Tag Archive | homeschooling

Birthday Girl… That’s Me!

June 23-24

For the first time in over a  decade I got to spend a portion of my birthday celebrations with my best friend from high school, the lovely Shandai… with her friends Sam and Ryan. We were supposed to go sailing but the wind was against us (literally and figuratively) so instead we went out for amazing Mexican food, a wade in a nearby lake…

Shandai and Sam

Shandai and Sam

With Ryan

With Ryan

101_2746and a trip to an amazing pet store with one of the largest selections of fish in the country. Including multiple sting ray (1499.00 no warranty!). All kid free time! Lots of fun.101_2750

Then it was back home to play with the bubbles with the kids…101_2753

And get a start on the playset.101_2760

Monday (which is far from my favourite day) was my BIRTHDAY! 34 yrs old I am! Which meant first and foremost that we had a half day of school to accomplish… of course!101_2761

Ken was up first and had the kids all draw me a special picture! Note the slurpees and smarties!101_2762

My birthday cake!

My birthday cake!

Karyn had sent a package that just managed to get through customs and get to me ON my birthday! What timing! She really DOES know me well… and included items for Canada Day as well.

Shirts for the girls, Canadian bits... note the yarn used as filler in the box!

Shirts for the girls, Canadian bits… note the yarn used as filler in the box!

In the evening we lucked out with Sean to babysit so Ken and I could go out to Khan’s Mongoli Grill and have all you can eat buffet there. OMG amazing! Like the Mongoli Grill we used to go to in Canada but cheaper and did I mention ALL YOU COULD EAT? Small bowls more often… less sauce choices but… yum!101_2767

I had Japanese tea.. soooo good

I had Japanese tea.. soooo good

Practice chopsticks the waitress suggested I take home for Emanuel to practice with.

Practice chopsticks the waitress suggested I take home for Emanuel to practice with.

Then off to the Source to walk around and pick up a manga… I got some lovely facial moisturizer with some money on the back from Ken’s folks. Sensitive skin and everything and enough money for a manga and then… I am hoping to get to a yarn shop and spend the rest on soft, snuggly yarn!101_2880

Did I mention I got all dressed up, fascinator, gel eyeliner and all??? Cuz I did!!photo (82hair)

Here is a good view of the eyeliner after all is said and done

Here is a good view of the eyeliner after all is said and done

Totally dressed up

Totally dressed up

This entry was posted on 05/07/2013, in Uncategorized. 2 Comments

Father’s Day Resources

As has become customary with our bigger topics it is time for another resource page… We lucked out with a coupon at the time but you can purchase the lapbook we are using with Live and Learn Press HERE. “It Takes Someone Special to Be a Dad” Live and Learn Folder. Our secondary printable resource was from HomeschoolNotebooking.com, though it was a gift from a friend a year or 3 back. You can find their site HERE. Our file was called Father’s Day Notebooking Pages.

Now for our book list:

  • Father’s Day by Anne Rockwell HERE
  • Father’s Day by Ann Heinrichs HERE
  • The Best Father’s Day Present Ever by Christine Loomis HERE
  • A Wild Father’s Day by Sean Callahan HERE
  • A Father’s Day Thank You by Janet Nolan HERE
  • Froggy’s Day With Dad by Jonathon London HERE
  • Hooray for Father’s Day! by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat HERE
  • The Berenstain Bears and the Papa’s Day Surprise by Stan & Jan Berenstain HERE

Links of interest:

  • Our song is from the list on DLTK HERE
  • How is Father’s Day date decided (the link in the lapbook is a deadlink) with VPCalendar.net HERE
  • Hallmark and their statistics for Father’s Day cards sales is interesting HERE
  • You can find a variety of things on the Activity Village page HERE set up for Father’s Day. I have linked (below) the specific things we used this time round!

Worksheets:

  • Father’s Day wordsearch with Activity Village HERE
  • Father’s Day mazes with Activity Village HERE
  • World’s Greatest Dad diploma with Activity Village HERE
  • Father’s Day Jokes with Activity Village HERE
  • Colouring by numbers with Activity Village HERE
  • Colouring page with Activity Village HERE
  • Learn to write a letter to Dad… HERE and HERE with Education.com
  • K level book about Daddy (though it may straddle first grade if you want them to write their own answers) with Education.com HERE

DVD:

  • Dora’s Butterfly Ball, it included two bonus episodes with our themed one – Feliz Dia de los Padres HERE

A silly song to bop around to thanks to Songdrops.

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This entry was posted on 30/06/2013, in Uncategorized. 1 Comment

Finding Strength and Joy as We Look to the Next Year

Well, we are at the end of our full week, full day year… my first with 4 of 5 kids involved and Emanuel’s first full on working year. This means I am already looking to the future, and the reality that I must now plan for FOUR instead of 3 and an intermittent. All this on the back of our first year in a new country with a new and less hands on (can I have my facilitator back now please?? oh and the funding??) system. It is hard to keep my confidence and even harder to gird the loins and plan ahead.

What more can I do than look to other sources for some suggestions and support? Once again Brave Writer comes through with her post: The Secret To Next Year’s Happiness! 3 tips to transform your homeschool this year! She just seems to know…

Years ago, when I was in between a June and an August, I realized that I wished I knew how I could plan a year that would end with smarter kids, and me—happy and relieved, not exhuasted and worried. Ever felt like that?

We all talk about how much we love homeschooling (really, most of us do!), but we also spend an equal amount of time:

  • worrying,
  • fretting,
  • planning,
  • revising,
  • ditching one book for another,
  • cycling back to the ditched program,
  • ditching it again, and so on.

We go from:

  • schedules to unschooling,
  • plans to inspiration,
  • child-led to parent-controlled,
  • workbooks to unit studies,
  • DVD instruction to co-ops,

looking for that perfect blend of instruction that leads to brighter kids, good feelings, and a clean kitchen to boot!

It’s true, homeschooling really is a life in flux. You are always striving for better. This year we went REALLY child led. I enjoyed that, but have come to the realization that not knowing a month in advance what is next has me scrambling to get those library books, find craft supplies and figure out the “how’s” to teaching that subject or concept.

BUT all is not lost, Brave Writer has some suggestions…

1. See the end from the beginning.

Ask yourself in August how you will know you’ve been successful when you get to June. Pretend you are looking back on the coming year, not looking forward. What is the measurement you use to evaluate your home education experience?

We don’t have to measure our progress all the same way… I know looking back at last year… how were we successful ??? Listen to the twins read!!! Watch Emanuel inhale dinosaur information and use words like herbivore and carnivore PROPERLY. Watch Trinity write out her letters and sound out a word or two… we may not have made huge leaps all round on all subjects but our foundation is becoming stronger and stronger.

And then there are the ones for me… I managed to learn things myself… I can take pride in our finished work which I also shared on the blog. I helped OTHERS to find interesting projects because I took the time to research and share my information.

And then there is the family success… we went out as a family and all enjoyed the learning process. The older kids helped the younger kids learn what they in turn had learned from me in years previous. We end our month with completion and joy…

Her second suggestion is to find a “Secret Need“…

  • The need for order (if you feel you live in chaos).
  • The need for support (friends, spouse, community, accountability).
  • The need for happiness (no tears, laughter, energy around family activity).
  • The need for balance (between project-y activities and daily predictable routine).
  • The need for appreciation (someone else affirms what you do and gives you the praise you deserve).
  • The need to have measurable accomplishments (when most days feel like you’re a hamster on a wheel and you can’t see progress).
  • The need for fun (laughter, activities, surprises, family outings or games).

It is easy to forget  that a homeschool needs more than a public school’s checklist of tests and papers. Homeschooling is a family event and a family has needs that bleed into the lessons. Which brings me to #3 on her helpful list…

3. Other people in your life have goals, agendas, and needs too.

You need to know two things: You can’t make everyone happy, particularly those outside your family. Conversely, it helps to listen to your family members and provide one or two ways for them to be happy, even if they want things you don’t typically want or find difficult to do.

The point is this: Don’t forget to plan how you will feel this year, not just what you will do.

We need to feel good about our year, about our choice and about our plan… but plans cannot be set in stone. So as I look to my next year I will look back to this year and say YES WE DID GOOD! We learned, we loved and we laughed and it was done together. The ups and downs have culminated in progress and that is something to be proud of. You can read ALL of this helpful blog entry on the Brave Writer page HERE.101_2258