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If we value the pursuit of knowledge, we must be free to follow wherever that search may lead us. ~ Adlai Stevenson

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

I can't believe I forgot to post about this...

but we finally made it to the Rosicrucion Egyptian Museum last Saturday. We've actually been hoping for months to make the trip, but it just kept getting delayed. Since we are now finished (for the moment anyway) with ancient Egyptian studies, this seemed like a great way to wrap it all up. And we had a fantastic time! So much to see... we played Senet in the garden, checked out all the pavilions, and slowly made our way inside. Once we actually went in, we saw everything from mummies to ancient mirrors, from a tomb replica (the kids' absolute favorite part) to a replica of a birthing room (although my MIL, who tagged along, could not figure out the purpose of the bricks... I tried several times, to no avail, to explain the idea of squatting during childbirth). My favorite part? All the day-to-day stuff. That is what fascinates me about history - it is not the big events, it is instead how people lived, regular people. I also loved watching the kids, especially Elf, connect what we had studied to what we were seeing, like the Code of Hammarubi, and statues/sarcophagi/etc. of famous pharoahs. Fairy loved the idea of a hippo-headed goddess for some reason. We also stayed for a planetarium show, and the kids were amazingly quiet during the whole thing!

Now for...
Today's topic - a recipe for success, or lunch! I'll give you my attempts at success... variety. We don't just sit down and school-at-home, nor do we do one hands-on project after another, or sit around reading for hours on end (although I could easily do that. Well, easily if I didn't have to stop every 42 seconds). We mix it up. A somewhat typical homeschooling session, for lack of a better word, might look something like this:
CircleTime first (adopted from Oak Meadow - it gets the children focused on what we're sitting down for)... verbal
Then we'll do our Meeting Books from Saxon, which involves calendar work, and checking the weather/temperature... writing, reading thermometer
Poetry memorization... again verbal
Explode the Code... writing
Then, we likely have a jumping jacks break, or a running around the backyard like maniacs break
Cyrus reads aloud... verbal
Math... written
History or science read-aloud time or watch a documentary/movie... verbal/visual
Maybe an art, history or science project, if we have time... hands-on
I also read from a chapter book at bedtime.

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What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.
Emerson

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