Tuesday, December 31, 2013
INTENTIONS FOR NEW YEAR
1. Daily Bible reading (using some different translations: NET, HCSB, and ISV)
2. Daily free reading (I have a lot of good books I'd like to read)
3. Eat only 3 times per day and record on MFP
4. Exercise 4 days a week using schedule I posted here in Jan. 2012, before my surgery
5. Walk when the weather is good
6. Rotating house cleaning schedule I posted here in Jan. 2012
7. Start an expense notebook and try to save money, especially on groceries
8. Write in my diary daily, or at least when there is anything to write
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Friday, February 3, 2012
FRIDAY FAVORITES - A FAVORITE ESSAY
Of Daffodils and Diesels
Author UnknownI'm not very good in school.
This is my second year in the seventh grade, and I'm bigger than most of the other kids. The kids like me all right, even though I don't say much in class, and that sort of makes up for what goes on in school. I don't know why the teachers don't like me. They never have. It seems like they don't think you know anything unless you can name the book it comes out of.
I read a lot at home-things like Popular Mechanics and Sports Illustrated and the Sears catalog-but I don't just sit down and read them through like they make us do in school. I use them when I want to find something out, like a batting average or when Mom buys something secondhand and wants to know if she's getting a good price.
In school, though, we've got to learn whatever is in the book and I just can't memorize the stuff. Last year I stayed after school every night for two weeks trying to learn the names of the presidents. Some of them were easy, like Washington and Jefferson and Lincoln, but there must have been 30 altogether and I never did get them straight. I'm not too sorry, though, because the kids who learned the presidents had to turn right around and learn all the vice presidents.
I am taking the seventh grade over, but our teacher this year isn't interested in the names of the presidents. She has us trying to learn the names of all the great American inventors. I guess I just can't remember the names in history. Anyway, I've been trying to learn about trucks because my uncle owns three and he says I can drive one when I'm 16. I know the horsepower and gear ratios of 26 American trucks and want to operate a diesel. Those diesels are really something. I started to tell my teacher about them in science class last week when the pump we were using to make a vacuum in a bell jar got hot, but she said she didn't see what a diesel engine has to do with our experiment on air pressure, so I just shut up. The kids seemed interested, though. I took four of them around to my uncle's garage after school and we watched his mechanic tear down a big diesel engine. He really knew his stuff.
I'm not very good in geography, either. They call it economic geography this year. We've been studying the imports and exports of Turkey all week, but I couldn't tell you what they are. Maybe the reason is that I missed school for a couple of days when my uncle took me downstate to pick up some livestock. He told me where we were headed and I had to figure out the best way to get there and back. He just drove and turned where I told him. It was over 500 miles round trip and I'm figuring now what his oil cost and the wear and tear on the truck-he calls it depreciation-so we'll know how much we made. When we got back I wrote up all the bills and sent letters to the farmers about what their pigs and cattle brought at the stockyard. My aunt said I only made 3 mistakes in 17 letters, all commas. I wish I could write school themes that way. The last one I had to write was on "What a daffodil thinks of Spring," and I just couldn't get going.
I don't do very well in arithmetic, either. Seems I just can't keep my mind on the problems. We had one the other day like this: If a 57 foot telephone pole falls across a highway so that 17 and 3/4 feet extend from one side and 14 and 16/17 feet extend from the other, how wide is the highway? That seemed to me like an awfully silly way to get the size of a highway. I didn't even try to answer it because it didn't say whether the pole had fallen straight across or not.
Even in shop class I don't get very good grades. All of us kids made a broom holder and a bookend this semester and mine were sloppy. I just couldn't get interested. Mom doesn't use a broom anymore with her new vacuum cleaner, and all of our books are in a bookcase with glass doors in the family room. Anyway, I wanted to make a tailgate for my uncle's trailer, but the shop teacher said that meant using metal and wood both, and I'd have to learn how to work with wood first. I didn't see why, but I kept quiet and made a tie tack even though my dad doesn't wear ties. I made the tailgate after school in my uncle's garage, and he said I saved him $20. Government class is hard for me, too.
I've been staying after school trying to learn the Articles of Confederation for almost a week, because the teacher said we couldn't be a good citizen unless we did. I really tried because I want to be a good citizen. I did hate to stay after school, though, because a bunch of us guys from Southend have been cleaning up the old lot across from Taylor's Machine Shop to make a playground out of it for the little kids from the Methodist home. I made the jungle gym out of the old pipe, and the guys put me in charge of things. We raised enough money collecting scrap this month to build a wire fence clear around the lot.
Dad says I can quit school when I'm 16. I'm sort of anxious to because there are a lot of things I want to learn.
Friday, January 27, 2012
FRIDAY FAVORITES
Thursday, January 26, 2012
THANKFUL THURSDAYS

Since I focused on my Big Girl last week, I will focus on my Little Girl today. As you can see from the pictures, my Little Girl is not so little anymore. It was 13 years ago and then some that I brought home this gift for which I am eternally thankful.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
TITUS 2 TUESDAYS - SCHEDULED HOUSECLEANING
Monday, January 23, 2012
MISCELLANEOUS MONDAYS - FOCUS ON EXERCISE

Most people hate Mondays. I love them. A brand new week is almost as good as a brand new year. :-) Mostly, I just like the routine - school, regular housework, etc. Weekends seem long and boring to me now that my girls are older and mostly independent. I keep up the housework during the week and, besides a bit of laundry, there is really nothing much left to do on Saturday and Sunday. I wish we had a church, but since we don't, Sundays are really the worst. I always wonder what in the world I am going to do with myself once my girls are both finished schooling.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
SACRED SUNDAYS - A FAVORITE HYMN
This is one of my favorite hymns. In the video at the bottom, he sings the most often used stanzas, but be sure to read all of them. Read slowly and think about what is being said. I especially love that last one!
HOW FIRM A FOUNDATION
Listen to the music here. A blurb from that site:
This hymn was sung at the funerals of American presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson. In addition:
[It] was the favorite of Deborah Jackson [sic; her name was actually Rachel] President Andrew Jackson’s beloved wife [he was President-elect at the time], and on his death-bed the warrior and statesman called for it. It was the favorite of Gen. Robert E. Lee, and was sung at his funeral. The American love and familiar preference for the remarkable hymn was never more strikingly illustrated than when on Christmas Eve, 1898, a whole corps of the United States Army Northern and Southern, encamped on the Quemados hills, near Havana [Cuba], took up the sacred tune and words.
Saturday, January 21, 2012
SCHOOL STUFF SATURDAY
DraculaBy Bram StokerA reviewTime, Setting, and Location: Dracula was a novel set in Victorian England and Europe.Author's Worldview: It's hard to say. Obviously, there was great evil and self-sacrificing good in the book, but the Vampires were victims as well as enemies. It was not their fault that they were what they were - another vampire had made them so. Even Dracula’s face, upon being killed, had a brief moment of peace as he was finally set free. Such objects as crucifixes and holy water and sacred wafers (I would dearly love to know how exactly the Professor got hold of them. He must have had some connections) were used along with garlic as a defensive against the vampires, but this could be more from the author using myths that were already in existence than from a Catholic worldview.Who/what did you like? My favorite character was the Professor. This isn’t unexpected. I tend to like professor or archeologist characters. He was a foreigner and so didn’t speak English perfectly and sometimes messed up expressions, which made him endearing. He was the father figure of the group, trying to protect everyone. My second favorite character was Quincy the American. He was loyal to the end and, unfortunately, was killed off.Who/What did you dislike? Nothing really. Every character fit in his proper place.Was the book well written? Yes, or I would have never gotten through it.Would you recommend it: Yes if the person can take a little bit of suspense.
Friday, January 20, 2012
FRIDAY FAVORITES - A FAVORITE POEM

Thursday, January 19, 2012
Thankful Thursdays
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Friday, January 6, 2012
CIVIL WAR UNIT
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
HOW WE USE SPELLING POWER
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
A BRAND NEW YEAR
Monday, January 2, 2012
A FAVORITE POEM
By Robert Frost
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.
Friday, November 4, 2011
WEEKLY REVIEW
This week in history, we have been reading about the 1840s. Big Girl is still reading Uncle Tom's Cabin. She finished up A Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. Little Girl finished up a Frederick Douglass biography and a book about Sutter's Fort. Together we finished up one book on the Oregon Trail and a book about the early life of Charles Dickens. We are continuing in several other books.
I am still reading Uncle Tom's Cabin and have just started on A History of the American People by Paul Johnson. I was reading More than Conquerers, a commentary on Revelation, but could no longer take his seemingly random interpretations and symbolism. Like when he said the woman with the sun, moon, and a crown of 12 stars who gave birth to the male child represented the church of all time! I don't think I have ever heard it interpreted any way other than that this woman represents Israel, from which Christ came, which is the only thing that makes any sense at all! That was enough for me. Wish I hadn't wasted my money.
Big Girl finished The Story of Art by Gombrich. She really enjoyed that book, but said she hated the modern art when she got to that part. I have to agree with her. A bunch of blobs and scribbles does not make art, no matter who says so. Unless, perhaps, you are three years old. She continues to work on her fan fiction stories, and has some ideas for some stories of her own, which I am hoping she will do some day. She gave up on the guitar and has been practicing on the keyboard. She says she likes it much better because you can play the actual melody and don't have to sing in order to recognize the song. She also commented that, with the keyboard, "the notes actually mean something." :-)
Little Girl is continuing to read her many books. She finished Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH this week. I had to order the next levels of both her language arts and math the other day. She is coming to the end of the CLE 4 math (we sped through it), and her CLE 7 language arts. I have slowed her down to a half lesson a day in her LA because CLE only goes through level 8, and there is no hurry to get through it.
Both girls have been rather obsessed with all things "Sherlock Holmes" lately. They have been reading from a collection of his works and watching the TV series on youtube. They used their allowance to order the set on dvd the other day, and they are impatiently awaiting its arrival.
Friday, October 28, 2011
ODDS AND ENDS
Little Girl is almost finished with the CLE level 4 math. I LOVE this math! If I had another child to homeschool, I would definitely start at the beginning with it. It covers so many things that you "think" you will cover in "real life," but never actually happens. At least, not enough to actually learn it. She is also just about finished with the 7th grade CLE Language Arts. Since they only go through 8th grade, I have slowed her down to a half lesson per day. That leaves her more time to work through the math and to read. She is still doing the Apples 2 Spelling workbook, skipping through some unnecessary pages, and the Vocabulary Vine book. She is also reading the BJU 8th grade Literature book, just one story per week right now. She still keeps several other books going at a time, as well as her Nature Friend magazine. She just finished Black Beauty and The Wind in the Willows.
Big Girl is still working through the Abeka Consumer Math book and the Story of Art book. She is also reading A Ready Defense (with discussion and discernment), and the Clarence Carson history book, as it goes along with our main history, Uncle Tom's Cabin (as am I), A Narrative Life of Frederick Douglass, and A History of England by Dickens.
For history, we have dropped Tapestry of Grace. I just did not like the way we kept going back and forth in history, instead of completely chronological. I know everything can't be perfectly chronological (as when you read a biography, that person's life will cover a lot of ground), but it could be much better than most history programs do it. I started to pick Truthquest back up, but it has the exact same problems. We do not like studying history in units that cause you to go out of order, like most history programs (actually all I have looked at) do. So, I have been creating our own. We are still in the 1800s, taking it a decade at a time. I use a couple online timelines, as well as a few books I have here, and we cover a decade in 2-4 weeks, depending on how much happened during that time period that we want to study. I went through several book lists I found (along with All Through the Ages and Truthquest guides) and listed out all the most recommended books for our century first. I narrowed them down to ones we own or could get at the library. Then I put an approximate date by each. If we want to study something or someone we don't have a book listed for, we just see what we own or the library has on that topic.
We are basically reading chronologically through that book list, along with reading Abraham Lincon's World, the Scholastic Encyclopedia of the Presidents, The Pictorial Encyclopedia of American History, The Defining of America (PAC), and utilizing BJU world and U.S. history texts where we want extra info or can't find it anywhere else. We usually have a biography or two going, as well as a historical fiction and a few nonfiction books on the period. I simply figure out what readings are about the decade we are studying and divide them up and read a bit of each book daily. We all are enjoying this much better.
I am trying to do some of my own reading lately as well. Currently (besides the Bible), I am reading Uncle Tom's Cabin on the Kindle, More Than Conquerors by Hendrikson (don't think I agree with his viewpoint, but wanted to read a good book on it anyway), and Amusing Ourselves to Death by Neil Postman. I may do some short reviews on these soon.
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Sunday, August 21, 2011
Switching Math
WEEKLY REVIEW 8/15 - 8/19
BOTH GIRLS
Bible: Revelation
Music appreciation: Discovering Music
Artist Study: Thomas Sully
Geography: Reading How People Live
Daily poetry reading
History: TOG Week 11 - Jacksonian Democracy - Reading Abraham Lincoln’s World, This Country of Ours, President books, In the Days of Queen Victoria, Island of the Blue Dolphins, Andrew Jackson biography, Sequoya bio online
BIG GIRL
Consumer Math
Literature: To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
BJU Cultural Geography
The Story of Art by Gombrich
The Sections and the Civil War by Clarence Carson
Bible/Religion: Bible, Pagan Christianity (with discernment and discussion)
Writing: She writes her own stories all the time
LITTLE GIRL
Math: Teaching Textbooks Pre-algebra
CLE Language Arts: 4 lessons
Vocabulary Vine: dis, di, dif, de - apart, away, un, down
Spelling: Apples Spelling Drills 1
Writing: Killgallon Sentence Composing workbook
Science: Nature Friend Magazine, Real Food Nutrition and Health
Independent Reading: Bible, Baker’s Bible Atlas, BJU Literature book, Black Beauty, Henry and Beezus by Cleary, The Indian in the Cupboard by Banks
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