This blog is about their education. It's a bit of an open house every time you check in to the site. We're constantly examining the fact that "to whom much is given much is expected." (Lk 12:48) And, Thank you for your support :-)
Friday, May 28, 2010
Is it enough for you?
16«Çünkü Tanrı dünyayı o kadar çok sevdi ki, biricik Oğlunu verdi. Öyle ki, O'na iman edenlerin hiçbiri mahvolmasın, ama hepsi sonsuz yaşama kavuşsun.
Monday, May 24, 2010
Thursday, May 20, 2010
According to the Placement Test for Saxon Math...
Our rising oldest places into Saxon Math 5/4 for the fall. I'm thrilled and look forward to more math adventures with the math program that the Daddy likes. Until then, we continue working on division in MathUSee Delta and maybe a little Epsilon about fractions. Very few howls of disdain were uttered by said student. Being the first born, he was generally pleased to please.
Monday, May 17, 2010
Are Molecules Attracted by Charges?
"Adventures with Atoms and Molecules, book 1" by Mebane and Rybolt is written with a down-to-earth perspective. I wonder if they knew that a home-school mom, with a healthy love of science and maybe even chemistry, would be using it to teach her kids about charged molecules. The experiment went off without a hitch and my kids had very few hang-ups about writing the lab sheet (they haven't been doing this task as often as we are directed). We talked it through and even explained the whole thing later to the nuclear engineer dad at the dinner table. Yippee for my kids at chemistry today and for Paige at Elemental Science who put the whole package together!
(spelling mistakes when whole-heartedly completing a lab sheet in second grade are allowed and encouraged if one is actually answering the questions oneself with one's own words.)
(spelling mistakes when whole-heartedly completing a lab sheet in second grade are allowed and encouraged if one is actually answering the questions oneself with one's own words.)
Friday, May 14, 2010
Last Artistic Pursuits Project
Officially, we finished Millet from the last chapter of the Artistic Pursuits book. The assignment asked for a diorama. I pictured a painful ocean box with lots of blue for water and fish and other squiggly things. But, another idea from the crowd suggested the back yard. We look out at it from our "classroom" and it is pretty easy to break down into pieces that each person could work on by themselves. G3 took on the storage shed and compost bin. G2 did the fence all by herself, except for the part about gluing it to the base which took some folding magic. G1 was in charge of the non-scalped tree and the greenery behind the tree. The twins took on the garden plot and hostas that surround it. I think they also had the job of the boat and trailor too. All in all, each learned lessons about teamwork, 3 dimensional work and scale of each piece. The tree stood up with a corndog stick behind it. You can see the white fence thermometer that I got for Christmas last year. And you can see the green trash cans that have part of our raised garden in them. Soon, I'll post pictures of the real garden all planted and growing.
Sunday, May 9, 2010
HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY!
I am grateful to the Higher Power and Intellegent Designer that He didn't listen to my plan about how my life should go. All I wanted was two hands full, but it was His plan that I should have three, and His plan is soo much more BRILLIANT than anything I could have EVER thought of in my wildest dreams! Plus, I get to teach them and demonstrate a life worth living.