pumpkin playdough

 

Early in the month we were talking about making homemade playdough when I ran across a recipe for pumpkin scented dough. (actually this links to the basic recipe with a link to the scented) We had all the ingredients on hand so Alannah made up a batch for the littles one morning while I was working with the olders.  Divide and conquer.  

Yay-ah! <g>  Seriously now, don't be a hater ok? 20 some yrs ago when I was teaching a five yo to read while my three year old was attempting to climb out the windows (not kidding, ask my neighbor) and my nursing one year old was beginning to toddle through the house I would probably have had some choice words for the woman with a built in extra pair or two of adult hands.  But a) I had to be in your shoes to walk to where I am now and b) those extra adult hands don't linger long.  They get jobs and go to school and move away all too soon.  It is a teeny tiny window of wonderful collaboration. A grace God sometimes grants which helps to make year 25 of preschool as much fun as year one was. 

Back to playdough. The post mentioned refrigerating the dough to boost its longevity.  This recipe has lasted all month.  In fact we had it out today and I am amazed at how pliable it still is.  

We have made rolled out pumpkins with cookie cutters and added dry beans to make faces. We also made pumpkins from balls of dough and noodle stems.  I want to point out though to any new teacher-moms that might see this that it is especially nice to organize a blog post around thematic colors and shapes.  In real life though, it is the rare child who feels compelled to restrict his/her play to preselected, holiday appropriate themes.  Hence, we have also had orange apple pie and pumpkin scented snowmen with the dry beans becoming snowman wigs. Which actually went sorta well with the Christmas story book from the library.  In October. 

You should know this happens.  It's ok.  : )  

 

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The Globe

 

A month ago Shakespeare was a really good prop, but it had been a while since I had dusted off the Lamb's volume.  The little boys hadn't heard the stories I admit. I didn't have a real driving urge to fit them in.  I admit that too.  They were on the educational bucket list but that list is pretty long and we have been ticking off line items at a ferocious  pace the past couple of years. 

When we arrived in Germany we inherited a group of close friends.  Jen was on her way out as we were arriving and she smoothed the path for us in so many ways. She introduced the girls and I around, helped us find extracurriculars. We were off and running in no time. 

Arriving in England was different. We had work friends which was wonderful.  The children knew no one however and living in the country meant no neighbors as built in playmates. While I was relishing the quiet community of the farm I knew the children needed more, at least some of the time.  As the weeks wore on I, too, missed the comraderie we left. 

The solution pushed all of us out of our comfort zones. 

The best way for a newcomer to meet new people?  Volunteer to be the offical meet and greeter in the homeschool group. : )  They needed to fill a board position. Doing that introduced me to some wonderful women, one of whom happened to have been stationed in Germany herself just before we got there.  We have mutual friends it turned out.  These women have there bearings here.  They know the transit system and have older children for whom they are teaching older children classes.  They welcomed our current set of olders in and we are happily pooling our energy and skills to meet each other's needs. It's awesome.  

I have been reading a home management series and the author mentioned how her system has changed over the years but that each method used was perfectly suited to that particular stage of their lives.  Homeschooling is like that. There are many constants in our journey.  The specifics flex a bit from year to year, from pregnancy and nursing times to teen years.  From good health and great energy to recuperation and quiet times. Books read to children in a hospital bed or a body cast and later seeing that same child posing before the Olympic rings.  It all works over the course of the years spent together. 

So, that is the long story of how on this day the older children and their Dad learned to navigate the system to get to the Globe and the Golden Hinde to highlight their Shakespeare co-op class. The little ones and Alannah and I baked and read at home. No doubt the roles will be reversed before long. I look forward to that too.  Meantime, here are some of the pics from the field trip.  They got a guided tour of the Globe:

 

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Above are the "heavens" and on the stage floor is a trap door so actors could descend into "hell" as needed. 

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The children got a full hands on demonstration of costuming, complete with the dressing of one of the students in all the layers a female part would require.  Their impression was that it was very, very heavy!

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Then the walk to the Golden Hinde

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The animated guide managed to fit the word "defecation" into the presentation a number of times I am told. 

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A look at learning

 

Just some random glimpses of learning lately. Some favorite things this fall have been drawing from how to books like Draw Write Now, some of which we are also using for our continent studies.  They have gone through a fair amount of origami paper.  The littles have a much better handle on the world map

We did a little Catholic feast day cooking.  Just a little. A birthday cake for Our Lady. Some cookies for St Rose of Lima.  We tried some marshmallow fudge molded into roses for St Therese.  That didn't turn out so hot. You win some, you lose some.  

The lagoon notebook page below is from Kieran's geography.   Kieran loves the geography book I shared in this post. We actually use a workbook as well.  A both/and approach this year.  He is using techniques from the Drawing With Children book and I think the pages are really bold and fun. 

 

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signal fires

 

"If there is more important work than teaching, I hope to learn about it before I die." – Pat Conroy, My Reading Life

 

We had about a half hour early morning session of (not) back to school pictures, so these are rife with imperfections.  No re-do's at this school though. <g> I am happy enough to capture us as we are this year – grades K, 2, 5, 7, and 10 plus one mom who is also learning as she goes.

The quote is one of many I have transcribed from My Reading Life which I grabbed blindly off the shelves.  I have not read Prince of Tides nor any of his other work, nor even watched the movies.  The memoir thus far is gripping even without that background and I found myself unable to see the type for several minutes this morning as he shared the story of his beloved English teacher's death.

His mother instilled in him a tremendous love of literature, introducing him to classics by the armful.  The first few chapters are tributes to these two great influences on his life.  Definitely lots of food for thought to mothers who are also teachers.

 

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"She read so many books that she was famous among the librarians in every town she entered. She outread a whole generation of officer's wives but still wilted in embarassment when asked about her college degree.  She talked of Pasternak and Dostoyeysky."

 

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"My mother hungered for art, for illumination…She lit signal fires in the hills for her son to feel and follow. I tremble with gratitude as I honor her name."

 

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" A library could show you everything if you knew where to look."

 

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"She checked out large art
books from the library and and spread them out for Carol and me and read
out names seething with musicality and strangeness."

 

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"Pat, don't you think the passage of time is what all literature is really about? Poems, plays, novels, everything?"

"I think so Gene."

"Mr. Powell seems to think it is a dance.  Do you agree?" (referring to Powell's 12 volume A Dance to the Music of Time)

"I wish I'd thought of it before he did."

"You walked into my class in 1961."

"Our dance began."

It is good to think about our own dance through time with these children. What will they remember? What treasures will they store up in their hearts and minds?

This is what I am thinking about this week.

 



Hands on learning

 

Sharing some cheap and easy manipulatives today. 

 

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This is one of the power tower games I mentioned yesterday.  (link in yesterday's post)  You write the memory fact on the end.  I put the answer inside the cup for self checking.  These aren't real neat because his brother wanted to help so he wrote all the math facts for me.  Can't refuse willing workers.  Especially when they volunteer.  Done is better than perfect.  

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A big sister cut these base ten cards for these two to play war with. (its all linked up on the pinterest page – button over to the right sidebar)  It wasn't much of a stretch for Brendan obviously but they are all really good about playing with a sibling.  We have also used flash cards and given an older sibling a harder set of facts so the playing field is level.  Whoever has the highest answer on the card collects. 
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I don't love the graphics on these printables but it was a hit for obvious dental reasons. <g> Tess, at 5, is losing a lot of teeth already.  She loved this game. The graphic has ten teeth.  You black out however many you are subtracting from ten in your math problem.  
Usually they complete a regular math book page and then quite happily spend another 15-20 minutes playing more math games. 
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We made a DIY version of this activity years ago but it was a little wonky due to slight variations in the cuts in the wood made by hand.  When I was at the craft store this bucket of dowels in assorted widths caught my eye.  Since it was discounted and we have no power tools with us I grabbed it up.  Abbie spent a long time this morning sorting and making dowel trains.  It requires careful comparing to sort the narrower widths.  Much less expensive than Montessori sensorial materials and my heart won't break if one goes missing. Eventually one will. ; ) 

School’s in

 

Or on or how do we say that? All I know is I am having so very much fun. So much fun I haven't time to post the things I thought I would.  Suffice it to say the pinterest board is filling rapidly and just as rapidly we are making what we see there and trying it out.  Power Towers?  Big hit. Bible memory?  Check.  Art trays. You betcha. 

We hit the jackpot when we found the craft store on base this week.  Let me just say I haven't been in a proper craft store in 2 1/2 yrs.  YEARS. We're talking significant withdrawal.  I found myself longing for floral foam bricks and styrofoam balls and embroidery floss and origami paper and…. you get the picture.  Well, the wait is over.  I walked out of there with an armful and promised myself to use it all before I go back.  It's been two years though.  I am making no promises.  I lost so much of last year right after we started that I want to get all our ducks in a row. No day of wellness and strength is ever taken for granted.   While I keep telling myself this year is not last year, I know how quickly things can change and I want to bullet proof the year where I can. 

Anyway man oh man it is late and these people start the day unreasonably early.  I would be in bed myself but making things makes me want to make more things and here I still am.  I do have a scrapbook page to show for it though.  

I hope your 2012 school year is starting strong and you are learning something new right alongside your little people.  There is always something new to learn.  

school

courage and sacrifice

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To resume our history of the decline: the beginning of the end of the formal study of the Greeks arrived in the 1960's.  Classics – lonely amo, amas, amat in the carrel, Demosthenes' hokey sermons on courage and sacrifice, Livy's advice to fight the good war – became worse than irrelevant.  The entire package was viewed as  part of the reactionary establishment.  It had to be jettisoned.  Classics was ancient, it was dominated by 'old' white males, it was time-consuming and difficult.  So much page-turning, so many "no's" and "don'ts", and "stop-its." Absolutes, standards, memorization, and traditional values had no place on a campus where modernity, relevance, and ideology were the new mantras; to say as much publicly brought self-affirmation and a sense of revolutionary commitment. 

University administrators caved in to the complaints of young often self-righteous students.  Curricular 'reform' followed, resulting in the virtual abandonment of core courses – important, basic classes which required students to gain at least some familiarity with the literature, grammar, philosophy, history, and language of Classical study. (Even the Vatican gave in, dumping latin as the Church's universal language.) Professional 'educators' and social scientists leaped into the vacuum, spreading therapeutics through the university, metastasizing their "I'm growing" and "Tell us about yourself" like cancer cells in a weakened system.  The seeds of the "feel-good" curriculum were planted, the crops of which we are harvesting in today's pressing concern for institutionally imposed self-esteem. This new, ultra-sensitive curriculum… ran directly counter to Greek wisdom.

Students of this new age, no longer either compelled to memorize irregular comparative adjectives or eager to soak up the corny wisdom of Sophoclean tragedy, now needed to be enticed back into the traditional classroom. Scholars were forced to win back their students and to convert the now preoccupied public to their own particular enclaves.

Who Killed Homer? Victor Hanson and John Heath

An upside to moving an imposing volume of books all over the planet is to unearth hidden gems in your home library. I have acquired a good many more books than I've had time to read in the past couple decades. It is a great pleasure to dig into them now, with not much more time perhaps, but a somewhat clearer head.  Sleeping through the night – at least more often – does that for you. ; D 

I will confess I do not read latin and Greek in the original, however as the university went, so went the lower schools.  The same fallout seems to have been experienced in trickle down fashion right through the grades which I do deal with daily. This book coincided with Colin, Alannah, and I watching Men Who Stare at Goats, which was equal parts hysterical and tragic to watch as a child of the 70's.  They combined to leave me with a perpetual head shake and occasional grumble to myself this past week.

While the answer is not a joyless 'cracking down' I do feel that viewing absolutes and rigor differently is in order. Re-establishing a truth and rigor-based (versus an emotions-based) curriculum right here at home is a goal worthy of consideration lest we, too, find ourselves in a position of needing to entice our own students as we head 'back to school' shortly.

The bigger issue is the long term effect of relaxation of standards in our self-esteem. I thought of that over and over while reading Emma

"Emma was sorry… to be always doing more than she wished, and less than she ought! Why she did not like Jane Fairfax might be a difficult question to answer;  Mr. Knightley had once told her it was because she saw in her the really accomplished young woman, which she wanted to be thought herself, and though the accusation had been eagerly refuted at the time, there were moments of self-examination in which her conscience could not quite acquit her." 

How many of us are like Emma today it seems: clever and just well-read enough to appreciate education, but not disciplined enough to have truly acquired academic excellence. We are articulate, versus substantial. We like to think about thinking much as we like to think about exercise, nutrition, theology, teaching, homemaking, or any number of other topics far better than actually digging into the doing of them, which is always conserably less romantic.

These are the things I have been chewing on lately, particularly as we prepare for another year of learning. (and travel and sports and arts…) It is always daunting initially, looking at the year ahead and all we hope to accomplish, all we really must fit in. Step by step and day by day we proceed and, by the grace of God, succeed more often than not. Having these reminders helps. 

It's been an eclectic summer of Grace Livingston Hill, Beverly Cleary, and Jane Austen on one hand.  Hanson, Raymond Moore, and a handful of social science titles on the other. 

Brain is full. : ) 

 emma

 

 

the graduate(s)

 

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My baby girl donned her cap and gown this weekend, graduating from high school with her besties, along the shore of wooded pond. It was a tremendous moment for us all, not because we didn't see it coming.  She didn't just burst into womanhood but has just naturally eased right into it, feeling very comfortable in her skin. 

I realized this time, the fourth time we have sent a child forth out of our homeschool nest, that it is different now. People ask, "Does it get easier?"  They mean, I think, "Does parenting get easier?  Does teaching (and choosing curricula and methods) get easier?  Does letting go get easier?"  Well, it must, because the thing that has struck me the most about all that in recent weeks is that I no longer feel the angst I felt as a young mom.  

Decisions that were all consuming for many, many years no longer occupy my every waking moment. Not because we no longer have small children, for we definitely do. Somehow it is easier now to make peace with the reality that every choice we make necessarily closes other doors.  It is easier to trust that even if we don't select the very 'best' math program or music lesson or scout troop that God can still make everything work for good if our intentions are sincere. It is a little bit easier to feel in my heart that even if they aren't under my roof, we are still bound very tightly in our hearts. 

I don't know where life is taking this girl of ours.  She will be close by for a bit yet, taking advantage of this opportunity to see Europe.  But I know that even when she leaves, she is still our own dear girl.  And we are going to be ok. As she said in her commencement speech, "We've got this."

It isn't just kids that grow up.  Families do too. 

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(the dads gave speeches as well as the girls' close friend, Sarah. Then the girls each shared some thoughts.)

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Thank goodness for some levity at this point because there was not a dry eye by then!

 

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All I am going to say about this is that dessert may or may not have been analogous to our homeschool journey.  We sighed over Pinterest images of little cake pop graduates.  Then, as we attempted a makeshift double boiler far too late the morning of the ceremony, our white chocolate 'seized'.  We improvised with tiny 'diplomas' made of Ho-Ho's last minute.  They worked.  They were devoured.  And no one was any worse for wear for having missed the cake pop experience.  note this : ) 

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It's been a marvelous ride, sweet girl. 

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