That’s How We Roll

That’s how we roll…well that could be referring to the bike ride everyone not still coughing took today. But I was actually thinking of spending the last few days with the boys making new Dungeons & Dragons characters.

For the first quest they did, the dad who is the dungeon master and teaching them to play took the time to make a bunch of characters and just let them pick one. One of the joys of living somewhere with numerous homeschoolers is there is a group, gathering, co-op for that. Whatever that is.

For their second quest, they have the option of making their own characters. Now neither of us ever played D&D – just because I never knew anyone who did, not because of it’s geekiness; we played Magic the Gathering for a while instead :)- so trying to get through the guidebook is like reading a foreign language. I keep having to ask the boys, “Did that make sense?”

Geek Evolution Cartoon

They have loved learning to play and are really enjoying the game. D&D doesn’t have the same geeky connotations today that it used to. Or perhaps being geeky itself doesn’t. Today’s children – and adults – are surrounded by computer technology – the more you know the better; Harry Potter and wizardry, magic and dragons;  Bill Gates and Steve Jobs being household names. Nothing wrong with being smart or liking myth, magic and make-believe. Of course, this comes from probably the only cheerleader in my high school that read Tolkien and Douglas Adams.

One of my favorite quotes by our eldest was last year when I mentioned Shakespeare. C, who was 8, momentarily couldn’t remember who that was. D, who was 10, looked and him and said, “Remember on that one episode of Dr. Who…?” Pure awesome. I’m not sure which puts us more firmly in the homeschool box: the fact that I expected my 6, 8 and 10 year olds to know who Shakespeare was, or that the explanatory reference came from Dr. Who. Of course this same child performed in Romeo and Juliet just last month. He was Abraham of the “Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?” line. When his sister asked what that meant he held up his middle finger and told her he thought it was the same thing. Then he held up his first two and said that would be the same in the UK. After telling the idea was similar for all…I told him he watched way too much BBC.

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Icky Sickies

The last few days we’ve been fighting off the sickies. Nothing major, just tired and an annoying cough.
Monday D and C went to the first meeting for the Arizona Homeschool Theater program, while their sister stayed home sick with grandma, and then we pretty much laid around all day.
Tuesday they all went to their enrichment program, then were too tired to go to akido.
Wednesday we had a pokemon playdate at the park (is it geeky to like the alliteration?), then they decided not to go to our homeschool group’s park day to save their energy for akido. We evidently missed quite the park day, because the President’s cavalcade drove right by the park they were at. Bummer.
Today I’ve got one at their enrichment program and two home coughing. We’ve watched TV, read and now D is playing TimezAttack and B is one Starfall.
Tomorrow I thought we’d go on a field trip, but now I’m thinking we may bunker down and rest all day. Icky sickies go away!

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Roller Grooving’

Okay, so I’m behind. We’ve been doing our thing…things. Last thursday we went roller skating with some friends. Fun, exercise and groovy with the black lights and glow sticks.

Weekend was spent with grandma. Eat, read, watch movie, play, repeat :)

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Internet Wandering

I’m often asked what we do all day. That is a lot of why I do this, why I’m trying to get back in the habit now that the blog is fixed. If you asked what we did last week or last month, I’d be able to tell you the big things – vacations, field trips, excitements – but not the little moments that make our days. And just the act of writing it down, or typing it out as the case may be, helps me remember.

Yesterday was a pretty usual Wednesday. Everyone read. Well, actually that’s relatively new. They’re all excited about reading right now so we’re spending quite a bit more time than usual on it.

We had park day with our homeschool group. No two park days are the same. Depends on the park, which kids are there and the position of the moon in relation to what they had for breakfast. Yesterday one of the boys had brought a mortar and pestle and some of them were crushing leaves of plants to see how much liquid they had, colors, etc. Another had brought paper and was showing kids how to fold origami stars. Some kids were on the playground equipment, some wandered, one read, some climbed, some ate, some played tennis – kinda – in an open field.

In the evening the kids had akido. They love it. I like that it is defensive and it is a martial art where size isn’t as important. The dojo we go to is also brilliant with the kids and they learn a bit of Japanese while doing it. In fact, D has been invite to test for a belt next month and it’s the Japanese terms for moves and positions that he needs to work on.

So, pretty standard Wednesday…but what did we get into in our unorganzied free time? Well that’s were every day is different and you never know what’s coming. Well daddy had found the first of these at a joke site so I showed the kids. And in internet fashion one thing just kept leading to another…

 

which led to…

 

and this Donkey Kong Parody…a some previous favorites Avada Kedavra by Steve Goodie and Perform This Way by Weird Al

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Life on the Fly

Somehow with everything being put on hold with the holidays, our homeschool group ended up completely over-scheduled yesterday. Never let it be said there is nothing to do around here as homeschoolers.

Buoyancy and Propulsion

Yesterday morning we had science co-op. We learned about buoyancy and propulsion. After learning about the theory, the kids build boats from halved milk cartons and made sails, motors from baking soda and vinegar in empty bottles, pontoons from empty water bottles or used soap to break the water tension. And then they set set sail in a backyard pool. Hypothesize, test, make adjustments. The best kind of science.

We left science and drove straight to lego day. Which is just what it sounds like – getting together to build legos. I had two of mine and two extra kids. One of mine road with another mother. As we left, I got a phone call from the mother of the boy I drove offering to take her son and my boys to the next activity so I wouldn’t have to do so much driving. My daughter stayed behind for a playdate. The moms starting laughing about playing musical children and one said, “This is life on the fly.” Exactly.

So I took four boys and drove half way, passing them to one of the moms so she could drive them to Dungeons & Dragons. The boys have been playing D&D for a couple of months now and just finished their first quest last night. They love it. One of the dads is being dungeon master and adjusting things for the 9-12 yo age group and doing a wonderful job.

At the end of the day we ended up with all three of our kids back and no spares. We’d learned about buoyancy, played, legoed, traded pokemon, played D&D, and been shuffled through multiple hands. Life on the fly…I like that.

Categories: Buddy Time, Homeschooling, Science Schmience | 1 Comment

Gauntlet Thrown

So last week the kids were taking guesses as to how many books I could read if I had nothing else to do. I tried to point out how unlikely that situation was – even if I ignored laundry and vacuuming, there are still kids to feed and places to go. They decided on a day. One day to read and do nothing else. And actual books, not kindle, so they could see my progress.

Wanting physical books, I took a trip to the library. I saw fascinating books like a historical fiction on feudal Japan, but those don’t read quickly. I asked two different librarians for short, quick reads – hoping for some 200 page genre fiction. The only recommendation they could think of was Lillian Jackson Braun; it only took a page to have me checking copyright date. For future reference I can skip all books written in the 60s that use words like doll and dame.

Yesterday was the day. But it wasn’t quite a full day. Grandma was down in the morning, kids came in and out and in and out, breakfast, lunch, dinner…and the wandering. Discovered I can no longer sit by the hour and get completely lost in a book. I’m wildly out of practice and have about a 45 second attention span. Read, hear kids talk, read, think about what we need to do the next day, read, go check on laundry. Wow. I guess motherhood and constant interruption has seriously decreased my focus.

1. The Cat Who Could Read Backwards by Lillian Jackson Braun 250 pages
2. Moon Called by Patricia Briggs 288 pages
3. Blood Bound by Patricia Briggs 292 pages

Three books, 830 pages. Should have picked shorter books since it was by book count! Two-thirds were impressed. One thought I’d be much higher. I told them I’m out of practice. Anymore I read two or three pages and hop up to do something else, sneaking reading in whenever I can. Maybe if I try some more extended sitting periods I can get back to a bit more concentration. The good news is every read yesterday, not just mom. And maybe I’ll get more practice in future.

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From Pirates to Punk

Right now I have one sleeping, two if you count daddy, one reading a Magic Treehouse book and one doing Mighty Mind puzzles. Random. Yesterday definitely had that eclectic random feeling we specialize in sometimes, but added busy.

We headed over to the Arizona Science Center. While we’d planned just to walk around, we saw that the exhibit Real Pirates was going to close Sunday. On the way to the exhibit, D wondered how much electricity the science center uses and asked an employee, who called over another employee, who ended up calling a manager. Never got an exact answer, but ‘a whole lot’ was the general consensus. But they talked about the solar panels they have to generate some electricity. One of the employees we talked to was knitting with strips of plastic grocery bags. She’s making sleeping mats for the homeless. She’d like help with the project if anyone local is interested – leave a message in the comments. The kids chatted with her until the doors opened for the pirates exhibit.

I wasn’t sure what exactly the pirates exhibit was going to be. It was the real story of Whydah, which began as a slave ship, became a pirate ship and sunk of the coast of New England. The exhibit discussed slavery, the economic impact on both Africa and Europe, the conditions of the slaves as they were taken from Africa to the Caribbean. The kids were horrified by examples of small leg shackles and drawings of the over crowded sleep conditions on board. We read sign after sign and looked at the all the artifacts while most people raced by us. Then the exhibit moves into the pirate Sam Bellamy and how the Whydah became a pirate ship. There were a lot of things we didn’t know about pirates in general and a lot of myths debunked. We read signs, looked at muskets and cannons, read stories about pirates in general and the Whydah in specific. Then the exhibit moves on to the discovery of the ship and the ongoing process of exploration. The entire thing was very interesting and we learned a lot of new things. A couple of which we learned from other people wondering the exhibit that talked to the kids. And if we want to explore more, National Geographic, that created the exhibit, has several lesson ideas online.

Biggest ideas that stuck with us or surprised us:
D – Real treasure doesn’t look at all the in the movies. They had actual treasure found from the ship – various countries silver and – a few – gold coins. It looked more like a piggy bank exploded that the image of hunks of rubies and emeralds and necklaces dripping from overloaded chests.
C – They let us touch some of the real coins from the ship. Very cool because they were over 300 years old and were pirate treasure.
B – That Blackbeard was real. His name is so funny, he sounds like a mythic pirate.
Me – Probably how egalitarian pirates were amongst themselves – splitting treasure equally, voting for officers, taking men of any color or nationality and even a few women.

When we left the exhibit we wandered through the body area. Nothing like a hands on museum to encourage wandering. We ran into a friend that was heading into the planetarium and decided to join them. Ice Worlds was about the importance of ice in the galaxy, examples of it in our solar system and on our planet. Then we got to see the stars in that night’s sky. The kids asked for different features – specific stars, constellations, blackholes, etc – and we get an explanation while they were displayed.

D Punk

B Valley Girl

C Punk

 

Headed home and read a bit. But just a bit (the first book in the 1001 Books Every Child Must Read Before Growing Up list – The Little Engine That Could by Watty Piper. There was an 80s theme dance party we were invited to and the kids spent the rest of the afternoon looking up ideas – two decided to go punk and one as a valley girl. Getting ready was accompanied by an insane mix of Cyndi Lauper and the Sex Pistols for mood music. I couldn’t believe how excited they got about getting dressed up.

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Learning Away From Home

While some homeschoolers would consider any school learning to bump you from that huge homeschool label, my guys like to go to an enrichment program that run two days a week. They like the no-pressure classes and seeing friends; I use the time to recharge. We missed the first day of the new semester because we were lounging on the beach in Mexico. Today was the second day.

B is in a 1st grade classroom. No grades, no homework, no tests, lots of projects and hands on learning – just the fun stuff. Right now their theme is transportation. She’s made a timeline of transportation and charted the speed of various modes of transport. They also do pe, music and computers.

The boys, because they are older, get to pick their classes. They have academic and fun classes and, because it is enrichment, they can pick what they like. So far they are enjoying Spanish, photoshop, and pe. They love pop-up books and have already brought books home today. Archeology is a little more iffy. We’ll see what they think next week or they’ll switch to chess. Now if only I could find my camera I’d take a picture of the very cool snowman pop-up books.

Tomorrow: zoo or science center? Hmmmmm

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100+ Books In A Year Reading Challenge 2012

Maybe I’m crazy, but I’m going to do my best. I’m probably getting a bit too confident based on eight days at the beach, which also explains a lot of what I’ve read so far. But the best I can do is try – and it’s always good to be an example for the kids, so I’m going to participate in the 100+ Books in a Year Reading Challenge 2012.

That’s it. No levels, no craziness. Just read.

1. Dirty Secrets Club by Meg Gardiner
2. Stitches and Scars by Elizabeth A. Vincent
3. To Conquer Mr. Darcy by Abigail Reynolds
4. Finding Kate Huntley by Theresa Regan
5. The Unidentified Redhead by Alice Clayton
6. The Cat Who Could Read Backwards by Lillian Jackson Braun
7. Moon Called by Patricia Briggs
8. Blood Bound by Patricia Briggs
9. Iron Kissed by Patricia Briggs
10. Love Unscripted by Tina Reber
11. Bone Crossed by Patricia Briggs
12. Silver Borne by Patricia Briggs
13.
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15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

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Little Bit of Everything

Yesterday was a slow day. D cooked everyone breakfast. Cooking is such an important life skill, but because it isn’t reading, writing or arithmetic most people don’t consider learning to cook as actual learning. Personally I eat every day but don’t need to remember how to balance chemical equations…just saying.

The kids all recently got Mine Craft. Evidently that can easily become an obsession. They spent a bit of the morning playing and checking out each other’s worlds. D ready to his sister, because we need to go to the library for the book he wants to read. C read a bit of a Magic Treehouse book.

Then we picked up some friends to take to our homeschool group’s park day. Kids, moms, snacks, scooters, chatting, catching a fish in a homemade net (then trying to get it back out), climbing, hanging. Park day.

Kids had akido in the evening, which they started about two months ago. They all really enjoy it.

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Categories: Fresh Air, Getting Physical, Homeschooling | Tags: , | 1 Comment