At
times in our lives we turn invisible corners from knowing to understanding,
from holding-on to letting-go, and we see things for the first
time as they are, not as they should be.
"What a lot of ants!" exclaimed Anteater upon seeing
the tiny black rivulets of text on pages 53-54. "There's my breakfast."
| Anteater |
| Bartholomeus Anglicus, "On the Properties of Things": Owl |
| State of the Art, Transforming Ideas for Teaching and Learning: To Read |
| The Outreach and Technical Assistance Network |
A
person beats me. I look into his eyes and figure out just how it happened,
and silently I let him know that it will not happen again.
Ok, come on.
Now...SIT. No, no, no. I dont want to pet you right now. That
come's after you sit. Can you sit for me Spike? Just like this.
See how Mom is sitting?
A
caring teacher makes learning a joy.
| More information on the
writings of Thoreau and a discussion of American nature writing. |
| Become a Big Brother or Sister |
| Visit other nature
photographers on the web: Amateur Photography |
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