• Dec. 17, 2009 - Special Needs Children: Bring Them Home Where They Belong
Posted By Gena Suarez, The Old Schoolhouse Magazine
More abusive teachers are in the news, this time two teachers tortured and abused several special needs children in their care--children who couldn't speak out about what was happening to them.
Parents, even your special needs children deserve to be at home where it is safe, and where you can be there to protect them. Homeschooling special needs children can be done!
Check out these resources to start:
You can find many more resources by searching online, and don't be afraid to ask questions! Trust is a huge thing for children with special needs. Your child trusts and needs you, not a person that neither you nor your child has never met before. You wouldn't just leave your child with strangers otherwise, why do so just because that stranger works for a public school?
Tia Linschied
Senior Editor of HSB |
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• Dec. 17, 2009 - Communication Corner ~ Countdown To Christmas!
• Dec. 16, 2009 - Background Checks for Homeschoolers?
Posted By Gena Suarez, The Old Schoolhouse Magazine
World Net Daily reports that just may become the case for British parents who wish to homeschool their children. The law stems, in part, to a problem that some parents are using homeschooling as a way to disguise abuse. However, what the law doesn't stipulate is what is required to pass a background check, it invades the rights and privacy of parents, and presumes them guilty until proven innocent.
As I've said before, there are already laws in place--in both Britain and the U.S.--in regards to child abuse. Government agencies are refusing to back those laws up. While there are several homeschool parents in Britain who are in agreement with making tighter restrictions on themselves in order to get rid of the few who give them a bad name, they need to recognize that this bill isn't really about protecting them. It's about a government trying to find ways to slow homeschooling down--period. Find out which parties and agencies are backing this bill and I think you'll find they aren't, and never have been, friendly to homeschooling.
Tia Linschied
Senior Editor of HSB |
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• Dec. 16, 2009 - Homeschooling Through High School ~ The Beginning of Wisdom (Part 2 of 2)
This week at HSB's "Company Front Porch," we've been asked to focus on Christmas. Last week, though, I began a 2-part post about studying the Bible as it relates to Homeschooling Through High School. In continuing that topic today, I think the Lord will allow me to do both things! Grab a cup of java or tea, and join me as we take a "mind's eye journey" back to Bethlehem.
As I write this message, we are 10 days away from Christmas Eve. Now that I no longer have little ones in my home, my heart is more atuned to our celebration on Christmas Eve than on the morning that follows...not that the date really matters! Drawing upon my own experiences of being in a pasture with sheep in my volunteer work at a living history farm here in Illinois, I can close my eyes and imagine the shepherds out in the fields with their flocks by night. I think most of us can, regardless of personal experience. We've read the story, seen it illustrated a hundred times, or watched a dramatization of it on television or on the big screen.
But that's NOT where I wish to take us. I want to go deeper than just that. I want to go back into the Old Testament, and set the stage for that event which took place out in those fields. To do this, I'd like to introduce to you a dear friend of mine, Cindy Zeigler, mother of 4 homeschool graduates (all of whom are now married and 3 of whom are missionaries), and author of several of the best Bible studies our family has ever gone through. In "Understanding the Bible: A Biblical Survey," we read the following (note: Cindy uses the NASB translation in her materials, so that is what is quoted here):
Shortly after the onset of Judah's captivity, the city of Jerusalem was destroyed by the Babylonian king, Nebuchadnezzer. Then, after the Medes and Persians overtook Babylon, and after the 70 year period of Judah's captivity, Judah was allowed to go back to their land and rebuild Jerusalem, the wall, and the temple. There were three post-exilic prophets -- Haggai, Zacharia, and Malachi -- each telling of the plans the Lord has yet for Israel. After the Word of the Lord came to Malachi, the final prophet, there was a long period of silence from Heaven -- 400 years.
The prophecy of Amos came to bear on the Jews. Amos, after being told by a priest to leave the Northern kingdom and go prophecy in the Southern kingdom (Amos 7:12), uttered these words:
Amos 8:11 "Behold, days are coming," declares the Lord GOD, "When I will send a famine on the land, Not a famine for bread or a thirst for water, But rather for hearing the words of the LORD..."
So there was silence.
The voice of Heaven was not heard by the ears of earth.
...for 400 years.
...four hundred long years!
And...
A woman who was called barren,
bore a son, and they called him John.
Suddenly a bright light shown in the darkness...
...a star shining in the east.
A virgin had conceived and had borne a Son, and they called Him Immanuel, "God with us."
Then a voice was heard...
...a voice crying in the wilderness
...calling the people to
"Repent for the Kingdom of the Heavens was at hand."
Now, jumping ahead in the study, we come to the First Advent of Christ in fulfillment of so much prophecy...Cindy writes:
Not far from the city of Bethlehem was a place where shepherds were keeping watch over a flock of sheep. After "Immanuel" was born, an angel appeared to these shepherds.
Luke 2
8 And in the same region there were some shepherds staying out in the fields, and keeping watch over their flock by night. 9 And an angel of the Lord suddenly stood before them, and the glory of the Lord shone around them; and they were terribly frightened. 10 And the angel said to them, "Do not be afraid; for behold, I bring you good news of a great joy which shall be for all the people; 11 for today in the city of David there has been born for you a Savior who is Christ the Lord. 12 And this will be a sign for you: you will find a baby wrapped in cloths, and lying in a manger."
13 And suddenly there appeared with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying, "Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace among men with whom He is pleased."
I can only imagine the explosion of praise that erupted from the heavenly host after 400 years of silence...after the end of the waiting in the heavens for this plan from the time of the creation to finally be put in motion...I can only imagine the sheer terror of those shepherds out in the quiet of that field!!! The NASB translation quoted uses the phrase, "terribly frightened." The KJV says "sore afraid." The NIV offers "terrified." I put myself out there on a quiet night in the fields with a bunch of sleepy sheep and try to imagine the event...I don't know if "terrified" is even descriptive enough!
But the greater point is this...in the continuum of measured time from the creation of the world through the end of this world, dwell upon that which has just happened...in God's plan for His people, given the "silence from Heaven" that had been the reality for 400 long years, put the event of the birth of Christ and the preaching of John the Baptist on the timeline...this is so much more, when placed in the BIG picture, than what we can all too easily isolate as the birth of the Son of God! As big as that is, the reality of the shattering of the silence of Heaven and the beginning of this part of God's incredible plan for His people, which will be completed at the Second Advent of Christ, is so much more!!!
And that brings me back to "Part 2" of last week's post regarding Bible study in the homeschool high school, and the question we began with: "What is God's mind on education?" Here are God's inspired words: "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom: and the knowledge of the holy is understanding" (Proverbs 9:10). Encourage your high schoolers to dig into the Scriptures, and to dig deep. Untold riches are often skimmed right over by all of us when we read what to us seems "familiar territory." I love the way that Cindy and another of my favorite authors, Diana Waring, both keep coming back to the big picture of God's unchanging plan, of His-Story (Diana's word for history), of His promise and His glory. May we all grow in wisdom, knowledge, and understanding in these remarkable times!
May God Bless you and yours during this Christmas Season,
Lori
PS. Cindy's Bible studies are available free of charge at the link provided above and HERE. Donations are accepted if you are able, but are not required. This is a ministry of their church, and the call of God upon their hearts. Studies are available digitally for download, or you may email and request a hard copy. In either case, email and ask for a set of any DVD lectures that go with the studies. The study I've quoted from in this week's post, "Understanding the Bible: A Biblical Survey," is recommended as a "prerequisite" and basis for all of the other studies offered. For homeschoolers, it makes a wonderful one-semester high school study, providing a 1/2 credit (0.5 CU) in Bible. It is 17 weeks long, with assignments 5 days a week, and a 45 minute video lecture to be viewed after completion of each week's study (we watched our DVD lectures on Saturdays, and looked very much forward to each one!). Follow this with "Understanding Hebrews," a 16-week study, and your student will have a full year (1.0CU) of Bible for their transcript. More important, however, will be their spiritual gain: the fear of the LORD which is the beginning of wisdom, and the knowledge of the holy which is understanding. Whatever Bible study you choose to share with your young adults, encourage them to drink deeply from the well of God's Word!
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• Dec. 16, 2009 - Taming the Gifting Chaos
Posted By HomeschoolBlogger Company Blog in
tamingchaos
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I love Christmas! Keeping focus amid the joyous busy hustle of the season is a challenge though. Especially as the children are involved in more outside responsibilities with each passing year.
Here in our home though, we keep it simple. We love our advent devotions, baking goodies together, and playing games as a family. Christmas day is our biggest event of the year, when cousins, grand parents, aunts and uncles come "over the river and through the woods" to our home. (Or more accurately "over the dry creek-bed and through the prairie fields.")
Gift giving is part of sharing the joy, but sometimes it can seem to upstage all the other delights. We've tried a few things to ensure that presents don't distract from our focus on Christ's birth.
—We give only a few individual gifts to each person.
—We open our immediate family presents before the big gathering with relatives. (Typically at our own private celebration on Christmas Eve.) When extended family comes Christmas Day we do exchange gifts and do little stocking stuffers for all, but because all the families who come have opened gifts within their individual family unit separately, packages aren't the primary dynamic of our gathering.
—This year we are opening some of the "family gifts" in the days leading up to Christmas. Every year many of the presents are things I've purchased for the whole family: games, books, family movies or fun art supplies. We opted to open one of these family gifts following each advent devotion through the 12 days leading up to Christmas.
Other families I know have a set number of gifts, such as three per person. Some do an exclusively homemade Christmas, handcrafting through the year to invest their time and skills to create thoughtful presents.
Whatever tips or traditions we employ, the goal is to remind ourselves and our children that the packages we give are just our way of celebrating the Savior and remembering the greatest gift ever--the gift of Jesus Christ!
Have a Merry (and Chaotically Tamed) Christmas!
Domestic Chaos Tamer and Homeschool Mom of Five, Dell writes about home, heart and hearth.
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• Dec. 15, 2009 - Kitchen Moments ~ Christmas
If you can stand yet another Christmas cookie recipe, here's a very simple, yet tasty one:
Sugar-N-Spice Cookies
1/2 cup melted butter
1 cup cane juice crystals (or other sugar of your choice)
1 tsp vanilla
1 egg
1 cup organic unbleached flour (plain unbleached flour is fine, too)
1/2 tsp. ground cloves
1/4 tsp. ground allspice
1/4 tsp. ground cinnamon
dash nutmeg
Mix butter and sugar together. Stir in vanilla and egg until smooth. Mix flour and spices together and then stir into butter mixture until well blended. Drop by teaspoonfuls onto greased baking sheet. Bake at 350 for 12 minutes or until edges just begin to brown and tops start to crinkle and collapse. Cool on pan 30 seconds, then move to wire rack to cool. Enjoy!
May I encourage you to spend some time this week asking Jesus what He would like for His birthday? The answer may surprise you!
Perhaps your family could join ours in baking a batch of these cookies to share with those less fortunate than us who could use a bit of Christmas cheer this season. Be sure to tell them the reason for the gift ... It's Jesus' Birthday!
Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world:
For I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in:
Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I was in prison, and ye came unto me.
Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungred, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink?
When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed thee?
Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee?
And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me. Matthew 25:34-40
I pray your family has a blessed Christmas.
Catherine
Catherine Love lives in the heart of Texas with her husband Carl, and their 3 daughters, Sarah, Hannah, and Cana. They enjoy cooking, gardening, and learning new things as they seek to live a lifestyle of learning together as a family. You can read Catherine's Kitchen Adventures and more on her blog- Seeds of Love. |
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• Dec. 14, 2009 - Craft Corner ~ Christmas
Posted By HomeschoolBlogger Company Blog in
CraftCorner
Christmas is looming closer! If you would like to make a few decorations, or you still need to make a couple more gifts for friends or family, then check out the wonderful links below!
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Owl Garland ~ I'm not really sure what this has to do with Christmas, but I decided to add it, since it is so cute!
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Pine Tree Sachets ~ Make these aromatic trees to give or gifts, or even make a couple to place around your own home!
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Minutia ~ Knitters will love this collection of tiny sweaters ornaments.
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Partridge Ornament ~ This makes me think about Quail more than Partridge, but then, I don't think I've ever actually seen a Partridge...
Homemade Gifts
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Peasant Skirt ~ Every girl will want one of these for Christmas! They shouldn't take too long to make, either.
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Adventure Pouch ~ I think this would be perfect for little boys to carry their treasures around in! Of course, grown-ups might like one too.
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Embroidery ~ Stitch an verse, or inspiring quote, to give to one of your loved ones.
Eyebright enjoys crafts of all kinds, especially knitting and crochet. You can find her blogging at Defective Compositions.
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• Dec. 14, 2009 - Classical Education ~ Christmas
Posted By HomeschoolBlogger Company Blog in
classical
| December is a hard month to continue on with school. With all of the preparation and excitement that comes at this time of year, keeping to a regular routine is hard for our family. Usually, when December hits, we delve far from our regular school path and sprinkle our learning time with more of a Christmas flair. I found the Teaching Mom's Advent website about three years ago and we have been using it ever since for the month of December.
This site has Bible readings, art history and appreciation, history, geography, music, book suggestions and just plain fun. All of these offerings are rooted in Christmas and Advent. The first page gives you a calendar of the Advent season (the site has not been updated since 2008 but it is still usable.) When you click on a day, it gives you a plethora of ideas and readings for that day. Most days revolve around a theme which make us theme-oriented moms happy.
This is an awesome site and it is used to full capacity by our family, year after year. Our Advent season would not be complete without ideas from this Advent site.
Julia lives on the Canadian Prairies with her husband, homeschooling her 3 children (10,8,6) and is attempting to give them a Classical Education. You can read more at her blog. |
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• Dec. 14, 2009 - It's Beginning to Look A Lot Like Christmas
For some of you it's finally snowing, and for the rest of us the wind is merely blowing, but the Christmas season has begun! The one thing we probably have in common, no matter where we live, is a tight budget. Still, making Christmas special is easy if we focus on the meaning of the season and not the material side of things.
How many of you connect oranges with Christmas? I don't just mean because you read about it in a book, but truly associate the fruit with the season? When I was a girl I spent every Christmas at my Grandma's house. There were two, very simple acts that, to this day, I hunger for oranges and look at brown paper sacks with fondness.
My grandparents had a good friend named Bob White. I only remember his name because I would look at him trying to figure out why his parents would name him after a quail. Every year on the day our family celebrated Christmas he would show up with a large box, full of oranges, nuts, and assorted other goodies. All of us grandchildren would run to the kitchen for an orange and the adults would gather around Mr. White to wish him a Merry Christmas and catch up on family news.
On Sunday the family would go to my grandparents church and after the service was over brown paper sacks would be passed out, each one containing an orange, and chocolate covered nuts, and other Christmas candy--the loose kind, not the individually wrapped sort, because back then people could trust each other and we weren't worried about getting germs because someone had handled our chocolates.
So what does any of this have to do with reason for the season and tight budgets? Just that it was the simple things that I remember, not the extravagances. It was Bob White giving what he knew would be useful to our family. It was a church family not in the least bit concerned with making the wrapping as fancy as the gift itself. Not that oranges and bulk chocolates are all together fancy, but the appearance of the gift wasn't as important as the gift.
Give what you can, give what can be used, give it with your whole heart, and no apologies! If a visit is all you can afford, then give it!
To this day oranges are still an important part of my families Christmas. Someone will buy the box, as Mr. White is no longer with us, and the tradition has moved to eating the oranges late at night, after everything has settled down. We sit around the table happily eating our oranges and talking about Christmas memories. That gift of oranges has lasted a lifetime for me! My children have never even met Mr. White, but they enjoy the gift he brought to our family.
I hope you will enjoy the Porch articles on Christmas this week. Some will help you with your holiday preparations and keeping things simple.
Won't you join us? Tell us about your Christmas memories and tips, either in a comment or leave us a link to your blog post.
Merry Christmas!
Tia Linschied
Senior Editor of HSB |
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• Dec. 10, 2009 - Communication Corner ~ When All Your Family's Not Christian at Christmas
This is one of my very last podcasts before I go off the air in 2010, but it's a very special one! Come join me live as I talk about how we can have a special Christmas with family and communicate in love with our non Christian relatives. It can be a challenge for both sides when not everyone has the same beliefs. Non Christians can feel badgered and Christians can feel like they can't express their beliefs. How can we have a blessed time with relatives this time of year? Effective Communication skills! Come join me for some tips and share your experiences today: 8am PST/11am EST http://www.talkshoe.com/tc/19736
Tips are based upon my study, Say What You Mean: Defending the Faith. Check it out here.
Can't make it live? We hope to be able to keep uploading our audios after the show, so come live if you can!
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