Samut Saring Ceylon


Thu 18 Sep 2008

The Schoolhouse Planner is simply cool
Last month, just days before our school year started, I won the Schoolhouse Planner.  I have been thinking for awhile if I would buy the product and download it since school is almost about to start but $39.00 is not a small amount. A  podcast of JoJo Tabares at  Grace Talk I have been listening to gave me an opportunity to join a contest hosted at Karla's blog, Joyful Mother of Children and I bagged the prize!



I have been tapping my keys on this planner since it was opened. For one, I realized that my laptop desperately needs an upgrade, a 1GB RAM perhaps will make it faster to open this 247-page pdf file.  I have printed out daily schedule pages and groceries from its pages. I love the fact that these are nifty and handy. Just type your notes in and print out and the idea that it never runs out is terrific!  Given little time though, I know I have not maximized the use of it. Another wonderful thing about is it never gets outdated. I can buy modules in the years to come to keep it current.

The Schoolhouse Planner is not only a planner, it is a great resource for the homeschool mom/parent. The "good stuff" included in it is actually more than you would ask for. I love the articles, recipes, quick facts, homeschool ideas, links to materials and supplies and much more.Perhaps the time is ripe to say goodbye to my thick black leather planner I always carry around and frequently misplace amidst books strewn all over the place. Ha ha! Actually, got so tired carrying this bulky type now. With this planner, I know it will only just be in one place. My laptop! And I have the shortcut on the Desktop, so one click opens it. Opens slow but it works, but it might be just my computer.

Some few points that I think would help improve and make it more user friendly.

1. I haven't figured out how to add bookmarks. Maybe, adding more important bookmarks as default will make it more easy navigate.
I suggest bookmarks for Homeschool and Household Forms, My Address Book, Bible Reading Schedule and Prayer Journal. This may sound silly, well, probably most forms that are needed everyday should have a bookmark. I am not sure but maybe, I am saying this because my computer is slow or the file is just too big.  It takes a long time scrolling through just one page.Are you also experiencing this?

 2. The Homeschool and Household Form Instruction pages should have links to the corresponding forms with each description of form or if not, at least the page where it can be found.  Picture this: I clicked the Table of Contents and then Homeschool Forms Instructions. Hmm, I need a form to keep me on track each week. Aha!Sounds like WEEK-AT-A-GLANCE LOG will do. Then, I tried to click the red font title...ooops. No link. Well, I click the Table of Contents again to find that form... Hmmm, what's it called again? I didn't note it down. Got to go back.. oh!

 3. As an Asian homeschool parent who acquires a lot of our materials from the US because of the lack of it in our region, I would love to see a module of Asian Studies. Oh, I love all the articles and information included. And yet... I know there aren't a lot of homeschoolers in Asia, but it is a growing community and many of us will greatly appreciate a module we can also use in our context.  Perhaps 1-2 recipes from Asia, some important history events, mission efforts in Asia or the Third World, some themes... I am sure many US-based families would also find these interesting.

Overall, I love the fact that this one never gets old. =) You can use it over and over through your homeschool years. I guess, you have already graduated your oldest through youngest yet the household and planning forms, recipes, and all the timeless, practical pages would still come in relevant and handy.
Isn't that simply cool or what?
_____________________________

 

Day Seventeen   Iran's Mazandarani People

Day Eighteen  Aleppo, Syria
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Fri 29 Aug 2008

I won a copy of The Schoolhouse Planner!


It is amazing. I haven't won anything before and it is my first time to win a contest online. Karla, Joyful Mother of Children, hosted in her blog a giveaway contest sponsored by The Old Schoolhouse. The prize is a copy of The Schoolhouse Planner. Isn't that fab?

I went to her blog and left this:

August 17, 2008 - Hello from Colombo
Posted by 10gal

It is a blessing to hear about your contest via Grace Talk with JoJo T. Thank you so much for giving us this opportunity to win this planner. I live far from where homeschool resources abound and coops exist, a planner like this with all the good stuff in it will definitely be a great guide and encouragement to help me plan out our homeschool year (it was so unnerving last year and I am still recovering from it). My husband and I homeschool 3 kids ages 11, 10 and 3.5yo here in Sri Lanka where homeschool support is such a rare commodity.


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I downloaded it the other day. It is just so timely. Now, I am on the process of typing in notes from my notebook planner to this nifty Schoolhouse Planner in pdf format. Yes! It is a type-in pdf format.I am so enjoying this! After I am done completing the school calendar and forms, I will give you a full feedback. So make to sure visit again so you will know how it went.

Thanks again, Karla and Heidi of TOS.   


   
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Fri 25 Jul 2008

Dabbling with Doulos

Since yesterday, the children have been working on a Doulos model ship from a book I have picked up from the ship in December 2006.


We have slowed down a bit on academic subjects, so they kept themselves busy putting together the ship model which has been sitting on the shelf for over a year.


Have I mentioned to you Vibrant Bea wants to  voluteer and work on the ship someday? I hope she realizes her dream before this oldest passenger ship expires.. I still hope it will carry on for decades.


I have taken some snapshots.




 



 Completed in two days! It is now sitting on the top-most shelf beside my desk. Good work, kiddos!




  

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Tue 15 Jul 2008

Have you heard of our on-the-road games?
We do not have a car here in Colombo.

Going around the city begins with a call. It is either a taxi or a metered tri-wheeler we call tuktuk which comes to pick us up. Many tri-wheelers do not have a meter and they can overcharge you if you do not know your way around.

On long trips outside Colombo, we hire a van. Long trips could really get boring, especially if you have passed that way many times. Well, there is the radio but we can hardly understand the local broadcasts except for BBC programs from UK. Sometimes, we bring a music cd or audiobook for a pleasurable treat. Too often, it gets interrupted when something interesting on the road captures our attention - once it was a giant monitor lizard crossing at a very slow pace it caused quite a havoc and held the traffic, no driver dared to run over it.

Does it get into you when kids start asking "Are we there yet?" when you have only left the house half an hour ago. Once they do, they never stop. Admittingly, it does with me. They do try to observe the people by the roadside or even take candid photos but sometimes it is just the same-o. So what is next? Probably boredom. But you know what? After so many long road trips, we have somehow came up, even concocted, and played lively games during these seemingly so-called dull moments. And because they are fun, we never fail to play on short trips or while waiting for our ride.

GAME ONE is called GHOST, which my husband got from a book of games. I heard now that there is also Super GHOST or Super Duper GHOST or what have you.
The object of GHOST is to avoid calling out the last letter of a word. Usually players will try to make it challenging for other players by calling out a letter that is rarely used to form a word with the earlier letter. It has to form a word somehow, else he will also be challenged by other players if such a word exists. The game is started by a player by calling out a letter. The next player thinks of a possible word to form and calls out the 2nd letter - perhaps a challenging one to make it harder for the other players. And so does the rest of the players. However, each player makes it sure that she/he doesn't call out a letter to make a complete word from the preceding letters in sequence earlier called out by the others. Minimum number of letters to form a word depends on the ages of the players. We usually make a 3-letter-word as the minimum.

Example,
Player 1: "H".
Player 2: calls out a letter follow "H" - this letter must lead to form a word. Let us say he calls out "E".
Player 3: calls out a letter which will not form a word from the preceding letters. So, he may call any letter except for example "M" or "R" or any letter which may complete HE-___ as a word. "M" or "R" when added to HE form the word HEM or HER. If player 3 does make a mistake of calling out a letter which completes a word, player 3 gets a penalty of G from the word GHOST. Player 3 may call out an "A" because HEA may be used to spell the four letter word HEAD or HEAR and so on.
Player 4: avoids saying "R" or "D" or any letter which will complete the sequence to make a 4-letter word, is such no letter exist, then he get the G for GHOST. Any player can challenge a letter called out if it appears that there is no such word that can be formed the sequence of letters.

Did that make sense or did I just confuse you? Hmmm, to make it easier for us both Here are some links and variants.

GAME TWO is what we called Amusing Alliteration. This is inspired by a book we had a chance to read to Lil Ruffin before we gave it to the Children of the Sea. It is The Berenstain's B Book. We made a game of alliteration from it.
The object of the word is to keep adding a word to a growing sentence where all the words start with the same letter and it has to make sense else the player to make it senseless is out of the game. A new game thus begins with the next player by starting a new word starting with a different letter.

Example:
Player 1: HORACE
Player 2: HORRID HORACE
Player 3: HORRID HORACE HAVE
Player 4: HOWEVER, HORRID HORACE HAVE
Player 1: HOWEVER, HORRID HORACE HAVE HOT
Player 2: HAPPILY HOWEVER, HORRID HORACE HAVE HOT HAMBURGERS
Player 3: HAPPILY HOWEVER HORRID HORACE HAVE HOT HAMBURGERS HEAVILY
Player 4: HAPPILY HOWEVER HORRID HORACE HAVE HOT HAMBURGERS HEAVILY HEAPED...

and so on... until the sentence doesn't make sense anymore. SO each player should always add a word beginning with the same letter before or after the growing sentence that will make sense.

We always have fun forming the wackiest yet complete sentences ever. The imagination gets creative with this word game. Tucked away vocabulary words from many of those readers and read-alouds spring to life! And it does enhance your grammar skills.

These two are our favorites. Why don't you try them?   

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Wed 9 Apr 2008

Free Manners E-Book Package Give-Away
If you haven't done it yet, drop by quiverfullfamily.com ,Quiver Mamma is hosting a contest and is giving away a a copy of 100 Important Things Your Boys Need to Know: A Homeschooler’s Guide to Boys & Manners A toolkit of 8 resources for helping you train up those boys.

    Here is what she wrote:
"Although we have only girls so far, they also need to be trained to have proper manners! We had purchased this set alone, then were able to purchase it again as part of a large package deal, so we are pleased to offer our extra copy to one of our blog-readers! Thanks to Jim Erskine from Little Homeschool Library for allowing us to offer this extra copy as a prize! This e-book package set is available as an instant download for $14.95 through the above links."

The contest runs until today so don't waste any time now and click that link . Make sure you read the rules first.

    Have fun!
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