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

Category: General Page 43 of 116

Organizing for homeschool is hard

It is often difficult for us to describe how busy are our homeschool days.  The kids have a busy academic schedule that must accommodate a lot of interruptions.  Yesterday was one of those days with many interruptions.  The kids start their day at 6:30 AM.  It is a twenty minute drive to Kelly’s piano lesson that starts at 10:00 AM.  Everyone goes to the YMCA directly from the piano lesson, so they do not have lunch until 12:30 or 1:00 PM.  Then, they have to leave time for a thirty minute drive to Christian’s guitar lesson at 2:00.  Lorena needed to go to the bank and Costco after the piano lesson, so they did not get home until about 5:00 PM.  As soon as everyone gets home, Lorena cooks while Christian, Kelly, and I do our read aloud.  The kids work while they ride in the car, but it is much more difficult for them to concentrate when they have to pick up their books and move every half hour or so.

Every day has some such interruptions.  Today is a little less chaotic because the kids will only have to leave the house twice:  once to go to the YMCA for their workout and once to go to our Wednesday night bible study.  We kind of feel sorry for some of the government schoolers who are stuck in classrooms all day.  We wonder how they get any non-“Lord of the Flies” style socialization time at all.

Priorities, time, and chance

Our weekend was interesting.  We spent two days at one of our churches conventions.  Between meetings we talked to lots of old friends and made a few new ones, too.  A lot of people seem to be struggling financially right now.  One of the recurrent themes of discussion was that times like these help us reset our priorities.  Then, when we returned home on Sunday evening, we heard that the brother-in-law of one of Lorena’s girlhood friends had been killed in a car accident.  He was the father of three children.  We really did not know him at all, but it made us think about our priorities even more.

In addition to all that, we were reminded of the shortness of life in a number of ways when we went to Oregon.  There were many, many people on whom we depended for so many years who are now old and struggle even getting around.  One of our dear friends had lost his wife and appeared lost himself.  Then on our return to North Carolina, we were reminded again of how quickly time passes when neither of a faithful old couple in our Sunday morning meeting were unable to get to our convention for the first time because of poor health.

It was just a very good reminder to me that there are some things that are very important and some things that are not.  We might have many years left, but we might have only a few hours.  Either way, it is good for me to be reminded that my time is finite and I better spend what time I have available on stuff that matters.

Christian’s birthday on a three day weekend

As often happens, Christian’s birthday falls on the three day Labor day weekend.  We are off to see friends and get recharged at a church convention for a couple of those days.  We hope to have some birthday pictures and the second video cast before the end of the weekend.  Of special note, Kelly has kicked it up a notch in her drawing for a story line about an art contest at her Betty Blonde comic.  Note the different points of view, the zoom levels, the improved lettering, and what I think is a funny and interesting story line.

Homeschool update – 2009 September: Starting the year

This is the first homeschool update of the 2009/2010 school year.  We finished our first week on Tuesday and are off to a good start.  There were big changes for both of the kids this year that are a continuation of some things we started last year.  Those changes all have to do with the kids taking on more of the responsibility for planning their studies.  I still direct the material they study, but they plan how and when they engage with the material.  An example of that is the way we the kids are assigned books.  In the past, I always assigned a specific number of pages or chapters to read on a given day.  Last year, I assigned Kelly a book with only a completion date and the assignment of a way to show me that she had read the book usually in the form of a book report or a discussion of what was read.  That worked well for Kelly and Christian has switched over to that very same method for this year.  The kids are getting more adept at negotiating their studies so they can perform the work successful.

For instance, when I assigned Christian one book per week for the entire 36 week school year, he came back to me and said, “Dad, these are not all one week books.  Some of these books are two or three week books and some of them are two or three day books.  Why don’t you let me arrange my reading so that I am always reading two books at a time.  That way I won’t be stuck reading way too little one week and way too much the next.  The order that I write the book reports might change a little, but I should still be able to delivery on report per week and even out my reading load at the same time.”

That sounded like a very good idea to me, so that is what we are doing.  We have upped the ante with Kelly quite a bit in hear reading.  Since she will be in college full time next year (ala Ruthie’s Tisse), I am giving her a fixed reading schedule of scholarly books.  She is actively working through methods to get through heavier material, Rodney Stark’s Victory of Reason being the first, than she has read in the past.  She has looked through some of her “how to study” books trying to find better ways to do the reading.  The material is interesting, but sometimes it gets more technical and uses vocabulary that makes comprehension a little more difficult.

The things that have not changed so much are the math, science, music, memorization, bible, and exercise.  Both of the kids are more heavily engaged in CLEP preparation.  The kind of work they have to do to prepare for those tests is the same, there is just more of it.

A Project Unveiled!!

Christian and I are doing weekly video-casts now! Here is the first one. It’s about the origins of Betty Blonde:

We will definitely be working on the professionalism and quality of the videocasts. We’re very excited to see how this, like Betty Blonde and this blog, progresses.

We’ll have to skip next week as we will be at convention, but we’ll stay on schedule after that!

Enjoy!

Christian’s Bulgarian made guitar

Christian’s birthday is on Saturday.  Yesterday, he went for his normal guitar lesson with Alex Gorodezky and got an early birthday present.  The Orpheus Valley Fiesta FC guitar was hand crafted in Bulgaria.  Alex recommended the guitar and, after having read a number of reviews (here is a typical one), we went ahead and bought it.  We are ALL enjoying it very much.  Christian’s guitar playing has improved pretty dramatically over the short time he has taken lessons from Alex.  He was pretty faithful in his practice before we found Alex, but now he not only does his regular daily practice, but picks up the guitar just for fun to work on different songs the he or someone else in the family wants him to play.  Last night, he worked several versions of Greensleeves that all sounded great on the new guitar.

We took the beautiful Yamaha guitar Kendall had lent us back to him on Sunday (Thanks, Kendall!!).  I think Christian was pretty sad to have to give that back and went through several days of pain and frustration playing his steel string guitar until we got the new one.  When I got home from work, Lorena and Christian piled into the car, ran down to the music store, and got a nice hard shell case like the one Kendall has for his Yamaha.  We are looking forward to Christian’s continued efforts on his new instrument.

OR vs. NC

Some differences (and some similarities) noted while vacationing on the west coast.

North Carolina lacks sidewalks, soda can eating machines, gas station attendants and Douglas Fir trees. Oregon lacks sweet tea at convention, accents and y’alls, churches, and square rocks. North Carolina has BoJangles, Biscuitville and Chick-Fil-A. Oregon has Baja Fresh, Burgerville, and Elmer’s. North Carolina is humid. Oregon is wet. Oregon does not have Kitty Hawk, but North Carolina does not have Crater Lake. North Carolina houses have garages on the side. Oregon houses have garages in front. North Carolina rednecks are loggers. Oregon rednecks are loggers. North Carolina hippies live in Chapel Hill (or so I’ve been told) Oregon hippies live in Oregon. Real Oregonians are Beaver fans. Real North Carolinians are into Nascar or something. I’m not sure. All I know is that they’re definitely not Tar Heel fans. Barbecue is a specialty of North Carolina. Marionberry jam is an Oregon specialty. Harris Teeter and Safeway are very similar, but Safeway has better Chinese food, and Harris Teeter has free cookies.

Alberstons and Fred Meyer are Oregon stores. Food Lion and Lowes are North Carolina stores. Ginger Rogers and Beverly Cleary and Herbert Hoover are from Oregon. Dolly Madison and Andy Griffith and Michael Jordan are North Carolinians. Krispy Kreme was founded in Winston-Salem, but Nike’s headquarters are in Beaverton. They cancel each other out, don’t they? Oregon state motto: She flies with her own wings. North Carolina’s motto: “To be rather than to seem”  Both Oregonians and North Carolinians seem to like country music.  Oregon has mountains. North Carolina has hills. North Carolina is very neighborly, only all across the state, not just in the small towns like in Oregon.  Both North Carolina and Oregon grow great peaches.  North Carolina has a history full of pirates and explorers and indians. Oregon has a history full of cowboys and pioneers and indians.

I’m sure there are many more differences and similarities. Feel free to add anything you like!!

Fish barrels and water research

I have been trying to figure out how to combine our fish barrel project with the GaugeCam project on which Christian and I work with NCSU.  The object of that project is to measure the level of water in rivers, lakes, barrels, etc.  Eventually, we will want to measure the surface velocity of the water with cameras, too.  Right now, we always have to get the images we want to evaluate from the server Christian set up in the Ag Engineering lab.  It would be kind of nice to have a setup of our own.  I think we can kill two birds with one stone.  The idea I have is to set up two half barrels that hold goldfish.  We could put a series of bamboo troughs and pipes between them and use a camera measure the water level in each of the barrels and our little Arduino controller to control the movement of water between the two barrels.  It would have an appearance with sufficient aesthetic appeal for Lorena to allow us to put the thing on the front porch.  I like it.  We could even put some lily pads in it!

Happily back to our routine

This weekend, we did not do much.  After a wildly eventful summer, it was very nice to just hang out with the family for a whole weekend.  We went to the Holly Springs Library on Saturday morning and bought some school supplies at Staples after meeting on Sunday.  It was very restful.  So restful in fact, that the kids were sufficiently bored by the end of the weekend that they started, on their own, a project that is way over due.  I will not steal their thunder by describing what they did.  Actually, I am looking forward to seeing the fruit of their efforts myself.  Kelly and Christian took over the living room yesterday afternoon to work on their project while Lorena and I took a nap.  All we heard was some shuffling around and hushed talk for a couple of hours.  It was kind of nice.

Earlier in the day, Kelly’s piano teacher, Brenda Bruce called to assure Kelly was back from vacation and change her piano day from the normal Tuesday to today.  Christian will have his first guitar lesson of the school day with his brand new guitar on Tuesday.  Everyone except me will start their workouts at the YMCA later this morning–Kelly and Christian are preparing for a 10K race in the spring.  I bought another CLEP preparation book from Amazon this morning.  It really does feel that we are back to our school year routine.

Bonjour!

Today my schedule was very vague on what I should write in the blog. It said: Craft, Fashion, or Girl Stuff. I get the feeling that Dad thinks that those three words sum up all of my extracurricular activities. He is mostly correct to tell you the truth, but ‘Girl Stuff’ can cover a broad range of things. Anyway, I’m going to follow my schedule and tell you everything that’s been happening in Crafts, Fashion, and Girl Stuff lately.

Crafts
I made most of a tiger amigurumi on the plane ride but it doesn’t look very good and it still needs legs. I’m also planning to make some of these cute headbands . I already found a great idea for handmade Christmas gifts for the year on Martha Stewart.com.

I’m not too crafty as of late actually. I have craft highs and lows. Right now I’m sort of medium. Outside of Betty Blonde, I’ve actually been drawing quiet a bit. I made my third annual convention drawing and put it on Facebook. It’s six pages long since there were like 45 kids that I wanted to draw. Very epic.

As for fashion, I’m afraid I’m not much of a fashionista. I like to look nice and I think shopping is fun as long as I have something in mind that I want to buy, but that’s about it. I suspect Dad put it in my schedule because fashion is to girls as football is to boys. 😉

Girl Stuff. I think I’ll just write anything I want here, because I’m a girl, and so naturally when I’m writing about stuff it will be girl stuff.

I think Dad already wrote this, but I’m reading The Victory of Reason to review on the blog later. I wish I could review it now because I have been enjoying it so much, but I’m not even through the second chapter. Because of it, I’ve been thinking about things that I never would have even considered before. It’s answered a lot of historical and even a couple of spiritual questions already and it’s given me a healthy list of vocabulary words to look up. And I thought non-fiction was a drag!

Also, I started Rosetta Stone French today! I’ve learned how to say how girls, women, men and boys can eat, run, read, write or swim! I feel very smart and culturally savvy at the moment.

La fille (moi) mange!!
Lunchtime 🙂

Logic circuit job opportunities and French

Aunt Jean, as much as she hates to admit it, is one of those rare nerds with finely honed people skills.  An electrical engineer with an MBA, she manages a group of support engineers for a company that makes very specialized circuit design and verification tools.  She was telling us that the people she hires need to have strong object oriented programming skills (java or c++), the ability to write code in a scripting language (Python, Perl, or tcl), and know how to design logic circuits.  I asked her if she thought that was something Christian could handle.  She, with the help of one of her engineers, sent us a bunch of resources to study.  They matched pretty closely what we are already doing with our Arduino project.

Christian and I are going to look into formalizing a study program to get him (and me–I want to learn, TOO!) ready to do that kind of work.  Aunt Jean said they sometimes hire interns to do that kind of stuff.  If we spend a couple years learning about these kinds of circuits, not only will we be able to use them in our water project, but Christian might be able to get a summer job.  How cool would that be?  The other thing is that Aunt Jean is a hard core runner.  Maybe Christian could do some of that if he goes to Oregon for  summer, too.

On another note, we got the new Version 3 Rosetta Stone French loaded up on our homeschool computer.  I started last night and absolutely loved it.  Lorena and Kelly are going to jump into it today.  Christian will probably wait until after he finishes taking the CLEP Spanish test, but we are all pretty excited about the idea of getting ready to do a semester of immersion French in Quebec or France in a couple of years.

A very good first day of school

Kelly and Christian got off to a good start in their school yesterday.  As always, there were a few hiccups.  The Rosetta Stone French program did not get completely installed, Christian spent several hours doing Geometry corrections from last spring, and so on.  But, when I got home last night, there was a very good level of enthusiasm for the new program.  I think we did fairly well this year calibrating how much to put on their plates.  Still, I am sure we will have to make some corrections as we go along.  One very good surprise was that Kelly LOVED here new humanities/history reading program.  She actually wants more reading so, on her own suggestion, we are going to go to the library every other Saturday to pick up some classic literature.

After the bible study last night, Kelly and I got to talking about what she might do in college.  It is still pretty early to be trying to decide what she will do for the rest of her life, but it is fun to speculate.  The one thing we have figured out is that she wants to do a hard science undergraduate degree in something like math or statistics with the idea that she will study as broad a range of things like history, sociology, and philosophy as she can with the electives she has available.  That way, she will be able to make a more informed decision about what direction she wants to take when she gets to graduate school.  We all love the start of the school year when these topics are particularly exciting to discuss!

Back From Beaverland

Yesterday morning we got up very, very early and went to the Portland airport to get on a plane back to Houston and Raleigh. The plane ride was uneventful, except for the awesome little breakfast they gave out and the cute little sandwich they gave us for lunch. I’ve always thought food tastes better 30,000 feet up in the air.

Oregon was fantastic. It was great to see all of my old friends! One thing… It’s a really odd feeling to say hi to all of your old pals expecting them to be the same as always, and then they say hi back and they sound like Darth Vader. Creepy.
Anyway, we had a great time. 🙂 Monday evening we went over to Aunt Jean’s house and took some awkward family photos and had some funfetti cake for Christian’s birthday. Funfetti cake is like sugar cookies on steroids. It definitely helped with the awkward family photos.

We had a wonderful convention. We heard lots of lovely things, made starburst chains, took walks in the woods with the gang, sang hymns with everyone, and got jobs. Christian washed dishes as he always does, and I got to serve bread in the food line for the first time ever!!! I felt very important in my apron and gloves. It was great.

Today I started 10th grade and Christian started 8th grade. All of my friends thought Dad was crazy for making us start school the day after we got home from Oregon, but it’s actually not a huge adjustment. My schedule has been working really well. I’ve already finished Bible, Chemistry, Pre-Calc., both CLEPS, and Spanish. I was going to install Rosetta Stone French, but realized that it would take quite a while so I decided to do that after I had finished everything else. Betty Blonde has been kind of wonky because of the trip, so I’ll be working on straightening that out today as well. I’ve also got to study the PSAT book and the driver’s manual. Everyone else my age has their driver’s permit except me, and it is making me feel behind the times!

Lyle is back in the game! School starts

The big news today, is that Lyle is back in the game with his first post on the Weight Loss Death Match chart in several weeks.  With Christian and Kelly (and even Dad) training to run in a 10K this spring, we need to figure out some way to track our times and running the way Lyle does on his blog.  Our problem is that none of us have iPhones.  Well, he is the king of that kind of stuff, so maybe we will ask him for some ideas.  With all our summer travels coming to an end, we are moving back into a more normal routine and I have adjusted my eating habits to start trying to shed some of last winters fat in time for this winter.

School starts today.  I made out some GREAT schedules for Kelly’s and Christian’s the first two weeks.  I am sure they will require a little adjustment because they are significantly different from anything we have done before.  We have tried to kick up the intensity a little in terms of the reading load because that is something they will have to deal with when they go to college.  Kelly’s history/literature theme this year is Western Civilization.  I am particularly excited about her first book.  It is Rodney Stark’s The Victory of Reason: How Christianity Led to Freedom, Capitalism, and Western Success.  I have started a search for other such books that both cover the material we want to cover and are not saturated with a humanistic, post modern worldview.  It should be great fun.

Home from Oregon

Lorena, Kelly, and Christian will arrive home from Oregon this afternoon.  They are getting on the airplane in Portland as I write this email.  Now, maybe I will have something a little more interesting about which to write.  We have a busy September ahead of us with new projects, new goals, new daily homeschool schedules, and and another new Betty Blonde t-shirt to give away.  One of the big changes in my life is that, when Lorena and the kids are here, Rubix and Kiwi, the twin cat sisters will give me a little peace.  Talk about high maintenance cats!  I will start talking a little about our projects over the next week or two.  They include Lorena’s upholstery project, Christian’s robotics project, and my programming projects.  We need to think of a good and difficult new project for Kelly, too.  In addition to all that, Christian’s guitar lessons and Kelly’s piano lessons are about to kick into high gear again, too.

Homeschool planning for the 2009-2010 school year

It is really not much fun to be stuck at home without the family.  They spent the last four days at one of our church conventions in Oregon.  They saw a lot of old friends, made a bunch of new ones, and generally had a fun and fruitful time.  I talked to Lorena three or four times per day between meetings and meals to hear what was going on.  The kids both got to help out–Kelly served food in the cafeteria line and Christian washed dishes.  I promised to try to send us all back there again next year.

I did not waste ALL my time at home alone feeling sorry for myself.  I spent some time programming, but mostly I put our 2009-2010 school year together.  Our math and science will continue in a similar fashion to years past, but the rest of the materials will be fairly different.  For math, Christian will finish up Geometry and move on into Pre-calculus while Kelly will finish Pre-calculus and move on into Calculus.  For science, Christian will do Apologia Biology and Kelly will do Apologia Chemistry.

After that, just about everything changes.  Kelly has already passed to years worth of college level Spanish.  She will continue to study Spanish daily, but the bulk of her foreign language effort will move to French.  Christian will continue in Spanish through most of the year, but should be able to take the CLEP test and move on into French sometime this spring.  Lorena and I want to start studying French, too!  The kids and I are reading a U.S. History textbook right now to help Christian get ready for the U.S. History I and II CLEP tests.  When we finish that, I will find him another textbook to read through on his own.  We will find a Western Civilization text to read aloud together (after we read a cool book on interpersonal relationship skills).

One of the fun parts of our program is to find books on economics, history, sociology, and other topics from great scholars like Rodney Stark, Ben Witherington, and the like.  Kelly will read one of those every two weeks, then post her thoughts on the books on this blog.  We will also continue with memorization, poetry, physical education (preparation to run in a 10K race), and other such materials.  I will start my homeschool update posts right after labor day.

Programming the Arduino with Jeff and Troy

With Lorena and the Kids gone, I have been stuck at home alone by myself for the last few days.  Jeff called me earlier in the week and asked if I could help him a little on the program his is writing in C for the GaugeCam project we are working on at NCSU.  Jeff is doing the lab automation for us.  Our hope is to be able to perform a bunch of functions that have to do with the lab equipment over the internet.  We have a pump and a couple of lights we want to turn on and off.  We want the light to move in an arch to emulate the kinds of bright spots and shadows caused by the sun.  We also want to be able to read a transducer that measures water height so we can compare it to what we are getting from the camera.

The upshot is that Jeff and Troy came over last night to work on it.  I got some sandwiches and some chips, showed Troy how I work on my programs at home, and worked through the programming problem with Jeff.  Among other things, I found that Jeff is an oil painter and plays the guitar.  He will fit right in with our clan!  It was good to have both Troy and Jeff over at the same time.  Troy really understands many facets of the problem we are trying to solve better than I.  Jeff, because he is a mechanical engineer had some great ideas about how we could do some of the stuff.  At any rate, I enjoyed myself a lot.  We are using some Arduino micro-controllers for the lab automation, so I got pretty inspired to get our controller going with Christian, too.

A great newspaper article (with pictures) about some of our friends

There is an amazing article in the August 15, 2009 issue of the Dubois County (Indiana) Herald about some of our friends.  We used to get together with them when we lived in Oregon.  On our way out to North Carolina, we spent a night (or two) with them and had a wonderful time swimming, talking, eating, and just hanging out together.  A reporter and a photographer spend many hours with Eric and Audrey Gabhart to learn and write a story on homeschooling.  It was a very well written, positive article that came out on a Saturday after five days worth of articles on the local government schools.  The photography that accompanies the article is stunning.  The photographer deserves a prize.

I think one of my favorite things about the article is the clarity with which the author describes how one homeschool family educates their children, volitionally and unapologetically, to prepare them to live useful and fulfilling lives.  The article is very careful to explain that the children’s education is academically rigorous with great attention paid to socialization, community involvement, physical education, art, and financial responsibility.

Congratulations to the Gabharts, Kasey Hawrysz (the author), and Krista Shinagl (the photographer) for a wonderful article.

Life as a bachelor

Lorena took the kids over to visit Aunt Julia and their cousins last night while I was stuck at home scanning in the rest of this week’s Betty Blonde comic strips and working on the GaugeCam program.  The house is slowly getting trashed and the dirty clothes are starting stack up.  Jeff and Troy are coming over tomorrow to work on our robot programming, so I am going to have to clean up a little before they arrive.  That is a good thing.  If I do it once now, it won’t be so onerous to do it the night be for Lorena returns.  The last time this happened I was up to my elbows in dirty clothes and dishes for four hours.  I think my problem is that I can get away with being way more of a slob than when Lorena is here.  In addition to doing what is necessary not to drown in my own waste, I still have homeschool planning, GaugeCam work, and one more session of Betty Blonde scanning to perform before everyone comes home.

Eating at Boston’s Pub and Grill with Dave and Glad

We have been to Boston’s Pub and Grill in Wilsonville at least a half a dozen times with our friends David and Gladys.  Dave was Grandpa Milo’s business partner for several decades in the doll house business and a long board surfer (born and raised in Hawaii).  Gladys is, well, she is just Gladys–one of the most loved people in our family.  We all agree that Boston’s is a requirement for future.  The have awesome (heart UN-healthy) chicken.  We need as much time with these folks as we can get.

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