We homeschool for six weeks and take a week off. Many veteran homeschoolers have recommended this schedule as a sanity preserver, so I am going with the voice of experience. We have homeschooled now for six weeks and this is the first official school break in our home. It’s exciting.
I thought this would be the week when I finally finish some writing projects and can applesauce, but I have all kinds of other appointments which I was not planning on. On top of that, our monthly Ripley’s Aquarium science class happens to be this week and we still have another session of our Adventurer Club to attend before we take a two-week break from that…
Looks like learning will happen despite the break from the 3Rs.
The curve ball is the bug my daughter has been fighting for a few days now and which has transferred to my son today.
Speaking of my son, I asked him to sweep the floor after lunch and he did a great job. I still had to sweep a bit after him in places, but he has made a lot of progress since last week. He was proud of what he accomplished. After he missed the trash can though, he got discouraged. He asked me to sweep up the mess. I told him that he was still learning and encouraged him not to give up. He was still negative, but stood there and watched me sweep.
After I cleaned up the trash can area, he came back to me asking me to let him try dumping the dust pan again. He did not miss this time. I felt he was growing right there before my eyes, not just in home ec. skills, but also in attitude towards work and in his self-image.
Work is an important component of the Moore Formula (besides academics and service). I think children learn so much by working and performing chores around the house.
When we visited their grandmother in the hospital over the weekend (that falls under service, by the way), my son narrated a whole book to her of his own free will – Curious George Gets a Job. (Narration is a Charlotte Mason method.)
Of all the books we have read to him recently, he thought of that one because George broke his leg and had to wear a cast – like grandmother, who fell and broke her leg, and has to wear a cast now.
My daughter sang I’m a Super Sleuth – which she learned in church recently – also of her own free will. Children are so good at comforting others. They are natural at it.
I feel so blessed to be able to stay home with them and teach them and watch them grow and learn.
Homeschooling blesses me just as much as it blesses them. Which is why, when I look up at the sky, I thank God for my life. How did I get to be so lucky?
I would like to know more about your adventure club. We are local. Please send me some info! 🙂
I saw your info on the KIDSKLUB yahoo group email!
Hello Jessica,
Thanks for reading my blog. I just sent you an email with details. The Adventurer Club meets three times a month at 3611 Kingston Pike in Knoxville. It is for children PreK-4th grade. It’s a scouting-type program with a religious component. As one of the leaders told me, “It’s just busy work unless we show them Jesus through everything they learn here.”