Saturday, April 27, 2019

Homeschool Notes: Week 33 Spring

Spring is glorious! We spent time outside every day but Friday this week, because Friday was rainy pretty much all day.

Monday
A foggy morning cleared away to reveal sunshine and spring. Flowers are everywhere. The silver maples in the back yard have baby leaves growing enough to partially shade the yard. School work was a struggle for some, who are ready for the school year to end. It happens every year, that pull to set aside the books and get out of doors. We do have one fun nature study going on at the moment. We have 11 painted lady caterpillars eating and growing in the living room.

A peek at the calendar shows 20 medical appointments (not including physical therapy) in the next 22 days, with probably a few more to add in still (dental work if anyone has cavities or baby teeth that need pulled because they've wedged themselves in). It feels like appointments here are often a flood.

We spent the evening outside enjoying the perfect weather.

Tuesday 
School went much smoother. Oliver finished level four of All About Reading - a huge accomplishment because he has now graduated from the program! Joseph and Daniel each finished their current level of The Good and the Beautiful Language Arts. People started reading various new books, kept reading current books, and we listened to more of our Homeschool Book Club title - Beauty. The afternoon held piano lessons and then time outside until dinner.

Wednesday
Makayla had new retainers made at the orthodontist's office today. Those things aren't cheap! There was school work (Emma finished TGTB Language Arts), cleaning, laundry, and cooking as a family. The older 4 kids had activities at church in the evening.

Thursday
Navigating almost-adult children in the home is quite the experience. We are learning as we go, so excited for what comes next while still struggling with growing pains as we all find our feet in new roles.

Home life has a few stresses right now as Jason reaches the end of his 4th month of no employment during his surgery recovery. He sees his surgeon next week and we hope his restrictions are adjusted enough that he can go back to work even part time. He is feeling pretty great compared to before his knee and shoulder surgery.

Caterpillars began changing to their chrysalis on this day. By Friday morning all 12 were finished.

Friday
The highlight for five people in my home was going to watch Avengers Endgame in the morning. I was home with the five youngest kids and Makayla was at work. Caleb helped me bake a couple loaves of banana bread and pumpkin bread, which became lunch. In the evening the entire family made their own pizzas for dinner. It is on nights like this that I wish for a double oven! 7 pans later everyone's pizzas were cooked and eaten.

Saturday
Errands and play filled the morning. I'm heading to IKEA this afternoon with my sister - for our very first time ever. It's lunch time so I'm getting off here and making sure everything is finished.

Friday, April 19, 2019

Homeschool Notes: Week 32


Last Friday
I just needed to put a really quick note in here because Mason finished All About Reading level 3 and was super excited about it. He started level 3 exactly two months ago to the day (I had to look it up). He truly flew through this level, reading the reader. I can count on one hand the number of times he needed a new concept taught. He's moving forward into level 4 next week. Caleb moved forward into level 3 last week and reading has not yet clicked for him into complete fluency, but he is seeing measurable improvement. I'll say it again, this is the beauty of homeschooling! Each child can go at their own pace in every subject. Caleb has been done with his math curriculum for at least a month, while Mason, on the other hand, has 1/3 of his book yet to go. Teach the child, not the curriculum.

Saturday
Friday night I threw up in the middle of the night. Saturday I spent as much time not moving as possible, fighting nausea. The older three kids had the Spring Formal, I got to do the girls' hair before they headed out. According to their chatter they all had a good time at the dance.

Sunday
I was feeling better but Rebekah had a runny nose, so I stayed home with the youngest 3 kids. Jason spoke in Sacrament meeting and based his talk around one of the General Conference talks from last weekend, called Your Priesthood Playbook.

While the church group was gone I baked a cake and made two 13x9 pans of peanut butter pie. Sunday evening some extended family came over to celebrate this month's birthdays - mine and my husbands. He'll be 41 and I'll be 38 by the end of the month. Family time was fun and noisy as usual.

Monday
The beginning of a new school week went well. All of the usual lessons happened around our table, on the couch, at the computer, in bedrooms, etc. We decided to finish up the marine biology unit this week. Our zoo trip last week was great, the kids loved seeing so many things we had talked about, including live coral, fish, and sharks. We also saw some animals we were going to talk about this week (sea turtles, herons, and penguins). Today we read a few books about Jacques Cousteau and a few about penguins. The kids were fascinated with various things they learned. Here are the highlights:
  • Cousteau was an explorer, inventor (aqualung), videographer, Navy sailor, and author.
  • He bought an old military warship named Calypso and converted into a research ship.
  • Emperor penguin moms lay one egg, pass it off to dad, and then go to sea for several months to eat. Meanwhile, penguin dads skip eating for several months while keeping the egg and then young chick warm on their feet and under their belly. 
  • There are 17 penguin species and some live in warm climates, others cold. 
  • Some penguins can stay underwater for up to 25 minutes and dive 1000 feet deep in the ocean.
We also had some unplanned lessons on this day. We watched as Notre Dame burnt in a large fire. We talked about Notre Dame, the Rose Windows, the Hunchback of Notre Dame, the bells, the history of the cathedral, Catholicism, firefighting, courage, bravery, hope, God, faith, hard work, and mourning with those that mourn. What a sad event that will impact so many people.

Tuesday
I am almost as excited about the last month of school as the kids are. We have one month left of school after this week. Everything seems more interesting, more fun to do. Maybe it is just the spring weather improving our moods? Joseph, Emma, and Daniel will finish their levels of The Good and the Beautiful Language Arts next week. We sat down to chat about what they will do for the last 3 weeks of school. Each one chose to do a book study with me. I prepared a list of books for each to choose from individually today, so I can track down copies of each book before next week. Daniel and Emma each chose The Westing Game (which Joseph already read and liked this year). Joseph chose Ender's Game. I'm excited to reread each book along with my kids and have some Socratic discussion with them.

In the afternoon the main attraction for our next science unit for the elementary kids arrived - two cups of live caterpillars. We will be studying butterflies and caterpillars next!

Wednesday
This morning two of my kids chose to start their school work off with writing. Each of the younger kids need to do a writing project related to our recent science studies, so they started that today. Mason wrote about herons. Oliver and Caleb chose sea turtles. Daniel wrote about penguins.

There was a lot of math help, listening to kids reading aloud, and science help today. Basically, a normal Wednesday of school.

Once afternoon hit I made a trip to the library and found a few copies of the books my kids picked to read. I hit Aldi for fresh fruit for Cub Scouts tonight. We're doing a cooking night. The boys will be making homemade pizzas, a fruit salad, and rice crispy treats.

Later that night: The cooking was a hit, the food was delicious, and nobody cut themselves. That is a big win with a kitchen full of Cub Scouts.

Thursday
My favorite morning learning was simply the many books read with various children. After school we also did a few small house projects, including spring blanket switch where we get out sheets flat sheets and put away all but one of the warmer blankets on the beds. We live in an old house that stays pretty hot upstairs all summer, even with air conditioning running downstairs. Yesterday the temperature reached 80F outside, so upstairs was pretty warm all afternoon and evening.

Friday
Today has flown and instead of taking notes I just enjoyed the day. We are looking forward to celebrating Easter and have been talking about Jesus Christ, the Crucifixion, and the Resurrection as the more secular Easter symbols have caught the kids' eyes.

I'm off to listen to a podcast and then make dinner. Happy Friday everyone!

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Homeschool Notes: Week 30 and 31


Our calendar is swiftly winding down to the end of the school year now that Spring Break is finished. I am so excited for this spring term because the fruit becomes obvious as we finish subjects and put away books. Who doesn't love 'finishing'?! Here are my notes for the last two weeks.

Monday
I was the only person truly excited about the first day back to school, though everyone willingly did their work. As always, children have a mix of independent and guided work. Some of the lessons I helped with today were:
  • Latin with Makayla - We read and translated the story of Crassus the elder and Crassus the younger.
  • The Good and the Beautiful Language Arts with Joseph, Emma, and Daniel(only some parts each). Joseph passed off a states and capitals ladder, read with me about idioms, and did sentence dictation. Emma wanted help practicing her geography cards and passed off a states a capitals ladder, then read with me about idioms, and did sentence dictation. Daniel read to me and practiced vocab with me.
  • All About Reading with Oliver, Caleb, Mason, and Samuel - Oliver read part of a story in AAR level 4 to me and finished on his own. Caleb finished reading aloud the very last story in AAR level 2 and celebrated the move to AAR level 3. Mason read part of a story in AAR level 3 to me and finished on his own. Samuel finished reading a story in AAR level 1 to me. 
  • Handwriting Without Tears with Samuel - We worked on using the slate to practice uppercase letters and really focused on his pencil/chalk grip. His grip is atrocious and so we're focusing on that for a few weeks to hopefully make some progress.
  • Math with Emma, Daniel, Oliver, Caleb, and Mason - Emma wanted me to practice area of parallelograms and trapezoids today, as well as finding a missing side or height if we already had the area, and converting measurements before doing those calculations. Daniel's Math U See lesson introduced some geometry basics around lines/rays. Oliver's Math U See lesson had him looking at diagrams and writing the shaded part to the whole as a fraction. Caleb and Mason were both introduced to some math fact practice games that have them roll dice and solve problems on a game board. 
At 9am Makayla and I headed to an ENT appointment. She had a scope done and came away with a confirmation of gastroesophagal acid reflux and a stronger reflux medicine to try for 3 months. As the rest of the day went on there was cooking, cleaning, playdoh, more cooking, General Conference preparations, physical therapy for daddy, Makayla and Tobias making rice crispy treats, getting a few dresses dropped off to be hemmed, reading another chapter in Owls in the Family, drawing, and some of the kids watching Mary Poppins Returns. It was a good day!


Tuesday
I loved this day because I had no place to be out of the house, which makes for a relaxed homeschool day Breakfast at 7am started the kids off. I sat at the table offering my presence for those who wanted help. This one habit is a wonderful help in having smooth homeschool mornings. I am ready and available to help. Today some of the lessons I helped with were:
  • Math - a mix of math games, answering a question about finding the area of a rhombus when only given diagonal measurements instead of edges, checking fractions.
  • Language arts - overseeing a child editing a sentence looking for mistakes, dictating sentences for two children to write (this helps them work on spelling and punctuation), explaining how quotations marks work when a speaker is talking and also quoting someone else during part of what they say (single and double quotation marks), and reading and discussing a story with a child.
  • Reading lessons - teaching new concepts and listening to children read aloud.
  • Science - studying magnetism with middle schoolers, then teaching the next marine biology lesson to the 5th grade and under crowd. Today we talked about tides, tidepools, creatures living in the intertidal zone, as well as reading a book about each of the layers of the ocean and how creatures survive in them.
  •  Handwriting - Today Samuel and I wrote words on the dry erase board on the dining room wall. He chose words that interest him, like his name, ghast (a Minecraft creature), and the name of a favorite character from a book. This gave him a good mix of letter to practice and we were able to use large motor skills to write very big, then write a second time making our letters smaller and working down into fine motor practice.
Some of my Marvel-loving family were excited that we got tickets to the opening showing of Avengers Endgame today. Tickets released today and we had a 2.5 hour wait online in a line to get our tickets. During part of that wait we finished reading aloud Owls in the Family. In the end it was a good book, but not truly great. I think everyone enjoyed the story and found the end bittersweet. Our next book is Beauty: A Retelling of the Story of Beauty and the Beast by Robin McKinley, published in 1978.

The afternoon piano lessons were accomplished and then it was time for dinner prep. It was Taco Tuesday. We followed tacos up with making new batches of slime for the younger 4 boys.

Wednesday
My favorite part of school on this day was that we somehow managed not to have any meltdowns. After taking a school break we almost always have kids melting down by midweek when we start back to school. Today went as peacefully as the earlier days in the week and I was so grateful.

Lunch was leftover tacos or chili and cornbread, depending on your preference. After an afternoon of family time and dinner of soft pretzels, salad, and fruit, it was time for weekly church/scouts activities. The youth did a 'Chopped' cooking competition that sounded like a lot of fun according to my youth. Meanwhile the Cubs and I had a marbles night led by my assistant leader. She did great and the boys loved it!


Thursday
This morning always feels hurried to me because I'm trying to help kids with school before Mason and I leave for physical therapy at 10am. Daddy oversees school after that, which always goes fine, but I try to be there for the lessons kids need the most help in. Physical therapy went well. It is a challenge to decide how much PT to do, and what to do during PT. Mason has some real, physical limitations and not all of them are clearly defined. His nerve damage is different in different parts of his body, so some areas can be strengthened more than others (even a difference in left and right sides of his back/core). All of it is also affected by his scoliosis progression, meaning what he could do or couldn't do today may be different tomorrow, next month, or next year. As he grows the spinal cord itself can be stretched and cause further nerve damage without warning (and need surgical release - we last had to do that at age 2). Figuring out what is a change and what is just him having a tired, sore, or off day is challenging.

In the afternoon there was an orthodontist appointment, a bit of grocery shopping, and games with the kids.


Friday
Our early morning had kids doing a few school assignments. Mid-morning was spent at a friend's home for Book Club. We talked a bit about Owls in the Family, as well as our upcoming book. Everyone got to visit, play, and just enjoy their friends of many years. When we came home it was time to clean the house in preparation for General Conference weekend, where we watch live broadcasts from the leaders of our church, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, who speak over five sessions of approximately 2 hours each. They share messages of hope, encouragement, and instruction to help us become more like Jesus.

In the evening I made a quick trip to a couple stores with Makayla. She was looking for materials and plants for a small container of succulents. She has a cactus she has grown from seed (it is at least 6 years old) and decided it needed some company.


Saturday
This first morning of Conference is spent baking. We made muffins and cinnamon rolls to enjoy at the first session, which began at noon. I also managed to slip out with Emma for a quick stop at our library book sale. We came home with two bags of books for $10. So many new books are on our shelves now!

General Conference was wonderful. There were so many encouraging, challenging, inspiring talks that I look forward to studying and applying in my life. They are all available to read/watch/listen for FREE online here or on the Gospel Library App. The first talk I want to study from this day is Careful vs. Casual by Becky Craven.


Sunday
Day two of Conference went swimmingly well. We made it through the first session with more great talks. Then while I was preparing chicken enchiladas for the oven for dinner Makayla learned that the sister missionaries were looking for a place to watch a special show about several Amish families that converted to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints several years ago, that was airing the half hour before the next session of Conference. These families live in our stake, which is a geographic area similar to a Catholic diocese. We know them a little bit and Jason was able to do some of his early college classes with two of them a few years ago. We invited the sister missionaries to join us for the show and for the last session of Conference as well.



Monday
Another beautiful Monday morning welcomed us to our learning routine. Each child took a few minutes to schedule out their subjects and then got to work. Three of my kids let me know they only have 10 days left of The Good and the Beautiful Language Arts and decided to do extra work this week in that subject. I'm fine with that!

We started listening to Beauty by Robin McKinley today for book club. Sometimes I read aloud myself, and other times I like to just sit and listen with everyone else. That is when Audible comes in handy!

A couple of the boys and I did some chalk pastel art this afternoon. We each chose a sea creature to go with our Marine Biology study. We followed that up with a game of Labyrinth, playdoh, and then reading aloud a stack of books from the library sale.

In the evening Jason, Joseph, and Emma headed to do a special pick up. I received a phone call during the morning from a gentleman in our church. He had heard we have some children who love art and wondered if we wanted a drawing table. He also offered to share some of his knowledge about drawing, which Emma loved. She and Joseph both brought some of their art to show him, and came home excited for more drawing adventures.

Today was also day one of potty training Tobias. We have been waiting for his speech skills to move forward enough that he can reliably communicate his needs. While there is a fair amount of speech delay still hanging around, we have noticed a leap in the last two weeks that should be enough to get us through potty training without anyone pulling their hair out. Tobias is my 9th child to potty train. I'm pretty laid back about the process. Day one is all about peeing everywhere but the toilet as he tries to understand what his body is doing and the subtle signals it is giving him before he pees. We set a timer and hop on the toilet about every 30-45 minutes, but beyond that it's just underwear and accidents. Tobias did pee in the toilet once today. Hopefully tomorrow he'll beat that and have a new record. ;)


Tuesday
School was school, straightforward. The highlights today were:
  • Tobias potty training - he woke up and simply used the toilet all day, lots of successes. If my count is right, he only had two accidents. If this continues he will officially beat Daniel as my easiest child to potty train. 
  • Changing out some of the winter clothes for kids out for short sleeves and shorts. We are in the lovely Ohio weather season known as sprinter. We can have frosty mornings, thunderstorms, sunshine, and end the day in the 70s all in a single day. 
  • The weather was perfect to spend outside roasting hot dogs and making smores for dinner - so that is what we did. Add in a bubble machine, sidewalk chalk, scooters, etc and it was a great evening.
Wednesday
The morning was pretty chilly for children who had hoped to wear shorts again. Some of them still did, while bundled up with fleece blankets to do school. Tobias started the day out happily using the toilet. I'm shocked how easy this is going. By bedtime he had just one single accident (#poop). He's officially the easiest child I've ever potty trained. Seriously, one day of accidents, then using the toilet cheerfully day 2 with 2 accidents, and 1 accident on day 3? I'll take it. Now to figure out the pooping aspect of using the potty.

Other things we did today:
  • School work. I feel repetitive explaining this every day, so just know that we did school as usual.
  • Home project - doorknob replacement.
  • Daddy's last day of physical therapy.
  • Daddy did his final exam for his microeconomics class. All that is left this week is the final for the communications class. Then he gets 1 whole week off before his next class starts.
  • A temple trip for Daniel and Makayla tonight, youth group for Emma, and hanging out at home for everyone else. 

Thursday
We took advantage of beautiful weather and made a trip to the zoo. While there we checked out some of the marine animals we have been learning about, walked a lot, saw tons of animals, and just enjoyed family time in the sunshine. The pictures sprinkled throughout this post are from the zoo, courtesy of Makayla.

Friday's plan is another school day. I'm going to hit publish now, Thursday night, and let this be the end of the notes for the week. Happy Spring everyone!