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HS Comments on the Fly

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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 27th, 2007

Homeschool P.E.

Physical Education usually means a bit of physical activity of some sort. We’ve done all sorts of stuff and called it P.E.

Let’s see …

  • tree climbing
  • swimming at the local pool (regrettably we don’t have one in the backyard)
  • biking over to soccer (European football) lessons
  • soccer (see above)
  • having folks over to play a baseball game or just tossing it around w/each other
  • Tae kwon do lessons
  • shooting hoops out in front of the house
  • walking
  • jogging
  • archery
  • badminton
  • preparing for a mountain hike by carrying sacks of sugar in backpacks and walking 2 miles daily for a month
  • yoga
  • sailing
  • chopping wood
  • free weights
  • home weight bench
  • stationary bike in living room w/TV turned up loud
  • tossing a football around
  • skating
  • sledding
  • snowboarding and skiing

I’m sure there have been other things, but what I actually have a photo of is from one of our canoe trips. And of course, canoeing counts for P.E. class.

On one of the trips, we visited the area known as the White Cliffs area of the Missouri River. It’s located in the part of the country previously owned by both Spain and France. The U.S. government was offered this section of the country by Napoleon. You can read the story of its purchase in Rhoda Blumberg’s book titled What’s the Deal? Jefferson, Napoleon, and the Louisiana Purchase — a fine book, published by National Geographic.

We set in at Coal Banks and got out a few days later at Judith Landing. If you look at this map (http://www.trailadventures.com/images/ta_map-inset_lrg.gif) the portion of the Missouri River I’m referring to is highlighted in yellow on the right of the map. Lewis & Clark, the famous explorers of the Louisiana Purchase, traveled along this same stretch of the Missouri River in the early 1800s, though they were going upstream and we went downstream. We did this with a couple of other families with our own canoes, though you can get a tour company to take you on a guided tour for about $325 per person per day. ::cough, choke:: I imagine that our trip cost us around $325 for all 4 of us for 3 or 4 days (can’t remember how long it took). But we did already have a water purifier and camping gear (tents, sleeping bags, gas cookers, life jackets, etc.) which kept our costs down. Gas was much cheaper then also. I think my husband bought a new, and quite technologically advanced, canoe paddle. Oh, here’s another tour company that provides trips for about $665 per person w/guide for three days.

  Eagle Creek White Cliffs of Missouri  
Canoers Paradise - White Cliffs of Upper Missouri River

Anyway, the picture is the view from our camp the first night. It looks just like this painting of William Clark found here. I guess the location is Eagle Creek. All I know is that there was no way out except by walking or continuing on in the canoes at this point. Our cell phones didn’t have service, so we were seriously cut off from civilization. As a worry-wart mom, this was not very comforting to me, and I was able to imagine all sorts of medical emergencies that might plague us — rattlesnake bite at the top of the list. I do believe that cell towers have been put up in the area since we went through there.

As I already mentioned, this stretch of the Missouri River is called the White Cliffs. It’s well known, but I didn’t know it at the time. I did know it was protected, though. President Clinton made this area a national monument as one of his last acts in office.

The Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument contains a spectacular array of biological, geological, and historical objects of interest. From Fort Benton upstream into the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge, the monument spans 149 miles of the Upper Missouri River, the adjacent Breaks country, and portions of Arrow Creek, Antelope Creek, and the Judith River. The area has remained largely unchanged in the nearly 200 years since Meriwether Lewis and William Clark traveled through it on their epic journey. (source)

I didn’t keep a diary of the trip, but I’ll link to a few at the end of this entry. I remember that it was a little chilly considering it was summer, and I was glad that we took jackets along. We ate lots of Chex Mix, granola bars, and dried fruit (but no dogs, as did some one the L&C expedition — [Clark, October 11, 1805]). We paddled along by moonlight one night. We saw a beaver and heard it do a tail flap. We had a good breeze for a while and a few of the guys tied our canoes together and fashioned a sail out of a tarp, rope, and a few canoes. It kept hitting some of us in the head. Delightful. Once we were out and packed up, we ate a sumptuous dinner at Pizza Hut at the closest town.

Trip Diary in .pdf, best photos most resembling our trip except we took our trip later in the year and the water levels were markedly lower.

Trip Diary

Trip Diary

Trip Diary

Trip Diary