
Jamie Lee Curtis has it all going on. The Emmy-nominated and Golden Globe-nominated actress, who has appeared in such cinematic blockbusters as True Lies, Trading Places, Halloween, and A Fish Called Wanda, is now a best-selling author of children's books. Where Do Balloons Go? An Uplifting Mystery, released in 2000, was a best seller; her seventh and most recent effort, Is There Really a Human Race?, came out last fall.
Curtis, the daughter of actors Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh, and the wife of actor-director Christopher Guest, may qualify as Hollywood royalty, but she is perhaps most engaged these days as an author and an AIDS activist. She also serves on the board of directors of her son's school in Los Angeles.
One who is patient and makes things -- ideas and history -- come alive in the method they teach it.
I did an oral report on Paul Revere's ride, dressed as a flea from the horse. I got an A+.
A constant fear of knowing that I wasn't very smart.
Private and public. It really is all about the teacher.
I was at the smart-aleck bottom.
I still love history. I love learning about how things were in another time and place.
I would make it multimedia, with an emphasis on experiential learning, and I would use audiovisual tools much more. I was not a good book learner. The texts were so dry and uninteresting.
Life and the constant changing nature it throws you.
I learned that many others feel lost and alone.
I reinforced the adage "First things first."
Orange chicken and Sugar Babies and fruit punch.
Edward Norton.
Links:
[1] http://www.edutopia.org/edutopia-staff
[2] http://www.edutopia.org/pop-quiz-linda-ellerbee
[3] http://www.edutopia.org/pop-quiz-ashley-judd
[4] http://www.edutopia.org/suze-orman
[5] http://www.edutopia.org/randy-nelson-school-to-career-video
[6] http://www.edutopia.org/stw-differentiated-instruction-learning-styles-video
[7] http://www.edutopia.org/martin-scorsese-teaching-visual-literacy-video