Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Busy, Busy, Busy
December 10 - 16: RobotBoy squeezed in four math lessons, reading a few chapters of Alice Rose and Sam, a little bit of Latin and Spanish, some science reading, watching Beethoven Lives Upstairs, a piano lesson, attending a Christmas-themed show at the Shakespeare Theatre, and one lesson of CHOW in between three Nutcracker rehearsals and four performances, the show's cast party, the end-of-semester party for his Sunday school class, plus a three-hour choir rehearsal and the choir's Christmas concert and reception.
December 17 - 23: This week was supposed to begin our official holiday break. However, because we took a week off from math last month that I did not plan for, RobotBoy had to keep working in his online class. So, he did another three math lessons and made corrections to a couple of lessons he had submitted the previous week. He spent Wednesday afternoon at the final session of his science center physics class. At the last minute, he was asked to come be in the series of three abbreviated Nutcracker they do for school groups. He then had regular shows on Thursday and throughout the weekend.
I honestly believed that he would be thoroughly sick of The Nutcracker by the time he finished this run, but it wasn't so. He was very disappointed to see it end, and even the prospect of Christmas, itself, didn't seem to help all that much.
On Christmas Eve, we headed out to church. Moonheart had volunteered to sing in the children's pageant and then was invited to sing for the later, grown-up service, too. We had decided RobotBoy would not participate in the pageant this year, because of the Nutcracker schedule, but he got recruited to sing a short solo, too. The pageant was the usual rocky experience: Right up to the very last minute, we're all sure it's going to crash and burn, but, somehow, it all comes together. Of course, my favorite moments were the ones involving my kids, but it's possible I'm not exactly an impartial observer.
I thought folks might like to hear a little sample of Moonheart's performance. I think I've finally figured out how to get the video to show up here. Cross your fingers!
Monday, December 10, 2007
Another Interrupted Week
The out-of-town ballet performances went very well, by the way. I served as a dressing room chaperone for most of the weekend. It never ceases to amaze me how many electronic devices are brought into boys’ dressing rooms, but the kids were really good and managed to remain as friendly and cheerful as a room full of kids could be expected to be when required to spend more than 20 hours of a weekend cooped up in a room smaller than most children’s bedrooms. The group my son performed with received compliments both from the show’s director/choreographer and from the mom who coordinates all the backstage stuff. And my son had a wonderful time. So, I’d say it was a good experience.
After three years of performances, he's also acquired a nice (and growing) collection of nutcrackers, which he enjoys arranging and displaying throughout the year
He had this weekend “off” (just a two-hour ballet rehearsal plus three hours of choir on Saturday morning) before heading into two more weekends of local performances.
Meanwhile, Moonheart and I made it home late on Thursday. I was a bit surprised to find actual snow on the ground in Virginia.
She had Friday at home to goof off and relax, then went to a rehearsal with her old choir on Saturday afternoon. She was preparing to make her debut as an alumna at the choir’s Sunday evening concert. When I picked her up, she told me with great joy and amusement that everybody wanted to hug her! That trend continued when she went with us to our church on Sunday morning. She reconnected with many old friends of varying ages and seemed to have a lovely time. She then went to an hour’s worth of rehearsal for the upcoming Christmas Eve pageant, for which she has volunteered to sing a short solo. After that, we had just enough time to run home, let her eat sometime and change clothes so that she could go back downtown for the choir concert.
The concert was lovely! RobotBoy will have his turn with the boychoir next weekend.
And, in the middle of it all, we’ve managed to more or less keep up with the schoolwork, too. Here’s the rundown for the week:
Math:
RobotBoy took the final for the geometry module on Monday and got himself a nice ‘A.’ He has moved on to the module in algebraic thinking, which isn’t quite such a piece of cake for him. He’s doing fine, but has to pay a bit more attention. (Not a bad thing, in my book!)
History & Literature:
We accomplished exactly no reading of Great Expectations last week. Instead, once Moonheart was home, we started reading aloud How Mrs. Clause Saved Christmas, the sequel to Jeff Guinn’s Autobiography of Santa Claus that we all enjoyed reading last year. At this point, I’m assuming we’ll have to catch up with Mr. Dickens once Moonheart is safely back at school. In independent reading, RobotBoy finished Red Badge of Courage, which got two big thumbs up, and has started reading Kathryn Lasky’s Alice Rose and Sam.
English:
It was a writing exercise week, so RobotBoy took his first stab at a photo essay about our field trip to Fort Sumter. It still needs to be refined, and once I’ve signed off on it, he’ll write out a final copy for his notebook.
Science:
He had the third of four sessions of the physics class at the museum. As homework, he researched and wrote a paragraph about catapults. The class then built a model catapult and apparently had a grand time. At home, he read from his Human Body and Earth’s Waters books. We ended up postponing the experiments about ice from the Marine Science book, because I had forgotten to prepare the necessary supplies for him. (Bad homeschool mommy! Bad!)
Latin:
This week, RobotBoy did the first half of Chapter 5 of Minimus Secundus. He got through the first picture story and well as the Grasp the Grammar and Latin Roots exercises. He also had a good time coloring and cutting out the stand-up figure of poor Duccius, the standard bearer.
Spanish:
He worked on The Learnables three times this week, earning perfect scores on all five ejercicios.
Music:
He got back to learning new pieces in Themes to Remember this week, starting with Beethoven’s Symphony #5. It’s become the height of humor around here for him to randomly sing snippets of classical pieces or to figure out how to segue smoothly from a tune from a popular song or film score to a classical piece. We also watched Amadeus with Dad as a family movie night, which was a big hit.
Oh, and he had a double piano lesson on Monday to make up for a portion of the time he’s missed over the last couple of weeks.
All in all, it’s been very busy, but we’re keeping our heads above water so far. The plan is to try and stay on track with a more or less normal schedule this week, then take off from everything except the online math class until the second week of January, after I’ve deposited Moonheart back at the dorm.
Let’s just hope I can manage to wash, dry and fold all of the dirty laundry she brought home in time to drive her back.
Hoping everyone is having a lovely (and not too stressful) holiday season so far!
Friday, November 30, 2007
Where Am I This Week?
Well, let’s just forge ahead, shall we?
The last couple of weeks have been very busy. I had to make two round trips to Virginia to bring Moonheart home for Thanksgiving and then deposit her back at her dorm. And RobotBoy is deep into Nutcracker rehearsals and preparations. In fact, we are spending much of today getting ourselves ready to be away for a full weekend of performances in another city. At the last minute, I decided that it was pretty crazy to bus back and forth (a three- or four-hour round trip) every day and just booked us a motel room for the weekend. When we return, I should just about have time to catch my breath before I take to the road one more time to bring Moonheart home for her holiday break.
And, of course, right in the midst of it all, we had several days of internet connection trouble.
Nonetheless, we are managing to keep making progress academically. Here’s a quick run-down of what RobotBoy has accomplished in the last couple of weeks:
Math:
He has just about finished the geometry module and continues to do very well. On the oral component of the module exam, he earned 100% of the available points. Now, he is just waiting for a few of the lessons he’s already submitted to be graded in order to be sure there is nothing else he needs to review before taking the online assessment.
History & Literature:
We have finally gotten back to regular reading of Great Expectations. We’re still behind where I had planned to be by now, but will just have to continue reading over the holiday break in order to catch up. RobotBoy finished reading Rifles for Watie just this morning, and has already started on The Red Badge of Courage. Sometime today, he will also read A Day That Changed America: Gettysburg. And, as I type, he is watching the last half hour of an A&E documentary called Abraham Lincoln: Preserving the Union.
One nice side effect of all the Virginia to-ing and from-ing is that we managed a field trip to the Fort Sumter National Monument. It was perfect timing, since RobotBoy has been reading about the Civil War. It was very interesting and well worth the 45-minute detour. RobotBoy’s writing assignment for next week will be to choose a few of the many photos I took and use them as writing prompts.
As a fun extra, we’ve been listening to the Chronicles of Narnia on CD during all of our driving. RobotBoy read the whole series a couple of years ago, but I had planned to have him re-read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe this year as a prelude to attending a stage adaptation later this year. I happened to find the full series, unabridged, on CD a few weeks ago, though, which has proven a really fun way to pass time on the road. So, I’m now pondering options to substitute for LWW later this year. Given RobotBoy’s obsession with the Barry/Pearson Peter Pan series, I’m thinking the original novel might be a nice possibility.
English:
We’re continuing to like Galore Park’s English Prep. We took last week off while we were on the road and celebrating Thanksgiving, but got back to work this week with the reading and comprehension exercises.
Science:
We rushed back from Virginia in order to make sure RobotBoy made it to the second session of the Physics class, which he’s enjoying very much. Meanwhile, he continues to read through his human body and marine science books at home.
Latin:
Since I last wrote, he has finished Chapter 4 of Minimus Secundus and did the chapter on Daudalus and Icarus in Learning Latin Through Mythology. In addition to the regular worksheets and exercises, he particularly enjoyed drawing a picture showing how he would escape from an island if he had on-hand only one wheel, a ball of string, some chewing gum and some logs harvested from a nearby forest. He even consented to write a paragraph describing his plan.
Spanish:
Yet more perfect ejercicios. He’s doing so well with this program that I floated the idea of speeding up a bit next year. However, he is pretty vocal about maintaining his current pace and making sure he has time to really learn the material.
Music:
Piano practice is happening on a somewhat more regular basis these days. Of course, between the holiday and our time on the road, he’s missed his lesson the last two weeks . . . Ah well, we’ll get back on track eventually.
Meanwhile, he’s been reviewing his Themes to Remember pieces, and I’m very pleased with how much he remembers.
Well, that’s the whirlwind version of the last couple of weeks. It’s not exciting, but I’m actually fairly pleased with how well we’re chugging along, given everything else that is going on in our lives.
And now, I’m off to finish the packing and preparations.
Friday, November 09, 2007
Almost Caught Up
Despite that, however, we did make real progress this week.
Math:
He has finally, officially caught up in his online math class. (Yay!) And, after seeing his grade drop following that one really disastrous module exam, he’s been really good about being more careful and picking up all the points on every daily assignment. It helps, too, that this module is about geometry, which comes very easily to him. He took the mid-module quiz today and earned a 90%. Combined with the good daily work, he’s now back to earning an ‘A’ for the course. (Again, yay!)
History & Literature:
Again, we slacked on Great Expectations this week. I think this mostly has to do with my making the mistake of buying RobotBoy the new Peter Pan prequel, Peter and the Secret of Rundoon. He’s absolutely bonkers about these books, reads and re-reads them, and he just resents any other reading that infringes on his attention. We got through three or four chapters, but we’re still way behind my goals for this week. If we don’t catch up before our holiday break, I guess we’ll just have to continue then.
We did read some more poetry, several short, child-friendly pieces by Christina Rosetti. And we talked about how stressed and unstressed syllables make rhythm and about rhyme schemes. He really eats this stuff with a spoon. So, I pulled an old middle school textbook off the shelf and skimmed through their poetry unit to see what other concepts we might cover this year. He also read “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” in preparation for going to see a production at a local theatre this weekend. He’s supposed to be almost 1/3 of the way through Rifles for Watie, too, but as of this afternoon he was only about 70 pages into it. He says it’s picking up and getting more interesting now, so he should be able to catch up this weekend.
And, of course, he’s continuing to read from his assorted history books, and he’s watching a two-hour documentary about the California Gold Rush.
English:
It was a writing week. RobotBoy chose to write a paragraph about his impressions of “The Elephant’s Child.” He stalled the actual writing until Thursday, but blew through it and produced an acceptable paragraph on his first attempt. We also did the grammar exercises about commas in lists.
Science:
In addition to his regular reading from the assorted science books and a couple of marine science worksheets, RobotBoy went to his first meeting of the four-session physics class at the science museum. He seemed to have a good time and is looking forward to the next class.
Latin:
That leftover Secundus vocabulary finally got done over the weekend. (Yet another small yay!) And this week, he had all the vocabulary typed by Friday afternoon. He also translated the picture story and did the Grasp the Grammar page aloud with me.
Spanish:
Perfect scores on all ejercicios this week! I think that deserves a big YAY!
Music:
Piano practice is still a sore point. He goes to the piano without a whole lot of grumbling when I remind him, but it doesn’t sound like enough “practice” is getting done. He spends at least as much time calling out for me to listen and talking about what he’s doing as he devotes to actually doing it. Still, I’m trying to focus on the fact that he is playing almost every day. And he admitted that both he and his teacher could tell how much better he did at this week’s lesson just as a result of the practice he did manage. So, again, progress. (I can’t quite muster a yay for that one, though. Maybe next week.) Meanwhile, he continues to enjoy Themes to Remember. This week, he worked on Mozart’s Concerto No. 21.
Oh, and we did a musical field trip this week. The big Episcopal cathedral downtown offers a series of free lunchtime mini-concerts. I always mean to attend more of them than we do. This week, though, was a recital by the assistant organist on their enormous pipe organ, which RobotBoy just adores. So, we made the effort to get out the door for that one.
Butterfly Update:
Sad news on this front, unfortunately. We were extremely excited to find one of the butterflies hatching this afternoon. After a long struggle, though, he seems unable to free one of his wings from the chrysalis. I went against my better judgment and tried to help him along, but it doesn’t look good. We finally decided to let nature try and resolve the situation, and last time we looked, he was not where we had last seen him. I’m not sure what this means, and we’ve decided to hope for the best. I assume the other one should be ready to emerge in a few more days. We’re keeping our fingers crossed he does better.
And now, we’re off to the weekly 3.5-hour marathon at the dance school. Fortunately, I went to the craft store yesterday and acquired materials for a couple of small projects I can take on the road. So, with my craft bag and the MP3 player, it shouldn’t be too bad an evening. (Maybe just one more tiny yay?)
Friday, November 02, 2007
A Pretty Good Week
RobotBoy donned his samurai garb one more time and insisted on being the one to answer the door and offer our cauldron full of goodies every time the doorbell rang. We got lots of trick-or-treaters, which was cool, and several comments about how spooky our house was. In between, we snacked on freshly roasted pumpkin seeds and the fudge I felt suddenly felt inspired to make that afternoon and watched spooky movies. All in all, a very pleasant day.
And I’m actually quite pleased with how much we managed to accomplish academically given the distraction of the holiday.
Math:
We’re waiting for the instructor to finish grading RobotBoy’s latest exam, but he made great progress this week catching up in his work and bringing his grade back up into A territory. He completed five lessons on area and volume this week, earning near-perfect scores on each one, plus the module exam and the module survey. He is now less than a week’s worth of assignments behind and should be able to make up the remaining lessons next week.
History & Literature:
We didn’t cover a lot of ground in Great Expectations this week, but we had fun reading aloud some poetry. We read an extract from “Song of Hiawatha” and also “Charge of the Light Brigade,” the latter of which seems to have made the bigger impression. RobotBoy commented that the recurring use of the phrase “Rode the six hundred” reminded him of the chorus of a song. We looked up the history of the battle on Wikipedia, too, and he continued reading from his various history sources: Learning Through History: Victorian Era; Time for Learning: Presidents; History of the World: Revolution and Conflict. His independent literature reading for this week is Wisler’s novel about the Civil War, Red Cap. He’s finding it a less than stimulating read, unfortunately. (I have to admit, it was one of the ones I didn’t love when I pre-read over the summer.) On DVD, he watched one episode of a series called 10 Days That Unexpectedly Changed the World. He learned about the battle of Antietam. And, just for fun (and because there was a link from his online math course), he watched a BrainPop animation about the history of Halloween.
Netflix is due to deliver Friendly Persuasion in today’s mail, and I’m looking forward to viewing it as a family movie night sometime this weekend.
We had a funny experience this week, by the way. RobotBoy takes his drum lessons with a group that holds its weekly practices at a local, very expensive private school. RobotBoy has been known to walk across the campus sighing about how nice a place it is and how he might like to go to high school there someday. Well, this week we happened to be hanging around in the hallway waiting for other drummers to arrive, and we were looking at the bulletin boards with homework assignments and class schedules posted. I was perusing the Eighth Grade Honors English information and couldn’t help laughing. Their in-class assignments for the week were to: edit the rough draft of their current writing assignment (Monday), read aloud “The Raven” (Tuesday), read aloud “The Tell-Tale Heart” (Wednesday) and watch a documentary about Edgar Allan Poe (Thursday and Friday). In other words, this very-well-thought-of, very expensive private school has their honors-level eighth graders doing exactly the same work as my 9-year-old did at home two weeks ago.
Don’t you love homeschooling?
English:
We started Chapter 3 of English Prep, reading Kipling’s story “The Elephant’s Child” and a letter to the editor about the ethical issues involved in keeping elephants in captivity. As always, RobotBoy breezed through the associated comprehension exercises.
Science:
RobotBoy read about rivers and how erosion shapes land in Earth’s Waters. He read about the major muscles in Time for Learning: Human Body and about coral reefs in Marine Science. He’s happily looking forward to starting the second series of classes at the science center next week. They’ll be doing physics this time around.
Latin:
It’s a Learning Latin Through Mythology week. RobotBoy read the myth of Cephalus and Procris and translated the associated picture story. He did two worksheets on Roman numerals, including making his own dot-to-dot for me to complete. He also finally got around to entering last week’s Secundus vocabulary into his word bank.
Spanish:
Mostly, Spanish went quite well again this week. RobotBoy did stumble and have to work a bit harder on one set of fill-in-the-blank ejercicios. He ended up having to go back and review a bit, but got everything in its correct place before he turned it in for grading.
Music:
His Themes to Remember piece for this week was Bocherini’s “Minuet,” which he liked so much that he voluntarily practiced singing through it every day. Since Netflix finally delivered the Great Composers DVD on Handel, he watched that this week, too. We’re still working together to figure out a good time when he can reliably do his instrument practice. On Friday, we decided to try having him do at least 15 minutes before lunch each day. We’ll just have to see how it goes, I guess.
Butterfly Update:
As expected, the caterpillar who was hanging in the J position last week is now cocooned. I’m always awed by how beautiful the chrysalis is:
We’ve had very windy and rainy weather a few days this week, and I’ve been very concerned about him, but he’s still hanging on. And, just to add to the fun, RobotBoy discovered a second chrysalis on the underside of one of our plastic patio chairs.
So, now we just have to wait and watch.
Friday, October 26, 2007
Forging Ahead
The big distraction this week, of course, is preparing for our church’s annual Halloween party, which takes place this Saturday evening. You’d think with only one costume to make that I’d be coasting, but it doesn’t seem to be working that way. RobotBoy chose to dress as a samurai this year, inspired by The Demon in the Teahouse and its sequels. I decided there was no reason we couldn’t squeeze a little education out of the process, so I had him do all the research and find photos of appropriate garb and go with me to the fabric store to select materials. He’s consulted every step of the way and made all the significant decisions and done a bit of the hands-on work. I think he’ll be very happy with the results. It really is going to look cool. But it’s been a lot of work, and he is so much more interested in that process than he is in math or science or any official schoolwork that I’ve gotten a bit irritable.
Here’s what we’ve got so far:
He also took upon himself the task of decorating the house for Halloween, since neither my husband nor I seemed to have the time or the energy. Again, he’s had a blast, but I can’t help seeing every minute he spends doing that as a minute he’s not doing schoolwork. The results are pretty cool, though. He’s been quite creative about how he uses various items we’ve had around for years:
Other distractions included two days out of the house. Our local science center has had one of those Our Bodies exhibits for months, and we kept meaning to go see it. Well, after at least one extension, it is closing for sure at the end of this month. So, since RobotBoy did not have a science class this week, we decided Wednesday would be a good day for a field trip. And, after I committed to that, some friends of ours invited us to go play at a local water park on Friday. So, we were working on a compressed schedule, even before you take into account the concert we attended on Tuesday evening, the hours we lost on Tuesday taking my car in for repairs (again), or the extra dance rehearsal scheduled for Thursday afternoon.
Nonetheless, we forged ahead. Here’s what we managed to get done:
Math:
RobotBoy managed only two lessons and a quiz (on which he got a nice, solid ‘A’) during the week. He’s still working on standard and metric measurements. We’re still working on catching him up after our road trip, though, so the plan is for him to do at least one lesson over the weekend.
History & Literature:
We’re back on Great Expectations after our side trip into the gothic stuff last week. On his own, RobotBoy finally got around to reading the copy of If You Lived in Williamsburg in Colonial Days that I bought for him to read before our trip. He also read another in the same series, If You Traveled West in a Covered Wagon. He tried hard to get through the abridged copy of David Copperfield I found at the close-out bookstore, but really hated it. This version is based on the one that Dickens, himself, used to read aloud during his public lectures, but it must lose something without Charles’ own personal touch, because I, too, found it incomprehensible. Since we’re already doing the unabridged Great Expectations aloud, I opted to let it go. Meanwhile, he’s also reading about the mid- to late 1800s in Revolution and Conflict, Learning Through History: The Victorian Era and Time for Learning: Presidents and watching a DVD biography on Queen Victoria.
English:
We worked through the remainder of the grammar and vocabulary exercises in this chapter of English Prep, focusing on verbs and on correct usage of their, they’re and there. RobotBoy also got his act together and wrote me two paragraphs for the assignment left over from last week. He produced a pretty good first draft about manatees, although we still have some work to do on organization and transitions. Given our compressed week, however, I’ve decided to let revisions slide until next week.
Science:
As I said, the big event of the week was our field trip to the science center. We explored the Our Bodies exhibit, which got mixed reviews from RobotBoy. He was clearly uncomfortable with the idea that we were looking at real bodies and was not able to focus as well as I would have liked on actually learning anything. We did get the audio tour, though, and he listened to most of that. And he said it was interesting to see what different parts of our bodies actually look like. So, I think some information got through. The exhibits that were of most interest to him were the ones that showed how various types of joints and muscles work together, because he could relate that to dancing. While we were there, just for fun, we also saw two IMAX films, one on dinosaurs and another on mummies. RobotBoy enjoyed both. At home, he continued reading from Time for Learning: Human Body and Earth’s Waters and completed two worksheets from his Marine Science book.
Latin:
Finishing up Chapter 3 of Minimus Secundus, he did the Latin Roots exercise, read the Roman Report about how they built roads, translated the second picture story and read the myth about the birth of Athena. He ran out of time to type the new vocabulary into his word bank, but has promised me to do that over the weekend.
Spanish:
RobotBoy did great work in Spanish this week! He did four ejercicios, earning perfect scores on all of them. I’m very pleased.
Music:
This was one of his review weeks, when I assigned no new pieces to learn and encouraged him to go back and practice all the songs he’s learned so far this year. What actually happened was that he spent most of his time working on the Surprise Symphony, because he didn’t really do much with it last week. He really likes that one, especially when I pretend to fall asleep and then get startled as he sings through it.
I think I mentioned last week that he had his debut with his choir on Sunday? Well, it went really well. The choir sounded great, and he got through the almost two-hour-long service with nary a complaint. The cathedral was hosting a choir visiting from England, and the two choirs sang a few pieces together, which was just wonderful. Even though we are not members of the cathedral (or, indeed, the denomination with which it is associated), I simply love that church. It is a gorgeous, inspiring space, and the acoustics are incredible. I feel so lucky to have a really good excuse to visit and enjoy their music program on a regular basis.
On Tuesday evening, the visiting choir gave a full concert. RobotBoy and I attended and were impressed all over again with how good the other choir was. I realized part-way through the performance that I was actually relaxed and had more or less turned off my brain. I wasn’t worrying about what I had to do when I got home or making a mental shopping list or criticizing the choir or analyzing the lyrics . . . I was just being there and enjoying the sounds washing over me. It was lovely.
Oh, and on a non-academic but really fun note: RobotBoy found two big, healthy monarch caterpillars on our patio today. One was happily munching away on one of the milkweed plants, but the other had already attached himself and gone into the ‘J’ position. Unfortunately, he chose the top rail of our guinea pigs’ play pen, instead of a plant.
So, we’ll have to be careful moving things around out there until he completes his metamorphosis. We raised some monarchs as part of our biology curriculum three years ago and have had a soft spot for them ever since. So finding these guys just outside our back door was a very exciting event!
I’ll keep you posted on any butterfly-related developments in next week’s entry.
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Half-way to the Holiday Break
Just for the sake of mixing things up a bit, I think we’ll do a day-by-day rundown this week.
Monday:
We took a break from Great Expectations in favor of reading two Washington Irving stories and some Edgar Allan Poe. It was awfully convenient that these two authors came up chronologically just in time for Halloween, huh? We started on Monday with “Rip Van Winkle” over breakfast. RobotBoy started his desk work with a math lesson on standard and metric units of measure. We then went over the lesson in English Prep about question marks and did the first exercise together orally. He also chose a topic for his writing assignment. (More on that later.) He translated the week’s picture story in Secundus and did a couple of ejercicios in The Learnables. The rest of the day was all music. He sang through Haydn’s “Symphony #94,” then went to his piano lesson and drum practice. On the way home, we made a quick stop at the library to pick up two of the books recommended for the English writing assignment.
Tuesday:
At breakfast, we read about the first half of “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,” after which RobotBoy tackled another math lesson on units of measure. This one took pretty much all morning, since it involved a series of “E-M-E” activities. This is a technique that requires students to estimate the size of one item, then measure it, then use that experience to estimate the size of a second, usually larger, item. He had two of these activities each for length, area, volume, capacity and weight. And each one required him to go through the process using both standard and metric measurements. He had a lovely time making all kinds of messes in the kitchen filling various containers (and the entire kitchen sink) with water and running all over the house measuring things. And I’m sure he learned a lot. But, oh boy, it took a huge bite out of our day. Once he finally finished with that, he did started reading the book he chose to read in order to complete the English writing assignment he had selected on Monday. He also read in his Human Body book about joints and muscles (of special interest at the moment, since he’s working hard in ballet to improve his turnout). He then worked for a while on his homework for the science center class (which he neglected until the last minute again) and did some more Spanish before we had to leave for ballet class.
Wednesday:
RobotBoy was up bright and early and already at the computer typing when I got up, frantically trying to finish his science class homework. He made it, just barely, and we headed out just about on time. Only after we were too far from home to go back did we realize he had forgotten to pack his tights for that evening’s ballet class. (Sigh.) So, I got him settled in class and went to the dance supply store, reasoning that it was closer than going all the way home and he needed another pair of tights, anyway, and they had called me the week before to let me know that the shirts I ordered had arrived. This was the final week of the biology series, and they focused on the human body. After class, we scrounged for dinner at the mall food court, then went to the second ballet class of the week.
Thursday:
“The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” concluded over breakfast (well, just after, since we were close enough to the end that we lingered until we finished reading). The day’s math lesson was on converting measurements (within systems). RobotBoy practiced converting ounces to pounds, inches to feet, feet to yards, etc. He also practiced converting from larger to smaller metric units, and the other way around. He watched the Famous Composers: Joseph Haydn DVD over lunch. He then read Diane Stanley’s Charles Dickens: The Man Who Had Great Expectations and read the story about Dickens in Lives of the Writers. He read some more about food webs in his Marine Science workbook and did the associated worksheet. He wrapped up the day by attending choir practice that afternoon.
Friday:
Continuing our spooky literature trend of the week, we read aloud Poe’s “The Raven” over breakfast and had a lot of fun squawking “Nevermore” at each other for some time thereafter. The final math lesson of the week required him to read some articles about whether the U.S. should switch to the metric system and then do another “out-of-seat” activity. This time, he had to pull a bunch of packages out of our pantry and document whether they were marked with standard or metric measurements, or both. It turned out to be a fairly boring assignment, since everything we could find had both types of measurements. He moved on from there to finishing his Secundus assignments for the week, adding new vocabulary to his word bank and doing the Grasp the Grammar exercise with me. Then he settled onto the couch with a snack and finished his history reading: a few pages from History of the World: Revolution and Conflict about the late 1800s; entries on Martin Van Buren, William Henry Harrison, John Tyler and James Knox Polk in Time for Learning: Presidents; and three articles in Learning Through History: The Victorian Era. He seemed especially impressed by the article about Florence Nightingale. He read about musical forms of the Classical era and the symphony orchestra seating plan in Themes to Remember and practiced singing the week’s musical selection, which left us just enough time to finish the grammar exercises for the week in English Prep. He had a quick, early dinner, and we set out for his trio of dance classes.
So, did you notice what didn’t get done? Remember way back on Monday when we went to the library and then he started reading the book on Tuesday? Did you notice how I never mentioned it again? Yes. I noticed, too. See, what happened was this: I told him to choose one of the topics suggested in the book to write about. He insisted he wanted to do the one that involved reading one of the books on the “Have You Read?” list. I reminded him that the assignment was supposed to be finished within the week. He was so enthusiastic, though, that I eventually agreed he could have until the end of next week to do the actual writing, as long as he read the book this week. Well, we all know how that went. So, I have now decreed that he must choose a different topic and do the writing assignment on top of his regular assignments for next week, on penalty of losing fun TV and computer gaming. That usually does the trick.
In other news, we’re in full Halloween costume-making mode this weekend. The samurai costume is coming along nicely, although these things always turn out to be more work than I anticipate.
And tomorrow is RobotBoy’s big debut with his new choir. They are singing alongside a choir visiting from England for the service at the Cathedral tomorrow morning. I can’t wait to see him all angelic in his vestments . . . complete with neck ruff!
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Two, Two, Two Weeks in One!
Math:
RobotBoy has just about finished the first module of the second segment of this class. He’s been doing very well with ratios and proportions and cross-multiplying and dividing and all that stuff. The advanced lesson for this module had him outside measuring shadows and figuring out ratios that allowed him to estimate heights of buildings and trees too tall to measure directly. He had a good time with that one.
History & Literature:
Great Expectations continues to be a fun read-aloud. We’ve finished the “first stage” of Pip’s expectations (about the first third of the book) and learned a bit about the author, himself, watching an A&E Biography about Charles Dickens. RobotBoy is currently learning about significant people and historical events from the early 1800s. So, he read The Alamo from the Day That Changed America series and watched History Channel documentaries on that battle and on the development of the Transcontinental Railroad. He read about the first few U.S. presidents in his Time for Learning book, and completed story #78: “Latin America and the Caribbean Islands” on his Child’s History of the World CD. He read about Edgar Allan Poe in Lives of the Writers: Comedies, Tragedies (and What the Neighbors Thought) and watched an A&E biography DVD. We then read "The Tell-Tale Heart" together.
The high point of this two-week week, though, was our field trip to Colonial Williamsburg. Since we were in the neighborhood visiting Moonheart, we decided to tack on an extra day for some educational fun. RobotBoy had a great time and might even have learned a few things. I think his favorite sites in town were the blacksmith and cabinetmaker.
Oh, and just for fun, we listened to about the first half of an audio book version of The Fellowship of the Ring during the road trip. I’m not a big Tolkien fan, myself, but RobotBoy is really enjoying it.
English:
This was one of the subjects we took on the road with us. We started the second chapter of English Prep Book 1, reading the fiction and non-fiction excerpts and doing the comprehension exercises aloud. It was kind of fun to watch my husband be impressed at how well and quickly RobotBoy ripped through the questions.
Science:
RobotBoy had one of his twice-monthly science center classes the afternoon before we left town. They talked about plants, and he came home with a lima bean in a tiny pot ready to sprout. The class also dissected an earthworm in the last hour, but RobotBoy opted out of that one and explored a virtual worm recommended by his teacher, instead. Of course, he came home with yet another list of vocabulary words to define, so he’s been working on those a few at a time since we got home. In Earth’s Waters, he’s reading about the water cycle. He finished the first chapter of the text and took the online self-test. Time for Learning: The Human Body also went on the road with us, and he regaled us with lots of information about teeth on the way to Virginia.
Latin:
He’s back to Learning Latin Through Mythology this “week,” reading about Baucis and Philemon. He read the story in English, translated the Latin picture story version and completed the match-the-sentence-to-the-picture worksheet.
Spanish:
Nothing terribly interesting to say about Spanish this time around. RobotBoy did a nice job with the required ejercicios, but it wasn’t exciting.
Music:
He has two more Handel pieces from the Royal Fireworks Music for this week. He was supposed to watch a Great Composers DVD on Handel, too, but Netflix hasn’t delivered it just yet. So, that will have to happen next week. While visiting Moonheart, we attended a wonderful concert put on the by faculty and students. RobotBoy especially enjoyed watching the pianist and was very pleased to see pieces by both Gershwin and Tchaikovsky on the program. However, I think his favorite musical experiences of the week happened in Colonial Williamsburg, where he had the chance to hear a real glass armonica in concert and to get his hands on a reproduction harpsichord in the cabinetmaker’s shop.
Outside of official educational stuff, RobotBoy had a great time visiting with his sister. We toured the campus and the (tiny) downtown area next door. He went to the college’s Physical Activity Center with Moonheart and her roommate for a workout, then had lunch with them in the dining hall. We all went to see a performance of Love’s Labor's Lost at the local Shakespeare theatre, which was especially fun for RobotBoy since he’s currently reading Shakespeare’s Scribe.
Now, we just have to get back in the swing of normal life at home (until we have to do another road trip to bring Moonheart home for Thanksgiving . . . ).
Saturday, September 29, 2007
My Accomplishment for the Week
But the first step is to figure out what I already have on hand. So, I spent most of Wednesday morning while RobotBoy was enjoying his day off from desk work unpacking the last of the book boxes left over from this summer's move. I then sorted and organized everything onto the shelves in our office/schoolroom (and even managed to put a few in the "donatables" box in the garage). I turned up a few things I remembered and had planned to use for next year but hadn't been able to find and a few things I'd forgotten we even owned. I then hit one of my favorite bargain bookstores and lucked into a couple more. I still have a long way to go to collect enough for a full year, but I feel quite pleased with the starter kit I've got sitting on the shelf already.
We'll be cycling back around to the ancients next year. Here's what I've got so far:
Learning Through History: Ancient China
Learning Through History: Ancient Egypt
Learning Through History: Mesoamerica
Ancient Egyptians and Their Neighbors
Egyptians, Maya, Minoans Activity Book
Ancient Rome Timeline / Activity Sheets
Discover Ancient Egypt Activity Book
Ancient Greece Activity Book
Coloring Book of Ancient Egypt
Make It Work: Roman Empire
The Maya: Life, Myth and Art
Story of Philosophy (37 pp. on Greeks)
Mysteries Through the Ages (sections on pyramids, prehistory, lost civilizations)
Top 10 Greek Legends: Zeus on the Loose, Deary
Horrible Histories: Rotten Romans, Deary
Detectives in Togas, Winterfield
Place in the Sun, Rubalcaba
The Way of Alexander the Great, Mercer
The Children's Homer, Colum
So, with that as my base, I've started building a list of things to look for in the next few months. I'd love to hear any ideas anyone might want to throw my way!
Isn't planning fun?
Friday, September 28, 2007
Week #5: Just Chugging Along
It’s a small thing, but it’s what I have to hang onto this week.
So, with that said, here’s the scoop. (I’ve decided to revert to the subject-by-subject format this week.)
Math:
RobotBoy is half-way through the first module of the second segment and doing very well. He’s been continuing to work on ratios, proportions and scaling this week. On Thursday, he earned a perfect score on his mid-module quiz! I’m starting to ponder what to do once he finishes this course, which should happen in mid-January. In theory, the next step would be algebra, but I’d prefer to have him take his time and really cement things before rushing along into high school math. FLVS offers a half-speed algebra course (spread over two years), but the description clearly states under Prerequisites that the “student should be in 9th grade or higher.” Weirdly, the regular Algebra I course requires only completion of 7th grade math. I guess a consultation with his current instructors is in order before too long.
History & Literature:
Most of his assigned reading this week has focused on events of the late 1700s and early 1800s. He’s read portions of the History of the World: Revolution and Conflict and Time for Learning: Presidents, as well as a fun bargain-bookstore find called Ultimate Field Trip: A Week in the 1800s. RobotBoy had a great time quizzing me to see whether I could recognize the objects shown in some of the pictures. (It was lots of fun to freak him out by showing that I did, in fact, know what most of them were.) He’s also finishing up the historical novel The Keeping Room, which offers a surprisingly complex perspective on the Revolutionary War. His DVD for this week is the first volume of the Ken Burns documentary, The West.
By the way, we went to see the stage adaptation of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory on Sunday after church. It was, I’m afraid, a bit of a disappointment. Maybe it’s just because I’m raising theatre geeks that we’re all a bit jaded, but I was less than impressed with the production as a whole and, quite specifically, with the performances of the child actors. RobotBoy enjoyed it, though.
English:
This week’s grammar was a review of types of nouns: common, proper and abstract. RobotBoy especially loved the silly caricatures representing each type. We went over the information together, after which I challenged him to name one noun for each letter of the alphabet. The catch was that he was allowed to name only fruits and vegetables, boys’ names and feelings. And he had to identify each one as a common, proper or abstract noun. He did this exercise quite cheerfully while simultaneously walking around and around the guinea pig playpen on our patio. On Thursday, we skimmed over the vocabulary and spelling page. I had planned to give him a written quiz on Friday, but just plain forgot to get it ready in time. So, he lucked out this week.
Science:
He continued reading from his three spines. In Time for Learning: The Human Body, he read about the skeleton. His Marine Science assignment this week was about the food chain, including a worksheet on which he practiced identifying “producers” and “consumers.” In Earth’s Waters, he read about states of matter and previewed an experiment he’d like to do next week that explores evaporation. In between readings, he worked on homework for his science center class, including researching information about mushrooms for the essay assignment. Just for fun, he watched an episode of Blue Planet: The Living Seas.
Latin:
He finished up Chapter 2 in Minimus Secundus, typing out his translation for the picture story. The activity sheet requiring him to draw his own pictures to illustrate the story of Odysseus and the sirens was a big hit, although I’m getting awfully tired of having to work so hard to get him to draw more carefully and include color. We also went over the Grasp the Grammar exercise on adjectives and adverbs, and he added the week’s vocabulary to his glossary.
Spanish:
I’m trying to encourage more attention being paid to the written exercises by recording grades for them. The rule is that I check his work and mark incorrect answers. I then award half credit for any corrections he makes. This seems to be working, since it gives him an incentive both for doing it right the first time and for going back to fix mistakes. He worked through three repasos and did two ejercicios, ending the week with 9/10 written in my grade book.
Music:
He continues to love Themes to Remember. This week, he’s been working on two Handel pieces: “The Messiah” and “Royal Fireworks Music.” Singing through them a few times a day has become one of his favorite activities. We’re also working hard to fit instrument practice back into his daily routine. It was better this week than it has been up to now, but he’s still getting only about 15 real minutes each day, instead of the 30 I’d prefer.
Other than that, it was the usual round of music lessons and dance classes and a choir rehearsal. Oh, and RobotBoy would be quite irritable with me if I neglected to say that he has again been cast as a one of the children in the party scene in the ballet company’s Nutcracker. So, as of this Saturday, we’ll be adding weekly rehearsals to our schedule.
Finally, I’ll mention that next week’s report will likely be either late or non-existent. We’ll be away for a few days visiting Moonheart on campus for the college’s Family Weekend. I’m not looking forward to the driving, but I can’t wait to see her.
Wishing everyone a great week!
Friday, September 21, 2007
This Just In: The Weekly Bulletin
Here’s the day-by-day rundown:
Monday
RobotBoy dived into the second segment of his math class with a lesson introducing ratios. We’re trying having me read over each lesson with him and do a bit more hand-holding while he works the practice problems (which basically means making sure he actually does all the practice problems) before turning him loose to do the assessment on his own. I'm hoping this will encourage him to give more time and attention to the lessons and result in better retention. It seems to be working well, and he’s off to a strong start for the second half of the course. He read a few pages of Earth’s Waters and then worked on typing definitions for his science center class coming up on Wednesday. Next, he read a short book on Benjamin Franklin’s experiments with electricity and a couple of pages in History of the World: Revolution and Conflict about the beginnings of the United States. Over lunch, he watched the first half hour of a three-hour DVD biography about Thomas Jefferson. He was appalled to find out that Mr. “All Men Are Created Equal” was a slaveowner, so we had a conversation about the necessity of evaluating every person as a product of his or her time. It was back to Minimus Secundus for Latin this week, with a reading about the Roman army. His “Theme to Remember” for this week is Handel’s Water Music (which he likes, but isn’t nearly as big a hit as Tocatta & Fugue). Then it was out the door for his piano lesson (and to drive uptown for the drum lesson we didn’t know had been cancelled).
Tuesday
We started the day with reading a chapter of Great Expectations over breakfast. Then we moved to the office/schoolroom for a math lesson about equivalent ratios and unit ratios. RobotBoy, again, did very well. After that, we tackled the first writing assignment in his new English book (which I was rather dreading, since writing so often seems to be a source of conflict and tension). We’ve decided to try letting him type out all of his rough drafts, which should make it easier for him to make corrections. Then, once I’ve approved the final draft, he will write out a good copy by hand. This is in deference to my agreement with him that I will require less handwriting this year, but that what he does write must be of high quality. Since both of this chapter’s readings were about food, he chose to write about making pasta sauce (his favorite food). We went through a couple of rounds of writing and corrections, but I was actually quite pleased with how little ink I needed to spill on his pages. He worked on some more science class definitions and did the worksheet requiring him to label the parts of a cell, then read If You Lived at the Time of the American Revolution. He practiced the Handel snipped and then finished the day by translating a picture story from Secundus before we ran out to his ballet class.
Wednesday
Despite my repeated encouragement to get them done in small chunks, RobotBoy left a long list of science vocabulary words to finish up on Wednesday morning. He got them done and printed out neatly pretty much just in time to leave for his class. They learned about plants during class time, and came home with yet more vocabulary words to define and an assigned essay on the question of whether a mushroom is a plant. We finished out the day with another ballet class, then headed for home. Inspired by the Hoobler books he read in the first couple of weeks of school, he has decided to dress as a samurai for Halloween this year. So, he spent the hour or so before bedtime searching online for pictures from which we can draw inspiration.
Thursday
RobotBoy was up bright and early and back on the computer searching for samurai before breakfast. I pulled him away to eat and listen to me read aloud the next chapter of Great Expectations. Next came the morning’s math lesson, introducing proportions. We then went over the first set of grammar and punctuation exercises in the English text orally. For Latin, he reviewed the picture story he had translated on Tuesday and typed the new vocabulary words into his glossary, then did an activity sheet about the contents of Julius’s backpack. He read a couple of pages in his Human Body book, then took a break and watched a big chunk of the Jefferson DVD. His last bit of desk work for the day was a Spanish exercise (which he had to do twice to get completely correct). Then we drove uptown (again) for choir practice.
Friday
Today in math he learned about “within” and “between” relationships in proportion and about scaling. He grasped these concepts easily and well and should end up with a near-perfect score for the week’s assignments. He decided to tackle writing out the final copy of his English assignment next, but to work on it two sentences at a time in between other work. (I told you he hates to write.)
We went over the Grasp the Grammar and Latin Roots in Secundus together orally, after which he retired to his bedroom to read from the Revolution News and Learning Through History: The French Revolution. Neither of them got read terribly carefully, apparently, and I had to send him back to re-read sections when he was unable to answer any questions about them. Eventually, though, he got through them and seemed to absorb a reasonable amount. He followed up with “America Gets Rid of Her King” from the Child’s History of the World CD, then practiced Handel’s Water Music one more time. One more Spanish ejercicio finished up the deskwork for the day (and the week). As I type this, he is watching the last 30 minutes of the Jefferson biography before we head out for his back-to-back-to-back dance classes. He is planning to finish up his reading (the first several chapters of The Keeping Room) in the car.
By the way, we’re experimenting this week with finding a place in the routine for regular instrument practice. He used to do 30 minutes per day, last thing each day, alternating piano and drum. However, we’ve found that anything he leaves until last doesn’t get done either regularly or well. So, we’re working together to find a better time. We tried having him do it in the morning while I’m making breakfast, but he’s kind of a slow starter and doesn’t really focus on anything until he has eaten. The best plan we’ve come up with so far is to have him practice in the middle of the day, after he has finished math and at least one other subject. My routine is to take our guinea pigs out to play on the patio at about 11:00 each day, so today we had him do his practice during that time. He grumbled, but did it. So, I think we’ll keep it there for now and see how it goes.
Until next week . . .
Sunday, September 16, 2007
“The cat ate my homework!”
We have two cats in the house, including one not quite a year old who is still very playful. On Saturday morning, I discovered the disaster: the cat had gotten hold of his model and chewed significant portions of it to bits.
RobotBoy took it well, and decided to spend part of Saturday making a replacement to take to class on Wednesday. This time, he decided he wanted it to be more flexible, so that he could make it twist better. So, he skipped the foam parts and made his base pairs with pipe cleaners, instead. I think it turned out pretty well!
Friday, September 14, 2007
Week Three, and All Is Well . . .
First of all, the thing RobotBoy is most excited about is that he is adding yet one more dance class to his weekly routine. He started tap last year and just loved it. He did well enough to be promoted to the next level for this year. Unfortunately, when it came time to register for classes, once we blocked out time for other things that were not flexible, there was no way for him to fit tap into his schedule. The class he should have been in overlapped by 30 minutes with one of his core dance classes. He was, needless to say, very upset and disappointed.
Then he was at the dance school waiting for one of his ballet classes to start when the tap teacher came over and asked why he wasn’t in her class. He explained about the scheduling problem, and she ended up moving the class half an hour earlier so that he and two other students who were in the same predicament would be able to join.
The other piece of good news is that, having begun his current online math class over the summer, he finished the first “segment” (semester) today. He very much wanted to end the semester with an ‘A,’ and came through with flying colors, earning a 98% on his semester final.
And so, all in all, not a bad day here at the Academy.
Here’s a quick recap of the rest of our week:
Math: Most of this week was wrapping up the current module and reviewing for the semester final. He also did his oral quiz with his instructor over the phone on Wednesday.
History & Literature: He finished Charlie and the Chocolate Factory toward the beginning of the week, and we’re looking forward to seeing the stage adaptation next weekend. He also read abridged versions of Robinson Crusoe (a lovely edition with illustrations by N.C. Wyeth) and Gulliver’s Travels. His history reading focused on the French Revolution, with selections from Learning Through History magazine and other resources. He’s continuing to very much enjoy our breakfast read-aloud, Great Expectations. ("Miss Havisham is sooooo creepy!") We’re doing a bit of a nautical theme this week, too. In addition to Robinson Crusoe (shipwreck), we’ve been watching the wonderful PBS miniseries Longitude with Dad in the evening, and today we read aloud the first part of the “Rime of the Ancient Mariner.”
English: We broke open the new Galore Park book this week, and I’m just so pleased we decided to switch. The book seems to be a really good match for RobotBoy’s learning style. Beginning with Book 1 is making this a very easy transition, too. He did the first exercise on Monday, which involved reading an except from Oliver Twist and answering a series of comprehension and vocabulary questions. Of course, in our musical theatre-obsessed household, this particular reading selection meant I got to spend the rest of the day listening to RobotBoy sing “Food, Glorious Food.” It was a small price to pay, though. On Tuesday, we tackled the non-fiction selection, which went quite well, too. Next week he will have his first written assignment from this book. I’m expecting some resistance but crossing my fingers . . .
Science: He again read from all three of his science texts and on Friday did a worksheet comparing algae and other plants. As one of his Wednesday projects, he made a model of a DNA strand, which was one of his homework assignments from his science center class. He’s also been working on typing out the required definitions for that class.
Latin: In his first week with Learning Latin Through Mythology, RobotBoy read about Atalanta and Hippomenes and did a great job translating the sentences and matching them with their pictures.
Spanish: This subject didn’t get as much attention this week as it probably should have. He rather rushed through one set of exercises late on Thursday and made several mistakes. We discussed and corrected them, though, and I think he’s back on track. I continue to be very pleased with The Learnables.
Music: He moved on to the second theme from “Tocatta and Fugue” this week and also read the story about Bach from Lives of the Musicians. However, I think the biggest hit of the week was the Composers Special Bach’s Fight for Freedom. He was especially thrilled to discover that the special features on the DVD allowed him to play all of the pieces used on the soundtrack (over and over).
One other fun extra this week: We have season tickets for the local Shakespeare theatre, and went last night to see the season opener, Comedy of Errors. It is, apparently, Shakespeare’s shortest comedy, and we all agreed it is among the silliest we have seen so far. Lots of fun, though!
Friday, September 07, 2007
The Big Picture and This Week's Report
I noticed in reading over my last couple of entries that I haven’t listed the year’s curricula anywhere. So, I’ll go ahead and remedy that now, before we get to this week’s report.
Math:
- Florida Virtual School Math 3 (8th grade)
English:
- So You Really Want to Learn English Book 1
- Word Roots B1 software
- Reading list coordinated with history
History:
I discussed this in a earlier post, "My Favorite Time of the Year." I neglected to mention there, though, that he is also watching two or three DVDs each week that relate to his current reading.
Science:
- Prentice Hall Science Explorer: Earth’s Waters
- Marine Science Books 2 & 3 from Dandy Lion
- Time for Learning: The Human Body
- Homeschooler classes at our local science center
Latin:
- Minimus Secundus
- Learning Latin Through Mythology
Spanish:
- The Learnables: Basic Structures
Music:
(Note: This is the history and appreciation portion on his music study.)
- Themes to Remember
- Lives of the Musicians: Good Times, Bad Times (and What the Neighbors Thought)
- Composer biographies from Netflix
Geography:
It’s light this year. He’s doing the Top Secret Adventures kits from Highlights, and looking up the countries he’s reading about on his globe and/or world map.
Extras:
Piano, drum, choir and dance.
We had a minor bit of re-scheduling in order to make room for one more ballet class each week, but RobotBoy is happy as a clam with his busy schedule.
There. Now I can get on with the Weekly Report!
This was a cramped week, between Labor Day and my husband’s birthday plus the first science center session. So, RobotBoy and I have been scrambling a bit to squeeze a full week’s worth of work into two and a half days. Amazingly, we’re just about going to make it.
Math: Three lessons down, one to make up over the weekend. He’s been learning about types of numbers (rational, irrational, natural, etc.) and working on exponents and scientific notation.
History & Literature: He finished The Ghost in the Tokaido Inn several days early and voluntarily moved on to the sequel, The Demon in the Teahouse, even though I had decided not to assign it. In conjunction with that, he watched a three-hour PBS series about Japan. He’s also been reading about the French Revolution and Napoleon in various books and on the Child’s History of the World CD. Still on his to-do list is watching an A&E Biography of Napoleon. In preparation for seeing a stage production later this month, he’s begun reading Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and we’re continuing with Great Expectations aloud.
Science: He read a section of Earth’s Waters and a few pages in The Human Body about cells and DNA. Conveniently, this week’s science center class—the first of a four-session series about biology--was about those same topics. He also read a few pages from one of the Marine Science books and did a quick research project about animals that live in tide pools and kelp forests.
Latin: This week, he wrapped up the first chapter of Secundus and started building his personal glossary from the words introduced in the lesson. In addition to Latin vocabulary, this lesson focused on how nouns change their endings to reflect whether they are being used as subjects or objects. Next week, he’ll take a break from Secundus and tackle the first chapter of Learning Latin Through Mythology.
Spanish: We’re both happy to see how much he’s remembering from the first part of The Learnables now that he’s starting Basic Structures. He’s listened to the first few sections and done their associated ejercicios flawlessly.
Music: The Themes to Remember version of “Tocatta & Fugue in D Minor” is a huge hit with my young musician. In addition to playing the track over and over (and singing it . . . loudly), RobotBoy is having a blast picking out the tune on the piano. We’re expecting the Great Composers DVD on Bach in tomorrow’s mail and plan to have him watch that over the weekend.
Not bad for an abbreviated week, huh?
The other good news is that our copy of Galore Park’s English book arrived yesterday, meaning that we can start incorporating it into our lesson plans as of next week. I’m really happy I decided to jump to this series. I just like the layout and approach, the whole “tone” of the books, and I think RobotBoy will be much happier with them.
Until next time . . .
Friday, August 31, 2007
The First Week: Not a Disaster So Far!
RobotBoy and I had a really rough time last year. I knew things would change quite a bit this year, with his big sister off at college. And I made a genuine effort in planning to choose materials and a schedule that would make things more palatable for him. Two of my primary goals for this year, in fact, are to work on improving our relationship and to re-ignite his enjoyment of learning.
Nonetheless, I worried as we got close to the official start of our year. I absolutely dreaded the idea that we would fall back into the unpleasant patterns from last year.
So far, though, things are going well. We’ve done away with assignment sheets entirely. I have my lesson plans for each week, and on Monday we just sat together and figured out how much of each subject he would do each day. He’s been writing out his own list of goals on his whiteboard each day and gets a big kick out of erasing things as they are finished.
He did leave a little more reading for today than would probably have been ideal, but he’s a terrific reader and enjoys curling up in a nest of blankets and pillows in the living room to read. So, it’s not the worst problem we could have.
The only moments of tension so far came on Tuesday (when I made him erase and re-write some labels on a Latin worksheet to make them neater), Wednesday (when he experienced his first “free” day and got bored until I guided him to a project—Thank goodness for Learning Through History magazine!) and today (when he was doing a quiz in his online math class, asked me for help and then got angry when he didn’t like my answers). Each of them has passed quickly, though, and ended with a spontaneous apology.
The Week in Review
So, for those that may be interested in the nuts and bolts, here’s what he accomplished this week.
Monday: Doing a math lesson, reading four pages of Prentice Hall’s Earth’s Waters, reading two pages of Minimus Secundus, reading the biographical information about Antonio Vivaldi in Themes to Remember and listening to “Spring,” reviewing the information about numbers in The Learnables Spanish: Basic Structures, working on the latest Top Secret Adventures geography kit on Greece, reading from The Ghost in the Tokaido Inn, attending his weekly drum lesson.
Tuesday: Listening to me read aloud from Great Expectations over breakfast, doing a math lesson, reading two-page spread from his Human Body book, doing a Secundus activity sheet, practicing “Spring,” reviewing the “How to do the lessons” information in The Learnables, doing some more work on the Top Secret kit, doing one story from the Child’s History of the World CD ROM, reading more of The Ghost in the Tokaido Inn, attending his piano lesson.
Wednesday: Making a Russian cloak and hat following directions from Learning Through History: Tsarist Russia. We had to go to the fabric store for supplies first, and I let him be in charge of figuring out what he needed and choosing the materials. He had a blast! He watched a couple of kid-friendly science shows we had saved on the DVR, started re-reading the 7th Harry Potter book, then attended his ballet class that evening. Two Wednesdays a month, he will be attending classes at our local science museum. On the alternate Wednesdays, assuming he is caught up with all of his schoolwork, he gets the day off to do projects and read and play and watch reasonably educational TV.
Thursday: Doing a math lesson, reading and translating the two-page picture story from Secundus, practicing “Spring,” reviewing the week’s Spanish assignments, reading a few articles from Learning Through History: Tsarist Russia, doing another Child’s History of the World story, doing one lesson of Word Roots software, reading some more Ghost in the Tokaido Inn, watching a Great Composers DVD about Antonio Vivaldi, attending choir practice.
Friday: Listening to some more Great Expectations over breakfast, doing his math quiz, reading Diane Stanley’s Peter the Great, reading some background information about Kabuki from a book about theatre history, reading some more Ghost in the Tokaido Inn, reading a few more articles from Learning Through History: Tsarist Russia and Learning Through History: The French Revolution, reading two pages from one of his Marine Science books, doing another Secundus activity sheet, reading the story about Vivaldi from Lives of the Musicians, watching an A&E biography of Peter the Great, attending ballet and jazz classes.
You will notice that there’s no grammar or writing in the mix just yet. That’s in part because I made a conscious choice to require less writing this year, since it was the cause of so much of our trouble last year. I consulted with the certified teacher who does our annual evaluations, and she agreed that it won’t do him any harm to back off a bit and let us both catch our breath. He reads constantly and consistently scores extremely well in all language arts testing (except for spelling and punctuation), so I’ve decided to just let him relax a bit this year. Also, I made a last-minute decision to switch from Voyages in English to Galore Park’s English Prep text. The book had to be ordered from England, so we’re still waiting for it to arrive.
I almost succumbed to assigning a written narration on Peter the Great today, since RobotBoy was so excited after reading about him. But I bit my tongue, both because I decided it wouldn’t be fair to toss in an extra assignment this late in the week and because the week has gone so well so far that I don’t want to blow it! The plan is to gradually add back in some more writing as the year progresses.
He seems to be pretty happy with his curriculum and with his schedule so far. He is very much enjoying both The Ghost in the Tokaido Inn and Great Expectations and is getting a big kick out of Themes to Remember. I think the Prentice Hall Science Explorer book is going to be a big hit, too.
So, all in all, a pretty good week! I’m actually starting to feel optimistic about this year.
Here’s hoping that all the other homeschoolers out there are finding their years off to a good start, too.
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
"How do you write your lesson plans?"
(To see a larger, more readable version, click on the graphic.)
These are the first two weeks of my plans for RobotBoy for this coming year. The "Notes for Mom" box at the bottom is my innovation for this year. I'm hoping it will help me to be more prepared, rather than scrambling for supplies every Sunday evening!
Friday, July 27, 2007
My Favorite Time of the Year!
There have been a lot of changes and adjustments taking place here at our little academy. The most significant is that we will be reducing our student enrollment by half next year. Although we had hoped to hang onto her for another couple of years, Moonheart decided to go ahead and apply for admission to the early college entrance program she’s had her eye on. She has been accepted and is due to start classes in August. So, we’ve spent a lot of time this spring and summer filling out forms and arranging finances and combing through class schedules and other information.
We’re very happy for her and very proud. (And no one would blame me if I were just a little melancholy, right?)
So, this means that I now have the freedom to tailor RobotBoy’s curriculum and schedule for next year specifically for him. I’ll get to that in a minute.
We also made a local move last month, and the new house has a spare bedroom that will allow us a real schoolroom for the first time in a few years. At the moment, the décor and furnishings still consist largely of half-unpacked cardboard boxes, but I plan to have things in much better shape by the time school rolls around in the fall.
Now, since RobotBoy is my highly social, places-to-go, people-to-see student, I’ve decided to arrange lots of outside-the-house activities for him. In previous years, I’ve had to juggle the schedules of the two kids and balance RobotBoy’s need to be out and about with Moonheart’s need to stay home in order to manage her heavy academic load and, especially, her commitments to online classes. With her away at school, though, we’ll have the freedom to do more. So far, the anticipated schedule looks like this:
Monday
Piano Lesson 4:30 – 5:00
Drum Lesson & Practice 6:15 – 8:00
Wednesday
Homeschool Class at Science Center 12:00 – 4:00 (twice a month)
Ballet Class 5:30 – 7:00
Thursday
Choir Rehearsal 4:30 – 6:30
Friday
Ballet Class 6:00 – 7:30
Jazz Dance Class 7:30 – 8:30
The other big change is that we’re going to try scheduling desk work only four days each week, allowing him Wednesdays off as long as he is caught up on his assignments for Monday and Tuesday. I noticed last year that Thursday and Friday tended to be his most productive days, and I suspect it worked that way because he knew he would be grounded or doing make-up work all weekend if he didn’t finish his assignments before dinner time on Friday. So, I’m hoping that dangling the carrot of a day off in the middle of the week will keep him motivated to work efficiently.
In terms of curriculum, we’re doing a few things differently there, too. First of all, I’ve decided to back off on the amount of writing I’m asking of him, especially for history. It was just so unpleasant last year that I’ve decided we both need a break.
We’re also going “spine free” for history. Or, perhaps, the more accurate way to put it is that I’m using his reading list as the spine. I’ve been collecting books from closeout and discount bookstores and culled anything useful from our existing collection. By the time I was done, I had a shelf full of about 6000 pages of non-fiction, biographies and historical fiction, plus several reference books and anthologies from which I wanted him to read. So, I just arranged all the readers in chronological order and broke them into chunks that would fit into the number of weeks in our academic year.
We’re a little off track from the history divisions recommended in The Well-Trained Mind, because we spent a year on American history back In 2004-05. This year, we’ll be covering “modern” history, from about 1700 forward. I’m doing this in order to round out the complete world history cycle and allow us to start over with the ancients next year.
Here’s the list:
Peter the Great, Stanley
Ghost in the Tokaido Inn, Hoobler
Robinson Crusoe: Young Reader’s Edition (Running Press)
Gulliver’s Travels (Dorling Kindersley Classics)
Benjamin Franklin’s Adventures With Electricity, Birch
If You Lived at the Time of the American Revolution
Keeping Room, Myers
Ultimate Field Trip: A Week in the 1800s
Sleepy Hollow / Rip Van Winkle, Irving
Day That Changed America: The Alamo, Tanaka
"Emperor’s New Clothes," Anderson *
"Tell-Tale Heart," Poe
Charles Dickens, Stanley
If You Traveled West in a Covered Wagon
David Copperfield (abridged by Dickens for public readings), Dickens
Great Expectations, Dickens (Aloud)
Rifles for Watie, Keith
Red Cap, Wisler
Red Badge of Courage, Crane
Day That Changed America: Gettysburg, Tanaka
Alice Rose & Sam, Lasky
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Carrol
Dragon’s Gate, Yep
Around the World in 80 Days, Verne (Aloud)
Tom Sawyer, Twain
Last Princess, Stanley
Treasure Island, Stevenson *
Sherlock Holmes stories
Immigrant Kids, Freedman
Jungle Book, Kipling
Day That Changed America: Earthquake, Tanaka
Trapped by the Ice, McCurdy
History Channel Guide: Anastasia
Gandhi, Pastan
Cheaper by the Dozen, Gilbreth
Dave at Night, Levine
Daily Life: The Great Depression, Parks
Franklin & Eleanor, Harness
My Family and Other Animals, Durrel (Aloud)
I Never Saw Another Butterfly, Volovkova *
Day That Changed America: D-Day, Tanaka
Mieko and the Fifth Treasure, Coerr
So Far From the Bamboo Grove, Watkins
Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Lewis *
Malcolm X: Fire Burning Brightly, Meyers
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Dahl *
My Name Is America: Journal of Seamus Flaherty
Journey to Jo’burg, Naidoo
Red Scarf Girl, Ji-li Jiang
(Selections marked with an asterisk have adaptations being performed on-stage locally this year. So, I’m moving them around in the schedule to make sure that RobotBoy reads them just before we go see each show.)
I also have the following audio books, which we’ll listen to while on our way to all those afternoon activities:
Twenty Days with Julian and Little Bunny, Hawthorne
Time Machine, Wells
Defending Baltimore Against Enemy Attack, Osgood
And we’re going to include some poetry, too:
Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Coleridge
Lady of Shallott, Tennyson
Pied Piper of, Browning
The Raven, Poe
Charge / Light Brigade, Tennyson
Song of Hiawatha, Longfellow
Goblin Market. Rossetti
Owl and the Pussycat, Lear
Jabberwocky, Carroll
If, Kipling
I’ve Known Rivers, Langston Hughes
In Just, cummings
In order to give the whole thing some structure and context, he’ll work his way through most of these as appropriate during the year:
Child’s History of the World CD (19 sections)
Time for Learning: Presidents
History of the World: Revolution & Conflict
Revolution News
Learning Through History: Tzarist Russia
Learning Through History: Victorian Era
Learning Through History: French Revolution
Learning Through History: Great War
Well, since this is already longer than I intended, I’ll stop there for today. Tune in tomorrow (or sometime in the next few days, anyway) for samples of my lesson plans for the year!