Category Archives: Bandwagons

I am the Jon Snow of reminiscing about our week

I’ve felt like I’ve fallen into a time warp all week. And not the good kind, with fish fingers and custard and a quirky, handsome guide to the universe. It’s more like the kind where you accidentally start a war with a small landlocked country or get eaten by a baby pterodactyl. I’m having a hard time recovering from Disney World / Halloween / having guests / the World Series, is what I’m saying.

(I know none of those are even remotely terrible things, but my brain is fried nonetheless.)

So while I know the kids have accomplished some school-related work this week, I couldn’t begin to itemize what they did. Here is a bit of what we did this week:


Reading

We are all beginning to understand that “Little Women” is the longest book in the history of literature.

Math

Poppy is supposed to have a math test today, but she really needs to have a solid day or two of review before the test. And we have definitely not had a solid day or two of review, so the math test will be postponed until next week.

History

We returned to post-Revolution France this week, and the kids seem to have paid attention to the information. Today we’ll be doing a little map work and playing a card game in which the rules keep changing. After Anne asked about it, the folks at Peace Hill Press said it would be OK if I shared the rules with you. Here’s how you play!

CHANGING RULES

from “Story of the World: Volume 4”

Materials:
– a deck of playing cards
– a score sheet with space for 6 rounds (Republic #1, Empire #1, Kingdom #1, Republic #2, Empire #2, Kingdom #2) and a total
– at least two people to play

Keeping track of points:

  • During the Republic phases, all cards with numbers are worth their face value. A 6, for example, is worth 6 points. Face cards and aces are worth 1 point each.
  • During the Empire phases, an Ace is worth 20 points. A King is worth minus 10 points, a Queen is worth minus 8 points, and a Jack is worth minus 10 points. No other cards are worth anything.
  • During the Kingdom phase, a King is worth 10 points, a Queen is worth 8 points, and a Jack is worth 6 points. An ace is worth minus 10 points, and other cards are worth nothing.

    Playing instructions:

  • Shuffle the deck.
  • The dealer deals 4 cards to each player. Everyone can look at his or her own cards.
  • The remaining cards are placed face-down in a draw pile.
  • The player to the left of the dealer discards a card from his hand and places it face-down next to the draw pile, then picks up a card from the draw pile.
  • Play continues around the circle. You should never have more than four cards in your hand at once.
  • Once each player has discarded and drawn four times, count up the points in everyone’s hand. Write you point total on the score sheet, then start the next round with the cards in your hand left over from the previous round.
  • At the end of the game, the player with the most points wins.
    Extracurricular

    Poppy only made it to two of the four tae kwon do classes this week, and she only had two of her three usual soccer practices. Pete did make it to both of his TKD classes, but the Monday one was a special-edition Halloween class where they just played games. He’s been working pretty hard rehearsing for his guitar recital this weekend, too.


    How was your week?

    Wanna read more about homeschooling? Check out the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers weekly linky thing!

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  • Why we homeschool our children

    Teacher's PetWe are neither commune-dwelling hippies nor religious fundamentalists. The public schools in our area generally fall between fine and great. We aren’t trying to completely shelter the kids from the world. And as those are — warning: sarcasm ahead — most definitely the primary reasons that people homeschool, why did we decide to go that route?

    It all started in my sister-in-law’s living room. Chloe Poppins had started homeschooling her two oldest children, and I was intrigued. The kids were learning at their own pace, in their own place, and sometimes even in their pajamas. It looked like a relaxed, comfortable way to learn. I wanted to know more. I started my research with the Poppins family’s copy of “The Well-Trained Mind: a Guide to Classical Education at Home.”

    “The Well-Trained Mind” was written by Jessie Wise and her daughter, Susan Wise Bauer. It’s a very thorough guide to a classical approach to education, which appealed to me, and it talks a lot about the fact that homeschooling allows you to teach to your child’s level rather than to the average intelligence of a class full of kids. If your child is a math whiz, for example, you might breeze through addition and subtraction and get straight to tackling fractions. Or maybe your child is having trouble spelling and you need to slow things down a little. Being able to take advantage of either option sounded like a terrific way to approach school.

    By the time I’d finished the book, I was convinced. Rockford and I talked it over and agreed: Should we ever have children, we’d give homeschooling a shot. Poppy came along five or so years later, and her education started as soon as she was able to listen to us read to her. (Pro tip! If you’re reading to your kids and talking to them about history or politics or the way the moon influences the tides? You’re doing a little homeschooling already!)

    We’ve been at this formally for about seven years now, and unless our circumstances change I’m planning to homeschool all the way through twelfth grade. Having the ability to sleep ’til 9 and then do science in our jammies is wonderful (although we can’t do that as often as we used to, due to early-morning outsourced classes), but the factor that has made and continues to make homeschooling a great fit for our family is the freedom to pick up our school and take it on the road. Rockford travels frequently for work, and we’re often able to go along with him. I think that’s gone far to help us maintain a close relationship both as a couple and as a family.

    So we aren’t homeschoolers for religious or even ideological reasons. We started homeschooling because I was inspired and idealistic, and we’re still homeschooling because the freedom to travel and the ability to customize our curricula to our children mean it works beautifully for our family.

    Have you ever considered homeschooling? I’m happy to try to answer any questions you have about it! Just leave ’em in the comments.

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    The chain letter that finally paid off

    One of my neighbors posted something on Facebook a few weeks ago that caught my eye. It was, it said, a “social experiment” in which you send one of your favorite books to someone and then, eventually, you get a bunch of books in the mail from other folks. It was a good old-fashioned chain letter, but with books.

    After being disappointed time and again as a youth, I finally grew wise to the chain letter and stopped sending them along. But I’m a sucker for a good book — and sometimes even for a bad book, as evidenced by the fact that I read a tome called “Saint Dale” in its entirety. So I signed on for my neighbor’s literary Facebook experiment, sent a Graham Greene paperback off to her friend and hoped for the best. Worst-case scenario, I figured, was someone would get to read “The Quiet American.”

    And then a few days later Abraham Verghese’s “Cutting for Stone” arrived. And then “Supreme Courtship” by Christopher Buckley, and then “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” by Truman Capote. Then we went on vacation, and when we came home Rebecca Skloot’s “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” Rob Sheffield’s “Love is a Mix Tape,” Lisel Mueller’s “Alive Together” and Maria Semple’s “Where’d You Go, Bernadette?” were there waiting for me. I love a good book recommendation, and it’s been delightful getting things in the mail that aren’t bills.

    The moral of the story? I don’t know. Take a chance on a chain letter now and again? Have a little faith in goofy Facebook things? Regardless, I’m loving having a stack of books waiting for me to read.

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