Professor Levy

September 14, 2012 11:54 PM
The past year had been both a blessing and a curse. Erika loved her babies. She really did. Every time they smiled at her or held her finger, she just melted. Unfortunately, that was only half the time. Spencer was especially fussy and didn’t want to sleep ever. In the rare moments when she did, were the moments that Parker didn’t. Adding in to the fact that both Torra and she worked, they had been absolutely exhausted. Erika had never in her life missed a day of work, but this year she had called in absent more than her share. Thankfully, Kiva had understood. She had a few familial changes of her own.

Now that they were a little over a year, they were finally on a sleep schedule, which meant that, at least during the night, she could get some rest. During the day was another matter. Both babies were on the go. She worried more about Parker than Spencer, because he was already walking without the help of furniture and he tried to get into everything! She knew Spencer wouldn’t be far behind. Whatever Parker did, Spencer did. Though, the same wasn’t true for Parker. Already, Spencer could hold a conversation. Granted, half of it was gibberish, but there was no doubt she was going to be a talker. Parker had yet to try. Her mother had told her not to worry cause some babies took longer than others, so she tried not to worry too much.

Aside from that, with the babies having a set routine, she was able to focus her attention into teaching. Sitting behind her desk, she straightened the pile of papers she intended to pass out, which included the syllabus and their first assignment. Soon enough, students began filing into the classroom. Before class officially began, she gestured for one of the students in the front to hand out the papers.

After all the handouts had been passed out and everyone was situated, Erika began her lesson. “Welcome to Intermediate Defense Against the Dark Arts. I am Professor Levy for anyone that may not know or may have forgotten.” The last part was said jokingly for her absences last year. Speaking of which, “When I call your name, please say here. Adair, Alice…” She knew most of them by name already, so it was more a formality than anything else. Of course, occasionally, there were transfers.

Once attendance had been taken, Erika went over the rules. Again, mostly formality, but it never hurt to remind them that there was no fooling around. After all, learning defense was a serious business. It could be the difference between life and death. Not that most students thought about that fact, but it was there nonetheless. How many people had lost a perfectly good limb on the account of someone else not following the rules? It was a lesson that she had learned on account of a dimwitted partner. Though, she couldn’t say nothing good came from it. She got to see her babies more than she would have if she were still in the Auror field.

“If you’ll take a look at your syllabus, you will see that we will be focusing on the mind for the next couple of weeks. Many of you many not think that the mind is an important part of defense, because of how much emphasis is places on spell casting and deflection. Yet, the mind is probably the most valuable and most vulnerable asset we have in defense. For example, many of you may have heard of the Unforgivable Curse – the Imperius Curse. Just a quick side note for anyone who doesn’t. There are three Unforgivable Curses – the Imperius Curse, the Cruciatus Curse, and the Killing Curse. We won’t go into details today on all three, but needless to say, they are so named, because they are Unforgivable. No one in here should even be attempting these spells. They are a severely punishable offense. Got it?” She gave them all a stern look.

“That said, we are going to touch on the theory of the Imperius Curse. The Imperius Curse is a spell that causes the victim to be completely controlled by the castor. If a person’s mind is weak and susceptible, they are more likely to fall under this curse. But it is possible to resist, if one’s mind and will are strong. What we are going to focus on the different mindsets as well as the basics on what to do and not do to prevent yourself from becoming susceptible. A mindset by definition is a mental attitude or disposition that determines how a person responds or interprets situations. Everyone in here has a fixed mindset, which is the behavior to which you are born with and the most difficult to overcome. What we want to develop is the growth mindset, which are the qualities that we choose to develop.”

With a flick of her wrist, the following appeared on the board:

Negative mindset

Energy is focused on what is wrong in one’s life. Reasons are given for why the individual will never succeed – too sickly, too sad, no energy, don’t have anything, etc. Thus, the individual gives up before they can succeed creating a self-fulfilling prophecy of failure.

Has an attitude of ‘I can’t.’

Positive mindset

Energy is focused on what is right in one’s life. The individual is focused on being grateful for what they have. The individual sets goals and strives to meet their goals.

Has an attitude of ‘I can.’


“Everyone has days when they are up or down. We all have traits that fall into a positive or negative mindset. Maybe you feel that you can do well at Potions, but feel hopeless about Charms. Maybe certain things make you feel nervous. Or maybe other things like teasing can trigger a negative mindset. What we want to focus on is learning to control what causes a negative mindset and working towards a positive mindset. When we are in a negative mindset, we are susceptible to poor performance and consequently, poor defense. That said, I want everyone to answer the provided questionnaire to help determine your fixed mindset and ways we can work on our growth mindset.”

Page 1 - Mindset Questionaire

1) You do well on a test, because:
a) I’m smart.
b) I was lucky.

2) You do poorly on a test.
a) I’ll do better next time.
b) I’m a failure.

3) You join your friends, who have suddenly stopped talking, you think:
a) Nothing of it.
b) They were talking about you.

4) Your boyfriend/girlfriend dumps you:
a) There are other fish in the sea.
b) Your life is over.

5) Being myself guarantees people will:
a) Like me.
b) Dislike me.


“If you answered mostly a’s, then you have a positive mindset and if you answered mostly b’s, then you have a negative mindset. Knowing where your mindset lies, you can work towards improving or overcoming initial barriers that cause us to fail. All right, I want everyone to break up into groups of two. Using the next page of this packet, I want you to think of how you would react in the following scenarios and what might be a better way to react. Please discuss this part with each other. If you have any questions, please raise your hand and I’ll be around. For those who finish early, you can start on tomorrow’s assignment, which is listed on the third page.”

Page 2 – Scenarios

1) You are walking down the hall when some kids corner you. They start calling you names and teasing you. Eventually, one pulls out a wand and attempts to hex you with the Jelly Legs Jinx. What is your initial reaction? What is a good way to handle the situation?

2) You are walking through the Labyrinth Gardens and come across a creature you have never seen before. It looks rather dangerous. How would you feel about the situation? How would you handle the situation? Are there any ways to handle the situation that would be more appropriate?

Page 3 – Overcoming Obstacles – Using Expelliarmus with a positive mindset

With a partner, practice the Disarming Charm (or other previously learned spells) while trying to remain positive. ‘I can disarm my opponent’ or ‘I will not be disarmed.’ Does the spell feel easier to perform in the positive mindset? Were more positive results shown?

Subthreads:
0 Professor Levy Intermediate Level: Lesson I 0 Professor Levy 1 5


Theresa Carey, Pecari

September 20, 2012 1:25 AM
Some, if asked, would have most likely ventured to speculate that the Careys taught all of their children the Dark Arts at an early age, but this, as far as Theresa knew, was uniformly untrue. Her part of the family was a little different than the others because her maternal grandfather and all his male relatives had been Aurors at one time or another, but she knew for a fact that all the questionable spells Arthur knew, he had taught himself, and that Arnold probably still didn’t even know any. That was something he should definitely correct if he was planning to get married, in her opinion, but it was his business, and the point stood that while they all knew where certain kinds of books and artifacts were, they had all also been strictly forbidden from touching or even looking too closely at them for all their lives. Her family did not officially condone a mastery of black magic and had not done so for at least twenty years, or some ridiculous figure that predated her birth like that.

In general, this wasn’t something Theresa thought too much about, but at Sonora, she had slowly come to realize that some of the jokes the adults made about the family reputation weren’t just jokes, and so, walking into the Intermediate class, she felt almost defensive, as though the more advanced material was somehow going to mean more looks sent her way, or her cousins’, in this class. She was never sure she had seen one sent to any of them before which was unambiguously hostile and which she could safely say paranoia was playing no role in her interpretation of, but she was always waiting for it to happen. Taking care to find a seat well away from that of the very strange fourth year she had met in Charms, Theresa arranged her desk as though preparing for war.

Her name came at the end of the list of Careys in the class, all of which she thought were moved past without any unnecessary pauses or anything like that. Well. That was good. A little deflating, but good. She adjusted the position of her inkwell slightly, making the desk a little less militant. It seemed that Defense Against the Dark Arts was going to stay Defense Against the Dark Arts as usual, even if she was in the Intermediate class now.

When it came time to answer the questions, Theresa was in two minds about the first one, believing both answers simultaneously and then hesitating because it sounded arrogant to an unladylike degree to assert that she was smart, but other than that, she only had a little trouble with the one about boyfriends and girlfriends, because she didn’t plan to ever have one of either. She intended to secure a good betrothal, which was significantly less susceptible to change and had nothing to do with her or the other person even if it did change. She had raged for a bit at Arthur when he told her two days ago to stop staring at the back of Cepheus’ head, there was no point, and planned to do something deeply unpleasant to that Teppenpaw girl he was betrothed to the first chance she got just on general principle, but she would hardly say her life was over; she had never stopped considering other options, and though she’d happily pick Cepheus up if the Teppenpaw idiot dropped him, she was already seriously considering, after an offhand comment of her cousin’s, her options as far as the weird Charms guy’s roommate went. Laurie Stratford wasn’t pretty, and she really doubted he would appreciate her dresses, but his father was a second son like hers, which made it much more likely that she’d be deemed an acceptable match for him in spite of her three brothers.

Mr. Stratford – the one who was Lawrence’s father, not the one who was on the Aladren Quidditch team, or his father – had, she had heard, been a Quidditch player. Quidditch players made a lot of money. Money meant clothes, meant pretty clothes, not the barely-functional things they wore at home and which kept getting altered to fit her younger siblings because the family felt it was being generous enough to keep the three of them who had to go out in public clothed well enough that – though they were obviously not even as well off as the twins were, much less the Fourth – they didn’t actually look as poor as Mother said they were. Some would have objected to a Quidditch player father-in-law, but it was better than an incompetent smuggler father and would have been even if she hadn’t expected her cousin to follow the same path, and Theresa did not care where the money came from as long as she had it. She could get used to red hair and chirpiness, and unlike her first choice, he didn’t seem to have a line forming to marry him. If she could prompt her father, or maybe even Uncle Anthony, then that could work out well.

Her first thought, on reading the first scenario after Professor Levy finished saying a lot of things that didn’t make sense, was that her reaction would be to hex the would-be jinxer until they looked like they’d had a Jelly-Legs Jinx applied to every portion of their anatomy, but that it would be smarter not to tell anyone that. Actually using her Defense lessons was not something that a proper lady should do, and besides, while she was busy with the first one, one of his buddies would – if there were really people stupid enough to taunt a Carey – curse her in the back, so it wouldn’t work that well, anyway. Catching someone’s eye, she decided to buy herself a moment to try to come up with an acceptable response. “Would you like to work together?” she asked, smiling nicely. That, like curtsying, had been practiced in front of a mirror.
0 Theresa Carey, Pecari Oh, this should be a bundle of laughs.... 0 Theresa Carey, Pecari 0 5


Nora Dobson, Aladren

September 30, 2012 7:31 PM
At the mention of the Unforgivables, Nora's eyes lit up, not that she wasn't normally interested in all her classes. This, however, was just the sort of thing that appealed to her. The dark side of magic fascinated the fourth year along with the minds of people who'd use such. Of course, the best model for the sort of person who was doing so, her grandfather, was a person she'd never been allowed to get near. Mother would even scold Nora for asking questions about him, saying that it wasn't a proper subject for a young lady to talk about and that it would scare Portia even though the younger girl never seemed all that afraid.

It was much more likely that talking about Grandfather upset Mother, even though he'd mostly ignored her for being just a girl instead of actively mistreating her the way he had Grandmother and Uncle Marshall. Nora supposed that was rough too and that, along with seeing how her mother and brother were being treated,probably had quite an effect on Mother's psyche.

Obviously, the first question was an A and in the unlikely event that the second question ever happened-which was an unfathomable thought for Nora-it would be a total fluke so she would certainly do better on the next one though she couldn't imagine a circumstance under which she'd fail a test so she marked A for that too as well as the last three questions.

Apparently, the Aladren had a positive mindset. She hadn't ever thought otherwise, but she couldn't help but question the validity of the test. Oh, yes, the As were positive and the Bs negative but there was gray area in between. For example, question four had asked about dating when a good many people in the room would end up with betrothals such as she had. Plus, how could an entire aspect of a person's mindset be assessed in five narrowly defined questions. Psychology was very complex subject.

Nora glanced at the person who had spoken to her. Theresa Carey. She would be a satisfactory partner, she was a Pecari but not the sort of Pecari that had the attention span of gnat, and seemed reasonably intelligent. Furthermore, she was a Carey and thus the fourth year could hardly be rude even if she wanted to. "Certainly." Nora replied. "What do you think of the first situation?"
11 Nora Dobson, Aladren If you have a twisted sense of humor it is. 197 Nora Dobson, Aladren 0 5


Theresa

September 30, 2012 8:56 PM
Having secured Nora Dobson’s agreement to partner up, Theresa reread the first scenario, looking for what her answer to that exact moment would be. The Aladren girl was someone she’d heard Arthur speak approvingly of, so she was not likely to be very interesting, but she would also not do anything that would get them in trouble during the lesson and would be smart, so Theresa supposed she could have done far worse as far as partners went. The main problem was just that she had to seem smart and competent now, too, and this question wasn’t helping her out with that.

“I think I’d yell and then Arnold and Arthur would curse whoever was bothering me,” she said finally, since that was more ladylike than saying she’d do it all by herself, and it was probably true, too. She would help her cousins, if she could get her hands on her wand in this situation, but she thought the boys would do their fair share to show the outsiders why it was a bad idea to bother a Carey girl, The good thing about having a very large and close-knit – well, for a certain value of the phrase, anyway; they didn’t always like each other, but everyone would band together against a threat – family was that she didn’t have to face anything by herself, ever. The family was always there to offer support, protection if necessary, whatever was needed. That was what they all did for each other, and that was what made it better to be a Carey than any other kind of person.

If she didn’t have that resource…well, she didn’t know what she’d do, really, except yell for the staff and try to take as many to the hospital wing with her as she could, even though she knew that was a very…Arnold kind of thing, an Arnold and Brandon kind of thing, to think. She knew there should be a better answer, but she couldn’t think what it was. If someone was trying to use a jinx on her, then she doubted they were going to stop halfway through because she asked politely, or because she cried. Really, she thought that might make them just want to attack her more, since they’d see her as a weakling they could treat that way.

“What would you do?” she asked. Maybe Nora knew the other answer. Theresa hoped so, anyway, as much as she hoped that Nora would offer her opinion for the second scenario before Theresa had to say what she thought, so she could just agree and not worry about saying something her partner would be sure was improper. She wanted to finally get things right this year, not stumble her way through ineptly again and get called out on it at home.
0 Theresa I wasn't being serious, but you have a point 0 Theresa 0 5


Nora

October 03, 2012 7:59 PM
Theresa's answer was satisfactory one, a proper one. One that she might just be giving to look good. Or she could really be that proper which she very well might be despite being a Pecari. It was possible. "Well," Nora considered. "I suppose I could ask Evan for help." Granted, that would more likely deflect the teasing onto him, which the fourth year knew wasn't right, but honestly, her cousin was... weird . Interesting, but weird.

"More likely, though, I'd stand my ground and try to block the hexes and possibly find a way to get back at them later." The Brockert family had that ability. Like that dreadful woman that tried to blackmail them after they had her fired for mistreating Autumn the first time she was in treatment. Nora wasn't necessarily supposed to know stuff like that, but she had ways of finding out about them. Mostly eavesdropping.

Sometimes, the Aladren felt her parents treated her like a baby. They never wanted her to hear or read interesting things, saying that they were too 'dark' for her to know about, but Nora did anyway. She couldn't resist the quest for knowledge about things that she was interested in. If she did, her life would be so boring. Besides, she was betrothed already, and if she was old enough for that, Nora should be treated like an adult.

"I can't really figure out why anyone would be teasing me in the first place." The fourth year added. There would be no reason to. She was smart, reasonably attractive and from a powerful family that nobody with any sense would want to mess with. The people who were picked on were generally the more vulnerable, emotional sort and that wasn't Nora. If anything, she was considered to be detached and somewhat cold and unfeeling. That's what Hope and Evan seemed to think.

That was the problem with these hypotheticals, they just seemed so unlikely and like the questions, just seemed not to apply to her. "I can't imagine why I'd be in a place to be attacked by a dangerous creature either. To put oneself in such a situation is rather idiotic. However, in that unlikely event, I'd try to get away before the creature saw me or stand perfectly still not to attract it's attention and hope it moved on."
11 Nora Thanks, I often do. 197 Nora 0 5


Theresa

October 07, 2012 12:59 AM
Theresa just looked at Nora for a long moment, surprised by her answer. Of course it was more or less what Theresa would do, too, if the situation really came up, but this was a class exercise, which was all about giving the right answer. Theresa was very clear about what right and wrong answers were, and how they were to be used regardless of what the truth was. She’d had to go through all those awful remedial etiquette courses until she was very clear about that kind of thing indeed. She could only assume that Nora didn’t normally say these things, that she was in for an unpleasant winter break, or that the head of her family didn’t care for her development into a proper young lady.

She wished her lessons had worked well enough for her not to feel a little jealous if the last one was really the case.

“I…I see,” she said faintly.

She felt on firmer footing with the next thing Nora said, more able to agree with it without getting into trouble. She nodded emphatically. “I know what you mean,” she said. Why would anyone attack her? Even if they didn’t care for her, personally, they would have to know her family name. A Carey was Head Girl, she was surrounded by male relatives, two of them were nearly in the upper years and not known for being weak wizards, and then there was her family outside of this place…It would be the stupidest thing that a person could do, really. She was not someone it would be smart to treat that way. It might happen inside her family, but they would, among other things, keep it out of the corridors. If they had problems, they could work them out without the interference of others, as they always had.

“That makes sense as well,” she said, glad to hear an answer she could agree with without worrying. “I suppose that just leaves us with the last page.” She smiled slightly, always glad to get her wand out. It was so much more straightforward than things she had to talk about, something she could do without worrying too much about what was and wasn’t proper and correct. No one was going to fault her for completing her lessons, even in a manly subject; they knew that she needed to know these things, since the family ideal of a lady did involve being able to defend her family if - and only if - it was absolutely necessary, and that she had to know them in order to pass her CATS and make a good impression on people.
0 Theresa No self-esteem problems for you, I see 0 Theresa 0 5