Monthly Archives: June 2010

End of Term 2

Well we’re winding down to the end of another school term. While there are many people driving around, picking up their children from school or finishing up from work and plan to pick up their children from after school care, I know there will be discussions and phone calls to book children into holiday care programs, people taking time off work and grandparents having holiday time with their school aged grandchildren. Holidays are a very busy time for most people. The two weeks off for our winter break, here in Australia, will mean the roads will be filled with more cars containing more children than usual, shops will be full of people between 9am and 3pm as well as there being ‘more things to do’ at the Art Galleries and Museums etc.

Holidays are a quiet time for most Home Educating families. There is a tendency to stay away from busy places and avoid the traffic. Sport activities are usually on break too
so there is ‘less’ to do with our children. If it wasn’t so bitterly cold we would probably be going camping or at least making day trips out of town to see some sights. As it happens we’ll be continuing on with our academic type of activities and reading a lot. M is busy borrowing and reading books for the MS Read-a-thon while D is really enjoying learning to read. We’ve just visited the local library and have borrowed many books, DVD’s and CD roms that will take care of the rest of the week’s literacy requirements!

On the way home from the library we stopped in at the shops. With mince on sale D could easily see that the higher the amount per kilo the higher the final price and the less mince you could afford. He was able to choose the best pre-packaged deal and both M and D completed the shopping themselves with the self-serve checkout.

Navigating around an already busy car-park we discussed how easy it is for drivers not to see children when reversing, people smoking cigarettes in public places where children are as well as looking forward to going home and getting into our projects. This week D doesn’t have Joeys but we do have a Cubs activity of ice-sledding with a pre-made slab of ice with some rope frozen in it. Should be fun to see the children using these to slide down the grassy hill! Following that we have a sleep over in the Scouts Hall and that will mark the official end of Term 2 for us.

Term 3 will see us doing more learning from everyday experiences, introducing MORE literacy and numeracy into our daily activities for D as well as working on our projects. Most of the learning M and D do is self directed, I just provide the materials and drive them to where they need to be. We all have our ongoing projects which keep us learning and concentrating on big concepts for sustained periods of time.

My current projects are
* GTD – re-reading for about the 7th time as well as listening to pod-casts based on Getting Things Done, by David Allen
*Music – I recently took my girls to see the Newcastle Conservatorium Choir and I’m now listening to more excellent quality singing … this may turn into a project of rejoining a choir, as I was involved with a Welch choir for a while.
*Writing – I’m reading more books about writing, specifically blogging but this project is one that doesn’t have a deadline. I’m quiet happy for this to remain a behind the scenes activity as really it is Home Educating that takes up my time, energy as well and gives me a most profound and satisfying sense of joy!

Watching my children naturally using their manners while playing with children they don’t know in a park when I know that their aged peers in schools would be unlikely to say “Excuse me, are you using this play equipment? I was wondering if I could use the swing please?” gives me chills! Firstly, it must seem strange that children of that age are using their manners but also the comments I get, especially from people over 50 is really enjoyable, especially for my children. They are taken seriously, they are respected, they are listened to by adults. They are ‘part of the community’ and are seen already as contributors of our community. There is no “wait until you’re in the ‘real world’ youngen” for them! They ARE in the ‘real world’, what ever that really means and they are involving themselves on a daily basis with people of varied backgrounds, of various ages and they are doing all of this not with a script or after having undergone some advanced social curriculum but as themselves, completely void of the deliberate interference of peer-pressure, social ridicule, misaligned learning, religious or intellectual dogma and without the need to ‘perform’ to an arbitrary standard that may or may not include rewards or punishments. They are free to be themselves and they are free to learn what they want, when they want. I do organise their activities and have a routine based on how best they learn and also when they are most alert (morning 3 hour work cycle, which is based on the Montessori Method) and also I limit the amount of computer and television that they watch, giving them both free time after 2pm to either work on their computers or watch some ABC kids tv.

As well we continue to enjoy play-dates and get-togethers with other Home Educating families! I’ve very fortunate to have a large social group of other families to interact with. During the holidays I hope to finish off some emails and letters to friends who are not local as well as see some of our school friends during the weekdays when they are usually away from their parents and other friends, who either go to other schools or Home Educate, like us.

Bringing it all together!

You know those times when you work really hard at nothing? 

Sometimes it seems as though you can go months or even years plodding along at some task, making small movements forward and then stall or even go backwards, all the while ‘feeling’ as though you’re living in a rut; at least in regard to that one annoying, tiny, sometimes insignificant but nonetheless thoroughly distracting detail! Well! I’m reminded this week of a big word I learnt years ago

CONSOLIDATION

Finally all the little twigs of information I’ve been gathering have formed a branch that links into the tree of knowledge that is a life of learning. I now know how to…. wait for it….. update my website!

Holding the applause? Well in my little world it’s a big victory! You see YEARS ago I turned my ‘helpful advice’ into a business. My aim was to keep working while home educating my children. That is something I still have a passion towards, however the site that I had for the business was outdated… there was little to no traffic and I couldn’t update it and it became an embarrassment that I couldn’t help myself with and feared telling others about. I have the logo and web address on my car so I’ve been aware of the ‘need to learn how to update my website’ everyday for years!

Having to learn and wanting to learn are two opposites in my brain for my way of learning. I know many people with this affliction; choose to do something and it’s a breeze. Be told to do the exact same activity and you get stuck and can’t even get started! Just like nagging, it doesn’t help the learning process. It has been a really enjoyable task in the end because I didn’t will myself into it but slowly got innately motivated, slowly moving from drawing, to painting, to changing graphics on my computer, then updating some templates for my blog site, twitter site and then presto I was in Dreamweaver and 4 hours had zoomed by!!! The final “putting site on net” was aided by the beautiful Michelle who has several websites of her own. I profoundly thank her for her time and talents in teaching me how easy it is to use firefox to update sites! Awesome!

I LOVE LEARNING!!!

Now, on to transforming my Home Ed room into a clean and functional space again and while I’m at it put some more hours into writing my book. Promise I’ll put up some before and afters of the room! I’ve even been making a video of the progress. Mixing up the physical work with writing works well for me. Being kinaesthetic really gets my subconscious unblocked. I find that a lot of my ‘problems’ get resolved when I’m doing a repetitive task such as washing up or picking up around the house. Best of all is putting out the washing… being outside doing the mindless activity really works for my writing blocks. Different approaches to learning really works!

The Little Ones: beyond beautiful!
M sending an emal
D using magnetic moveable alphabet to write his words

Hope your world is beautiful today, thanks for visiting!