Janette Wolfe

April 16, 2010 5:11 PM
Janette entered her very own classroom, a bubble of excitement lifting her spirits. She couldn't wait to meet her students. Teaching has always been something she had wanted to do, and now that she was here, she felt wonderful.

Her bright blue robes swept the floor as she approached her desk, sitting behind it. Her eyes skimmed over the roster, though she had probably looked over it fifteen times already. She was nervous, she had to admit. How would they react to her? Would they be bothered by her tattoo's? Or would they be in awe? Were they behaved? Would she have to deduct points?

She shook her head, hoping for a bit of clarity. Everything would be fine. As the students began entering the room, a sudden calmness and serenity enveloped her. She stood and grinned, her arms wide open. her eyes friendly and inviting. She watched the students sit down, and as every murmur was silenced, she began.

"Welcome to Transfiguration! My name is Janette Wolfe, and I am your professor. You may call me Professor Wolfe, Professor Janette, or even Professor Jane. I'm not particularly picky." As she said this, she walked out from behind her desk so she could see them better.

"Transfiguration is a rather dangerous art- fooling around during the lessons won't be tolerated, I'm afraid. As some of you may know, Transfiguration has different branches. Some of these are Animagus, which is significantly dangerous, Animate to inanimate, vice versa, Cross-species, and Conjuration- to name a few. Now, this assignment will be relatively new for the first years. But for the second years, it will act like as a review." Janette finished with a smile. She skimmed over the student's reactions, whether they were pleased or annoyed mattered little to her. What did matter was that they got this right.

"Let's begin." Janette began. "You will notice three randomized objects your desk. They have different qualities about them that I want you to take note of. Examine them and jot down all the details you can think of. For example, write if it is smooth or rough, soft or not, light or heavy, and so one. Pay particular note of the colors.

"When you are finished taking your notes, point your wand at the object and imagine it changing into something similar. I don't want you to change it into anything alive, simplicity is best at the present moment. However, the changed object must have some similar qualities of the original object. For example, I am going to change this button," she held up a red button, slightly transparent and with swirls of white, "into a pebble. Like so."

Holding her palm out for all to see, she made the elaborate wand movements, slightly exaggerated for the benefits of the first years, and tapped the button and said, "Mutatio."

Janette held it between her fingers so that the students could see the difference of the button. It was now a pebble, slightly red in color. It was the same color as the button as well.

"You pronounce it Moo-tay-shio. Before you cast the spell, it is crucial that you keep in mind the item you have, and the item you want it to be. If you do not, something will go wrong, and it will likely seem disfigured. When you are finished, turn them in as well as your notes. Do not worry about transfiguring them back- your magic won't sustain the transfiguration for long."

Janette smiled comfortingly. "I realize it may seem like a huge task, but relax. Everything will be fine. Don't be afraid to ask me anything if you need it. Be creative, and good luck!"

OOC: Usual rules apply, ten sentences minimum. Don't worry about the notes, I'm not expecting an essay. Use details, your imagination, and have lots of fun!
Subthreads:
0 Janette Wolfe Beginners Transfiguration (Ist and 2nd years) 0 Janette Wolfe 1 5


Dani Adair

April 18, 2010 9:04 PM
Looking bored, Dani entered the Transfiguration room. Most kids were probably excited to be here, but the way she saw it school was school whether she was here or at home. Though, even she would admit that attending classes with students that weren’t her sisters was more than a little pleasant, especially Alice. That girl was just too smart for own good sometimes and could get annoying when the tutor would compare her and Jordan to Alice as if they should all be geniuses just because they had the same parents. At least, here, she would be able to be graded on her own merits without any other interfering influences.

Even so, she opted to take a seat towards the back of the room, feeling this gave her the best observation point. After taking out her supplies, Dani turned her attention to the professor and was a bit surprised at the tattoos. Wasn’t that unprofessional? Her tutor would never have considered such a thing. He had always come dressed in the finest teaching robes armed with a mountain of books and his wand, which was also a convenient pointer/switch. So, she really couldn’t decide if she agreed or found it incredibly cool. She was hesitant to say the latter, because, well, from Dani’s standpoint the professor was old, but then anyone above eighteen was.

Rather than worry about it, Dani focused on the lesson itself. The theory was one that had been touched on briefly over the summer, only because she was attending Sonora this year. Simplicity and similarity, the double S of Beginning Transfiguration, was easy enough to remember, but doing could prove more difficult. She looked at the objects on her desk – a rounded, blue candle, a small, stuffed bear, and a pair of glasses. She quickly wrote down the details, but that still didn’t help her think of what to change each thing into except the first. That one was easy. A rounded candle could become a ball. Similar shape.

Dani pointed her wand at the object. Her brows knitted in concentration as she thought about what the candle was and what she wanted it to become. Moving the wand as the professor had done, she stated the magic word and was pleased to find that it half worked. She picked up the blue rubber ball with a wick sticking out of it. Well, it would certainly make for some interesting Quidditch play if the balls they played with were lit on fire, but she didn’t think the school would want to make the game any more dangerous than it already was. Feeling elated over her success, she decided to play friendly and asked the person next to her, “Did you get anything to change yet?”
0 Dani Adair Attempting a good grade and friendly conversation 166 Dani Adair 0 5

Nicodemus Sawyer

April 19, 2010 2:35 PM
As a half-blood, Nic did not view any of the classes taught at Sonora to be particularly amazing. Sure, they were neat, and almost certainly beat the math and history he'd be doing if he was still attending the muggle school in Miami that he'd gone to until now, but what he was more thrilled about was that a fair number of his peers at Sonora had names equally as strange as his own. He was beginning to think that even if the Transfiguration teacher called attendance (the Coach in Flying Lessons hadn't, so there was even a slim hope this wouldn't happen), nobody would even blink at someone being named 'Nicodemus' - the playground bullies of Miami hadn't been nearly as forgiving.

Not that he planned to advertise that Nic was short for anything other than Nicholas if he had the choice. It was still a horrible name even if he was surrounded by Cosettes and Autumns and Talons now instead of Billies and Betties and Bobbies.

And then Professor Wolfe made his day again by not calling roll, and he sat back in his seat at the back of the room and smiled. He could continue to be just Nic Sawyer for another class period.

He took a few notes as she explained the basics, but Nic wasn't too worried about it. His textbook would make a much better study tool than anything he jotted down during class, and too many notes just made a person look like a teacher's pet. He didn't want anything more than a perfectly average grade. An 80% ought to continue to be a good place to aim for. He didn't want anyone thinking he was a nerd here anymore than he had at home.

At home, it was because he had a reputation to maintain, but he kind of liked that reputation, so he figured he may as well try to get it here, too. Besides an 80% was a good place to sit at. You got enough right that the teacher didn't bug you to study more, but you got enough wrong that you weren't in the cut-throat competition and bitter rivalry for top grades.

Plus, people underestimated you if you only ever got Bs, and he liked to make the teachers scratch their heads by getting exactly every fifth question wrong. See how long it took them to figure out he was throwing his scores. It was way more of a challenge to get a perfect 80% than it was to actually ace a test, especially once essays and partial credit came into the equation.

Graded class assignments were hard, too. He frowned at the three objects. Three was not a good number for getting an 80. He was going to have to work on getting each one transfigured 80%. Or some combination where it looked like he was getting better at it, but the average was still 80%. Sixty, eighty, one hundred ought to do it.

He picked up the first item. It was a silver sickle. He could see if he could turn it into a dime. That was similar and simple. Transfigure the one face to Roosevelt's. Leave the tails side the same. Get it to the right size and put the little ridges on the rim. That was about 60%, right?

Nic took out a dime from his pocket for comparison purposes, bit his lip as he studied how the facial structure of the wizard stamped onto the sickle had to change, noted the words that would need to be changed and added and removed, and then took a deep breath and drew his wand.

"Mutatio," he cast, and frowned when it didn't work at all. He reviewed his notes on the spell, re-examined the sickle and the dime, and gave it another go. "Mutatio,", and this time tapped his wand to the sickle.

He sat back in satisfaction. It had shrunk to the size of a dime and had the little ridges and Roosevelt sat there in profile, trusting in God and Liberty, and wondering how his face got on a coin minted in Philly in 1994. He turned it over and faked looking dismayed as he saw that it still said 'One Sickle' on the tails side.

Showing it to the girl next to him, Heads side first, then Tails side, he lamented, "I almost got it, but I didn't get the back side to change." He flipped over the dime, "It's supposed to look like this."
1 Nicodemus Sawyer Attempting a mediocre grade and a competent conversation 165 Nicodemus Sawyer 0 5


Dani

April 22, 2010 1:54 PM
Muggle money. She had seen it occasionally. Sometimes there would be some lying in the street and other times she had seen some of the older boys that loitered downtown with it. She had never actually gotten up the nerve to talk to any though. Unlike Jordan, she had the good sense not to talk to boys she didn’t know. She didn’t know how Jordan could be like that. She would chat up and flirt with any guy that had two legs to walk on. The worst part was she was only ten! Dani didn’t understand it at all. She was older. She was eleven and she didn’t have any interest in boys yet.

But she did have an interest in the money. “Why does it look like that?” She never understood why there were people on it or why it said the things it did. She figured the rest was some form of denominations, because that was a fairly universal thing in money. Otherwise, everything would cost the same, which would make absolutely no sense. “I mean why does money muggle have people on it? And it always seems to be men. Do any have women on them?” Women and men were supposed to be equal, regardless of what groups like WAIL said, so where were the women? Or were muggle women like house elves? She didn’t think that was very fair. Muggle culture was confusing.

Of course, she was assuming that he knew something about muggle culture given that he had muggle money. It seemed likely that he was muggleborn or at the most, a halfblood. Though, it was plausible that he just picked it up off the street. Thinking about his heritage, however, she realized she didn’t even know his name. “What’s your name?” She asked. Then not to be too incredibly rude, though, Merlin knew, she could be at times, she added, “I’m Dani Adair.” Here’s where she was supposed to put of the Arizona Adairs to show that she was a pureblood from one of the longer lines, but never did. She hated the formality of it.

Looking at her, one would probably mistake her for a muggleborn or halfblood with her painted black nails and the jeans she wore. Sure, her mother bought her fancy dresses, but she never wore them. There was nothing worse than the feel of a dress. The way one couldn’t breath and the constant worry that somehow your behind would end up being shown off. It was an embarrassment just waiting to happen and you were asking for it by wearing one. How her sisters could stand them she had no idea. They even liked wearing them and for Jordan, the shorter the better.

Introduction made, she showed him what she had done, “I didn’t get mine one hundred percent right either.” She showed him the blue ball. “It was a candle. You can tell cause the wick is still on it. I was thinking what would happen if it was transfigured into a bludger like this. Can you imagine them lit on fire and used in Quidditch?” Dani asked, the thought still amused her. “No one ever go for it, of course, since it’d be much too dangerous.” She supposed it could always be used in a circus. It would make a good act and they were always doing death defying sorts of things like flying through the air and just hoping to grab that bar on the other side.
0 Dani How about a compromise? 0 Dani 0 5

Nic

April 22, 2010 5:08 PM
"I'm Nic Sawyer," Nic got the easy introduction out of the way before he got into the more complicated explanation of who Roosevelt was, why US coins had mostly men on them, and offer Canada up as a feminist alternative. He briefly toyed with the idea of lying about his full first name, but decided to just leave it at 'Nic'. It was too likely she'd learn otherwise and he wasn't really much of a liar anyway. It was best to just let her assume it was Nicholas, then it wouldn't be his fault when she found out it wasn't.

"And they put faces on the money to honor past leaders - or current leaders in some countries. There's a dollar coin with an Indian lady, and there's one with Susan B. Anthony on it, but the US mostly uses past presidents, and all those have been guys so far, since girls only started being able to vote and hold office in the early 1900s, like the twenties or something. Canada's money has Queen Elizabeth the Second, though, so all of theirs has a woman on it."

He pushed the real dime over in front of Dani so she could examine it more closely. "That guy is Franklin Roosevelt, the president during a really important part of muggle history, and I think the most recent guy on a US coin, and he was from like the thirties, or something." It would be way too nerdy to know his exact years in office, so Nic kept it vague and made it sound like he was guessing.

While he gave her the opportunity to look over the coin, he examined her ex-candle, and tilted his his head as he considered it. "If the ball was the size, shape and color of a bludger, and the wick was burning, it would look like a bomb," he decided. "The old kind, like from pirate cartoons."

Though since Dani had apparently never seen a dime before, he figured his conclusion was completely incomprehensible to her. "Which, in wizarding language, means it looks like a muggle weapon that blows up like a potion gone very very wrong. It would look really really scary to any muggleborn or half-blood if they saw it flying at them. It would be awesome."

He looked at his remaining items and picked up what he assumed was a wax apple, but as his hand closed around it, he changed his mind and decided it was a rubber apple. Or something else that was a little squishier than wax. "Here, I'll show you what the kind of bomb I'm talking about looks like."

He decided his bomb was going to look pretty good, but it was still going to be squishy - that was probably the hardest part to change anyway. And the fuse would still look like an apple stem. That was probably close to eighty percent right.

He studied the apple's current appearance from every side (he wasn't going to have the same problem this time as he'd purposely done last time), and then imagined what a bomb with the same apple stem would look like. He was a very visually and spatially attuned person, so it wasn't hard to sort of spin the mental image around like a 3-D model and then compare it to the apple. Once he had a solid grasp on the differences between the current form and his intended form, he held his wand over the apple and cast, "Mutatio!" and tapped his wand down on it.

He nodded in satisfaction as it transformed perfectly, then remembered that his idea of 'perfect' was not going to be the same as the teacher's, so he let his smile fade as if just noticing the problems. "Oh, except this would be a thin rope, not an apple stem," he qualified, touching the stem-fuse, and frowning a little more when the whole bomb squished a little against the desk at the pressure. "And it's supposed to be made of metal. But otherwise, that's what a cartoon bomb looks like."
1 Nic So mediocre grades and friendly conversations, then? 165 Nic 0 5


Dani

May 02, 2010 11:45 AM
“That sounds really weird,” Dani commented on Nic’s explanation of people on muggle money. “So, I’m guessing the US muggle society is a patriarchal one and that Canada’s is matriarchal? But what makes this Susan person stand out that she gets to be on money? And what happens when they want to honor someone else? Do they just make more money so they can do that or do they change the face? It would much easier if they were like wizarding cards. You know, just appearing as necessary, but instead they could honor multiple people on one piece of money. They could take turns.”

Turning the dime over in her fingers, she was fascinated by how different it was. Sure, it was fairly detailed for a coin, but it didn’t move or talk or really anything. Very strange. She looked at the guy some more. So, Nic had said the guy’s name was Franklin Roosevelt and was an important part of muggle history. “What did he do?” Oddly enough, the name rung some bell in her mind, but she couldn’t quite place her finger on it. Whatever it was, she felt it was something that had been significant enough to effect magical history. Her tutor would have been disappointed in her inability to remember.

Confusion touched on her features when Nic mentioned pirate cartoons. She knew what a pirate was, but no idea about the cartoon part. Though, Nic never explained that, he did at least clear up what he was referencing causing her to laugh when he finished that it would be awesome. Yes! Someone with a twisted sense of humor. So far she had only met her roommates. One was overly perky, but Jessica was pretty cool. Even so, she wasn’t sure if the other girl got that about her or not. Most people didn’t, but it wasn’t like Dani was trying to fit in.

She watched while Nic went on to try and transfigure his apple. There was no doubt that it would be utterly cool to watch. “I think yours is better. Instead of blowing up like a potion gone wrong, it could blow applesauce onto whoever was nearby. Can you picture it? The Chaser has the quaffle and is heading towards the goals when all of a sudden there’s applesauce everywhere!” Of course, that would take away the fun from some of the blood thirsty beaters, which she wasn’t sure would be a good thing as they might transfer it into other aspects of life.

Glancing over to her other items, Dani frowned. The candle had been easy, but the next two might not be so. Should she try the bear or the glasses? Hmm. She decided to go for the glasses. Maybe she could turn that into a glass? It wasn’t nearly the same shape, but the name was similar, super similar. Trying to concentrate, she said, “Mutatio!” Lines furrowed her brow. “Well, I guess it’s the perfect pair of glass for a Cyclops.” The arms were still in tact from the middle that had sort of formed into a glass, but was rounded, maybe more like the bottom of a glass.
0 Dani That's workable. 0 Dani 0 5