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HS Comments on the Fly

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November 9th, 2007

Today’s Geography Lesson

Arno RiverTrue or False. Put a T in front of the statements that are true. Put a F in front of the statements that are false.

__ There are no rivers in Florence.

__ The Arno River’s in Florence.

__ There are no rivers in Pisa.

__ The Arno River’s in Pisa.

Yeah, this isn’t really a test. I just think it sounds funny to say both of those sentence sets quickly. When I read this journal in my dotage, I’m going to need a laugh and this will be it.

My daughter came up with this while we were reading Galileo’s Daughter aloud and chatting the other day.

November 9th, 2007

The Blog Readability Test

I usually stick all this type of info over on my Baloney page. However, this is just so amazing that I had to post it here for you, my regular lone reader.

The Blog Readability Test lets readers know the level of education required to read this online journal. So I guess a lot of 3rd graders are in luck! Result!

cash advance
And who would have thunk it? Not me. I also checked and it seems that my online homeschooling journal garners a G rating.I checked on this Critic’s Rant web site that is running this little readability test — you know, just to see if it’s on the up and up — and the good news is that it is! After all, who could doubt the credibility of a web site that likes Chuck?

H/T Notes From A Homeschooling Mom

November 8th, 2007

The Bitter Homeschooler’s Wish List

Here are my three favorites because I am just so sure you are dying to know:

We don’t look horrified and start quizzing your kids when we hear they’re in public school. Please stop drilling our children like potential oil fields to see if we’re doing what you consider an adequate job of homeschooling.

Don’t ask my kid if she wouldn’t rather go to school unless you don’t mind if I ask your kid if he wouldn’t rather stay home and get some sleep now and then.

Stop assuming that because the word “home” is right there in “homeschool,” we never leave the house. We’re the ones who go to the amusement parks, museums, and zoos in the middle of the week and in the off-season and laugh at you because you have to go on weekends and holidays when it’s crowded and icky.

Honorable Mention goes to:

If you can remember anything from chemistry or calculus class, you’re allowed to ask how we’ll teach these subjects to our kids. If you can’t, thank you for the reassurance that we couldn’t possibly do a worse job than your teachers did, and might even do a better one.

You too can read The Bitter Homeschooler’s Wish List.

November 8th, 2007

Living Science at Upper Levels

Sure living books are great for grade school, but should a homeschooler still be using real books (aka living books) at the high school level?

I really don’t see why not. That’s how I, as an adult, learn. Think about it. All adults who are done with their classroom education use real books to learn. Oh, sure, you might use a tutorial to learn PostgreSQL, but a tutorial isn’t a textbook. While some college classes require a textbook, many also require that real books be read or consulted. If I want to know how to garden, I don’t grab the first botany textbook that I can find; I buy a gardening book. Take a look at your local bookstore. Is it full of textbooks? No. That’s because learning is best done through the use of real books.

So why can’t high schoolers learn by using real books, too? Why should high school science education be different? I guess it probably shouldn’t.

However, how can someone like me make sure that my students are properly prepared for college-level science if they’ve not covered what’s in the high school science texts? Well, a high-school-science-teacher homeschooling parent can figure that out. But I can’t. It’s easier and faster to just do what’s in the science text than it is to re-invent the wheel. No pun intended.

So we only do one year of “real book” science in high school. We title the class “Science Survey.” I have no idea if that’s the best title for the class, but it’s good enough for us. If you know of a better name, let me know.

For that class, the student chooses from biographies of scientists or any non-fiction science book that we can find in the library. It has to contain a lot of science; it can’t be a story about the childhood years of Enrico Fermi. My daughter’s already chosen and read a few books. She read that one about Archimedes, I think it was. She read another about a teenage chemist who became a perfumer. She’s read a few others, but I can’t remember the titles. She’s got them written down in her school records, but that’s at her desk a ways away.

Right now we’re reading Galileo’s Daughter by Dava Sobel together as a read aloud. I’m enjoying how Sobel shows Galileo’s excitement about finding four “Jovian planets” and how that when he took a trip from Florence to Rome, he set up his telescope every night along the way. She also tells that when Galileo found two of Saturn’s moons that he sent an encoded note to Johannes Kepler in Prague. Kepler could not read the code, as intended by Galileo. But the code proved to the world that Galileo was the first person to find two moons of Saturn — or it proved it when Galileo released the meaning of the code. He was a little hesitant because he wanted to make sure of a few more things before he told the world, but yet he still wanted to get the credit for the discovery.

So far, it’s a good book and we’re enjoying ourselves reading it. It gives us an example of a real scientist at work and how he recorded his findings and why. Reading books like this makes science seem real to the regular person rather than something only done in labs by people with goggles on. I truly think I’m learning more by reading some of these books with my students than I did taking that required science class at the university. Science doesn’t have to be boring. There are all sorts of science topics out there to choose from when picking real books.

Anyway, if you want to see a list of the books my son read for his class, I’ve posted them over at Homeschool RAQ.

November 5th, 2007

Won’t They Ever Forget?

That poor Guy has been burned in effigy year after year for ages. They are celebrating in London, etc., right now, and you can celebrate, too, if you saved any fireworks from the Fourth of July. Why not? We all need another excuse to play with fire, don’t we? Besides, it is educational.

As seen in the Tower of London:

nov fifth

Guy Fawkes was the supposed main culprit. And now he’s famous.

You can read more info on the rather sad tale of Guy Fawkes at this BBC page or at the Gunpowder Plot Society. For fun, here’s a bunch of Bonfire Night photos.

November 5th, 2007

Pass the Earplugs, Please

It was probably at a homeschooling book swap two and a half years ago that I first heard that sound. Its intensity and speed increased. Then it double, then tripled. I was in the middle of a conversation and had to excuse myself because I could no longer concentrate on the discussion we were having. I turned my head and saw some children in a frenzy nearby, pounding colorful plastic cups into the floor.

This was my introduction to what is called sport speed stacking. You’ve probably seen it yourself. Maybe you even participate. I don’t. Too loud. Give me rock ‘n roll instead.

So, come to find out today, they actually have a World Sport Stacking Association. I got the web site URL from an article in a Arizona paper about stacking, but it’s not working right this second. It will probably be back online soon.

The article mentions that there’s going to be an attempt at a world record soon. 154,000+ stackers are going to all stack at the same time. All I can say is, “Pass the earplugs pronto.”

November 2nd, 2007

Homeschool Webmaster Extremely Ill

Homeschooling mom Mary Leggewie, who has been running HomeschoolChristian.com since 1998, is very ill. Here is the link to her bio and another link to the most recent update on her condition. I believe the “evacuation” comment is about the recent California fires.

UPDATE: It appears that for now updates on her condition are being posted on the Fellowship Board at her site.

UPDATE from Fellowship Board mentioned above: In the past 18 days Mary has been kept alive by machines and powerful drugs. She has been alert and, once told about the full scope of her situation, was able to make her own decision. She has made the decision to sign her own ‘Do Not Resuscitate’ order, and she will be going to be with the Lord in a short time. (from a post by Martha)

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.