Today was our first official day! I tried to get a cute pic of the kids and there were more funny ones than anything. My kids are silly, but good little people.
Monday, August 29, 2016
Saturday, August 27, 2016
Back to school night
We decided to have a back-to-school night for the children. It was a huge success. We summarized for them what subjects we'd focus on. We showed them the books they'd be learning out of and they were excited about them and asked lots of questions. We told them how they'd be learning out of the books. We also gave them an orientation on how things will be structured, how they'll be accountable to their mom and grandma and how to organize their work.
In between the official stuff we would stop to play some fun minute-to-win-it games.
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| Unrolling toilet paper |
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| Tossing ping pong balls into cups |
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| Tossing marshmallows into cups |
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| And of course we had candy |
After we were all done we had a fun dinner of what the kids like to call "homemade Lunchables". Because I don't like to buy them Lunchables (since they have such little quality nutritional value), I make them this sometimes because they like the style and theme of a Lunchable type meal.
The kids really loved it, W has been saying how much he loved it; a couple times last night and a few this morning.
Monday will be our first day. It will be a challenging and interesting year, but the one thing that keeps my mind eased is the fact that we can take this whole thing however we want. We can relax and take it easy and not be rushed by a schedule of the day and be distracted by 30 other kids. I hope to stick to the work schedule because I'm just a schedule person, but it's nice that we choose not to have so many things going on and we can really focus on their learning for the whole day.
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
As School Starts
As school starts up for everyone there are a lot of back to school pictures of people's kids and I really love seeing them. I like that parents are proud of their kids and making note of their progress. It's also fun to be a virtual witness to how fast my friends' kids are growing up. It's crazy!
I have seen a couple of posts on Facebook that disturbed me a little though. They aren't posts that my friends posted or shared, they are just one of those posts that show up in my newsfeed as "[so-and-so] likes [such-and-such news channel]" and then it will show that news channel's sponsored Facebook post. The ones that I'm referring to happen to be about parents posting back-to-school pictures for some contest or drawing they were sponsoring, and the ones that won. The photos that won were photos where the parent is celebrating their kids going back to school as a means to get rid of their child, and of course it's being passed off as funny. I just don't think it's funny at all. One in particular showed a woman with her little girl, the woman looking completely overjoyed holding a bottle of wine and a wine glass with perfectly manicured fingernails, and the girl looking sad or angry (I couldn't tell what the posed emotion was honestly) with her arms folded wearing her cute new clothes and backback. Something else in the photo made it appear as if the woman were planning to sip her wine while taking a bath. The mom was also holding a sign that said, "So long [girl's name]!" or something to that effect.
Let's think, also, about the message that sends to the husbands and fathers.
I could really go on about how sad I think it is, this picture, and also for society by the fact that a news media outlet would be promoting the notion that there's something okay about portraying your incredible enjoyment over getting rid of your kid for 6 to 8 hours a day five days a week right to their face. But I won't, I'll spare you, because I think that one sentence I just constructed sums up my feelings about it. I'll just ad this: Poor child.
There is a difference between being proud of your children and excited for their learning adventures and viewing the public school system as a means to get rid of your child so you don't have to deal with them for half their childhood. They're still your kid, get involved, volunteer at the school, lobby to make changes that you think are good for your child! Parents need to be more involved. I'd love for my children to grow up in a world where parents care about their kids education. There is a difference between needing a break from your children now and then and basically telling them you can't wait to have them gone, away from you, the one who birthed them and chose to have and keep them. I just don't get it. Even if you think it, why would you tell it to your kid?
On that same note I do find myself completely confused by people who choose to send their children off to public school (again, NOT CONDEMNING THIS CHOICE) and then are surprised when the government steps in and demands personal data, or tries to dictate medical choices, or family life. This really should be EXPECTED when you choose a form of education run by the government, it should not be a surprise or a shock at all. Do something about it! Stop the madness, don't sit idly by and be upset while conceding to it. Talk to your law-makers, opt-out, get your education degree and get a job at the district, run for office. Take a stand. They're your children and if this stuff angers you, make it known and don't accept it. If you believe in the public school system enough to send your precious minds there, then don't accept anything less than the best. And if you're already following my pleas I admire you so much! I'm not strong enough to do that, that's why I just take it all into my own hands for my own kids.
However I'm praying for the public education system all the time. It matters for our world what happens in those schools. All children deserve the best education. Otherwise, I don't want to think what the heck is gonna happen to our world in 20 years?
I have seen a couple of posts on Facebook that disturbed me a little though. They aren't posts that my friends posted or shared, they are just one of those posts that show up in my newsfeed as "[so-and-so] likes [such-and-such news channel]" and then it will show that news channel's sponsored Facebook post. The ones that I'm referring to happen to be about parents posting back-to-school pictures for some contest or drawing they were sponsoring, and the ones that won. The photos that won were photos where the parent is celebrating their kids going back to school as a means to get rid of their child, and of course it's being passed off as funny. I just don't think it's funny at all. One in particular showed a woman with her little girl, the woman looking completely overjoyed holding a bottle of wine and a wine glass with perfectly manicured fingernails, and the girl looking sad or angry (I couldn't tell what the posed emotion was honestly) with her arms folded wearing her cute new clothes and backback. Something else in the photo made it appear as if the woman were planning to sip her wine while taking a bath. The mom was also holding a sign that said, "So long [girl's name]!" or something to that effect.
Let's think, also, about the message that sends to the husbands and fathers.
I could really go on about how sad I think it is, this picture, and also for society by the fact that a news media outlet would be promoting the notion that there's something okay about portraying your incredible enjoyment over getting rid of your kid for 6 to 8 hours a day five days a week right to their face. But I won't, I'll spare you, because I think that one sentence I just constructed sums up my feelings about it. I'll just ad this: Poor child.
There is a difference between being proud of your children and excited for their learning adventures and viewing the public school system as a means to get rid of your child so you don't have to deal with them for half their childhood. They're still your kid, get involved, volunteer at the school, lobby to make changes that you think are good for your child! Parents need to be more involved. I'd love for my children to grow up in a world where parents care about their kids education. There is a difference between needing a break from your children now and then and basically telling them you can't wait to have them gone, away from you, the one who birthed them and chose to have and keep them. I just don't get it. Even if you think it, why would you tell it to your kid?
On that same note I do find myself completely confused by people who choose to send their children off to public school (again, NOT CONDEMNING THIS CHOICE) and then are surprised when the government steps in and demands personal data, or tries to dictate medical choices, or family life. This really should be EXPECTED when you choose a form of education run by the government, it should not be a surprise or a shock at all. Do something about it! Stop the madness, don't sit idly by and be upset while conceding to it. Talk to your law-makers, opt-out, get your education degree and get a job at the district, run for office. Take a stand. They're your children and if this stuff angers you, make it known and don't accept it. If you believe in the public school system enough to send your precious minds there, then don't accept anything less than the best. And if you're already following my pleas I admire you so much! I'm not strong enough to do that, that's why I just take it all into my own hands for my own kids.
However I'm praying for the public education system all the time. It matters for our world what happens in those schools. All children deserve the best education. Otherwise, I don't want to think what the heck is gonna happen to our world in 20 years?
Friday, August 12, 2016
The Story of the World Volume 1 & 2 36 week schedule
As I was trying to get ready for the new year, I found it a bit difficult to get a 36 week schedule out of The Story of the World Volume 1 for E. I did search online for one and found some, but they weren't really what I wanted. After many weeks I finally decided that I would just sit down and put one together myself. I will post it here for anyone else that is looking for something similar and save you the trouble.
TSOTW has 42 chapters, so doing one chapter per week would put you well into summer break. What I did here is put the chapters that have only one section with a chapter following it or preceding it for the corresponding week.
We'll see if this works. If it doesn't work well, I'll have to adjust the schedule as I go. I'd like to come back to this post and mention any thing we had to adjust. Sometimes a certain topic might be really worth diving into more and spending more time on.
Volume 1 Ancients
TSOTW has 42 chapters, so doing one chapter per week would put you well into summer break. What I did here is put the chapters that have only one section with a chapter following it or preceding it for the corresponding week.
We'll see if this works. If it doesn't work well, I'll have to adjust the schedule as I go. I'd like to come back to this post and mention any thing we had to adjust. Sometimes a certain topic might be really worth diving into more and spending more time on.
Volume 1 Ancients
Week
|
Chapters to cover
|
1
|
Introduction:
How Do We Know What Happened? - 1.
What is History? 2. What is Archeology?
|
2
|
Chapter
1: The Earliest People – 1. The
First Nomads 2. The First Nomads Become Farmers
|
3
|
Chapter
2: Egyptians Lived on the Nile River
– 1. Two Kingdoms Become One 2. God’s of Ancient Egypt.
Chapter 3: The First Writing 1. Hieroglyphs and Cuneiform |
4
|
Chapter
4: The Old Kingdom of Egypt 1.
Making Mummies 2. Egyptian Pyramids
Chapter
5: The First Sumerian Dictator 1.
Sargon and the Akkadians
|
5
|
Chapter
6: The Jewish People 1. God Speaks
to Abraham 2. Joseph Goes to Egypt
Chapter
7: Hammurabi and the Babylonians 1.
Hammurabi’s Code
|
6
|
Chapter
8: The Assyrians 1. Shamshi-Adad,
King of the Whole World 2. The Story of Gilgamesh
|
7
|
Chapter
9: The First Cities of India 1. The
River-Road 2. The Mystery of Mohenjo-Daro
|
8
|
Chapter
10: The Far East: Ancient China 1.
Lei Zu and the Silkworm 2. The Pictograms of Ancient China 3. Farming in
Ancient China
|
9
|
Chapter
11: Ancient Africa 1. Ancient
Peoples of West Africa 2. Anansi and Turtle 3. Anansi and the Make-Believe
Food
|
10
|
Chapter
12: The Middle Kingdom of Egypt 1.
Egypt Invades Nubia 2. The Hyskos Invade Egypt
|
11
|
Chapter
13: The New Kingdom of Egypt 1. The
General and the Woman Pharaoh 2. Amenhotep and King Tut
|
12
|
Chapter
14: The Israelites Leave Egypt 1.
The Baby Moses 2. The Exodus From Egypt
|
13
|
Chapter
15: The Phoenicians 1. Phoenician
Traders 2. The Founding of Carthage
|
14
|
Chapter
16: The Return of Assyria 1.
Ashurbanipal’s Attack 2. The Library of Ninevah
|
15
|
Chapter
17: Babylon Takes Over Again! 1.
Nebuchadnezzar’s Madness 2. The Hanging Gardens of Babylon
|
16
|
Chapter
18: Life in Early Crete 1.
Bull-Jumpers and Sailors 2. King Minos and the Minotaur 3. The Mysterious End
of the Minoans
|
17
|
Chapter
19: The Early Greeks 1. The
Mycenaeans 2. The Greek Dark Ages
|
18
|
Chapter
20: Greece Gets Civilized Again 1.
Greece Gets and Alphabet 2. The Stories of Homer 3. The First Olympic Games
|
19
|
Chapter
21: The Medes and the Persians 1. A
New Empire 2. Cyrus the Great
|
20
|
Chapter
22: Sparta and Athens 1. Life in
Sparta 2. Life Athens
Chapter
23: The Greek Gods 1. The Golden Apple
|
21
|
Chapter
24: The Wars of the Greeks 1.
Greece’s War with Persia 2. The Greeks Fight Each Other
|
22
|
Chapter
25: Alexander the Great 1. Philip
and His Son 2. Alexander’s Invasions 3. The Death of Alexander
|
23
|
Chapter
26: The People of the Americas 1.
The Nazca Drawings 2. The Heads of the Olmecs 3. Rabbit Shoots the Sun
|
24
|
Chapter
27: The Rise of Rome 1. Romulus and
Remus 2. The Power of Rome
|
25
|
Chapter
28: The Roman Empire 1. The Roman
Gods 2. The Roman Builders 3. The Roman Gladiators 4. The Gladiator School
|
26
|
Chapter
29: Rome’s War With Carthage 1. The
Punic Wars
|
27
|
Chapter
30: The Aryans of India 1. Life on
the Ganges River 2. The Castes of Ancient India 3. Siddhartha
|
28
|
Chapter
31: The Mauryan Empire of India 1.
The Empire United 2. The Jakata Tales
|
29
|
Chapter
32: China: Writing and the Qin 1.
Calligraphy in China 2. Warring States 3. The First Emperor and the Great
Wall 4. The First Emperors Grave
|
30
|
Chapter
33: Confucius 1. China’s Wise
Teacher
Chapter
34: The Rise of Julius Caesar 1.
Caesar Is Kidnapped 2. The Consuls of Rome 3. Caesar and the Senate
|
31
|
Chapter
35: Caesar the Hero 1. Caesar
Fights the Celts 2. Caesar Crosses the Rubicon 3. Caesar and Cleopatra 4. The
Death of Caesar
|
32
|
Chapter
36: The First Roman Prince 1.
Augustus Caesar
Chapter
37: The Beginning of Christianity
1. The Birth of Jesus 2. Jesus Crucified and Resurrected
|
33
|
Chapter
38: The End of the Ancient Jewish Nation 1. The Destruction of the Temple
Chapter 39: Rome and the Christians 1. Nero, the Evil Emperor 2. Christians in the Catacombs 3. The Emperor Is a Christian |
34
|
Chapter
40: Rome Begins to Weaken 1. The
British Rebellion 2. Rome Divided in Two
|
35
|
Chapter
41: The Attacking Barbarians 1.
Attila the Hun 2. Stilicho, Roman and Barbarian 3. The Coming of the
Visigoths
|
36
|
Chapter
42: The End of Rome 1. The Last
Roman Emperor
|
Volume 2: Middle Ages
|
Week
|
Chapters to cover
|
|
1
|
Chapter
1: The Glory That was Rome 1.
Wandering Through the Roman Empire 2. The Fall of Rome
|
|
2
|
Chapter
2: The Early Days of Britain 1. The
Celts of Britain 2. Barbarians Come to Britain 3 Beowulf the Hero
|
|
3
|
Chapter
3: Christianity Comes to Britain 1.
Augustine Comes to England 2. Medieval Monasteries 3. Writing Books by Hand
|
|
4
|
Chapter
4: The Byzantine Empire 1. The
Beauty of Constantinople 2. Justinian, the Just Emperor 3. The Empress
Theodora 4. The Church in the East
|
|
5
|
Chapter
5: The Medieval Indian Empire 1. A
King Named Skandagupta 2. Monks in Caves
|
|
6
|
Chapter
6: The Rise of Islam 1. Muhammad’s
Vision 2. Muhammad Flees to Medina 3. The Koran: Islam’s Holy Book
|
|
7
|
Chapter
7: Islam Becomes an Empire 1. The
Fight for Mecca 2. The Spread of Islam 3. The City of Baghdad 4. Sinbad in
the Valley of Snakes
|
|
8
|
Chapter
8: The Great Dynasties of China 1.
Yang Chien Unites North and South 2. The Tang Dynasty
|
|
9
|
Chapter
9: East of China 1. The Yamato
Dynasty of Japan 2. A Tale of Three Countries: Korea, China, and Japan
|
|
10
|
Chapter
10: The Bottom of the World 1. The
First People of Australia 2. The Long Journey of the Maori
|
|
11
|
Chapter
11: The Kingdom of the Franks 1.
Clovis, The Ex-Barbarian 2. Four Tribes, One Empire
Chapter 12: The Islamic Invasion 1. Islam in Spain and Africa |
|
12
|
Chapter
13: The Great Kings of France 1.
Charles the Hammer 2. The Greatest King: Charlemagne
|
|
13
|
Chapter
14: The Arrival of the Norsemen 1.
The Viking Invasion 2. Eric the Red and “Eric’s Son” 3. The Norse Gods 4.
Thor and the Giant King
|
|
14
|
Chapter
15: The Firs Kings of England 1.
The Vikings Invade England 2. Alfred the Great 3. The Battle of Hastings
|
|
15
|
Chapter
16: England After the Conquest 1
The English Language 2. Serfs and Noblemen 4. Stone Castles
|
|
16
|
Chapter
17: Knights and Samurai 1. The
English Code of Chivalry 2. The Samurai: Japanese Knights
|
|
17
|
Chapter
18: The Age of the Crusades 1. A
Command from the Pope 2. Recapturing Jerusalem 3. Saladin of Jerusalem 4. El
Cid and the “Reconquest of Spain”
|
|
18
|
Chapter
19: A New Kind of King 1. Richard
the Lionhearted 2. John Lackland and the Magna Carta 3. Robin Hood. 4. Robin
Hood and Butcher
|
|
19
|
Chapter
20: The Diaspora 1. The Scattering
of the Jews 2. A Tale of the Diaspora 3. The Clever Rabbi of Cordova
|
|
20
|
Chapter
21: The Mongols Devastate the East
1. Genghis Khan, Emperor of All Men 2. The Mongol Conquest of China
|
|
21
|
Chapter
22: Exploring the Mysterious East 1.
Marco Polo Goes to China 2. The Forbidden City of the Ming
|
|
22
|
Chapter
23: The First Russians 1 The Rus
Come to Constantinople 2. Ivan the Great and Ivan the Terrible
|
|
23
|
Chapter
24: The Ottoman Empire 1. The
Ottoman Turks Attack 2. The Sheep-Rocks 3. The Capture of Constantinople 4.
Suleiman the Lawgiver
|
|
24
|
Chapter
25: The End of the World 1. The
Plague 2. A New Way of Living
Chapter 26: France and England at War 1. Henry V and the Battle of Agincourt 2 Joan of Arc |
|
25
|
Chapter
27: War for the English Throne 1. A
War of Roses 2. The Princes in the Tower
Chapter 28: The Kingdoms of Spain and Portugal 1. Ferdinand and Isabella Unite Spain 2. Henry the Navigator, Prince of Portugal |
|
26
|
Chapter
29: African Kingdoms 1. Gold, Salt,
and Ghana 2. Mansa Musa of Mali 3. The Songhay Empire
|
|
27
|
Chapter
30: India Under the Moghuls 1. The
Mogul Dynasty 2. Akbar of India 3. The Bad-Luck Servant
|
|
28
|
Chapter
31: Exploring New Worlds 1.
Christopher Columbus 2. Vespucci and Magellan
|
|
29
|
Chapter
32: The American Kingdoms 1. The Mayans
of Central America 2. The Marvelous City of Tenochtitlan 3. The Incas
|
|
30
|
Chapter
33: Spain, Portugal, and the New World
1. The Slave Trade 2. Cortes and Montezuma
|
|
31
|
Chapter
34: Martin Luther’s New Ideas 1.
Martin Luther’s List 2. Henry VIII’s Problem
Chapter 35: The Renaissance 1. A New Way of Thinking 2. Gutenberg’s Great Invention |
|
32
|
Chapter
36: Reformation and Counter Reformation 1. The Spread of the Reformation 2. The Council of Trent
Chapter 37: The New Universe 1. The Revolution of Copernicus 2. Galileo’s Strange Notions |
|
33
|
Chapter
38: England’s Greatest Queen 1. The
Queen Who Almost Wasn’t 2. Good Queen Bess
|
|
34
|
Chapter
39: England’s Greatest Playwright
1. William Shakespeare 2. Macbeth 3. Macbeth’s Decision
|
|
35
|
Chapter
40: New Ventures to the Americas 1.
Walter Raleigh and the New World 2. The Lost Colony
Chapter 41: Exploration in the North 1. The New-Found Land 2. Jacques Cartier’s Discoveries |
|
36
|
Chapter
42: Empires Collide 1. Spain and
England’s War 2. The World at the End of the Sixteenth Century
|
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