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

Year: 2007 Page 12 of 15

Homeschool methods update – Part 3 of 3 – college

This is the last in a short series of three posts we are doing for a friend who is starting to homeschool this year. We have no illusions about our homeschooling method and plans being right for anyone else, but we thought it might be a help for others to get a sense for what works for at least one family. The following is links to the first and second of the three posts:

Homeschool methods update – Part 1 of 3 – curricula
Homeschool methods update – Part 2 of 3 – a typical day

Of course, what students do after they finish high school varies greatly. Some get a job. Others join the military. Some take a year off and travel if they have the money. Some start a business. Many go on to college. Circumstances change, but to the extent that we have influence, we have decided that we want Kelly and Christian to be prepared to enter college. There is really no problem for well prepared homeschoolers to get into even the best universities in the nation. It is commonplace to read articles about homeschoolers succeeding at places like Stanford, Dartmouth, Harvard, and good small private colleges like Grove City, Hillsdale, and George Fox. There are homeschoolers in most state run colleges and universities, too. The third and fourth tier private colleges like Linfield, Lewis and Clark, and Willamette here in Oregon have programs to try to attract as many homeschooled students as they can get. So getting into a college is not really too difficult for students who document their academic achievements and test even at just an “OK” level on the SAT or ACT. We are doing ar best to cover those bases.

The challenge with many homeschoolers is that many of them are academically ready to enter college at a much younger age than normal. It is not so much that they are not ready for college, it is more that the college is not ready for them. If we stay on our current track, Kelly will be ready to start taking college courses in just three years and Christian will be ready in four. Of course, there is no way that we want them to leave home at that time. So we have to find a way to keep them academically engaged for two or three years at the college level while they are still at home.

The obvious answer for us is the community college. The government school district to which we pay our taxes is required to pay for community college for those students for which they have nothing to offer academically. Of course it could be argued that they have not ever had anything to offer, but that is a different post. We are fortunate to live within driving distance of both a community college and a major state university. It is not difficult to meet the admission requirements of the community college, so entrance to that system is easily manageable. We will probably start the kids at the there with they idea they will continue there through the age when they would normally have graduated from a government high school. That should help them prepare well for the PSAT, SAT, and/or ACT tests. Volunteer work, a job or two, and continued participation in their clubs, music, and sports should help to round out their preparation. It is up to Lorena and I to continue to document their academic progress. All this should prepare them to get into a good school.

If we prepare well, it will be easier for them to decide where (and if) they want to go to college. We are kind of hoping they will stay at home through a bachelor’s degree and then take a graduate degree as their away from home experience, but that will really be their decision. If things move along on their current course, both of the kids should graduate with a bachelor’s degree by the time they are nineteen or twenty. The other wild-card, is that, if we have the resources, we would like to go someplace for six or nine months to pick up a third language. Whether we can do that and whether the time we take will impact the schooling is something we do not know. Neither do we know whether it will work out like this at all. But we have a plan that we can either follow or modify as time and chance change our circumstances. Even if it does not all go according to plan, it is good to have a plan.

Vivian and Bryan

Bryan made some comments earlier about our dear friend Vivian Plews.  He also sent along a great picture of the two of them.  The comments bear repeating and the picture speaks for itself.

Marilyn Denio announced after Gospel Meeting tonight that Vivian passed away.  She was truly a great lady! When we first moved to Newberg in 1972, I was a freshman at Newberg HS, and we went to her home for Sunday AM meeting. Over the years I have come to love dear Vivian very much. So sweet… and always a smile and word of encouragement. Always!  I will miss her dearly.


Vivian and Bryan

Two funerals and a visit from Udo

This weekend was a very busy weekend.  We went to the funerals of Dick Nelson and Vivian Plews.  Then, my cousin Udo and his wife Damaris from Montana came and spent the night with us on Saturday night.  It was very good to have some time with them as Udo was a very good reality check for me on all things spiritual.  We did nothing other than just sit around and talk.  We bragged about our kids and they didn’t even flinch.  Of course, they bragged about their Erika, too, but they should because she is so amazing.  We are pretty whipped though after all that socializing.  All I was able to do for homeschool this weekend was get next weeks plan completed.  I will have to catch up on my corrections tonight.

The good news about homeschool is that both Kelly and Christian have picked their annual research report topics.  Kelly will be doing something on the history and care of house cats.  Christian is doing his on bombs and projectiles.  We are looking forward to learning some amazing things.

Math and catch up

Today, I thought I would write a little about a phenomena that has raised its head about this time for the last three years.  We have been working hard on our homeschool now for 26 weeks.  We are still a couple of weeks from spring break, after which the kids will start on their very interesting research reports.  Right now, though, we are all feeling a little burned out.  There is a lot of cool stuff going on outside of school:  tennis, music lessons, Kelly’s upcoming birthday party, boy scouts, and so on.  On top of that, the weather is starting to get nice so it would really nice to be out playing in the sun with the other neighborhood kids.  I was thinking something was wrong, but then I thought back on my on school experience, even up into college.  This is just spring fever.  After spring break, there will be new, fun things about which to think and the fire will get lit again, but right now, we just need to tough it out for a couple of weeks and do well on all those subjects that require serious thinking.  That means math more than any other subject.  It is hard to do math while one is day dreaming.  Well, I talked to the kids and we agreed that each of them are going to try to get through unit 80 by the end of the year.  It is an arbitrary goal, but a good one, most of all because it lets them know there is an end in sight and they now where it is.

Until Bryan checks in, I will use his numbers for last week:

Kelly’s party

Well, Kelly has decided what kind of party she wants to have.  It is a “mystery party” we got from Host-Party.com.  It is an all girl kind of thing so I think I am going to try to get a buddy of mine and his son to go with Christian and I to the beach or something like that.  I have been reading through the party material and it looks like it will be a lot of fun.  People coming to the party get a packet that explains who is their character for the party, kind of how that person might act and dress, and some other information.  It can be especially good if people really stay in character.

I got up at four this morning to come into work.  I have a ton of stuff to get done combined with funerals on both Friday and Saturday.  It will be great to see a lot of people I have not seen for a long time.

Funerals

Last Saturday, we went to the funeral of Martha Axtell, a faithful lady who lived in our town for many years.  This Friday, we are going to the funeral of Dick Nelson, another faithful man who also lived in the area for many years.  Last night I received a call from my very close friend, Eric Plews.  His grandmother, Vivian, who was had a big and wonderful influence on my life, died last night.  When we first moved to Newberg before my junior year in high school, Vivian and all of the rest of the Plews opened up their family to us.  I am grateful to them and mourn their loss, but Vivian lived a victorious life.  We have felt like we were part of their family for a long time–meeting in with them for Sunday morning fellowship meetings and Wednesday night bible studies for many years.  One of our best memories was when Grandpa Milo and Vivian’s son Joe decided to have a Mother’s Day breakfast for all the ladies in the field before Sunday morning meeting just shortly after we moved to town.  It was such a wonderful success that they did that for many more years. 

All of these people had lived long, faithful lives.  I am sure they were not perfect, but they surely seemed that way when we were young.  It is hard to see that generation go.  It has been a help to me, though, in remembering my priorities.  All of this is happening at a time when our children are young, just getting started, and need to see someone they respect model what is right.  The world is very much different from when Martha, Dick, and Vivian were young, but the issues are still the same.  Because the generation that needs to do the modeling is my generation, some of us surely do not seem as able as earlier generations.

An evening with Kelly (and a weight report)

I really look forward to Tuesdays.  This is the night that Lorena takes Christian to Boy Scouts.  They both have a great time there.  In the meantime, Kelly and I hang out together at home.  I do my exercise while we listen to a debate on philosophy, theology, history, or science.  I suppose we will start listening to debates on politics when the presidential election gets closer.  If that gets tiresome, we will find some other stuff to read.  Tonight, after my exercise, we are going to buy a book that I owe Kelly from a long time ago, and a murder mystery game that she will use for her birthday party.  She likes that idea a lot and has been trying to decide which one she actually wants to get.

It is tough right now to stay on track with school.  We have been going at it pretty hard for quite awhile without a break.  We are ahead of schedule on almost everything, so we are going to take this week for a math breather and just do corrections.  Then we will jump in next week and try to make the run to spring break with as much energy as possible.  Between now and then, one of our most fun and interesting tasks is to decide what should be the research report topics for the year.  The kids have made some super reports in the past and I am looking forward to seeing what they decide to research this year.  Work also continues on the next Kaktus Kids issue that is scheduled to come out in May.

As for the weight loss cage match.  I was ready for Bryan on Friday.  I was actually down seven six pounds, but now when we postponed our weigh-in until today, I got on the scale and was only down five pounds.  Rats!  It must have been that leftover soup JoAnn brought to us.  It was fine soup.  Or maybe it was the clam chowder Lorena made.  That was fine soup, too.

A working weekend

Well, I worked both Saturday and between meetings on Sunday, so I do not have much to say for myself today.  The really nice part of the weekend was that Grandpa Milo and Grandma Sarah came for the afternoon on Sunday.  From work, I went to pick up my cousin Tim to take him to Gospel meeting on Sunday afternoon.  He was not in his apartment, so I headed on out toward Tangent where the meeting was going to take place.  When I got to Roger’s, Tim’s favorite restaurant, I saw him walking through the parking lot, so I drove over to where he was and asked him if he wanted to go with me.

He said, “Isn’t it Saturday?”

When we got that all squared away, we had a nice chat on the way to meeting and on the way home, too.

Kiwi guards the wifi

Too much stuff going on, maybe Kelly will post…

I am running like crazy today, so will not have a post.  Bryan and I have agreed to postpone our weigh-in this week until Monday.  I hope Kelly will post a poem from homeschool later today.

Losing weight

I quote Bryan:

“my weight is heading south again” LOL what does that mean!?!
How do you translate that?
Does that mean you are sagging? Or are you on another business trip to CA?

Ha ha ha!  Well, it could mean that my weight is going down.  Or it could mean my weight is getting worse (going up).  Or it could mean I am going to California for liposuction (my weight is going south).  It is my rope-a-dope strategy for the cage match.  I am lulling him into complacency!  I sure doesn’t look like I am going to win this by losing weight faster them him so I am going to have to win by the wiles of old age.  He should not be surprised if packages of Girl Scout cookies start showing up mysteriously on his front porch.  But I AM making progress.  Just wait until tomorrow’s weigh-in.

Sorry for the light posting, but it is going to be like this for a bit until we get past a few big events over the next couple of days.

Too busy – not good

Last night, Lorena and Christian went to Christian’s last Cub Scout event.  Now we are making the hard decision about when and if we will jump into Boy Scouts.  Kelly and I stayed home.  I was planning on spending more time talking with her and working on her book, but a long phone call, homeschool corrections, and work on my big program cost me that time with her.  We listened to a debate over the internet together, but it was really inexcusable not to have sat with her to work on her book.  We always have a super time, we both learn a lot, and we have something to show for it when we are through we have something to show for it, too.  I coulda, shoulda woulda is not acceptable when your kids are growing up.  So, tonight and tomorrow night, Friday, and all next week, I will rededicate myself to helping the kids with math, ordering Kelly’s book and play, etc.  It is so easy to let trivial personal priorities get in the way of what is right.

On the other hand, my weight is heading south again.

Working on a vision program

I have started back working on a vision system on the Linux computer at home.  It can currently do the basic image filters, morphology, connectivity analysis, and blobs.  I have been talking with a friend and am thinking about setting up a basic vision laboratory in our bonus room at home.  I am running today, so I cannot write a whole lot more on this, but plan to expand on it as it develops.

Books

A couple days ago at the library, when I thought I had read all the good books there were to be read, and all that was left was a couple of picture books and some magazines, I came upon a series that I had been searching for.  Luck was with me, and I found two more series that I had heard about or been searching for.  Plus, Christian found two totally new Asterix and Obelix comix boox!  And we got the usual Tintin.  And an extra book to even things out too.  Oh, and another series that I had been searching for.  And next time I’m going to look for a couple of books that I have read about.  So our reading for this week (and maybe next week too) is enough for us to be satisfied.  And there’s also our home school books which are very good.  And all the books laying around the house.  And the Hank the Cowdog book that we forgot to turn in last time.  Why would anyone hate the public library?

Homeschool methods update – Part 2 of 3 – a typical day

This is the second in a short series of three posts we are doing for a friend who is starting to homeschool this year. We have no illusions about our homeschooling method and plans being right for anyone else, but we thought it might be a help for others to get a sense for what works for at least one family. The following is links to the first and third of the three posts:

Homeschool methods update – Part 1 of 3 – curricula
Homeschool methods update – Part 3 of 3 – college

Today I am going to try to describe a typical day of homeschool in the Chapman household. This is material about which I have previously written, but due to an email we received from some of our friends in Australia who are just getting started homeschooling I thought it might be nice to explain how we go about it. We make no claims about our homeschool methods other than that they work for us. Most days are not typical homeschool days because every day of the week is occupied with, not only the academic subjects we cover, but all the extracurricular activities in which the children participate. I will try to capture all of that, too. This will divided into two categories. First, there is a the kids study schedule. Second, I explain what I do to prepare, teach, and correct.

Schedule

  • 5:50 – Dad goes to work
  • 7:00 – Get up, make their beds, get dressed, read their bibles, and memorize their bible verses
  • 8:00 – Christian practices guitar, Kelly practices Piano
  • 8:45 – Breakfast
  • 9:15 – Clean up (floss, brush, wash face, etc.)
  • 9:30 – Morning academic subjects: Math, grammar, history, literature, vocabulary
  • 12:00 – Lunch
  • 12:30 – Afternoon academic subjects: Writing, Spanish, science
  • 2:30 – Break for a snack
  • 2:45 – More literature, history, catch-up, and corrections
  • 3:30 – Go out and play until Dad gets home.
  • 4:30 – Dad comes home and calls his partner, Ron at Quality Corners
  • 5:30 – Dad starts corrections
  • 6:00 – Kids come in and start on corrections and work with Dad on new materials
  • 6:30 – Dinner
  • 7:00 – Spelling and continued work on corrections and new materials
  • 7:30 – Kelly and Christian read aloud to Dad and work on a jigsaw puzzle while he does his exercises
  • 8:15 – Goof off until bedtime at 9:00

We are playing to do one or two days per week of drawing, painting, or pottery starting in the next week or so in addition to the following extracurricular activities:

Monday – Kelly baby sits a group of small kids with a girl from Santiam Christian School
Tuesday – Tennis and Kelly’s Piano (we are deciding on what to do about Boy Scouts on Tuesday nights)
Thursday – Tennis and Christian’s Guitar

Preparation

Each week I prepare a one page schedule for each day of the week for each of the kids. We stick very close to the schedule recommended by our Sonlight curricula provider for Science, History and Literature. We go a little faster than many on the mathematics because the kids can handle it and the Teaching Textbooks lends itself to one lesson per day. The same is true for the Wordly Wise vocabulary program and the Easy Grammar and Easy Writing programs. They spend twenty minutes per day on Rosetta Stone Spanish. Christian spends 30 minutes per day on his elective material which is C# programming while Kelly spends that much time or more writing and illustrating stories that we are going to put into a book at the end of the year.

The schedules are setup so the kids know what they are supposed to do before breakfast, before lunch, after lunch, and when I get home. It is setup as a checklist that gives them enough flexibility to make some decisions on their own about when they will do each element of the program, but structured enough so they can know whether they are ahead or behind at any given point in the day.

It usually takes me a couple of hours on Saturday morning to put a weeks schedule together and I usually have two weeks of schedule ahead of the kids when they start on a Monday morning. I keep each schedule in one large spreadsheet in OpenOffice.org. We print out five pages (one per day) per kid per week that they keep in a large, zip-up loose leaf binder. If I have to make adjustments during the week I can just pencil them in. When they finish any materials, they put their work into the binder behind the schedule for the day on which they are working so I can easily get to it for correction. They also put a red sticky note in any books where they have performed work so I can find them easily. When I correct, I put a sticky note of another color into the places where the corrections are required.

Testing

In addition to the normal, end of chapter tests we give in Math and Science, the kids take a nationally normed standardize test each year to see where they are relative to government, private, and homeschool students throughout the country. This year they will take the test in early April. This testing takes two or three days and is much more comprehensive and rigorous than the testing performed on the Oregon government school students. The State of Oregon is currently going through another effort to further lower the score required to pass and/or rigor of their tests. Kelly and Christian will be taking the Stanford Achievement Test which will be administered by one of the local private schools.

Next: Our plans to prepare the kids for college

Xubuntu and our laptop

Lorena’s laptop computer has been running Windows XP since we got it. I dual booted to Kubuntu for awhile, but with one thing and another, we started experiencing Blue Screens of Death (BSOD’s) when we ran XP and the wireless networking and a couple of other things were not working exactly like we wanted it in Kubuntu. It dawned on me that I really might have a resource problem, so I formatted the hard drive and installed Xubuntu. It is awesome. The wireless works better than it ever did with Windows XP or Kubuntu (I did some ad hoc download testing to figure that out), it is very snappy and does everything we want it to do.

The things we want it to do are pretty typical of a laptop. We want to be able to do the following:

  • Read and write email (Thunderbird)
  • Access the other computers and printers on the network (CUPS and SAMBA)
  • Browse the web (Firefox with AdblockPlus plugin)
  • Blogging (Performancing Firefox plugin)
  • FTP (FireFTP Firefox plugin)
  • Word processing (Abiword)
  • Spreadsheets (Gnumeric)
  • Talk to Grandma Conchita in Mexico (Skype)
  • Instant messaging (GAIM)
  • Webcam (Camorama and XAWTV)

In addition, I would like to be able to do some programming so I added KDevelop and a couple of other things, but that was not the main purpose of this exercise. The main purpose of the exercise was to get a piece of trash computer back into a usable state. This worked great. My buddy Lyle Waldo has an even worse computer coming along in the next few days that we are going to upgrade with Xubuntu, too. It is a computer that started out life as a Windows ME computer, but was upgraded (and I use the term upgraded quite loosely in this case) with Windows XP. It has a USB wireless dongle that we will need to make work and a few other challenges, but I think we can manage it all quite nicely.

Even though our experience was overwhelmingly positive yesterday, there was one big challenge that the normal user will not have to confront. The Automatix2 website was down all weekend, so we had to hand install Skype and the wireless stuff. I have not yet installed all the fonts and the DVD player because it was not as important as the other stuff and I know it is very easy with Automatix. I would highly recommend assuring that you can get the Automatix upgrades unless you are pretty comfortable with the linux command line and with foraging about in ubuntuforums.org.

My weight loss cage match competitor

This is a photo of my nefarious weight loss cage match competitor. Notice the fierce look in his eye. Also notice, that unlike our beautiful and delicate pets, Rubix and Kiwi, the twin tortoise shell cat sisters, Bryan’s pet is obviously an attack cat. He has to wrap both arms around the ferocious beast and hang on for dear life just to take the picture. How fitting that his cat is black. I have to win this contest for all that is good and noble in this world.

Tennis

Yesterday (as Dad said) we went to our first tennis lesson. The tennis club is very cool, it has an outdoor pool, several indoor courts, several outdoor courts, and a big upstairs room for viewing the indoor courts. That is where Mom stays to study her calculus. We were a little bit shy at first, but our instructor was very nice. He introduced us to the rest of our class: Ronnie, who turned thirteen in December and is home schooled. She was very nice and always giving us tips or compliments! Sterling was in sixth grade I think and the teacher labeled him as kind of crazy. He was always bouncing a tennis ball on his racket. 🙂 David used to go to my school and he knows some of my friends, he is in the eighth grade, the teacher labeled him as always late and even more crazy. I think there are going to be some more kids coming on Tuesday.

After introductions we started practicing a little bit. The teacher let us borrow some tennis rackets and all he had us do at first was hit the ball when he threw it at us. We did that for a while, then practiced bouncing the ball on the racket with our palm up, then our knuckles up. After that we practiced serving the balls and the instructor showed us how to hold the racket, how to stand, and how to swing. Then we played a few games. I liked playing Jail. You lined up and the teacher threw you a ball. Then, if you hit it over the other side, you were safe. If you didn’t, you were in ‘jail’ on the other side. The only way you could get out of jail was catching the ball before it bounced. It was all very fun and I can’t wait until Tuesday! Mom was up above watching us the whole time, talking to Ronnie’s mom, who was very nice. Ronnie comes all the way from Salem because of the instructor. Pretty cool!

Woo hoo! – calculus, tennis, and one more pound

This was Christian’s idea:

The really big news of the week is that Lorena got an 89 on her calculus midterm, so she continues to make great progress on her degree. She studies hard. Kelly, Christian, and I are wildly impressed; it is not an easy class.

Yesterday Kelly and Christian went to their first tennis class. I think they are really going to enjoy it. I hope Kelly writes a post here to describe their first class, her impressions about what she learned, and the new people they met.

Today will finish my fifth complete of spending at least 30 minutes on the elliptical machine six out of seven days per week–if I get my workout done today and I plan to do that. Now that I am over fifty, I know that I have to take it a lot more slowly. I am going fast enough to get a good sweat for twenty-five or thirty minutes of the workout, but slow enough to listen while Kelly and Christian take turns reading to me while the other works on a jigsaw table in the bonus room. Eating wise, I am doing pretty well, too. Lorena is making really healthy stuff and I am working to eat the right amounts–that is the hard part.

Bryan vs. Ken Weight Loss Cage Match
Bryan: -8
Ken: -5

 

Tennis starts today and big Quality Corners news

This afternoon the kids will have their first tennis lesson.  We are excited about getting them started.  Like swimming, tennis can be a lifelong sport.  If they really like it, I might just have to get a racket and take some lessons myself.  The problem is that we are rapidly arriving at that awkward age where the kids will not be getting any very stiff competition from the old man.  Maybe I should just stick with the elliptical machine and concentrate on burying poor Bryan in our weight loss cage match.

It looks like our partner, Ron, won a big (big being a relative term for our quite small business) new account for Quality Corners this week.  He and Grandpa Milo are up in Washington today to meet with the buyer and work out all the details.  The meeting is right after lunch.  We really do not know how big it will be, but we do know that they have been selling our competitor’s products to many of the “big box” stores in the Western U.S. and all of Canada for many years.  I can hardly wait to hear how it goes.  Ron has a couple more big opportunities in various stages of the sales process.  With the downturn, we are going to have to have an aggressive sales effort just to stay where we were last year in terms of sales.  Ron is making a stellar effort to assure that happens.

Page 12 of 15

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén