The Single Parent Homeschool

Archive for the ‘General Homeschooling’ Category

Welcome!

author Posted by: Andrea on date Sep 6th, 2008 | filed Filed under: General Homeschooling



Now it’s time to say goodbye…

author Posted by: Andrea on date Mar 5th, 2010 | filed Filed under: General Homeschooling

I haven’t been posting much, because Shorty and I are getting ready to undertake two big parallel moves. I am moving to a new city, and he is moving back to Boston, MA, to live with his dad, with whom he is extremely close, as well as his stepmom and 2 younger half-siblings. As Shorty grows into a young man, I have been realizing the importance of his having a positive, supportive and consistent male role model in his life. His dad has been wanting to be a bigger part of his life for a while, and we think that this is a very positive move for both of them.

I also need a change of pace. After nearly 7 years of homeschooling a special needs child as a single parent, I’m more than a little burnt out and have kind of reached a wall professionally and financially. It wsa a catch-22 for me: I couldn’t afford to move anywhere else because I live in one of the country’s most expensive cities (Miami, FL, for those of you just tuning in!). Yet, I need to move elsewhere, because almost all of my income is taken up by rent and utilities. I am in need of some medical attention, and haven’t been able to afford it – the things I need that I have been putting off have been mounting, and there has been no real way to get ahead, as I am only one person and there are only so many hours in the day.

I feel bad posting this here, as I know people read this blog to get encouragement for their endeavours in home-educating as a single parent. All I can say is, it takes a LOT of sacrifice, and an irrefutable LOT of external support, or you will wear yourself out. But it is possible. Anything’s possible with prayer, determination and resourcefulness. At this time, we don’t know if Shorty can continue to be homeschooled in his new home, though his dad is not ruling out the possibility, but I do still think it is a viable option for all kinds of families with the will to do it. I don’t want anyone to see this decision as discouraging. I stuck it out a long time, and just because homeschooling is no longer right for me at this time, that doesn’t mean it’s not right or can’t work for you and your family. Please pray about the decision, seek out support, and arm yourself with all the knowledge you can, and you’ll at least be in a position to make a powerful, knowledgeable decision.

I’m going to keep this blog up a little while longer, but eventually I will simply point the domain name to my Delicious account with all my links and resources, as the blog will no longer be updated.

Thank you all for your wonderful comments and encouragement throughout the years. I hope I’ve been able to give that back at least in some small way. :)

How Do You Work AND Homeschool Your Kids?

author Posted by: Andrea on date Feb 18th, 2010 | filed Filed under: General Homeschooling
I get this question a lot when people find out I work full time and homeschool my son.  Granted, I don’t work outside the home – I work at home as a freelance writer/ editor and web developer, and sometimes, when I am bored and want to break the pace up for myself, as a transcriber for a company called iDictate.  All of these jobs pay relatively well, and they are all on my own terms and my own schedule. I have several income sources, which I recommend to anyone sincerely trying to make a living from home, because Internet companies are notoriously flakey, and even the ones that have been around for a while and are completely legitimate sources of work may close up shop overnight. This is especially true in this economy. (Note: If you’d like to check out many legitimate work-from-home companies, please check out my words of advice and HUGE, non-scammy, continually updated links list of work-at-home companies and jobs here.)

Because my schedule changes every day, it took me a long time to secure several well-paying positions that meet my requirements: no phone work, weekly or bi-weekly pay, no set schedule and no minimum hours required.  But finding good, steady work from home when you’re a single parent who home-educates is really only half the battle, because you still have to find the time to educate your child and spend time encouraging and guiding him in his educational and personal pursuits. As a single parent who homeschools, you really have two jobs: the one you do to pay the bills, and the one you do to homeschool your kids.

I will say that juggling these two tasks becomes much easier as your child gets older and can do more things independently, but at the same time, an older child’s interests become more complex and involved, and he or she may desire more activities outside the home.  Juggling everything is a time-management challenge that can require daily fine-tuning, but I do think there are some basic principles that might help.

1. Set weekly, rather than daily goals.
For me, this was more helpful than setting a daily to-do list.  If something came up one day and I wasn’t able to meet my daily goal, I knew I could spread out the remaining tasks over the coming days, and it wasn’t so self-defeating. It’s also really encouraging to see my efforts add up over the week, instead of being faced with a blank slate every day. This is a good plan for homeschooling, too! Set weekly goals, not daily goals. Don’t sabotage yourself by being in a constant battle to “catch up.”

2. Write down the expenses you’re working to pay off that week, and the cross them off as you pay them.
If your goals this week are to save $50, pay a $150 light bill, pay a $85 insurance bill, have $90 for groceries, $30 for gas, $75 for your health insurance, $100  to buy new shoes for your sprouting teenager and $30 to take your kids to the movies, you’d have an expense list that looks like this for the week:
  • $150 – electric bill
  • 50 – savings
  • 85 – car insurance
  • 90 – groceries
  • 100 – Johnny’s shoes
  • 30 - gas
  • 30 – movies
  • 75 – Blue Cross/ Blue Shield
Prioritize them from most important to least important.  Then, as you make enough to cover those expenses, cross them off the list.  Say you earn $180, your list might now look like this:
  • $150 – electric bill
  • 50 – savings
  • 85 – car insurance
  • 90 – groceries
  • 100 – Johnny’s shoes
  • 30 - gas
  • 30 – movies
  • 75 – Blue Cross/ Blue Shield
And so on. Money is just a means to an end; whatever your financial goals are, make specific financial to-dos instead of working “as much as humanly possible.” Not only is that not as gratifying, but it’s a lot more nebulous, and may mean you have less time to spend with your kids.

3. Work when your kids are busy, and keep your kids busy while you work.
This may seem like a no-brainer, but it is a caveat for anyone who thinks that people who work and homeschool simultaneously abuse the Wii and TV as a babysitter. Granted, my son and I both love TV and the Wii, but I dislike having him spend a whole lot of time alone, so I’d like to expand on the notion of “busy.” 

Busy can mean “sleeping,” or “eating,” or “working on a math worksheet,” or “hanging out with grandma” or “engrossed in a LEGO project.”  Busy does not mean sitting in front of the TV, bored for hours on end. That’s not busy – that’s neglected, and I’d like to think that most homeschoolers are more vigilant than that.  How your children spend their time while you work obviously depends on the work you do and the kind of lifestyle that you want your family to have. 

Remember that just as educating at home doesn’t have to look anything like traditional school settings, so working at home doesn’t have to look like a regular 9-to-5 cubicle gig.  You can work any time of day or night when you work from home, depending on your job, so it’s easier to fit your work around your kids, instead of the other way around.  If you have a set schedule, your kids will need to, as well. They’ll either need to work quietly beside you as you work, or be in the care of a caregiver, or you’ll have to choose working hours when your children are normally asleep or not home.   In my own household, we opt for a combination of all three.

4. Rely on several caregivers, not just one.
Things can change, and you don’t want the rug pulled out from under you when a babysitter cancels and you’re facing a 40-hour workweek with no caregiver. I am fortunate that my grandmother lives next door to us, and he hangs out with her a few times a week, during which I catch up on work.  Also, he has a three-hour youth group on Friday nights, so I work quite a bit then, as well. If your children are younger and/or you have no nearby relatives to watch your children (and maybe even help with homeschooling!) on a regular basis, I really recommend asking your local church/ synagogue or homeschooling group if there are any responsible older homeschooled kids or grads who could come in once or twice a week as a “mother’s helper.”  It’s better than hiring a stranger, and you don’t have to worry about whether the babysitter understands your lifestyle.

5. Select homeschooling materials that emphasize independent tasks. 
There are many wonderful options for home educating your child, and many of them require more consistent parental involvement than others. I don’t mean that you need to choose “curriculum” where your child works alone for hours on end in front of a computer or text book, which I call the “Off with you!” approach to homeschooling (“Off to the computer/workbook/ etc with you!!”); that’s not fun for anyone and few kids do well with that, in my experience, since many children crave and need adult interaction. And besides, if your homeschool curriculum spends more time with your kid than you do, you’ll never be on top of what’s really sparking your child’s intererests and passions, which will snowball into many tossed-aside and unsuccesssful choices in homeschool materials.

What I mean is – don’t pick materials that require you to be glued to your child’s side for 3 straight hours. It doesn’t matter how great they are; if you need to work, there are only so many hours in the day and it won’t take long before you feel completely burnt out and “fall behind” on whatever you’re doing.  Try to strike a balance - materials that require some interaction with you, and also have things your child can do on his own while you work. 

We are very relaxed homeschoolers, so my son has a tote box of file folders in which I put cool books, puzzles, Mad Libs, tangrams, logic puzzles, math worksheets, crossword puzzles, lapbooks, web site suggestions, and so on, for him to do on a daily basis.  At this time, he has asked me to organize his daytime hours for him; as he gets older, he’ll probably want to do this himself.  At the moment, we’re having a grand old time with Amanda Bennett’s Winter Olympics 2010 Unit study, for which HomeschoolShare.com has a corresponding free lapbook. This is a month-long unit study, and it’s not just providing us a ton of information about Ancient Greece and the history of the Olympics, but has a lot of videos and web sites about each of the major events themselves.  So this bleeds over into our nightly Olympics recap watching (during which I sit next to him and work on my laptop), and has been the basis of many good conversations. There’s no way I would’ve had the time or motivation to find the hundreds of resources with which this unit comes all by myself, and my son loves the videos and focus on biographies (one of his favorite genres), and he likes doing lapbooks so he can have a record of his projects to look through at a later date, so for us, it’s been a great resource, but this is just one of countless options. We like unit studies for this reason – they serve as a springboard for my son to spend time investigating topics of interest on his own AND tie into family activities.

We also spend an hour or so a day reading bedtime literature or looking through YouTube or other recommended web sites from whatever unit study we’re currently doing.  I think this teaches my son not just about the immediate topic, but also teaches him how to find information on the Internet and in offline resources about whatever subject in which he may be interested. Research skills!

LEGOs, construction projects, arts and crafts, cool kids’ web sites, science project kits, Mad Libs (especially if you have more than one kid), tangrams, logic puzzles, jigsaw puzzles, teaching your child to paint or sew or garden, Play-doh, clay, drawing, paint-by-numbers, robot-building, Klutz books – these are all things that your kids can spend some time with you learning, and then go off and do on their own as they see fit, and free up some time for you to catch up on work email, crank out an article, or what have you.

6. Know when to stop working and when it’s time to be just a mom (or dad). It’s just money.
Easy for me to say, you must think, but I really live a fairly humble lifestyle. I think if I worked a lot more, I would make a lot more money, wear nicer clothes, go on more vacations, etc.  but the reality is that my son is only little once, and for me, I constantly have to remind myself to not give into the stress of making more, more, MORE! and trusting that God will provide for all my needs. I just do what I need to do and then I turn off the computer and spend at least one or two hours just having fun and hanging out with my son, focusing on what’s fun to him AWAY from the computer, away from the Blackberry, with the phone off.  I also dedicate at least one day, usually Saturday, to go out and do something fun with my son that has nothing to do with work.  If you can’t do it every week, try for twice a month.  When your children grow up and think back on their childhood, they won’t remember how well you paid the electric bill – they’ll remember all the time you spent with them.  Believe me, this is something about which I need to remind myself often; in this economy, particularly when working from home, which can be especially precarious, it’s easy to get wrapped up in bills and work quotas. But in the meantime, your kids are growing up, so make sure to carve out some time to indulge in that, too.

What are some of your time management techniques for juggling homeschooling and full-time work? Feel free to post your suggestions in the comments!

Posted via email from hi, i’m andie.

Christmas and New Year’s Eve 2009 Photos

author Posted by: Andrea on date Jan 22nd, 2010 | filed Filed under: General Homeschooling
I had completely forgotten to post these – the pictures from Christmas morning with Shorty opening up all his wonderful presents that the whole family bought for him (the perks of being an only child AND only grandchild!) and also the New Year’s Eve celebration that we had at our park group playdate on December 31. Our friend Sonia has a tradition of bringing plastic champagne flutes and non-alcoholic apple cider for all the kids and moms to toast each other and the coming new year. Hopefully we don’t look like a bunch of drunks and give homeschoolers in our neighborhood a bad name. ;) There are also a few pictures of the quiet but extremely fun new year’s celebration we had with my mom and grandma at home!

I hope 2010 is being inordinately kind to all my readers so far.

CLICK TO SEE THE REST OF THE PICTURES

I just took the most hilarious picture of Shorty…

author Posted by: Andrea on date Jan 13th, 2010 | filed Filed under: General Homeschooling
And he WON’T LET ME POST IT!!!

A little backstory. We have been picking things to do from the book ”Days of Knights and Damsels”, from a cute hands-on project kind of series of books that Shorty has always enjoyed. Last year he went through and did a lot of the things in the similar book “More than Moccasins,” about different Native American traditions. You can probably find a lot of those posts on my blog still :) This one is about life in the medieval period, in which Shorty is currently keenly interested. The Renaissance Festival is coming up and we have been trying to plot our own costumes, so we have had fun making things out of the clothing section of the book and exploring our options. Some of them have turned out better than others – they’re harder than they look! Also, just as a side note, it’s amazing a little boy will get all excited about learning to sew when it’s for making a cool Robin Hood hat. Ha!

Today we read about ruffs, and we made one by accordion-folding and gluing long strips of paper together. Then he tried it on, and it looked hysterical – just like one of those ridiculously huge collars they used to wear. Then he decided I should take a “royal portrait” and struck a pompous pose that was JUST like the snooty noblemen of the paintings we’ve seen. It is the funniest thing ever, even his face got all dramatic, but then…

He said I can’t post it on “any of my sites!!” Ah, the drawback of having a kid who knows you’re all up on Twitter and Facebook and approximately 47 blogs. He knows how I roll. Maybe  I can talk him into it. Wish me luck!

Posted via email from hi, i’m andie.

How We Organize Our Homeschooling Week – Part 1

author Posted by: Andrea on date Jan 10th, 2010 | filed Filed under: Charlotte Mason, Family Life, General Homeschooling, Unschooling, Weekly Rundowns, Workboxes

I was chatting on a workboxes homeschooling group, having one of those conversations where a mom asks if we all think she may be overloading her exasperated kids with “too much work” (the answer is invariably “yes” in these conversations, in case you’re curious). A lot of times, I find those conversations very exhausting, because they’re about the mom wanting strategies to be able to force her kid to do a lot more boring, tedious stuff, and then doing a lot of flailing because no one gives her any and instead tells her to relax and consider chucking, like, everything. Fortunately, in this case, it wasn’t like that, but had been initiated by a very well-meaning and thoughtful mom whose 7yo was getting frustrated despite the mom’s very best efforts, and she was looking to make the day more enjoyable for the family, a good goal to have imho ;) . During the conversation, she said their school day was lasting over 6 hours, and I said:

Just so you can see a different perspective: That’s over an hour longer than my son’s average workbox day – and he’s in the SIXTH GRADE, and he studies 2 foreign languages, practices 2 musical instruments, reads poetry, Shakespeare, Hymns, logic, Bible devotional, art history, music theory, medieval history, united states geography, literature and astronomy.

Another mom then asked me some questions about how it’s possible to organize my son’s time with the boxes (we don’t call them workboxes, just boxes) in such a way that it takes “so little time.” I think four hours is a lot of time! I thought I would repost my detailed response here. Italics were her questions, the rest is my response. It’s been a good talk, with the other mom asking a lot of good questions that made me think a lot and helped me clarify my own values some more, so hopefully this is helpful to someone. This is an ongoing dialogue, so there will be follow-ups with people’s questions in future posts, but feel free to ask your own! (Some of you longtime readers may notice we’ve changed a lot since starting this school year and are no longer using Ambleside Online’s recommendations. My son is still really interested in the Middle Ages, though, so he asked me to buy a few of the WinterPromise resources to learn more about the Middle Ages. More on this change at a later date!) A few of my answers have been proofread and/or expanded upon from the conversation where it was necessary for greater clarity.

My 6th grader does three subjects at a co-op (one is no homework), plus French, flute, history, and science at home, and it’s really hard for me to schedule all her subjects. Would you mind sharing a sample weekly schedule?

I don’t mind at all :)

The last few months, we have settled into a comfortable, flexible routine, where we get a much earlier start in the day than we used to. But we are both early morning lallygaggers and I work nights, so we get started later than most families. Typically my son starts his boxes between 10AM and 11AM, we break half an hour for lunch somewhere in there, and we’re done with the boxes by 2:30 or 3:30, depending on what we are doing. We then go out and do errands, or go to the park for a playdate, or other outings or sometimes we just chill out and goof off on the Internet, watch TV, play video games, build robots, or whatever else he’ll feel like doing. I try to schedule all doctor’s appointments for this time, too.

I will say that we don’t do any co-ops (my kid hates them) and I try to keep our field trip type outings for the weekend. We don’t do more than 2 field trips with our local homeschooling groups per month and it’s ONLY if my son seems excited about it, for example, the trip to see a Norman Rockwell exhibit next month. We have a lot of cool weekend and night time outings, but I’m a single mom and have to work, and there are only so many hours in the day! He has a park date weekly and a youth group twice a week at night, and sometimes a playdate with a friend, and that’s about it during the weekdays.

These are things which are not in the boxes, that he either does of his own free will and doesn’t want me to organize for him, or we do together as a family every day:

  • Computer programming/Internet surfing/ video game design
  • TV. We both like TV a lot and I won’t apologize for that. I’ve written several posts about why I love it and think it’s awesome. I don’t restrict TV in any way, but I do watch things with Shorty and talk about things we watch. Shorty is currently really into marathons of Everybody Hates Chris reruns :)
  • Afternoon walk, weather permitting, approx a mile and a half a day, for exercise and fresh air and chatting and sometimes Shorty likes to take our digital camera and take pictures of our walks and post them on his Facebook (he’s got a great eye for photography!!);
  • Instrument practice (guitar and piano) 10-15 min each, though he sometimes will spend hours in the afternoon practicing on his own;
  • Morning Bible devotionals and daily Bible reading, which Shorty has requested we do before anything else;
  • Bedtime literature. He says he’s too old to call it a bedtime story. *g* Sometimes he reads it out loud, sometimes I do, sometimes we switch off. Currently reading The King’s Fifth by Scott O’Dell, in concurrence with our study of the middle ages. It’s pretty awesome!!

These are the boxes we do daily:

  • Latin, Shorty’s pet subject #1 – Getting Started With Latin has turned out to be a big hit;
  • Math – typically two worksheets;
  • Wordly Wise vocabulary, Book 5 – pet subject #2;
  • Some kind of history reading. We have many books on the Middle Ages,  so sometimes we have more than one history reading – reading from the “spine” or main book (currently The Kingfisher’s Atlas of the Medieval World) and then a second book about the subject, usually very brief on each count. We’re talking no more than 2-3 pages, unless he wants to keep reading.
  • Geography/ map drawing, pet subject #3.
  • Poetry – we just read 1 poem a day from a Walter de la Mare poem book. We don’t discuss it too much or analyze it. We just read it for fun.

These are the boxes we do 2-3 times per week, as our schedule and his mood permits:

  • Spanish – We are native speakers, and live in Little Havana, so our focus is vocabulary expansion so that Shorty can communicate with locals more easily;
  • Astronomy: short reading, plus occasional notebooking/games – that would be a 2nd box;
  • Some kind of history-related project, lapbook or activity – currently we are alternating between a project from The Days of Knights and Dames and lapbooking about knights and castles;
  • Christian studies – we did a wonderful Advent study during Christmas that Shorty absolutely fell in love with, and he’s been reading A Little Pilgrim’s Progress;
  • Tangrams, which my kid loves, but not too often or he gets tired of them!

These are the subjects we do once per week:

  • Nature walks with nature studies,
  • Guitar lesson;
  • Piano lesson;
  • Logic – having great fun with The Fallacy Detective;
  • Hymn study with the book and CD, Then Sings My Soul;
  • Shakespeare – usually a couple of pages from a “Tales from Shakespeare” book;
  • Biography. Currently Diane Stanley’s Joan of Arc. Shorty really loves and gets into biographies and we are discussing organizing a study of inventors and industrial-revolution people (his other favorite historical era) when he finishes his current stuff;
  • Grammar – one weekly exercise from Simply Grammar by Karen Andreola for my little budding wordsmith;
  • Reading out loud from the McGuffey 3rd Eclectic Reader – he has great dramatic flair ;)

These are the things we only do every other week:

  • Juggling, a popular medieval pastime which he’s always wanted to learn anyway;
  • Art History OR Composer studies – We alternate between the two. One week we do one, the other week, we do the other. Shorty really gets excited about these, though, so I’m looking to see about doing this more often. Currenttly we are listening to a lot of Edvard Grieg and Sibelius, and leafing through my huge Norman Rockwell book, whose realism in illustration Shorty admires and envies. Fortunately, there is a traveling exhibit of his work right in town!

I’d love to see how you approach scheduling so many topics.

I have my little weekly workbox grid that I made. Because I like to plan for the whole year vs. little-by-little planning, even if I inevitably end up changing a million things as we go along, I printed out 36 of those, one for each week of the “school year,” which is all I have to keep track of for record-keeping purposes, though we do cool stuff almost every day all year long. I put subject dividers between each 12 - twelve weeks in a term, which our private umbrella school requires us to track. 180 days.

I am not married to this schedule in any way.  It is a list of possibilities for the day and nothing more.

I then take each resource and divide it up. If it’s a book, I divide its pages by 180, if it’s something we want to take all year to do. For example, the Latin curriculum he wanted has only 120 lessons. So we figured out that he needs to do about 3-4 lessons per week to finish it by the end of the year. So I go through the 36 weeks and put “Latin lesson #whatever” 3 or 4 times per week all year, until I get to 120. If it’s a shorter book, for example, we are reading the book Medieval Medicine and the Plague which has only 12 chapters, each about 2 pages long, I put it once per week for one term. Or I could put it once every 3 weeks all year, or whatever else had suited us.

NOTE: You do NOT have to plan things out for a whole year. You can divide the resource this way above, or you can plan one or two weeks ahead and not pre-determine how much you’re going to do. Then you’d just write “Legos” or “art/craft” or “Read such and such book.”

I do not feel the need to tell my son what to do all day long. My son has explicitly asked for help organizing his time and attention between his many interests, so I divide it up for him, but of course, if he wants to work ahead or postpone something one day, we do.

Sometimes I have a set amount to cover in a set amount of time. For The King’s Fifth, the novel we are reading right now, which has 31 chapters, I did not want to take months to read it, because we both lose interest and start to find it tedious when that happens, so I decided we’d read one chapter per day, which was 6 weeks if we read one chapter on a weekend. So I put in the “notes” section of my planner for week 1: “The King’s Fifth, Ch 1-5″. And then I put a checkmark as we read them, so I can at least tell where we are if I lose the bookmark. LOL!

FIRST, I do this with what he wants do every day. I fill in all the workboxes all year for those – labor intensive up-front, but saves me tons of time over the year.

THEN, I do this with the things he only wants do a few times a week.

FINALLY I plug in the ones he only does once a week or every other week. I just stick them wherever there’s an empty box!

I try to leave at least one empty box per day for spontaneous projects or for things he didn’t get to the day before or whatever. But it’s not necessary because the stuff we’re doing IS fun for him. If it’s not something he’s enjoying, I chuck it and we try something else or drop it. We have very few “schooly” things in there. I am constantly introducing new and interesting things, and I try to pay very close attention to what my son responds well to and what he doesn’t. I feel the materials should serve the child, not vice versa. I don’t understand why I see so many moms try a curriculum, notice it tanks with the kid, and conclude there’s something wrong with the KID! And then post, “How can I make my kid want to do this thing he hates that I think he should do anyway?” To me this is a backwards approach to education.

I’m guessing you don’t do everything, every day, but how do you decide what you don’t really need to do on a daily basis when so many things like music and foreign language need constant practice?

Some of it, as you saw above, decides itself. It is very obvious that Simply Grammar, with its 39 in-depth lessons, cannot be done every day and fits better as a weekly visitation. A lot of my notions, I got from Charlotte Mason, who really believed in child-gentle interest-whetting vs. a proscribed set of information delivered in a prescribed manner. This is also why we study hymns and Shakespeare, and only once a week. That was her recommendation and we tried it and it seems to work for Shorty. The rest, I take my cue from my son. I don’t think anyone NEEDS to do geography five times a week (or ever, really), but since my kid is endlessly fascinated by maps and state trivia, and thinks it’s great fun, we do.

Also, *I* don’t decide this. We decide it together. If he wanted to read Shakespeare every day, we would. And we only read it once a week because he asks me to read it. I think for him it’s like a little radio play. LOL, as in, ”This week on SHAKESPEARE’S DRAMATIC SOAP OPERA…”

And I realize this goes against conventional wisdom, but I don’t think a foreign language needs daily practice to master, and music practice is something my son is expected to do on his own. We are both musicians, so this isn’t really something he needs a reminder about; it’s just his great passion that he’s currently pursuing. We listen to, talk about and play music all day. I don’t think a child should be forced to play an instrument if s/he doesn’t want to. If s/he wants to play one, I would just be very frank about what’s required. “People who don’t practice the piano every day stink at piano. If you do practice every day, in a very short amount of time, you will be totally awesome at it. It’s up to you what you wanna be!” My son knows I’m honest and that I know what I’m talking about when it comes to music, so I only had to tell him this once!

I think when a child trusts you to respect his comfort zones, they trust your opinions a lot more, instead of finding them suspect and wondering if you’re trying to con him into doing something you think he should be doing, whether he hates it or not.

Do you do homework after dinner or some other trick to be done for the afternoon more quickly?

Nooooo. We do no homework. We are anti-homework! LOL! Once the boxes are done, either just before or just after lunch, his time is totally unscheduled, except that it is convenient for both of us if he showers while I’m making dinner. Otherwise, he does whatever he wants with his time. Basically, the workboxes are just a way for me to help him structure his time. He finds this helpful and encouraging. I am by nature a very UNSTRUCTURED person with a good internal clock, but he’s the opposite, he likes to plot out every minute of his time and has asked me to help him do this, so while it’s more controlling of his time than I would prefer, I need to acknowledge that his preferences are  not my preferences and I use the workboxes to help him in this way.

My son has a large workspace he likes very much because it is a very business-y roll top desk that he says “makes him feel like an executive.” LOL.  I sit next to him and let him do his thing while I work on mylaptop, unless he needs me for something, but if I see he’s taking forever on one box, I will use humor to check in with him (“EARTH TO ELI, DO YOU COPY?!” :D ) Sometimes this is enough to get him back on task. Sometimes he’ll then say he’s struggling and needs help. Sometimes he’ll say “Mom, I reeeeeeeally don’t feel like doing this today” and that is okay because I also am not always in the mood to do something every day. The homeschool police will not arrest us if we chuck a worksheet… or a whole workbook!

Obviously I’m a very laidback parent/ person/ homeschooler. When I say my son’s time is unscheduled except for the boxes, I mean it is totally unscheduled. I put no limits on any activity. He is allowed to watch TV, play video games, listen to music, chat with his friends/grandma on Facebook, or WHATEVER as much as he wants. I am right there actively engaging him in what he does, of course, but I am very much about not controlling every waking minute of a kid’s life. I think this is why workboxing and homeschooling is so low-stress for me and my kid. We just do whatever makes us happy, and don’t do whatever doesn’t. So far, so good!

Pictures from today’s Christmas party

author Posted by: Andrea on date Dec 21st, 2009 | filed Filed under: Family Life, General Homeschooling, Photos, Thoughtful Christianity
Today Shorty and I got together with six friends and four of their kids to have a little pre-Christmas party and fellowship. We have been hanging out with these ladies for fellowship and prayer for nearly five years – it’s a group of single moms from various churches around Greater Miami. There were a few of us missing, but in general, it’s a great and very encouraging and supportive group of people and we are so blessed to know them all! The party was AWESOME, with food from 4 different countries, a fun little gift exchange and lots of good music!

This season, we have focused hard on drawing closer to God and other people around us, vs. getting trapped in the relentless materialism and stress of the holiday season, and I have to say, it’s been one of our best, if not the best, Christmas season we’ve ever had so far. Definitely worth thinking about and redoing next year! Here is a picture of all my beloved friends:

CLICK TO SEE THE REST OF THE PICTURES FROM THE PARTY!

Abstract Christmas Tree Art!

author Posted by: Andrea on date Dec 17th, 2009 | filed Filed under: Art and Music, Family Life, General Homeschooling

This very simple but super cute craft was made by gluing successively shorter strips of green construction paper onto white construction paper into a pyramid formation, then drawing a star at the top, then taking a flat pencil eraser and dotting the whole thing with different-colored tempera paint for the ornaments. You can make this as elaborate as you want; Shorty chose to decorate his with different colored glitter glue and added his own message of cheer at the bottom! This is a really fun craft – you can make it with really little kids very simply, or you can make it more challenging for older kids by using decoupage, collages, strips of material, different-patterned scrapbook paper, whatever you have on hand.

Posted via email from hi, i’m andie.

A Day in Our Homeschooling Life!

author Posted by: Andrea on date Dec 9th, 2009 | filed Filed under: General Homeschooling
A lady on one of my Charlotte Mason homeschooling Yahoo! groups challenged everyone who has a blog to chronicle a day in the life of our homeschool. Today is one of our more typical days, so I decided to blog about it.
9:30AM
We were at a friends’ house until very late last night, so we rolled out of bed at this hour, about an hour later than usual for us.  It takes both Shorty and I a while to get our gears going in the morning, so we sat around and chit-chatted about last night’s shenanigans. Shorty told me all about a new video game, Guitar Hero 5, which is at the top of his Christmas list, and which our friends have. He described the details between the Wii and the XBox versions and all the different features.
10:00AM
We discover that one of our air conditioner wall units has leaked water all over the floor and spend some time cleaning that up.  Ewww.
10:15AM
A leisurely breakfast. Our choices of cereal, organic yogurt smoothies and some canned peaches. “Lite,” which I guess meant artificial sweetener. We didn’t love those. :(
10:45AM
I give Shorty’s hair a trim which he’s been asking for for a while. He thinks it’s too short, but I really took onl a little over an inch off, except for the back.  He looks really cute to me, but I’m biased :)
11:00AM
Shorty wanders off to get dressed/ stare at himself balefully in the bathroom mirror. I catch up on email.
11:30AM
Advent calendar time! Today’s advent calendar featured Swedish fish, and a reading of Luke 5:4-7. Shorty has never eaten Swedish fish before, and asks to buy more when we do groceries later. I agree. :)
11:45AM
Shorty does Box #1, a reading of Chapter 27 of A Little Pilgrim’s Progress, which he is enjoying very much, and through which he is learning a lot about allegories, metaphors and symbolism in literature. Ambleside Online recommended the original, but I remember struggling through that in Advanced Placement English as a senior in high school. I think it’s too difficult for an 11-year-old, but the remarkable thing is that he picked Year 2, which some kids as young as 7 are doing. We’ve liked a lot of the books they’ve recommended – Shorty is loving Understood Betsy, this term’s literature selection, for example - but I think asking a 7-year-old to attempt to comprehend the original Pilgrim’s Progress is pretty much crazy. A Little Pilgrim’s Progress is so much more fun.
12:15PM
Math begins – box #2. Shorty is very ambivalent about math. On the one hand, he hates it. On the other hand, he REALLY wants to improve his math skills, because so many of his personal interests involve math, such as computer animation and video games. He’s getting through Developmental Math Workbook 8 (multiplication). He didn’t do all of yesterday’s assignment, so he does that and today’s. Doodling and staring off into space occurs, but finally, it gets done. I work on someone’s web site at the kitchen table along side Shorty as he goes, offering help as he needs it.
1:05PM
Box #3 – our Advent study. We are doing this as a family Bible study, and we’re not doing any other Bible study or devotions during the holiday season.  We did days 7-9 since we’ve flaked out the last 2 days and it’s all really quick anyway.
1: 40PM
Box #4 – Getting Started With Latin lesson 25, in which the direct object plurals are covered. We dropped the ball on this a little these past few weeks, but we’ve been “catching up” and should be back on track by next week. Shorty LOVES this curriculum, which he asked to study this year, and has been having a good time studying the relationships between Latin, English and Spanish, as a great lover of etymology. Yesterday we learned that “specto” in Latin means “I watch/ I do watch/ I’m watching”. His face lit up as he realized, “That’s where we get the word spectator from!” Then we brainstormed other English words that come from specto: inspector, inspect, spectacle, spectacular, spectre, etc. Good times.
2:10PM
Ten minute break and a late lunch. PB and nutella on whole-wheat bagels, and a piece of fruit :) We got a late start this morning – typically we’re done with lunch by 1:00 or 1:30.
2: 35PM
Box #5 – A two-page reading of Exploring Creation with Astronomy. We’re on Planet Earth, and today we read about the concept of mass and its relation to gravity.  Shorty added some “fascinating facts” to his Earth notebooking page. The Apologia series came very well recommended by many homeschoolers for kids interested in learning more about astronomy. But it’s kind of repetitive – each chapter presents the material in exactly the same way – so when he’s done, we’re thinking of looking at WinterPromise’s new science projects, since they look way more fun and hands-on. Shorty is really interested in the one about the environment and weather. Today he did some really cute comic-book style illustrations about Isaac Newton’s discovery of gravity :)
3:05PM
Box #6 – Trail Guide to US Geography – we’re studying New Jersey.  Shorty was excited to learn from the atlas that one of the most definitive, if not the most definitive battles, that took place during the American Revolution, happened in New Jersey. He answers a handful of questions about New Jersey and the region. He is still figuring out how to look up information in an atlas or encyclopedia but he really feels proud of himself when he finds something. He’s already gotten pretty good at using the dictionary!!!  But by now I’m starting to get a little aggravated at how long our day is, and I think he is too. This is cutting into my errand-running time!
3:18PM
Box #7 – Map drill time – label and color a black and white line map of New Jersey. This is usually one of Shorty’s favorite things to do, but today the attention is slowly drifting off to Mars.
3:30PM
Ten minute break! I spend it perusing Project Gutenberg’s supply of McGuffey Readers after someone on the AmbleRamble Yahoo! group (discussion group for Ambleside Online) suggested it for reading comprehension; he spends it going to the restroom and checking his email. He sends email to his dad and they plot to talk on the phone later tonight. I decide to chuck the AO biography suggestion, The Little Duke, which Shorty isn’t getting much out of, with McGuffey’s Third Eclectic Reader instead, which sounds more enjoyable.
3:50PM
Box #8 – Shorty listens to Chapter 10 of Understood Betsy by Dorothy Canfield on Librivox as he reads along on Project Gutenberg. He is REALLY enjoying this book, much more than I thought. It’s very funny and very sweet! And there is a little boy whose name is the same as Shorty’s, though he’s a rather hapless character. Normally he doesn’t like stories about little girls, but this one is very charming and he warmed up to it immediately. He enthusiastically narrated and discussed the chapter. It was long, though.
4:30PM
Box #9 – Our Viking Adventure literature study and lapbook. Today, we did the lapbook components for Chapter 6, though we are far ahead of that in the book, slightly over halfway. We’re not doing the lapbook components in order. Today we talked about runes and the value of formal education through the ages. We cut out some cards and he wrote a few words like his name and “Nintendo” and “Mario” and “music” in the runic alphabet. The book is far below Shorty’s reading level – something I didn’t know when I purchased it – but the story is a good one that has engaged his imagination and the unit study, combined with a few History Channel DVDs and lots and lots of Googling and web sites, has satisfied his interest in Viking culture thus far. :)   I expect to be done with this by the time we break for Christmas.
We gave up on the 3 remaining workboxes, at this point. They included a family tree project we’ve been working on, a Klutz set and a typing program.
5:20PM
Shorty showers and hangs out at my grandma’s house watching TV and I go run and do some groceries. Today was WAY too long, even though we did start at noon and took 50 minutes worth of breaks.
7:10PM
Groceries took FOREVAH. I get home, grandma helps me unload. Shorty is on the phone with his Dad!
7:25PM
Grandma offers to spring for Pizza, since it’s 2-for-1 Tuesday at Domino’s.
7:50PM
Pizza arrives. I know a lot of people have dinner at crazy early hours like 5PM, but in many Latino and Spanish cultures, it’s common to have dinner much later. When I visited my paternal family in Spain, the family had dinner at nearly 10PM! Still, today we ran later for everything – usually our dinner is sometime between 6 and 7.
8:00PM
We have dinner, and watch a little TV. We’ve DVRed A Charlie Brown Christmas and we’re excited for the premiere of Disney’s new Christmas special, Prep and Landing on ABC!
9:15PM
Shorty is sleepy and starts getting ready for quiet time. We read a little bit of the Bluedorns’ The Fallacy Detective and a little of Viking Adventure before bed while listening to “Pomp and Circumstance” and a little of Ralph Vaughn-Williams’ first symphony.
9:30PM
Shorty has quiet time in his room, I refill the boxes for tomorrow, shower, and clean up in the living room. Usually at this time, he listens to the radio or his iPod, sometimes while reading.
10:00
Lights out for Shorty, and now I work, watch TV and catch up with my various social media outlets until around 2 – 3AM. I make sure to set the alarm for 8:30AM, and then we start it all over again. If I’m up particularly late or feel like I need a little extra sleep, I will leave Shorty and my grandmother a note with instructions for breakfast, and will sleep in until 9 or 9:30. I am working on waking up earlier though!

Hopefully this has given you an idea of what a “typical” day in the life of a single parent who homeschools looks like. But of course, that’s with the caveat that there IS no typical day… which is just how we like it

December Girls’ Night Out!

author Posted by: Andrea on date Dec 8th, 2009 | filed Filed under: General Homeschooling, Photos
Every month, the homeschooling moms (and one homeschooled graduate older sister!) from our local park group get together one night to go to a restaurant, while the kids all hang out together at home or visiting each other. Here are the pictures from tonight’s shindig at the California Pizza Kitchen!

Click to see the rest!