Lethbridge Public School Board Candidate

As a parent and teacher I’m excited to be running for school board trustee in the Lethbridge Public School Division.

I’ve been a teacher since 2010 and during time as elementary and high school teacher I witnessed first hand the deteriorating conditions within the education system in Alberta. I know we can do better.

Here are my priorities as a trustee:

  1. Inclusion for our most vulnerable students including minorities and those that identify as LGBTQ+
  2. Being a responsible steward of taxpayer dollars while also pressing the government to allocate more.
  3. Classroom sizes and complexities are harming student learning and this needs to be addressed.

How can learning conditions be improved?

Learning conditions in schools can be improved when classroom sizes and students with complex learning needs are supported. This means changing the criteria for when assistants are hired to be in classrooms and reducing class sizes. Money needs to be allocated to reducing class sizes not increasing the number of employees at central office.

How can trustees and school boards best support teachers?

Trustees and school boards can support teachers by creating policies that help teachers in all the ways they need. It is important that policies that make it easier to have safe and caring classrooms, that trust teacher autonomy, and that show teachers during this difficult stage of education in Alberta that there are boards that understand the complexities and serve to ease that burden.

Views on the new K-6 curriculum

The curriculum was pushed through without proper consultation from teachers in Alberta. The very people that are experts are curriculum weren’t asked to help build it and it reflects that this process didn’t respect the professionalism of educators in Alberta.

Lethbridge Public School Board Trustee

I’ve decided to put my name forward to run for the Lethbridge Public School Board as a trustee. I believe the trustees hold a crucial position that provides significant impact on children, families and the entire community.

I want to ensure every student in the Lethbridge School Division receives a high-quality education that prepares them for the future, whether they choose post-secondary education, a trade, or entering the workforce. This means focusing on foundational skills like literacy and numeracy while also embracing modern learning that teaches critical thinking and problem-solving.

As a trustee, I will be a responsible steward of taxpayer dollars. I will scrutinize budgets to ensure that funding is directed where it matters most—the classroom. I believe in transparent financial reporting so our community knows exactly how their money is being invested in our children’s future.

Parents are a child’s first and most important teachers. I want to foster a culture of partnership between schools and families. I will work to improve communication, ensure parents’ voices are heard and respected, and make it easier for them to be actively involved in their child’s education.

As Lethbridge is on traditional Blackfoot territory, I am committed to honouring the Truth and Reconciliation Calls to Action by supporting Indigenous education, culture, and language programs within our schools.

I look forward to continuing this dialogue as the campaign season kicks off.

The Story of WidgetSmith

I know him from his podcast Under the Radar and this story has been shared on air but David “Underscore” Smith’s tale of how building an iOS app changed his life is a fantastic story you shouldn’t miss. It even made me want to be an indie developer.

David Smith on what it feels like to win the App Store lottery:

The initial response to the app was warm but nothing out of the ordinary. Widgetsmith was the 59th app I had launched so I’d been through this process a lot over the preceding twelve years of indie app development. Typically you see a little swell of interest in the first few days. Then things settle down into a stable level and you move onto the maintenance and gradual improvement of the app.

This was what I thought would happen with Widgetsmith and the indications for the first few days were that this was exactly what would happen.

[…]

It wasn’t until we got back from our walk that I had my first indication that something was up. Someone reached out to me on Twitter saying they’d seen Widgetsmith getting mentioned on TikTok. I click through to the video they linked to and discovered that there was a walkthrough video by Katarina Mogus which was going viral at the moment.

Widgetsmith now has around 131 million downloads.

New Puppy and a New Camera

This weekend Andrea and Nesslin went on an epic road trip to the middle of nowhere Saskatchewan to pick up the newest member of the family… a puppy! They haven’t made it home yet but I’ve seen photos and videos and I’ve got to admit, it’s as cute as promised. It’s a black Maltipoo (half Maltese; half poodle) and they got it the very first day the breeder declared it old enough to go.

Also on the first day it was available, I just pre-ordered an iPhone 17 Pro. The last iPhone I bought was the 13 Pro four years ago and while it has been my favourite so far, I’m really hankering for the upgraded telephoto (200mm equivalent) that these new phones have. There are a ton of other upgrades too but the camera is what’s driving this purchase for sure. Apparently it’s even better at lowlight situations. I’ll be sure to see how it does on the dark fur of our brand new puppy.

First Day of School

It was the kids’ first day back at school today. We started a tradition of interviewing and creating a poster for each of our kids identifying their favourite things1:

The kids seemed to have enjoyed their first day back but by the time dinner was on, they were both losing their dang minds. Stress from back to school is a real thing and although I don’t remember it myself, according to Andrea, the same thing happened last year.

  1. They are mostly the things they’ve most recently experienced.[]

The Bad Review Revue

Honey Don’t: “An unfulfilling film that feels like a bootleg copy of Cohen and Cooke’s earlier and more successful work. Between a seemingly intentional directional choice of hollow performances and a sloppy plot, an actual bee sting would be preferable to watching it.” — Dana Han-Klein, What We’re Watching

Trust: “Trust is an ironic title for this foolish crime drama that has no credibility.” — Carla Hay, Culture Mix

Eden: “‘Eden’ is doomed to the same fate as its biblical namesake. And like Eve and the forbidden fruit, Howard’s lurid existential exercise bites off more than it can chew.” — Al Alexander, Movies Thru the Spectrum

Primative War: “‘Primitive War’ is a ‘Jurassic Park’-meets-Vietnam War mash-up—and is as ridiculous as that sounds.” — Jesse Hassenger, The Daily Beast

What Happened When Piers Gelly Tried to Replace Himself with ChatGPT in His English Classroom.

I loved this article by Professor Piers Gelly on “what happened when I tried to replace myself with ChatGPT”:

“Like many teachers at every level of education, I have spent the past two years trying to wrap my head around the question of generative AI in my English classroom. To my thinking, this is a question that ought to concern all people who like to read and write, not just teachers and their students. Today’s English students are tomorrow’s writers and readers of literature. If you enjoy thoughtful, consequential, human-generated writing—or hope for your own human writing to be read by a wide human audience—you should want young people to learn to read and write.
[…]
At the end of the semester, they would decide by vote whether AI could replace me.”

I’ve upgraded the N-dashes in the blockquote above to M-dashes. I’m told this has become a tell-tale sign of the use of large language models. I take it as a sign that even if my writing isn’t the greatest, at least I’m doing something right.

See also Why Did a $10 Billion Startup Let Me Vibe-Code for Them—and Why Did I Love It?1

(via Kottke)

  1. News+ Link[]

17 Year Old Hannah Cairo Found a Proof to a 40 Year old Problem

Seventeen year old Hannah Cairo solved a 40-year-old mystery that predicted how functions behave, called the Mizohata-Takeuchi conjecture.

Kevin Hartnett writing for Quanta Magazine:

“We were all shocked, absolutely. I don’t remember ever seeing anything like that,” said Itamar Oliveira of the University of Birmingham, who has spent the past two years trying to prove that the conjecture was true. In her paper, Cairo showed that it’s false. The result defies mathematicians’ usual intuitions about what functions can and cannot do.

So does Cairo herself, who found her way to a proof after years of homeschooling in isolation and an unorthodox path through the math world.

I’m only a little familiar with Fourier methods when it comes to compression of data. This article was fascinating throughout and especially fun that she is so young.

Apple Earnings Q3 – 2025

From Apple News Room:

Apple today announced financial results for its fiscal 2025 third quarter ended June 28, 2025. The Company posted quarterly revenue of $94.0 billion, up 10 percent year over year, and quarterly diluted earnings per share of $1.57, up 12 percent year over year.

“Today Apple is proud to report a June quarter revenue record with double-digit growth in iPhone, Mac and Services and growth around the world, in every geographic segment,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “At WWDC25, we were excited to introduce a beautiful new software design that extends across all of our platforms, and we announced even more great Apple Intelligence features.”

“We are very pleased with our record business performance for the June quarter, which generated EPS growth of 12 percent,” said Kevan Parekh, Apple’s CFO. “Our installed base of active devices also reached a new all-time high across all product categories and geographic segments, thanks to our very high levels of customer satisfaction and loyalty.”

Apple’s board of directors has declared a cash dividend of $0.26 per share of the Company’s common stock. The dividend is payable on August 14, 2025 to shareholders of record as of the close of business on August 11, 2025.

Here are the SixColors Charts.

Bohemian Rhapsody Interpretation

Plenty of fan theories about Queen’s rock opera Bohemian Rhapsody have arisen over the years trying to explain where some of the song’s cryptic imagery and dramatic shifts in style come from, and what deeper meaning—if any—lies behind its enigmatic lyrics. I came across one such theory on Facebook and decided it was interesting enough to post here. If you find this interesting, don’t miss the response I got from ChatGPT when asked these same questions and what could be said about this theory1.

By Jorge Palazón, Madrid (Spain), found on Facebook:

Why is the song called BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY?…
Why is it, exactly, 5 minutes and 55 seconds?
What is this song, really, about?
Why was the Queen movie released on October 31?

The film was released on October 31 because the single was heard for the first time on October 31, 1975. It is titled like this because a “Rhapsody” is a free piece of music composed in different parts and themes where it seems that no part has any relation to the other. The word “Rhapsody” comes from Greek and means “assembled parts of a song.” The word “bohemian” refers to a region of the Czech Republic called Bohemia, the place where Faust, the protagonist of the play that bears his name written by the playwright and novelist Goethe, was born. In Goethe’s work, Faust was a very intelligent old man who knew everything except the mystery of life. Not understanding it, he decides to poison himself. Just at that moment the church bells ring and he goes out into the street. Back in his room, he finds there is a dog. The animal transforms into a kind of man. It is about the devil Mephistopheles. He promises Fausto to live a full life and not be miserable in exchange for his soul. Fausto agrees, rejuvenates and becomes arrogant. He meets Gretchen and they have a son. His wife and son die. Fausto travels through time and space and feels powerful. As he grows old again he feels miserable again. Since he did not break the pact with the devil, the angels dispute his soul. This work is essential to understanding Bohemian Rhapsody.

The song talks about Freddie Mercury himself. Being a rhapsody we find seven different parts:

  • 1st and 2nd act A Capella
  • 3rd act Ballad
  • 4th act guitar solo
  • 5th act opera
  • 6th act rock
  • 7th act “coda” or final act

The song talks about a poor boy who questions if this life is real or if it is his distorted imagination that lives another reality. He says that even if he stops living, the wind will continue to blow without his existence. So he makes a deal with the devil and sells his soul.

Upon making this decision, he runs to tell his mother and tells her…

“Mama, just killed a man
Put a gun against his head, pulled my trigger, now he’s dead
Mama, life had just begun
But now I’ve gone and thrown it all away
Mama, ooh, didn’t mean to make you cry
If I’m not back again this time tomorrow
Carry on, carry on as if nothing really matters…”

That man who [he] kills is himself, Freddie Mercury himself.

If he does not fulfill the pact with the devil, he will die immediately. He says goodbye to his loved ones and his mother bursts into tears, tears and desperate crying that come from Brian May’s guitar notes. Freddie, scared, shouts “Mama, ooh I don’t wanna die” and the operatic part begins. Freddie is in an astral plane where he sees himself: “I see a little silhoutte of a man.” “scaramouche, are you going to start a dispute/fight?”

Scaramouche is “skirmish” a dispute between armies with horse riders (Four horsemen of the evil Apocalypse fight against the forces of good for Freddie’s soul) and it goes on to say “Thunderbolt and lightning, very, very frightening me” too much). This phrase appears in the Bible, exactly in Job 37 when it says… “the thunder and lightning frighten me: my heart pounds in my chest.” His mother, seeing him so scared by the decision her son has made, begs to save him from the pact with Mephistopheles. “He’s just a poor boy…” He forgives his life for this monstrosity. What comes easy, goes easy. Will you let him go? “Their supplications are heard and the angels descend to fight the forces of evil.” Bismillah (Arabic word meaning “In the name of God”) is the first word that appears in the Muslim holy book, the Quran. So God himself appears and shouts “we will not abandon you, let him go.”

Faced with such a confrontation between the forces of good and evil, Freddie fears for the life of his mother and tells her “Mama mia, mama mia let me go” (mother, let me go). They shout again from the sky that they are not going to abandon him and Freddie shouts “no, no, no, no, no” and says “Beelzebub (the Lord of Darkness) may have put a devil in you mother.” Freddie here pays tribute to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Johann Sebastian Bach when he sings… “Figaro, Magnifico” referencing Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro”, considered the best opera in history, and Bach’s “Magnificat”. He finishes the operatic part and the more rock part breaks in. The devil, angry and betrayed by Freddie by not fulfilling the pact, tells him “Do you think you can insult me ??like this? Do you think you can come to me and then abandon me? “Do you think you can love me and let me die?”

It is shocking how the lord of evil feels powerless before a human being, before repentance and love. Once the battle is lost, the devil leaves and we reach the last act or “coda” where Freddie is free and that feeling comforts him. He sounds the gong that closes the song. The gong is an instrument used in China and Far East Asia to heal people who are under the effects of evil spirits.

5:55 minutes last. Freddie was into astrology and 555 in numerology is associated with death, not physical, but spiritual, the end of something where angels will safeguard you. 555 is related to God and the divine, an ending that will begin a new stage.

And the song plays on All Saints’ Eve for the first time. A holiday called “Samhain” by the Celts to celebrate the transition and opening to the other world.

The Celts believed that the world of the living and the dead were almost united, and on the day of the dead both worlds were united, allowing the spirits to transit to the other side. Nothing in Bohemian Rhapsody is coincidental.
Everything is very measured, worked and has a meaning that transcends beyond being a simple song. It has been voted worldwide as the best song of all time.

This song represented a radical change in Queen as if she had really made a pact with the devil, she changed their lives forever and made them immortal.

  1. ChatGPT’s response to the same questions with an opinion on this theory[]