Coach Amelia Pierce

April 11, 2010 11:02 PM
The problem with first years at a magical school like Sonora were that they came from a variety of different backgrounds with hugely different levels of flying experience. And yet, Flying Lessons were still required for all of them.

A fair number would already know how to fly a broom with something close to expertise, having been raised in magical families and played broom tag or informal games of Quidditch with family members for most of their lives. Others would think flying on brooms was something only done on television shows and even if magic was real, surely that was just Hollywood.

The class was neccessary, of course. Flying was intrinsic enough to the wizarding world that it was only right to give muggleborns and half-bloods who may not have much (or any) experience a chance to figure out how it all worked. Brooms were an important mode of transportation in addition to their obvious application to sports. And since not even all purebloods taught their children to fly, the problem was that it was next to impossible to figure out who still needed to these basics and who didn't. So everyone in the first year had to take Flying Instruction.

It was optional for older students, whether they were transfers who didn't have flying lessons at their previous school/place of instruction or if they just wanted to take it again. But those were not the students she was worried about. If they didn't want to be there, they didn't have to be. It was the youngest group that were likely to cause problems either because they were too good for the class already or because they just didn't want to learn.

Once it seemed they had all arrived and she wouldn't have many more stragglers arriving, she gave them all a stern look. "Today, you are here to learn how to fly a broom," she announced in a loud voice that wasn't shouting but still carried very well over the open air of the Pitch. She'd never been or met a drill sergeant, but she was using the kind of voice that television told her they used. "My name is Coach Pierce, and I am going to show you how."

She looked them over, making instant assumptions and bets with herself about which ones didn't need the instruction. "Some of you probably already know how, I'd like you all to stand over there," she pointed to a patch of grass on the Pitch ground away from where she'd piled a stack of brooms. "For everyone else, I'd like you to collect a broom," she pointed at the pile, "and stand in a line right here. I'll be with you in a moment. That means everyone," she added to a student who looked reluctant to do so.

Since the Women Against Immorality in the League (better known to all as WAIL) began to make waves about how improper it was for girls to play Quidditch, some girls had begun to think the lesson shouldn't apply to them. That was not the case in this school.

She walked over to where the kids who had flown before were gathered, while the rank beginners fought amongst themselves to find a school broom that struck their fancy. "Okay, you guys, I'm going to exempt you from the lesson and let you free fly. I know I considered myself an expert flier by the time I was eleven," she'd been wrong, and anyone here who thought the same also was, but she wasn't going to burst their bubble yet, "so I imagine some of you also consider yourselves above a beginner lesson. I'll allow you to get out of it." It had worked out well enough last year, and she didn't want to have to try to keep discipline with a group of kids who didn't need her help.

She jerked a thumb back toward the broom pile. "If you'd like, there's a Quaffle over there you can throw around, and school brooms if you didn't bring your own. Please keep in mind that this is a privilege that I don't need to grant you. Any trouble from any of you, and you will all be back down here re-learning how to hover three feet over the ground, is that clear?" She frowned sternly and looked around with her best disciplinarian 'mess this up and you will regret it for months' Look and then nodded in dismissal. "Good. Have fun."

With that, she returned the beginners, who were mostly lined up by now. Taking a spot in front of them, where they could see her and she could see all of them, she summoned over her own broom and put it down beside her. "I want you all to put your broom down next to you. If you're left handed, put it on your left side, if you're right handed, put it on your right."

Once they seemed to have accomplished that, she instructed, "Now put your hand out over the broom and say 'Up!' very firmly, as if you were giving a pet dog a command. Not yet!" she ordered when a few kids opened their mouths and looked about to give it a try. "Wait for the demonstration. Up!" She commanded, and the broom leaped up into her hand. "It may take a few tries, but it should eventually come up to your hand. Once you get that far, put one leg over the broom, like this," she straddled the wooden handle.

"All of these brooms will have a cushion charm on them, so use that to find where you're supposed to sit. At this point, you may kick off the ground and hover, once you feel stable in that, you may try moving around a little bit, but don't go too fast or too high yet. Raise your hand if you need any help."


OOC: Welcome, first years, to the first of your classes. Keep in mind the site rules and write detailed posts meeting the minimum length requirements. Your quality of post will be reflected in the number of House Points you earn for your character.
Subthreads:
1 Coach Amelia Pierce Flying Lessons for First Years 20 Coach Amelia Pierce 1 5

Autumn Collins

April 12, 2010 2:36 PM
Autumn may have been from a completely pureblood background, and a fairly liberal one at that, but that did not mean she knew how to fly. Nor did it mean she wanted to learn. Autumn was terrified of heights. The first time she'd ever been on a broom, she had cried. It was not an experience she wanted to repeat, especially not in front of her entire class. Autumn would be humilated if that happened and nobody would want to be her friend.

In her opinion, it was better just to stay on the ground and avoid all that. If others wanted to get up in the air, if anyone wanted to play Quidditch and go out for their house team, that was fine by Autumn, she would even go support her house team, but none of it was for her.

She listened as Coach Pierce began the lesson. Suddenly, Autumn noticed the coach seemed to be looking in her direction. She cringed. It wasn't as if she wasn't paying attention, Autumn was, she always did. What made her paranoid was what the coach said while she was looking at Autumn. Something about her tone of voice. She probably thinks I'm one of those pureblooded princesses who supports WAIL , Autumn thought.

That wasn't the case. She didn't care if other girls were interested in flying or Quidditch and Lily had been an extremely good Beater for Crotalus but the thought of being up high in the air made Autumn feel a little dizzy. Still, she scurried off to grab a broom with the others. She didn't want to end up getting in trouble. Especially given that Coach Pierce was also her Head of House.

Autumn took her borrowed school broom and stood in line with the others. She did as instructed and put her hand over her broom and said "Up". It didn't even move. She was going to have to keep trying, she couldn't fail. Autumn would hover if she had to but she was not getting up in the air real high.
11 Autumn Collins *Gulps* 164 Autumn Collins 0 5

Nicodemus Sawyer

April 12, 2010 6:20 PM
Nic Sawyer knew what a broom was - both the muggle and magical varieties - but he'd never had occassion or opportunity to use one before. Since his mom was a muggle and they lived in a muggle neighborhood in a muggle house, Nic had learned to ride bikes, rollerblades, and skateboards instead.

Despite this lack of experience, he wasn't worried about flying. He was okay with heights and he'd always been pretty good in gym class. What did concern him about flying lessons was the same thing that concerned him about all of his classes. Namely that at some point, the teacher was going to call attendence. And then he was going to have to raise his hand when everyone looked around to see who was so very unlucky in life that his parents named him Nicodemus.

But Coach Pierce never did. Even after she sent off the kids who knew how to fly, she didn't ask the names of the people who actually needed her instruction. She just told them what to do and waited for them to get to it.

Crisis averted for one more class period, then.

He looked down at the broom he'd picked out of the pile - his dad had said a Cleansweep was a solid dependable broom, so he'd taken one of those even though all of them had looked a bit older than most of the other brands. He figured it wasn't going to matter too much for the first lesson anyway, and if he didn't like it, he could get a different one next time.

Putting his left hand out over it (he was left-handed), he did as the Coach had said and spoke in a very firm commanding voice, "UP!" And with all the prompt speed of dandelion fluff falling to the ground, the broom slowly, lazily began to float up in the general direction of Nic's hand.

He looked over at the girl next to him to see if hers was flying any better than his and saw he at least had the advantage of having gotten his broom off the ground. It still hadn't reach his knees yet, but it was on its way. Slowly.

He thought he recognized her as one of the people at his table at the feast, and one of the girls who had followed Coach Pierce up to Crotalus with him afterwards, so he ventured a comment. "I'm not sure if you can call this a success," he pointed with his right hand at the lumbering broom that was drifting just over his knee now, still heading upwards at a pace about equal to molasses in January, "but I think you need to say it louder."

1 Nicodemus Sawyer *relieved sigh* 165 Nicodemus Sawyer 0 5

Autumn

April 14, 2010 2:11 PM
At the sound of her classmate's voice, Autumn's face flushed almost as red as it had after she'd drank the Sorting potion. Had he noticed her failure to get her broom to do anything? Autumn could handle not getting everything perfectly, but for others to see her fail was quite a different story.

It was one reason why Autumn liked drawing and painting. Art was subjective. Plus, she rarely showed her work to most people, unless she trusted them. Most people she did show thought it was good, but Autumn assumed they were just being nice, as it was mostly her family. She was sure there were plenty people out there who were much better than her.

Still, the main reason she did it was that she loved it. Autumn knew there were many things in life she wouldn't enjoy-such as flying lessons-and some of them were necessary-unlike flying-so it was good to spend time doing something she did.

Right now, though, Autumn needed to reply to this boy and she wasn't sure she knew what to say. She'd never socialized with others much before and though she was a pureblood, Autumn never had lessons in how to speak to others properly. She didn't want to say something stupid. "Um, thanks." She bit her lip. "I'm Autumn Collins." She introduced herself.
11 Autumn I honestly can't think of a title. 164 Autumn 0 5

Nic

April 19, 2010 1:29 PM
"I'm Nic Sawyer," Nic told her in response to her own offered name. Autumn. He hoped he'd be able to remember it. His ability with names was usually pretty decent, though, so he didn't expect to have a problem. The flying instructor and their Head of House was called Coach Pierce. The principal like person was Headmistress Powell. The girl he ate dinner with last night was Cosette. The Head Boy was Tollan Dupree or something. The Head Girl was Lucy Anthony. Their prefects were Lucy again and Laura Cider. The Crotalus Quidditch Captain and Assistant were Oliver and Charlotte Costello. Remembering 'Autumn' shouldn't be hard.

Of course, now they'd exchanged names and Nic had offered all the advice he felt he was qualified to give so he wasn't sure what else he was supposed to say. He looked down at the broom, still mosying its way up to his hand, taking its sweet time as it rose up to mid-thigh level. He could probably reach down and grab it now, but the Coach said to let it come up to your hand, and it might mess up the calibration or something if he grabbed it too soon. Nic was a patient guy, he could wait for it.

"You ever flown before?" he asked, because some people seemed to think it was rude to not talk after starting a conversation with someone and he didn't want to be rude. He could infer from her broom still being on the ground that she hadn't, but he couldn't think of anything else to ask her about. His social skills were definitely among the many things his muggle teachers didn't praise on his report cards.
1 Nic It happens 165 Nic 0 5

Autumn

April 23, 2010 3:34 PM
"It's nice to meet you, Nic." Autumn replied. She usually did not know what to say beyond that and saying it was often a routine habit, something she didn't even realize she did. If she did, she would probably be embarassed at her own social ineptness, especially if it was someone else who called her on it.

Then again, the purebloods tended to have formalized repetitive greetings. Autumn was a pureblood, so perhaps it was to be expected from her.

Actually, she sort of recognized the name Sawyer, but she couldn't quite place it. Maybe she'd heard just heard someone mention Nic or something, after all Autumn thought he was another Crotalus like her. But she was pretty sure it was great-great-grandmother's maiden name. Nic couldn't possibly be from that Sawyer family though, as it had ended with Great-Great-Grandmother Gwendolyn marrying Autumn's great-great grandfather, Theron Brockert. It was probably a coincidence.

"No, this is my first time." Autumn replied. And if she had her way, she never would fly. She wasn't about to tell Nic that though. She had heard that people tended not to like you if you didn't love flying and Quidditch, aside from girls like Chelsea, who didn't like you if you did. From what Lily had said, Pecaris were especially bad about it, though Nina had always been nice to Autumn.

Besides, that was irrelevant, as she thought Nic was in her house anyway. "You're in Crotalus, right?" Autumn asked.
11 Autumn It happens to me a lot. 164 Autumn 0 5