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November 1st, 2007

High Seas Homeschooling

I know I have mentioned the Burns family before, but this bears repeating.

The Burns family is about to leave San Diego for their run to Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. They hope to circumnavigate the globe, so it will be fun watching. If you are in need of a world geography project for your homeschool, this could be it.

To catch you up, they left Alaska a few months ago on their Catalina 36. It is a 36-foot sailboat with one mast. I have no idea which model or year they own, but here are some photos of a similar boat’s interior. A 36-foot boat can only have so many configurations. Can’t you just imagine homeschooling in there?

Currently the passengers are:

  • Dad as Captain
  • Mom as 1st Mate
  • Son as 2nd Mate
  • Daughter as Cabin Girl
  • Bob as Crew

Each of the passengers blog every few days, so you get the kids’ viewpoint, too! They have a photo gallery, too.

It sounds like they’re doing a correspondence course for homeschool.

It reminds me a bit of reading the Pardeys’ books except the Pardeys went around the world the other direction, I think. It’s been a while since I read their series, so my memory is a bit sketchy. I think the Pardeys traveled east while the Burns are heading west.

October 10th, 2007

Homeschooling Before Widespread Panic Begins

An article in The Missoulian shows a photo of Renna homeschooling her son Christopher in the parking lot before a Widespread Panic concert.

Renna, her husband, Kevin, and son, Christopher, 7, have toured with Widespread Panic for the last four years. They home-school Christopher on the road, following the band while selling their Panic-Stricken Chicken Wraps, out of their makeshift Panic-Stricken Chicken Shack. The chicken wraps contain chicken, cheese, lettuce, salsa, bell peppers and onions.

Don’t those sound good? I think I know what we’ll be having for dinner tonight. Well, homemade ones; we’re not traveling to Ogden, Utah, to get them.

Christopher gets an amazing hands-on US geography education, too. With just this Fall tour, he’ll visit these states: Tennessee, California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Utah, Colorado, Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiana, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, and Alabama.

October 5th, 2007

Well-Trained Minds in Lake Oswego, Oregon

Here’s the link to an article about a family who uses The Well-Trained Mind in their homeschool.

The article discusses how the Shatsky family homeschools, but then gives some information based on a 23-family survey completed by 27% of the homeschool families in Lake Oswego. The survey is part of the Lake Oswego School District’s new marketing plan.


August 30th, 2007

Please … Paint a Big Ol’ Red Target on Your Chest.

In light of Judy Aron’s older entry (and another) from May where she indicates that Connecticut homeschoolers are under fire, would it be wise to answer the request made by a Connecticut newspaper to contact them if you homeschool?

And also, Judy writes, “There is documented proof that the CT Department of Education is encouraging school superintendents to report families [to DCF] who have decided to withdraw their children from government school to homeschool them.”

Here’s the notice in The Weston Forum:

Parents have a variety of reasons for homeschooling, ranging from concerns about public school environment, safety, drugs, or peer pressure, to a desire to provide religious instruction to children, to a belief that homeschooled children often fare better academically.

The Forum would like to explore these and other issues that surround the idea and the practice of educating one’s children at home.

Westonites interested in sharing their stories and experiences may contact [us … because The Weston Forum wants to hear about it].

Are they providing the red paint?

Or maybe it’s a great way to educate folks in CT about the positive aspects of homeschooling?

On another note, Brett Dennan and Tim Tebow, both homeschooled as kids, are still making news.

August 28th, 2007

HSing 11 in the UK

The Shepherds’ flock of 11* (almost 12) are featured in an article in the Daily Mail today. They homeschool in Grantham, Lincolnshire, England, which is north of London a bit. According to Wikipedia, Isaac Newton went to school there and Margaret Thatcher was born there. That isle’s got more history than you can shake a timeline at.

The Shepherd clan were also featured in an article back in April, before their trip to the States, which is chronicled with many pictures in their blog. They came to the States to tour with their Celtic folk-rock band Remnant which apparently plays predominantly in churches.

*Do ya’ think they’re tired of ever so clever quips like that yet?

March 6th, 2007

Homeschoolers Boycott German Products

… Support Us In This Boycott Of Germany By Vowing Not To By [sic] Goods, Travel To, Or Support Any Commerce With Germany. (source)

I suppose you’re already involved in this boycott — after all, you are a homeschooler. But I just heard about it.

This boycott is supposed to influence Germany into returning German teen Melissa Busekros to her German family. The web site provides links to Melissa’s story and also the German companies that are to be boycotted. Some big names include Bayer, DHL, Merck, Volkswagen, BMW, Siemens, T-Mobile, and Random House.

I won’t be involved in it, though, because I love my Miele upright vacuum and will continue to buy vacuum cleaner bags. I’ve had a Miele or Miele-designed vacuum cleaner since around ‘92 and have no intention of switching. This the one I own right now; I have the maroon one. It’s a dream come true. I can’t imagine going out and buying a new non-German vacuum to use until Melissa Busekros is returned to her family, which is when I would be allowed to buy more vacuum cleaner bags.

I can easily comply with the German travel part of the boycott. Traveling to Germany has never been high on my priority list. So, I guess I’ve been boycotting travel to Germany all my life.

Curious, I gave our home and garage a cursory glance, looking for German items. We use German technical pens and pencils, binoculars, power tools, a metronome, and a few other items, but not many. Interestingly enough, some of these items were assembled in other countries. My Miele vacuum was made in Spain. One of the power tools was made in Taiwan. How does that affect things? It seems like there will be collateral damage. Is that the right term?

March 6th, 2007

Today’s Homeschool News

A little bit of news.

From an article about alienated gifted students in the public schools:

According to the U.S. Department of Education, home-schooling rose 29 percent across the country between 1999 and 2003.

In a separate article which discusses how U.S. universities are easing policies for homeschoolers, Ana Beatriz Cholo (AP) writes:

Last fall, however, Riverside [the Riverside campus of the University of California] joined a growing number of colleges around the country that are revamping application policies to accommodate homeschooled students….

UC Riverside is actively recruiting homeschoolers, said Merlyn Campos, interim director of undergraduate admissions.

“There are a lot of students out there that are very prepared for a college level education,” she said. “They are kind of being forced into going into a community college.”

Frank Vahid, a UC Riverside computer science professor, was among those who lobbied for the change, contending the school could gain a competitive advantage because homeschoolers have a lot to offer.

Vahid’s own children are taught at home. His 15-year-old son also takes community college classes and will likely try to transfer into to a public university.

That is good news because the University of California system of schools were not overly welcoming to homeschoolers over the past couple of years because of their special rules that affected homeschoolers adversely — even the article uses the term “lost cause.”

Jessica Marks writes about a homeschooled visual artist named Brittney Diamond who airbrushes with a mixture of liquid lead, charcoal and pencil:

Art that she creates upstairs in her home has been valued at thousands of dollars, and people can’t get enough of her work….

Brittney only learned about airbrushing six months ago.

What gives her the edge is that she’s home schooled, [mother] Teri said.

“The one thing with home schooling has helped children find their passion,” she added.

For Brittney, that was art - and specifically, airbrushing….

Though art is a passion for Brittney, she only spends about an hour a day in her studio working on it.

If you’d like to see what Brittney Diamond’s work looks like, I found two paintings at the Liquid Lead Art Studio which is selling prints — “Jack Sparrow” and “a horse.” The pirate painting is startling in its intensity; it seems to capture what Captain Jack is all about.

From Salem, Oregon, we get a fun story about homeschooler Jordan Berrier. He plays basketball for the local public school and his nickname is “Homeschool.”

“He’s one of the more popular kids at school, and he doesn’t even go to school here. People all over the place know him and chant Homeschool for him when he’s announced.”

Berrier, a senior by eligibility standards, has tried going to public school a few times, but it never has stuck.

There was a three-day stint at an elementary school — he doesn’t remember which — and a semester of taking electives at Adam Stephens Middle School.

He has taken a few weight-training classes at McKay, but he has done better academically in the home-school environment.

Bill Poehler takes the obligatory prejudicial swipe at other homeschoolers with:

Unlike a lot the [sic] typical home-schooled students, Berrier (pronounced like Perrier) is well-adjusted and blends in enough with his McKay teammates that outsiders can’t tell the difference.

I believe Poehler is actually saying that a lot of typical home-schooled students are not well-adjusted and don’t blend in. I wonder if he’s basing that opinion on anecdotal evidence or something actually substantial.

Okay, I think that’s enough news for now. It’s enough for me for sure.

February 26th, 2007

A Former Homeschooler Is on The Amazing Race!

According the her Wikipedia article, Dustin-Leigh Konzelman was homeschooled. She is one-half of the Beauty Queens team which appeared on Season 10 and is currently participating this season (11) of The Amazing Race.

February 15th, 2007

Chris Thile Was Homeschooled

Growing up as a homeschooler, Chris Thile had plenty of time to play his music and record his albums. He’s 25 for just a few more days and was recently named Musician of the Year at the 2007 BBC Folk Awards. He was the only U.S. citizen nominated. (source, source, and source)

You can hear and see him on YouTube: Clip #1 or Clip #2

February 1st, 2007

Today’s Homeschooling News

This is what I’m seeing as today’s homeschool news.

(Format: Article title, followed by short excerpt with some homeschooling info included.)

Libraries slated to close in Oregon
Applegate resident Chris Shockey, who homeschools his family, said he checked out 1,176 items from the library last year. He estimated that without libraries, it would cost $7,000 to homeschool a family.

Christian Fascism: The Jesus Gestapo of St. Orwell (book review)
Millions of children in America are being home-schooled, and 75% of them are children from fundamentalist Christian homes. Home-schooling can offer an extraordinary alternative to attending public school, but for fundamentalist Christians, it serves, among other things, to shield their children not only from grappling with such issues as evolution and global warming, but learning the scientific method itself and the basic principles of critical thinking and logical analysis.

Dozier: American history subject of DAR’s essay contest
The contestant winners are … Nathaniel Stine of DeWitt, homeschool, 10th grade.

Authorities ask help in finding missing boy
A 9-year-old Longview [Washington] boy has been missing since before 8 a.m. Wednesday…. Michael D. Dalgardno was reported as a runaway by his parents around noon on Wednesday after they checked places where they thought he might go. He is homeschooled.

January 30th, 2007

Today’s Homeschooling News

As of right now, these are some of the homeschool headlines. The text underneath each headline is an excerpt from the article highlighting the homeschooling content.

Private schools and home-schooling exist because the public schools are failing in their delivery of educational services. There is neither equality nor excellence.

Numerous Cornell students, both undergraduates and graduates, took to the microphones to voice their concerns about the state of education in America. For instance, Kendra Chatburn ’10 discussed her experience being homeschooled and encouraged those in the audience to “have the confidence to take our education into our own hands.”

In Public Schools: Enforced Social Conversion & Parental Denial, tireless education and home schooling advocate, Nancy Levant, states, “Children all over the world are being converted to social compliancy and servitude. ….. No parent in the United States has any excuse, whatsoever, for ignoring the political-corporate take-over and manipulation of knowledge and learning.”

Our son, has Asperger’s Syndrome…. Nothing can possibly be better at developing a child’s understanding of the real world than living in it, which is what home education offers. All the evidence from research also shows that home educating, which is not about school at home in any way but child-driven learning, beats school on every measure, whether academic, social or building a confident and free-thinking adult.

Rosemarie Grusska is now home-schooling her son, who was in the Grade 7. He could not learn in class at the Leaf Rapids Education Centre while teachers were busy dealing with too many problem students, she said Monday.