Monday, March 28, 2011

Memory Work Monday

This Monday is basically a repeat of last week. Because we were having some work done at our house we had to stay elsewhere from Friday and today. School didn't happen as much due to our temporary surroundings. However we will have really nice finished hardwood floors, thanks to Tigger! He spent all weekend making them beautiful. I'll post some pictures when I can.

So for those reasons we will continue with Shakespeare as our memory work at least until Wednesday. Next week will be a poem.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Memory Work Monday

Memory work, we've had been forgetting to do it. (hahaha) Now that Z is older we decided to move into memorizing more substantial works. My book of choice for memory work is Living Memory by Andrew Campbell. The book itself has memory pieces that will carry you from elementary to high school. It's great for a classical educator as it has a large portion of Latin and Greek selections. However, the quality of the other selections are just as wonderful. We've been utilizing it since its publication.

We diverted a little in the last month as we've been study poetry and focusing on our writing skills. Z's current piece is Shakespeare's Sonnet 18. I'm giving him two weeks for this piece and by Friday he will have it memorized. We've played with the piece in several ways. One was to rewrite the sonnet for an alternative audience. I posted both of those last week, the Redneck sonnet 18 and the Dirty Job sonnet 18. Silliness abounds in our house AND it actually helps him memorize it. Don't be afraid to be silly!

Here is sonnet 18, I'll post how he does on Friday.


SONNET 18

Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? 
Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And summer's lease hath all too short a date: 
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimm'd; 
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd;
But thy eternal summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;
Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest: 
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this and this gives life to thee.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Writing Course: Day Ten and Wrap-up


Day ten was not all that productive, but it's all good. Maybe that's my motto for the week. Day ten started with massive insomnia on my part, not unusual. Insomnia has been a part of my life off and on for a few years. Some days are better than others.

Back to school. We did a few activities and I had a light day planned anyway. We worked on our Stuart Little narration and Z finished his paragraph exercise. We discussed a few other items on the agenda and called it a day. I grumbled through the rest of the day and took a nap.

Note to self: Do not schedule any intense studies for the same week as a time change.

Wrap-up: I'm still assessing where we are now. I plan on finishing Paragraph Writing Made Easy and Igniting your Writing while I finish reading through Bravewriter. I'm gathering, absorbing, and pondering all the information I gathered. I'm glad we took the time for this little experiment. I'm exhausted, Z worked hard, and tomorrow we return to our regular schedule.

We took the road less traveled for the last two weeks, we are dusty and dirty yet all the better for it.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Writing Course: Day Nine

Day Nine was an interesting diversion because of the cultural holiday. Yes, St. Patrick's Day. When you have Irish heritage and you're married to someone who has Irish heritage (and an Irish name to boot) you celebrate the day. "Cultural Studies" would be appropriate title.

Actually Tigger has been out of town and returned home in time to celebrate with us. We made it through our Stuart Little reading and part of  a Paragraph Writing Made Easy exercise. Then we went out to lunch. We're in a new town and discovering the town is part of our agenda, so lunch was our adventure for the day. Great little restaurant. Dh had a Reuben sandwich, his version of an Irish meal.

After that we attended our small towns small St. Patrick's Day parade. I think the crowd was bigger than the parade itself. It was quaint and I'm trying to talk the boys into doing our own float next year. They were not as excited about the idea as I was. We could be "The Classical homeschoolers of __________" we might be the only ones here. *grin*

Z is still working on Java. He did some of that yesterday. It was a short school day. However, as I said earlier in the week, next year we're taking off during the time change. We are still not acclimated...but that story will continue on day ten.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Writing Course: Day Eight

What does the future hold? The Magic 8 ball does not say. I can tell you about the present though. Today was good. Insomnia hit last night and I was up for over two hours in the middle of the night. We renamed our house Zombieland for today. Z was like one as well. We don't do time change well.

Today's study started with a practice of Shakespeare's Sonnet 18. Today we rewrote any version, I love my child. We opted to do a Dirty Jobs version. We collaborated, here is our take:

                   Dirty Job Sonnet 18

Shall I compare thee to a dirty job
Thou art more odorous and more horrendous
Rough winds do make me vomit upon the sea
And summer's lease hath all too much to rot
Sometimes too hot the toilet on the boat doth burn
And often is his nasal passages assailed
And every thing doth sometimes decompose
By chance or nature's changing course untrimmed
But thy eternal filth shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that smell thou owest
Nor shall Mike wanderest in the shade
When in eternal dirtiness thou growest
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see
So long live Dirty Job which gives life to thee. 


That counted as our work on adjectives for today. We then moved to Stuart Little and he did wonderful using complete and full sentences, YEA!!! Igniting your writing was working with adverbs. Those were a little more complex but we worked through it. 

The most interesting part of today was his free write. Five minutes, anything he wanted. He wrote Java code. :lol: After our science discussion yesterday he had spent part of the morning and break working on Java. So naturally it would show up in his free write. Not what I had expected, but things seldom are with this child. He continues to surprise me with his unique outlook. I look at him sometimes wishing I could peer into his thoughts. I wonder if he realizes how cool he really is? I tell him, I do, but I wonder if he's buying it yet. 

Homeschooling him is always an adventure. I've learned as much from him during this process. But children have a way of doing that, teaching us by simply being themselves. 

Writing Course: Day Seven

7, Medieval   

Day Seven was very revealing. We corrected a few small issues from his paragraph work yesterday. We took a writing break to talk about our art study of week. This week's picture was Tiger by Kawanabe Kyosai, it reminded Z of our cat. 

Next we moved to our read-aloud, Stuart Little. I mentioned WHY I picked this book in an earlier post. This book is just fun to read! E. B. White is a master of the written work and the quality sentences roll off the page. Z and I laughed at Stuart's adventure on the sailboat. I was engaged, he was engaged, it was a beautiful moment. All over a book. If you haven't read Stuart Little aloud to your children, you should. Even if  you children are older. The chapters are short and it would be a fun exercise to dissect the literary qualities of the book. You don't necessarily see those things if you read the book on your own as a younger child. 

We worked on adjectives in Igniting Your Writing and rewrote the example, mad lib style. Not exactly the way the assignment was supposed to go, but it was more fun. 

Next I had slated for Z to read a chapter from a text I had downloaded. It was a chapter on earthquakes and  would be relevant to current events. We've studied a little about them in the past, but he's watched so many science programs I knew the information might be redundant. Part of my goal was to see if he COULD read well from the computer screen and he was going to outline the piece. Halfway through he balked. He expressed with great passion an extreme desire NOT to read more about earthquakes. Writing is communication. His oral communication was clear. My heart skipped a beat. What about the entire course of earth science we have planned for next year? I gulped. 

His statement turned into a one hour and thirty minute discussion. We started at earthquakes, moved to Pangaea, a quick discussion on religions, cultures, racism, conspiracy theories (again! he brought it up), economics, nuclear energy, alternate energy, infrastructure, politics. At the politics I stopped and brought out Plato (which I've only skimmed one section of in my own reading). I read the editor's note "Plato sought a cure for the ills of society not in politics but in philosophy, and arrived at his fundamental and lasting conviction that those ills would never cease until philosophers became rulers or rulers philosophers." I gave my hearty agreement to that statement. 

After a few more diversions I asked about science for next year. I do all my planning before May so if he's changing his mind,I needed to know NOW. He did. We looked up all the areas of science. Since we will do chem, bio, and physics in high school (and we've already done those) he opted for Computer Science. We're a techie family so I agreed, knowing Tigger would be thrilled. Writing is communication. If nothing else he learned how to communication a desire for something different. 

Z was different by the end of our discussion. I had fulfilled a love language, I had listened, I had made his words important, even if they weren't ones written on a page. Plus anytime you can use Stuart Little and Plato in the same day, it's a good day. 

Monday, March 14, 2011

Writing Course: Day Six

Day six was a Monday. That summarizes the day nicely. The writing portion was good. I'm starting to see some of the information Z has absorbed coming out of his mouth. He wasn't even aware how he was using what he learned. Happy mommy time.

We started with Stuart Little. Today I continued with asking pointed questions to help him form his narrative. It went well. I also had him complete a copywork from a section of writing. Note: E.B. White is great to use for copywork.

He then practiced his Shakespeare sonnet. Friday is test day. We went through a few exercises talking about slang, cliches, and sexist language in formal writing.

He worked on paragraphs with Paragraph Writing Made Easy. He did these exercises on his own, as well as his science for the day.

He's almost finished with the first book in the Keys to the Kingdom series by Garth Nix, Mister Monday. He found a series that truly appeals to him. I knew it would and I'm so excited to hear that he is excited to read the rest of the series. It's wacky and weird enough for us. It reminds me of Alice's Adventure in Wonderland in some respects, or a dream gone mad.

Our diversion into writing has been very beneficial. I can't wait to see how the rest of the way goes, and thankfully it won't be Monday anymore.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Mom's Five Minute Free Write

I've been reading through my Bravewriter today. One suggestion was a five minute freewrite for the teacher. My brain is frazzled today, the writing reflects that. For your reading enjoyment, my free write: 


I'm supposed to do a free write for five minutes. I'm staring at a blank page. I have a thousand ideas running through my head, but none of them have to do with writing. We have ants in the house. WE don't know how they are getting in, but they are very computer literate ants, both Z and I have found them near or IN! our computers. Yes there were three ants in my netbook this week. Yuck.

In a period of five minutes today the dog got into the trash and I spilled lemonade on the floor because someone didn't put the lid back on the what do you call it..pitcher, that's it. The lid was not on the pitcher.

My desk is a mess and that's pretty much the state of my mind right now too. I'm trying to do too much, as usual. I don't know what's for dinner, I'm sure someone will ask me soon. The cat is sick and I'm trying to not let him eat paper. I have hordes of it on my desk, which is a mess.

I cut Z's hair today. It's look decent, I hope he's okay with it. The trimmers we borrowed from mama and papa aren't as good as ours, but ours are in the storage, along with half of my life. I keep thinking I brought something and then I can't find it.

We had a good day yesterday. Spent time with mama and papa, saw wind farms, bought books. Yes, I adore books. Now I have a silly song in my head. Five minutes is up, thankfully. 

Friday, March 11, 2011

Writing Course: Day Four and Five

I'd like to say I waited to post simply so I could use my favorite driver's number, 45. Actually I got busy last night and didn't update. 45 is the number of Kyle Petty, one of the nicest men in Nascar. But this isn't about my obsession with Nascar is it? This is about writing.

Yesterday, day four, was interesting. Interesting is a word I used when I'm not sure how I feel. We ended up doing a partial day of school, but what we did was productive. We started Stuart Little as a read-aloud. Stuart Little, yes, he's way too old to NEED Stuart Little as a read-aloud, but it had a purpose. One, majority of my books are still in storage :toetap05:. Two, I had picked up this nice colored illustration copy at a thrift store not too long ago.

We read two chapters and he answered questions WWE style. I then read the narrative to him and we'll work on incorporating that into writing next week.

He also did his reading and then we had a fire drill. I am extremely heartbroken to hear the news out of Pennsylvania this week about the family that lost so many children in a house fire. I cried and immediately thought "I can't imagine".  Then I cried more as I realized that they probably can't imagine it quite yet either.

We had gone through a quick fire drill when we moved in December. However, this time we discussed more. I reiterated how he was supposed to exit the house. This is the first house where we've had two stories and his bedroom is the entire upstairs (yes, it is that cool. It's a dormer room.) We talked about what he was responsible for getting out of the house, himself alone. The pets ONLY if they are in the room with him.

I'm glad we covered it again. Teenage brain has fogged up some of the details we've drilled into him over the years. So PLEASE COVER FIRE SAFETY IN YOUR HOME THIS WEEKEND!!!!! and PLEASE DON'T FORGET THOSE TEENS!!!

What does this have to do with writing? Nothing, although we might do a report on fire safety. We didn't get much done yesterday, but we did something important.

Today, Day five, was a planned field trip with my parents. My mother is my son's buddy. He adores her and she him. I've stated it before, but they share a birthday and probably a few other secrets. We went out to eat, to a Borders that is closing. I found some deals. I also found some deals at the thrift store.

At the thrift store I found a 1966 version of Classical Rhetoric for the Modern Student and a copy of Writers INC : A Student Handbook for Writing and Learning. Both were 1.79 each! What a steal.

I then came home and ordered Bravewriter's Writer's Jungle from Homeschool Buyers Co-op. It's on sale for 50% off until the end of March. I'm printing it out now. (insert biting nail smiley) I typically print large items thirty pages at a time, just so I can catch any issues before there are so many pages to look through.

So it was a productive in-service day for me. One the way home we drove through an area with wind farms. The windmills are enormous and very cool. We saw farm fields with ancient tractors and modern technology side-by-side.

We also stopped at a rural cemetery. One I am very familiar with. I have many relatives buried there including my father's mother and grandparents. One branch of our family tree goes back four greats (from Z) there. He's been there before, but was too little to remember. We're one of those dorky families that enjoys cemeteries. Three of the family member buried there I knew well, so I do feel it honors them to visit. It's also the most peaceful cemetery in the world. You can see the wind turbines from there and hear an occasional cow in the distance. So we managed to sneak a little bit of history and science at the same time.

We've also been watching the coverage of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami. Our history focus this year has been Asian history. We also started learning Japanese this year. We'd put it on hold with all the chaos we've had. However, grief doesn't need a translator.  I hope to find some way we can help those devastated by this incident.

My dad was stationed in Japan in the military. Although it was years ago it was helpful to discuss it with him. I also decided to add an interview with my dad about his time there as part of Z's studies this year. They need to spend some time together. As we have seen this week, life is indeed too short.

So while writing may have been our focus this week, we completed some important things too. Spending time with those you love can never be a waste of time. Today we literally took the road less traveled on the way, and we are better for it.

Well Bravewriter is now printed. Now I wonder if I have a binder big enough?


Thursday, March 10, 2011

Writing Course: Day Three


Day three has come and gone and we are stronger for it. Z worked with words, paragraphs, and narratives today. Our first task was to read a short book and I asked questions, thereby creating a narrative. This was taught in Writing with Ease. I started to see something in him while he was answering my questions. I studied and made notes.

When we moved to sentences I saw it, like discovering there is a sparkly vampire in your midst, I found it. (I only use that analogy because Z and I have had many conversations about who believes that vampires sparkle. He finds it illogical) What I discovered is something I knew, but it's like peeling that layer of understanding. Z is more literal than I imagined. He has such a sense of humor, a vagueness about his concern for certain areas of his life. When it comes to instructions and writing he needs more specifics. Alas, HE IS like me, he needs the details. (I'm quite sure Tigger is going to be happy to hear that one *giggle*) He was trying to be overly perfectionistic about his writing. Since our everyday speech is more casual that was a surprise.

As the light shines on this epiphany I see that he is like that in some areas. I attributed it to his youth/inexperience, not necessarily his personality. This helps me tremendously. I can frame assignments differently, I understand how to teach someone who needs details. *details, glorious details*

The rest of the day went smoothly and I'm seeing a path in the forest emerge. We just needed an aerial view to show us the way.

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Day Two


Day two went more as planned. We covered outlines, enumerative paragraphs, strong verbs, and a game of Yahtzee. Our first activity was to outline an article in our state conservation magazine. I made two copies of the article and we numbered the paragraphs. I then had Z highlight the topic sentence of each paragraph. He then made a one level outline from what he highlighted. We worked on this together, although he picked out the topic in the later paragraphs.

Our strong verbs activity came from Igniting Your Writing activity B1. We discussed synonyms, connotation, and made up funny sentences. Z smiled.

Our next activity was from lesson five in Paragraph Writing Made Easy. We discussed enumerative paragraphs and Z worked the examples mostly on his own.

We played a few other games including a game of Yahtzee. That helped clear our mind and gave us a few moments of non-writing activity.

Day two was more productive on the writing scene. It was also a more frustrating day as we dealt with the distraction of the dog and a teenage boy's need for food. Tomorrow is going to be an adventure, I can't wait. This is turning out to be fun.

Monday, March 07, 2011

Writing Course: Day One

I have a schedule, an agenda for the next two weeks. Today we did not complete said schedule. Today was simply another realization that we are destined to forge our own path through the forest of writing. *sigh* I'm happy though. It seems the floodgates of creativity have been opened, just not how I had planned.

We started well with a discussion on words. We dissected the Gettysburg Address by highlighting the powerful words. We discussed the impact of a three minute speech that chose the correct words over a long drawn out one. We then read a Shakespeare Sonnet. Number 18. Powerful and rich in language. We read through a paraphrase to understand the meaning. I reminded him that someday he might want to date a girl (like when he's 30!) and that she would think it was cool if he could recite Shakespeare to her. This is when we talked about having an audience for your writing was important. At which point I ad-libbed a Redneck rendition of Sonnet 18. Z loved it. So for your reading enjoyment:

The Real Shakespeare Sonnet 18


SONNET 18


Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? 
Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And summer's lease hath all too short a date: 
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And often is his gold complexion dimm'd; 
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd;
But thy eternal summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;
Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest: 
So long as men can breathe or eyes can see,
So long lives this and this gives life to thee.

Paula's Redneck Version:
You are just like the sweatball hanging off my nose
Except you look better and don't smell
Even though the wind will blow the sweatball off my nose
and this summer is awful,
and I'll be sweating more because
because of this infernal humidity.
Don't worry about them grey hairs, 
that fact you never lost the weight from our last child,
You still look hot in that tube top. 
Even when you die I won't think of you that way
because whenever I have a sweatball hanging off my nose I'll think of you
So long as people step outside and start to sweat for no good reason
You will live forever. 

After this we took a lunch break. Apparently at some point the floodgates of creativity were opened. Z came back to class with a renewed enthusiasm for creating...a world in Minecraft, nothing to do with writing, nothing to do with the rest of schedule. *grin* We spent two hours together designing the world. He drew a rough sketch on the dry erase board (great investment!) and then drew a scale version on some graph paper I found in the basement yesterday. 

The joy on his face was unmistakable. We had a great discussion on what needed to go where, how to stay symmetrical in his design (his choice), and why he wanted things to appear as such. We only completed one more of the assignment I had hoped, but today was a good day. 

He'll remember me helping him be creative more than he would the assignment on paragraphs I had so diligently planned. *sigh* I did remind him that tomorrow we needed to do more to make up for today. 

Someone also linked this video when I mentioned our diversion in sonnets. It reminded me that there are many ways to use a Shakespearean sonnet. This one made me laugh. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WxB1gB6K-2A

I can't wait for tomorrow. I have a schedule, we'll see what happens. 


Conquering the Dragon of Words

I admit to having an odd fascination with dragons. I like good dragons and naughty dragons and stories about dragons. So when searching for a title for our little detour into writing dragons came to mind. I even started a little story about the Dragon of Words, Words is a place in my story.

For the next two weeks, Z and I are focusing on writing. Getting his writing up to speed, out of the forest, into the light, however you want to phrase it. I spent most of last week figuring out how to do with while not spending any money. My only real investment was fifteen dollars for a new ink cartridge (it was low anyway) and one dollar and fifty cents for two sets of dividers on clearance. Oh, I did also spend seven dollars on a new white board, but I needed that anyway.

I feel like I've been dragging Z through the narrow path of the forest of writing. Now we're going to take a dragon's view and look at the forest as a whole. How, you ask?

Basically I've gathered many of the half used writing sources I own. Thankfully, for him, most of my books are still in storage. This might have turned into a month long deviation. (insert mad laughing smiley). One bite at a time we are going through these programs. I'm not totally a meanie. When I discussed this with some friends they suggested NOT stopping math for this time period. While I agree I knew I'd have mutiny if all we did was focus on writing and algebra. So I'm inserting some math games. We'll play Yahtzee every day. We're also completing a science study on latitude and longitude. It will tie into our current science study and force, allow, make him use some math skills.

Last night I finalized the binders and cleared the school desk. I have absolutely NO IDEA how this is going to turn out. I have a schedule. I only printed one week as I'm sure I'll change it before we start week two.

In the vastness of our homeschooling adventure, this is a simple adjustment of the sails (or dragon's wings). Where the wind will take I do not know, but I will seek to enjoy the journey.

Thursday, March 03, 2011

The Art of Poetry: A Review



Z and I have been taking a break from our regular literature to venture into The Art of Poetry from Classical Academic Press.* I received these books right before we moved and we haven't been able to implement them until lately. The more I read from this book, the more impressed I am. While it has been a long time since I have formally studied poetry, I was the kid who wrote little poems in her free time. Sometimes in class when I was supposed to be doing other assignments. So I approach this subject with appreciation for poetry and not a lot of formal background to teach.

We dabbled with other poetry programs, but this one struck me as different right away. The ART of Poetry, the clue is in the name. Some programs have you working on meter and rhyme scheme in the first few lessons. The Art of Poetry leads you into appreciating poetry first, dissecting it later. The first chapter is on Images, appreciating the WORDS of the poem first. As a classical educator, I find that a breath of fresh air. Even Z, who kind of raised an eyebrow when I mentioned studying poetry again, has enjoyed the lessons. He's added one of the poems from chapter one to his memory work, which he aced yesterday.

We've also added a fun activity suggested in chapter one, word association. We've played several times and it is so interesting to see the direction it takes. We start off with one of us saying a word and then the other states a word associated with that. I wrote them down and we took turns trying to stump each other. Our first foray into the game took us from the word graph to Mom, filling a whole page of words in between including yak, Veggie Tales, and Gandalf. It's a great exercise to show how people will approach any writing from the own perspective.

The layout of the program is such that you can take several weeks or multiple years to finish. There are two sections, The Elements of Poetry and the Formal History of Poetry. There is also a section with short biographies on the poets, which has been most helpful. Because our school year has involved a long distance move (otherwise known as the year of chaos) we're opting to take two to three years to finish the program. We're completing two to three chapters this year and at least finishing section one next year.This is exactly the type of program I've been searching for. The scheduling can be flexible, but it is meaty enough to encompass multiple years, and fitting for middle school through high school.

The real joy of this book is the Teacher's Edition, which was freshly published when I received my copy. It's an exact copy of the student book with copious amounts of teaching notes. If you don't understand poetry or feel like you need help to wade through the works of Dickinson and Yeats, this is for you. The teacher's material answers all questions found in the student book. It's done in a way that you are drawn into the work, not reminded of what you don't know about poetry.

If you are looking for a comprehensive poetry program that will help you teach without being intimidated, this may be for you.


*standard disclaimer: I received a copy of the TE and the student book from CAP free to review and use. My review of the product is my own and was not determined by the fact I received the materials gratis.

Tuesday, March 01, 2011

I am Not Doing Nothing

Yes, it's bad grammar, I know. Everytime I announce on my blog that I'm going to share something with Z I get sick!! It happened earlier when I posted about what an awesome week we were having. Now, after my lovely blog post about my report on aging, I have spent the last five days in bed. I'd be well now, except my equilibrium is gone and the I swear the draperies were moving a few moments ago. There is no breeze in the room.

So I officially announce I am doing nothing. Maybe then I'll get better. I won't tell you about the two week writing intensive course I'm planning for Z. I won't tell you how much I appreciate a netbook, my Christmas gift from Tigger. I won't tell you that I have officially planned the next five years of my son's education at least seven different ways in the last five days. Of which I'm sure to change at least forty-seven more times before implementation.

I also won't tell you that I watched the Red Carpet for the Oscars online while surrounded by 7-up and saltines. Or that I sat up long enough last night to watch Castle and that my dog is bored. She is my dog and is  like a toddler in that she won't leave my side. If she goes out with the boys she just wanders and then comes back into the bedroom.

So, yeah, blogger, I am not doing nothing. Hopefully blogger doesn't understand the relevance of a double negative and I can get back to school tomorrow.
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