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Saturday, December 29, 2007
Goals instead of resolutions...
1. Paint the house, inside and out. Thanks to some very generous gift cards I recieved for Christmas, this goal is now immediately possible, rather than something I'd like to do someday. Of course, the weather will have to cooperate!
2. Improve the yard, front and back. This includes tearing out the front lawns and putting in more interesting stuff - grasses, flowering plants, a few big rocks, two trees, and so forth; installing and planting raised veggie beds in the back; redoing the clotheslines as they sag terribly; putting in a sandbox/play area for the kids in the back; planting, planting, planting.
3. Set up the "playroom" and family office in our garage. Mostly this involves clearing out miscellaneous boxes, putting down some of my many area rugs, and setting up good toy/book/etc storage. We also need to get a heater that is efficient.
4. Lose (at least) another 20 pounds. I lost 21 pounds this year, and hope to do better in '08. Things that would help me accomplish this would be getting more exercise, and eating more healthfully. I want to keep working on this because I need to have energy for my kids, and to set a good example for them. I want to keep them healthy as well.
5. Find a better job. Part-time, decent pay, regular hours. It'll definately help that M will be going back to work fulltime in the next few weeks, as this gives my end of the financial contributions a little more wiggle room. I am looking at both secretarial jobs and instructional assistant positions.
6. Finish at the local community college and transfer. I have this planned, and in the works, for Fall of '08. I just need to actually accomplish it!
7. Follow my plans for the kids' schooling through early June. I have figured out what we need to actually do each week to accomplish my goals for them (mostly goals for Elf), so I need to make sure we do it. I won't reach my original goal of finishing SOTW volume 1 this year, and there are a couple of other things we won't get done, but that's okay and we'll just move on with what we can do, without undue stress!
So, there they are. My 7 goals for 2008. I have tried to make them realistic, so we'll see how it goes!
Sunday, December 23, 2007
Saturday, December 22, 2007
Sort of a weekly wrap-up...
I am still planning on being evil and doing some science (anatomy) and history (Mesopotamia) over the next couple of weeks of "vacation". It's not really evil if your kids love and ask for it though, is it? I also found this website (British) that relates to our history unit studies, so I may cull some further resources from that.
This week is our week of frenzy! It's busy at work (gotta love holiday retail), so I have more hours than normal. We have company coming this afternoon (so I had better get busy finishing cleaning soon), company on Christmas Eve (my dad, sister and brother), and then MIL will be here for Christmas Day, along with the kids' great-great uncle. Tonight, after company leaves, we're making cookies, and decorating them. I have to run to the store to get a couple of picture frames sometime today. Plus I still have to shop for Christmas dinner, though not today.
Well, in case I don't make it back before then... Happy Holidays!
Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Yaaay! Done with...
Wow, I'm 35 now. Can't say it's much different than 34! Today's plans - a late breakfast, since it's 10 and the kids are still asleep (we stayed up really late last night watching Christmas movies). A little homeschooling - calendar work, math, phonics, human anatomy. I was going to take the kids to homeschool ice skating, but it starts in 15 minutes, so we'll save that for another time. M wants to take me out later to pick out my own gift, and then my closest friend is coming over for dinner. My mom also offered to make a special dinner for me tomorrow, so I have to figure out what to ask her to make! It's hard because she's an awesome cook, and I really love a number of her dishes. Hmmmm, maybe we'll finish decorating our tree today. I did get a lovely early present from Elf yesterday - all the art I've been helping with on Wednesdays got made into a 2008 calendar of birds, and he gave me his, after wrapping it himself, very carefully. He was practically dancing with excitement when I was unwrapping it. I have to say I think it qualifies as the best gift ever, partly because I love his artwork and partly because there was such joy in giving it.
Just noticed this link on another blog - win a $50 certificate at Homeschool eStore, so here are my answers!
1. How many children do you have / homeschool? 2. One is in first grade and the other is pre-K
2. How long have you been homeschooling? Since my oldest was born! Technically for about a year and a half.
3. Have they always been homeschooled, or did they ever go to public/private school? Always homeschooled. We planned on it before even concieving our oldest.
4. Do you plan on homeschooling until graduation? Yes. No doubt about it!
5. Do you belong to a co-op? No, but we "belong" to a charter school that functions much like a co-op.
6. Do you school all year long, or use some other schedule? We basically follow a traditional school year schedule (that of the charter school), more or less. It's fun because we have an annual "not Back to School" celebration day in the fall, and the kids get the bliss of long summers of freedom (unschooling), during which they pursue their own interests.
7. Do you use textbooks only, or do you like to supplement with other materials? We supplement. I think our only textbooky textbook is science. We do use some workbooks, a lot of hands-on learning, lots of coloring/art, lots of reading.
8. Are field trips included in your school plans, or are they just family time? Both. I do plan some field trips (none lately though, oops), but we also do fun things just for family time that I could count as field trips.
9. Do you and your kids do crafty stuff together for school time? Yes, but not enough of it recently! My kids both do really well with a hands-on approach, so crafty projects work out well for us.
10. Would you consider everyday household life stuff ‘home ec’? Definately. I count their assistance with grocery shopping, preparing food, and much more as "home ec". It's a part of living, and I think they do need the skills they develop this way.
11. Do you have any advice for new homeschoolers? Go with what feels right for you and works well for your children. Don't think you need to buy a homeschool-in-a-box, or follow someone's advice to the letter. Feel free to tweak things so that they are right for you. After all, homeschooling is all about following your own path!
12. Do you have advice for homeschoolers with little ones under foot? Have things ready for them, from coloring pages, to a box of beads/blocks/trinkets. My daughter (pre-K) will play happily for hours with math manipulatives. If they want to be part of the homeschooling process, indulge them with some simple work, but don't get stressed over whether or not they complete it.
Saturday, December 15, 2007
A decent week...
In other general news, I will be officially done with this semester on Monday, when I take my algebra final. I have already submitted my final essays for political science and child development. Then no classes until mid-January! We also spent part of last weekend tearing out the wall-to-wall carpeting in the main bathroom. Yes, wall-to-wall carpeting. I don't know why, but it was there! Now we have bare (high quality) plywood, until we can tile it. Still better than the carpet though. I have a sort of milestone coming up this week when I turn 35. We got a Christmas tree today, and I put some lights up on our little front porch. And that's about it for our exciting life!
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
Almost forgot - small brag here...
Got my science stuff!
I also got my SOTW units figured out, including library lists for the first 2 units (Mesopotamia and Egypt). We'll be saving Rome for next year (oops). I just can't bring myself to hurry through history! Plus, if we take longer than 4 years, that's okay, especially if we do stick with the charter school, because they follows California education content standards to some degree, and in 6th grade, Elf would be doing Ancient History again anyway. So, 5 years, about, for SOTW 1-4 works out well in the long run, after which we may move to History Odyssey for Elf, in conjunction with SOTW for Fairy, or just continue with SOTW for both, with additional books, etc. for Elf.
We've gotten most of our Christmas shopping out of the way. Everything for the kids, except a few stocking stuffers, has been safely hidden away. I still have to shop for M, and get something for my MIL. I shop for most of my own family later on, since my mom doesn't celebrate Christmas until the Twelfth Night (ever since she lost her best friend to cancer on Christmas Day). So I also give gifts to my brother and sister then. We celebrate with my dad and my MIL on Christmas Eve. Very long holiday season for us, in other words! Every year I promise myself I'll shop early and get it all done ahead of time, but somehow it never quite seems to work out that way.
I'll have to take a picture of Elf's turkey vulture pic from yesterday. We saw several of them by the side of the road eating a dead opossum, and the kids insisted we stop and watch. So we did. It was kind of disgusting, but at the same time, it was funny watching them fight. They would cry out loudly (the kids said they were "yelling") and hit each other with their wings. So, Elf drew a picture of one, and did a narration, so I am counting that as science. Today we read Chapter 7 in SOTW and had a great discussion about laws and rules. We also had art and Elf had Spanish, plus we got some math and phonics done.
I am now off to a review for next week's algebra final. Yaaaay, ha ha.
Monday, December 10, 2007
Hmmmm....
Anyhow, today was a pretty normal day. After Elf's class, we played, and had lunch, then eventually settled in for lessons. We actually seem to have a pattern to our days now! First calendar work (Saxon Math Meeting books), then memory work, then math, followed by phonics, and finally a variety of other subjects (history, geography, science, handwriting, music, etc.). So, Elf worked on measurements while Fairy worked on finding, counting and coloring "hidden" sea creatures, then we moved on to phonics, only Fairy chose to work on handwriting instead. Elf also read another of his leveled readers aloud, and actually read it fairly fluently.
That was it, and then I had to rush off to algebra myself. We started late, so we didn't get to the "extras" today, but there's always tomorrow!
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Good start to the week....
Over the weekend, we got a new dining table, so I at last have my homeschool area in the family room, and the kids couldn't wait to sit down! I put on some music in the background (classical Christmas stuff). We started with calendar work: Fairy has her new color pattern for the month memorized, red green green, and Elf's IST gave me a bunch of weather symbols he can use in filling out his weather chart, which he thought was a lot of fun. Then, on to memorization - a review of the days of the week, and then the poem "Hey diddle diddle, the cat & the fiddle...". I think next week's poem will have to be more challenging, because they both got this one down fast! Some phonics work, where Elf made this week's words with his little letter cards, and Fairy worked on alphabet printouts from Enchanted Learning, and then a new subject. GRAMMAR! Finally, we got started with this, doing an intro to nouns from Teaching Treasures. Afterwards, the kids spent the whole evening naming things and seeing if they were nouns, so I think they got it, but I have a review planned for later in the week anyway. I also read them the Poco a poco story again, so we can restart musical studies. Smoothest day of homeschooling we've had in a while. A light day - no math, etc. - but I figure with Elf in an hour and a half class in the morning, a heavy schedule at home would be too much. He was really funny, scolding his letter cards when he misspelled one word, telling them they were out of order and had better get it straight, fast.
After all this, we drove to my MIL's house. My SUV is on her last wheels, so to speak, and is running very poorly, leaving me with an imminent sense of doom. I know I'll get stranded somewhere! But, MIL has an extra vehicle, so she's letting me borrow that until I can figure out how to afford a new (used) car. It's a truck, which is really not me, but it's fairly new, runs well, has enough room for my family with the extended cab... now if I can just figure out how to get rid of all the awful bumper stickers my step-father-in-law had put on it!
Friday, November 30, 2007
Some random, recent pictures...
Fairy helping with the side dishes
Good day today too. We did homeschooling early (for us), starting with calendar work, moving on through math, then some phonics work (from Elf's old Houghton Mifflin book we never completed last year for a change of pace). We finished up with a really fun book, called 1001 Things to Spot Long Ago from Usborne. Kind of like an I Spy crossed with Where's Waldo. Not a lot of stuff, but we covered the basic. After that, and some time I spent figuring out if we're "on track" with my plans for the year (which we mostly are), we headed off to the park. When we got there, most of the kids were off on an adventure, but mine settled right in anyway, having me push them on the swings. Eventually everyone else came back, and there were a lot of kids today! They played running-and-chasing games, climbing games, burying-cars-in-the-sand games... I think the idea of the "game" changed every 15 minutes! All the while my Fairy sat happily in the sand, digging with her buddy Cassia (I understand they are twins now). I met a mom whose daughter goes to the same charter school as Elf, which was cool, and we really got along well. She even gave Elf some car-related toys she was planning on donating. Anyhow, it turned out to be one of the best park days I've been to in a while. I do wish we had gotten there in time for the adventure, and that it hadn't gotten quite so cold, but it was still great fun.
Now I'm off to enjoy my first whole work-free weekend in months!
Our mummified apple slices...
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Back in the saddle...
Yesterday, we had a meeting with Elf's IST, so we spent the morning prepping, which mainly meant printing pictures of Elf at work (ex: picture of him working on his clay tablet) and having him copy over a sentence about each thing that I wrote in highlighter. After the meeting, he had Spanish, and then we had art class. This week's subject was the Snowy Egret, which we painted using feathers to get a nice wispy look.
I've been studying hard myself. Algebra is getting increasingly difficult, naturally. Plus I missed two essays from Political Science when I was having some computer trouble, so I've been working on making those up. Then the Child Development project, etc. I did register for spring classes this week - more algebra, World History (to 1500), and biology.
Well, off to work on another essay!
Monday, November 26, 2007
My essay on Homeschooling & Socialization...
I have noticed, since posting about our site, a fair amount of interest in the socialization process for kids that attend school at home, so as a parent that does school my two at home, I thought I might address some of these issues. Please keep in mind as you read this, that this article is intended only to show some of the socialization opportunities available - I am not saying that homeschooling is a better option than public schooling, as each family needs to make their own choices for their own children.
First of all, yes, there are a lot of socialization opportunities out there for homeschooled children. I belong to a local homeschool group that has park days, field trips, and more. With them we have toured pumpkin patches, a sticker factory, an ecology center, and more, just as public school children go on field trips. Children on these ventures range from tots to near-adults, giving all the children a wide range of people with which to socialize. 4-H is another option, with a homeschool group of its own. Many regions of the U.S. have numerous groups to which a family can belong, all with unique offerings. There are also charter school programs tailored to meet the needs of the homeschooled child, offering academic assistance and a variety of elective classes, so that even a devoted at-home-scholar can enjoy a classroom environment once or twice a week, or even more if desired. In addition, there are sports teams and classes, dance classes, art classes, Scouts, music lessons, and much more. According to Time Magazine (Seceding from School, August 2001), “98% of homeschooled children are involved in activities outside their homes, with persons other than family members”. For many homeschooling families, the issue is too many outside activities!
Then there are the more mundane aspects of socialization, those that come about through daily life. Grocery shopping, going to the library, running other errands, all provide social opportunities, chances for children to meet with and mingle with people of all ages, in real-world settings. Older children, in their teens, often seek out part-time employment (just as public school teens do), or internships, that provide them with more socialization, while instilling the sense of responsibility we all hope to see our children develop.
Of course, part of the role of being a parent who homeschools is to seek out and fully utilize these opportunities, just as much as it is that parent’s responsibility to act as teacher for their children. A parent interested in homeschooling is often a parent willing to do all types of research to find the best teaching tools and experiences for their child(ren).
And yes, there are always homeschooled kids that are not well socialized, but then there are kids like that in public schools too. My brother, for example, went through second grade, in a public school, without saying a word to anyone. No socialization "system", at home or at a school, is perfect.
I would like to finish by saying that, in my personal experience, I have noticed a striking difference in homeschooled kids versus their public school counterparts, and that is the willingness of older kids to play games with younger ones. Often in schools, children are very much age-segregated, and the older child that plays with a younger one can become a target for ridicule. I have not yet witnessed this at a park day, 4-H, or any other homeschool gathering. To me, that says a lot about homeschooled socialization.
So many questions...
Anyhow, the responses have been interesting! I am doing my best to answer the questions fairly, and calmly (no, I didn't say to the deprivation question what I wrote here - that's just what I wanted to say. I was much more polite in my actual answer!). I think the teacher assigned me to this group, and this particular topic, on purpose, because if she read my class intro, etc., she knows I homeschool!
Speaking of which, no, we didn't do much last week! The kids did do Thanksgiving activity books, and we did talk alot about Thanksgiving, plus they helped clean the house, Elf made the mashed potatoes, and Fairy helped M make gravy, but that's it. We did have a lovely Thanksgiving though! Everyone that was supposed to came, we ate tons of yummy food, kicked back in front of the living room fire, chatted, until eventually everyone drifted off to their respective homes, and then E trounced me in a game of chess, as always (there has got to be a way to defeat him!!!).
Today's plan, when Elf and Fairy are home this afternoon (my mom takes them on Monday mornings): a new poem for memory work, some phonics work, an intro to grammar, and then I plan to have Elf read a new book aloud... maybe a math worksheet, but not sure yet. Not a heavy load, but then he had class this morning.
Thursday, November 22, 2007
Monday, November 19, 2007
Just a quick link...
Woodland Animals
Oh, and on a sidenote, I was in the breakroom yesterday at work, and one of the other women, who has small kids, was asking me about homeschooling (seems she's not satisfied with the education her daughter is recieving). Anyhow, a male co-worker suddenly jumped into the conversation and it turns out that his five children were all homeschooled (the youngest, age 14, is still being homeschooled), and today he has a lawyer-in-training, a freelance writer, an actress, and an intern/doctor in his family. Not a bad turnout!
Science pages for Temperate Woodland Animals
Saturday, November 17, 2007
Finally, an update...
I have been working on choosing my classes for the spring semester at the community college, as I can register in just over a week. Biology, more advanced algebra, world history, and maybe an online typing/keyboarding class. I am trying to get my typing speed up, as this is one of the major things administrative jobs look for, and I honestly can not stay working for a grocery store forver, or even the next few years while I finish college and credentialing. Anyhow, it looks to be a busy semester, but manageable.
I am also trying to reorganize our homeschooling lessons. I have ordered (well, the charter school ordered) a couple of actual science workbooks for Elf. Each one has 10 units - one book is biology and one is chemistry. I asked around on several message boards about these, because I had heard yes they were secular, no they weren't... eventally I got enough good feedback to try Real Science 4 Kids. We ordered the pre-level ones that are supposed to be good for 1st-2nd grade. I did like the sample pages I viewed online. Anyhow, I need to really be a little more diligent about hitting all our subjects each week. We;ll go for a couple of weeks without touching certain books, and then I feel like we're behind, which we aren't really, but it feels that way. So, I am looking back over my plans, and trying to actually incoporate them into our homeschool days.
In other news, M and I are celebrating our 12th anniversary this weekend (it's technically Monday). Twelve years.... I won't say it has all been an easy ride, but definately worthwhile! We're just going to go out to dinner tonight, by ourselves.
Have a good weekend!
Saturday, November 10, 2007
Weekly Report: Nov. 5-9
Language Arts:
Elf got halfway through lesson 6 in ETC, after finishing Lesson 5 on Monday. He read aloud a Level One reader called "We Are Singing" and colored the corrosponding section of his bookworm chart. For copywork (and a quick grammar lesson), he copied the poem "Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, and Jack jump over the candlestick", which was also his memorization work for the week. He also wrote about snails in his journal: I fand a snale in our garden (I found a snail in our garden).
Math:
History:
Geography:
Science:
Memorization:
Art:
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Gee, last night was fun...
Anyhow, long story short, he fractured (into several pieces) the rounded end of one arm bone (radius) right at the wrist. He's in a splint now, getting a cast next week. Unfortunately, my job is running late on getting my benefit paperwork to me, so we don't have insurance for the adults in this family at this point, and M will be missing some work, but we'll get through it, and I think my insurance will be retroactive to October.
In regular household news, I got Elf and Fairy started on some memorization work today from the Treasury of Children's Poetry, which I picked up on sale for $3 two years ago and have barely opened. I thought we'd start small, with "Jack be nimble, etc.", and I gave it to Elf for his copywork. I'll have to post a picture as he did a lovely job. Then on to math, where Elf filled in the blanks on ____ + a given number = 10, or vice versa: a given number + ____ = 10. He got 25 of 25 right! Of course, a lot of them are repeats (no other way to have 25), but I guess that's the point of a drill page. We also did 3 pages in ETC, then read Chapter 5 in SOTW, after which I had him give me a narration of the chapter. In the meantime, Fairy worked on her HWOT book, her Meeting book, her ETC primer, and had a lot of math manipulatives play. She also listened in on SOTW and had her own points to add to the narration.
I had really hoped to head to a park day tomorrow, but I don't think we'll make it this time. My SUV is leaking oil all over my driveway, and my brother can't look at it until Saturday. I've been driving my mom's car, but it goes in for new tires tomorrow. I also have loads of housework to catch up on, homework to finish (political Science & algebra), and some homeschooling stuff to get the kids through. Maybe I'll do a fun art project with them in the afternoon instead. Oh, and speaking of art, I again had a great time as the teacher's assistant for Elf's art class this week! I got to direct the kids (15 this time, in small groups) in making leaf prints with tempura paint.
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
We started with our Saxon meeting books, and then Elf did 2 pages in math - one regular work sheet, with a word problem, fractions, telling time, counting money, and double-digit adding (no carrying or borrowing though), plus a drill sheet on some basic addition. Fairy did a math worksheet where she matched groups of objects to their numbers and traced the numbers, plus she spent some time playing with various manipulatives, and I worked with her on counting.
After that (and break #1), we moved onto ETC and GRfTC. Elf got halfway through Lesson 6, by himself, before getting tired of it, and Fairy did 6 pages in her book, with minimal assistance (basically I read the directions and let her do all the work). Break # 2, and we checked in on our apple slices. The mummified ones are very light and dry now, while the "control" apple slices are getting pretty gross - slimy, dark brown... good thing they're in Ziploc bags! We finished up with a few pages in Maps, Globes, Graphs for Elf, on how people alter their environments, with Fairy looking on. Then we had lunch and watched a documentary on the ancient wonders of Egypt.
So, I call that a very good school day! We also spent 15 minutes, approximately, reading a Curious George story aloud, and Elf read We Are Singing to me. Definately a productive day, and I don't know if it's because we took a few days off, or the breaks, but for once there was no whining! With Elf's progress through ETC today, I know he can read better than he lets on. He read all the silly sentences to himself, chuckling the whole time, and got all the right answers. I guess he just needs to keep building his reading confidence?
Monday, November 5, 2007
Getting back on track...
Speaking of seeing things first hand, my mom drove the kids and I to Cyrus's class today (as my car has an oil leak - yaaay), and we were looking for hot air balloons, since there's usually 1 or 2 around on clear mornings. Well, this morning we saw 3, and boy, we got a good view! There was apparently no wind up there, and they came down right next to the highway we drive on. The kids were in absolute awe at how huge they are close up, and just beautiful too - all deep rich colors. We were late to class due to stopping for a few minutes to watch, but it was worth it! It took me back to my childhood, when hot air balloons used to fly over our house on weekends, and one day, one came down in the field across the little street we lived on.
That was our excitment for the day. The rest of it was pretty ordinary. We did the aforementioned homeschooling, gardened a bit, did a little housework, I had algebra... Oh, and on the job front, the good grocery store offered me fewer hours at lower pay, with no benefits, so it's a no go. So, if you hear of a good part-time secretarial job that pays pretty well, let me know! I'm getting really frustrated with being out of the house every evening and never having weekends to do anything with my family. The pay isn't really worth it. Enough already, though, right? Other than work, things are good, so I can't really complain too much!
Thursday, November 1, 2007
I've been so bad about blogging....
After that, we headed off to pick up dinner stuff, and then home for some hot lunch... bean-cheese-&-tomato tostadas, which are the kids' new favorite lunch. The kids took their costumes off and played in the yard for a while once the sun came out. Then, back into costume and down to visit my dad!
We wound up the day by going out trick-or-treating, both around our block and around several blocks over near my mom's house, while M stayed home to hand out candy. Last year, at the apartment, we had no trick-or-treaters at all, which was a big disappointment, but this year, in our new neighborhood, we had a flood of them.
Oh, and here are our jack o' lanterns, at the kids' request. Elf carved his own, all by himself this year, and Fairy carved a fair bit of hers. I'm pretty happy with how my own turned out too!
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
I am now a classroom volunteer...
Speaking of his classes, he is friends with several other boys, and a couple of girls, that are in his blended class, so I was excited for Fairy today when the new kindergarten girl asked Fairy to play at break time, sat next to her at circle time, and worked with her at the coloring station. They're really close in age and have a lot in common (right down to the silver hoop earrings). Makes Fairy really feel a part of the class.
In other news, the manager of the good store is "very excited to welcome me on board". Haven't even had my second interview yet, so that's pretty good! I won't get the new store a mile away as too many of their already-hired employees transferred there, but I'll work just across town, and yes, I'll likely earn a little more, plus it's just a way cooler store. I also got my midterm grades - a solid B in algebra (yaaaay!!!) and satisfactory (no letter grade yet) in the other 2 classes. Phew!
Schoolwise, we've just been plugging along. Elf is whizzing through math, and Fairy is doing well with handwriting and phonics, except that she tends to write her name completely backwards, letters and all. Is that normal for a left-handed kid developing writing skills? Elf never did it, so it's new to me. At least she has all the right letters, in the right order if you read right to left or in a mirror. We started our apple mummification project, with slices of untreated apples as the control factor, and we're going to make mummy dolls with sarcophagi in the next couple of weeks.
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Nice rainy week...
Language Arts:
Elf worked through the last part of Lesson 3 and all of Lesson 4 in ETC. He also got 100% on his spelling test (trim, trap, frog, trot, rip, press, and clam). Of course much of this involved moaning and groaning. He loves the ETC workbook, except that he's not very fond of all the writing! Funny, because he's really enjoying his journal. This week he wrote a little about our house, and drew a picture of it. Fairy drew a picture too, and I'll tell you, our house looks very different from one picture to the next! Elf also finally read aloud a Level 1 book - #11: Snip Snap - that he's been avoiding because he thought it looked too hard - surprise! He read the whole thing quite well, if a little slowly, which I'd actually rather he do than rush through and make up words. In addition, he flew through a few more pages in his HWOT workbook.
Fairy is finishing up with the letter m in her Get Ready for the Code, and spends a fair amount of time going through her alphabet flash cards, singing the alphabet or naming the items on the cards with a lot of emphasis on the beginning sound. She's enjoying her HWOT book as well, and is asking for a journal.
Math:
We're up through lesson 32 in Saxon Math 2. Elf has learned this week about temperatures to the nearest 10 degrees, doubles plus one, a review of addition & subtraction word problems and some patterning, plus I tried him out on simple double digit addition involving carrying numbers, and he got it right off the bat! We'll see how well he remembers it later on though.
Fairy has been (mostly) completing worksheets that I print off Enchanted Learning or LearningPage dot com, as well as keeping her Meeting Book up to date. We go over the days of the week every morning with the Meeting Book, and she's looking forward to a new color pattern next month (this month is brown and orange).
History:
We read chapter 4 in SOTW this week, and browsed through a few books on ancient Egypt from the charter school. I've "chickened" out (sorry, couldn't resist) and decided we're going to mummify apples instead. By the way, Jenny, how are your game hens doing? We're thinking we might make it to the Egyptian Museum sometime in November - we'll see. Both kids are really enjoying the Egyptians, so I am happy we went with chronological history. We also did some map work and coloring pages this week, and I need to do a search on my tv for related shows (the History Channel usually has some good ones).
Science:
Elf has been studying owls at his charter school and is fascinated by them, so we've been talking about them a lot, drawing pictures, looking at all the cool little bones he got out of the owl pellet he dissected at the charter school... we also read, cover to cover, the Zoobook that arrived on Tuesday - all about sharks. He says he wants to continue studying animals for a while, and in another month or so we may move into anatomy (animal and human). Maybe a trip to the zoo is in order too!
Fairy on the other hand is very interested lately in both snakes (due to Blackberry) and bunnies. There are several of the regular pet-type bunnies loose in our neighborhood, so she runs to the livingroom window every morning to look for them.
Home Ec:
The kids helped me make oatmeal chocolate chip cookies this week - I had them measure and add the ingredients while I supervised. Only problem was, it was hard to keep the raw ingredients in the bowl rather than their mouths! They also helped me clean the house as we were expecting company today - first time my dad has been here to see the house. Elf is getting really good about trying to keep the room he shares with Fairy nice and tidy. Still a ways to go, but he's learning! I've given both of them a few chores to do daily, and they're doing well with them. M and I have decided that the time has come to officially start an allowance for them, provided they do their chores, and their homeschooling.
Other:
Elf has gotten through the boring intro in Maps, Globes, Graphs and is now working on chapter 1, which is all about landscape features, like mountains, rivers, plains, etc.
Art-wise, they're both drawing between 1-10 pictures a day, so I haven't been worrying about that, although there are a couple of drawing projects on KinderArt that I'd like to do with them.
Musically, we've been listening to variety of music these days. E likes jazz, so we hear a fair bit of that, and today we watched Fantasia 2000 - art and music!
Speaking of movies, Fairy wants to be Snow White for Halloween, but had never seen the movie. It turned out my dad had an old VHS copy he didn't want anymore, so he brought it over today when he came for lunch, and we finished it a couple of hours ago. Parts of it freaked both kids out, but they laughed almost hysterically through a lot of it. Elf is going to be Optimus Prime. We still need to make it to the local pumpkin patch! There was a homeschool association field trip on Friday to one, but since it rained, I don't know if it happened or not.
I called the good grocery store this week to see what was going on, and I'll be going in for a second interview within a week. Yaaay! I aslo got another perfect score on an essay for my Political Science class, which is just funny because I still don't own the textbook (don't tell my teacher that). I base everything I write for those off his recorded lectures (it's an online class), stuff I've read or seen, and what I can find on the internet or in the encyclopedia.
And that's it for now!
Monday, October 15, 2007
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Plugging along...
In the background, you can see my ever-so-lovely wallpaper (which I have started removing, although M thinks it now looks even worse with a bare patch on one wall). We're planning to have it stripped and repainted well before Christmas.... I hope.
Oh, I also added a new link to my curriculum in the sidebar - Book Lists.
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Most of a day off...
On the homefront, I think we're getting somewhere with all the unpacking. Yes, we still have stuff to unpack, but most of that has been placed in the garage for now, and what is in the house is where we want it, for the most part. I need to make time to sew the kids curtains soon, since my mom now has the fabric on hand. I also want to sew curtains for the other rooms, but those can come later, as can painting. I am still trying to get accustomed to the fact that we own this house, we're not just tenants. I find myself thinking "well, someday we'll own a home". Duh. When does the unbelievability (is that even a word?) wear off? On a positive note, I am doing much better with my daily household chores here! Maybe it's having the space to put things away, maybe it's just the home ownership pride thing... but whatever it is, I am glad I'm keeping up with it. BTW, Jenny, what are you guys doing the week before Halloween? Maybe a Wednesday or Friday (pre-park time) lunch?
I am still waiting to hear from the other grocery store and will give them a call tomorrow to check in, since I am really hoping this will work out. The current grocery store manager is really giving me a hard time regarding my unavailable days, and so far we haven't made it to 4H at all because I am always working during meetings. We may have to just not do 4H right now. Aaaarggghhh! Well, it's always something, and overall things are good, so no more complaints for now about evil corporate grocery stores!
Monday, October 8, 2007
I don't know if we should...
Anyhow, we did accomplish something. He made three letter & color patterns with his name for math that turned out to be pretty neat. He did another page of math practically on his own. He finished the third lesson in ETC and got 100% on his spelling test! Plus he finally did a writing exercise for his charter school, where each child was given two pictures and had to choose one to write about, in whatever words they wanted, with their own spelling, grammar, etc. His is short, but he did it! Phew. I'm just glad it's over. I do have to say though that both are working hard in gymnastics. I'm beginning to really see progress in both of them.
We did a make-up session on Sunday, since I've been sick and therefore completely unmotivated, where he did beautifully, as did Fairy. They listened, did the work without complaint, and did it well... I was hoping today would be a repeat of that! I read Chapter 3 in SOTW (we're making flour-based "clay" tablets tomorrow) while the kids colored their Egyptian scribe pictures, did a few pages of math, handwriting and ETC, and Fairy worked really hard on her Code book, plus we caught up on science by reading about "Animals of the Coniferous Forest" while Elf colored a grey wolf picture and Fairy colored a (blue) snowshoe rabbit (printouts courtesy of Enchanted Learning). It was nice!
Well, maybe tomorrow will be better. I'm off to bed in a few minutes, with yet another cup of Throat Coat tea so I won't cough so much tonight. Jenny, if you read this, is there a Friday park day this week? I'm totally confused, because I thought it was going weekly, but the newsletter doesn't mention that... and we missed the last one. Of course, I could easily be mistaken!
Friday, October 5, 2007
Tagged!
1. Your rock star name: (first pet, current car) - Felix Ford
2. Your gangster name: (favorite ice cream, favorite cookie) - Peppermint Gingersnap
3. Your fly guy/girl name: (first initial first name, first 3 letters last name) - GEst
4. Your detective name: (favorite color, favorite animal) - Green Dolphin
5. Your soap opera name: (middle name, birth city) - Ann Petaluma
6. Your Star Wars name (first three letter last name, first 2 letter of first name) - EstGi
7. Superhero Name: (2nd favorite color, favorite drink and add "the") - The Blue Merlot
8.Nascar name (first names of your grandfathers) - Edgar Arthur
9. Stripper Name: (favorite perfume, favorite candy) - Green Tea Chocolate
10. Witness Protection Name: (mother's and father's middle name) Marlena Edgar
Okay, I like my rock star name, my gangster name (though admittedly it does not sound threatening), my detective name (which is almost the name of one of my favorite books), and my superhero name, although I can't imagine the superpowers that go with that one. My stripper name is just silly.
Monday, October 1, 2007
Meet Blackberry....
Saturday, September 29, 2007
What a nice day...
So that put me in a good mood. Then I came home, had some coffee and read for a while, cleaned the kitchen, and baked a lemon cake for my friend W's (late) birthday celebration. M cooked dinner this evening, and the kids, W and I cleaned up all the old branches from the apple tree in the backyard - they, along with about a million little apples, have been cluttering the ground out there for a couple of weeks now. Without them, the yard looks much better, although still dead. I think I am going to make apple butter with the remaining million apples on the tree. Wouldn't that taste wonderful on fresh-baked bread in the winter?
Then, my mom sent me pics of curtain material for the kids' room, that she bought and that I will sew. I'll post pics when they're up. Suffice to say, they will go nicely with the rug, but thankfully I don't think they'll be overwhelming.
I think I'm off now to brew some tea and bathe the elflings, who are at the moment possibly quite the dirtiest children in the world.
Friday, September 28, 2007
Finishing the week up...
the Elf:
He is now (as of today, the 28th), keeping a journal, as part of a collaboration between his IST and myself, in order to get him in the flow of writing more easily. It will not be corrected, so all the spelling and unique grammar will be entirely his own! Today, he wrote (and incidentally almost all even spelled perfectly) about hot rods. And then drew a picture of a hot rod, with giant exhaust pipes and flames down the side.
In math, he is, as always, trucking along. I think it took him all of 5 or 6 minutes to do a whole worksheet today! He's really enjoying keeping track of the weather with his Meeting Book, and plans to count up the hot, warm, cool, and cold days at the end of each month for comparison purposes.
Historically speaking, we read today about Osiris (how do you pronounce this? I hear different ways from different people) and his evil brother Set. Then we had an interesting discussion about gods, and why people believe in them/him. I also did some digging around and found this site (scroll down to find Color Me Egypt), and this one for more coloring pages. We also actually did all the comprehension questions from part one of this chapter, and I was pleasantly surprised to find out that Elf did listen!
In language arts, he has finished his review of capital letter formation in HWOT, and has gotten through the first couple of lessons in ETC. He's also still reading aloud in the evenings, usually a Bob Book, although he's working on a set of readers that we got from his school, along with a caterpillar chart to color in as he masters each book. He's been doing some copywork as well, plus now journaling, so I think we're making some good headway in this area.
For science, we've been studying Animals of the Ice and Tundra, and if you look under Science Samples in the sidebar, you'll find his caribou drawing. He's also been spending a lot of time playing with the microscope, and of course, both kids are fascinated by the snake!
Other than that, he draws something everyday, so I haven't been bothering with art lessons at the moment. Musically, we've been listening to a cd called Mozart in Egypt. He's working really hard in gymnastics, and has even asked M to show him how to do some strengthening exercises at home so that he'll perform better in class. We're looking forward to having a weekly park day, as long as my job schedule meshes well with it.
the Fairy:
Not a heavy schoolwork week for her. She has been working a lot with her alphabet flashcards, and playing a lot of self-designed counting games, as well as spending an hour at a time at the little drafting table, drawing insanely intricate pictures of... well, things. She also colors the Egyptian handouts (as I type this she's working diligently on a picture of Osiris), and participates in the SOTW discussions, as well as following the science topics, so I'm not worried about her "falling behind".
She's also been working hard in gymnastics, and practices some of it at home as well.
In general household news, there's a fabulous grocery store opening up nearby, and tomorrow they are holding open interviews for all positions. If they pay any better than where I work now, I'm jumping ship. Unlike where I work now, they are not a corporation - instead they are a small, local chain (this will be the third store). Also, Elf cooked a whole dinner by himself last Saturday! He made turkey sloppy joes and coleslaw, his absolute favorite meal in the world. I just oversaw the process of cooking to make sure there were no burns, cuts, etc. Ummm.... let's see... oh, check out the new link at the bottom of my sidebar - cool whale pictures, some of which were taken by my brother-in-law.
And that's it from here for now!
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Saturday, September 22, 2007
Building a shaduf
Here he is digging an irrigation ditch...
Tying the shaduf together with string...
Testing out the finished project...
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Feels like fall...
Anyhow, on Saturday Elf, Fairy and I curled up on the couch to watch Walking with Cavemen. Fairy fell asleep about halfway through, but Elf and I watched every moment eagerly. It's so nice to have someone else in the house that is fascinated by this stuff! By the end of it, Elf was trying to figure out which of our human ancestors contributed what to the mix we are now.
Today we got a chance to actually sit down and "do school" (okay, it's been a really busy week). Fairy wasn't really interested, so after doing her Meeting Book, she ran off to play with her "babies", leaving me with some one-on-one time with Elf. We blazed through 2 pages of math, 2 handwriting pages, and 3 pages of phonics, before Fairy came back, just in time for the first chapter in our Animal Encyclopedia - animals of the ice and tundra. Both kids loved all the pictures of the animals, especially the penguins and caribou. Elf is working on a drawing of a caribou, which I'll post when he finishes. He's also really enjoying Spanish class on early Wednesday afternoons - today they worked on the names of body parts.
Tomorrow I hope we'll get a chance to read chapter one in SOTW. I work, all day pretty much, so we'll see how it goes (yeah, they messed up on my schedule at work).
Friday, September 14, 2007
Thursday and today were much more productive...
Both of them also got some practical, hands-on lessons yesterday. Fairy helped her Nonna make a batch of cookies, and Elf used a drill press (under M's guidance and very strict supervision) to make a screwdriver rack.
Today, we read about the boy who cried wolf, and then worked on our Meeting Books. We then moved on to math worksheets. Elf did a regular page and a drill page of doubles up to 5. Fairy worked on matching birthday cakes (for pictures of both, see Math Samples in my sidebar, under Sum & Substance). We worked on phonics next (again see sidebar). Today I combined the idea behind Easy Lessons for Teaching Word Families with Explode the Code. I wrote down the words from the first unit we've covered, gave Elf our letter cards, and had him sound them out when I read them out loud. He got all of them right, on the first try! I also used our alphabet flash cards for the first time, with Fairy. She can identify nearly all the letters and the sounds they make. After all that, we moved on to science, and we made a Jello cell model. It came out pretty good, although I think I could have used the bigger box of Jello. Still, we're now ready to move on to animals next week. I think the first section of the Animal Encyclopedia is on Arctic and Antarctic animals.
Tomorrow I have the day off, so we'll watch Walking with Cavemen as a segueway into the actual first chapter of SOTW. Yesterday, I read a little bit about cavemen to the kids, and they spent the early afternoon pretending to be Neanderthals. They hunted animals (teddy bears), made a tent of skins (towels and our table), and ate their kill (leftover chicken drumsticks).
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Not off to the greatest start this week...
Tuesday, I spent the whole morning into early afternoon at the the heart center, while my dad got his surgery done. Good news, and a little iffy news - he didn't need any stents, which they were expecting he would, so that was good. However, it looks like he had a heart attack some time ago without knowing it, which closed off a major vessel to his heart. But, another one grew longer and attached itself to take over. They don't want to operate to correct this unless the pain becomes unmanageable. After the surgery, I had work, so again, no lessons.
Today, I had every intent of getting stuff done, before C.O.'s Spanish class. But, we all overslept instead. C.O. did read out loud for his IST with no trouble! And she loaned me a few more books on biology, and ancient history, plus a bunch of Level 1 readers. I'm really not sure what happened to the rest of the day after Spanish, except that I cooked a really good dinner and went to class.
Well, tomorrow is another day! And we don't have to be anywhere until I go to work at 3.
Saturday, September 8, 2007
End of "week" one...
Math:
We're actually using the Meeting Books that come with Saxon Math this year. Both kids fill them out every morning. C.O. loves doing his weather graph (he got to mark "cool" yesterday and was very excited), and C.J. is definately learning patterning. C.O.'s worksheets are mostly review at this point, so he's flying through them. I've been printing out basic worksheets for C.J. from Enchanted Learning, and she's been exploring manipulatives.
Language Arts:
Both kids are enjoying their Code books. C.O. has done most of the first unit of Explode the Code 2, and C.J. is working on the letter "f" in Get Ready for the Code. They both did a couple of pages in HWOT as well, plus we're reading a lot. C.O. reads a Bob book out loud every day, and I am reading the classic Winnie-the-Pooh stories to them at bedtime. I've also been reading one of Aesop's Fables to them as a start to homeschooling every morning.
Science:
We're studying cell structure. I am going to give the kids another overview on cells this next week, and then we'll make a Jello cell. After that, we'll move on to our animal studies (starting in week 3). I just want the kids to have a basic understanding of what everything is built from!
History:
We read the intro to SOTW this week, and are now focused on archeology. I read to them a bit from the book Archeology for Kids, and we're exploring a really cool website - Kids Dig Reed, which is a site dedicated to an actual dig in the U.S. Yesterday at the park, C.O. and C.J. kept asking me to bury things so that they could excavate them. I have a few books on hold at the library that I'll pick up on Monday, and I may set up some sort of backyard project next week. I also ordered Walking with Cavemen from Netflix.
Other:
No gymnastics this week because of the holiday, but we'll start back up next week. We did go to a park day, and again worked on identifying poison oak. As far as art and music, we'll start that up next week. C.O. also starts his enrichment classes next week.
So there's our first week in review.