Selina Skies

April 16, 2021 7:47 PM
The beginners were usually a rather excitable bunch. Pecaris were usually a rather excitable bunch. It shouldn’t have been surprising therefore that a certain pair of second years needed an eye keeping on them, and yet it had been a while since Selina had felt quite so strongly about that. After all, so far their first year counterparts showed no such signs of being trouble, or making Selina want to implement a seating plan to separate them… For now, she was giving them the benefit of the doubt, but she would be keeping a close watch on things.

“Good morning,” she smiled, once everyone was seated. “Today, we are going to move onto design work.” By now, the class should have had the basics down, and at least been getting some result every time they tried a transfiguration – it was unlikely to be complete or perfect, but they should have been getting somewhere. Anyone who, by their own admission or her observation, was struggling with that had been asked to come see her during office hours for some extra help.

“In transfiguration, you are graded on several elements – the most important is always whether your work is complete and functional. For example, if you have been asked to turn a tortoise into a teapot, you need a complete teapot, whose lid can be removed, and which does not try to crawl across the table or tuck its spout in. You will also be able to increase your grade with the complexity of your design work. A white teapot with a blue pattern will get a higher grade than a suspiciously tortoise-patterned one, for example.” There was also fierce debate about the point at which ‘function’ or ‘full teapotness’ was achieved – as tortoise-patterned teapots did not commonly exist, did that represent incomplete transfiguration, even though it didn’t impact on function? A famous transfiguration scholar had once shown up to a conference with a novelty teapot in the shape of a tortoise to prove a point about that and the resultant fight had almost come to hexes. The beginners would have the fun of reading about that, and commenting on what made an object ‘completely transfigured’ for homework, with several similar examples presented for debate.

“Today, I’m taking the pressure off in terms of other elements of transfiguration – you are starting with a plate, and you will be ending with a plate. However, I would like to see at least two changes to it – whether that be material, colour, size, shape, or pattern. Whilst there are several charms that do one of those things, can anyone tell me why this will count as transfiguration?” Or at least, why it would for the purposes of assigning it within their curriculum. Again, shots had been fired on this. She took a few answers, until she felt the point had been made.

“The spell you will need is lateramen. It uses a gliding wand motion, like so.” She demonstrated, holding up a small, square black plate with a gold criss-cross pattern, where she had started with a large plain white one. Each student had a similar blank canvas on the desk in front of them.

“You may discuss your work quietly with your neighbours, and ask them or me if you have any questions. You may begin.”


OOC: Welcome to beginners transfiguration. Although no other transfiguration classes have been posted, you can assume we are part way through the term, and your character has had some experience. This is covered by the part about ‘By now, the class should have had the basics down, and at least been getting some result every time they tried a transfiguration – it was unlikely to be complete or perfect, but they should have been getting somewhere. Anyone who, by their own admission or her observation, was struggling with that had been asked to come see her during office hours for some extra help.’ You can assume all that is true of your character, and use it how you like.

The parts about students causing trouble is based on what was written in Charms by Billy and Oz, otherwise I would not make assumptions about the general behaviour of the class.

Classes are graded on quality of writing, not on how well you claim your character does. So, a long, detailed, realistic post where they only do part of the work will receive more points than a short post where they finish the task immediately. Points are given for length, realism, relevance, and creativity. If you have any questions, please ask on the OOC or in chatzy. Otherwise, dive in and have fun!
Subthreads:
13 Selina Skies Beginners - Design Work 26 1 5

Iris Cobb

April 17, 2021 11:55 AM
Iris was a little behind schedule today, as she had stayed lat after charms class to talk to Professor Grey about some of the bits of their homework assignment that had been confusing her. She usually arrived somewhere in the middle of the pack of students arriving for class, but today she was definitely closer to the end of that pack. She shot her brother, Billy, a dirty look as he was just wandering about in the corridor waiting for the last second to slip into the class room.

Inside she found an empty seat next to one of her fellow first years, Bobby Yu. Iris smiled at the Aladren girl and hoped she hadn't been saving the seat for anyone else. Before she could say much else though, Professor Skies began class. The crotalus girl listened intently to the professor. Transfigurations was not her best class, but she was doing okay. The question that Professor Skies asked about why these things counted as transfigurations sounded simple enough, but she certainly didn't feel confident enough to weigh in out loud.

Once the demonstration part of the class started, Iris wrote down the spell word and made a quick sketch of the wand motion. She had discovered that her drawing had often come in helpful in this class. If she could draw up a picture of what she wanted, it was so much easier for her to complete the transfiguration. Then the were set free to work.

Iris promptly turned to Bobby with a polite smile, "Hi, I hope you didn't mind me sitting here." She hadn't spent a lot of time getting to know Bobby yet, but they'd been in enough classes and such that Iris knew her name. "What are you thinkin' about doin' with your plate?" Iris turned back to look at her own, "I was thinking some flowers would look nice on mine, but that may be a bit complicated." She had drawn many flowers in her life so far, it was the natural subject matter when your hobbies were drawing and gardening. However, she hadn't needed to make any appear magically yet.


OOC: Billy Cobb is another of my characters, so I can write for him without it being considered 'godmodding'. If you think Iris and Bobby have a closer relationship than the one indicated, let me know and I can adjust things.
2 Iris Cobb Okay, no problem. [Bobby] 1526 0 5