Tuesday Tome Week 23 – Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up

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Warning! This New York Times best-selling book, The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo, will change your life. It has changed mine. Even though I am more organized than most people, or so I am told, I needed a book on decluttering to kick into a higher gear about my house.

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It was good to read some nonfiction for a change, after all the drama of my latest fiction adventures. Marie Kondo grew up tidying up and experimenting with different storage methods. She made all the mistakes in the book and learned from each one. As a result, she has put together a method of de-cluttering which helps many people in affluent countries like Japan and USA.

And even though her Japanese background (homes are very small in Japan compared to the US or Australia, for example) and her stay in Shinto shrines have influenced her much toward a minimalist style, you can tell she also genuinely loves to help you transform your house into a space where you feel joyous and at peace. Stuff does not bring joy or peace. We needed a Japanese young lady to teach us about it and more power to her and those who listen to her.  Continue reading »


Story of the World, Vol. 2, Chapter 22

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With Chapter 22, or Exploring the Mysterious East, we have entered the second part of the book. By the way, we are still reading a book about Eleanor of Aquitaine, the mother of Richard the Lionhearted and John Lackland, and other famous women from history. Also, we got a chapter book on Robin Hood from Dr. Bauer’s recommended list. We are swamped with reading material and we are on a deadline, as these are ILL items which cannot be renewed.

Needless to say, I am not inclined to be getting these extra readings from the library any time soon. First off, we are in catch up mode and I have decided that reading the lessons and doing the map and a bit of coloring here and there is sufficient for their age. Secondly, I am tired of having to stop in the middle of a sentence, when I read out loud to them, because of the violence portrayed in these books.   Continue reading »


Story of the World, Vol. 2, Chapter 21

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Chapter 21 or The Mongols Devastate the East happened fast, too, over lunch. I read, they ate. Then we did the map and I asked them to color the portrait of Genghis Khan. My son, 8, is sooo over coloring. Some days I make him do it. This was not one of those days.

A craft I found easy to do was putting history back in order. The strips of paper retelling the story had to be cut out, arranged in order, and glued onto construction paper. Now that we can do, I thought, especially because it has to do with words and reading comprehension.  Continue reading »


Story of the World, Vol. 2, Chapter 20

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We are still in catch-up mode. We finished the official school year back in April, but we have not finished our history curriculum. I believe in finishing every curriculum unless the children already know the information. Well, they don’t know history. Yet. So we will finish this curriculum before we go on to Volume 3.

Since we have a new daily schedule, doing history is actually easier to squeeze in. I read to them during their lunch and then I have them color and work on the map right after lunch. If we don’t bother with crafts, we can even do one chapter a day.  Continue reading »


Story of the World, Vol. 2, Chapter 19

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Back from Romania, at the beginning of May, it was time to catch up on our much-neglected history studies. A New Kind of King or Chapter 19 was a great one to pick back up because it dealt with Robin Hood. Well, first it dealt with Richard the Lionhearted, then with his brother, John Lackland and Robin Hood.

The kids love Robin Hood. We have read some books about this character and so they already knew who he was and what he did.

Making ancient-looking paper with black tea, for our own Magna Carta

Making ancient-looking paper with black tea, for our own Magna Carta. Before…

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… and after. Not must difference, right?

Besides the map and the coloring page, we chose to do a craft for this chapter. Well, I did. We made our own Magna Carta – one for each of their bedroom doors. It seemed the easiest craft to tackle.

I have decided that I am too much of a classical educator to spend ample amounts on time on crafts. I prefer to deal with words, words, words and read, read, read than to glue and cut and measure. But my children are still small and doing something concrete really helps.

So we dyed the construction paper with black tea – great use for some black tea somebody gave me without knowing I do not drink black tea. (It contains caffeine and I do not react well to this stimulant.) I noticed that the paper did not change color much, but it smells lovely now.

After the papers dried up, I wrote what they dictated to me. We did not really abide by the rules, not even for one day. But it was a great exercise and I know they got the point now about how democracy got started.

And, what’s more, my son used the words Magna Carta a week later, when he complained that we do not close the door to his bedroom when we leave and he is in there. “I even posted it on the door!” he complained. Which he had, a long time ago. Thinking for a bit, he said, “I think I will have to write it on my Magna Carta!”

I smiled inwardly and agreed with him outwardly. It is so good to see that our children are picking up new vocabulary and concepts and use them in their daily life. This is why we bother with history in the early grades.

Oh, and I told them the complete name of the document was Magna Carta Libertatum. We say “libertate” in Romanian and, of course, “liberty” in English, so I pointed out the Latin roots in both words. That’s how I do my kind of unit studies, mixing vocabulary and spelling and history.


Story of the World, Vol. 2, Chapter 18

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We covered The Age of Crusades or Chapter 18 in March, after our son’s standardized test and a spring break. By then, the terrorist attacks in Brussels had happened and it was very tempting to tell them the violence between Christians and Muslims are still continuing today. I am not afraid to call these people what they want to be called, i. e. Islamic terrorists or Islamic fighters.

However, we were getting ready to fly to Romania and I did not want to scare the children. It was eerie to be reading about this though just when we were ready to pack and travel. We even considered not going, as Europe seems to be in a state of confusion as to its own security.

In the end we decided to go and I have yet to update the blog and my readers about our trip to Romania. Suffice it to say that we had fun and the kids learned a lot.

This was a rather long chapter – four different stories, lots to keep in mind. I have learned to ask each set of comprehension questions after each story. That way, it is fresh in our minds. I can’t even keep all these details and people straight sometimes. So I don’t expect the kids to remember everything perfectly.

As long as we read the answers a couple more times, I consider it a review and another way for us to repeat and learn. History is not very fun unless you are emotionally involved with a topic.

Again, no crafts. We were in a hurry to catch up and I just wanted to get the map and the coloring page done. And no pictures because before we finished the 180 school days before we left for Romania. As such, I had switched them to new binders for history, having filed all the papers from “last year” in a place that is not easily accessible right now.


Story of the World, Vol. 2, Chapter 17

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Knights and Samurai or Chapter 17 was perfect for our two little Ninjas. For some reason, our son has gotten into Ninja stuff. (Thanks, LEGO Ninjago!) It was like a force of nature that came over him. I think it all started with the LEGO Club magazine. At first I did not like it, but then after talking with my husband and after remembering books like Wild At Heart and others about the male need to fight and protect, I gave in.

So this lesson came in at the right time. We put our children in Tae Kwon Do classes in January and we read this story for history at the end of January. Knights, Samurai, Ninjas – they all have something in common, besides fighting. They each had a code by which to live. As Christians, we also have a code by which to live (the Bible). So I made all sorts of connections for them to see this as a bigger picture.  Continue reading »


HOLA! Let’s Learn Spanish Review

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I have always loved languages and Spanish is a good one to learn if you are living in the US. Even though my focus is on English, Romanian and French with the children, I like to throw in a little Spanish now and then.

HOLA! Let's Learn Spanish

When the author of HOLA! Let’s Learn Spanish contacted me about a book review, I was glad. This is no ordinary book on learning Spanish. Even if you don’t speak Spanish, you will be able to introduce your children to the proper pronunciation because it even has an audio version. It takes commitment and your time, but I know homeschooling parents are made of commitment and time dedicated to the development of their children.  Continue reading »


Tuesday Tome Week 22 – The Thing Around Your Neck

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The Thing Around Your Neck by Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie has taken me on an emotional journey to Africa and back to the US through several stories, all represented in the book as Chapter 1. These are short stories and they could all be the beginning chapters of stand-alone novels. Different characters – mostly women – are portrayed in a slice-of-life setting with their painful, emotional situation, and how they get out of it. Or not.

The Thing Around Your Neck

As such, it was difficult at first to get into each story. Each story had different protagonists and their African names did not make it easy for me to keep them straight. Adichie’s writing makes these people so real, so believable, you feel like you know who they are after the first few paragraph which describe something they did or felt. And yet, this bursting into their life from paragraph one felt like a movie with lots of close-ups. You did not get an overall picture of any landscape. It wasn’t a bad thing. Just a different way of immersing yourself into a book. And I relish literary challenges.

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Our New Daily Schedule

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As children grow, schedules change. This is our new daily schedule, revised for one child in first grade and the other in third grade, after careful deliberations with an experienced homeschooling mom and my husband.

We work simultaneously on most subjects, but in skill subjects one would have to wait a couple of minutes until I explain a new concept to the other child. Ours is a multi-level classroom – they have been around for centuries and they have worked beautifully.

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Hanging on our fridge, our new daily schedule – even I need to refer to it several times a day

8:00-8:30 Breakfast in pajamas (Romanian and/or French lesson or video)
8:30-9:00 Getting dressed, personal hygiene, making beds
9:00-9:30 Family devotions and mommy reading aloud a chapter from a book
9:30-10:15 Math
10:15-11:00 Language Arts  Continue reading »