Musings of a Mentor
Oct. 10, 2006

Beginning Australia

I was planning on easing into Australia, but the kids dove in full force yesterday.

They made a long lists of everything they wanted to learn about Australia, they organized their folders, found many fasinating recipes and even cooked a couple. One groups of boys made Bloomin' Onions, which they declared were better than any they had ever bought. And another young man made Lamingtons, which is a sponge cake dipped in a cocoa frosting and rolled in coconut. They were also a big hit!

We started new group literature books as well yesterday. We have one group reading short stories from Australia and other Polonesian Islands, one group reading Lord of the Flies and the last reading Robinson Crusoe. I found it interesting with the choices each group was given that they would all end up choosing stories of island survival.

Tomorrow they will be giving their first oral book reports. I will try and remember to assign a 'reporter' to take pictures. Some of the posters that have already been brought in as props for the oral reports are very cool!

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Oct. 6, 2006

Buffalo Crossing....

We had a great day today at Buffalo Crossing. We got to pet all kinds of animals, see buffalo and llamas up close, eat buffalo burgers for lunch and pick pumpkins.


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Oct. 5, 2006

Science Museum

After having forgotten to take pictures yesterday, we took quite a few today. One of the coolest parts we could not photograph. We saw the Imax Safari Movie. It was probably the closest I will ever get to a real South African Safari. If anyone has the change to see it I highly recommend it!!



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Liv got the award for the best sour candy face!


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Athena, Josh and Brandon built an Arch.


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Austin, Cody and Gabe were playing a game that taught about the water cycle and Urban planning.


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Athena, Josh and Brandon taking a trip into outer space.


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Edward, Sue and Austin learning about drunk driving using a simulator.


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Jessica, Kayla and Liv in front with a few of the "big kids" in back at a rare trip to McDonalds. I realized today I hadn't had McDonalds in over 2 years!

A fun day was had by all!!!

And tomorrow we have yet another field trip to see buffalo and pick pumpkins!
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Oct. 5, 2006

African Bonfire


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This is the new fire pit area where we held our African Bonfire. A father of one of my students is making these benches for us. He had them done enough to use, but said he will continue to sand and carve them.


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This is the boys' concept of an African Market booth. They made Nigerian Chin-chin and West African Yamballs here and gave them out to the parents and visiters as they came by.


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This is a beanbag game the kids made out of their African Masks. It turned out to be a big 'hit' :)

I wish we had pictures of the actual bonfire, but everyone was having so much fun that we forgot to take pictures.
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Sep. 29, 2006

Heart Of Darkness---Group Report

Heart Of Darkness

Group Report
(this study group is all boys between the ages of 14-15)


    As a group we had mixed reactions to this book. A few thought it was boring because they didn't understand the language. A few thought it was complicated and layered with meanings making it very interesting. Some thought it just rambled too much to really make any sense. A the last group thought it was a very good example of how to use symbols to change how people think.

    Most agreed the theme of this novel was that greed and power can turn an empty soul black. To stand up to the temptations of power a persons needs to be grounded. They really need to know who they are and what they want out of life. The book illustrated that the slippery slope of control gets out of control very quickly.

    As a group we answered the question: “Why does Marlow travel mostly on the river?” The ideas discussed were that the Congo represented a main vein into the heart of the dark continent. Marlow was traveling on this vein physically while emotionally, traveling into Kurtz's dark heart. Another thought was that the river kept him safe and separate from the interior of Africa and the dark interior of men's souls. On the few occasions he did step foot on land all he found was dead wasteland or the wasteland of Kurtz's soul.

The following are the individual essays on Heart of Darkness.

Austin: In the story “Heart of Darkness” the author interpreted light and dark in many different ways. Light usually represents good, warmth and salvation, while dark represents evil, death, and despair. I personally find these connections racist, but I also think that was Conrad's point.

    White people being 'light' were representing 'gods' to the 'ignorant' 'dark' natives. Being dark the natives were worth less to the white men than the cheapest of animals. It is strange because I think the case was just the opposite, without the natives, the white men would not have had the ivory they so craved.

    Conrad showed how the white men with their 'hearts of darkness' were cruel, greedy, disloyal and mean. The natives were often kind, simple, loyal and self-restrained. The cannibals for example went hungry instead of killing the men on the ship. Marlow saw this as truly remarkable. These men were able to kill, were hungry, and yet choose loyalty instead of personal comfort or nourishment.

Throughout the whole book Conrad plays with the readers traditional understanding of light and dark.


Cody: Darkness has many definitions. In the beginning darkness is just a reference to Africa itself. Darkness refers to the dark skinned people and the dark jungles. The author doesn't stick with those meanings very long. Soon we figure out it is the hearts of the white men that are the blackest part of this continent. Kurtz is the most extreme example. His heart becomes completely black because of greed and lust. Then at the very end of the book Marlow chooses to leave Kurtz's fiancιe in the dark. Her darkness is one of not knowing the truth.

    Unless you read the whole book you will not notice how the definition of darkness changes. The way Conrad changes and uses the word 'darkness' is one of the book's huge driving ideas. It also gives us clues into his believes and morals.


Travis: In this novel darkness represents many things. Darkness represents ignorance. The ignorance of the white people, the ignorance of the natives, and the final ignorance of Kurtz's fiancιe. It also represents Africa. It refers to the people and the jungles. Darkness represents greed and evil desires. And finally, darkness represents death. The death of Kurtz, the death of the innocence of the natives and even the death of Marlow's idealism.


Brandon B.: Kurtz's dying words were “The horror! The horror!” I believe they expressed his torment he felt at the enormity of his actions. I believe he was facing God and trying to explain his choices. This must have seemed like torture. He realized that the way he had been treating other human beings was horrible. Making the natives believe he was a god so they would fulfill his lust for more ivory was just one of the evil things he did. He also made people crawl on their bellies while in his presence. Having to explain this to God would be more than horrible.

    I believe the reason Marlow was the only one to hear the last words was because he was more emotionally connected to Kurtz than anyone else. People kept telling Marlow he was like Kurtz. Both were young men who were given high prestige jobs without working their way up through the company. The other men were very jealous and resented both Kurtz and Marlow because the men thought the jobs should have gone them. The words could also have been a stern warning to Marlow, to make sure he didn't end up the same way.


Josh: “The horror, the horror!” were Kurtz's last words. I think he said them because he was reliving his last few years in Africa. He was facing the real God and having to explain why he pretended to be a god. Not a good god at that, but a vicious, greedy and lustful god that was only interested in power and wealth.

    Marlow was the only person to hear these words because they were meant to touch him. He understood Kurtz better than anyone else. He had been chasing Kurtz's shadow all the way into the interior of the continent. By hearing how tormented Kurtz was on his death bed, he could avoid falling into the same traps. The continent could not change him, the way it had Kurtz.


Marlow: Marlow lied to Kurtz's fiancιe because she thought Kurtz was the greatest man to ever have lived. Marlow didn't want to hurt her by telling her the truth. She seemed to be a light in the darkness. As she spoke about Kurtz her forehead and blond hair seemed to be the only light in the room. Since she was thinking about Kurtz in a good way her forehead lit up, but her heart was dark because she did not know the truth of his heart.

    In reality Kurtz was no better than the next man and actually worse than many. He lied, cheated, and abused power just to get more ivory. Ivory was the main money in this book. It was also equated with power. Kurtz went so far as to convince the natives he was a god to get more ivory. Marlow didn't want to tell all this to the young girl so he left her in a state of innocence. He let her believe Kurtz was a hero, maybe even her god.


Gabe: Marlow lied to Kurtz's fiancιe so that she would not be hurt by his true memory. She was oblivious to the facts that Kurtz abused his power and position. She had only the best of thoughts about him. Marlow was faced with two choices. He could tell the truth and put Kurtz's fiancιe into a deeper depression. She would probably lose all grip on reality. Or he could lie to her and let her live in a functioning fantasy world. Either way she was going to be a lost soul.

Marlow choose to lie because of the light illuminating her forehead as she spoke about Kurtz. The room darkened, making her seem even more innocent and about to be swallowed up. In Marlow's loyalty to Kurtz, Marlow could not see shattering her hero worship of her intended.


We would only recommend this book if you easily follow stories that bounce around in time and place. It is not for those who like straight forward stories with easy plots. The reader has to work hard to follow the story and stay interested.

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Sep. 23, 2006

Movie Review by The Thursday Afternoon Movie Watchers

This is a review of three African movies the kids have watched. I thought it was interesting because I was just blog hopping and it seems Dafur has finally made it into the mainstream. These movies, plus Darfur being in the news made a huge impact on them.

Movie Review by The Thursday Afternoon Movie Watchers
    Over the last three weeks we have watch three movies about Africa, Cleopatra, Shaka Zulu, and Hotel Rwanda. At first it seemed these movies had nothing in common, but upon closer inspection we noticed that all three movies are about European interference in Africa. In Cleopatra, it was Rome that conquered and exploited Egypt's resources. Rome demanded payments of so much grain that the people of the country were starving. In Shaka Zulu it was the English and the Dutch who were trying to settle in the southern parts of Africa. The slave trade was in full swing and that seemed to be the biggest natural resource the Europeans wanted. In Hotel Rwanda, we saw the fall-out of a Dutch Government pull-out. It seemed to us the Dutch were the root cause of the problems by dividing a previously unified people.
    Another common thread between the movies was that the Europeans never saw the Africans as real people. The Europeans were never able to meet Africans as equal humans also created in God's image. With the Romans that almost made sense because their gods looked like them and they were conquerers. However, in Shaka Zulu and Hotel Rwanda the Europeans professed to be Christians. It was very difficult for us to see the slave ship scenes in Shaka Zulu, because humans should not chain, rape, kill, or beat other humans. We could empathize with the slaves, but not the traders. No matter how hard we tried we could not ever imagine treating other people that way even if we disliked them. In Hotel Rwanda, we saw all kinds of people helping others. We think that is the way it should be. However, we also saw that it takes more than the power of individuals to prevent genocide. We feel Christians and countries that are primarily Christian have an extra duty to help keep the peace in this world. It often seems like animals that are on the brink of extinction get more attention and help than entire races of peoples.
    All three movies had people that inspired us and made us think about our world and how we treat others. In Cleopatra, Cleopatra was willing to give up her life for her people over and over. She inspired them with her love. In Shaka Zulu, the movie makers went to extra trouble make sure you saw the connections between Shaka and Christ. He was strong, brave, and inspired others to keep going beyond the usual limits of human endurance. He was especially Christ like when he left the settlement without killing all the whites when it was obvious that he could have done so easily. In Hotel Rwanda, Paul Rusesabagina uses all his wits, contacts and drive to save almost 1500 people. He saw his country fall apart and over 800,000 men, women and children killed in a massive act of revenge. We all hope that if we were ever in a situation like his we could act with half his courage and determination.
    After discussing these movies the question came up, “Should we be sending troops into Darfur?” Everyone of us thought that even if the UN didn't send more troops, the USA should figure out how to send Peace Keepers. We felt that even at these points in history, if more time was spent on finding peaceful solutions, tensions would not continue into each new generation. Everyone agreed to write their senator and represenative to tell them to continue to pressure the UN. We felt that when genocide is happening we need to make sure it is stopped.

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Sep. 9, 2006

Another great day.....

Since I had written about an unscheduled day yesterday, I decided to write about a scheduled one today.

Since we were cooking over raw wood today we had to get the fire going before 9am.

We started the day with Math. This year I am teaching the foundational classes (everyone not in Algebra).   So, I helped with Saxon 54, Saxon 76, Consumer Math, and when lessons were finished we used the rest of math time to play Suduko and 24. My mom has all the Algebra kids this year.


When math time was over, the fire was hot enough and burned into coals so we put the lamb that they had marinated yesterday on the grill.

Then we went into literature. I am reading Heart of Darkness with the 9th and 10th grade boys. I love the language, the boys are struggling a little, but the drawings they are doing while I read let me know that they are understanding what is happening even if they are not understanding the deeper meanings yet.


The girls are all together in one group they range in age from 12-16. Right now they are reading Not One Damsel In Distress, it is a collection of fairytales from around the world where girls are the heroes of the stories.


The little boys are being read to by the senior boys, they are reading fairytales too, Mightier Than The Sword, which are world folktales for strong boys.


After Lit. was lunch. We take a full hour for lunch. Lots of playing outside and joking around. About the time lunch was over the lamb was finally done .


We brought it in and let it rest in the oven until after grammar.

After reading and discussing 'The Thought For the Day' the kids could choose to write an essay that introduced themselves or 10 positive I am... statements. (today's thought: Who I am is what fulfills me and fulfills the vision I have of the world. –Audre Lorde), During grammar we also reviewed how to write a good outline, three spelling rules, and the rules for general to specific paragraphs.

Then I worked with a group who were answering questions about land formation. Specifically the Atlas mts, the Mediterrian Sea, and the Great Rift Valley. This was extra fun for me because I love physical geography and talking about plate tectonics, Pangea, and how the earth works as a great machine!

While I was working with this group on geography, I was also 'helping' a group in the kitchen who were slicing up the lamb, shucking fresh corn and squealing over the silk worms in the corn! It was funny because a parent brought in a bushel of corn today and one of the little boys said "that corn is wrapped in grass!" He had never seen corn in a husk and certainly never shucked it before. It was a lot of fun watching him experience it!


At the same time another group of students was working on beginning Greek with Mr. Aaron and then he had an older group for advanced Hebrew.

 

During language time I tutored Latin, then helped someone with their spelling, then I colored an Egyptian Princess.


Since the scheduled part of the day was over, it was time for the kids to work on group projects of their choice. I watched and offered a couple hints to the group of boys who were shooting a movie. They were funny because they went around in wigs and fake facial hair all day. I was cracking up everytime I caught them out of the corner of my eye!


Other kids were working on animal projects, sewing projects, serving up the lamb, playing basketball, going on nature walks, and photography.


It was another day that really let me know I am doing what I was created to do!

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Sep. 7, 2006

a perfect day.....

I think Thursdays are going to be one of my favorite days this years. On MWF we have 20-25 students (when they all show up), but on Thursday only 8-10 come over.

On MWF there are small group classes and a loose schedule. On Thursdays there is no schedule and everyone decides how to spend their day.

Today was great! It started at 8:30 with the 4 girls who were here deciding on a recipe to cook today. They found two they liked and when reading the directions saw that one needed to be marinated overnight so they asked if they could prepare it for tomorrow and cook the other today.

The girls prepared the list, but the teenage boys were the ones that went to the store. I was surprised that only one out of four had ever had to find food in the store. I gave them the list and just followed them around, trying to keep my mouth shut :) It was hard. It took them over an hour to find 6 ingredents.

The boys learned to speak with the butcher. He taught them the difference between a leg of Lamb and butterflied lamb chops. He even cut the chops especially for them from a fresh piece of lamb. They learned to smell herbs and I don't think they will confuse dill with parsley again.

Today turned out to be all about Northern Africa. The recipe that was actually eaten today was Koshery (Lentils and Rice). It was a bit spicy and very tasty. Cumin was a new spice to many of the kids. We talked a lot about the difference between herbs and spices and which ones are common to Egyptian food and why.

The other recipe that was prepped today and will be cooked tomorrow over an open fire was roasted leg of lamb from Morocco. While it shared similar spices it had a few differences and one of the more interesting ones was lemon juice from the Spanish influences.

While some kids cooked others were doing a project on the Sahara Desert. They learned why it was a desert, that it changed sizes with the seasons of the year and that the people who live north of it have a very different life then those who live south of it.

Thanks to satilite radio we listened to an Afropop station out of Algeria most of the day. The kids really liked the music a lot. They thought it was fun and exciting. The modern instruments with the ancient chants and drums were an interesting combination.

After lunch we watched Cleopatra ( Hallmark made for TV mini series). It really helped the kids to see how Ceasar, Cleopatra, Mark Antony and Octavious were all connected. Since we spent a lot of time on Rome last year, they really made the  connection this time to Egypt being in Africa, but under Roman rule. It made more of an impression of why North Africa is so different than the rest of Africa. For some reason it also clicked that Alexandria was in Egypt therefore Africa. The burning of the library in the movie made sense in relationship to the other things they already knew. They were inspired to add quite a few things to the group timeline.

After the movie the girls got out the history of clothing books and spent quite a while researching Egyptian styles. They drew some pictures and one even made a pattern to make her own robe based on one of Cleopatra's dressing gowns.

Not everyone watched the movie. Some of the older boys who had seen it a few times practiced music. A couple got out the drums and tried to recreate the rhythms from the songs on the radio. One young man who is fairly new to piano, practiced for almost 2 hours today. He is getting really good!

As the day was winding down, a few kids were playing video games, a few were working on maps of Africa and a few were coloring pictures of African animals.

Today was a great day because we all learned so much. Tomorrow will be noisy and the house will be full in comparison to today an it too will be a good day!
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Sep. 6, 2006

First Day at RGRC

I have talked about my 'kids' so often I thought I would show them to you guys! Here are the brilliant young people who share my days.


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Aug. 27, 2006

Life Skills....

I have been working on a list of life skills for parents who seem confused when I say that I believe 'Life Skills' are as important as reading and writing. I tell them to make a list of all the skill they would want their child to have before moving out then start looking for opportunities to introduce them. As a matter of fact I, tell them, I schedule no academic work on Tuesdays and Thursdays because not only does it give the students time to try new things, work, run their own businesses, develop talents, pursue their own interests, but it also give you time to teach life skills as part of their 'education.' In the kids I see here, those with strong life skills seem to have more self-confidence and natural leadership abilities.

Here is my list so far in no particular order:
setting goals and meeting deadlines
laundry
balancing a checkbook and understanding basic finances
budgeting
grocery shopping
importance of good nutrition and exercise
cooking and food sanitation
how to clean a house (even if they don't keep it that way )
how to talk to people they might have to hire or get a good deal from-- clerks, bankers, plumbers, etc...
driving
conflict resolution skills
skills for dealing with stress
simple sewing (buttons, hems, patches, small tears)

So my question are:

Do you teach life skills?

What do you teach as life skills?

What do you wish you were taught before living on your own?

Do you think having life skills help young people make decisions about their future?

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Aug. 19, 2006

Seven Habits!!!


I have a book I really like for teens called The 7 Best Things Smart Teens Do. These habits are great for teens to master, good for younger kids to learn and practice and excellent for moms and dads to model! I am going to use them as the format for my 7 habits:

1) Become Competent: this means get in the habit of practicing new skills until they are mastered and always reviewing old skills. The more competent you feel the more honest self-esteem you have, making you a much more successful and effective person!

2) Master Your Feelings: this means stop and think before just reacting, too often 'feelings' get in the way of good solid communication and learning. Figure out what you are feeling and why, and keep it appropriate to the moment. Learn and practice ways to control your emotions--deep breating, making lists, exercising....

3) Breaking the Silence: getting in the habit of finding people whom we can trust and with whom we can share our deepest secrets and feelings is a cornerstone of good emotional health and power. Pretending everything is always 'perfect' and having no one you trust to love you worts and all is too scary a place to live. I think homeschooled teens and homeschooled moms have to work very hard to develop these relationships.

4) Getting Healthy Power: get in the habit of setting realist consequences, enforce them consistently and have a small numer of reasonable rules..... not only will parents and kids both feel empowered, but they will actually really and truly enjoy each others company!

5) Face the Serious Stuff: I think this one goes back to making sure there are people around you that you can trust. If you are in the habit of uncovering and admitting when you are struggling, it stops the cycle of hurting, acting out, shame, covering up, more hurting, more acting out and even more shame......

6) Finding An Identity: get in the habit of self evauation. Here are a few goal markers that are more like sliding scales....trust vs mistrust( I have people I can share the 'real me' with); autonomy vs shame and doubt (My feelings are ok even though they are different than yours); initiative vs guilt (I washed the car? Do you think I could use it today?); competence vs inferiority (I like the fact I play hockey well); identity vs identity confusion (I'm not sure where I will be in my 30's, but I am confident that what I am learning now will be useful to me later in life)

7) Staking Out the Extremes: get in the habit of finding the middle ground. Rarely are things 'as bad as they seem' or will 'last forever' even though as a teen (or even a parent) it seems that way. Never and Always, are not as useful terms as sometimes or giving specific perameters. This works for arguments, lessons, siblings, etc...

These habits are a bit different than others, but they are ones I still work on and practice! I wish I had learned many of them much earlier in life!!!
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Aug. 17, 2006

More of what we do here!

I thought I would post this to help give a clearer view of what goes on around here. This is part of a parent orientation packet. I have posted parts of the packet already (the independent reading list and the what to do with an independent novel). We seem to  catch two basic types of students, those who have homeschooled all along and now want more group work as they prepare for college. And those who have been in traditional schools and have fallen through the cracks or have not been challenged. It is a very diverse community that crosses many age, religious, racial, and social-economic backgrounds. I love these kids with all my heart and opening my home to them 4 days a week has been a huge blessing!


We have been on break from the Summer Quarter for less than a full week and the house seems so empty and very quiet. The puppy is going nuts without her 20-25 kids to play with! We start the Fall Quarter on September 6th. Before then I have to get the books and materials out and sorted and the house deep cleaned!


Personal Best in All Subjects: Assignments must be in cursive or typed. Papers are to be neat and well organized. Folders and binders are to be organized and culled each quarter. All work is to be done on loose leaf paper and kept in the student's binder unless otherwise instructed. When work is turned in , it is also to be picked up promptly!


Math: Each student will have math assignments at their level from a math book on Mon. Wed. and Fri. Each lesson contains 20 to 30 problems. If the problems are not finished here, they need to be finished at home. On Tuesday and Thursday they will be expected to do math projects or work on life skills that use math (ex: cooking or balancing a checkbook).


Grammar: Each student will be expected to learn the parts of speech, their jobs and how to find them in a sentence, meanings of Greek and Latin roots, how to write a solid paragraph, common grammar rules, and spelling rules. There will be Grammar Quizzes at least three times per quarter. Thoughts for the day will be discussed during grammar time. There will also be essays and reports from History and Literature to edit on a weekly basis.


Foreign Language: We will have Mr. Aaron to help in the afternoons with formal Hebrew and Greek. Ms. Sandie will be teaching Latin I and II and Mr Dirk will be available on Wednesdays to help anyone who wants German. Students who plan on going to college are strongly recommended to choose a language and study it seriously.


Literature: For independent reading please see the very specific requirements outlined in What To Do With An Independent Novel. For group literature, students will be expected to listen to a book being read aloud, participate in group discussions and write individual reaction papers.


Geography/ History: We will be building notebooks based on the assignments in the book Around The World In 180 Days. We will be writing reports and essays based on the questions and suggested research topics. There will also be independent projects, group projects, cooking, music, art, movies, and current events based on each continent.


Independent Studies: I am expecting each 9th to 12th grader to 'fill-in' their schedule with one or two serious passions of their own. This could be novel writing, music, role playing games, movie making, photography, year book, painting, poetry, needle work, game design, a science, a sport, a job, etc.... If Mr. Dirk, Ms. Barb or I have no working knowledge in the field we will work to find a mentor who does.


What I expect from the parents: Your support is very important to me. We are a team working together to help your child be the best they can be. If you have questions or concerns I would like you to bring them to me right away. I am usually easiest to get a hold of by email or by phone after 3:00pm. I need you to ask the students about due dates, assignment sheets, projects and especially independent novels. If you don't see work by your child in the newsletter it means they aren't turning any in, ask them about it. Ask to see the continent folders and projects that will be evaluated and returned within one week of me receiving them. Please work hard to get your children here by 8:50am. We start small group work at 9:00am sharp. When students come in between 9:00 and 9:30 it causes major problems for us as tutors. Students leaving before 3:15 can also cause frustration when the tutor is in the middle of a class or project.


Basic Small Group Schedule for Mon, Wed, Fri.(often subject to vary):

9:00am to 10:30am Math

10:30am to 11:30am Literature

11:30am to 12:30pm Lunch/ Outside playtime

12:30pm to 1:15pm Grammar

1:15pm to 3:15pm History/ Geography/ Foreign Language

3:15pm to 4:00pm Independent Studies/ Projects


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Aug. 11, 2006

My Contest Answers!

I might as well enter a contest for something I was going to do this week anyway :) I like these questions and they will help keep me focused. Here is a link to the contest so you can join too!!! www.homeschoolblogger.com/JacqueDixonSoulRestES/178599/


What type of homeschooler are you?

The best definition I guess is an eclectic leadership style, but some call us classical, some say we are unschoolers, and some think we would be called Latin centered. Check out the Ross Griffin Resource Center Category for even more information and posts about how we actually work.


How do you homeschool? (Do you plan??)

A couple posts ago I posted sample weekly assignment sheets for the Elementary level and the Middle and Highschool levels. I also posted our first reading list and what we do with an independent novel.

We are a little different than most because we have opened our home to other homeschoolers. We have quite a few peer lead small groups all over the house during the day. I plan by picking the overriding topic, but the kids decide how to approach each topic. This year the core of the curriculum is Around The World In 180 Days. Some of the kids will use a notebook, some a scrapbook, some a time line, some a lap book, some will do mostly 3-d projects and on and on. The ideas are all from the students and they do the bulk of the planning. They just let me know what they need.


Are you using a specific curriculum or a conglomeration or none?

Conglomeration for sure! In Addition too ATW, we have students using, the daily newspaper, Saxon Math, Jacob's Math, Real World Math, English from the Roots Up, Latin Road to English Grammar, Abeka Grammar, Teach Me Some Greek, Rosette Greek and Hebrew, Hebrew Bibles, Greek Bibles, and even a few English Bibles :), lots of Classical Novels, Montessori materials, cookbooks from around the world, reference books of all sorts, art books and art history books, classical music and classical music books, etc... We match the materials to the student's learning style and interests.


Are you making it up yourself?

I make some stuff up,but I have found it is easier to adapt something rather than totally reinvent the wheel! For us it is really much more about approach, than material. So, we use Montessori Methods, CM methods, Thomas Jefferson Methods, and The Trivium to teach whatever it is the student wants to learn.


Do you have a plan or just use ideas as you go?

We use a four year cycle. In year one we focus on Foundations of Western Civilization, in year 2 we focus on world history and geography, year 3 we focus US history and geography, and in year 4 we think like scientist and cover lots and lots of formal science. Since this is our third time through the cycle, we have built up a lot of ideas and have lots of resources, so I have much less actual planning I have to do.


Do you homeschool in desks, at the table or anywhere it works??

Literature read alouds tend to be on the couches, big recliners and giant bean bags that is if they are in the house. Often when the weather permits literature happens in the garden or the patio or even up in the trees. One of the little guys' favorite places to read is in the big honeysuckle tree. They have had 5 kids and one adult in the tree at the same time before.

Math is usually at the table, writing is usually at the desks because that is where the computers are, and science and art are usually in the kitchen for easy clean up.


Tell me what you are excited about that you will be doing!

I love festival days! As we study each continent we will plan a huge party to show case the uniqueness of that continent. All the families come together for food, games, crafts, art, music and drama performed by the kids that shows what they have learned about that continent.


Are you going to teach each child in their own grade level or do you multi-grade teach?

The kids are divided by skill levels and interest more than grades, but roughly it is the elementary level, middle school levels, and high school levels.


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Aug. 7, 2006

Elementary assignment sheet

This one is an example of an elementary weekly assignment sheet. You can see they have a bit more structure to their study day, but even so they still have much more play time then study time :) This year I have two third graders, one fourth grader and maybe one second grader. These guys are mostly younger siblings of the teens who study here and have been studying with me for years, so they "know the routine" pretty well and are not afraid to ask the older teens for help when they need it and the adults are busy with someone else. If you compare this sheet to the one for the teens you can see that a lot of the topics are the same, this allows us to work with ability groups intead of age or grade groups when needed.

Elementary Assignments Week of September 6th – 12th

Keep these sheets in your notebook for the full quarter.

Thoughts for the week:

Wed: · Having a good discussion is like having riches. (Kenya)
Even though many will agree with this statement it is particularly true in areas of Africa where history and news are conferred exclusively orally.

Fri: · Every time an old man dies it is as if a library has burnt down. -Chiek Oumar Ba- (Mandinka West Africa) This is again referring to information in it's West African form, as an oral tradition. The Memory of a Musician, Genealogist, Story teller, Historian, myth maker, (often the same person) and a strong sense of culture and community help to keep African tradition and sensibilities alive in the present day as they have been for centuries.

Mon: · A student doesn't know about masterhood but a master knows about studenthood. (Mandinka) A master was once a student and cannot be fooled easily.

African Proverbs

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Fill in your Calendar as you complete each assignment!

Sept. 6th

Grammar: Go over Thoughts for the Week. Write Wednesday's in your journal in your best cursive.

Do the Abeka Oral Language Exercises 1.1.

Spelling: Find two words that match each of this weeks rules. (6 words all together)

Reading: Review all the phonograms and make a list of the one you still struggle with.

History: Introduce Around the World in 180 Days. Start pages 3-5 together.

Geography: Get out the globe and talk about where we are and where Africa is.

Literature: Listen to two African tales from Tales Alive, and then do the suggested crafts.

Math: Introduce Saxon 5/4, do lesson 1

Language:Play Rummy Roots to see how many roots your remember.

Sept. 7th

Grammar: Make up an African Tale and either write it in your journal or have a mentor write it for you.

Spelling: Practice the spelling words you came up with yesterday. If you have time practice your friends' words too!

Reading: Read to a mentor from a book of your choosing.

History/Geography/ Math: Cook West African Yamballs

Literature: Listen to more African tales.

Language:Play Rummy Roots.

Sept. 8th

Grammar: Go over Thoughts for the Week. Write Friday's in your journal in your best cursive.

Do the Abeka Oral Language Exercises 1.3.

Spelling: Find two new words that match each of this weeks rules. (12 words all together)

Reading: Phonogram quiz, to see where we need to focus. Read to a mentor.

History: Around the World in 180 Days. Finish pages 3-5 together.

Geography: Look at the different flags of African Nations. Make one of your own.

Literature: Listen to African tales from The People Could Fly

Math: Introduce Saxon 5/4, do lesson 2

Language: Begin your own set of Root Card, do 3-5 cards.

Sept. 11th

Grammar: Go over Thoughts for the Week. Write Monday's in your journal in your best cursive.

Do the Abeka Oral Language Exercises 1.4.

Spelling: Spelling quiz on your 12 words and bonus points if you get those of your classmates too!

Reading: Read to a mentor from a book of your choice.

History/ Geography: Use an Atlas and a blank map to label the items found on page 9.

Literature: Listen to African tales from The People Could Fly

Math: Introduce Saxon 5/4, do lesson 3

Language: Keep working on your Root Cards, do 3-5 cards.

Sept. 12th

You plan out this day: (movie, cooking, projects, reading, etc)

This week’s Spelling Rules:

  1. “Q” is always followed by “u” in English words.

  2. “G” usually says /j/ when followed by and “e, i, or y”.

  3. “C” says /s/ when followed by “e, i, or y”

Important Dates to put on your calendar:

African Project and folder due October 2nd

African Feast will be October 4th


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Aug. 6, 2006

assignment sheet for our first week of the Fall Quarter...( a month away)

Since I am on a planning roll today, I thought I would post our first week's assignment sheet for Fall. We have one more week of the Summer Quarter before our break.


This assignment sheet is for 6th grade and up. We will be using Around The World In 180 Days as our core this year. Spetember 6th seems like a long way away now, but with a couple more short trips, a remodeling project, and lots of parties it will be here soon.


Assignments Week of September 6th – 12th

Keep these sheets in your notebook for the full quarter.

  Thoughts for the week:

Wed: We must believe that it is possible to achieve our dreams and then commit to achieving those dreams. Fill in your Success Circles.

Fri: Who I am is what fulfills me and fulfills the vision I have of the world. –Audre Lorde Write about “who” you are when you are at your best. Either an essay or 10 positive I am statements.

Mon: Chances are you’ll feel confident, competent, and capable if you have a strong support system around you. List the five times you have felt most confident, five times you have felt most competent, and the five times you have felt the most capable.

Nine Steps to Success, Teens can make it happen! Stedman Graham

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Fill out your Calendar as you complete each assignment!

Sept. 6th

Grammar: Go over Thoughts for the Week. Introduce the Spelling and Grammar rules for the week.

History: Introduce Around the World in 180 Days. Do pages 3-5 together. Look at pages 11, 27, 34, 38, to begin deciding on individual African projects.

Literature: Choose independent novel from list, discuss how to take notes while reading.

Begin Group novel.

Math:_______________Language:______________________

Sept. 7th

You plan out this day: (movie, cooking, projects, reading, etc)

_______________________________________

Sept. 8th

Grammar: Do “TFTW” exercise. Go over notes on General to Specific paragraphs, put the list of words on your grammar sheet in outline form from General to Specific.

History: Finish anything left from yesterday, do pages 6-8 using an encyclopedia, atlas, or the internet.

Literature: Read at least one chapter the Literature book you choose yesterday.  Group novel______________

Math:_________________Language:_________________________

Sept. 11th

Grammar: Do “TFTW” exercise. Go over notes on General to Specific paragraphs, outline the paragraphs on your grammar sheet.

History: Use an Atlas and a blank map to label the items found on page 9.

Literature: Read at least one chapter in your independent Literature book. Group novel____________

Math:________________________Language:____________________________

Sept. 12th

You plan out this day: (movie, cooking, projects, reading, etc)

_______________________________________

 

This week’s Spelling Rules:

1)     “Q” is always followed by “u” in English words.

2)     “G” usually says /j/ when followed by and “e, i, or y”.

3)     “C” says /s/ when followed by “e, i, or y”

 

Important Dates to put on your calendar:

African Project and folder due October 2nd

African Feast will be October 4th

1st Independent Novel project/report due October  11th


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Aug. 6, 2006

What to do with an independent book?

Since I posted the Fall book list, I thought you all might want to know what we do with those independent books.
(We still have group read aloud books too. I'll cover those later.)

Requirements for independent book studies:


  1. Keep a piece of loose leaf paper folded in half long ways inside the book you are reading. As you are reading jot down quotes (with page numbers), questions, and/or comments. When you finish each chapter write a one to two sentence summary of the plot and one to two sentences about where you think the story is headed.

  2. Check in with a tutor at least once a week to discuss your notes.

  3. When you finish the book decide how you will report on it. Here are a few examples:

    a. gather items from the story into a shoe box and give an oral report to the group

    b. write a book report

    c. build a diorama from an important moment

    d. write and perform a skit that illustrates the theme of the story

    e. check out the Reading Activities book for inspiration if you get stuck

  4. However you choose to report on your novel, do NOT, retell the story. This is a list of what should be covered in your report, feel free to include more, but no less:

      1. 6th to 8th graders

        a. Author/Title

        b. Theme (with one or two examples to prove it)

        c. What did the main character learn

        d. Who is the hero and who is the villain, did they surprise you

        e. Which character is most like you and why

        f. What did you learn from this story

        g. Do you recommend this story and why/why not

      2. 9th-10th graders

        a. Title/Author with basic information

        b. Theme with examples to prove

        c. Which characters grew the most and how

        d. Which myth, legend, Bible story, or fairy tale did this story remind you of and why

        e. In which ways did you agree or disagree with the author's point of view

        f. How has this story changed you

        g. Do you recommend this story and why/why not

      3. 11th-12th graders

        a. Title/Author with extended bio. Information

        b. Theme with examples to prove

        c. Explain the basic conflict patterns

        d. Use 2-3 examples to explain at least one literary tool used by the author

        e. Explain the point of view the author used to tell the story, why do you think he made that choice

        f. In which ways did you agree or disagree with the author's point of view

        g. Do you recommend this story and why/why not

  1. Make sure your work is completed neatly and on time. Keep your book notes in your continent folder with a copy of your book report or oral report cards.

  2. Fall Quarter deadlines are October 11, 2006 for the first novel and November 15, 2006 for the second novel.

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Aug. 5, 2006

Reading List for Fall Quarter at RGRC

Independent Classics Reading List for Fall Quarter:

Each student is responsible for TWO independent novels PER quarter. They will choose at least one of these classics to read independently or with a parent AT HOME during the first quarter. The other book can be from the list, but doesn't have to be.


6th-8th grader's list

Wyss, Johann The Swiss Family Robinson Swept off course     by a raging storm, a Swiss pastor, his wife, and four young sons are shipwrecked on an uncharted tropical island.

Taylor, Theodore The Cay A n old blind man and a young boy figure out how to survive a shipwreck together

Sperry, Armstrong Call It Courageous A young boy finding his hidden strengths in the South Pacific
Lekuton, Joseph Lemasolai Facing the Lion Growing up Maasai on the African Savanna.
St. John, Patricia Star of Light
In a mountain village in Morocco, an Englishwoman transforms the lives of her visiting niece, a blind baby girl, and an eleven-year-old boy through her work as a missionary nurse.


9th-10th grader's list

Allende, Isabel House of the Spirits The story of the Trueba family in Chile, from the turn of the century to the violent days of the overthrow of the Salvador Allende government in 1973.
Defoe, Daniel Robinson Crusoe The adventures of a man who spends 24 years on an isolated island.
Swift, Jonathan Gulliver's Travels Gulliver encounters dwarfs and giants and has other strange adventures when his ship is wrecked in distant lands.
Mathabane, Mark Kaffir Boy: The True Story of a Black Youth's Coming of Age in Apartheid South Africa A tennis player breaks down racial barriers and escape to a better life in America.
Carson, Rachel Silent Spring Carson's original clarion call to environmental action sets the stage for saving our planet.
Young, Jerry D Shipwrecked Survivors of a cruise ship wrecked during its final voyage face not only the perils that nature throws at them on an uninhabited South Pacific island, but also conflict among themselves.

11th-12th grader's list

Carroll, Lewis Alice's Adventures in Wonderland A fantasy in which Alice follows the White Rabbit to a dream world.
Conrad, Joseph Heart of Darkness The novel's narrator journeys into the Congo where he discovers the extent to which greed can corrupt a good man.
Golding, William Lord of the Flies English schoolboys marooned on an uninhabited island test the values of civilization when they attempt to set up a society of their own.
Paton, Alan Cry, the Beloved Country A country Zulu pastor searches for his sick sister in Johannesburg, and discovers that she has become a prostitute and his son a murderer.
Darwin, Charles The Origin of Species The classic exposition of the theory of evolution by natural selection.
Wilder, Thornton The Bridge of San Louis Rey Five people have fallen to their death in Peru, and Brother Juniper seeks to prove the goodness of God by evaluating their lives to demonstrate exactly why bad things happen.
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Jul. 17, 2006

Athena and her current paintings

This is Athena and these are the painting she has finished this summer.


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Jul. 15, 2006

Sonnets

I was working with 5 young ladies on Thursday. They decided to learn about sonnets. So, we read a few different kinds, went over a few rules, looked at different meters and rhyming schemes. Here are the 'simplified rules' they choose to follow:
1) each line will have 10 syllables
2) the poem will have 14 lines
3) 3- four line stanzas and 1-two line stanza
4) rhyming pattern of a-b-a-b c-d-c-d e-f-e-f g-g
5) the first 3 stanzas mostly describe the last one reflects

The young ladies were all pretty happy with their finished poems, with good reason! They did a great job. I am posting the one that I found--and still do-- find most haunting. It a tiny window into the way the author views love right now....


Love's Spell

By: Athena Rose


She always takes the wrong turn in this maze.

Heart avoiding all the signs thrown at her.

Walking around in circles, eyes are dazed,

Confused, her mind only sees a big blur.


She tells herself she won't let love blind her;

Let it leave her there standing, knees shaking.

To bad its already taken over,

She turns, but nothing changes anything.


Filled with all kinds of bitter jealousy,

She tries to step back and forget it all.

No matter how she tries, she isn't free.

Feelings of frustration and love enthrall.


Are these feelings so complicated?

Is it me being manipulated?


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Jul. 7, 2006

Student Work

I am posting this Poem by one of my students because it shows how she is attempting to use many of the things she is learning. She is working on the Haiku form of poetry, she is working on using seasons to help convey 'subtext', she is working on poem cycles, she is working on metaphors, she is working on building up her vocabulary and spelling skills and most importantly she she is trying to find her voice. She is sixteen and has struggled most of her life with learning differently.

Love's seasons

by Sue


love, like a spring night

calming wind blowing through trees

promised potential


love, a summer night

sultry, enchanting senses

your fire at night


love, an autumn night

leaves colorful, air blows cool

secrets now unfold


love, a winter night

snow falls beautifully bright

wrapped together


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What Type of Homeschooler Are You?

Galileo - If it is worth learning, it has been printed
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