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Thursday, January 25, 2007

Homeschool Resources Meme

I've been tagged by The Tutor to answer this meme...

1. ONE HOMESCHOOL BOOK YOU HAVE ENJOYED
The Well-Trained Mind

2. ONE RESOURCE YOU WOULDN'T BE WITHOUT
Rainbow Resource, fabulous views inside products and great customer service. I also love their wishlist option!

3. ONE RESOURCE YOU WISH YOU HAD NEVER BOUGHT
Some DVDs about Rome that are inappropriate for my children but didn't have a rating on them to determine this before watching them. We'll be able to use them when they are older (high school), but it would have been nice to use that money in other ways.

4. ONE RESOURCE YOU ENJOYED LAST (This) YEAR
The Story of the World, Volume 1

5. ONE RESOURCE YOU WILL BE USING NEXT YEAR
Themes to Remember by ClassicalMagic.net, starting their six year schedule

6. ONE RESOURCE YOU WOULD LIKE TO BUY
One of those laser pointing things to help with astronomy.

7. ONE RESOURCE YOU WISH EXISTED
A step-by-step guide to narrations with scripted instructions and varying degrees of progress. And the book I'm supposed to write, The Ultimate Homeschooling Resource Guide.

8. ONE HOMESCHOOLING CATALOG YOU ENJOY READING
Memoria Press' Classical Teacher because of the articles.

9. ONE WEBSITE YOU USE REGULARLY
The Well-Trained Mind Message Boards

10. TAG OTHER HOMESCHOOLERS
TeamNewman

Mommyto7
ThoughtfulMom

 

A Froggy Sort of Day


In our life science studies, we're currently studying frogs. We have tadpoles growing and although we received 5 tadpoles in our shipment only two have survived. We also received a snail in our shipment that is doing well. I really hope the remaining two tadpoles survive!

We've taken Monday-Wednesday off because of various reasons. Monday, Camille was at her dad's. Tuesday, our 2nd grade curriculum came in and if you think I was going to homeschool with a box of goodies to look at, you're sadly mistaken. Wednesday, we had an opportunity to visit Sonya, a fellow classical homeschooler with six children. So here we are on Thursday and I had a dentist appointment. I assigned the independent work while I was gone- math, scripture memorization, poetry copywork, spelling, and cursive handwriting. Dh was there if she had questions. I came home and she was done.

So, Thursday is our science day. I decided to spend the remainder of the day on only science. Frogs were the animal of the day- we read from our First Encyclopedia of Animals, DK's Living Earth, Childcraft's All About Animals and then we read poems. We read 5-6 poems from An Arkful of Animals, It's Raining Pigs and Noodles, Childcraft's Poems & Rhymes, and we read fables and stories about frogs. Among these were Clever Frog, The Boys and Frogs, The Frog and the Ox, I tried finding Thumbelina in our collection of stories and didn't find it. I'll try again or check it out from the library. Camille also read from CL's Nature Reader. We have a few more books about frogs, like Ruth Heller's How to Hide A Meadow Frog that we will read tonight before bed.

We read Charlotte's Web last night and Camille asked me to read two chapters! This was a wonderful thing to hear from the girl who hasn't wanted to read aloud for the last two weeks! She even wanted to find out how long the book would take if we read two chapters a night. I told her it would take eleven days, she said "Good. Can we read Wind and the Willows next?"

Hallejuah! (The tadpoles came from Carolina.com, Carolina Biological something or other.)

 

Thankful

I have nothing much to say other than I am grateful and thankful for the blessings God has sent my way recently. I want to get this out so that when the time comes that I want to pull my hair out and I can read this again. : )

1. Discipline has finally found it's balance in our home between guiding, playing and correction. Danny is not the easiest little boy nor is he the hardest but it has been a tumultous experience figuring out what works for him and us.

2. My babies are home with me, I am enjoying homeschooling very much. Yesterday, Camille remarked at how late the school buses were delivering the kids at home (4:00 pm) and how although she likes the bus, she's glad she's at home.

3. Visiting Sonya always rejuvenates me and we were able to visit yesterday for a couple of hours. She made authentic fried rice and it was yummy!

4. I am so grateful to have our 2nd grade curriculum and be able to work on the teacher's end of the preparing whenever I'd like, without having to wait to order something. I'm grateful for the cash gifts we got for Christmas that allowed us to be able to place our order.

5. I'm grateful that I had a great dentist visit and I have no work that needs to be done.

6. I'm thankful to God for our recent struggles because it has made me stop and re-evaluate a lot of different things our lives and how best to move forward in a way that will be honoring and pleasing to Him.

7. I'm grateful for my Dh for working as hard as he does and surprising me every now and then with appreciation for what I do. Including sticking up for me when church members feel it's their duty to criticize me.

8. I am ever so thankful for the online homeschooling community that inspires me, uplifts me, bonks me on the head when I need it and pushes me in the right direction when I keep looking lost. There are so many wonderful homeschoolers out there that share their journeys complete with trials and triumphs.

9. We are blessed to be able to offer our children an education where patriotism, God and prayer play vital roles. We are blessed in that we don't have to rush our children through homework, baths, bedtimes and dinner in order to be in bed by a certain time deemed necessary for early morning rush-to-school.

10. I am grateful that our car that quit working on morning was fine and the mechanics could find nothing wrong with it and furthermore did not charge us for looking at the car. I hope to be grateful soon in finding a new owner for our truck, whose tranmission has gone.

What do you say when you're filled with thanksgiving?
Thank you Lord.

 

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

My M&M Version


 

It's Here!!!

And he asks...
"Is there any money left in our bank account?" Ol' ye of little faith! Our 2nd grade curriculum came in today and dh brought home the largest box from the post office.
Our 2nd grade art, we also have Lives of the Artists and will check out books from the library as we need them.

Music is our main fine arts focus for 2nd grade. We're starting the six year schedule at Classicalmagic.net this year.
Camille will also be taking piano lessons.

Readers I should have bought last year but hindsight and all. We have the Christian Liberty Nature Readers.

A few of the books we already own and what we bought to use for Bible and Church history. Courage and Conviction, the 3rd book in the History Lives series is available at Westminster Bookstore.

Our 2nd grade science, not pictured are the spines we already have.

I didn't dare photograph what we got for history, I might later. I am so glad that I bought Educating the Whole-Hearted Child by Clay and Sally Clarkson. After thumbing through it, I know I'll enjoy it.

Feeling very elated,
Jessica

 

Monday, January 22, 2007

Developing Your Child's Faith

I have to say I've been at a loss of HOW develop my children into strong Christians. If you've read my blog for a while, then you already know that I was raised in a moral home but not necessarily Christian. We didn't go to church, but I was allowed to go to my friends' churches when they invited me. When I got older I was given permission to attend church as I wish but it was never with my family.

Life can be so ironic at times. I'm a pastor's wife now and I don't know how to develop my children's spiritual lives. I've read parenting books about discipline, I've read books about character development but nothing has been helpful in making me feel more confident about the road ahead for my children's personal faith. I guess this is where the insecurity about American history came from. TruthQuest History (I may say this wrong, so please check it out for yourself) offers a type of discussion guide to help you seek the Lord in your history studies. I have a homeschooling friend that leads her children so well in their faith, in a way she's my mentor. I don't want to be exactly like her but I want to be able to help my children the way she does hers. I want to feel and be equipped!

I stopped at a Lifeway Christian store today and decided to look at the selections available. In the family section I found Focus on the Family's Parents' Guide to the Spiritual Growth of Children by John Trent, Ph.D., Rick Osborne, Kurt Bruner. This hefty volume felt like an answer to a prayer!
Here's a quick overview of the table of contents:

Part I: The Single Most Important Task for Christian Parents
with chapters on looking at the big picture, spiritual training 101, but what if?, making commitments

Part II: How to Pass on Your Spiritual Legacy
Section A: Your Family's Portrait
Section B: Ages and Stages 0-12
Section C: Ideas and Methods You Can Choose From
which includes church-related spiritual training; on-the-spot spiritual training; ideas, methods and tools for the family; special times and events; ideas, methods and tools for individual growth

Part III: The Content of your Spiritual Legacy
What your ____(fill in the blank with your child's age) can learn
Part IV: Practical Questions and Resources
Including memory verses! Plus there are so many books quoted and listed, you have a ton of resources in this book!

The format is very user-friendly and I compared this book to others in the store but I decided that I wanted this one. It seemed the most complete. If you can, get it through your library and preview it yourself, Amazon.com and ChristianBook.com has inside views as well. In his book, Shepherding A Child's Heart, Tedd Tripp talks about how important it is to reach our children's hearts while we discipline and outside of discipline but the examples just weren't enough for me. I feel this book will give me what I need to be the parent that I want to be, for God and for my children.

 

Obsessed with U.S. History

Our 2nd grade curriculum is in route and I can't seem to shake thoughts about U.S. History! At the end of SOTW 2, the explorers are finding America and there are chapters about the Aztecs and Mayans. No problem, I've got that period covered but when it comes to U.S. History there is just so much!

Participating in online homeschool communities can be hazardous to a simple approach, there are so many temptations to check out the curricula that others are using and praising! What has spurred this obsession of mine is thoughts about our logic stage years (grades 5-8) and what we will use. This is always a topic for Well-Trained Mind users that has very different opinions. So in an attempt to quell the curiosity beast within, I am going to list what I have collected from used bookstores, Goodwill, bookcloseouts.com and others for U.S. History. Maybe then I won't feel like I don't have enough!

BIOGRAPHIES
Abigail Adams : An American Woman (Weekend Biographies Series)
The Adventures of George Washington
Albert Einstein: Young Thinker (Childhood of Famous Americans)
Amelia Earhart
Daniel Boone : Frontier Adventures (Easy Biographies)
The Double Life of Pocahontas
Ferdinand Magellan (What Made Them Great Series)
Geronimo (History Maker Bios)
If You Grew Up with Abraham Lincoln
Legends of Paul Bunyan
Meet Benjamin Franklin (Step-up books)
Meet George Washington
Meet the North American Indians, (Step-up books)
Paul Bunyan
Paul Bunyan and Other Tall Tales
Paul Revere : Son of Liberty (Easy Biographies)
Phoebe and the General
Pilgrim Stories
Pocahontas: Girl of Jamestown
Pontiac, Chief of the Ottawas
Sacagawea and the Bravest Deed
Sam the Minuteman (I Can Read Book 3)
Sequoyah - Pbk
Squanto Friend of the Pilgrims
The Story of Thomas Jefferson
Tomo-Chi-Chi: Gentle Warrior
True Stories about Abraham Lincoln
What's The Big Idea, Ben Franklin? (Paperstar)
Why Don't You Get a Horse, Sam Adams?

EVENTS
American Revolution (Building a New Nation)
Breakout! Escape from Alcatraz (Step Into Reading , No 4)
Finding the Titanic Level 4
First Flight: The Story of Tom Tate and the Wright Brothers (I Can Read Book 4)
Fourth of July Raid
If You Lived at the Time of the Great San Francisco Earthquake
If You Sailed on the Mayflower
The Lewis and Clark Expedition
The Story of America: The First 500 Years
The Story of the Civil War
The Story of the Constitution (Cornerstones of Freedom (Paperback))
The Story of the Declaration of Independence (Book-of-the-Month Club)
The Story of the Declaration of Independence (Cornerstones of Freedom)
The Story of the Golden Spike (Cornerstones of freedom)
The Story of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (Cornerstones of freedom)
The Story of the Underground Railroad (Cornerstones of Freedom (Paperback))
The Story of the Women's Movement (Cornerstones of Freedom Series)

GENERAL
Children of the Wild West
The Courage of Sarah Noble
Cowboys: A Library of Congress Book (Library of Congress Classics)
Don't Know Much About American History (Don't Know Much About)
Hidden Pictures: Across America (Ultimate Hidden Pictures)
The Home Adventure Library : Volume 3 : People and Places and America's Story*
If You Lived in Colonial Times
If You Lived with the Sioux Indians
The Indian in the Cupboard
Little House on the Prairie (Little House)
Over the Mormon Trail (Frontiers of America Series)
The Red Badge of Courage (Dover Thrift Edition)
Sister Wendy's American Masterpieces
Stories of Early America (Through golden windows)*
Take Me Out to the Airfield!
The Wisdom of the Native Americans: Includes the Soul of an Indian and Other Writings by Ohiyesa, and the Great Speeches
Clamshell Boy- A Makah Legend
Famous Americans- Activity Book
A Child's Story of America by Christian Liberty Press*

GOVERNMENT
America the Beautiful: The Stirring True Story Behind Our Nation's Favorite Song
Book of the Presidents
I Want to be President (Sesame Street)
Lives of the Presidents: Fame, Shame (and What the Neighbors Thought)
So You Want to Be President?
A Star-spangled Birthday: A Celebration in Song, Poetry, Facts, and Trivia
We the people; the story of the United States Capitol, its past and its promise
The White House; an historic guide

STATE
Abeka's My State Notebook
My America: A Poetry Atlas of the United States
The Mysterious Tail of a Charleston Cat: A Tour Guide for Children of All Ages
Open dem cells: A pictorial history of the Albany movement
State Birds and Flowers Coloring Book (Dover Pictorial Archive Series)
Hold That Thought- U.S. Geography & History cd

I think I've got U.S. History covered for a while. The three with asterisks can be used as spines, of course A Child's Story of America is familiar to homeschoolers but the other two are gems I've found that are U.S. History narratives with stories by Genevieve Foster, D'Aulaire, Carl Sandburg, Stephen Foster, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Louisa May Alcott, and Elizabeth Coatsworth.
The People and Places, America's Story covers exploration to Martin Luther King Jr. in a narrative, illustrated way. I think I have U.S. History covered for our grammar years (1-4) and some of our logic years (5-8). I feel better now.

 

Sunday, January 21, 2007

First Sewing Project


The dresses are the same pattern with the exception of the sleeves but I'm going to attempt the one that is top left. I've got the fabric and everything else I'll need, including muslim to practice with. The lady at the fabric store said it was an ambitious project but when I asked if I should try something simpler to start she said no. Huh?

She made me get a Sewing How-To book, lol. I was frustrated with my new sewing machine because I couldn't find all the accessories that come with it, there's a secret compartment that I had a hard time finding. Lol. I thought that was funny. Here's the sewing maching I got for my birthday last April which only came out of it's box today.

It's a Brother XL3500T that dh said I could buy as my birthday gift, it was on sale. It'll allow me to do quilts on it as well, if I ever get that far. The lady at the fabric store said that sewing is as simple as driving a car. Yeah right. I don't have to run the seat belt through an obstacle course to get it on!

 

Saturday, January 20, 2007

The Weekly Report

This week has been interesting. The digital piano has gotten a lot of attention as Camille and I have been looking at the Piano Basics book we bought for beginning our lessons. I need to call the piano teachers in our area, get prices and arrange trial lessons. I don't know why I haven't done this. She's really excited to start piano lessons but not in the way that it seems that it has been hyped up.


ISSUES ABOUT READ-ALOUDS
I realized this week that I have been probably reading books that are too above her head, we were trying to finish up The Seven Voyages of Sinbad the Sailor and Camille had lost all interest. I have persevered in the past and just kept reading to her, just to expose her but I realized this isn't what I want. I want my children to love reading and at least like the books I'm reading to them. So I'm dropping all long chapter books that pertain to history unless Camille asks for them. If we can't read the books during our history time during the day, we're not reading them. I understand now that we should be reading children's literature, picture books and stories that she requests.

I'm still going to read fables, fairy tales and nature stories but other than that there will be no more longer historical fiction books until she can read them on her own and enjoy them. She has asked to read Charlotte's Web next so that is our new read-aloud. It is a chapter book but it's at her request. On a frustrating note this week, Camille has misplaced her Reading-Literature Primer that I had pictured in last week's review. I haven't torn the house apart looking for it yet because our Christian Liberty Nature Readers came in and I've had her read from Book One but I want the primer FOUND! Lol.

DANNY'S ESCAPADES
Oh, Danny (2yo) emptied a gallon of milk out on the kitchen floor this week. There is now a lock on the refrigerator door whenever I am not in view of the refridgerator. I just have to remember that the lock is on there, I've broken one already. So far in the last two weeks Danny has emptied a canister of flour and a gallon of milk- we're guessing eggs next. : )

BIBLE
We've started reading Egermeier's Bible Storybook alongside our Explorer's Bible Study and I like it better. We'll see how it goes. She also drew a picture for some of her memory verses this week and here's one about God resting. Yes, that is God laying down taking a nap.

POETRY
Working on The Whole Duty of Children by Robert Louis Stevenson.

SPELLING
Camille is doing very well with adding -ing, -ed, -es, -ed, -er, -est to her words. She's doing a lesson a day in Spelling Workout B. This could become an independent thing she can do on her own and I can quiz the words with her. I'm not sure if I want to do that just yet.

MATH
Going very well, I feel as if we've stepped up to the plate with math. We're getting into new territory and it's exciting and interesting to see how Camille will process the new information. We're counting from 100-200, so far so good.

READING
Camille read-aloud from the McGuffey's Eclectic First Reader this week and the Nature Reader book 1. We are still trying to locate our copy of the Reading Literature Primer that she was reading last week. Camille has decided she wants me to read-aloud Charlotte's Web.

GRAMMAR
Solidifying address information and working on The Days of the Week poem.

HISTORY
We studied the Olympic Games this week and had a version of our own in the backyard. Camille noticed that the men were unclothed in the Olympic Games, I was careful not to choose any books that showed detail but it is noticeable that they don't have any clothes on. She thought this was funny and decided to add it to her narration picture, much to my dismay. I did a poor job of writing down her narration, she talked so fast! I tried to get her to slow down but she lost her train of thought so I did what I could. (Sidenote: if she was in public school, I'd have no idea when or how she was exposed to these types of things, so I think this was pretty mild.)

SCIENCE
We studied ants and termites. We read all about them and even a few poems. We're having a lot of fun with our Animal study. Camille tried to draw the three parts of an insect, I think she did a good job- the head, thorax and the abdomen.

 

Thursday, January 18, 2007

Telescopes and Binoculars, Oh my!

This week we realized dh's telescope that he has had in a box for five years does not work. What a surprise, but thankfully it's just an old Walmart model. 'What a surprise', meaning this box has not been stored properly and I gave up this fight about 4 years ago.

So, since we're studying astronomy in 2nd grade I felt it was necessary to research how much tax money we might end up spending on a telescope or pair of binoculars. I didn't know I had so many decisions to make! After looking at telescopes and discussing it at a message board, the SkyQuest 6" Dobsonian Telescope was the telescope choice. The price anywhere from $229-259. This is pretty steep but it would be it for buying a telescope. And really that isn't steep in comparison to other telescopes. The problem with this is that this telescope is a beginner's telescope. I don't think that would be the problem until someone expressed interest in doing more.

Next up was looking at binoculars. There is nothing else that will make you feel dumb as a brick as tech-talk. If you don't understand the specifications and what they mean, you don't have a clue as to what you are truly looking at. Therefore, I had to read 3 or 4 articles to understand what in the world 10x50 means and why I might want it.

I am not the only person on the web pricing binoculars thankfully! Also, when in doubt ask a friend or if online, a message board. Chances are SOMEONE has experience with these types of things. I had the help of two experienced buyers. Yay!!! For binoculars, the choices can be cheaper than the telescope but it depends on a few things. One-your selection of binoculars, Two- if your selection needs a tripod and Three- if you have a tripod already that would work! Here's the choice of binoculars for us. These are the Celestron SkyMaster 15x70 Center Focus, these weigh 4 pounds and tripod adaptable. The price is $84.00, although reg. retail price is $128.95. I'm still doing a little research to see if the Celestron SkyMaster 12x60 Center Focus would be just as sufficient for us or not. The 12x60 are $65.00. We don't think we have to buy a tripod because we have two that might work.

I have a little more research to do, in comparing the 12x60 to the 15x70 and possibly even smaller ones. Click on the links and see how big these are, there's a picture of a girl/woman holding them. I think I'll be sticking with the Celestron name because other brands charge more for the same thing.

 

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

A Predator Study

If I were to do a study on predators for four weeks, I would either pick four predators and focus on one a week or pick four different type of predators from the different classes of animals and study one each week.
For example:

Week One - Shark
Week Two - Lion
Week Three - Eagle
Week Four - Snake

If you wanted to make the study a little longer you could add others.
Or for big cat enthusiasts:
Week One: Tiger
Week Two: Lion
Week Three: Cheetah
Week Four: Mountain Lion/Cougar

National Geographic or Discovery has plenty of predator dvds to choose from. You may even be able to get them through Netflix or Blockbuster, most you can. As far as games go, there may be some food chain / predator educational games out there, including this online one about predator/prey. Or here where you can build a food chain, there's a board game called INTO THE FOREST, Nature's Food Chain Game. If you like the game monopoly, there's the Wild Animology game, which can be found at ToysRUs.

Activity kits that would be interesting depending on the animals chosen, including casting kits for ages 7 and up. Of course there won't be activity kits every animal unless you do some real searching. Reading, watching videos, play-acting and playing a game or two should keep the kids interested. You can fill out the study with coloring books and sticker books, I have an Animal Predator sticker book, ISBN 1-84510-626-1, or you might be able to find an activity book that contains several different activities.

Hope this gives you plenty of ideas! We homeschool year-round and I like to finish our products, I've assessed that we should be done with all our first grade curriculum in May/June. Camille's birthday is in July so I'd like to wait until after that to start 2nd grade. If our dinosaur study gets interrupted that's fine, we could do it in two weeks.

tags technorati :

 

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Quoted & Noted

We previewed the Prima Latina DVDs today and Camille was just following what Leigh Lowe was telling her to say, no fuss - no muss. She looked at me with a serious look on her face and said, "Mom, you and Mrs. Lowe can be my teachers. Okay?" Caught a little off guard, I said "Sure." She got upset when Danny made car noises over Mrs. Lowe's instructions. "Danny, I'm trying to speak Latin HERE!!"

Just to trackback a little, Camille and I have had some conversations about taking piano lessons and how she would need to practice everyday. She was all on-board about piano lessons until I told her we were looking for a teacher. Serious look again, "Mom, I don't want anyone to be my teacher other than you. Will you teach me piano?" I wanted to tell her yes but I couldn't- this is one area that I need someone else to be involved, to help her achieve some discipline and possibly a mentor. I told her, "Sweetie, I'll help you with your practice and we'll find a nice teacher for you to learn with. That doesn't sound bad, does it?" Camille paused and thought for a moment, "No, it doesn't sound bad but I won't like her because you're my favorite teacher."

And a mom in Georgia smiles to herself.

 

Monday, January 15, 2007

One Month of Dinosaurs

This is what I've collected (over a period of time) for our one-month Dinosaur study. I consider it a unit-study because Dinosaurs is ALL we're going to study for one month during our break in-between first and second grade. I have a coloring book on it's way but for the most part, this is all of it. I don't feel like I need a guide, we'll just read and see what develops. I want to leave this as unscheduled as possible. We might get other books from the library but here's what we have ready to use!


Pictured:
National Geographic's Dinosaurs and Fossils (very cool!)
assemble a dinosaur skeleton • build a pterosaur mobile
cast plaster fossils • play a dinosaur quiz game
create a time spiral • make a geologic time bookmark
The 32-page book guides your experiments and discoveries.

Dino-opoly Game, Danny and the Dinosaur, Fossils Tell of Long Ago by Aliki, The Magic Treehouse: Dinosaurs Before Dark,
Dinosaur Songs (cassette tape), and Dinosaurs Forever by William Wise (poetry)
Really Wild Animals: Dinosaurs and other Creature Features DVD
Travel back to the days of raging raptors and the terrifying Tyrannosaurus rex, when dinosaurs ruled the earth! Plus, see some of the world's creepiest creatures such as spiders, ants, dung beetles, and more. Includes Bonus Program: I Love Dinos as well as Interactive Prehistoric Creature Feature with fun facts, quizzes, sounds clips, and maps.



Pictured: Rand McNally's Dinosaur Fold-Out Book, Golden Look Book- Dinosaurs, Digging Up Dinosaurs by Aliki, The Magic School Bus: In the Time of Dinosaurs, Raptors (Step into Reading), Living Fossils.



Pictured: The Nature Company Discoveries Library: Dinosaurs, Eyewitness Books: Dinosaur, DK Eyewitness: Living Earth and Discovering Dinosaurs Wierd and Wonderful.

Other videos will be watched via United Streaming. Here's some online sites we might explore.
Discover.com's Interactive Dinosite
Kid's Turn Central - a list of sites to explore
Dinosaur Online Activites
Kaboose Dinosaur Site

Enchantedlearning.com has a dinosaur shadow box (thanks Rhonda!)
http://www.zoomdinosaurs.com/subjects/dinosaurs/activities/diorama/

There's plenty to do online, of course. We'll also try to visit a museum that has a dinosaur exhibit.
Camille's excited and she doesn't even know all this!

SIDENOTE: If you're wondering why we're using products that promote the evolution theory, it is because my children will learn that that is exactly what it is. A theory. Just as what Young Earth Creationists, Old Earth Creationists, Progressive Creationist and all the other -ists that have "theories" about how the earth came to be about and the hows & whys we are here. There is only ONE fact and truth for us—God created. Meanwhile, my children will be taught to respect other's opinions but to realize always that we are merely human and God is the only one who knows all. : )


 

Sharing Website Resources

I've wanted to post this since I found some of these websites. I'll be adding them to the sidebar on the left but I want to 'highlight' them now. Don't forget to get your own Peculiar Aristocratic Name that is two posts down, and if you have an Junior Deluxe Editions on your shelf, I'm collecting them (read about it four posts down). So without further ado...

If you're new to homeschooling or you like reading articles, this is the best compliation of information I've seen. This is a page I wish I would have found when I first started. http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~ja8i-brtl/articlesDatabase.html

If you're interested in finding out more about United Streaming, Paula has placed an info page at her archives site: United Streaming, Paula's Archives

I posted this before but it's worth mentioning again, check out http://www.readingyourwaythroughhistory.com/ especially if you have any of the books on your shelves that they use. I use The Book of Virtues.

A great article about memorization. http://www.city-journal.org/html/14_3_defense_memorization.html

A page I found interesting about scripture memorization. http://www.schoolofabraham.com/scripturemastery.htm

Cool Vikings Game! http://www.mnh.si.edu/vikings/index2.html

Interesting about Spelling. http://www.trelease-on-reading.com/spelling-krashen.html

Great game for learning the location and names of the states! It's timed too. Believe it or not, I found this on a hockey forum!
http://www.pibmug.com/files/map_test.swf

This is a DVD that I cannot decide to get or not. If you've seen it will you let me know what you think?
http://www.questarhomevideo.com/shopexd.asp?id=151

An online friend shared about this website and store for American History. http://www.americanvision.org/store/c-7-children.aspx

U.S. Geography Quizzes. http://www.sheppardsoftware.com/web_games.htm

Celtic Game and Interactive site! http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/celts/

The History of Religion in 90 seconds! http://www.mapsofwar.com/ind/history-of-religion.html

Geology Online Labs http://www.sciencecourseware.org/GLOL/

Coins, Currency and the Presidents http://www.presidentsusa.net/coinsstamps.html

That's all I have time for today. I have more and I'll post them soon. Most of these have been shared by other homeschoolers at message boards or I have found them googling for a particular subject. A homeschooler requested some links so I thought I would post them here. Most of these will find a home in my left sidebar.

 

Sunday, January 14, 2007

My Peculiar Aristocratic Title

My Peculiar Aristocratic Title is:
Lady Jessica the Excited of Bumpstead under Carpet

 

Saturday, January 13, 2007

An Antiquer's Daughter

My mother is an avid collector of antiques, of course they have to suit her fancy but she has a few collections. She almost has every piece of the Ballerina Cameo, Green Depression glass. She knows the reproductions from the originals. She also loves lamps, candle holders and matchboxes. My grandmother collects Royal Doulton dolls and teacups with saucers. My mother-in-law collects Gone with the Wind memorabilia and cookbooks.

What do I collect? I tried the Willow Tree Angels, I love them! They are simple, elegant and have a primitive feel to them. However, how many angels does one person need? Also, where in the world do you PUT them? I tried a shelf, my fil bumped the shelf during a visit and the fall (laugh if you want) beheaded 6 of my angels. He offered to replace them but I told him it was okay. I didn't have the heart to say that it really wasn't a loss. My mil and fil had bought a good many of them.

I'd really like to say I collect something, at least to make it easier on those who want to give gifts that will have meaning to me. I was reminded at Christmas just how hard I tend to make gift-giving on others. I don't collect anything. A ha! Yes, I do. I realized this morning that I do collect something and I hold them in very high-esteem. I collect books. I don't just value the modern books, no my real passion is the books of old that are in good condition to be used today. Alas, I'm still difficult. I want certain books, a certain quality to them and I prefer that they don't smell.



I found these at an antique store and I have decided to "collect" them. They are called Junior Deluxe Editions, most were published by Doubleday in the 1950's. The ones I have pictured are in great condition, the pages are crisp and white, they do not smell and the spines are tight. Pictured is: Five Little Peppers, Myths Every Child Should Know, Gulliver's Travels, Bambi, Captain Courageous, Toby Tyler and Black Beauty. Do you know how many of these were published? I don't know either, but it's a lot more.

Here's a look at the inside of Five Little Peppers.

I love the illustrations. I also love that I don't have to worry about content due to modern updating. I can use these as read-alouds now and when my children are old enough, they will be reading them on their own. Another set that is probably even more lovely than these is the Everyman's Library Children's Classics. But I found these first and these are what I'm going to collect. (So, there!)

I know a lot of people don't wish to take the time to go to thrift stores, antique stores and used bookstores in search of great homeschooling books. Or they feel better buying new. All I can say is thank you! Thank you for leaving these treasures for me to find! While you like D'Aulaire, James Baldwin, Kipling, Burgess, and other authors that write "living" books in your shopping cart of the brand new bookstore or online homeschool store- I'm giving these treasures a home. In fact, if you have one or two on your shelf in good condition- email me. I'm interested!

See what an influence my mother is! It's all her fault. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

 

Friday, January 12, 2007

The Week in Review

I'm fulfilling my New Year's resolution to document Camille's work each week. We finally got back into the groove this week and there was no tv during the day until the lessons were done. I've been touch and go with this but I've maintained this week. It's made a huge difference in Camille attention and Danny's demeanor.

Bible
We're just following along in Beginnings I, we did Week 16 and talked about 1 Samuel, including Hannah, Samuel and Saul. We've had some wonderful discussions about what God wants from us and how we can joyfully serve Him.
I'm creating a notebook for her from History Scribes' biographies so that she can document what she's learned about each person in the Bible. I also typed out all the scriptures she will be memorizing from now until we're finished and this makes it simpler for her and me to have in one place. We're still reading Leading Little Ones to God because we took a break from it for a while.

Poetry
This week I've started using The Harp and Laurel Wreath with Camille, the first couple of poems she already has memorized but I'm having her redo them anyway. I created a copybook for her where the first page is the poem and a place to draw a picture about the poem. After that she focuses on doing copywork of two lines of the poem for a week. Although she memorizes wonderfully, I think taking a little more time will help with retention. The picture below that Camille drew is supposed to be a little girl bringing something to her grandmother, I don't know why she chose to draw this but she did.



Spelling
In Spelling Workout this week we talked about contractions, this took some time for her to understand and I don't think she has it down yet but the work she did was good. We're already on Lesson 20 and there's 36 total. I'm more than confident that she will be using the C workbook for 2nd grade.

Grammar
We love FLL, we're memorizing the poem Days of the Week, we've discussed the calendar and Camille did wonderful on a narration for The Hen and the Golden Eggs. The moral portion is still a little hard for her to understand but she's 6. We're doing a lesson a day and this has helped us tremendously.



Reading
Camille is doing well with OPG, we're strengthening her decoding skills with lots of reading, including The Primer by Free and Treadwell that I got from Yesterday's Classics. She's really enjoying reading the folktales. She is also reading Math Madness, Nora Gaydos' independent readers. As our current read-aloud, we're enjoying The Seven Voyages of Sinbad the Sailor. This is a history read-aloud.

History
We've had to play catch up this week since we've been hit/miss with history. We studied the Myceaneans, barbarians and early Greeks. We need to finish our narration pages today. We combined chapters 18-20 in SOTW and just read, narrated and did our coloring pages. We have 22 more weeks to go and I want to be finished before 22 weeks so I need to figure out where we can combine and/or skip. We've been light on the projects but we're going to do one every other week.


Science
Our tadpole is on its' way to our home so we can raise it to be frog, Camille is very excited! She's counting down the days, meanwhile we've studied worms this week. She watched videos online at United Streaming about soil and worms, did her worksheet about the characteristics of a worm (that I created) and we read a poem about Worm Puree. Green Thumbs had supplementary information about worms. We placed it in all the habitats it would live, and determined what type of eater it is- omnivore, herbivore, carnivore.


Math
Camille has finished her first workbook in Horizons! There's another one to do but she is so excited that she finished one! She's a whiz at subtraction but still has a little trouble with addition, especially taking a horizontal addition problem to a vertical one. Other than that she's doing great with the calendar work we've been doing. I love how Horizons and FLL line up with concepts at times!

 

Thursday, January 11, 2007

Homeschooling Without Influence

I've been wondering what our homeschool would look like without the influence of fellow homeschoolers that I've met/read online. I definitely wouldn't be as confident as I am or half as knowledgeable. The Rainbow Resource catalog is very nice but I appreciate their online catalog when I want immediate answers (and possible inside views).

I receive a good many magazines/catalogs that offer homeschooling advice and how-tos, but it doesn't equal the satisfaction of one-to-one conversations with someone who has been there. I really enjoy Memoria Press' Classical Teacher, which I tend to read more than once, but I could do that without online influence.

Online influence can hurt as well as inform, equip and enthuse. I've doubted myself, I've been envious and I've felt like a failure when I compare our homeschool to others across the great wide web. Part of this is inexperience and a little immaturity but it's also unavoidable. As I've sought God's counsel for our lives, I've become more confident, and I've enjoyed our journey a little more. I've been hurt by others wanting to condemn, judge and otherwise convince others that they are doing wrong by using a product, a homeschooling methodology or parenting methods.

It has caused great insecurity and stress within to read how if I read certain things to my children I would cause them a life of strife and great sin. It has been degrading to have to defend classical methodology to those who don't wish to use it but wish to bring others' down because their own insecurities. I cannot believe that those that attack classical education actually believe that homeschoolers want to harm their children in anyway! I also cannot believe that their thinking is so narrow that they ignore how many Christian leaders, professors, authors, evangelists have been schooled in the Western Civilization. I digress.

Now you may say, you shouldn't allow that to influence you. It does, a little seed is planted and then reinforced by another article or another's blog. Then it grows into this looming insecurity and renders you feeling useless to make any good decisions for your family. Just take a look at the Old Earth/Young Earth controversy. I was going to read every book I could get my hands on to get down to the truth of the matter. Then I realized, everything is just a theory, nothing is fact except that God created. Does it truly matter if the earth is 6,000 years old or 100 million years old? No. What matters is that God created. The scientific evidence we have, we have no idea if it's accurate- we are merely humans. This is a prime example of how harmful we can be online.

Narrations, oh my goodness! If I didn't read about how other children are doing wonderful at narrations or to what degree others do narrations, I wouldn't have a second thought about ours! In comparison, I feel that we are slacking. Which is wrong, we're not slacking it's just my perceived expectations have been skewed by online influences. I try my best to inform, equip, support, encourage in a positive and meaningful way while I spend time online. Faith is something I don't tend to share online, we are all different, unique in God's eyes and what works for God and me, may not work for you and God. I'm not good at being gushy about God either, He knows that and accepts it. He is a great God! : )

Share something positive today online.

 

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

One way to get out of church


Sunday morning as I was trying to get ready for church, Danny went into the learning room and brought one of the chairs up to the counter. I'm sure he was trying to get into the cookie jar that is filled with animal crackers but he found that the flour cannister was more fun. We have two churches that my dh preaches at every Sunday, due to sanity perservation the children and I only attend one each Sunday. Dh was on his way to pick us up to take us to the second church, and Danny was covered in flour, as well as our kitchen. What took him possibly 8 minutes to do took me 2.5 hours to clean up- do you know what flour does as it is moves? It spreads, we even had flour footprints throughout the house.

Dh came home, I had already tried to clean up as much as possible so that the flour wouldn't spread anymore. He looked, he laughed and said he'd see us after church. Now I should have taken MORE photos because these are not truly representative of the mess- there is flour in the cupboards, there is flour all over the sink, the stove (not pictured), all of the cupboards have a layer of flour dust on them. Instead of being angry, I took it in stride. If I were 2, I'd love to make it "snow"!


 

Sunday, January 7, 2007

Movies & Books

Charlotte's Web is in theatres and Camille wants to go see it. We haven't read the book yet so I've been contemplating whether to see it in the theatre before we read the book or read the book and catch it on video. Who am I kidding? We'll probably own this movie.

My indecision comes from wanting to enhance her imagination as much as possible. TV/Movies doesn't utilize the imagination, the work is all done- here it is on the screen. Of course we all know that when we read a book before seeing the movie adaptation we can formulate in our minds (imagination) how the character looks based on the author's description. Movies/TV take that away, an actor's face is in our minds as we read. Can you read Gone With The Wind without picturing Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable?

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is another example, when we read this will there be doubt that the book is wrong? Since the movie was seen first, will the book be deemed as boring? This is something I have struggled with as a reader, I prefer to read the book before the movie because I cannot get the actors out of my head! : ) In fact there are very few movies that I've watched that when I read the book first I was satisfied with. For example, An Unfinished Life by Mark Spragg was a good book and the tone was important to the story. The movie satisfied my reading experience with the exception of Jennifer Lopez. Although she acted the part wonderfully, I didn't picture HER as Jean. However, movies like Message in the Bottle have me talking to the screen, "You left this and this out!"

I'm currently reading The Iliad and while I have seen the movie Troy before, I didn't fully understand what was happening the whys behind it. I'm within the last chapters of The Iliad and I decided to watch Troy. I haven't pictured Brad Pitt or Orlando Bloom as Achilles or Paris, my imaginary versions are much more grander. I found myself again saying to the screen, "Not only did you leave this and this out, but you changed the plot! This war was 10 years! Helen loved her countrymen! Where is Zeus? Hera? Athena?" The book is so much BETTER! Of course, how could a movie compete with Homer?

The main reason I wanted to watch Troy was to understand a little better the fighting techniques that I'm reading about. I wanted to have a clearer understanding of the armor and the chariots. Now I do have to say that Eric Bana as Hector fits very well how I envision Hector but his character in the movie is a lot different than the book. I can say that this is one movie and book that the characters I envision are stronger than those of the movie, therefore the movie doesn't ruin my reading experience. Movies have politics, the screenwriters and directors manipulate the scenes to evoke feelings, attitudes and prejudices. Books are you and the author- you get to be the screenwriter, the author the director.

Read then screen. Talk about the differences. In fact, there is a book called Talking Pictures- A Parents' Guide to Using Movies to Discuss Ethics, Values, and Everyday Problems with Children. by Ronald Madison, Ed.D. and Corey Schmidt. Read the book, watch the movie adaptation and discuss!

 

Friday, January 5, 2007

One Year After Making the Decision

My goodness, is this a homeschooling parent's struggle or what? Looking at lists, catalogs, book recommendations, manipulatives, multimedia and feeling dizzy all the while! It might just be the custom homeschooler's plight. When I first started considering homeschooling (a year ago!) a prepared curriculum was all that I wanted. I didn't "trust" myself to provide wise curriculum choices for Camille.

What a difference a year makes! Now I'm cruising catalogs and book lists, pulling from this source and that source. I feel like with all that I've chosen, Camille will have a very thorough education, the best of all the classical curriculum available!

Last year, I was being told that Abeka was the best homeschooling curriculum and I was anxiously awaiting their catalog's arrival. This year, I have three bookcases filled with "living" books we've bought in the last year.

Last year, after realizing Abeka wasn't for us I discovered Sonlight. What a love affair I had with Sonlight, it seemed to be the best among prepared curriculums! A wonderful literature approach, worldly Christian focus and it even had P.E. classes! We were going to use Sonlight forever. What more could a new homeschooling parent want! This year, I'm using anything that fits Camille's learning style and my teaching style, most of it fits into a classical approach. This year, I know what a classical education is.

I have more confidence in our homeschooling selections this year than I did in my pinky finger last year! And I owe a lot of that confidence to my online friends, the wonderful homeschooling publishing community and most of all God. Without His answers to my prayers for discernment and guidance, I would feel alone in making such vital choices for our children. I've been involved in various conversations with homeschoolers from different perspectives, religious affiliations and educational philosophies in the past year. While at first it made my head spin, it has produced a lot of growth and maturity. After being tested quite a few times, I have a stronger faith, a clearer sense of what I believe and why and the strength and confidence necessary to fully apprecitation other's opinions without entertaining self-doubt. This is a continous work in progress.

Learning about yourself is just part of the process of homeschooling. Homeschooling highlights the parents' strengths and weaknesses as well as the childrens'. I know more about my children in this past year than in the collective eight years I've been blessed to take care of them. I am not the same person I was a year ago and my children aren't either, life is good. God is good.

 

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

A Verse Here, A Poem There

One of our new passions is poetry. Camille has blossomed by bounds since I started poetry memorization with her. She is very diligent about memorizing and just burst with pride when she's able to say a poem without prompt or help.

After reading about poetry and exploring it a little more, I made the decision to incorporate it into our day as much as possible. What most people don't realize is that poetry covers many types of verse. Most children's book are rhymed, and songs are considered poetry as well. In fact, a lot of times instead of singing a hymn, I'll read it as a poem.

Here's a few resources that you can look at to include poetry into your day.

Overall Memorization:
The Harp and Laurel Wreath by Laura M. Berquist
I really cannot recommend this highly enough, this book covers Grammar through Rhetoric stages and is filled with wonderful scripture and poems to memorize by increasing degrees.

The Book of Virtues by William J. Bennett
This book's primary purpose is to provide moral stories but within it's volume are countless poems that you can use.

A Child's Introduction to Poetry: Listen While You Learn About the Magic Words That Have Moved Mountains, Won Battles, and Made Us Laugh and Cry by Michael Driscoll
This book comes with a CD and although I'm not one for books that look too busy, Camille loves it. The poems are fun and simple.

Classic Poems to Read Aloud by James Berry
This book is nice but I only have it because I bought it at Goodwill. There are other books you can buy that have the same poems, such as
The Oxford Book of Children's Verse in America by Donald Hall.

A treasury of great poems, English and American with the Lives of the Poets selected and integrated by Louis Untermeyer
This book is wonderful it contains wonderful poems as well as a little biography about the poet, and has both American and English poets.

If you like Rudyard Kipling, you'll love Rudyard Kipling's Verse: Definitive Edition
There are many poems that you can incorporate into history studies with this book.

A New Treasury of Poetry Compiled by Neil Philip
This is a wonderful book and we love the black and white illustrations throughout.

Of course there are many compliation poetry books but once you obtain a few you find that a lot of poems are repeated throughout them. I think I have Jabberwocky in most of them! Lol. These are books I've picked up from Goodwill, thrift stores and antique stores, with the exception of The Harp and Laurel Wreath (which I bought new), I don't think I paid more than $6 for any of these.

For particular subjects:
These are a few books I've found that I feel are gems. I've found that I tend to like any book by Jack Prelutsky, Lee Bennett Hopkins and William Cole.

History:
Susan Altman has done some wonderful books that fit perfectly with our history studies.
Modern Rhymes About Ancient Times Ancient Greece (Ancient Africa, Ancient Egypt and Ancient Rome are other titles).

Dancing in the Wind: Poetry and Art of the British Isles by Charles Sullivan
An amazing book that can carry you from the Middle Ages to present times.

U.S. History:
A Star-spangled Birthday: A Celebration in Song, Poetry, Facts, and Trivia
My America: A Poetry Atlas of the United States by Lee Bennett Hopkins
Heroes and She-roes: Poems of Amazing and Everyday Heroes by J. Patrick Lewis (also has world figures as well)

The Book of Virtues, The Harp and Laurel Wreath and other books I mentioned as overall poetry books also have wonderful historical poems.

Science:
Dinosaurs Forever by William Wise
A fun book published by Scholastic, mixes fun with science facts about the dinosaurs. The illustrations are very kid-friendly and the poems themselves are fanciful.

An Arkful of Animals by William Cole
This is a wonderful book to have as you study animals, we are incorporating this in with ours.

Earthshake: Poems from the Ground Up by Lisa Peters
Footprints on the Roof: Poems About the Earth by Marilyn Singer
A Pocketful of Starts: Poems about the Night
Talking Like the Rain: A Read-to-Me Book of Poems by X.J. Kennedy

These books are great for adding poems to your nature journal or in helping discuss a topic. I've found it's best to find a poem and photocopy it or type/print it out and just stick in your child's science notebook. That way, when you come to that topic you won't be looking the poem up in a book, it'll be right there to enjoy. Plus, if you do a little work beforehand, you'll tend to not forget about it altogether.

Pass the Poetry, Please! by Lee Bennett Hopkins is worth looking at, there is information about poets and the different books they have written. It is a wonderful resource about how to use poetry with children and book suggestions. There are also activities and games to bring poetry alive with your students and how to teach poetry to older students. (It was written for classroom but it is just as valuable to the homeschool parent.)

There are many other poetry books worth mentioning but I don't have time. I have many other books on my wishlist for purchasing that are geared toward particular subjects in science, math and history.

 

20 Minutes Being Two

This is my son Danny. He's a fun-loving little one who is 2.5 years old and he loves to have adventures.
Let's take a look at what he did for 20 minutes this morning.

His bookshelf, looking rather raided. Hmm.

Oh, look on the floor. That's where the books went!

Danny! Let's clean up the books...Mom says. Where is Danny?

Looks like he got into the toolbox and wanted to do see
the world while I was investigating his book raid.

Where is he?

Oh, he's in his sister's room. Is he helping her clean up?
Let's see.

Oh, he's standing on the Zoob box, look at his coordinating skills!
Okay, why is he standing on the Zoob box?

Well that makes sense, if you can't reach the light chain that has
been shortened so that you CAN'T reach it, then pile up toys
to climb so that you DO reach it.

Two and a half years old. Twenty minutes.
I haven't mentioned the climbing the kitchen counter or
destroying his room.

I love him.

Here he is wearing his sister's Barbie skates.
Don't think I won't SAVE this picture!
Ah, the pleasures of being a stay at home mom.

 

The Book Of Virtues


I am talking about this book, not the Children's Book of Virtues which is smaller. I just wanted to be clear on that because since the titles are so similar they are easily confused.

This 832 page book contains chapters of literature and poems that deal with 10 virtues: self-discipline, compassion, responsibility, friendship, work, courage, perseverance, honesty, loyalty and faith. Sounds all neat and tidy, doesn't it?

While I have been contemplating which books to buy to bring a little more Charlotte Mason into our readings, I glanced through this book and noticed Andrew Lang's name and James Baldwin. If you're not familiar with Andrew Lang, he wrote the Red Fairy Book, Blue Fairy Book, Yellow Fairy Book and so on. James Baldwin is the author of Fifty Famous People among other books.

The stories in The Book of Virtues are short and perfect for read-aloud but I wanted to see if there was a schedule somewhere that aligned this book chronologically to be read alongside history. There is one site that has done this to a certain extent, Reading Your Way Through History. These stories within The Book of Virtues are just that, at times it is only a section of a longer story that highlights the virtue of the chapter.

Just to give a sampling of what can be found in The Book of Virtues, here's a listing of titles and authors in the first chapter, Self-Discipline.

  • Good and Bad Children by Robert Louis Stevenson
  • Please by Alicia Aspinwall
  • Rebecca (Who Slammed Doors for Fun and Perished Miserably.) by Hilaire Belloc
  • Godfrey Gordon Gustavus Gore by William Brighty Rands
  • The Lovable Child by Emilie Poulsson
  • John, Tom and James by Anonymous
  • There Was A Little Girl by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  • My Own Self by Joseph Jacobs
  • To the Little Girl Who Wiggles by Laura E. Richards
  • Jim (Who ran away from his Nurse, and was eaten by a Lion.) by Hilaire Belloc
  • The Duel by Eugene Field
  • Let Dogs Delight to Bark and Bite by Isaac Watts
  • The King and His Hawk by James Baldwin
  • Anger by Charles and Mary Lamb
  • Dirty Jim by Jane Taylor
  • Washing by Anonymous
  • Table Rules for Little Folks by Anonymous
  • The Little Gentlemen by Anonymous
  • Our Lips and Ears
  • Little Fred
  • The Story of Augustus, Who Would Not Have Any Soup by Heinrich Hoffman
  • The Vulture by Hilaire Belloc
  • The Boy and The Nuts by Aesop
  • The Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs by Aesop
  • The Flies and the Honey Pitt by Aesop
  • Mr. Vinegar and His Fortune by James Baldwin
  • and many more...
I suggest taking your own look at this book through your library or pulling it down off your bookshelf and reading a little. This is great for 2nd grade and up, of course you may want to pre-read the selections if you have a sensitive child. I forsee this book being used time and time again in our homeschool. I'm planning on using this as read-aloud using the Reading Through History information and for character study as we study history.

 

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Our House Rules

1. Be Kind
Ephesians 4:32
Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.

2. Obey the first time.
Ephesians 6:1-3
1 Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. 2"Honor your father and mother"—which is the first commandment with a promise— 3"that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth."

3. Be Happy, Speak only of good things.
Psalms 34:1-3
1 I will extol the LORD at all times; his praise will always be on my lips.
2 My soul will boast in the LORD; let the afflicted hear and rejoice.
3 Glorify the LORD with me; let us exalt his name together.

4. Never lie. Always tell the truth.
Proverbs 12:22
The LORD detests lying lips, but he delights in men who are truthful.

5. Treat others how you want to be treated.
Matthew 7:12
So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets.

6. Do not whine or complain.
Phil 2:14
Do everything without complaining or arguing

7. The first answer is the answer; do not nag.
Ephesians 6:1-3 (see above)

8. Show respect to adults. (May I? Please, Thank you)
1 Timothy 3:4
He must manage his own family well and see that his children obey him with proper respect.

9. Share your toys.
2 Corinthians 9:11
You will be made rich in every way so that you can be generous on every occasion, and through us your generosity will result in thanksgiving to God.

Deuteronomy 15:11
There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore I command you to be openhanded toward your brothers and toward the poor and needy in your land.

10. Always do your best.
2 Corinthians 13:11
Finally, brothers, good-by. Aim for perfection, listen to my appeal, be of one mind, live in peace. And the God of love and peace will be with you.

We used these for memorization and copywork until Camille was able to tell me what each rule is. I didn't require her to memorize the scriptures yet because some of them are long. This has been very effective in our home. The only rule I've been thinking of adding is Nobody is having fun if everybody isn't having fun. I have to work on that because the grammar isn't correct.

Rules for Mamma
1. Say what you mean and mean what you say
2. Keep your promises
3. Keep your expectations in check
4. Walk away when frustrated and collect yourself before responding
5. Make sure discipline/punishment fits the "crime"
6. Drink coffee, eat chocolate daily


 

Monday, January 1, 2007

Calvino Meme

Read about at Sylvia's blog, linked back to Kate's blog- where it all started. HT: Sylvia, very cool snap.

the Books You’ve Been Planning To Read For Ages
The entire set of The Great Books of the Western World

the Books You’ve Been Hunting For Years Without Success
All the Cherry Ames Nurse books in good reading condition

the Books Dealing With Something You’re Working On At The Moment
150 Great Books by Bonnie Helms, Invitation to the Classics

the Books You Want To Own So They’ll Be Handy Just In Case
The World Book Encyclopedia set, Norms and Nobility, please feel free to look at my wishlist.

the Books You Could Put Aside Maybe To Read This Summer
The Art of the Novel, Habits of the Mind, How to Read Slowly, Aristotle Made Easy, The Story of Philosophy

the Books You Need To Go With Other Books On Your Shelves
Since I've obtained the Great Books of the Western World, I need the Oxford English Dictionary.

the Books That Fill You With Sudden, Inexplicable Curiosity, Not Easily Justified.
Old books with clean pages and readable type. Compliation books of poetry, biographies and art.