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A Debt to Education
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What’s the Good of a School?
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A School of One
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On Praying for Your Children
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The World Is Your Classroom
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The Good Reader
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Orchestras of Change
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The Habit of Lack Is Hell to Break
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Kindergarten
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The Given Note
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Editors’ Picks Issue 19
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Litanies of Reclamation
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The Children of Pyongyang
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How Far Does Forgiveness Reach?
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A Trio of Lenten Readers
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Michael and Margaretha Sattler
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The Blessed Woman of Nazareth
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New Heaven, New War
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Born to Us
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My Fearless Future
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Covering the Cover: School for Life
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The Community of Education
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Readers Respond: Issue 19
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Family and Friends: Issue 19
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Verena Arnold
I had just climbed out of bed when I heard it: the unmistakable calling of tundra swans. It was still dark, so I rushed to the window, opened it wide, and put my face up to the screen to listen. The bugling chorus of what may have been more than one hundred swans passed close, then moved off toward the horizon.
Just fifteen minutes later I was stepping out of the house when I heard the wild calling of a second flock. It sounded like they were directly overhead. Looking up, I could see stars shining between the cumulus clouds. Suddenly the swans appeared in this clear patch of sky in a beautiful wide-angled V – somewhere between one hundred and one hundred and fifty swans. They appeared snow white against the black sky, illuminated by the lights of a nearby resort. The birds vanished to the northeast, honking continually their mysterious-sounding call. While I was watching this, a shooting star streaked across the early dawn sky.
The third flock showed up just as the pupils began to arrive at the school where I was teaching. By now it was broad daylight, and the children and I watched the thirty-two swans together – our first lesson of the day, and a grand one.
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