Montessori at Home – Multiplication Manipulative plans

Those of you who were interested in our multiplication mat might want to visit Montessori Print Shop.  Jennifer has graciously shared actual lesson pages from her primary math manual to use with the mat.   These run through a typical multiplication presentation, complete with suggested scripts. 

Enjoy!

The Best Medicine

"The best medicine in the world, without any side effects, is a smiling face."

We are hoping this saying holds true.  I had the privilege to photograph some of my favorite people this week and we had a blast.  Lots of smiles and laughter during the session.  Some more sober thoughts and lots of prayers while editing.  You see, the pictures of these beautiful faces are going to be hung in their father's ICU room, where he is in critical condition.  Visits are limited so we bringing a little bit of home to him this way.  I would ask you say a prayer when you see this post for a gentle man and the woman and children who absolutely adore him. 

Feb
Feb

Feb

Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb

Feb

Feb

Feb

Walk in Love

"The lens of loss and trial has a way of bringing blessing into sharp focus. It is the the relative ease of the uninterrupted daily that muddies the water, allowing discontent to filter in. It can make it hard to see love, to show love, to feel loving. How often we become farsighted as marriage ages, seeing clearly that which is beyond our reach, while what is right there before us blurs and fades from our sight…"

please visit Suscipio for the rest of the story

Covenant

"And God said, 'This is the sign of the covenant which I will give between me and you…'" 

oil spot
Rainbows aren't always overhead, in sun-splashed parting clouds. 

Very often they are right there underfoot, in the midst of our messy spills,

the sticky spots.

You just have to look for them.

Sharing a moment of grace with the ladies at Suscipio this week:
"They were there, these moments of grace. They may have been fleeting and the noise and demands of life may have tried to drown them out, but they were there."

Yarn Along – to infinity and beyond

Joining Ginny for Yarn Along again this week:

Alannah has taken up the needles again and has undertaken an ambitious first project – an infinity scarf, ambitious more for the size than the difficulty.  We found several patterns online, but none exactly right for our yarn and skill level. We ended up modifying a pattern.  She cast on some couple hundred stitches onto the largest circular cable we had.  Then has been alternating knit and purl stitches every three rows to make gently rolling ribbing.

knit

Of course it had to be white to contrast nicely with her red wool peacoat. 

 knit
Noteworthy reads this week include the Little Housekeeping book I quoted yesterday.  I thoroughly enjoyed this one although I feel the need to go scrub something with turpentine now. <g>  I think my favorite part was the discussion amongst the tutors as to whether to cover laundering in the lessons, it finally being decided in favor, however unlikely it was to come up.

A few children’s books we loved this week:

The Boy Who Drew Birds: A Story of John James Audubon 

The 39 Apartments of Ludwig Van Beethoven

Snook Alone

The Beethoven book has architecture so very like what we see here.  Snook was a story of a dog who belongs to a monk.  He is left behind on an island for some time.  In the course of the story a great deal of naturalist information is imparted.  This seems to be a theme because the Audubon book describes the journals and specimen collections of the famed artist.  Inspires me to get everyone back out and collecting.  Well, maybe when the temperature inches above 20 degrees anyway. Brrr. 

 read
That weather has made Aidan’s celestial navigation course a challenge but that course is prompting a great deal of astronomy related reading for everyone. 

 read
In other news, I picked up Keep a Quiet Heart by Elisabeth Elliot.  I have long loved Elisabeth’s sensibility.  I have been pleasantly surprised and encouraged to see so many saints quoted as the basis of her essays in this volume.  

One passage really spoke to where I am at this moment:

“There are times when the entire arrangement of our existence is disrupted and we long then for just one ordinary day – seeing our ordinary life as greatly desirable, even wonderful, in the light of the terrible disruption that has taken place.  Difficulty opens our eyes to pleasures we had taken for granted.”

I don’t mean to sound pitiful when I say that plenty enough such disruptions have visited me that I have come to truly relish and delight in the ordinary. I spent two hours ironing my husbands work clothes this evening.  What a wonderful blessing it was: the steam, the rhythm, the quiet after little people had settled into bed, the old Ozzie and Harriet episodes keeping me company.  A very good night ending with a quiet heart.  

I’ve many a cross to take up now,

And many left behind;

But present troubles move me not,

Nor shake my quiet mind. 

and what may be tomorrow’s cross

I never seek to find;

My Father says “Leave that to me,

and keep a quiet mind.

– Anonymous


I can’t say this has always been my MO, having been as perpetually preoccupied with tomorrow’s crosses as I have often been.   I do feel convicted that this must be the course to set from here out however. 

Slipping away from the screen on that note.

Housekeeping

dollhouse
Her room was put in beautiful order, to her closet and shoe-bag, and she even stopped to put a clean cover on the bureau and dust nicely, to show she had not forgotten a single thing. The halls and parlors had to be thoroughly dusted now, but as none of them needed sweeping it did not take very long, and there was still time to go to market.

dollhouse

 

The mother looked around her. "Everything is very nice," she said. "The sink is clean, and so is the pantry, and so are all the dishes. The range is bright; the dish-towels are washed; the dining-room is in order. I noticed as I came through the other rooms that the bedrooms, bathroom, and parlors have all been looked after to-day, too. Margaret, I do believe you are as good a housekeeper as I am already."

dollhouse Feb 2012 dollhouse abbie web

Margaret laughed as she took off her apron. "But I just love to do things," she replied, as she went up-stairs.

A Little Housekeeping Book Caroline French Benton, 1906