My plans, successes, and failures regarding homeschooling, college, and life.
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Nearing the End
I just turned in my final paper for sociology. The end of the semester is right around the corner. I've made it and my 4.0 is pretty much assured. I have several last minute things to wrap up but the pressure, by and large, is Off.
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Homeschooling
For those who don't know me, I homeschool my four children. My daughter is 11, and my three sons are 9, 6, and nearly 2. They have never gone to traditional school. I have always felt strongly that homeschooling them is in their best interests for a multitude of reasons (I won't get into all of them there but the reasons range from purely academic to social--my kids are free thinkers in a very conservative area). Those feelings have not changed; the amount of time and energy I have to put into homeschooling has changed.
Every year except this one I spent most of July and August rereading The Well-Trained Mind, researching curriculum, piecing together every subject and filling in gaps. I really love this time, as it's a chance for me to breathe in and just plan. I love to plan and organize. I'm good at it.
This summer, however, I've taken 10 credit hours (in 8 weeks, oy) as well as Russian tutoring. I don't have the time or energy to micromanage homeschooling right now and I have 12 credit hours (anatomy & physiology, concepts in mathematics, psychology, and exposition & persuasion) coming in the fall (I'm toying with the idea of adding microbiology, so you might try to talk me out of that in the interest of sanity--microbiology just looks so interesting!) so fall doesn't look to be any less hectic.
I've decided to rely, for the first time, on a boxed curriculum. I've always pieced together a neoclassical curriculum and will still add in Latin, Russian, and violin (foreign languages are non-negotiable here) but I've decided to rely upon Oak Meadow for the rest. I'm actually pretty excited about this and I hope it works well for us.
Every year except this one I spent most of July and August rereading The Well-Trained Mind, researching curriculum, piecing together every subject and filling in gaps. I really love this time, as it's a chance for me to breathe in and just plan. I love to plan and organize. I'm good at it.
This summer, however, I've taken 10 credit hours (in 8 weeks, oy) as well as Russian tutoring. I don't have the time or energy to micromanage homeschooling right now and I have 12 credit hours (anatomy & physiology, concepts in mathematics, psychology, and exposition & persuasion) coming in the fall (I'm toying with the idea of adding microbiology, so you might try to talk me out of that in the interest of sanity--microbiology just looks so interesting!) so fall doesn't look to be any less hectic.
I've decided to rely, for the first time, on a boxed curriculum. I've always pieced together a neoclassical curriculum and will still add in Latin, Russian, and violin (foreign languages are non-negotiable here) but I've decided to rely upon Oak Meadow for the rest. I'm actually pretty excited about this and I hope it works well for us.
Saturday, July 3, 2010
Priorities
I'm not normally a proscratinator. I do work better under some level of pressure but I am not, by nature, someone who puts off work that needs to be done. Except for today, that is, when I have several things to do for each class, including writing a paper, reading a chapter, and doing a quiz for sociology and writing a midterm paper about Russian Nationalism and Rimsky-Korsakov for music appreciation. What was I doing instead of my paper?
Playing Super Mario Brothers 3 with H, my 6 year old son.
Now it's midnight, a time when I normally really buckle down and get work done, and I've got my bed littered with papers, schoolbooks, and little boys (we sleep in piles at my house). I shall conquer this sociology paper.
Playing Super Mario Brothers 3 with H, my 6 year old son.
Now it's midnight, a time when I normally really buckle down and get work done, and I've got my bed littered with papers, schoolbooks, and little boys (we sleep in piles at my house). I shall conquer this sociology paper.
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