Professor Skies

April 12, 2013 6:59 PM
The final challenge was taking place in the Cascade Hall. The usual furniture had been removed and the room divided into twenty small booths, created by deep velvet curtains hanging from poles. The poles themselves appeared to hang from nothing. The students would find, once ensconced with their teams, that the heavy velvet was surprisingly effective as blocking conversations from the neighbouring teams... They were also spellproof and flameproof. These were usually sensible precautions at the best of times around students, and when emotions were running high it was just asking for trouble not to do so.

“Welcome to this, our final challenge,” Professor Skies greeted the teams as they assembled in the entrance hall. “When you enter, you will find a booth with your team's number and a box of odd and ends. The first part of your challenge this morning is to charm or transfigure everything on your table. Each team member must take responsibility for one item. Your task will therefore be to decide how best to show your range of talents, not to show me five or six pieces of advanced work, all done by your oldest student. There is a sheet for you to note whom has started with each object and what their aim was. I and my assistants,” she nodded to any other staff members and prairie elves whom she had been able to rope in for the morning, “will be wandering around during the tasks. We also have ways of verifying those things which we have not seen so, once again, do not pile all the work onto your advanced students. One piece each please.”

A reminder of these rules was displayed in each booth. There were also several chairs and a table, on which was resting a box of ill assorted objects. Each box contained a button, a pin cushion, a feather, a lemon and a medium sized stick. Those with six members in their team would have to think slightly laterally to work out what their sixth item was.

“You will have an hour from when I blow my whistle to make your decisions and complete all your spell-work. The whistle will sound again at the end of the time period and you will step out of your booths. You may go and make yourselves at home. Do not open your box until the whistle sounds,” she cautioned. She waited until all of the teams had settled in their places and then blew the whistle, which had been charmed to penetrate the otherwise muffling effects of the curtains. As she did this, a luminous clock face appeared, glowing on one of the walls of each team's work area. As the time ticked by, segments of the clock went out, showing the teams how much time remained to them.

After an hour, a second blast of the whistle sounded.

“Well done,” Professor Skies smiled when the students had all stepped out of their booths. “You now have a twenty minute break, during which you may get a drink, run around outside or whatever it is you wish to do to let off steam. After that, you will be back here to face the second and final part of today's challenge. Thank you,” she smiled.
Subthreads:
0 Professor Skies Challenge Three - Part One 26 Professor Skies 1 5


Michael Grosvenor

April 24, 2013 1:36 PM
Michael thought the challenges, thus far, had been okay. His criteria for this was the fact that they hadn't caused him to make a massive tit of himself. This was his general approach to real life too; so long as no one was pointing and laughing (and, in the case of the magical world, so long as nothing was exploding) you were generally getting on alright. Anything else was a bonus. He let out a very slight groan when they were given the instructions for the final challenge.

“Does this sound like a CATS dry run to you too?” he muttered to Mellie, as they made their way over to their booth, right at the back of the hall. Professor Skies had talked about range of talents and stuff but basically each of them was expected to do the best they could do and then they'd be graded on it.

When the whistle sounded, he opened the box of objects. As they had a five person team, the presence of five objects didn't throw him. Some back part of his brain that wasn't busy doing something else vaguely guessed the six person teams must have something else and wondered, briefly, what it was. Nothing looked particularly breakable, so he upended the box onto the table, so they'd be able to see the things better, deftly catching the lemon as it made a bid for freedom off the edge.

Mentally dividing up the objects was tricky, given that he didn't know what the older students could do, not having yet done it. He wasn't even sure, of course, whether Russell took the advanced classes in either of the relevant subjects, which might impact what he could offer. And, hopefully, what was expected of them. He strained his brain to remember what he'd done in first year but it was a bit too full of CATS stuff. Planning for all of them was not really his strength, so he just decided to speak up about what he could do.

“I should be able to do an inanimate to animate,” he stated, hoping that 'should' really wasn't an operative word there. He was fairly sure he needed to be able to do that by the end of the term, when his exams rolled around. “So like... pin cushion hedgehog, or a stick insect stick,” he suggested. So far he was managing a solid 'average' in Transfiguration. He was occasionally a little better in Charms, and wracked his brain for appropriately fancy things he could show off.

“What have we done lately except summoning?” he asked Mellie. He'd been revising the Charm and it was currently the only thing coming to his mind. Seeing as they were meant to do the work and leave it there, he couldn't really do a Summoning Charm. Unless he somehow pinched someone else's stick and made it clear that he had done so, but he didn't think that was very sporting.
13 Michael Grosvenor Team 19 - so close to finishing without embrassment 199 Michael Grosvenor 0 5


Abigail Thornton

April 25, 2013 9:42 PM
Abigail, at the start of the Challenges, didn’t really love them, or even hate them. At the first one she thought she was going to have a heart attack or something when the bunny slippers popped out of nowhere. She was glad that she hadn’t reacted hugely to them or anything, cause the whole first Challenge could have been so much worse. The second one started off alright. The mud pit was sort of fun, for her at least. The only thing that would have made it better for her was if there really was little animals or something in there. Yeah, that would have been cool… she thought to herself as she walked over to Cascade Hall for the third and last challenge.

She walked into the room through the doors and glanced around in surprise at what she saw there. “Little cubicles?” she wondered. She wasn’t sure if there was anyone nearby her to hear her say it, but she didn’t care either. It wasn’t the people she wanted to learn about, it was the animals that lived all around them. In both the magical and the muggle world, animals were much more her friends than people. In all honesty other than her siblings, Clara and their other cousins, Abi didn’t care for any other people until she got to Sonora.

When she’d been introduced to Wendy, Waverly’s little sister, Abi had finally met someone who didn’t crawl under her skin like a small icky bug and she loved the fact that Wendy was so different from any other person she’d ever met! Okay, maybe not everyone was bad there at school, but none were like Wendy, that was for sure! Abi had actually found a best friend, and as odd as it seemed, she actually cared about her almost like a sister. That was saying something and she knew it.

Professor Skies welcomed them to the last challenge and told them what would be happening in it. Michael groaned and Abi wondered what was said between him and Mellie, but didn’t ask or brooch the subject. Professor Skies went on speaking about how long they had time-wise and set them on their way.

The whistle sounded and Michael opened the box, turning it over onto the table. The older boy caught the lemon as it rolled almost off the table. “It was diving for freedom!” she said to the group, chuckling sort of and almost feeling bad for the lemon. Michael mentioned that he could probably do inanimate to animate before asking Mellie what else they’d done recently.

Abi waited till she answered him and then asked, “Wait, does Wingardium Leviosa count? Like if I were to levitate something?” she asked, remembering that lesson with fondness. She’d actually been able to do that right the first time and she loved that!
0 Abigail Thornton Thank goodness for that! 242 Abigail Thornton 0 5