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Showing posts from April, 2012

Spa Treatment

The attendance at the last day of the conference was sparse, so the president of NESA cancelled the closing session. We heard an excellent keynote speaker, Tim Burns, speaking on current brain research and how that should inform our teaching. I then attended two rather mediocre workshops - Goal Setting in Writer's Workshop & Helping Students Read Non-Fiction Texts. I met Patty and Chris for lunch at a terrific outdoor cafe before going to an unexpectedly wonderful spa experience at the Intercontinental that I had booked the day before. After a good pedicure, I was offered time on the heated tile reclining chairs in the "relaxation room' before taking time in the sauna, then steam room and finally a rainforest shower - HEAVEN! I floated back to the hotel to meet up with Jeff and Cole who had finally toured the Ancient Agora. We met Letty, the Camponeschi's and Meg for dinner at Hard Rock Cafe, taking a cab back in an unexpected rainshower.

Paying the price for .....

Julie and I, too tired from the late night before, bagged the early keynote speaker; instead meeting at a coffee shop before walking over to the conference hall around noon. I love being an adult. Jeff and I attended an unusually blatant recruiting session by the American School of Doha and were quite interested as it appears there is not a strict age limit. I then attended a good workshop on bringing picture books alive and learned new ways  to engage students in read-alouds. Afterwards we went back to our hotel to spruce up for the NESA "gala" dinner and Greek dancing, while Cole went out on the town alone for a spaghetti dinner. Jeff and I danced a few Greek folk dances, then headed home early - exhausted.

Celebrating Greek Style

We were up early to get to the institutes that began bright and early at 8:30 AM. I went to Georgia Heard's class on Enhancing Reading Comprehension Through Poetry - and she is the master. Julie joined me for the afternoon session because it was so good. By 1:00 we were free to roan the city. We joined the Camponeschi's to try to use up the remaining parts of our Acropolis tickets that allowed us to see several other sites. Ancient Agora was closed (again) but we enjoyed trolling the Monastiraki flea market, the original Olympic Stadium and Hadrian's Gate, the National Garden. Afterwards, we went back to the hotel to clean up for a good dinner  to celebrate Julie's birthday. Before dinner we went to an intimate gathering for a fantastic concert of piano and violin featuring pieces by Fritz Kriesler, Mozart and Prokofiev. The musicians were from Austria and very good. After a culture-starved 6 months in KSA, this was heaven. Drinks before dinner (tsipouro) at Strofi&#