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fandomhigh2017-01-03 01:00 am
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Home Ec, Tuesday, period 1
The home ec classroom was reasonably well decked out, Eliot was pleased to find. He'd sworn off the Danger Shop for at least the semester, and had been a little worried that this would mean trying to teach the kids how to cook pasta on a hot plate using buckets of water. But the room was lined in little kitchenettes, complete with small fridges, stoves, ovens, and sinks, each with its own set of cabinets full of dishes and cleaning supplies. The center of the room was dominated by long wooden tables, each with ample storage and several electrical outlets set into the floor beneath them, so he wouldn't have to worry about snaking extension cords all over when they got to using sewing machines and the like.
Not half damn bad, if you asked Eliot.
The front of the front of the room had a big friendly white board on it, on which was written "HOME EC" in foot-tall letters, with "Eliot Spencer" in more standard sized letters beneath it. Eliot himself sat behind the teacher's desk with his feet up, reading a book. There was a sheet of instructions at every seat.
"Following instructions is important," said the board. "Please read all instructions on the worksheet before beginning. You have ten minutes."
At the end of the ten minute period for instruction-following, Eliot sat up and put his book aside. "Right. So there's a nice lesson in how schools like to catch you out and make you look silly if you don't do what you're told." He shrugged. "My home ec teacher pulled that on me when I was your age. I think maybe one kid in the class actually did it 'right'. And about five of us smart asses had explanations as to why the 'right way' to do it was wrong." He shrugged. "Welcome to Home Ec. Instructions are gonna be important a lot of the time in here, if nothin' else to keep you from accidentally mixing together poison gas trying to clean your kitchen. But I promise that's the last trick I'm gonna pull on you in here." He walked around to the front of the desk and leaned against it. "It's the first week, so I'm guessin' you all know what that means around here: introductions. Tell me your name, what kind of livin' arrangements you have at home, and what you're hopin' to learn about in this class, please. I'll start us off: I'm Eliot Spencer. You can call me 'Eliot' or 'Mr. Spencer,' whichever you're comfortable with. I live in a four story house on the other side of town with my partners, but I've lived alone most of my adult life, so most of all this stuff was up to me. And I'm apparently gonna end up learnin' to knit with y'all, so I guess that might be fun." He pointed to one of the students. "Now, how 'bout you?"
Not half damn bad, if you asked Eliot.
The front of the front of the room had a big friendly white board on it, on which was written "HOME EC" in foot-tall letters, with "Eliot Spencer" in more standard sized letters beneath it. Eliot himself sat behind the teacher's desk with his feet up, reading a book. There was a sheet of instructions at every seat.
"Following instructions is important," said the board. "Please read all instructions on the worksheet before beginning. You have ten minutes."
At the end of the ten minute period for instruction-following, Eliot sat up and put his book aside. "Right. So there's a nice lesson in how schools like to catch you out and make you look silly if you don't do what you're told." He shrugged. "My home ec teacher pulled that on me when I was your age. I think maybe one kid in the class actually did it 'right'. And about five of us smart asses had explanations as to why the 'right way' to do it was wrong." He shrugged. "Welcome to Home Ec. Instructions are gonna be important a lot of the time in here, if nothin' else to keep you from accidentally mixing together poison gas trying to clean your kitchen. But I promise that's the last trick I'm gonna pull on you in here." He walked around to the front of the desk and leaned against it. "It's the first week, so I'm guessin' you all know what that means around here: introductions. Tell me your name, what kind of livin' arrangements you have at home, and what you're hopin' to learn about in this class, please. I'll start us off: I'm Eliot Spencer. You can call me 'Eliot' or 'Mr. Spencer,' whichever you're comfortable with. I live in a four story house on the other side of town with my partners, but I've lived alone most of my adult life, so most of all this stuff was up to me. And I'm apparently gonna end up learnin' to knit with y'all, so I guess that might be fun." He pointed to one of the students. "Now, how 'bout you?"
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[In case you can't follow the link in the post:
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Which turned out to be to her advantage when she reached the end. She snorted.
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Some of the instructions made her giggle but the last one made her scrunch up her nose in dismay. That wasn't a very nice trick to play on people.
But she ended up with just her name on the paper, like she was supposed to.
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Peridot's expertise in the area of relatively normal human classrooms was lacking somewhat. So, while she didn't end up doing everything down the list, she really didn't manage steps one and two, either.
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And Mr. Spencer was just going to have to deal with her name being in red sparkly gel pen.
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Hanna Heller was written across the top, and then, But what if I wanted to write this in blood?
Hanna's sense of humor skewed toward the Grimm.
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Ten minutes wasn't much time to read all of the instructions and then follow them, and he had enough pride to not want to go over the allotment. So he'd started writing along with the instructions until around step seven, when he realized that no one else was still writing. And so he took several more painstaking minutes to read through the instructions and then got out a second piece of paper so he could do the whole thing right.
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But she respected Eliot, so she struggled to read the directions all the way through, which meant she was about at #13 and thinking this was really the craziest thing she'd ever been asked to do by the time the ten minutes was up.
Which meant she hadn't done anything as yet.
And she still had no idea what the word "Ec" meant. She'd spent a fair amount of time thinking about that (along with why in all the hells someone had signed her up for a class about Homes, Ec or not.)
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Hopefully he could make up for in skill what he lacked in facility with the written language, else this class would be bad for his ego.
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"Lucille Sharpe. Allerdale Hall, Cumberland, England in 1889. So far I'm not sure."
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"I'm Alluka," she said, hugging her bunny as she spoke. "Um. I lived in my room and I'd like to learn anything?"
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At least it didn't have a giant hole in it. It could have! It wasn't Homeworld, but it was hers. Sort of.
"During this class, I hope to learn more about the economic trends in the management of the human home," she added. Because this class was about the economy, right? "And when it is appropriate to bring a pen and paper with me to a classroom."
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"There's a couple hundred of us on tour at any given time, an' more back at th' ranch, so it's people everywhere."
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Or she could just eat yogurt. That was what she did now.
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Talk to Eliot
OOC
Best.