Showing posts with label Homeschooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homeschooling. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

Science Experiments

As a homeschooling parent, I have the privilege of repeating many lessons I have forgotten over the years. Generally, I get to help the girls with their science experiments so my scientific smarts are regularly dusted off and kept fit with regular exercise. It seems lately, we have been doing a lot of hands-on science - which is cool. All four of the girls have kept me busy.

Alayna has been doing physical science. Our most recent experiments had to do with fire.


Add a candle and some vinegar to a bowl...all is well.
Add baking soda to the mix and you get a cool way to snuff out a candle.
Alexie and Adriana have been busy with the microscope and the some dissections. I will spare our weak-stomached readers the most interesting photos.
I asked Alexie, "Have you ever read, How to Eat Fried Worms?"
Our girls don't get to defer to their lab partner; I may help, but they get their hands in the mix.
Adriana studying and drawing the heart she dissected.
Annalise is studying plants. I am no gardener, but these pots have been sitting empty on our porch for a while so we decided to give it a try. We now have a few peppers, tomatoes, and a pineapple planted. Who knows what will happen, but if all goes well, we will have a few veggies and a home-grown pineapple.

Grace,
Tom

Friday, September 24, 2010

A Sweet Ending

Our first week of school is complete. We:
  • started our study of the book of Mark,
  • solved various mathematical problems,
  • learned about the Wars of the Roses, Cosimo de Medici, Ferdinand, Isabella, and the Spanish Inquisition as we began our study of the Renaissance to discover the Mystery of History,
  • studied some of the marvels of the scientific world including birds, physical science and chemistry,
  • listened to different family members' music created with the keyboard, dulcimer, and guitar as well as, some of the composer Bach's pieces,
  • admired some of Leonardo Da Vinci's masterpieces,
  • joined Christiana as she starts along the Pilgrim way
  • read different literature selections from Ambleside Online including reading to see if it is true that All's Well That Ends Well
  • practiced hospitality
  • even got watercolors out and painted birds, this is noteworthy because I toted some art supplies all the way here over 2 years ago yet we seldom "get to" art
  • took a trip to the market for a real life economics lesson and exercise

All this in the first week.
Anticipating a great year of learning together!

Lisa

Monday, September 20, 2010

Garden of Grace Girls Academy - First Day!

Bontoc schools began the school year in early June. Michigan schools began right after Labor Day. Garden of Grace Girls Academy began this morning.


Adriana is a high school sophomore.

Alexie is in 8th grade.
(Grades 7 and 8 are not part of the Philippine school system.)

Alayna is in 6th grade.

Annalise is in 3rd grade.

The other day, Lisa figured out that there are 10 more years of homeschooling ahead of us. That puts us at exactly half-way.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Life Skills

Just like most other school years, there are items put on our "schedule" that it seems we just do not end up doing or at least not as often as planned. Our girls have had many learning opportunities woven in our life as missionaries in a foreign land, but we have not had time or made time to spend on handicrafts. But Saturday there was yarn here, there, and everywhere as the girls were busy weaving on their cardboard looms we made.

Even more important than lessons in weaving was the lesson Alayna got in making homemade pizza. This is essential just in case when they are older God calls them to live in a land far from frozen pizzas or pizza delivery places like Pizza Hut. You know, like the Philippines.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Say It Again

This morning at breakfast, Annalise said,"I wish every day was Tuesday and Thursday."
"Because we get to do science!"
Alayna quickly agreed.
I hope the study of the human body I am doing with Annalise and Alayna continues to be met with such excitement. We already tackled that BIG question, "Where do babies come from?" and this week we are learning about bones.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

School Good Enough to Eat

This is school that really matters beyond second grade.
Annalise reading Daddy's pancake recipe.
Not quite as good as the Filipinos since she still uses her hands but we have only lived her a year and a half.
Learning to read a recipe, fractions,
special time with Daddy.A great team
Not only does Daddy make delicious pancakes...
he often takes the time to design special shapes.
"Mangan tayo"

Saturday, November 7, 2009

More Real Life Learning

We have been taking a break from our school books so we can join the Baguio DTS in ministry. However, "Life is school. School is life."

"That's amazing!"

and this is what she saw when she looked at the slide.

The Letter of the Week seems to be L..landslides,lice!

Monday, September 21, 2009

Walking to School

Alexie working on math.

While those back at home have just made their way back to school, we just finished the tenth week of ours. Mostly, we are following the plans we made at the beginning. While our girls have spent many, many hours traveling on buses in the last 16 months, they have never ever ridden a bus to school. Some children, during several months of the long winter, must stand in the cold snow drifts waiting at the bus stop for the big yellow school bus to take them to their place of learning. Just ordinary buses. Absolutely nothing magical about them. But I remind our girls of the luxury they have to learn sitting around the kitchen table or relaxing with a book on their bed.


History

We are using many books in our study of the early church and the Middle Ages. Here are the main ones: Mystery of History Vol. 2, Our Island Story, Famous Men of the Middle Ages, Trial and Triumph, and Fifty Famous Stories. We study history together with the girls doing oral or written narrations after each lesson. Adriana is also doing some history reading on her own including : Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People, William of Malmesbury's account of the Battle of Hastings and The Life of King Alfred.

Geography
Besides the map work that coordinates with our history studies, the girls are learning geography as they read another book. I am reading Seabird to Annalise and Alayna. Alexie is reading Kon Tiki, while Adriana is reading The Brendan Voyage.
Alayna and Thomas doing some map work.

Science
Annalise and Alayna- The Burgess Animal Book
Alexie- Apologia's Exploring Creation with General Science
Adriana- Apologia's Exploring Creation with Biology and The Lay of the Land
Adriana collecting samples from a rice field

Investigating those samples


We plan to do some nature study of the plants and animals of the Philippines as well but so far haven't done much; the biggest excuse being the rainy season.
Annalise and Lisa exploring what can be found in a rice field

Alayna after nature study

Literature
Read-alouds have always been a family favorite. This school year we have already enjoyed Just So Stories, Robin Hood, and Peter Pan. We are listening to an audio dramatization of Pilgrim's Progress but this we are spreading it out; doing just a small portion each week so we won't finish until the end of the school year. This helps us gather more meaning from the allegory told in Old English.
Other literature selections:
Annalise is following Sonlight's Core 2 for her reading books. Last week she finished reading to me the Old Testament stories of The Beginner's Bible.
Annalise and Alayna have The Blue Fairy Book and Parables from Nature.
Alayna is also reading Little Duke and King Arthur and His Knights (along with her older sisters.)
Alexie and Adriana are reading Age of Chivalry.
Adriana's books include: The Once and Future King, Watership Down, Ivanhoe, and The History of English Literature for Girls and Boys.
These are the books scheduled for them along with a number more on their free reading list.
Annalise and The Beginner's Bible.

Grammar
Grammarland for Annalise and Alayna.
Daily grammar lessons on the internet for Alexie.
Our Mother Tongue and The Grammar of Poetry for Adriana.

Foreign Language
This is one area we are not following the recommendations of the AmblesideOnline curriculum. The girls are NOT studying Latin. They are not learning several languages. Our focus is on learning Ilocano. This is an area we hope to do better in as the year progresses. Since resources for learning Ilocano are very limited, Thomas has put together a computer program for us to use. The girls study four times a week. They are familiar with a growing amount of vocabulary but still don't speak it much. Although they do speak more than Thomas and I.

Music
Besides our hymns, folksongs, and composer studies, each of the girls practice the piano daily.

Adriana being a freshman this year has some additional studies. She is learning economics as she reads Whatever Happened to Penny Candy? For logic, she reads and discusses with me How to Read a Book. She has been reading chapter books since she was in kindergarten. She has the amazing ability to read lengthy books such as Lord of the Rings in a matter of hours. One of my goals is for her to slow down and meditate on what she is reading so she grasps the deeper meanings of what she reads.

Plutarch is a subject we attempted to add to our school studies for the older three girls. But after struggling with it for eight weeks, we decided to drop it from the schedule. The ability to provide education tailored to best meet the needs of our daughters is one of the reasons we homeschool. Any curriculum or book is meant to be a tool to help us. Our homeschool varies from the many other families that choose to homeschool but no one else is homeschooling our Adriana, Alexie, Alayna, and Annalise.

I think that covers the basic snapshot of our official studies for this year.
Lisa

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

YWAM Baguio DTS Mid-Term Part 1

One of our responsibilities here is to coordinate the ministry of outreach teams that visit YWAM Mountain Province. We enjoy the opportunity this gives us to meet people from various places around the globe. Last week a Discipleship Training School (DTS) team from Baguio came to minister in Bontoc. The students were from different places in the Philippines, though none from this region. Two staff accompanied the students, Rachel, originally from Malaysia and Bamshak from Nigeria.

We took a break from our normal school work and spent the week assisting the team and guiding them to the places they were to serve in the community.

The team: Jason, Rachel, Ruth, Jasmine, Gretchen, and Bamshak.

Monday morning they performed a drama for the flag ceremony. The drama highlighted the importance of unity and teamwork. It was very appropriate and well received by the government employees. I heard several comments as I moved around taking pictures. During the mayor's address, he talked about the value of the drama for the community.
After the flag ceremony,they joined me for the Moral Recovery Program with the Philippine National Police. After Gretchen opened the meeting with prayer, Bamshak talked about the love of God and how it affects a community.
Afterwards, they were given the opportunity to pray for Mayor Odsey. It is an honor to have the opportunity to encourage the leaders of our community to consider God as they perform their duties.

It was a busy Monday. After their time in the governmental plaza, they joined Lisa for the Values Education Program at Bontoc Central School. I enjoyed it because it was the first time that I got to tag along and see her teach the kids. She does such a great job.

The kids really enjoyed having the team there, too. The team led a couple of action songs. Then they performed a comical skit with a serious meaning - Jesus needs to be the one "driving the bus".


In the afternoon, we escorted them to the Bontoc Museum (thus the picture at the top of the post). Lisa and I were blessed there. The receptionist at the museum recognized us because each time a team comes, we take them there. Because of this, she waived our entrance fee. Even though the students on the team are Filipinos, the culture here is considerably different than their homes. So it is a valuable experience to learn more about the people of the region.

After their time at the museum, it was back to work. Because we were leaving the next morning to go to Can-eo for a few days, we needed to go marketing for our trip. There is no market in Can-eo, so anything we planned to eat needed to be purchased in Bontoc. The students enjoyed comparing the prices and the size of the market to those in their own home towns.

In the evening, the team led worship and presented a message for our weekly Discipleship Talk with the SSM students. The room was a bit more crowded than usual because several of the students from Bontoc Mission Church attended as well. It was a great time of worship together.

Finally, after a very busy day, the students returned to their rooms for some much needed rest. So did their (much older) host!

Grace,
Tom
More to come...