Professor Connell

January 06, 2007 4:54 PM
Marian Connell had not been sure what to expect from her new first year class. Yes, she’d ‘met’ some of them, her Pecaris, on the first night, and, of course, there was always Hikaru, who really didn’t help her nerves much. Yes, they were only eleven, but when even one was doing things like setting off hexes in classrooms and signing essays in blood, well, she was naturally a little worried.

Even so, they seemed quiet and un-troublesome enough as they entered her classroom for the first time. Of course, that could possible have been from nervousness or curiosity. Her classroom was very different from the other professors, for obvious reasons. Dark, windowless, and with shelves situated around the room displaying myriad jars of pickled animals, it was not a welcoming room. Yet Marian liked her classroom the way it was, no matter how others might view it.

As soon as it appeared the last of the first years had found their way to the classroom and taken a seat, she stood from her seat behind her desk, moved to close the door, then returned to the front of her classroom, standing this time. “Welcome to your forst potions lesson,” she began, resisting the urge to comb her figresr thorugh her curly blond mop of hair nervously. While one would think such basics would only get easier after five years of teaching, it hadn’t for the twenty-five-year-old. She still thought she sounded weak or like a pushover, things that had, fortunately, been corrected with the years.

“For those of you who have not yet met me, namely those not in my house of Pecari, my name is Professor Connell, and, as you probably guessed, I am your potions professor. For those of you who know little of this class, it will be almost exactly what it sounds like- you will be learning the art of making various potions, as well as the uses and properties of various ingredients. Eventually, you will learn more advanced skills, of course, but for this first year at least the focus is on the basics.”

Marian had been smiling throuout the introduction, but now turned sterner, gazing at the assembled students with none of the humor she’d shown earlier. “Potions making is an exact art, and precision and attention to detail are perhaps the most important thinks you will gain from this class. Safety is without a doubt my foremost concern while you are in here, so there are several rules you must follow at all times.

“First, take the utmost care when preparing your ingredients and adding them to your potion. Even an ounce too much of a substance can cause catastrophic results, as has been shown before in this classroom. Also, there is to be no horseplay of any sort. When you are working, and you will more often than not be working with partners or in groups of three, the ways you chose to spend your time is your own decision, as long as htre work is done, and no one is faced with potential harm. However, if that line is crossed, I will not hesitate to make the consequences as severe as it is in my power to do so. Remember, there are potentially dangerous solutions in those cauldrens, in addition to the simple threats posed by the fire or the scalpels. While there is a direct path from this room to the infirmary, since the medic and I share so many of the same ingredients, I would prefer not to have to trouble him because someone behaved stupidly.”

Seriousness gone now that her warning and/or threats had been dispersed, Marian leaned back to look at her planner to make sure she had the right pages, then spoke for the final time. “Today, to start off things easily, you will be making a boil-cure potion. It will be found on page fifteen of your textbooks, and you should have the ingredients, dried nettles, crushed snake fangs, stewed horned slugs, porcupine quills, in your potions supplies, although there is a supply of most common ingredients in the black cabinet in the back of the classroom. You will work with a partner, and once you’ve finished, put a vial of your finished product on my desk, with the names of both partners written on it. Also, while there should be a warning in the instructions, be sure not to add the porcupine until after the potion is taken off the fire, or it will melt your cauldron and likely your and your neighbor’s shoes, which is not a pleasant experience.

“Now, if there are any questions, feel free to ask at any time, otherwise, you may begin.” This was the part that might get a bit complicated, Marian thought, taking a seat behind her desk as the students began to find partners. Normally, she wouldn’t feel any qualms about working on something for another class while her current one was working, since generally if anything happened someone would alert her, but with the rumors she’d heard…paying close attention was probably a must.

OOC: Standard posting procedure applies. There should be at least two decent-sized paragraphs, so about 5 sentence minimum per paragraph. However, longer, more detailed posts are greatly appreciated, and will receive more house-points than posts that barely make the limit. Also, as this is a potions classroom, minor spills and the occasional explosion are welcome (such as adding the porcupine quills too early, intentionally or unintentionally), but please read others’ posts before having something like that occur, since it’s not likely that two different groups would forget something, particularly if an explosion already happened. Be creative, and have fun.
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Subthreads:
0 Professor Connell First Years- Lesson 1 0 Professor Connell 1 5


Lawrence Cooper

January 09, 2007 4:57 PM
Sitting towards the center of the classroom, Lawrence Cooper wasn't very sure if he was going to like this class. It wasn't the cheeriest looking room, and worst of all, there were no windows, which made the eleven year-old shift in his seat uncomfortably. He wasn't claustrophobic, but the closed-in feeling the room had bothered him, and the boy hoped he could get passed that so he could do his best in his class.

The teacher seemed to be as concerned about safety in the potions classroom as his mother was about the organization of her bookstore. If she were anything like his mother, then Professor Connell would never let them forget even the minutest rule about potions safety. Law knew it was important, but the rules kind of bored him, and just as his attention was about to completely drift away from the class, she started talking about potion making. They were going to get to make potions already? That was absolutely brilliant. He was sure this would be much more interesting than talking about the rules, to say the least. Even if it was a potion for boils, which were pretty gross. Law thought of himself more as a sports kid then a gross-out type of kid.

He opened his textbook to the assigned page and skimmed over the instructions. It looked like the actual preparation of the ingredients would be harder than the brewing and all, as long as you weren’t careless. All he needed now were the ingredients and a partner. Neither would be hard to find, especially since the teacher had directed them where to get their ingredients, and because people at Sonora seemed to be really cool.

It was much too noisy to just ask someone, so he ripped a piece of parchment off from his roll, and packed it into a light ball, aiming for the shoulder of a person just off to the right of his seat. Tossing the paper ball, he hit the tip of their right shoulder; sure he’d get their attention.

“Hey,” he called out loudly to the chosen person, “Would you mind being my partner?”\n\n
0 Lawrence Cooper Not the cheeriest of classrooms 0 Lawrence Cooper 0 5


Jaeven 'Jae' Dimitri

January 10, 2007 9:29 AM
Jae knew it was important to listen to teachers. He learned that last year in science class when they were learning about some Chemistry, and they had been using acid, and somehow some acid had ended up on his partner's shoe because the thing they had been using to put the acid into the cup wasn't closed all the way. So Jae really, really tried to listen to Professor Connell, but halfway through he got distracted, looking around the room. He saw Mika, and that Gwyneth girl, and the kid who had gotten the Charms teacher with the froghat upset. Jae didn't see the older guy he worked with in Charms, though. Maybe he was just in a different class.

After class inventory had been taken, Jae looked around the room. There were weird pickled things all over, which was kind of cool. It probably made some of the girls jump and yell, like they did in the old sitcoms that Aunt Marla and Aunt Cheri and Jae sometimes watched on Friday nights, but Jae thought they were cool.

Now that he had taken not of his surroundings, Jae started to fidget. He twirled the earring in his left ear, fiddled with the wandstick wedged behind one ear, and pulled on one of his blond dreadlocks. When Professor Connell said they could turn to page fifty in their book, Jae did so happily. Finally, something to do! So he looked at the potion for a bit. Why would someone want to make a Forgetfullness Potion?

The question shot out of his head and Jae shot out of his chair as Professor Connell said they could work with partners. Partners were FUN! Even though Mika already had a partner, which made Jae sad, and so did Gwyneth, it was still exciting. Looking about and grinning broadly, Jae searched for someone, anyone to be his partner.

Then, a paper ball fell from the sky and hit him on the shoulder.

"Sure!" Jae responded to the question, grabbing his bag and skipping over to the other boy. "I'm Jae! I'm in Pecari with Saul, and I worked with Mika and Gwyneth in Comec and a big kid called Earl in Charms, but Mika and Gwyneth already have partners and Earl isn't here. Why do we have to make a Forgetfulness Potion?"\n\n
0 Jaeven 'Jae' Dimitri Good you have a cheery partner then, yes? 0 Jaeven 'Jae' Dimitri 0 5


Law Cooper

January 20, 2007 4:58 PM
The targeted boy seemed to be very talkative, but that was okay, at least he was friendly. Friendly people were cool because they kept you entertained. This class definitely wasn't going to be a snore fest, so long as Jae was around.

"I'm Law," the heavy eleven year-old said, not bothering to explain that it was a nickname because that was too dull and he didn't want to confuse anybody. He took out a polished wooden box from his bookbag, opened the latch and took out the appropriate ingrediant and laid them on his desk before putting his box of ingredient back in his red bookbag. He was glad his parents had gone through the ingredients with him, labeling every small bottle from rat tail to crups' hair. Otherwise, he would have been extremely confused right about now.

"We're making a boils potion, not a forgetfullness one," Law said, uncertainly, "At least I think so." It would be pretty annoying if they were making a different potion, because that would make Law feel especially stupid. He knew he wasn't the strongest student, but at least he was usually good with following directions.

His book already opened, he caught a glance of the page the professor told them to turn to. His fears were denied when he saw that it was indeed a Boils Potion that he and Jae would be making, and not anything else.

"Yeah, it's the boils one," he said, turning back to Jae, "Pull up a chair and we can get started."\n\n
0 Law Cooper I blame midterms for my lack of posting... 0 Law Cooper 0 5


Jae

January 23, 2007 10:00 PM
Jae's partner's name was Law. Not only that, but he looked smart...and he was wrong! Jae was right!

"No," Jae said, grinning widely and bouncing up and down. "See? The professor said page fifty, not page fifteen! But that's okay. I mishear things sometimes too."

Jae pulled up a chair and set his bag on the floor, then looked over at Law. So far as reading went, he preferred relying on other people. Nina occasionally made him read by himself, when she caught him, but he didn't think Law would notice too much. The ingredients looked weird, from what he had seen of the things other kids were pulling out. A lot of them looked different. Maybe there were different kinds of ingredients? Like, Aunt Marla liked organic peanut butter, but Aunt Cheri bought Safeway peanut butter. So maybe there was organic and Safeway potions ingredients? Jae decided to ask Law.

"Are we using organic ingredients? Or stuff from Safeway or King Soopers?" Well, maybe not those stores. Jae couldn't remember seeing slugs in King Soopers. "Another store, I guess. Maybe WalMart?"\n\n
0 Jae I blame...life? 0 Jae 0 5


Law Cooper

January 27, 2007 10:30 AM
Law blinked with confusion as Jae ranted on about strange stores like Safeway, and what was it... Walnut? What was he talking about? He'd certainly never heard of such places before. Oh, wait, now he got it, the kid must've been Muggleborn.

And he continued saying that they were doing page 50 and not working on page 15, today. Sure Law got confused from time to time, but he was pretty sure with this one. Why would they start the year in the middle of the book? And then he read over the list of ingredients for the Forgetfullness Potion, and noticed a lack of porcupine quills. The teacher had been pretty straightfoward in saying that there were porcupine quills in the potion, but there weren't anywhere on page fifty.

"It has to be page fifteen," Law said, totally ignoring Jae's question about stores and organic ingredients, becaue he really wasn't sure what to say, "There aren't any porcupine quills in Forgetfullness Potions, and the Professor kept talking about those. But there are some in the boils potion-thing on page fifteen."

He hoped the other boy would believe him. Law didn't want to spend all of class time fighting, or get into any sort of trouble. Maybe he should just go and ask the teacher what they were doing himself.\n\n
0 Law Cooper That works too 0 Law Cooper 0 5


Jae

January 27, 2007 9:29 PM
"Um...." Jae thought quickly. He didn't want to be wrong. He was right, wasn't he? That didn't happen very often, but Professor Connell had said page fifty, right? "Maybe they're a garnish thing? Aunt Marla puts those on some food sometimes. And we're s'posed to wait to put it in, right? So maybe it's just a garnish."

Maybe he was wrong. That was possible. Jae was wrong a lot, especially when it came to reading. Numbers he was usually good with, though. Still, the instructions had been verbal, and he hadn't really been paying attention. Maybe Law was right.

Potions should have something to do with living animals. Jae was good with animals. They liked him, usually, and when they didn't they listened to him sometimes anyway. Animals were nice and simple and they didn't read or write or spell. They made weird noises and played all day. Jenny and Todd were nice like that. Jenny was probably up in his dorm room with Todd right now. They were probably playing.

"I'm probably wrong though," Jae said, looking down and scuffing one shoe. "Um. Do you want to get the ingredients? I can try to start the fire...."\n\n
0 Jae Walnut? I usually call it Duckmart. But that works too. 0 Jae 0 5