"In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world." –John 16:33

San Pedro Garza Garcia

Day: November 15, 2006

The French Revolution (by Kelly Chapman)

(Forgive me, I do not know how to spell Burgoyne.  The historical accuracy might also not be perfectly historically accurate also 🙂 )

The French Revolution
By Kelly Jean Chapman

France!
France!
The people began to dance! dance!
To dance and to sing
and make the streets ring,
and fight and revolt for France! France!

Bastille! Bastille!
The peasants danced to a reel! reel!
They reeled and rebelled!
They cried and they yelled!
They brought down the prison Bastille! Bastille!

Revolt! Revolt!
The Burgoynes began to jolt! jolt!
to jolt the great jail
and try to prevail
and cry to the jailer: Revolt! Revolt!

Powder! Powder!
They shouted yet louder! louder!
They took all they could
and made off with the goods
and started a war with some Powder! Powder!

Rebel! Rebel!
France began to tell! to tell!
of hunger and need
of a movement to lead
great France to begin to rebel! rebel!

Done!
Done!
The people had fought and had won! won!
They defeated the king
and beheaded the queen!
now the revolution is done! done!

Moral of this story (Christian’s Idea): Off with her head
                                                        Marie is now dead 🙂

What do Engineers Do?

Last night, Christian was working on a program that Dad downloaded.  Dad said that Mr. Harris from meeting (who also is a mechanical engineer that goes to Dad’s work) had a more complex version of the program that Christian was working on.  I said “But that’s just drawing pictures!  I thought that engineers made cars and stuff!”  Dad said “How do you think they make cars?” (grooaan) I got beat on that one!  I don’t think I would make a very good mechanical engineer.  I also had a good time at swim team yesterday.  They worked us out, really, really hard but I learned a few new things and I love being in the pool. 

A typical homeschool evening

Homeschool day 58 of 180
Government school day 47 of 170

It was a fairly typical homeschool evening last night. I thought I would write down what happened to give a sense for our normal evening schedule. Lorena passed me going the other way as I came home from work last night. She was taking the kids to swim team practice. So, the house was empty again when I got there. I had a snack and sat down to correct Kelly’s homeschool work. I could not find her math, but was able to correct everything else before the family got back home. They were dead tired when they arrived, so rather than jump into any corrections, we made some popcorn and read a chapter of Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze by the fireplace. We almost finished when Lorena called us for supper. For some odd reason, she decided that we absolutely had to have some Jimmy Dean’s Sausage. Every now and then she gets a whim like that. We are glad she did. I do not know how healthy it was, but at that place and time, it tasted very, very good.

After we ate, I finished the page and a half we had left to read in Young Fu. Kelly then found her math for me so I headed on upstairs to correct it forgetting that we were supposed to do Spelling Power. We will have to make that up tonight or Friday. We cannot do it on Thursday because that is another normal Spelling Power night; it is almost impossible to double up and do two Spelling Power sessions in one day unless you do one in the morning and one in the evening. Finally, I got to Christian’s homework. He had done three days worth of very hard Singapore Math work in one day due to a misunderstanding about the schedule, so he was justifiable frustrated with all that math. Normally, I correct his math and then go through the stuff he missed so he will be ready the next day. Because of the misunderstanding, he will do his math corrections today for me to correct tonight. If we get it all finished up tonight, he will be a day ahead of schedule and will have some extra time for his claymation, probably on Friday. He had way fewer corrections on the rest of his homework than usual and an especially good write-up on a book he is reading about Eric Liddell, the Olympic runner on which the movie “Chariots of Fire” is based.

Kelly fixed her math, but had not yet gotten to her twenty Rosetta Stone Spanish for the day. She also needed to play an additional four minutes to finish her piano practice. Her improvements testify to the fact that she is so scrupulous in spending the required amount of time practicing. We all marvel at the new things she learns to do on the piano every week. Kelly was going to try to take a math test yesterday as she has finished a major section of her text. The math test is the equivalent of doing an entire daily math assignment. She was only able to complete the first half yesterday and will try to finish the rest today. The highlight of the day for Kelly (this is just my opinion) was the poem she wrote. She promised that she would post it to the blog when she has a chance later today. She made quite an interesting comment about her poetry. She likes to read and write poetry a whole lot more than study it as an academic subject. My sentiments are the same, but her poetry surely does seem to have improved since she started studying it earlier this year.

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