50th Wakita High School Biography

 

Karen Kyle Roberts Dahlem
2733 SW 116th Place
Oklahoma City, OK 73170
405-691-2936 (H) 405-503-3224 (C)

John and I have been married 51 years.

We have two children.

Stephanie Lynn Pounds is married to Jeffrey Pounds and they are the parents of Alex and Brian.
 Stephanie, a graduate of OU, is Learning Program Manager at Hewlett-Packard.
 Jeff, a graduate of Florida Institute of Technology and an Air Force veteran, is a captain with Continental Airlines.
 Alex has a degree in Exercise Science and trains professional athletes at one of the three Plex facilities in Houston.
 Brian lives in Austin, is a musician (check out iTunes for his latest), is studying accounting at Texas State at San Marcos and works as an intern with a booking agent.

*Stephen Paul Dahlem is an Emmy award winner and Senior Creative Designer for Dallas based Corporate Magic. He was a performer at Disney World, on Broadway, in Japan and Germany before he went to the creative side of entertainment. His shows have included the Oklahoma Centennial, the Boy Scouts 100th Anniversary, and the grand opening of Opryland and the Dallas Cowboy’s Thanksgiving halftime show for national TV for the last 9 years, (among others).

• I graduated from Enid High School in 1961, Kansas State of Pittsburg with an Arts and Science degree in English in 1967 and a Masters degree in Library Science from Northwestern Oklahoma State University 1972.
I taught English or was library media specialist in Goodland, Kansas, Fairview, Geary and Seiling, OK. In 1984, I was elected as the first full-time Vice President of the Oklahoma Education Association and elected President in 1986. I called the 4 day teacher’s walk-out in 1990 that resulted in the passage of House Bill 1017, the education reform act of 1990. Upon finishing my term in office, I was an elementary library media specialist for 10 years in the Moore, OK district. In 2000, I was hired as the Director of the Teacher Education and Minority Teacher Recruitment Center for the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education. As such, I was liaison with all of the public universities in Oklahoma. I retired in 2008 but was asked to come back as the interim Associate Chancellor of Administration for the State Regents in 2009 and retired again in July of that year. I am now the Executive Director of the Oklahoma DaVinci Institute, Oklahoma’s creativity think tank. I have spent 44 years in education.
I love teaching!! I was teacher of the year in 4 different districts. I was a member of the National Education Board of Directors, the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards and was an original member of the Oklahoma Commission for Teacher Preparation. I was honored as an Outstanding Education Graduate of Northwestern OSU in 2000 and was inducted into the Oklahoma Educator’s Hall of Fame in 2010.
I teach Sunday School, give the children’s sermon nearly every Sunday and sing in the choir at Southern Hills United Methodist Church in OKC. I tutor a 3rd grade Hispanic student in reading every week.
• John retired as principal of Westmoore High School in 2003 after 39 years of coaching and teaching. He then was a realtor for 6 years before re-retiring the same year I retired—2009.
• We love to travel, Turkey, Greece, Egypt, Malta, Spain, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Japan, China. In the states, we visit our children and grandchildren, all Texans,, family in Maryland and California and points in between.

Mystical belief

Kyle as Mystic?  Certainly my beliefs have evolved through my lifetime—as I reflect upon my lifetime of belief, I realize how much it has changed but stayed the same.
I would like to believe that I have had mystical experiences—but I can’t say that in the deepest sense of the word. I am not disciplined enough to be a mystic, but I truly believe that I have had mystical experiences.
My first mystical experience happened when I was in the first grade. On a beautiful, warm spring day in Apache, Oklahoma, I raced home (one block from the school) to change clothes and race back to school. Several friends and I had agreed to return to the playground as quickly as possible. I still remember how excited I was as I raced back to the schoolyard and how surprised to find that no one was there. I had returned before anyone else. OK, I would wait for them (I can’t remember who was suppose to return.).
I sat in the swing and began to kick off. Swinging, swinging—still no one returned. I kicked off again. Swinging, swinging. The swing went slower and slower as I watched my toe dragging in the dirt. Slowly, more slowly barely moving. I remember staring for some time at my foot in the dirt—the swing not moving. Suddenly I had the weirdest sensation of silence—no birds, no cars, no voices—it was verrrrry . eerily silent. I looked up. AsI looked around, there was a glow around the playground as if there was a halo around everything. At that moment, I felt as if I was the only person left on earth—I was totally alone—I was frozen in place but feeling like I was melting into space. I was frightened by the sensation.
Seriously. I don’t remember going home or any of others showing up that afternoon I just remember the almost out-of-body sensation.
I missed the class picnic on the last day of my 4th grade as mother took me to Hobart? (year was that?) where I was unceremoniously placed on a metal table, a rag placed over my face and ether sprinkled on the rag.  You’ve heard this story many times—under the influence of ether! Some would call these dreams—they didn’t feel that way to me. Appendectomy in 1960; anesthesia and back into the same vision as if no time had passed at all—that I had gone from one timelessly to the other.
I often went into the empty church during the week–maybe to get away from everyone. I remember sitting in the balcony room of the Buffalo church. Initially, I was imagining how I would remodel that church to make it a big home. I was there for a very long time in complete stillness when I felt myself weightless and no longer alone. It was so surreal that I jumped up in fright and looked around for anyone else who was there. No one. That certainly broke the spell.
I have been to heaven—in my dreams–it was so real–I believe that there was reality in those dreams.

November 5, 2020
After four days of delightful play Wallis is on her way home to Hutto!  Missing her already but I do want to take a few moments to respond to the question “Do I believe that Jesus was the Son of God?”  Yes!
Jim Robert sent this to me this morning.

And he wrote this:

“. . .So my inspiration today is this pic took on my last night in Yangon Myanmar at the Shwedagon pagoda. Sun was near setting and this boy caught my eye.  I nodded at his mom with my camera and pointed to her son and she nodded and smiled back.  I sat down on the floor and he without any verbal communication stuck his pose.  i could tell I made his night… he has absolutely no idea how healing my memory of that 5 minute relationship calms my soul tonight and many nights b4”
This picture speaks to me as well.
MY ASSUMPTIONS:
1.  GOD is too great to be understood by any one person or religion.
2.  John 10: 22-39 (this are the only verses from the NT that I will reference although there are many more that instruct me) and Psalm 82:1-8 (particularly verse 6 and 8 from the OT).
From the beginning of recorded history and archeological evidence, humans have experienced GOD.  The oldest know sacred writings (2500 BC) acknowledged creation and creator of all the world they knew).  Psalm 82: 8(written a 1000 years later) acknowledges the GOD of ALL nations. Jesus references this Psalm in his rebuttal to the Jews in John 10.
As human understanding of the universe has changed and as culture and geography shaped individuals,  GOD can only be named as the great “I AM.”  For all humankind, “HE IS.”
3.  GOD is love. and the great religions all express that “I AM” love.

The following two passages that I’ve posted express more clearly what I believe .  God is in ALL human beings just as Jesus said, “. . .the Father is in me, and I in the Father.”
4.  “This was revealed most fully in Jesus, as God’s Son. His love for enemies, his non-violent response to evil, his embrace of the marginalized, his condemnation of self-serving religious hypocrites, his compassion for the poor, his disregard for boundaries of social exclusion, his advocacy for the economically oppressed, and his certainty that God’s reign was breaking into the world all flowed from his complete, mutual participation in the Father’s love. Jesus didn’t merely show the way; he lived completely in the presence and power of God’s redeeming, transforming life. . . . His life embodied what God’s love intends for the world and demonstrated the Spirit’s power to transform, heal, and make whole what is broken. . . .”  Richard Rohr.

“Love is the affinity which links and draws together the elements of the world… Love, in fact, is the agent of universal synthesis.

Someday, after mastering the winds, the waves, the tides and gravity, we shall harness for God the energies of love, and then, for a second time in the history of the world, man will have discovered fire.

The world is round so that friendship may encircle it.

We are not human beings having a spiritual experience. We are spiritual beings having a human experience.

We are one, after all, you and I. Together we suffer, together exist, and forever will recreate each other.”  Teilhard de Charden

 

DeCarte life is a dream?
Everything is connected—everything—connected with a spirit that many called God—but this spirit is indescribable.
The Mystical Body of Christ
Friday, May 3, 2019

A cosmic notion of Christ takes mysticism beyond the mere individual level to the transpersonal, social, and collective levels. Cynthia Bourgeault, another of our core faculty members and an Episcopal priest, explores Jesus’ resurrection from a universal, mystical perspective:
What Jesus so profoundly demonstrates to us in his passage from death to life is that the walls between the realms are paper thin. Along the entire ray of creation, the “mansions” are interpenetrating and mutually permeable by love. The death of our physical form is not the death of our individual personhood. Our personhood remains alive and well, “hidden with Christ in God” (to use Paul’s beautiful phrase in Colossians 3:3) and here and now we can draw strength from it (and [Christ]) to live our temporal lives with all the fullness of eternity. If we can simply keep our hearts wrapped around this core point, the rest of the Christian path begins to fall into place.
Yes, [Jesus’] physical form no longer walks the planet. But if we take him at his word, that poses no disruption to intimacy if we merely learn to recognize him at that other level, just as he has modeled for his disciples during those first forty days of Eastertide.
Nor has that intimacy subsided in two thousand years—at least according to the testimony of a long lineage of Christian mystics, who in a single voice proclaim that our whole universe is profoundly permeated with the presence of Christ. He surrounds, fills, holds together from top to bottom this human sphere in which we dwell. The entire cosmos has become his body, so to speak, and the blood flowing through it is his love. These are not statements that can be scientifically corroborated, but they do seem to ring true to the mystically attuned heart. . . .
Without in any way denying or overriding the conditions of this earth plane, he has interpenetrated them fully, infused them with his own interior spaciousness, and invited us all into this invisible but profoundly coherent energetic field so that we may live as one body—the “Mystical Body of Christ,” as it’s known in Christian tradition—manifesting the Kingdom of Heaven here and now. Jesus in his ascended state is not farther removed from human beings but more intimately connected with them. He is the integral ground, the ambient wholeness within which our contingent human lives are always rooted and from which we are always receiving the help we need to keep moving ahead on the difficult walk we have to walk here. When the eye of our own heart is open and aligned within this field of perception, we recognize whom we’re walking with.

Retirement, Elliot is Born, Move to a Smaller House

2015 was a pivotal year.  I started to feel the burden of running my vineyard business, especially dealing with government reporting and payroll issues.  I decided in late August, it was going to be my last grape harvest.  I quickly secured the sale of all my equipment and informed my clients of my decision.  The first of October, I issued the last batch of checks as I was saying goodbye to my vineyard workers.  I woke up the following Monday morning free of my professional obligation, with no doubt in my mind I had made the right decision.  My good friends Rick and Laura Wilson arranged a wonderful retirement party.  Everybody signed a lazy Susan made from the head of a wine barrel.  I also was presented the framed customized license plates VTICULT that my children gave me on a birthday in my forties, that I have proudly placed on many pickup trucks ever since.  Thank you, all of you!

A couple of years earlier, Melanie, Jack, and Logan needed a comfortable place to stay, and came to stay with me.  I often gave the boys a ride to their schools.  Logan wanted to have chickens.  On a Saturday with the help of two of my vineyard workers, I built a nice enclosure in a corner of the yard.   A friend gave us some chickens and one night Logan discovered a couple of eggs.  What an happy kid!  The following summer, he was going door to door selling eggs in the neighborhood.  I was very happy to have their company and I still call Logan, “Logi Log,” the nickname I gave him when he was a little kid.

As soon as I retired I quickly made a plan to downsize.  In 2016, I purchased a home that I completely remodeled inside and out.  It took a few months and I moved in early November.  I took the essentials with me, especially furniture and tapestries from my parents house that I treasured.  It was quite a relief to simplify my life, with no more pool to worry about and all that space to maintain.  I was starting a new chapter.

Nick and Sunny wanted to take Julien to France and they invited me to go with them.  We stayed at the Hughes’s apartment in Paris and we spent a lot of time with Caroline and her family.  I met with Thomas, Bernard’s younger son, whom I hadn’t seen for quite a while.  We took the train down to Libourne.  We all connected over great meals with Rosy and Michel and their families.  In spite of distances and language barriers, we were all very happy to see each other.  It was a great trip, as I admired Nick and Sunny as a married couple and Nick becoming a father.  I was so proud and so happy!

Caroline and her family, as they did every year, arrived in Santa Rosa for a few weeks.They stayed in their beautiful home overlooking the city. They entertained  the family around the pool and bbq. Another perfect summer. After they went back to Paris a fire ignited in the hills a few miles away.Extremely dry air and fierce winds pushed the fire into Santa Rosa.Five thousand homes burned to ground including Caroline and Martins home.A few family heirlooms and precious momentous were gone. The family gathering place was no more.

Fall 2017, Elliot was born a few weeks premature while his parents were vacationing in Los Angeles.  Elliot, clinging to life, and his mom flew back to the Bay Area in an air ambulance and were rushed to the hospital.  I went to see him a few days later, still heavily monitored.  He was so small and so precious—and it all turned well.

 

Walking in Europe Becomes a Passion, Rosy Left This World

It all started when Nick and I walked a section of the Camino de Santiago a few years ago.  In the fall of 2016, I attended the wedding of Amendine, Marie-Helene’s daughter.  Marie-Hélène and I talked about the Camino in Spain and agreed to meet in Spain in May of the next year, to walk for a couple of weeks.  I arrived at our hotel in Santiago de Compostella first.  Tired after the long flight, I decided to nap on one of the beds in our room.  Later on that afternoon, Marie-Hélène arrived from Germany and the desk clerk took her to the room.  As he opened the room door, he said, “Your husband is here already.”  And she replied, “He is my uncle.”  We only heard a disapproving, “Oh…”

The next day we took a bus to Ponferrada, about 200 km from Santiago.  We were on our way to an incredibly satisfying journey.  We met a lot of nice pilgrims along the way, and enjoyed a mug of the local draft beer, Galicia, outside an old house converted into an albuerge, a place to eat and find bunk beds in a dormitory room.  Marie-Hélène always slept on the top bunk, often above me.  We admired centuries-old churches and monasteries, walked along trails used by pilgrims since the Middle Ages.  We walked side by side, often in silence, and sometimes reflecting on the family dynamics that shaped our lives.  She had to escape the world she grew up in as I had also.  We did not belong there.  We talked a lot about the difficulties we experienced with our parents and siblings.  We agreed that we cherish going back to our roots but we are very appreciative to live freely abroad.

One day we left our hostel at 6:30 a.m., knowing we had to walk 27 km in rather hilly countryside.  After about an hour, we entered a tiny village, La Faba.  Being hungry and needing coffee, we knocked on the door of a small albuerge run by a young Brazilian couple who previously had powerful jobs in London; walking the Camino convinced them to leave their busy life to be host to pilgrims.  It was a small place, an ancient parish house, and quite rustic.  We could have stayed longer but what a gift it was.

We arrived in Santiago, happy to see and wish good luck to a few pilgrims we had met along the way.  We realized that we are part of a big international Camino family.  It was my birthday and Marie-Hélène treated me to an elegant paella dinner.  Life was getting much better than I ever imagined.

We had a few days left before we had to board our flights back.  Naturally we went to Fistera and Muxia for two more days of walking.  These fishing villages are truly the end of the Camino.  Then it was time to say goodbye, sad and happy at the same time.

That fall Cristina, originally from Colombia, entered my life.  We quickly made some plan to walk in Spain.  Marie-Hélène, her niece Pauline, a German friend named Merita, Cristina, and I met in the Pays Basque at my niece Muriel’s country home the following May.  All five of us pilgrims were excited to get going.  We spent the first night in Roncesvalles, a huge medieval complex, full of history.  (For example, Charlemagne’s rear army was destroyed by the Basques as it was returning to France, after it had damaged the walls of Pamplona, in 778.)  The next morning at 6 o’clock, we were awakened by boisterous volunteers playing the banjo and singing “good morning” at top of their lungs, walking up and down the halls.

We happily started the trail.  Pauline had to stop to greet the horses, whispering to them as they reached over the fence to receive a hug and kiss from her.  At the end of the day, Merita, our German friend, would announce “beer”–about the only English she knew.  Of course, Cristina would converse in Spanish with locals and pilgrims from Latin America.

Pauline left us first, wanting to be with her Grandmother, my sister, for her birthday.  When we reached Burgos, Marie-Hélène and Merita took a bus to Madrid and flew back to Germany.  Cristina and I kept on going past León.  One afternoon, arriving in a typical village and chatting with locals in a bar, we learned that day was the feast of San Isidro, patron saint for harvest.  After Mass, we joined a procession outside the village to a newly planted corn field, which the locals blessed, hoping for a good harvest.  We were invited to dinner by the locals, but we had a reservation at our albergue.  We marveled at storks’ nests on top of fireplaces but mainly on church steeples.  After three weeks, we left the Camino.  Muriel met us in Irun between France and Spain and the next day we went to Gironde to visit Michel and his wife Martine.  My sister, suffering from a chronic illness requiring her to receive a blood transfusion almost weekly, was quite weak.  One evening, Cristina and I were invited to Marie-Claire’s house for dinner.  She is my tennis friend Philippe’s sister.  We went to the elementary school in Rauzan together and she recalled how messy I was as a kid with my fingers always covered with ink from the ink well.  We stayed in Paris for a few days, walking along the Seine and exploring bistros in Caroline’s neighborhood.

Summer 2018, we celebrated Caroline and Martin 25th anniversary along with Nick’s 40th and my 75th birthday.  It was a fun evening party with family and close friends, good food, good wine and a lot of cheers.

I went back to France in the fall to say good bye to Rosy.  I sensed that she was ready and a few weeks later she passed.  The previous day, she was taken to the nearby hospital so she could be comfortable; knowing the end was near, she told her son Frank, “I leave my kingdom and I am going to the paradise.”  Nick flew back with me for the funeral.  It was a very well-attended funeral mass and she was buried in the family plot in Rauzan.  Her children arranged a reception at Augey, the property where I grew up, which was turned into a B&B by the current owners.  I got to reconnect with people I had not see for years, including Lisiane, the daughter of my parents’ farm manager, my playmate from seventy years ago.  The past was rushing through me.

The year 2019 was special.  I was curious about the ancient trails, GR, as they are designated in France, which eventually connect with the two Caminos of northern Spain.  I met my niece Muriel at Gare de Lyon, in Paris, in early May to start our walk from Le Puy en Velay.  She took two weeks off from her practice as a midwife in Hasparen to be with me, which was wonderful.  There were relatively few people, some as pilgrims but also many who like walking village to village for a few days.  We had long conversations about her childhood, her dad, my brother Bernard, being a lot stricter than I imagined.  One day I was telling her how Bernard, as a young boy, was showing me how, with a blade of grass, we could convince a ground cricket to come out of his hole.  And thirty years later, laying down flat on his stomach he was showing his daughters how to do it in the meadow in front of the house.  Precious memories!

We encountered snow, cold rain, and gusty wind, but at the end of the day, a friendly hostel with good country French meals.  We especially enjoyed Conques, a medieval, well-preserved village with a marvelous abbey.  After dinner a local monk explained at length the significance of the intricate carvings over the massive church doors.

A few days later, we arrived in Figeac, and had a delicious late lunch along the Cele’ River.  The next day Muriel went back home.  I continued walking for two weeks, enjoying Roman style churches along the way, praying, being thankful for these good times.  I was discovering France at a slow pace, admiring the countryside I never saw before.  One time I was amazed to discover delicate, pale blue butterflies.  It was cherry season and I bought some from a farmer working in his orchard who reminded me, “They don’t get harvested by themselves!”

I arrived in Condom and the next evening I was to meet Cristina in Toulouse, as she was coming from Barcelona.  There was no train in Condom and no convenient bus to Agen, the nearest train station.  As I did when I was a teenager or in the military service, I stuck my thumb out on the side of the highway and an hour later I was in Agen.  Great memories!

We had rented a cottage in Luberon, in the village of Vaugines, a quiet place in Provence.  That Sunday we went to mass at the Abbey of Senanque, a working monastery founded in the 12th century and still occupied by Cistercian monks.  We were treated to Gregorian chants throughout  the liturgy.  What an experience!  When I had visited the abbey with my parents, my dad declared, “No other compares.”  The highlight of our trip was Carrières de Lumières, where paintings by Van Gogh, Cristina’s favorite artist, are projected on the walls, ceiling, and floor carved out of “les Baux” (bauxite).  We were totally immersed in his paintings.

As we were driving to Bordeaux we stopped in Cap D’Agde on the Mediterranean to see my nephews Frank and Hughes.  We stayed at Martin’s country home on the Dordogne River for a week.  Bernard and Helia join us for a few, fun days, having elegant dinner at Michel’s house, a day trip to the picturesque town of Sarlat.

Then we were on to Paris for a few days.  Valerie, a fan of women’s soccer, had come to Paris for the World Cup.  One balmy evening we all went to watch a game, the stadium Park Des Princes being walking distance from Caroline and Martin’s apartment.  Too soon, it was time to fly back to California.

That fall Cristina and I went back East to Rutgers University where Max was in a play, part of his work as a Fine Arts Major student.  We met most of his fellow students in the program along some of the parents.  We took the train to New York, and rode a horse-drawn carriage through Central Park.  A fabulous week!

More Travel, the Corona Virus Takes Over Our Lives

Bernard Portet, my friend from boarding school, and I were able to see each other more often since we retired.  We shared a lot about our growing up in France, being fathers and supporting each other in our daily lives.  We decided to organize a picnic for our two families in a park with a big pool and a creek nearby.  Helia, Bernard’s wife, being from Chile, bonded very easily with Cristina, from Colombia.  I very much enjoyed our children and grandchildren having fun together.  A great day under the California sun!

Later on that summer, Bernard and I decided to walk together from Condom, where I stopped that spring, into Spain.  We met at the Gare St Jean in Bordeaux and by train and bus we made it to Condom.  We enjoyed the company of friendly pilgrims, stayed in farmer’s homes.  We entered every open village church to pray for God’s protection on our families.  When we arrived in Pays Basques, we met Muriel in St Palais.  We shared a great dinner and we admired the locals dancing in the square joined by my niece.  A perfect evening.

While in Spain, after visiting an old convent church run by French nuns, I realized I lost my passport.  Soon a young group of Spaniards caught up with us saying, “Francés de California, passeporte?”  They found it on the trail.

Our walking together took our friendship to a level I did not believe could exist between two older guys.  In Pamplona, we celebrated our last day together.  Bernard left for his native Charentes to surprise his brother at his birthday party.  I continued alone to Burgos, remembering sights from the previous year and discovering new ones.  I flew back to California from Barcelona very happy!

In February 2020, we flew to London to attend Max’s performance in The Winter’s Tale at the Shakespearian Globe theatre.  Caroline was there from Paris along with Max’s siblings, Anton and Alexandra.  What a treat it was!  Cristina and I took a very well-organized bus tour through England.  After visiting Scotland, we were back home just ahead of the pandemic caused by the virus COVID-19.

Being confined at home, we rely on communicating by Zoom.

After four years at UC Santa Barbara, Zac earned a BS in mathematics but, with no graduation ceremony, we could not celebrate in person.

Anton is in his last year at the American University in Paris.

Max is waiting for Rutgers University to resume classes.

Alexandra, with two more years in Paris, is looking forward to join an University in England or the U.S.

Logan is looking forward to graduating from Healdsburg High School.

Jack, with three more years in high school is searching a college where he’ll like to play baseball.

Julien is home schooled and will start kindergarten next year.

Elliot enjoys his nursery school every day.

On this, the first day of September  2020, we are thankful that no one in Cristina’s or my family has contracted the virus.  This is definitely a period full of uncertainties, but as it is often said, “We will go through this together.”

The future of Teaching in the Pandemic

Good Monday morning,
Since I’ve sent two wild idea e-mails, I do want to send you ideas that have more immediacy! Although these are not directly related to selecting AA students, they will impact selection. When we changed to electronic submission we discussed these issues so there may seem to be nothing new. For example, the pandemic has changed the way technology is being used in education and some of the usage will continue from this time forth.
There is much discussion right now about even going back to college in the fall—even if it is opened virtually. Health issues, cost of education and reevaluating potential career and education requirements seem to be the main topics about which I read and listen to on podcasts—even one TED talk.
Teachers are talking about several things—relationships—human contact seems to head the list.
What’s not being talked about enough is how to teach effectively with technology. But, of course, effective teachers has have always been the crux of good schools. (That’s one of the reasons I think good teaching, as through Khan academy and ultimately the Holodeck, will evolve.). For years, businesses have used technology successfully. International teaching and learning and sharing information have been ongoing for so many of the large companies.
Assessment will be a major development. Should I mention that there will be/is major push-back from the current anti-intellectualism populist movement?
SAT. ACT testing will resume in June according to their Website. So, there will be 2021 grads who could be eligible to apply.
Broadband for all! Until all schools, homes, individuals have access to broadband connection, all the computers and other tools that are being handed to students to learn from home won’t be helpful; the learning gap will continue to expand.

For the near future, I’m thinking that the current selection process can be used with a few modifications.
For the long term, technology gurus, which include game developers, computer program/apps developers, business technology practicioners (not CEOs but those who use distance technology for doing work), on-line college/high school teachers, should be assembled to envision technology in the next 10, 15, 25 years.
In fact, getting them together might be too cumbersome—have one-on-one ZOOM interviews or surveys or ??? Get a sense from each one and synthesize to know how OFE should use it to renew itself and how soon should it happen.
Once you get a sense of how education is going to be delivered, then will be a better time to decide what OFE will be going forward.
President Boren often tells the story of going to the Oklahoma Teacher of the Year presentation and noting how pathetic it was. Taking that motivation, he created a recognition using the current education system and improved it by recognizing its best parts. OFE challenge will be to take what comes in the next few years and develop a way to recognize students/teachers/ professors who may be using what we might call non-traditional ways to teach and learn. If it’s still called public education, It’s in the playing field of the OFE.
I don’t know if this is helpful to the Foundation but I know these are ideas that are being discussed in many education venues.—AND it must be noted that with DeVos dismantleing of so many education programs, there probably will be quite a bit of restructuring when that administration is gone.
KD
Rachel and Teresa,
What an interesting invitation!—And I’m not being cynical. Conference Call?? How passé 🤣 Sure you don’t want to ZOOM? I would be able to visit with you all next Thursday—my calendar is sooo busy!!🤓😂 I’m going to preface our conversation with the following so you get a sense of what I’ve been thinking about and talking with others. There are pros and cons for all of this but mostly it comes down to accepting a drastic change that is difficult to wrap one’s mind around. It’s not going to be there when schools reopen but it’s evolving more quickly than I imagined.

The first thing that came to my mind was to show a scene of the Holodeck from Star Trek, the Second Generation. I’ve been a science fiction fan since Buck Rogers so it’s no surprise that I was one of the original trekkies (I actually went to conventions to see the cast!!Did you ever watch the 2014 concert—there’s more than one—that featured Michael Jackson (after his death) that was a hologram? I watched it on YouTube.
I first used the holodeck in a speech in 2005 after reading an article in Popular Mechanics about the prototype of the holodeck that was being designed. During those first speeches I gave to student teachers, I told them that if education changed as drastically in the 40 years that they might be in education as it did in the 40 years that I was in education, the holodeck would be a reality. At that time, I first said in 75 years and then it was down to 50 years—ahh, but now????
and the question I had for them was: “Would students choose to come to your classroom?”
In March when schools didn’t reopen after spring break, I began a conversation with ‘furloughed’ teachers, asking them this: “When schools are reopened, what should education look like?? Let’s don’t go back to the “same old same old.”
What I learned is that the conversation is already underway in various parts of the education world. As stated in my first e-mail, although schools will eventually reopen, change is happening—technology (ZOOMING—who knew that word 3 months ago?) has already changed the culture and schools/education will follow.
Many if not most Texas universities are going to be on-line this fall—discussion is still underway for how high school and elementary will look. The suggestions are fascinating.
Ok, there’s my preface. I’ll give it more thought and I’d welcome your questions before we visit next week.
Live long and prosper.
🖖 😃.
KD

Dreams and Aspirations

Like most kids I had dreams of greatness that were out of step with my talents and commitment to practice. I loved to sing and act, so of course watching musicals on TV made me imagine myself on stage or in front of a camera. I got to be in five musicals in high school; my freshman year we put on Fiddler on the Roof (I played Chava.) in the fall, and Oliver! (I was an orphan boy and sang in the chorus.) in the spring, the only year Remington has ever staged two full productions in one academic year.  I played a nurse and sang in the chorus in South Pacific my sophomore year; my Junior year in Camelot I played a lady-in-waiting to Guenevere.  My senior year, I got to wear amazing hats and stunning costumes as the carousel owner in Carousel; in addition, I played the female lead in Don’t Drink the Water opposite my life-long friend and classmate of 13 years, John Resnik.

I enjoyed this activity so much that I wanted to major in Theater and Music in college, but my wise Daddy reined me in a bit with a question about the plausibility of my ambition and the practicality of studying something that could support me, say working as a secretary.  Common sense won out, and the skills I gained with my Associate of Arts in Secretarial Studies degree from Bethel College served me well, as I worked for several years, mostly enjoyably, in offices at Prairie View in Newton and the Clerk’s Office for the City of Wichita.  I’m really amused when I think back to the word processing capabilities in those early days.  The first piece of equipment I learned about was a typewriter that would store a certain number of characters so you could go back and change them before you printed them on a paper.  (Does that even seem like a benefit now?)  Then my office got a massive word processor that we had to self-train on for days  (maybe even weeks?) through a tutorial procedure; the unit resembled an entire desk, including a keyboard, some sort of screen, a disk drive which could store entire documents (Wow!) on 5¼” floppy disks, and a printer as well.  PCs were just coming out when I quit working to be a full-time Mom, my favorite job ever!

Having four siblings and dozens of cousins led me to want a large family for myself.  Three biological children and three stepchildren filled the bill.  

JMM Vineyard Services, Nick Marries Sunny, Their First Son is Born

After four years managing vineyards for Cline Cellars and being 59 years old, I decided to start a vineyard management business.  My brother Michel said, “It’s about time you are totally on your own.”  In retrospect, I should have done it a lot sooner.  I bought tractors and trucks, ATVs, harvest equipment.  I assembled a great crew, guided by Ermelando whom I had known since he arrived from Mexico as a teenager many years ago.

Developing a vineyard for the Sangiacomo family became my best accomplishment.  The Roberts Road vineyard is now famous for the outstanding Pinot Noir and Chardonnay wines produced from those grapes.  I introduced my grandkids to riding four wheelers in this vineyard.  It was so much fun until Max lost control and hit a post in the vineyard.  Of course, as young teenagers they were fearless.  The year 2013, I turned 70 and, being unattached, I went to France with Phil and Kathy Carlsen, staying in Paris a few days.  Phil and I enjoyed going to the tennis French Open at Rolland Garros, something I hoped to do for a long time.  The two days spent were memorable, but Phil probably remembers best that while standing in the crowded metro, a pickpocket took his wallet, stole his money, threw the wallet on the platform, and disappeared in the crowd.  It took her only a few seconds.

We took the TGV (high-speed train) down to Libourne where my brother was waiting for us.  We stayed at his place, Chateau Cazeau, a beautiful property that our parents purchased in the late 50’s.  Michel, being the oldest son, made it his home shortly after it was purchased and lived there until he sold it recently with all the vineyard and winery business he developed over the years.  Now retired, he lives in the village of Sauveterre de Guyenne.  He totally remodeled and decorated a great house near the town square.  His wife, Martine, stays in her impressive, newly-constructed home a few kilometers away.  My family is always welcome in their homes, entertained in luxury.

Phil, Kathy, and I drove down to the Pyrenees to Lourdes shrine.  We walked by the rock where the Virgin Mary is believed to have appeared to Bernadette.  Ecstatic, Kathy said, “I need to walk by it again.”  I am so glad she experienced such a beautiful place, as she is quite religious.  Upon returning to Cazeau, Michel and Martine organized a catered garden party for friends and family.  I was thrilled to see a lot of my nephews and nieces.  It was a fairytale event.  We spent a couple of days at my sister’s charming house on the Dordogne River.

Also that summer, my three daughters and son organized a “French picnic style” party for my birthday.  Marie-Helene and her family came from Germany for the occasion.  A great party, great food and wine, kids playing in the pool!  But the best part for me was the “roast” Anton, Zachery, and Max gave me, recalling stories and mimicking me in a very funny way, including my French accent I never lost!  What a day!

After seeing the movie The Way I was inspired to walk the Camino de Santiago in Spain.  At Christmas dinner in 2013, with my family assembled, I asked, “Who wants to walk with me next year?”  Right away Nick said, “I will!”

Sunny, Nick’s girlfriend–and they married the following year–gave us a ride to SFO, with our backpacks and guide books.  I was quite anxious and worried about walking four or five hours a day, finding a place to sleep, in an unfamiliar, foreign country.  We arrived in Santiago de Compostela after a stopover in Madrid and spent the night there.  The next morning, we took a bus to the town of Sarria, about 100 km away from Santiago.   I insisted on leaving the hostel very early the next day, afraid of not making it to Albergue Mercadoiro, about 17 km away.  We arrived there by 11 in the morning with nothing to do the rest of the day in this tiny hamlet.  Nick and I enjoyed a beer or two, some of many along the way.  It all went well, meeting pilgrims from around the world, enjoying the slow pace.  We reached Santiago five days later, proud of our accomplishment.  We went to the noon mass in the cathedral and were thrilled to observe the giant incense burner “Botafumiero” swinging close to the high ceiling of the church, an incredible sight.

These few days spent together, away from modern, daily obligations, inspired me to cherish a slower pace of life.  I knew then I had to go back and venture again carrying only a few essentials in a backpack.

Nick and Sunny married in 2015 on the campus of Canada College where they both worked.  It was a great wedding, lots of cheers and dancing.  One of Nick’s cousins, Michel’s son Emmanuel, came from France, and some of Sunny’s family from South Korea as well.  The family was expanding and more diverse.  Sunny and Nick welcomed Julien, my seventh grandchild, into this world on Valentine’s Day the following year.

My Daughters Go to College, Nick Graduates from High School in Utah, Caroline and Martin Marry

After graduating from Santa Rosa High and winning a small pickup truck at an all-night graduation party, Caroline decided to attend the local junior college, staying with her friend Alisha, at her parents’ pool house.  Caroline heard of a semester abroad program in Paris and was thrilled to be able to go.  That winter I went to France for a visit.  We went to Krefeld in Germany to spend a long weekend with Marie-Hélène and her family.  Upon our return to Paris, I invited Nathalie, my sister’s youngest daughter who lived in Paris, her husband Hubert, Caroline, and her friend to a popular steak house.  Nathalie asked me if she could invite Martin, a friend of the family that I heard about over the years but had never met.  We had a great time with typical Parisian ambiance.  A few weeks later Caroline announced to her mother that she had met someone, Martin, whom Pop met in Paris.  Of course her sisters and mom were curious about him, but I was no source of information.  He sat at the opposite end of the table and did not appear in the pictures I took that evening, a fact that I got me in trouble.  Caroline went back to Paris to receive her Bachelor’s degree from the American University.

When he was eleven, Nick and I took a week-long camping trip through northern California and southern Oregon.  The first evening, Nick caught a big fish, a bass I think, which he cooked that night on the camping stove.  That trip was a great and memorable father/son time spent together.  On our way back, we discovered a resort where we could rent ATVs to ride in the Oregon Dunes along the Pacific Ocean.  We liked it so much that we decided to stay another day!

Nick also went to St. Rose School.  He played a lot of basketball with CYO and also became a good soccer player.  His high school years were difficult as he lost interest in sports and needed a change.  He eventually graduated from a small school in Utah.  He attended Santa Rosa Junior College, worked part-time, and lived at his mom’s family home.  He transferred to USF as a junior.

Caroline and Martin announced their engagement and started to make plans. On a trip to France around that time, we visited the proposed site of their wedding reception, the Chateau de Monbazillac, helping them decide on the menu.  Mary, Melanie, Nick, and I flew together to Paris.  The next day, in a rented minivan, we drove to the airport and found Valerie, sitting on a curb in front of Terminal One, waiting for us.  That evening, we were in Gironde.  I am still amazed how we could do all this without cell phones!  My sister provided the decorations and Michel the wine.  I was very proud of the family togetherness.  The morning of the wedding, Martin and I played tennis against a couple of my nephews.  My brother, being the mayor of Sauveterre, officiated the ceremony, followed by cocktails at Martin’s beautiful property on the Dordogne River, then more drinks and  fireworks at the Chateau.  We sat down for dinner past 10 o’clock.  Dancing started at midnight, music provided by Martin’s best friend Claude, who put his old rock and roll band back together for the occasion.  They took a break at 4 a.m. and could have played longer, but everybody was ready to
retire.  What a wedding!  The next day, the immediate family had lunch at Martin’s parents property, trying to finish the open bottles of wine from the day before.

A few weeks later, Caroline and Martin arrived, with Claude, Nathalie, and Hubert for the California wedding.  It was a church wedding at St. Rose, followed by a reception at the elegant Gloria Ferrer Champagne Cellars, a property I knew well since I was responsible for planting their first vineyard.  My little girl—I walked her down the aisle and she is now married!

Valerie and Melanie completed their degrees at UC Davis where their parents met 30 years earlier.  During those years, I often met them and some of their friends for a picnic dinner on the campus—with a handful of Safeway grocery store gift certificates.  I always felt very welcome there.

Melanie got engaged soon after graduating.  We all were at the celebration party at a large Sacramento apartment complex in the outside common area.  Melanie and Tim had very unruly beagle named Cali, who was roaming around and suddenly appeared with a large, raw t-bone steak in his mouth—and we could not catch him.  It probably was not funny for the people returning to their patio barbecue and finding no steak on the fire!

They choose to be married at beautiful Paradise Ridge winery, in late afternoon.  The outside ceremony on the patio overlooking Santa Rosa was
officiated by three family-friend priests.  My sister was there along with her son Frank and his fiancée.  Marie-Hélène, the bride’s godmother came from Germany.  It was a balmy evening and a great time for everyone!