists
Even though we had no school on Thursday and Friday thanks to Winter Storm Thor (a name my superhero-crazed sons appreciated), I haven’t gotten much done with the extra time. As much as I enjoy the time off—and the customary sledding, hot chocolate, and pajamas-all-day—I… Read More
Slice of Life 6: Could have been a mathematician (small rant)
Last night, Matthew asked me for help on his math homework. He is in fourth grade, and they are currently working on a unit on division. His end-of-module test was supposed to be this week (we’ve had two snow days), and the review packet included the… Read More
Slice of Life 5: Charlotte
I’ve been reading Charlotte’s Web to the boys, just a chapter or two a few nights a week. Charlotte’s Web was one of my favorites growing up. I didn’t have the words for it back then, but I knew that there was something special about reading… Read More
Slice of Life 4: Can you play narrator?
“Daddy, can you be the narrator?” I hear one of the boys ask my husband. Whenever the boys play together—whether it’s with their Legos, Star Wars figures, or super heroes—they usually assign someone to play the role of the “narrator.”
Slice of Life 3: I am Harrison Bergeron
With the popularity of dystopian literature, I guess it’s only fitting that I find myself sometimes wondering if I do, in fact, life in a dystopian society. And I’m not even referring to the 1984-esque Patriot Act or the Generation Like of Brave New World. And… Read More
Slice of Life 2: I’m sorry, Francis Underwood, you’ll have to wait.
The long-anticipated season 3 of House of Cards was released on Friday. While some of us joked at lunch last week that we’d be glued to our TV sets this weekend, I’m not sure how many of us actually got to spend all that quality time… Read More
Slice of Life 1: Stranger Reading
This year, I rededicated myself to helping students find their “readerly lives.” I actually started to do more independent reading with my students three years ago after I read Readicide, but it wasn’t until this year that I felt like I understood what it really meant to… Read More
Notes from NCTE Annual Convention 2014
Presented at Tredyffrin-Easttown School District Language Arts Standing Committee, February 2015
From the Classroom: Gatsby, Hawthorne, and Being Sixteen
One of the last books I read in 2014 was Gabrielle Levin’s delightful novel, The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry. At one point, the main character—a somewhat odd and sometimes churlish bookseller named A.J. Fikry—tells his daughter to remember that “the things we respond to… Read More

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