Tag Archives: University of California

Camp Clay

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One of our annual August activities at the Lair of the Golden Bear family camp is playing with clay. Most of the family ends up in the Lair’s Art Grove sooner or later, either to keep my mother (Eleanor Dickinson) company while she is drawing and painting, or to do art of our own. This year, I bought four bisqueware plates at the camp store. (Bisqueware is once-fired clay.) Recruiting Jessica, Matt, Paul, and John, I traced one of each of our hands on a plate.  I painted in between the lines in colored glaze, then covered the whole with clear glaze.* I fired the plates once at camp and then painted over the hands for deeper color and fired them again after vacation at Clay Planet (Santa Clara, California).

My mother mostly painted tiles and sketched in her traveling journal. This year, she painted a special bowl in honor of my son Paul’s 18th birthday. It features images of rock crystals and a large beetle.

* actually, John painted on the clear glaze for me because he smudges less than I do

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Images by Katy Dickinson, Copyright 2010

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Summer Stuff

Summer events:

Jessica fixing her bike photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Jessica is home

Resurrection lilies are blooming photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Resurrection lilies

Camp St. Andrew's Scarf Sunday photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Scarf Sunday

My daughter Jessica had a successful summer being the web intern for the World Organization for Human Rights USA in Washington, D.C. She also worked in a bike shop.

This is the season for roses, resurrection lilies, yarrow, cactus and other heat-loving plants to bloom in my garden.

St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church sent a hundred campers off to Camp Oskie (which for that week becomes Camp St. Andrew’s) at the Lair of the Golden Bear, the University of California at Berkeley Alumni family camp in Pinecrest, California. On Scarf Sunday, everyone comes to church to show off their new St. Andrew’s Camp scarves, tell camp stories, and sing. This year’s theme was Safari so the altar was flanked by a life-sized cardboard tiger and lion. Leopard print was the fashion for the day.

Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

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Peninsula School – A Successful Alternative

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My daughter Jessica is almost done with her first Freshman semester at university. She is very happy and seems to be thriving. Over Thanksgiving, she and five school friends celebrated together by cooking meals for each other at a hotel in Washington, D.C. and playing cards when not cooking or touring the nation’s capital. All of them were California kids who now attend Eastern colleges. Washington D.C. was a convenient meeting place for those who did not go west for the break.

It interested me that four of those who gathered were Jessica’s friends from Peninsula School (Menlo Park, CA), and only one was a High School friend. Jessica attended Peninsula School from age three through 8th grade. Her group called itself the Uns (since they were in neither the Boys’ group nor the Girls’). The bonds of comradery, communication, and trust formed by the Uns from the time they were barefoot little kids making mud pies together in Nursery Blue seem to be holding firm despite the High School and college diaspora. The Uns are still cooking together, using the skills they developed through many class camping trips with Peninsula School. From reading their blogs, these are capable and interesting young adults whose progress I admire.

Peninsula School is a “progressive” or “alternative” school, meaning their focus is on development rather than grades. (Jessica calls Peninsula her “hippie school”.) In fact, Jessica did not get formal grades or take tests until she was in 8th grade and applying to High School. Nonetheless, she was regularly awarded high honors at Harker High School (she was entered into the Cum Laude Society) and is flourishing at Carnegie Mellon University where she is in the Humanities Scholars program and several CMU concert choruses.

With so many schools now teaching to the test and being obsessed with grades from the earliest grammar school years, Peninsula School is a good example of a better way. It is not a perfect choice but no school is. For example, Peninsula was as much the wrong choice for our son (who has serious learning disabilities) as it was a great choice for our daughter. Even though Peninsula was an excellent school for Jessica, it took several years for her Math knowledge to catch up to Harker’s standards. (She is taking Calculus II at CMU next semester.)

Perhaps one of the hardest parts of being a Peninsula parent for 11 years was my quiet fear that Peninsula might be too much of an academic risk. That is, I shared a concern with some other parents that our children would not do well in more conventional schools. However, if my daughter’s Peninsula School class is a representative (if small) example, Peninsula kids can compete very successfully in both standard and world-class rigorous academic environments.

Peninsula School is not the only successful alternative school. There were at least two kids in Jessica’s Harker class who came to the prep school with a very different point of view. Jessica came from Peninsula and her best friend at Harker came from Ananda Living Wisdom school. It was interesting to see how both girls succeeded in the grade-conscious pressure cooker environment of Harker School. Despite their alternative school origins, both girls did well academically and were accepted into good colleges (Carnegie Mellon and U.C. Berkeley). Better still, neither has lost her creative flair, curiosity, or independence.

I was not sure if it was just these two girls who had blossomed from non-standard seed beds until I put together a list of where Jessica’s Peninsula School classmates ended up after High School. From what I can tell, the whole class is now in college:

    • Academy of Art University (San Francisco)
    • Bard College (Annandale-on-Hudson, NY)
    • California College of the Arts (San Francisco and Oakland, CA)
    • Carnegie Mellon University (Pittsburgh, PA)
    • Colorado College (Colorado Springs, CO)
    • Foothill College (Los Altos Hills, CA) 2 going
    • Portland State (Portland, OR)
    • Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI, Troy, NY)
    • Stanford University (Stanford, CA) 2 going
    • Swarthmore College (Swarthmore, PA)
    • University of California at Berkeley (Berkeley, CA)
    • University of California at Davis (Davis, CA) 2 going
    • University of California at Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, CA) 3 going
    • Wesleyan (Middletown, Connecticut)

Pretty good for graduates of a “hippie school”!

Update: Jessica was graduated in 2012 from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh PA, with college and university honors, Phi Beta Kappa.
More on her class: Peninsula School – Grads Doing Well (9 May 2013).

Pictured are Jessica’s 8th grade school play: The Mouse that Roared, and Jessica selling the jewelry she designed.

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Images Copyright 2002 by John Plocher

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UC Berkeley California Centennial features 3 from Sun

UC Berkeley’s alumni magazine, California, recently issued its Centennial Edition, featuring hundreds of Berkeley luminaries. Sun and Berkeley share some particularly bright stars: turning to p.30 you will see a full page photo of John Gage (Sun’s Chief Researcher and Vice President of the Science Office) with Kim Polese (former Sun Java product manager then co-founder of Marimba). Turning to p.104, there is a photo of Eric Schmidt, who hired me when he was Sun’s Software Manager and left after becoming Sun’s CTO to go to Novell and then Google.

Strangely enough, Sun Founder and notable Berkeley alumnus Bill Joy is only mentioned briefly in this issue. Other Cal profiled graduates who did well in the Silicon Valley include Douglas Engelbart, Gordon Moore, and Andrew Grove.

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Interviewing for College at Starbuck’s

My daughter Jessica is now in the last half of her Senior year in High School.  All of nine college applications are in. She just finished her final vocal audition last week and recently participated in two of the final three alumni interviews. She is still trying to arrange a time for that last interview.

Except for those at the university admissions offices, I think all of Jessica’s interviews have been held at Starbuck’s coffee shops. A friend of ours who does alumni interviews for his alma mater says that Starbuck’s is sufficiently public that both the interviewer and candidate feel safe; also, there are lots of Starbuck’s shops around and they are usually easy to find. (I am currently re-reading Moby Dick in which the moral but pliable first mate is named Starbuck. The coffee shop chain is named for him.)

We are still getting letters from schools saying they are missing information already sent. For one school, she sent in her musical profile three times before they acknowledged getting it. I suspect that some schools are not as organized as they require their applicants to be.

We will be happy to be done with waiting to hear back. All of the schools are supposed to give Jessica their acceptance or denial letters by 1 April. One interviewer told her they would say by 15 March. Another school asked her to apply for a binding early admission (she declined). A third college had a professor write her a personal letter about his new program. I think all of this communication means that at least some of Jessica’s applications are well regarded. But I would still like to know for sure. I hate waiting.

We are sending in our 10th week summer Blue Camp Bear’s Lair reservations without knowing whether Jessica will be able to go or if we will have to cut our camping short to move her into a dorm.

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