Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Homschooling Wednesday

Math - graphing and multiplying exponents
Math Center - Archimedean Solids

Language Arts - Finally finished Essay Voyage

History - the life of children in 18th Century Virgina

Science - using microscopy, scanning electron microscopes, and x-ray diffraction to see minuscule structures.

Read Aloud - Another version of Prometheus and Pandora which lead to a long discussion about the roots of historical anti-feminism.

Japanese - Katakana and predicting weather

Watching - Xena

Reading - Uncle Tom's Cabin

Piano - practice practice practice

Hebrew School

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Just a small town girl

Today I am feeling grateful for the small town we live in. I am inspired to make a top ten list of things that made me happy today.

1. Living one block from the river. Recently it has been steely gray with white snow banks reflected on the edges. It's poetic.

2. That Pere job downtown is so close that he can come home for lunch everyday.

3. Looking out the window high up in my therapist's office where I can see half the town at the many historic churches, and buildings.

4. That we have a Chocolate Cafe.

5. The girl with pink hair at the Chocolate Cafe. I wanted to say "I love your hair." But she walked by to fast.

6. That we can afford a house that it large enough that we can have a baby grand piano.

7. The 24 hour Poetry Reading Event coming up.

8. Our AWESOME and FREE Math Center downtown.

9. Our Temple that has a young Rabbi and so many friendly congregants.

10. The many smart, interesting, nice people I have the good fortune to meet.

Monday, February 22, 2010

It's been too long since I last posted. Honestly, I am spending more time on Facebook.

But I need to remember that this blog is also a journal for me, a history of our lives together and a portfolio for Zoe's education. And, with that in mind, I am inspired to post more often.


For Zoe's 9th birthday we gave her the present of sleeping over at the Field Natural History Museum.


There best part was running around the different exhibits all by ourselves. I mean, isn't that something you've always wanted to do? We weren't really in there alone, but in certain places we could pretend we were. The tour of the Egyptian exhibit by flashlight was second best, only because it was a bit crowded. Overall it was great, though next time I would bring an air mattress rather than try to sleep on the hard floor with only a sleeping bag.

Here are just the highlights of what Zoe has been doing in her homeschooling

Math - Life of Fred Algebra and going to the Math Center 3 times a week. Yesterday one of the mom's at the Math Center asked me how old Zoe was and what math curriculum I used and then she complimented Zoe a lot on her math knowledge. One of the projects Zoe is working on at Math Center is writing an explanation of Base 2, 3, 4, 5, etc. for their website. They will also be doing a project on fractional bases.

Language Arts - Zoe has finished the Michael Clay Thompson Voyage series and will be starting the Word Within The Word and Magic Lens series. This is a secondary curriculum for gifted students and one of Zoe's favorite classes. She especially loves the poetry component.

History - Reading about Colonial America. Last week was a perfect storm about Slavery. She was reading about slavery in history, reading excerpts from Abraham Lincoln's speeches in Language Arts, reading Uncle Tom's Cabin in Literature and watched an episode of Hercules about slavery.

Science - I just got a new high school biology book for Zoe. It was written by biochemist Mahlon Hoagland, who discovered transfer RNA.

We talked to some science savvy friends and decided we could skip middle school science now that she is pretty solid in her algebra. We will problem just end up doing Biology, Chemistry and Physics in a loop with more advanced material as we go along.

Literature - Reading Uncle Tom's Cabin. Zoe is loving this literature choice. She says she is excited to be learning so much about slavery and that she really likes how Harriet Beecher Stowe brings the reader into the story. Did you know Uncle Tom's Cabin was the best selling novel of the 19th century? It was the best selling book of that century after the Bible.

Music History - Professor Carol is doing a great job teaching us both about music history. The videos are very interesting, and I really feel like I am learning a lot about music from a cultural perspective. I know Zoe is too.

Japanese - more of the same. This week she is focusing on reading katakana and describing what people look like and what they are wearing.

Reading - Zoe has been really into acting out Shakespeare's plays with her dolls. She spends a lot of her free time doing this, in the afternoon and before bed. Brian and I sometimes do it with her.

I realized that she would get more out of Shakespeare if she was more familiar with the Greek Myths. She has already read D'Aulaire's Greek Myths a few times, that is a great book. But I felt like she needed more. So we started reading Nathanial Hawthorn's Tanglewood Tales, but even that, whilst having excellent vocabulary, was still edited for children. Much of the passion was taken out, which is kind of misleading, in my opinion. For example, the book doesn't mention that Zeus was the white bull that took Europa, nor why.

Bulfinch's Mythology was a little better but still written for children in 1855, so there was censorship of the passionate appetites of the Gods. And hey, the passionate appetites of the Gods is what a lot of the stories are about.

So this weekend I found Gods and Heroes of Ancient Greece, an English Edition from the German author Gustav Schwab. These stories seem to be oriented towards adolescents, at least as far at the content including Zeus's exploits with mortal women.

Zoe is enjoying the Hunger Games and Catching Fire, both by Suzanne Collins. Other books she has read recently are Gregor the Overland and City of Ember. She liked them both.

Mostly though she has been rereading/staging Shakespeare and reading her new Spyology book, which is really cool.

Whew! That is a lot but I am not done yet.

Zoe has a piano competition coming up in two weeks so most of her piano time has been spent getting ready for that.

She also auditioned for and got into a local performing dance troupe. They started rehearsals last week. They perform mostly over the summer, doing over a dozen dances at festivals, charity events, and in small theaters. Zoe is extra excited because one of her good friends from the neighborhood is also in the group.

Zoe also auditioned for a part in Seussical the Musical which is playing downtown South Bend at the Civic Theatre. She got in the Who Chorus and a part as a Fish Lady. But, unfortunately, the Seussical rehearsal times conflicted with her dance group's rehearsal, so she is not doing the play.

She is pretty busy. It can be a struggle to make sure she has enough downtime to just play and be bored and then inventive (because that is often the order of things.)

These days she is homeschooling from 8:30 - 3:30 with an hour and 10 minutes for lunch.

I am keeping busy too. I have been running for seven weeks now. I am up to running for 30 minutes at a stretch. I am really proud of myself because I have been able to keep this up and also because I am enjoying it. I really never thought I would enjoy running but I do. I imagine I will like it even more when I am not running in the snow.

I have also been eating 1200 - 1500 calories a day since the new year. Though I don't really stick to the calorie limits on the weekends. But I don't gorge myself either. But I eat what Pere cooks, which is usually high in calories, or we go out to eat. But I have been losing weight and it makes me happy to be taking care of myself.

My book is going pretty well. Some days I can get five or six pages written. Some days I feel like my writing is crap and no one will want to read it. But, I know I have written some good stuff, so I can keep on editing the parts I am less happy with until I am happy with them. Writing is so much about editing.

I am also reading Mean Mothers by Peg Streep. It is REALLY good. It has made me cry several times and I realize that I am not done with my grief and maybe I never will be. But I guess that is natural. Here is an excerpt from Mean Mothers

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Starfish and Poetry



Zoe started off with some Life of Fred Algebra.
Then she wrote three poems with instructions from the back of the MCTLA poetry book.
Then she read a chapter on the history of New Netherlands aka New York and New Jersey.
She loved dissecting a star fish for science. She was not squeamish at all.
She did her Professor Carol music history homework.
For lunch she watched a British television show called Primeval. It is from the people who did Walking With Dinosaurs. It is fictional but has dinosaurs in it.
Then for Mommy Time she wanted to take turns reading from Midsummer Night's Dream.
Then she read 4 chapters from Uncle Tom's Cabin and did a little narration on it afterwards.
Lastly she spent an hour working on her piano piece for the Stickley competition.
After homeschooling she had her Pet Shop dolls perform Shakespeare's MSND.
and she helped her father make a google site for his music and created a google presentation... for me.

If you are squeamish about dissections don't look below
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Monday, February 8, 2010

Math - factorials and exponents

Language Arts - Read bit of of U.S. Grant memoirs and looked on a globe the geography around the Aegean Sea, and created a Works Cited page for her DNA essay.

History - the Dutch colony in America. Identifying primary and secondary sources.

Science - Hatching brine shrimp for her microscope. And compared a Zoe hair to a Charlotte hair under the microscope. And looked at a Cicada leg.

Japanese - Describing people using nouns and modifying clauses

Reading - Finished The Minotaur in Nathanial Hawthorn's Tanglewood Tales and began reading Shakespeare Much Ado About Nothing

Art - painting

Music History - OnlineG3 Webinar The effects of the printing press on music and the gramophone.

Lightening Literature - Walt Whitman and Voice Thread on Leaves of Grass.

Piano - practicing for Stickley competition.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Zoe's 9th Birthday and Slumber Party

A salt snowball from the Mojave desert from C.T.


Matching Outfit and clothes for American Girl Rebecca from Grandmere and Grandpere


Mircoscope from Tante Juliet


Look of surprise at the Night at the Museum gift.


Dissection Kit


Cool but ewwww! :)


SLUMBER PARTY






Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Happy Birthday Zoe!!!


Just Born


One


Two


Three


Four


Five


Six


Seven


Eight


Nine!!!