Revisionist Poetry – I knew a God…, v3: A more narrative version

Before I knew a god there was a river,its pulse a promise. I moved toward that cadence;the lark took the promise in its throatand gave me a first, clear song.Before I knew a god there was a star,spilling small iron-lit pages across the dark.I read until the night turned colour —no hand stopped me from … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – I knew a God…, v3: A more narrative version

The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Making and Installing Handmade Tiles by Angelica Pozo

Angelica Pozo’s Making and Installing Handmade Tiles sits at an interesting crossroads: part technical manual, part artist’s manifesto, and part visual essay. The book announces itself as a practical companion for the person at the wheel or the trowel, but its most enduring achievement is how it insists that technique and meaning are inseparable. The … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Making and Installing Handmade Tiles by Angelica Pozo

Revisionist Poetry – I knew a God…, v2

I knew a God…Some river before me —I followed its slow rhythm,as if to tell me it might happen:the lark sang its first song.Some star before me —I leaned into the glitter;no one stopped me from seeingthe last, most colourful page.Some rose before me —I turned toward the aroma,with only fate left to pluckthe first … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – I knew a God…, v2

Revisionist Pedagogy – Empowering Tomorrow’s Change-makers: Applying Critical Theory in Primary Education, v2

Critical theory — here understood as a set of tools for noticing power, asking who benefits from a given idea, and imagining fairer alternatives — can be translated into developmentally appropriate practice in primary schools. When paired with teacher supports, intentional assessment, and community engagement, it cultivates children who are observant, empathetic, and ready to … Continue reading Revisionist Pedagogy – Empowering Tomorrow’s Change-makers: Applying Critical Theory in Primary Education, v2

The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Fired Up with Raku: Over 300 Raku Recipes. by Irene Poulton

Irene Poulton’s Fired Up with Raku: Over 300 Raku Recipes reads, at first glance, like a practical compendium; read closely, it reveals itself as a meditation on the paradox at the heart of raku work — the persistent human desire to name, measure, and reproduce a process whose aesthetic power depends on chance. She gives … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – Fired Up with Raku: Over 300 Raku Recipes. by Irene Poulton

The Adaptable Educator’s Book Reviews – The Tale of Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter

Beatrix Potter’s The Tale of Peter Rabbit (1902) is a pocket-sized fable whose deceptive simplicity disguises a finely tuned moral and aesthetic practice. Written for children yet animated by the author’s keen observational eye, the tale endures because it compresses a complex set of cultural anxieties — discipline and transgression, class and rural economics, the … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Reviews – The Tale of Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter

The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – The Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe’s The Fall of the House of Usher reads like a concentrated experiment in atmosphere: a short story that refuses to be small, folding psychological pathology, architectural metaphor, and sonic lyricism into a single, inexorable collapse. Poe does not so much tell a tale as stage an experience — one in which language, … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – The Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allan Poe

Revisionist Poetry – The Lay of Copernicus Wiffledown (in iambic tetrameter), v.5

The town still speaks his gentle name,a man of coin and quiet care.He kept a pouch of folded things,and sent them out like softened prayer. They called him Scrooge when snow was thick,not for a sting, but for his lists.He tallied ribbons, numbered bows,and waited for his chosen wrists. That once his pockets had been … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – The Lay of Copernicus Wiffledown (in iambic tetrameter), v.5

The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven” reads like a virtuoso exercise in controlled obsession. In a compact, theatrical narrative of no more than a few hundred lines, Poe engineers an atmosphere so resonant that the poem’s central motifs—loss, memory, and the unanswering voice of doom—saturate the reader long after the final refrain. It is less a … Continue reading The Adaptable Educator’s Book Review – The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe

Revisionist Poetry – The Lay of Copernicus Wiffledown (comedic), v.4

Copernicus Wiffledown was much admired—a well-to-do gentleman with a bulging pouchlike a squirrel’s briefcase, stuffed with oddments:a clock that ran backwards for sentimental people,a rubber chicken for emergencies, a mitten with a pocket,and tins of biscuits stamped “For Immediate Surprise.” They called him the Christmas-Day Scrooge—not for stinginess but for his solemn inventory:he kept a … Continue reading Revisionist Poetry – The Lay of Copernicus Wiffledown (comedic), v.4