Professor Sophie O'Malley

July 09, 2016 1:28 AM
“Just two more,” Sophie told herself weakly, a mumble under her breath not dissimilar to that of a crazy person. She was the mother of two toddlers who were still raging through their terrible twos (with their likely equally terrible threes on the horizon) after all, so maybe she was a crazy person. Her life was busy, and while she couldn’t imagine herself happy any other way, it could be a bit much, especially since now their babysitter varied by day. As glad as she was that Serapes was well enough to return to his employment, she certainly missed his reliability.

Today the boys were actually at Sonora, dropped off at Juliet’s quarters bright and early before the first class of the day (“You owe me for this one,” she had kindly pointed out, her eager smile a solid indication of her sarcasm), and Sophie could only imagine what kind of trouble they were getting into. She trusted her cousin completely, but if Juliet let either of those small boys on a broomstick, blood was going to be spilled.

With an exasperated sigh--it was Friday at least, but she had two more classes before her weekend could begin--Sophie slid down in her chair, invisible behind the desk. But a moment later, she heard the first of her beginners arriving, and she rocketed up, banging her thighs into the wood. “Ouch!” she cried involuntarily before making eye contact with the first arrival. “I mean, uh, hey there. How’s your day going?”

Luckily, there wasn’t too terribly much time of awkward Let’s-Pretend-I’m-A-Better-Adult-Than-I-Am conversation with the individual, since the rest of the class flowed in not terribly later. “Hello, everybody,” the small blonde grinned. “Hopefully since we’re finishing up our first week back, you’re all feeling back into the swing of things.”

“For that reason--and don’t hate me--we’re going to have a pretty big assignment. Remember,” she added quickly, her hand raised, “how I didn’t give you any work over break or any homework this week.” Her eyebrow raised as if quietly asking, am I wrong? “Right, so we’re going to do a research essay. I know, I know,” she talked over any groans, “those are boring and not fun, but they’re important. Honest. You’re each going to pick a Potion and write me an essay on its origin. Who invented it, why, what it does, anything relevant that you can find.”

“A lot of that is going to be in your textbooks, but there’s also a stack of other helpful and appropriate resources on the counter by the extra ingredients,” Sophie continued with a gesture. The counter was occupied by not only its usual organized smattering but a cluster of books, all varying in size, color, and apparent age. “This will be due a week from Monday, so that gives you two weekends to work on it. We’re going to get started looking through books during class today, and before class is over, I’m going to pass around a sheet for you to all tell me which potion you’re researching. It’s perfectly fine if people choose the same one; I just want to know what to expect.”

“You’re also welcome to work together on research, but each of you has to turn in your own essay. If they’re exactly identical, it will hurt your grades. Two feet of parchment.” The Pecari alumna glanced around for any looks of confusion, choosing to ignore any of disgust. “Right, so unless you guys have any specific questions right off the bat, let’s get cracking.”


OOC: This (scroll to "curriculum" and pick something from any year's lessons) may be a helpful resource if you want to specify what potion your character is selecting. Have fun!
Subthreads:
12 Professor Sophie O'Malley Getting write down to it. [Years I-II] 34 Professor Sophie O'Malley 1 5

Finn Scott, Teppenpaw

July 18, 2016 5:36 PM
Professor O’Malley was right, Finn decided. He hadn’t previously thought too much about it, but on reflection he actually was feeling back in the swing of things. A week had been enough time to readjust to life at Sonora, especially things like having to be up at a set time (not that he was normally a late sleeper) and, more difficultly, going to lessons again. Finn had enjoyed the break from schoolwork over the holidays, and he mentally groaned as the potions professor announced the classwork for today. It wasn’t that Finn was stupid – he was actually fairly intelligent, he just didn’t have that much of an enthusiasm for academics. And he’d much rather attempt to make a potion than write about one.

Still, there wasn’t anything he could do to avoid it, so Finn started flicking through the textbook. The Wiggenweld Potion was the first that struck him as interesting, or at least as a useful potion that he wouldn’t mind knowing about, so he put one of his quills in the page to mark it as he continued his search. However, a few seconds more was enough to bore him, and he turned to his neighbour in the hope that partnering up might relieve the tedium.

“Hey, do you want to work together?” he asked, slightly nervously but with a friendly smile. Finn had learnt long ago that, in order to actually do anything, he had to overcome his shyness. Besides, you didn’t make any friends by never talking to people, and Finn liked making new friends. He didn’t really have enough at Sonora yet, he’d decided, and so his plan was to make even more of an effort to talk to people. “I don’t think I can cope with the boredom if I work alone,” he added, grimacing.
9 Finn Scott, Teppenpaw Struggling to find enthusiasm 347 Finn Scott, Teppenpaw 0 5

Jozua Sparks

July 19, 2016 9:36 PM
Jozua was indeed back into the swing of things. It actually wasn't too bad once you got used to the great number of people around. At least school work ended here when you weren't in class or actively doing homework. Mom made everything into a lesson, including eating dinner and clothes shopping (which was bad enough finding a fancy robe for the ball, but did he really need an economics lesson along with the horrendous duds?)

He was normally a fairly early riser (not crack of dawn early, of course, but early enough that he didn't need an alarm to make it to breakfast), a trait he felt fortunate Finn shared as he would have hated to either need to sneak around silently in the dark or risk waking his roommate, so that was no trouble, and it only took a couple of days for his class schedule to become routine again.

He often sat with Lily during classes, as she was one of the few people he had clicked with perfectly, but today he had chosen to sit beside his roommate because he'd just gotten a letter from his mother asking him if he'd asked anyone to the ball yet and he didn't really want to have that discussion at all never-mind in potions class, so he was sort of, kind of avoiding the only girl that ever came to mind when the topic of the ball came up. It probably wouldn't kill him to improve his relationship with his roommate anyway. Not that it was in bad straits or anything, he got on fine with Finn, he just liked Lily more and therefore tended to spend his time with her, sometimes to the exclusion of Finn. And that wasn't really fair to Jozua's only guy-friend at the school.

So when the assignment of a week-plus research assignment came up, he was actually kind of glad he was next to Finn instead of Lily. Lily - as wonderful a person as she was - wasn't exactly the academic type, and he was pretty sure he didn't want to work on a long thesis paper with her. He got particular with his research projects and he didn't want to get mad at her if she wasn't doing it right.

Finn, on the other hand, Jozua figured he could work with. He was already kind of used to doing homework in the other boy's vicinity anyway, and was pretty sure he didn't have any habits that would peeve him. Plus it might be fun to have someone to bounce ideas around with after lights-out (the best time for brain-storming, in Jozua's opinion).

First, though, he needed a topic, so he grabbed a book and started flipping through it, looking for one that sounded interesting.

"Sure," he said, looking up, without any hesitation when Finn asked if they wanted to work together. "We'd probably end up asking each other to proof-read anyway. It can be a roommate bonding project . . . with way too much library time. We'll need to match every research hour with something fun, though, or we may go mad."

He glanced back down at his book, then back to Finn. "Any ideas yet? So far, I'm leaning toward Invigoration Draught, but I am not sure that'll be . . . invigorating enough to study." He winced a little and eyed Finn to see how well his joke was received. He generally assumed most of his attempts at humor would be met with groans, but there was a vast difference between a groan that meant the joke was understood as intended and groans that meant the joke was actually horrible instead of just humorously horrible.
1 Jozua Sparks The struggle is real 348 Jozua Sparks 0 5

Finn

July 27, 2016 5:51 AM
Working with Jozua really was one of the best-case scenarios that Finn could come up with. The two hadn’t spent loads of time together, but Finn thought they’d been getting on well as roommates. He was enjoying the company of sharing a room – Finn was a strange mix of shy yet also sociable, and he felt quite confident in Jozua’s company after having shared a room with him for a term. Room-sharing seemed to be going very well.

Finn’s decision to work with Jozua was definitely justified when the other boy suggested doing fun things as well as researching. Hours spent doing nothing but work would definitely be guaranteed to send Finn over the edge, but Jozua was sure to make things interesting. He had plenty of cool hobbies and would no doubt be able to come up with incentives to do the necessary work. Not that Finn really did need incentives to write a two foot long essay. Lessons with a tutor before Sonora had taught him that it really wasn’t a good idea to skimp on work, as that often led to exclusion from fun activities. Still, Finn would be more than happy with anything that could make essay-writing more bearable.

Finn rolled his eyes at Jozua’s joke, smiling though because whilst puns led to the most awful attempts at humour, the result were usually also amusing, and this was no exception. “I found the Wiggenweld potion,” he replied, after deciding that no, there was absolutely no way he could think of a pun that would work with that potion. “It’s not the coolest sounding, but it probably has a lot of information on it as it seems to be used for healing. Or we could find a poison or poison antidote, those could have some stories that’d be fun to write about.”
9 Finn Sadly so is this essay 347 Finn 0 5

Jozua

July 28, 2016 4:17 PM
Jozua grinned a little as Finn rolled his eyes in response to his pun. That was positive reaction to his joke, good. He relaxed a little, satisfied that his humor was, if not appreciated, then at least not unwelcome.

Finn's choice of potion for his essay lacked both pun potential and any appeal to Jozua. Having plenty of source materials did not make up for a boring subject in Jozua's opinion, but Finn's next remark - which sound almost like a throw-away rhetorical comment- did spark his interest.

"Oh," Jozua said, "that could be fun, if we did a potion/counter-potion pair of essays. Come at the same effect from opposite directions, like one of us can do Swelling Solution and the other can do Shrinking Potion. Or some other pair of opposing potions, whatever your favorites are. Then we're doing different things, but they're kind of related, so it's a little more like a group project instead of two individual essays, and we can talk about if the discovery of one influenced the discovery of the other."

He bit his lip and tried to think of other examples or paired potions. "So poison/antidote, swelling/shrinking, um, aging/de-aging, what else? Any of those strike your fancy?"
1 Jozua Essays can be vanquished! 348 Jozua 0 5