
A chronicle of our homeschooling, natural living, and attachment parenting journey. We are living simple so that others may simply live.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
What can I say It's been a Haiku kind of day......
Playing in the rain
Chasing frogs and dewy dreams
Youth gallops away
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Welcoming the fall
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
To usher in the season the children and I took our weekly nature walk at Shad Landing State Park. Autumn is my favorite time the whole world seems ablaze. We did a nature scavenger hunt which was a big hit with my little treasure hunters. We collected:
- something a bird would use in a nest
- something a squirrel might like for lunch
- a rough rock
- a smooth pebble
- a leaf with pointy tips
- something yellow that grows in nature
- something smaller than your thumbnail
- a stick
- a leaf that has been chewed on
- something that would feel nice to walk on barefoot
- something that would be uncomfortable to walk on
- a seed
- a feather
- a flower
- an insect
O has no fear and loves to be outside...she found a daddy long legs for her insect. (it's actually an arachnid but who's arguing with a three year old?) She proceeded to let the spider crawl up her arm and shoulder and onto her face...giggling the whole time about how much it tickled! I tried to hide the look of horror and shock I was feeling...I'm not into spiders! T feels the same and he ran away from her in disgust. That's my boy!
The idea for this scavenger hunt came from a book I'm currently reading and highly recommend "Let's Go Outside!" by Jennifer Ward. This book is packed with outdoor activities and projects to get you and your kids closer to nature. In her intro she references a study by the Kaiser Foundation(Washington Post, June 2007) which found that the average child spends six hours a day watching television, playing video games, and/or using a computer....Um WHAT! So please do yourself and your child a favour and go outside and play:)
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Handwriting absolution
Shhhh....I have a homeschooling secret. I will not be teaching cursive to my children. Really who writes in cursive these days???? Anyone.....anyone....I don't think so. Electronic communication is the future. In today's world cursive is quickly becoming archaic. When was the last time you were asked to fill out a form in cursive? Luckily I'm not the only one who feels this way and most of my handwriting guilt was absolved by this article:)
Thanks NYT for helping this frazzled homeschooling mama take one thing off her plate! T hates his handwriting lesson. I was really sweating trying to teach and rationalize cursive to him...I'm sure it would have gone something like this:
Mom: Here let's learn a new way to write....
T: Um...why? Where is it used...... in books, the Internet, the mail???
Mom: Nope absolutely nowhere but you still have to learn it...The powers that be deem that all must carry on this unused written code. It's like sentence diagramming...you will never use it but you must know it OK? Got it any questions???
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Numbers...
Friday, September 18, 2009
Homeschooling in a cup of coffee
T- "Mom what is coffee"
Me -"A plant that grows in the tropics" we look it up on wiki
T -"Where..."
Me -"Nicaragua..it's a fair trade and organic product"
T -"That's in Central America right? What's fair trade?(we are well versed in organic farming by now!)
Me ..after another trip to wiki still grumpy and blurry eyed "Fair trade is an organized
social movement and market based approach that aims to help producers in developing countries and promote sustainability"
T-"oh OK...can I make it for you?"
Me-...thinking hmmm coffee made for me everyday by my young son, this sounds like an excellent learning activity:) " Sure you use 1tbsp. of ground coffee per 6 oz. of water"
So we covered botany, social responsibility, geography, and mathematics all before breakfast. Plus I now have a personal coffeemaker. Sounds like a great start today!