World in the Satin Bag

World in the Satin Bag

Learning: Whose Responsibility is it?

While perusing my RSS feeds I noticed a post by L. E. Modesitt, Jr. about teaching and students and whose responsibility it is to learn. Modesitt makes a valid point by stating: The responsibility for learning has been quietly but dramatically shifted over the past two generations. Long years ago, when I was in school, and longer years ago, when my parents and grandparents were in school, the responsibility was very clear. Regardless of the circumstances, the student was the one who was responsible for learning, and the teacher was responsible for teaching. Today, everywhere I look, and everywhere the teachers in my family look, the responsibility for both has been placed on the teacher. Today, teachers must inspire; they must create the atmosphere in which children will learn; they must create a climate where student self-esteem promotes learning. Everything must be positive, despite the fact that, outside of school, life has a tendency to provide far more sticks than carrots, and that “life lessons” can be brutal. Interestingly enough, I agree wholeheartedly with this. Teachers have become responsible for producing results in students, but the reality is that students should be more responsible for their learning (and it is the job of parents to make sure their children are responsible). Once you get into college it becomes crystal clear where the responsibility sits, because professors don’t give a flying fig about whether you succeed or not (well, if they like you they do); they are there to teach and if you aren’t willing to learn, that’s not their problem (some professors are exceedingly open to discussion though, and are not fascists who aren’t willing to help you better understand).Modesitt goes on to talk about why students have little motivation, remarking that, “[it] has gotten to the point where most students take little or no responsibility for learning, particularly if the subject is difficult or ‘boring.’” While I agree with Modesitt on the basic principle, I think something should be said about why students lack that motivation. It isn’t just that the subjects are boring; they, too, feel that the subjects are of little interest, and in a way they are right. To those of us who have an education (mine is almost exclusively within the arts) understand the importance and value of that education (with exception to the occasional thing that I know I will never use again).But imagine how kids who are learning a wide range of subjects feel about those subjects. How many of them are actually going to want to become biologists or chemists or historians? Most people don’t head off to college to advance themselves, sometimes for good reason, or at least what seem like good reasons to them. “I’m never going to use geometry.” “When am I ever going to need chemistry and biology if I’m going to be a contractor?”I’m not saying that this sort of mentality is right, but I do understand it. I also understand why the burden has been placed on teachers. Too many of our students don’t care, even the intelligent ones who could very well become leaders in this country, or in the world. We have to get to the bottom of why they aren’t enthusiastic about learning. Do their lives at home influence their interest in learning? I imagine that the environment a student lives in will have significant impacts on his/her education, and here I leave out the obvious instances of home environments that are not conducive to learning (exceedingly abusive parents, child molestation, kidnapping, etc.).I don’t know if Modesitt is suggesting that teachers stop playing an active role in getting their students interested, but if so, I think that will be a disservice to society as a whole. I do understand where Modesitt is coming from and I do agree, but when it comes down to it if we just sit back and say “we’re not going to push you to be interested” we will end up with an entire generation of kids that fit into the following: Don’t know anything and realize it. Don’t know anything and don’t care. Don’t know anything, but think they know a lot of things. Don’t know anything, but don’t know what to do about it because they don’t know anything, or they feel that it’s too late. Don’t know anything and have no drive whatsoever to do anything productive. Insert your own version here. We need scientists. We need teachers. We need literary enthusiasts and educated people in this country. The fact is that we can’t rely on students to become enthusiastic about certain subjects on their own. We can’t rely on students to become interested in advanced education without a little push. Something has to give, and unfortunately with the majority of parents not playing an active role in their children’s lives (or playing a negative active role by effectively attempting to dislodge or deconstruct what their children are learning) we have to lean on teachers (and this is short of making public policy that dictates how people teach their children, which would, in my opinion, be a significant breach of civil rights). Teachers are our mediating factors and until such time as parents or students become more involved on their own we are going to rely on teachers to do what has to be done to keep this country competitive and educated (to the best of our ability).

World in the Satin Bag

Vote No on Prop 8

If you want to protect marriage, then don’t vote for a constitutional amendment that will actually destroy legal marriages. That’s right, all those people who got married when the courts turned over the ban on gay marriage will effectively be forcibly stripped of their marriages all because a few people are upset at the prospect of homosexuals being able to share the same rights. What 8 will do is put the government into a position in which it will interfere in our personal lives and strip people of their rights and of their marriages. Think about that while you’re considering how to vote. Are you willing to tell homosexual married couples that they can no longer be married because you don’t like their marriage? Not just from the comfort of your own home, but to their faces. If you’re not willing to tell these people straight up that they can’t be married because you say so, then why are you voting for 8? Vote no on Prop 8. Let’s be fair here. The fact is that marriage hasn’t been threatened one bit by homosexual marriages. Not once. Look into it. Thousands of homosexuals have been married since the change, and has marriage been damaged? Nope. Not at all. Just think about what you’re doing when you vote yes on 8. Think real hard about it. Because you are contributing to the historical and social discourse of hate depending on how you vote. That is all. (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this!)

World in the Satin Bag

Guidelines: An Editorial Nightmare

Being a writer who wants to be published in a legit publication, I have always spent a considerable amount of time mulling over the guidelines of a magazine I want to submit to. There are a lot of obvious reasons for doing this, but the most important reason, for me, is to make sure that my submission is properly formatted, is submitted correctly, and fits into the magazine or anthology’s theme or editorial direction–maybe those are the only real reasons for reading guidelines.But now that I’m editing a magazine–well, it’s turning out to be more of a journal than a magazine, to be honest–I’ve discovered that I must be a minority among writers. I don’t know what it is, but since opening up submissions to the general public we’ve been hit with a series of submissions that simply weren’t correct. One submission was from a 45-year-old woman from Argentina who wanted payment through Western Union. The problem? SBS Magazine only accepts submissions from writers under the age of 25 (and we’re a tad lenient on that age, but not lenient enough to add a year to it). To top it off, we specifically stated in our very organized guidelines that payment is made through Paypal. Another fellow submitted to the wrong email address while responding to an ad that I had put up. I emailed him back and told him to read the guidelines to figure out where to submit to.And this has made me want to give a little advice to folks out there wanting to submit to a magazine or journal somewhere: Read the guidelines. They’re not put there to be pretty. Editors want you to read them and submit properly for a lot of reasons. Don’t assume that your submission that doesn’t follow the guidelines will be so good that the editors will ignore that you’ve not followed guidelines and publish it anyway. In fact, of the submissions that have been sent to us that didn’t follow guidelines, we rejected them without reading them, and other editors do this too–and we’re pretty lenient. True, SBS Magazine isn’t Analog or F&SF, and we don’t have thousands of submissions a month, but the guidelines aren’t that hard to read and there are certain things we’re not willing to be lenient on–like age. But editors at bigger magazines won’t read your submission at all if it’s off target–say submitting a poem to a magazine that only publishes fiction. They don’t have the time or patience for you if you can’t even read the guidelines. Editors aren’t trying to be mean an anal when they reject your manuscript because it doesn’t follow guidelines. Most, if not all, magazine editors have a certain direction they want the magazine to go. Analog only publishes hard SF and nonfiction essays on certain aspects of science that might be of interest to readers of the magazine. Other magazines have a wider audience, or at least have no genre specifications, but look for certain types of writing as opposed to any type. So, if your submission doesn’t fit what they’re trying to publish, you’re actually wasting the editor’s time, and they don’t like that one bit. It’s not a matter of being the cranky old editor. Some of the more popular magazines get hundreds, if not thousands of submissions every month. They have to reply to each of them–usually with a form rejection. Can you imagine going through a few hundred manuscripts every month? Don’t be an ass. If the editor rejects your manuscript, don’t do any of the following: Write back explaining why your manuscript wasn’t up to par. Write back arguing with the editor over their choice to reject you. Write back with some sort of snarky remark, such as “I guess your magazine doesn’t publish highly metaphorical literary fiction.” Flame the editor for rejecting you on your blog. If you want to be taken seriously, act professional. Unless an editor has done something morally objectionable, leave it be. Send the editor a mean letter. Hopefully that all makes sense. The biggest thing is to read the guidelines. Seriously.

World in the Satin Bag

Prop 8: A Thought

For those of you who think that voting yes on Prop 8 is not the equivalent to hate, try exchanging “same-sex marriages” or “interracial marriages” or “black marriages” or “non-Christian marriages,” etc. Any way you look at this, to remove someone’s right to marriage is an act of hate. And to those idiots who keep putting up the ads for Prop 8 that claim that gay marriage will be taught in schools: has it ever occurred to you that your kids are already being taught about homosexuals anyway and that there’s absolutely nothing you can do about that? Making the argument you are making is basically saying you want to put your kids’ heads in the sand like ostriches. And then what happens when they go into the real world and find out that things aren’t this rosy heterosexuals-only world? No matter how you look at this, gay marriage is going to become a reality eventually. If we ban it now it’s only a matter of time before we unban it. You can fight it all you want, but you’re going to lose. And while you are fighting it rational people are associating you with the same people that believed that God mandated them to keep blacks as slaves or to maintain segregation. Heterosexuality is not the supreme sex just as white is not the supreme race. That is all. (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this!)

World in the Satin Bag

Short Story Review: “The Ships Like Clouds, Risen By Their Rain” by Jason Sanford

Mr. Sanford sent me a copy of his short story some time back when he was holding a contest for a subscription of Interzone and I had intended to review it back then, but am only getting to it now. “The Ships Like Clouds, Risen By Their Rain” (“Ships” from this point forward) is a truly bizarre piece of speculative fiction. Science fiction meets fantasy meets weird. It takes place on a world ravaged by weather patterns driven by bizarre ships in the sky. Small settlements of people have slowly built their cities on top of older buildings, rising higher and higher as the storms constantly shift water and mud around, burying the markers of people long gone. Without giving too much away, I can say I enjoyed “Ships.” For such a short piece I think it did a remarkable job of presenting Sanford’s ability at world building. World building is generally one of those things that is exceedingly difficult in short fiction, but somehow Sanford managed to give me a good idea what his world is about without giving everything away. I genuinely want to see more of this world. How did the world in “Ships” end up like this? How long has it been this way? What is the future of the people not mentioned? What is the future for the ships? I think one thing I took away from it that had nothing to do with the actual story was a better sense of my own writing, particularly an alleviation of concerns I had regarding my experimentations with style, story, and plot. Sanford has created a fascinating piece that I think is a fine example of what speculative short fiction can be. I know, this sounds like I’m just plugging Mr. Sanford, which isn’t my intention here (sort of). I simply think that this is a terrific story with a fantastic, if not unique, vision. It puts Sanford in a category of people I admire and perhaps hope to be like–not in the sense of imitation, but in the sense of rising to that level. And he’s in good company (Tobias S. Buckell is on that list, along with John Scalzi, Paul Genesse, and a handful of other fine writers). For those interested in reading “Ships,” check out the August 2008 edition of Interzone. If Sanford’s story is any indication of the quality of fiction in Interzone, I expect many more great things from this British magazine–they’re going in the right direction for me.

World in the Satin Bag

Video Found: Star Wars A Capella (Solo A Capella)

I’ll let the video speak for itself (it’s a little rocky in the beginning, so give it enough time to get into the music). And yes, I do think this is one of the coolest things ever done for Star Wars. Edit: Forgot to say I got this from SF Signal. (Don’t click the read more, there isn’t any more after this!)

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