The Creative Classroom by Mitchell Lopate, M.A.T. = Academic humanities advising-mentoring, tutoring, writing support: 25 years college & university and middle-elementary education in-class/online with a B.A. in psychology and a masters in education. (PS: it's fun.) Cross-curriculum humanities concepts, career counseling, MBA instruction, composition and research methods, and values, ethics, and writing. “Learn by example, succeed by effort." mitchLOP8@yahoo.com / 840-216*1014
Tuesday, February 6, 2024
Sunday, February 4, 2024
Friday, February 2, 2024
Monday, January 29, 2024
Geometry in 4th grade: SING it. DANCE it!!
Monday, January 15, 2024
Famous Faces in History: Who ARE they? And why you SHOULD know them.
Calling all history majors, English majors, journalists, advertising majors, and marketing reps--and a few instructors too: let's see you solve the puzzle of 16 Famous Faces.
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Here are 16 faces: who's who? (Hint: one just became a royal grandfather again.)
In 1995, I was substitute-teaching and saw a Wall Street Journal. (It's not my normal reading, but it was there.) In it, I saw an advertisement for Dewar's Scotch: these were the images used, and the selling point was something about so few leaders available for such good Scotch. My response: I showed initiative and pro-active thinking BY CALLING THE DEWAR'S ADVERTISING OFFICE AND ASKING TO SPEAK TO WHOMEVER DESIGNED THE AD. I WANTED TO KNOW WHO THREE (3) FACES WERE: I thought I knew 13, and I did. But the last three stumped me--and I wasn't giving up. Not me with my encylopedic-photographic memory. And they obliged me--and I was right about at least one. The other two...now I recognize them.
And there was more. Dewar's sent me a color image of the ad, and I had it framed and hung on the wall for years. I've let it since go, but the significance is in their eyes: who ARE these people, what did they do with their lives to be this important, and why were they selected?
(Another hint: at least 2 had the same position in life and circumstances as the background; two held the same position of service to their country, and two are notorious strategists. Fascinating, isn't it, what you can do when your curiosity does more than just push buttons on a phone?
By the way, this would make an excellent history or education--or marketing! lesson--because of the strategic placement of some of the candidates. It's almost bitter irony in some instances.
Friday, January 5, 2024
Saturday, December 30, 2023
The Value of Literature, Part II
Upton Sinclair’s muckraking masterpiece The Jungle centers on Jurgis Rudkus, a Lithuanian immigrant working in Chicago’s infamous Packingtown. Instead of finding the American Dream, Rudkus and his family inhabit a brutal, soul-crushing urban jungle dominated by greedy bosses, pitiless con-men, and corrupt politicians.
While Sinclair’s main target was the industry’s appalling labor conditions, the reading public was most outraged by the disgusting filth and contamination in American food that his novel exposed. As a result, President Theodore Roosevelt demanded an official investigation, which quickly led to the passage of the Pure Food and Drug laws. For a work of fiction to have such an impact outside its literary context is extremely rare. (At the time of The Jungle’s publication in 1906, the only novel to have led to social change on a similar scale in America was Uncle Tom’s Cabin.)
Today, The Jungle remains a relevant portrait of capitalism at its worst and an impassioned account of the human spirit facing nearly insurmountable challenges.
2. Psychology: heights and depths of human psyche
3. Zoology: study of animals (and relationships to humans)
4. Sociology: social problems and other cultures
5. Geography: other places and habitats; environmental issues
6. Math: reason and deduction
7. Speech: communication
8. Art/music: balance of form, rhythm, and structure
9. Science: laws of nature and cause-and-effect
9. Marketing/Business: Business/economic strategies
Analyzing and interpreting literature helps develop critical thinking skills. The power to analyze problems and make convincing written and oral presentations is a major quality of leadership and general excellence.
Wednesday, December 27, 2023
The Value of Literature: Life Lessons that teach values & cause/effect
* Enables us to recognize achievement of human dreams and struggles from places and times apart from our own.
* Offers valuable testimonies about life experiences that broaden our knowledge.
* Links us with varied base of culture, philosophy, and religious values that comprise our beliefs and ideals.
* Provide resource tools of perspective by using our imagination in ways that a computer or television set can NOT do but our brain is capable: literature sensitizes us with interest, concern, tension, excitement, hope, fear, regret, humor, and sympathy.
* Literature helps shape our judgments through comparison and perception of good and evil (cause-and effect); options, decisions, outcomes.
* Literature teaches us about human nature: Perceptions, feelings, lives, patterns of human existence that are timeless and consistent; motivations that have shaped and altered society for better or worse.
Therefore, literature makes us THINK and stretch our ability to do so!
Monday, December 4, 2023
Things you never knew: the Great Lakes

Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Welcome to Holiday (Horror Day) High School! (A funny look at Grades 9-12)
(PS: After our 50th reunion last year, I stopped by and gave a copy to the current principal.
He had NO idea of these stories. Well...NOW he has homework!!)
Welcome to a new school year! On Amazon.com Kindle or paperback.
Welcome to “Horror Day” High School.
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Meet the Class of ‘67: it’s a typical teenage crowd—with a European, 7’0”, 110-lb. albino “vampire” who sucks the juice out of oranges through a straw, a hairy wolf-boy who howls over tests, the Hulk-in-football pads, a pink lollipop-Valentine girl, a Brainiac, a Halloween Goth-witch, a Christmas surfer girl, and a guy with green skin—and hair!
👻👻👻
It’s really “Holiday High School” in Las Vegas. These are the memoirs of “the Dirt Devils,” the weird-and-wild-ones who “did it their way” enroute to graduation before the fame, notoriety, and legacies of success in business as adults—but not before they turned the world of education on its head.
The boys love monster movies at the drive-in shows, putting cars on top of the auditorium roof for fun, and scaring the opposing football teams with weird cheers—and their appearances. The girls like to dress according to their favorite holiday colors—and keeping up with the mischief.
Join them as they craft bizarre school songs, smoke cigars in empty classrooms, engage in spitball-straw cannon fights, and overall, leave the administration hanging from the ceiling in dismay.
Sunday, October 29, 2023
Saturday, September 9, 2023
Friday, September 1, 2023
Tuesday, August 29, 2023
Monday, August 28, 2023
Saturday, August 26, 2023
Monday, August 21, 2023
Reality is in the mind of the observer
Just remember: perspective (or what you THINK you see) is a matter of what your brain says to your capacity to view an idea, object, or concept. Just because someone says "This is how it is" does not make it real. To that individual, it IS. But the capacity to change one's perspective is just as important.
The story is told of the blind men and the elephant.
There were once six blind men who stood by the roadside every day, and begged from the people who passed. They had often heard of elephants, but they had never seen one; for, being blind, how could they?
It so happened one morning that an elephant was driven down the road where they stood. When they were told that the great beast was before them, they asked the driver to let him stop so that they might see him.
Of course, they could not see him with their eyes; but they thought that by touching him they could learn just what kind of animal he was.
The first one happened to put his hand on the elephant's side. "Well, well!" he said, "now I know all about this beast. He is exactly like a wall."
The second felt only of the elephant's tusk. "My brother," he said, "you are mistaken. He is not at all like a wall. He is round and smooth and sharp. He is more like a spear than anything else."
The third happened to take hold of the elephant's trunk. "Both of you are wrong," he said. "Anybody who knows anything can see that this elephant is like a snake."
The fourth reached out his arms and grasped one of the elephant's legs. "Oh, how blind you are!" he said. "It is very plain to me that he is round and tall like a tree."
The fifth was a very tall man, and he chanced to take hold of the elephant's ear. "The blindest man ought to know that this beast is not like any of the things that you name," he said. "He is exactly like a huge fan."
The sixth was very blind indeed, and it was some time before he could find the elephant at all. At last, he seized the animal's tail. "O foolish fellows!" he cried. "You surely have lost your senses. This elephant is not like a wall, or a spear, or a snake, or a tree; neither is he like a fan. But any man with a particle of sense can see that he is exactly like a rope."
Then the elephant moved on, and the six blind men sat by the roadside all day, and quarreled about him. Each believed that he knew just how the animal looked; and each called the others hard names because they did not agree with him. People who have eyes sometimes act as foolishly.
Wednesday, August 16, 2023
Film Comedy - a lost skill
And finally, there just aren't the same kind of comedy teams working the circuit of theaters because the movie industry itself has changed: the promotion of DVDs and other home entertainment systems have altered the way we view the world.
Wednesday, August 2, 2023
ASL students: learning to communicate in their own unique way
Not everyone has the chance to say directly what he/she feels, thinks, understands, or values.
For these young boys and girls, it's just a matter of finding a different way to share those qualities. They have to use ASL: American Sign Language--because they were born deaf and unable to hear.
But if you listen closely, you can understand every word they are saying.