We spent much of this weekend on swimming events. Saturday we went to the all YMCA championship meet that include four or five of the local YMCA swim teams. The meet was extremely well run and both of the kids swam well. After Gospel meeting on Sunday, we went to the ice cream social and end of the season awards ceremony for swim team. Kelly got a sportsmanship award for her age group while Christian got most improved swimmer. Christian broke the local YMCA records for freestyle, backstroke, breast stroke, and butterfly, so they put his name and times on the record board by the pool. Kelly won one of her heats and got second in another in the championship meet. Christian won his three events at the championship meet. It truly was a great year for swimming. The new friendships the kids made were just as good as the exercise and competitions. One of our friends took a picture or two at the awards ceremony. I will try to put one up here if it arrives in the email over the next day or two. Lorena, Kelly, and Christian still plan to go down to the pool every day for the rest of the summer so the kids can swim laps while Lorena does her workout. I am still trying to convince everyone they need to train for a triathlon. It will be a great way to stay in shape over the winter.
Category: General Page 62 of 116
After my post yesterday on programming with Christian, our new friend Ruthie left a comment about a program called Alice. I checked into it and it sounds pretty amazing. Alice is a program that was developed at Carnegie Mellon to teach kids how to program. Here is their homepage blurb:
Alice is an innovative 3D programming environment that makes it easy to create an animation for telling a story, playing an interactive game, or a video to share on the web. Alice is a teaching tool for introductory computing. It uses 3D graphics and a drag-and-drop interface to facilitate a more engaging, less frustrating first programming experience.
Before Christian and I jump into our big project I am going to have him download Alice 2.0, a program designed for high school and college kids. The thing that is cool about it (beside that it runs on Linux, Windows and Macs) is that it also involves storytelling, 3D graphics, and visual programming. Wow! I watched the promotional video and I think I am going to have Kelly play with the thing, too. It is very, very cool.
Thanks for the GREAT tip Ruthie!
In that vein, I am going to have six or eight hours to myself tomorrow. The final (very long) swim meet of the year is tomorrow. I am only needed when it is time to spectate; the kids will be spending the time between events playing games with their teammates. I am going to go into the YMCA and work on the Betty Blonde comic webpage so it is easier to use and more interactive by adding some JavaScript. We hope we have some time to go to the library, but the swim meet will probably run too long. On Sunday, the final YMCA swim team party will take place. We should be able to get there just a little bit late after our Gospel meeting on Sunday afternoon.
Update: Ruthie just sent a comment that noted that Rand Pausch, one of the authors of Alice died to day. We all really enjoyed his very famous “last lecture” shown in the YouTube video below:
I have been trying to figure out a good project to do with Christian. Something dawned on me as I was driving in to work this morning. Focus on the Family had a program on the radio about how there are not enough hours in the day to do everything that needs to get done. A person has to cheat one thing to do another thing right. It was really a program on setting a priority to spend more time with the family rather than at work. While I was thinking about that, it dawned on me that a great way to spend some time with Christian would be to teach him how to program. Previously, I had gotten a couple of C# programming books and had him start working his way through them. He has gotten a good grasp of object oriented programming in a garbage collected environment, something that is hard to do on your own if you do not have a specific task to accomplish. That is especially true if you are ten or eleven years old.
Well, now we have a project that would be a big help in running our website. It would make a great programming project, too. I have been working with the Python programming language and the wxPython cross-platform GUI libraries lately. There is a development environment that goes with it called Stani’s Python Editor. I would like Christian to know how to use that and the best way to teach that is to sit down at computer together and go through a project. We both enjoy programming and I think it would be a super way to spend some time together. So what are we going to do for a project? We are going to try to automate the posting and maintaining of Kelly’s Betty Blonde comic onto our website. If the project works well enough, we can put the program out as an open source piece of software.
Posting a day’s comic strip now requires multiple steps in several different programs. Kelly first draws, colors, and adds text to her strip in an art book as four individual frames. Then we walk through the following process:
- Use the XSane program to scan and save each of the individual frames as separate image files into the computer.
- Use GIMP to open each of the frames to rotate and save them in both the large resolution at which they were scanned and a smaller resolution to insert into a single image with the other frames.
- Create a new boilerplate image in GIMP with the comic strip title and author at the top and copyright at the bottom.
- Use GIMP to add the four scanned frames to the boiler plate.
- Save the image of the accumulated trip in jpg format and a smaller image to be used as a thumbnail.
- Open Firefox and use the FireFTP addon to upload the strip and its thumbnail to the correct location and modify the filenames on our website.
- Use the SciTE text editor to update the comic strip index page with the new info.
One thing we are not doing right now that would also be helpful is to add JavaScript to the comic strip page so it is possible to view any of the old strips without leaving the main page. The bigger point though, is that one of the best ways to learn a programming language is to write a program while a more experienced programmer sits behinds you to direct and correct as the program is developed. We can even listen to Pandora while we are doing it.
Our friends over at JKLMNOP blog put up a post that asked that I list seven facts about myself. It sounded like fun, especially when I read our friend Karen’s list. I knew about the pianos, the cooking, and the quilting, but I was way impressed when I found she is swimming five days per week! So here goes:
- My mother found my first job in the robotics (machine vision) field in 1984. I have been working in machine vision ever since.
- I wet my bed until I was nine years old.
- The first time I ever ate hummus and pita bread was in a small Arab restaurant on the side of a hill in Nazareth (Israel).
- I have eaten Mexican food in Brno, Czech Republic (Hacienda Mexicana – Ok) and Malacca, Malaysia (Renaissance Malacca Hotel – Awesome!).
- I have a black belt (1st degree-shodan) in Kodakan Judo with certificates to prove it. I started playing judo at age nine.
- When I was in college, I wrote funny poems that I sent to my sisters who were in high school at the time.
- One of my greatest memories was when my cousin Merle bought my brother and I five scoop black berry ice cream cones at a little homemade ice cream store in Oakridge, Oregon. I think I must have been about eleven years old at the time.
The main people I would like to see do this are: H|esoteric, Lyle W., and Charlie. They are supposed to list seven things about themselves, strange or mundane, if they are so inclined. If they do so, they need to ask seven others to do the same.
Our good friends Carlos and Vanesa in Texas have a son name Joaquin. Carlos and Joaquin run in triathlons. When we were at Gospel meeting Sunday afternoon, one of our other friends, Mike C. told me that he and his kids were going to run in a triathlon next summer. I got to thinking that Kelly and Christian really like to swim and might really enjoy doing that, too. Today, they were scheduled to swim a mile at swim team practice. Some of the triathlons listed on Carlos website had swims that were much shorter than that. Of course, the swim is only a third of the race, but there were several races the kids could certainly handle right now. There was a 300 meter swim/11mi bike/2mi run, 750m swim/7mi bike/5k run, 500m swim/14 mi bike/3 mi run, and so on. I think they could make it through any of those. With a little training, they might even be pretty good. It would certainly benefit from getting ready and competing in some of those. I do not think I could keep up with the kids, but it would be a lot of fun. I think I will try to connect up with Mike and Carlos and see how they go about getting their kids ready for one of these.
Note to Christian: Check this out. I wonder if this could be programmed?
We have added a cartoon page to ChapmanKids.net: http://www.chapmankids.net/bettyblonde. Kelly is getting far enough ahead with her cartooning that she thinks she will be able to do one every day for quite awhile. I think she only has to draw one more to have enough for this week. I like her cartoons a lot. In addition to cartooning while I read aloud, this weekend she cartooned while we listened to Dinesh D’Souza debate Michael Shermer on the questions: Is Religion a Force for Good or Evil? and Can you be Good without God? and Christopher Hitchens on: Is Christianity the Problem?
A special treat for the Hitchens debate was that it was moderated by Marvin Olasky. Marvin Olasky is the editor of World Magazine. We have subscribed to World for many years. We look forward to reading Joel Belz, Lynn Vincent, Janie B. Chaney, and all the others. We lurk at the World Mag blog but we are special fans of Marvin Olasky. Kelly’s desire to study things like statistics, philosophy, sociology, biology, and politics has been inspired by the things she reads in World Magazine. Olasky’s interviews of Arthur C. Brooks, Rodney Stark, and others have provided fodder for many fruitful discussions and inspired us to learn more. We have listened to several of William Lane Craig‘s debates on the existence of God and the historocity of the resurrection of Jesus. We have purchased books by Behe, Dembski and others involved in the great intelligent design debates. We have studied logic and argumentation. I do not know what Kelly will study in college, but her plan is to prepare herself to participate as a writer in the national discourse on these great topics.
This fall, she will be writing for this blog. Every couple of weeks it will be given to her to describe her thoughts on what we call the great debates. The commentary she writes will not so much be about taking positions on the topics, rather they will be about what she feels she understands, what confuses her, what is interesting to hear and why it is interesting. We want the work to be challenging and interesting for her.
Christian, Kelly, and I are reading two non-fiction books aloud this summer. Actually, I do the reading while they work on their cartooning. Understanding the Times is quite a bit of work, but educational and rewarding. I am glad we chose to read it this summer because it is a great book to prepare us to read Understanding Intelligent Design and Explore Evolution. I tend to want to read straight through a chapter, but the material is sufficiently provocative that the kids want to talk about it as we read. My impatience can be an impediment to some pretty amazing discussions, so I have decided that I need to be more responsive and liberal in allowance for such interruptions. I need to remind myself that the goal is to learn, not to accomplish a certain number of pages read. The other book, The Thinking Toolbox is not only educational and rewarding, but way fun! It is the companion book to The Fallacy Detective that we enjoyed so much last year.
On the cartooning front, Kelly had a cartoon almost ready for scanning and upload last night when I got home. I thought it was really good, but she said she really needed five frames to make the thing flow right and make sense, so she decided to do another, just in the evening. She was able to draw and color the cartoon in the time we sat on the couch and read aloud–about twenty minutes. If she can do that regularly, she should be able to get a pool of cartoons completed so that we can post them regularly. Christian has about a three week story going that we will scan and post after Kelly does a complete week next week. I need to get a cartoon webpage set up here on ChapmanKids.net so we can have a home for all the cartoons and a way to step through and view previous cartoons.
The final large box of books for the 2008-2009 school year arrived yesterday from Sonlight. There is a big swim meet in Raleigh tomorrow, so I am looking forward to spending the time between events to work on the plan for the year. Every year I think it is going to get easier, but every year I think of some new or different way to write and manage the plan so it feels like I do about the same amount of work now that I did when we first started homeschooling even though I have a ton more experience. It is going to be a very cool year. We have always used an OpenOffice.org spreadsheet to manage the plan and we will do that again this year. I am trying to figure out a good way to “webify” the whole process so we can get to it anywhere. The best we did in the past is either email the spreadsheet to our self via Yahoo or Google so we could always get to it via webmail or ftp it up to a private directory on our web site, but neither of those solutions is very satisfactory. It would be great to have a Firefox extension that would allow us to upload, download, edit, and view the plan from our webbrowser. Maybe that is too ambitious given all the other programming projects I am investigating, but it would certainly be useful for a lot of us distributed homeschoolers.
Christian and Kelly have been writing cartoons for quite a long time. Every night now, when we read aloud together, I do the reading and they work on their cartoons. Over the two or three years they have been doing it, they have developed several characters with established persona. We have decided that I should start posting some of their work as a regular feature for this blog. It is very interesting how they both draw the same characters. They have a common, well-developed understanding of the personalities of each of the main characters. As they have gone alone, the characters, drawings, and stories have improved dramatically. You will always be able to get to the current comic by clicking on the small Betty Blonde comic image to the left. We will have a regular page for the strip here. I will add a link to the Betty Blonde homepage as soon as it is a little more developed. Here is their first offering:
Grandma Sarah’s twin sister Janet has a granddaughter (Jon and Sharon’s oldest) who has moved just a couple of hours north of Monterrey to work in the Rio Grande Valley for a program called Teach for America. Some of the poorest schools in the country are there. She will be a teacher at one of those schools. She is a wonderful writer with a very interesting voice. She is keeping a blog that I expect will always be interesting. I have put a link to her blog in my blog roll on the left-hand side of this page. You can also click here to get there.
The day is already off to an inauspicious start. When I got to work, I made the coffee and set down to update the weightloss chart, read my email, check the news on the internet, read a couple of blogs I check every day, and write in my own blog. Right after I sat down, I adjusted my glasses and they broke in half. There was no way to fix them, so I went out to my pickup in the parking lot to get my spare glasses in the glove box there. Somehow they had been sitting wrong so they rubbed against something so now I have a permanent mark on them right in the middle of the spot through which I look to work on my computer. It takes forty minutes to run to the store and back to get glasses, so I have decided to wait until lunch or after work to get some new ones. That, however, does not mean I will not complain loudly about this irritation. Complaining can be quite cathartic in the right circumstances.
It finally is starting to feel like summer. We had a long finish to our homeschool this year. After that the swim team and a whole bunch of small commitments kept us busy enough so that it did not really seem like we had slowed down after school let out. Last night, though, we went to a Gospel meeting in Fuquay Varina. After meeting, everyone stood around and talked long enough that we did not get home until over an hour after the meeting was over. It was really nice. Kelly and her friend Megan are planned to get together to go swimming and shopping, Christian talked over computer stuff with Hunter and Sterling. Most of all we just stood around and enjoyed the warm evening air. It will be nice to have a few weeks without any pressing commitments to enjoy the sun. There is a Dairy Queen close to where we are having the Gospel meetings. Maybe we will go there after meeting next week. Then it will really feel like summer.
We had two of our ministers, Robert and Harlan stay with us for a couple nights. We enjoyed them a bunch, but they have already moved on to be with some other folks. They really liked the pizza Aunt Julia taught us how to make.
Next year is going to be a very exciting school year for both Kelly and Christian. We bought the Sonlight books for Kelly this year, but not the study schedule. We were not even going to do that, but when we got to looking at them, we realized it would be a shame not to read them. Still, we are going to deviate significantly from the type of schedule she has followed in the past because we/she wants(s) to concentrate on college level material and material that will prepare her to take college classes. We will emphasize Math this year so she will be well prepared for Calculus next year. This year’s science is a Biology program that is nothing short of amazing. We are planning to supplement it with some discussion of current topics, too. We bought Understanding Intelligent Design by William Dembski and Sean McDowell and Explore Evolution by Stephen Meyer, et. al. Christian, Kelly, and I plan to read those books aloud together. Kelly’s other main area of concentration will be the CLEP tests she plans to take. They include Biology, Spanish, U.S. History II, Psychology, and Sociology. We are not sure how fast she can go on those tests, but it is a good goal that we can modify if necessary.
I started creating the 2008-2009 homeschool plan this weekend. I got a good start on making it significantly more automatic than in years past. I keep the schedule in an OpenOffice.org spreadsheet, so I downloaded the lasts version (2.4.1) to get started. Early in the process, I realized it would be easier to set up a schedule for the whole year, then make modifications to it when there were changes than to add one week at a time like I have done in the past. I finished about half of Kelly’s schedule, but have had some additional thoughts on how to improve it, so I might start over again from scratch next weekend. After I finish Kelly’s schedule, I will be able to start with that as a base for Christian’s schedule so it will go a lot faster.
Diet notes: This is the first weekend in the history of my diet that I have not gained wait on Monday. If I can just do that a couple of more times, I might be able to continue to lose weight. Bryan has almost met his goal. I will bug Lyle about where he is.
I was visiting a blog at lunch time and came across this website. I thought it was very cool! It features ticker that allows you to show your weight loss, debt reduction, fund raising, body mass index (BMI) on a neat little ticker. I thought it was a really cool idea. I know I would certainly use it if I had not already set up our very cool Goggle chart. Lyle looks like he is already using something like that on his website to track running/walking.
(Click on any image to make it larger)
I hope to get started on homeschool planning for the start of the 2008-2009 school year Saturday afternoon. I was not going to buy the Sonlight curriculum this year, but after talking to Kelly, I decided to get the literature for the ninth grade program. We all just love those books and it would be a shame for her to miss any of them. This is the first year we will not be using one of the Sonlight Core programs. Kelly has done well on the CLEP tests, so we have decided to have her prepare for additional tests in place of those parts of the Sonlight program we do not feel are that helpful. She just finished U.S. History I so she will start up with U.S. History II, studying it in parallel with preparation for CLEP Spanish. The Spanish test is a HUGE test counting for up to twelve semester hours (two years) of credit if she gets a high enough score. We will have Christian start preparing for the Freshman English Composition test a couple of months into the year followed by the Spanish test. Those should really be enough for him for the year as he will still be heavily into the Sonlight Core Curriculum for seventh grade.
This morning, I drove Aunt Julia to the airport so she could fly to a trade show in Atlanta. She did her usual stellar teaching thing during her short stay with us. The kids learned how to play cribbage and another card game called Golf. They learned how to make ultra-thin crust pizza on the grill. I can truly say it is the best pizza I have every eaten. She showed us how to cut different vegetables into strips and grill them on the barbecue. She introduced us to a new and wonderful, low-fat salad dressing from Trader Joe’s. She went to the YMCA with the kids during their swim practice and worked out lifting weights and doing cardiovascular exercise. We talked about books and family late into the night. We love Aunt Julia and hope she comes back soon. I will put a couple of pictures up as soon as Christian emails them to me:
Bryan sent me a screen capture image he extracted from a video he took at a great party we had before Lorena and I got married. In June of 1992, Lorena flew to Oregon from Monterrey for the first time to spend a couple of months to get to know my family. She stayed with Grandpa Milo and Grandma Sarah at their house with the big cement pond outside of Newberg. I lived in Boynton Beach, Florida at the time and worked for Motorola at the time, but flew back to Oregon to spend the Fourth of July weekend with Lorena. We threw a big party for all our friends to introduce Lorena to them and to celebrate Grandpa Milo’s and Grandma Sarah’s 39th wedding anniversary. It was a great party.
Lorena and the weather were both beautiful. Lorena made her famous frijoles a la charra (cowboy bean soup). Lorena worked hard to get them just right. Right before they were served, Grandpa Milo poured off all the broth because he assumed that they were just supposed to be beans with a few condiments and that Lorena had somehow gotten it wrong. Lorena was horrified and did not say anything. The beans still tasted great, but I guess it just was not part of his paradigm that Mexican beans should be in a soup. We harrass him about that to this day–the broth is the best part.
The future best men (Byan and Warren) at our wedding were both there along with about a hundred or so other people. In Mexico they have two testigos instead of just one best man. It was honor to have both of them stand up for me. Paul and Beth Bellam were there. Paul gave a fabulous toast to commemorate both the anniversary and the engagement. Warren played his guitar and sang to entertain the crowd.
Lorena says she loved her stay with my parents. The hardest part was that it was so quiet out at their little farm. Lorena grew up in a city of about four million people with lots of traffic and neighbors who lived very close. She and Grandma really hit it off. All of my family and friends loved her and she loved them back. Lorena stay with my folks capped by that great party were a great confirmation of what I already knew–I had hit the lottery when Lorena agreed to marry me.
This picture surely brought back great memories. Thanks Bryan.
Check out Cousin Charlie’s awesome Guatemala blog. It is a fascinating read. He is definitely having an “interesting” time and I am sure he would appreciate any comments you might leave. For future reference, so you can get back to it whenever you want, I have add a link to his blog in my blog roll to the left of this text. We were reminded about this by…
My sister, Julia is visiting for a few days from Oregon. She is out east to go to a trade show in Atlanta so she is spending a few days with us. We are VERY happy that she is hear, especially since part of the plan is to teach some more cooking to Kelly and Christian. I guess today they are going to make grilled pizza! Julia is the craft queen, too, so the kids are wildly happy she is here. I will post a picture here of her with the kids for those of you who know her. She is an iron woman! She is operating on west coast time, but plans to get up with Lorena and the kids to go get in a workout when they go to their swim practice at what would be 4:30 AM in Oregon. Inspiring!
I got a great note from our buddy Kevin W. He was looking for a bible program to run on his laptop. He has converted it over to Ubuntu Linux! He used e-sword on his Windows computer and wanted to do the same on the Ubuntu computer. I recommended BibleTime and GnomeSword. He got them installed and working, but could not transfer his notes. So, instead of give up, he figured out how to run the Windows e-Sword program using the Wine program that provides the capability to run Windows programs on Linux computers. Not everything worked perfectly. He had to jump through some hoops to get his notes imported into the program, but he got it going and is using it now. He sent us a note about it and has inspired us to try to get our Rosetta Stone Spanish running on Wine. That will be a great project for Christian.
Our little family has always enjoyed small town 4th of July celebrations. In Oregon we went to McMinnville several times, Forest Grove, and Independence. This year, there were many places we could have gone, but we wanted to find something with that small town feel. I searched around on the web and found that the small town of Lillington, North Carolina, about twenty-five miles from our house, has one of the biggest fireworks shows in the state. It is a small town and their 4th of July celebration definitely did not disappoint! Here is what their webpage says about the town:
The Harnett County Seat, Lillington a picturesque town with a population of about 4,000 nestled in the heart of North Carolina. The beautiful Cape Fear River meanders through town as it flows to the Atlantic.
Just north of Fort Bragg and Fayetteville, and south of North Carolina’s state capital city of Raleigh, Lillington is perfectly located close enough so that the big city opportunities are just a commute while providing the comforts of a small town lifestyle.
Our town is a fine place to live and raise a family, re-locate or start a business, or retire. There is something for everyone in Lillington.
We got there about 6:00 in the evening. So we would have a reasonable chance of getting away after the party, we parked about a half mile away from the carnival, bandstand (with a live band playing classic rock–name “The Grand Oz” or something like that). We grabbed our chairs, fried chicken, drinks, and camera and set ourselves up by the baseball field between the Republican Party booth and some of the food stands. It was awesome–exactly what we were looking for. The local police put on quite a show on the baseball field with their K9 corp–the dogs found some drugs and explosives hidden in a car, subdued a bad guy, and then sat patiently while the kids petted them. The politicians were there passing at cards and shaking hands. A rather tipsy woman who must have been in her late fifties and was dressed like a hippie danced quite joyfully by herself in front of the band. I am sure there were literally a thousand other towns around America where this same celebration took place.
We were just getting seated to watch the fireworks when it started to rain. The sky was very dark and it looked like it was going to start coming down hard. Lots of other people were packing up to leave, so we did, too. We were pretty disappointed, but by the time we got to our car, the rain had stopped. We noticed that there were lots of people setting up in the parking area near our car to watch the fireworks, so instead of heading home, we stayed to see if the weather would hold long enough for the fireworks to continue. Providence was on our side. We watched kids playing with sparklers and setting off other fireworks until the real show started.
The fireworks were awesome. I do not think they were as good as the massive fireworks display we saw when Kelly was just a baby in West Palm Beach, but they were close and the setting seemed a whole lot more representative of the America in which I was raised. As long as we are here in North Carolina, we will go back there to celebrate the 4th of July. Hopefully, next year, we will take some other people with us.
P.S. Christian figured out the settings on the camera and took some nice fireworks pictures. The one in this blog post was one of them.
Interesting stuff: While chess boxing does not look like that much fun to do, it might be fun to watch.
Well, it looks like I am going to have to rethink the plans we have made for the kids as they move into high school. It turns out that one has to jump through a ton of hoops to get kids below the age of sixteen into our local Wake Tech Community College. The requirement is for the kid to take a bunch of tests at the parent’s expense. Then, and only if an administrator at the community college gives their personal approvales of both the test scores and the maturity of the kid, he can be admitted to the school. If the kid is admitted, the parent must sit in on every minute of the class–and this for the mediocre, politically correct education provided at the community college.
It also turns out that the “transfer” degree at the school is not a transfer degree in the traditional sense. All the Wake Tech transfer degree says is that if the state universities in North Carolina would normally accept a class that is part of the transfer degree program, then the credit will be given for the class at that university. The “transfer” part of the program sounds EXACTLY the same as just taking classes at the community college without participating in any program and then transferring them over to the big state university. The only thing one receives from the community college is an Associate of Science transfer degree which requires throw-away classes like psychology and sociology and is worth just about as much as a government high school diploma–the cost of the paper.
We were planning to send both of the kids to the community college for a couple of years each. Based on the abysmal and inadequate “transfer” program and age discrimination at Wake Tech, we have decided to just have them take as many CLEP tests as possible until they are sixteen. Then, if we have no other option, put them into a community college to take a couple of math and science classes that can be transferred to a real school.
Kelly took here second CLEP test today. The one she took was History of the United States I: Early Colonization to 1877 for three semester hours of college credit. She did great and will now be going on to take the History of the United States II (3 hours), Spanish (12 hours), Analyzing Literature (6 hours), Biology (3 hours), Sociology (3 hours), and Psychology (3 hours) next year. We really did not want her to take so many CLEP tests next year, but the local community college, Wake Tech, is not very friendly to homeschoolers who are under the age of 16 even if they have a demonstrated ability to do the work. So, we will just have her take a few more CLEP tests next year and the year after. If we are still around when she arrives at her Junior year in high school, we will sign her up.
We have found that one of the tests accepted by the state of North Carolina as a nationally normed, standardized test for homeschoolers is the ACT test. Both Kelly and Christian will take it at the end of each school year starting next year. It is really a college entrance exam, but that is good, because it will give them practice on taking a test they will need when the time comes to go to college.
We definitely want to go see some fireworks this Fourth of July. It sounds like there is an opportunity rich environment; there are fireworks, in Fuquay Varina, Garner, Lillington, and I have been trying to think of what we can do to fill out the weekend. We have been invited to a get-together on Friday. I have been checking on museums and the Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh will definitely be open over the whole weekend. I think the kids and I should give Lorena a break and barbeque up some ribs, make some coleslaw, and maybe try to make some of our own ice cream. We really need to go to the Holly Springs Library to turn in our books and get some new ones–we found that our friends Jim and Madelaine Melton live just a couple of blocks from the library, so we might stop in and bring them some homemade bread or something like that, too. We are definitely going to need to get some
As for the volcano camera, we are still making good progress. I am writing up a cross-platform application in Python that will connect to and control the volcano camera computer from either a Windows or a Linux laptop. We are making some minor modifications to the GPS so we can hook it up properly and the camera is now up and working, too. We have to swap our camera out for a triggered version so we can trigger the capture from the GPS pulse-per-second signal, but that is a fairly trivial change. We have been ticking the problems off one by one to the point where now all we have is a couple more items and a fairly large application programming task.