Friday, August 20, 2021

Aug 16 - Aug 20: Homeschool Life

A couple of the boys are
working on learning coding.

Another week has come and gone. I wanted to quickly remind readers of a few things:

  1. Our weeks are very often repetitive. It's just a fact of this slow growing time we've chosen as we stepped off the education conveyor belt more than 15 years ago. It's the freedom of living a life less driven by other peoples' agendas and schedules. It also can get boring to read about. Check back in when you need a quiet read. Take a break when you don't. 
  2. The real reason I keep this blog is to keep a family journal of this precious time we have together. When I look back at the earlier posts in this and an older, private blog, I see the growth, love, learning, and joy of family life. Sometimes I need that as a mom of ten children. I need a way to step back and see the bigger picture, to see the progress that we've made inch by inch over the days and weeks and years, that add up to miles and marathons. 
On to this week's notes!

Monday morning's homeschool was the usual chaos of teaching new math lessons and overseeing many other lessons. We started our continent tour this week officially and begin in the Middle East. What a time to do that, with the events going on in the world right now in Afghanistan and other places. Our goal with this study of middle eastern countries and cultures is to learn to see God's children and learn to love them a little better. I will try to remember to share a separate post each month about the books we've grabbed for each area.


We started our next family read aloud today. It is The Turtle of Oman by Naomi Shihab Nye

In the afternoon Mason and I made a trip to pick up a brace he'll wear at night for his scoliosis. It was a rainy 3 hour trip, but we had fun listening to an audio book and talking together. Daddy and the rest of the kids at home had their own quiet afternoon.



Tuesday's slow wander through lessons took all morning. Tobias was one of the first kids up and wanting to do school work, so we sat down and did his language arts and math first. He is five years old, and finally interested in 'doing school'. It is a bit interesting because Tobias has a speech delay. That makes phonics a challenge, but we are working on learning letter sounds, handwriting, etc. He is using The Good and the Beautiful PreK Language Arts first, and will move into K Primer soon. We also have their handwriting books, but the PreK includes some handwriting already. In math, however, he flies. He naturally grasps a lot of the concepts in the curriculum we've started with, so we will take it at his pace and move through faster on easy concepts, and slower on more challenging ones. He is using The Good and the Beautiful Math K and will move into Math 1 later this year. The other kids woke up and did their school work. 
Language Arts and World Geography in progress.


Wednesday was a harder day, with a very distractible and distracting kid who simply didn't stay on task all.morning.long. We finally made it all the way through school work and I was worn out! In the evening the older four had youth activities at church that ranged from hiking to karaoke and bb guns to 3D drafting and printing. 

Thursday was our last day with Makayla. She got a lot of final tasks accomplished while the rest of us did school. Joseph and Emma's Culinary Arts project this week was today. They teamed up to cook a 'Thanksgiving dinner', which meant our house smelled like a roasting turkey all afternoon. Yum! The kids spent a lot of the afternoon playing together in various groupings. Dinosaurs and vehicles are the current toys downstairs, so those featured in a lot of play. The boys have also been Pokemon battling regularly. They play the card game, not online, and have so much fun. 



Friday morning I waved while Makayla drove off to college, and even with it being year three, I cried a bit. She'll hopefully be able to visit for the holidays this winter, but until then everyone will get by with video chats regularly. A little bit before were were going to begin school for the morning Grandma showed up to visit for a bit. We talked and chatted about lots of things, including hard things as a family member nears the transition from mortality to heaven. After soaking in time with my mom, the kids pulled out their school work for the last day of week three. We will actually have our first break week next week, so everyone was excited about that. We generally take a week off every 6 weeks during the school year, but it worked out well to take one a bit earlier this time around. Our next break week will be in early October. Next up is a visit from my sister and a couple of her kids, a perfect way to kick off break!

3 comments:

  1. Rebekah is changing so fast these days! I can't believe it's already Makayla's 3rd year of college. Have a great weekend!

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  2. I like the slow repetitiveness of your weeks. I read your blog very intentionally, and I miss it when you don't write. I wish Makayla well in this 3rd year of college! And I totally get the slower in some areas, faster in others method of schooling. We do the same here every day. :)

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  3. Time just flies by so quick. I like reading all that you do. It is a great place to get ideas for books and activities.
    Blessings, Dawn

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