New Hampshire Mountain Mommy

#Homeschoollife, Week 2

September 7, 2022

Well, we kind of crash-landed in week 2. I was exhausted and underprepared, having just raced the Overland and dealing with the mixed emotions of this year’s event. It made me a less energetic educator and a much less patient mom!

Nevertheless, we made it through. Theo continued working through his unit on community, talking about how we use money for wants and needs. I set up a little “store” in the school room… Guess what he went for first???

Learning about money and budgeting! If only iPhones were really a onetime cost of $20.13…

In response to my store, Charles set up his own, much cooler store selling amplifiers and band gear in their bedroom.

Inspired by a trip with Uncle Jordan earlier this summer!

Math included a review of comparing numbers. So far, Theo hasn’t met anything in his math work that’s been too challenging for him, but I’m enjoying a different approach and think it’s really rounding out their understanding. Because they’re both bright, they don’t tend to need endless repetition to understand a concept, but I like that they get to come at each lesson from several angles.

We also started our spelling work. The boys are so different about spelling. They’re both diligent when we’re working specifically on spelling, and they both remember phonetic “rules” for regular words, but Theo is much more likely to remember/use correct spelling once he’s used a word. Charles opts for the fastest option, regardless of whether he could spell it correctly — if he’s able to edit later, he catches and corrects his mistakes himself. I just can’t figure out what the block is on spelling correctly the first time!!! In any case, Theo is a lot more patient with the process, and I was pleased he didn’t fight me on our “rainbow copying” work!

Crazy to think he was just learning to write letters two years ago!!!

Theo has been pretty bummed that his curriculum so far hasn’t included any science [it’s coming!!!], so he’s joined us in Charles’s plants & soil unit. On Tuesday, we learned about plant reproduction and dissected some flowers. “Embryo” turned out to be a challenging word to say, but we loved learning about seeds and seed formation, and comparing the different flowers from the garden.

Snapdragon with its inner workings exposed.

Charles made a video talking about the parts of a Lima bean seed:

We also made maple bars while working through some assignments about “Sugar Snow” from Little House in the Big Woods. It’s been a trip down memory lane for me to reread this alongside Charles, and to think about the differences in how he experiences it and how I did as a child. [Stay tuned for a Little House post… I’m reading The Birchbark House alongside it and think they should be read in tandem!]

While we were waiting for them to bake, Charles did some research on bears, and dictated an acrostic poem!

On Friday, Dad was home and we took a family mountain bike ride. Charles had grown so much since this summer that his feet touched his handlebars!!! It was beautiful riding weather, and the boys got to try out their new water bottle holders from Class 4 Designs. Instant hit!

It was a great end to a long week.

I’ll leave you all with this video that sums up Theo’s work…..and the general level of enthusiasm in our house!!!

· Cycling, Homeschool, Kids

Homeschool Begins

August 24, 2022

Year #3 of our homeschooling project started this week. The kids were complaining constantly of “boredom,” I was going stir crazy and needed some organization in our day, our sitter was off to college…. Getting going seemed like the best way to combat all these things.

We are using Moving Beyond the Page for the first time this year. We’ve loved Bookshark for the past two years, but wanted to mix things up and try something new. So far (2 days in), it’s been a smashing success. The kids love how much hands-on there is; I love how much discussion we have; and the activities are things the kids and I might have done organically before, but having a structure so I’m not doing last-minute web searches for good projects is a blessing for us all.

I’m hoping, this year, to use the blog to do more in-depth recaps of our “This Week in #homeschoollife” Instagram posts. They’re important because they remind me, when I’m feeling bedraggled and exhausted at the end of the week — but unsure what learning actually took place — that we’re making forward progress, and that this crazy experiment is working, worthwhile, and FUN!

As we’re plunging headfirst into [cool, refreshing?] Homeschool ’22-’23, I just want to list some things that I try to keep at the top of my brain to make it through our weeks intact.

(1) I AM AN ADULT AND THIS IS NOT AN EMERGENCY. I read this years ago in some book about parenting toddlers, and I repeat it at least ten times a day when I am losing my ish, worrying about ER visits and wondering if my kids are actually sociopaths.

(2) If we don’t finish all the projects/lessons today, there is always tomorrow. I am incredibly type A. I like to check all the boxes and get all the things done. I don’t (as an adult) enjoy procrastination, last minute changes, or “flexible schedules.” I want to get it DONE when it is SCHEDULED. But the truth is, we are not on a 180-day school schedule, and if we need to speed up or slow down or skip a project or spend some extra time talking about a concept, it’s OK. That’s a benefit of homeschooling. Teachers in public/private school have days they don’t make it through their lesson plans, too.

(3) Teaching is part of parenting, and I am my child’s natural teacher. The kids’ preschool teacher gave me this pep-talk in the middle of a grocery store when I was going into our second year of homeschooling and no longer had the, “We’re just homeschooling because of COVID” fallback to catch me or anyone else. They are learning just by being with me and doing things day-to-day. They know how to schedule and budget, how to read a map and road signs, how to meal plan (and cook some things!). Fractions come pretty easily to Charles not just because he’s good at math, but because he’s measured things with me his whole life. (In fact, this week, he decided on measurements for a science experiment, measured them out himself, and set the whole thing up independently of me.)

(4) Did I mention that I AM AN ADULT AND THIS IS NOT AN EMERGENCY? If some dirt gets spilled, someone colors outside the line, or we get sidetracked using unit blocks to build patterns / castles / jewelry for our stuffed animals… it’s ok. Deep breath. Because there is always tomorrow. And those unit blocks are at least easier to see on the carpet than Legos.

(5) We need to sit and read together. It’s been how we calmed down since Charles was 3 months old. Theo’s 2nd day of school was 1000% more successful than the first because we snuggled on the couch with a Richard Scarry book to kick off our discussion of People in the Community.

(6) Challenge builds character, problem solving, and intellect. Sure, it was nice that Charles could do all his work independently last year; that he read all his assigned reading in twenty minutes at the beginning of the week; and that I didn’t have to listen to him moan about writing in a journal. But now he gets to learn how to look up vocabulary and read critically.

(7) Structure and schoolwork feed our creative brains. The kids have been a flurry of activity these past two days: inventing new games, discovering new ways to add to their ubiquitous stop-motion-animation; helping each other with their work and chores. They’ve both written newspapers and drawn maps outside of school time. They’re engaging ME in their imaginative play. I feel like we’ve done more in the past two days than the entire summer… even though we did SO MUCH this summer!!!

So cheers to this school year! We’re going to make it through today, and tomorrow, and then I’m going to focus on my race for a few days, and then we’re going to start soccer! And piano lessons! And we’re going to… NOT PANIC because we are ADULTS and this is NOT AN EMERGENCY!!!!

· Homeschool, Kids

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