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November 20, 2005

Six Week Report

Well, Gabriel's been home for six weeks now - it's been going very well and he's pleased and feeling on top of things. Our schedule has been a bit hectic - me working part time at the high school plus all the Christopherus stuff.... but he's done quite a lot. Here is a summary of all the things he's done in the past weeks (something I often advise homeschooling parents to do - to make a list of all the things their child has done over a period of ... a day? .... a week?... a month?.... just so they can see, as the unschoolers say, that "children learn all the time".):
 
* he's read Genevieve Foster's Augustus Caesar's World and is taking notes in preparation for writing a biography of Augustus.
 
* listened to me read Famous Men of Rome most mornings - we're almost finished with the book and we've had many good discussions of what we've read.
 
*memorised a couple of passages from Virgil's Aeneid in Latin and English.
 
*has been working on a beautiful Main Lesson book which contains passages from Virgil and Livy, his own composition and things I've written which he's copied or been dictated. He also has made a map of the Roman Empire, a drawing from a bust of Julius Caesar, other illustrations and a mosaic.
 
*He's about to start reading The Bronze Bow.
 
* He's worked faithfully through some Latin exercises every day - and in order to help him understand the Latin grammar, we've done a lot of grammar exercises and review in English. Now that he's motivated to learn this stuff - because he wants to learn Latin as well as German - he is finally taking it in.
 
* When he was at school his class had been having a Geology main lesson - he has continued with some studies of rock formations and continued to fill his main lesson book with beautiful illustrations, diagrams and descriptions of rocks and minerals.
 
* Each week I've given him a list of spelling words which he has worked on - each Friday he's had a spelling quiz.
 
* Most days he's played the piano for about 15 minutes - I am trying to carefully walk that line between requiring him to play - and letting his own interest inspire him to play. It's a bit hit and miss at the moment.
 
* The last week I asked him to switch from free choice math exercises to working on measurement (which somehow got missed earlier on) in the Key To... workbooks  we have. He has finished workbook 1 and has started on the second one on English units of measurement.
 
* He spends about 15 minutes three times a week working on a typing/keyboarding program on the computer.
 
* He spends about 15 minutes 4 times a week on the Rosetta Stone German language program - also on the computer.
 
* He has started to knit again - he finished a scarf and is now working on a hat.
 
* He read Rosemary Sutcliffe's The Lantern Bearers for enjoyment.
 
* And he did laundry, walked the dog, played monopoly and Battleship with a friend, vacuumed, prepared several meals, looked after the rabbit and helped keep the house cleaning moving along!
 
I guess he accomplished quite a lot!
 
 

November 15, 2005

Wonderful Halloween

What a great Halloween we had in our family! What a wonderful festival - though unless one is a follower of Celtic traditions, I'm not sure 'festival' is the correct term. 'Excuse for fun' or 'evening out of the ordinary' might be more apt descriptions.
 
Why do I enjoy Halloween so thoroughly? Because it is the one night of the year that children can run around town, often unsupervised by adults, approaching strangers and receiving smiles and treats! How often does that happen in the life of the average Western child? Is there any other evening when bands of children - and teens - running around the streets elicits indulgent smiles and kind words from adults?!
 
What a wonderful thing for a child to be able, in trust, to knock on the door of someone she does not know and know that she will get some small treat, a few words about her costume, perhaps, and generally enjoy the wonderful feeling created by adults who care enough about to children to take the time, the effort and the money to decorate their homes, to dress up themselves perhaps - to buy or make treats!
 
Ok - sure - there are horror stories, there are always those unfortunate souls who prey upon children or who put up little signs declaring "no trick-or-treaters" (and who might have a good reason for this). And there is the sickly amounts of sugar that the children stuff down themselves. But it seems to me that such risks are worth it - that the price of fear of Halloween is a mistrust in the world and in the unknown - and, unfortunately, not the unknown ghoul but the unknown human being. As for the candy - for sure there are children who cannot, for health reasons, eat pounds of Snickers bars and tootsie rolls - but nowadays many people give out stickers or healthy alternatives.
 
Having said that, as a parent of boys blessed by an abundance of hearty health, an orgy of sugar does not trouble me. I am so pleased by their experience of the kindness of strangers, of whole neighborhoods being decorated to please the children, of free explorations in the dark - that I don't care if they over-do it. They get over it. And what they are left with is a positive picture of adults welcoming children in a warm and positive way. To me that's worth a few tummy aches!