![]() I removed grades entirely from my courses. To find the gems, I had to cart away the useless rock. How did I go from feeling like a dragon to feeling like a king? I took a metaphorical lesson from the dwarves in Tolkien’s book. Happier about how we approach learning and assessment. No longer buried under a mountain of grading. And nothing says “measurement” like a steady flow of grades. Most of us have been trained to make sure that we are providing a meaningfulĪnd challenging experience for our learners, while we are also asked by ourĪdministrators and institutions to show measurable evidence of student I was definitely under the mountain, but I felt less like a king and more like a dragon-grouchy, tired, and ready to spit fire.ĭo we do this to ourselves as instructors, creating mountains of grading? Well, Every little discussion post, short-response essay, lab report, knowledge check, exam, annotated bibliography, course project, capstone report, and quiz answer had to be weighed, ranked, and assigned a numerical grade. More than 80 years later, I found myself buried beneath a mountain of grading that I myself had created by asking my students to demonstrate their skills often, at length, and in detail. “As like as not it is the marauding fire of the Dragon, the only king under the Mountain we have ever known.” Tolkien, 1937, Ch. “Which king?” said another with a grim voice. It is time the songs began to prove themselves again.” “Perhaps the King under the Mountain is forging gold,” said another. “The lights again! Last night the watchmen saw them start and fade from midnight until dawn. ![]() Suddenly it flickered back to view a brief glow touched it and faded. Now it was lost and gone, blotted in the dark. Only its high peak could they see in clear weather, and they looked seldom at it, for it was ominous and drear even in the light of morning. ![]() In the time when the book takes place, a dragon has chased away the dwarves and claimed their halls as its own, occasionally flying out to terrify the inhabitants of the lake town of Esgaroth.įrom their town the Lonely Mountain was mostly screened by the low hills at the far end of the lake, through a gap in which the Running River came down from the North. Tolkien’s famous 1937 fantasy book, The Hobbit, introduces among its heroes a fierce group of dwarves who are descended from noble stock: ancestors who ruled a community that lived and thrived in tunnels and halls they had hewn inside the mountain called Erebor. The location of the secret door in the mountain would eventually allow Bilbo to enter a secret passage in the side of the mountain that would lead him to Smaug’s lair.J. 2790 at the hands of Azog the goblin.Īccording to what Gandalf told Thorin at the Unexpected Party at Bilbo’s house, It was Thror who made the map of the Lonely Mountain and surrounding area. However, he met an untimely death in the year T.A. Some years later, Thrόr tried to re-establish a settlement in Moria. However, Thrόr, his son Thráin, and his grandson Thorin escaped. 2770, driving the dwarves into the wilderness. Craving the gold and jewels of the dwarves, Smaug attacked the city of Dale and the Lonely Mountain in the year T.A. As their reputation for riches and the creation of fine artifacts spread, it finally reached the ears of Smaug, the dragon. King Thrόr and the people of Dale became fabulously wealthy, and renowned throughout middle-earth for their crafts. ![]() Thrόr lead a contingent of his people to Erebor, re-establishing the Kingdom Under the Mountain that had been abandoned by his forefathers years before. Thrόr was the grandfather of Thorin Oakenshield.
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