The Wizarding Council's Official Examiners

October 23, 2009 4:10 AM
Two weeks of examinations was bad by almost anyone's standards, but when they came along with the name 'Ridiculously Anal Testing of Skills' they took on a whole new aspect. Examination timetables had been handed out a fortnight beforehand, so no one could legitimately claim to be caught unawares of when their exams were to be held. The hall had been rearranged for the exams and the waterfalls silenced. At the front of the room the examiners sent by the council conferred quietly (except in the case of one wizard) while waiting for the students to arrive and settle into their appointed seats.

Two of the examiners required no introduction. David Weatherby and Bernard Starsky had been at Sonora only the week before, examining the fifth years taking their CATS, and were almost certainly still familiar to the seventh years from when they'd taken their own CATS. Nothing much had changed since the week past, although Starsky had started to favour his right leg somewhat. It seemed, beyond all reason, that this had also caused his vocal volume to increase. Alongside the two wizards, the final examiner, Aurora Septentrion, looked far more feminine. It helped that she was a witch. A little below average height, her blonde hair fell loose down her back, although with such order that it was almost certain that there was a crafty charm at work keeping it neat and untangled. A pair of elliptical spectacles was perched on her nose, framing her light blue eyes. She didn't smile, at least not in this environment; Septentrion took her work and responsibilities seriously.

The specially designed examination quills were handed out once the students had found their seats, and papers and examination booklets were placed on every desk by the younger two examiners. The third watched all with a suspicious eye, keeping a close eye on the time.

"This," Starsky bellowed at the students without preamble, "is the first of your RATS examinations. We expect you to take them seriously and not to do anything dishonest. That means no cheating. No distracting others taking examinations. And no cheating." He engorgio'd his clockwork stopwatch and charmed it to stick to the front wall. "You will start when the second hand reaches the top, and you have two hours and thirty minutes to complete the paper. Begin."

This was, of course, only the beginning. Written examinations were being held of a morning and after a generous hour and a half break for lunch - and, undoubtedly, practice. And cramming - practicals for the same subject took place in the afternoon, although in a one-on-one format with the examiners. This would continue over the next two weeks while every subject taught at Sonora was covered. It was long and grueling, but at least once it was done there was the summer - and life as an adult - to look forward to.


OOC: Same as with the CATS, pick your examiner - from those mentioned in the post - for the practicals. Good luck.

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Lila St. Martin

October 28, 2009 8:52 PM
On the first morning of her RATS, Lila did exactly the same thing she did every morning: she got up, spent half an hour primping in front of her mirror, and ate very little of the light breakfast she served herself in the Cascade Hall. The Calming Draught in her pocket would make her feel nauseated without more than an orange on her stomach, but after seven weeks of feeling like she was an inch from a breakdown, she was almost used to that. The trick was to sit very straight and keep her mouth shut, which was much easier than working out a diet that would let her fit into her ballgowns before the first dances of the summer.

Her RATS didn't really matter. She needed to make something higher than a Troll on the three exams, just so her husband would know she had enough basic intelligence to clean up in an emergency and obey instructions, but neither her parents nor anyone else cared if she actually did well. In fact, it was almost better if she didn't do too well; she was seventeen and still unengaged, which made getting engaged a priority, and being overtly intelligent would not help with that. For that reason, she could only conclude that she had put way too much effort into the Bonfire; there was no good alternate explanation for why she was nervous about exams.

She sat up very straight during the proctor's introduction, her mouth shut tight and breathing slowly through her nose. Her head was full of a sort of blank buzzing, which she had started to notice happening when she took Calming Draughts; if she had not felt so very apathetic because of that, Lila would have thought Morgaine was trying to poison her. There was a good reason not to let girls be too educated; who had ever heard of a girl from a good family, with money and one living brother, going to medical school? Of course Morgaine could never marry - Aunt Emma said she'd never have babies, not without it killing her, and Uncle Alasdair was much out of society's favor these days anyway - but she could make a proper old maid of herself and stay out of a man's field...

She heard a throat clear, and realized she was staring off to one side, where one of her classmates was bent over the exam booklet. Blushing slightly, she wrote out her name in her best handwriting and forced her attention to the first question of her test.

1) Explain, in detail, the theoretical basis for the Fidelius Charm

Oh, Merlin, they would start with that. Allie had tried her best to explain it, but Lila had barely paid attention; she still refused to take anything Allie said seriously. With a silent sigh, she began to write.

The idea behind the Fidelius Charm is to completely hide a secret inside a person, who keeps it faithfully; the word Fidelius means 'faithfully' in Latin. She was sure that had featured into something Allie said. There had been some very sentimental-sounding part, too. Some forms of magic are based on emotion, like trust. When the person tells the secret, then the trust magic is broken, and the person that the Secret-Keeper told the secret to can now work with that secret.

She very purposefully did not look to see if anyone else's test paper was black with tiny, dense handwriting. She was sure she had come up with enough for partial credit, which was enough. She had an exam minus one question left to go, which was much better than having an exam.

2) Describe the degree of relationship between physical and magical strength and their relevance to the Levitation Charm.

That seemed simple enough. If only her head would stop buzzing... Her neck felt unpleasantly hot, and Lila pushed her hair off it with her free hand as she made an effort to keep her eyes and mind on the question. The physical and magical strength of a person do not possess any relationship. If they did, Morgaine would be the next thing to a Squib, and Lila truly believed her step-cousin was capable of blowing up the Hall if it took her fancy to do so. Your magical strength determines what you can do with a Levitation Charm.

It went on. And on. Though none of her answers, including those for the mini-essays, were very long, her hand began to seize up after about thirty minutes and still ached so she wanted to hold it as the papers were taken up. As she left the Hall, she carefully avoided her sister's eyes.

The practical exam went - somewhat - better. She was lucky enough to be called by Professor Septentrion, who, despite the lack of decorum her holding of a job indicated, had an admirable level of control over her appearance. Lila first judged all other women by their personal appearance, and a witch who could keep her hair as perfect as Lila's own was clearly someone she could deal with. She gave the examiner her brightest smile and, for appearances' sake, didn't ask what charms Aurora thought were best for flyaways.

The older witch didn't smile back. "This is the practical exam for Charms," she said. "Levitate this water from the glass and then lower it back."

It took a complicated twirl of her wand after the standard swish and flick to do it, but she got almost all of it one or two centimeters above the top of the glass. Lowering it didn't go as well; she lost her grip on the spell, and the water splashed back down to earth without ceremony. With a muffled shriek, Lila jumped back to save her shoes, only a small part of her mind wondering if she'd get a few points for the bit of water that had, by chance, landed on target in the glass. Aurora made a note, her face expressionless, before she looked up again. "Dry that up," she ordered.

Lila did so, happy to see that spell go perfectly. Aurora said nothing about it. "Create a woodless fire in the jar to your left," came the order instead.

That much was easy. It got harder when the next directive was to turn the fire green, then split it and have a half be blue, and then to split it even further and manipulate more than one segment at much while keeping them all four different colors. After a minute, she began to feel woozy on top of everything else, which didn't help. By the time she was allowed to stop that, she felt actually tired.

And there was still a lot of exam to go.
16 Lila St. Martin I never did care for rodents. 80 Lila St. Martin 0 5


Lila St. Martin

November 03, 2009 9:10 PM
Lila had taken Potions for one reason, and one reason only: she had scraped the requisite mark in it on her CATS, which she had not done in enough other subjects to get out of the class. If she'd had her way, she would have dropped Potions like a pair of purple dragonhide boots. It was nasty, there were way too many smart people signed up for it, and, worst of all, her Uncle Julian specialized in it.

Genius was not exactly unheard of in her family. Nor was an amount of insanity. Uncle Julian possessed both. Though the weirdo hardly ever came out of his lab, Lila had gotten the impression that he was something of a 'figure' in Potions-y circles. She could hardly care less about such circles, but the ever-present fear remained that, if he ever found out a slight hint of aptitude for the subject existed in her, she would spend the rest of her natural life cutting up strange things and tending to fires while Julian furthered the arts of the cauldron and made his reputation greater than it was already. Serving the best interests of her family was noble and good, but not at the expense of ruining her hands.

For this reason, she had consistently performed below what she was actually capable of in the class. It lead to a lot of frustration when she could practically hear Elly Eriksson and the Laynes and Morgaine thinking of her as an idiot, but it had saved her summers. Now, though, Lila was almost afraid it was going to cook her bacon; now that she thought about it, she'd tried so hard to look like she was learning nothing that she wasn't sure if she actually had.

The papers were passed out as before, with a near-identical speech as a preface. If testing had not been so repetitive, so perfectly predictable in its forms, that Lila had always found it soothing, she doubted she would have ever passed a single year. She wrote her name, and other descriptive data required by the Council, out in her flourishing handwriting and then opened her booklet, already expecting a disaster.

1. Describe the physical appearance of the Polyjuice Potion.

Lila sighed. It would be just her luck that they'd begin with a trick question. Did they mean when it was on its own, or when it had someone in it? She began to write about the former. It's thick and looks like mud with a lot of bubbles in. It's ugly. When you put a piece of the person you want to turn into in it, it bubbles a lot, and then it changes colors.

She should get most of the credit for that...On to number two.

2. List the ingredients of the Draught of Peace.

Great Merlin, they wanted her to remember what was in it? She could see the potion in her head, she'd helped brew it for the Bonfire competitions, but...She had very, very little idea what went into it. Scrambling, she wrote the first thing that came to mind. Moonstones. She thought that sounded right. Peaceful, sleepy, the moon... Now she just had to come up with a bunch of others. An ounce of healall. Unicorn tailhair. Essence of nighshade. Silver. Wolfsbane. Salamander blood. That looked like enough ingredients to her.

For her practical, she was assigned to Mr. Weatherby. Lila tried a smile on him, and the calm smile she got back came as conclusive proof that the world hated her and wasn't in the mood to give her so much as a little point for being a pretty girl of excellent breeding. When given the options, she picked Easy without even thinking about it. After that travesty of a written exam, she was sure that not even the best potion ever made could scrape a pass for her.

The mixed blessing of Potions classes - that it was almost impossible for anyone to keep their work private - was not an issue for the exam. Lila found this inconvenient in the extreme. It was a lot harder to concentrate when it was all quiet except for Mr. Weatherby's notations, and it was no cake walk to work without other people's work about to show her what to do. Through some miracle, though, Lila looked down at her final product and realized that horrid-smelling smoke was not pouring off its surface, it did not seem to be exploding, and it was even something that would at least, if shade names were suddenly outlawed, end up as part of the same 'purple' group as the lavender the little card said it was supposed to be.

She'd still failed. She knew it. Lila went back to her room in a temper, wondering why she hadn't quit school years ago before everyone realized she was an incompetent Squib.
16 Lila St. Martin ...Or work, for that matter. 80 Lila St. Martin 0 5