Monday, October 21, 2013

Letter from Betty for October 2013

Hello,


We are in the midst of an exciting, yet busy time of year for high school juniors and seniors. Juniors are patiently waiting the results of their PSAT scores and while many have already started prep for the SAT and/or ACT, others will start in mid-December or the first of the year. Seniors are completing early admissions college applications to meet the November 1st deadline. They are also visiting various college campuses so they will be better prepared to gauge where they will complete their undergraduate studies.


Good luck to all upperclassmen while you journey through the maze of the college application process. If there is anything we can do to make the process more positive and less stressful, please let us know.

If you haven't seen our College Wall yet, please stop by for a look. New pennants are added to it frequently to recognize and honor past FFL students and the colleges they attend. This year's additions include: Boston College, James Madison University, Skidmore College, William Paterson University, Michigan University, and Washington and Lee. Congratulations, graduates!


Best Regards,

Betty Bodenweiser

Test Schedules for October 2013

SAT, ACT and SSAT Schedules




How Helen Keller Learned

We know that there are different types of learners and different ways to learn, but the life of Helen Keller is an amazing example of creative instruction and how a ferocious desire to learn can break down barriers and take a student to great heights. Helen Keller (June 1880–June 1968) was a remarkable woman who overcame tremendous personal barriers to become a celebrated American author, political activist, and humanitarian.

Though she is remembered as being deaf, dumb, and blind, she actually was born with the ability to see and hear but lost those senses when she became ill and developed a very high fever when she was just 19 months old. She was closed off from the world except through her sense of touch, and her parents lost their ability to communicate with their daughter. Over time, she developed signs that she could use to “talk” with her family, but because she was so isolated her behavior became very unruly and unmanageable. Just imagine what it was like, how frustrating it was for her to be unable to see or hear the world around her, or to speak or hear the voices of her family.


In 1886, Helen’s mother read a story by Charles Dickens about another deaf/blind woman named Laura Bridgman who was successfully taught to interact with the world. Helen was sent to Baltimore for an evaluation and then was referred to Alexander Graham Bell (the inventor of the telephone, shown with Helen in the photo here), who was working with deaf children at the time. Bell referred Helen to a special school for the blind and there was assigned to recent graduate, Anne Sullivan. Sullivan, who herself was visually impaired, began using a series of techniques to break down the walls that kept Helen so isolated within herself. Endlessly repeating a series of finger motions on the palms of the Helen’s hands (who was extremely frustrated by this exercise) and alternatively running cool water over her hands, Helen excitedly understood the connection between the fingertip touch on her palm and the cool liquid. Anne finally got through to her and Helen learned the idea/symbols for “water.” From there, Helen frantically demanded the names of all the familiar objects, and her world suddenly expanded. A 49-year relationship with Sullivan began.


Together, Anne and Helen moved to Massachusetts to receive schooling from the Perkins Institute for the Blind and then moved to New York to attend the Wright-Humason School for the Deaf and the Horace Mann School for the Deaf. In 1900 they returned to Massachusetts and Helen was admitted to Radcliffe College, where she became the first deaf/blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree.

Helen’s education did not stop there. She was determined to communicate with others as conventionally as possible, to expand her reach to other people, so Anne Sullivan, still at her side, developed a technique where Helen could use her fingertips to touch Anne’s nose, mouth and throat to feel the different vibrations that different letters and words make. In this way, Helen learned to “hear” and use her own voice to communicate. Wanting to expand her experience even further, she was determined to understand music, and with the patient assistance of the Zoellner Quartet, a highly acclaimed chamber music group originally from Brooklyn, New York, Helen spent hours sitting near the group while they played, touching her fingertips to a nearby tabletop so she could feel the resonant vibrations. In this way, Helen learned about the different musical notes, how the notes worked together and combined with rhythm and pacing, allowing her to “hear” and understand chamber music.

Helen went on to lecture and give speeches advocating for services for the deaf/blind community, workers rights, women’s rights, and women’s health, and is also credited as being a co-founder of the ACLU.


“I long to accomplish a great and noble task, but it is my chief duty to accomplish humble tasks as though they were great and noble. The world is moved along, not only by the mighty shoves of its heroes, but also by the aggregate of the tiny pushes of each honest worker.” ~Helen Keller

“Literature is my Utopia. Here I am not disenfranchised. No barrier of the senses shuts me out from the sweet, gracious discourses of my book friends. They talk to me without embarrassment or awkwardness.” ~ Helen Keller

“The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched. They must be felt within the heart.” ~ Helen Keller

For further reading on the amazing life of Helen Keller:

The Story of My Life: With Her Letters (1887-1901) and a Supplementary Account of Her Education, Including Passages... by Helen Keller and Annie Sullivan (Jul 24, 2011)

Helen Keller (Scholastic Biography) by Margaret Davidson and Wendy Watson (Apr 1, 1989)

And here is a great video from a 1930 newsreel of Helen Keller and her teacher Anne Sullivan:


The Puzzler: Five Famous Americans

Helen Keller met and touched and befriended many famous Americans.

QUESTIONS: Can you name all five famous Americans shown with Helen Keller in the photos below?

1.
















2.












3.












4.












5.












Recognize these five famous Americans? Answers next month!








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LAST ISSUE'S PUZZLER: Planet Tri-Gravito, with ANSWER

On the very strange planet of Tri-Gravito the Yellowers, Reddians and Blueys live on three different planes of gravity. Each group's floor is the next group's wall. It is very confusing and even dangerous for everyone. An emergency plan has been proposed that all residents should wear brightly colored yellow, red or blue outfits in order to avoid severe injury. As you can see here, only the leader from each group is wearing the colored safety uniforms. The entire population of 15 people is visible in the picture.

QUESTION:
How many more of each color uniform (yellow, red, and blue) are needed?


For the answer, scroll down...









ANSWER: 4 more yellow, 5 more red, and 3 more blue uniforms.


This intriguing work of art, minus the colors, is "Relativity" from 1953, by M.C. Escher. More works by Escher may be found here.