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thescrappyhomeschooler

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Posts posted by thescrappyhomeschooler

  1. I know you have been there already but since your kids haven't, revisiting Normandy and the beaches would be great. I first saw them back when I was about their ages.

     

    New places to go- this slideshow had pics and better descriptions of a few places that I was going to suggest.

    http://www.thelocal.fr/galleries/travel/top-10-unknown-must-visit-places-in-france

     

    Thanks for the link!

     

    I want to do a longer tour of France with the kids in a couple more years when my husband can join us, so we will definitely go back to Normandy.  If not for the beaches, for the Bayeux tapestry.

    • Like 1
  2. I used to live just north of Freiburg.  Its such a beautiful area.

     

    Have you been to Nancy?  I loved it there.  

     

    It might be interesting to share some of your favorite places with your kids....

     

    Its too far south i think, but i've always wanted to take a sail thru the Canal du Midi.

     

    On the German side, there is a lot, too.

     

    have fun!

    ann

     

    I have a friend who suggests biking along the Canal du Midi every year, and one of these years, I will take him up on it.  He doesn't have kids, so does not understand my life and why I cannot flit off to France when he gets a whim.  Lol.

     

    I have a friend who lives in Freiburg.  Her parents live in Horben up in the hills of the Black Forest.  It's gorgeous.  I had the privilege of staying with them a few times.  I spent the New Year holiday in Frieburg one year and had a blast.  My other German friends live in Eggingen, which is kind of in the middle of nowhere between Freiburg and Zurich.  I'm not sure if I'll stop in Freiburg, or if my Freiburg friend will come down to Eggingen to hang out with all of us.

     

    I haven't been to Nancy.  That is a possibility.

     

    I want to take another trip, just to France, in a few years, when my husband can go, too.  I want to show them all the Loire Valley, and Normandy, among other things.

    • Like 1
  3. I was going to suggest Luxembourg instead, but would second for a stop in Belgium if you don't want to go to any of the places you have already been but want to go somewhere cool with the kids. I think they would love the fortifications.

     

    I have been to Belgium a couple of times, but not Luxembourg.  I actually have a friend who lives in Luxembourg, too.  I could stop in a say hello.  That is another excellent idea.  Thanks!

  4. Hmm.  I like being married okay to my particular husband, but I never really wanted to get married.  I enjoyed living on my own.  I was almost 33 when I got married, and I had a nice life.  I've had to compromise on things I wouldn't have had to had I not married, such as where to live. If for some reason we were no longer married, I would almost definitely not get married again.  So, even though he does things that drive me freaking nuts every once in a while, I love my husband, and I don't hate living with him, but marriage overall is something I could leave behind.

    • Like 2
  5. We took our son to a highly recommended child psychologist who specialized in autism spectrum disorder.  She spent a couple hours with us in her office, then had dh and I come back separately to discuss her findings.  He was then evaluated by physical and occupational therapists, and recommendations were made to us for things that would help him get along better.  He now sees a talk therapist every other week and goes to social skills group on the opposite weeks.  The social skills group does seem to be helping.  He is now able to evaluate some of his own behaviors- usually after the fact, but at least he can recognize them now.

     

    I also recommend reading The Out of Sync Child.  That book actually helped me understand my husband better as well as my child.

  6. I studied in France as an undergraduate, and then again as a graduate student, so I've been to many parts of France.  I will be taking the kids through France next summer.  We will be taking the Chunnel train from London to Paris, and then I need to get to my friends' house in Germany, near the Swiss border (Zurich area).  This will be the kids' first trip to France, so we will spend a few days in Paris, and then I'd like to spend a few days somewhere else in France that I've never seen before heading to Germany.

     

    So, here are the places I've visited:

     

    Paris- many times, seen a LOT

     

    Tours and the Loire River Valley, including Chambord, Chenonceau, Amboise, Chinon, Saumur, Villandry, among other places in the region

     

    Strasbourg and Colmar and other small towns in between

     

    Clermont Ferrand and the Puy de Dome

     

    Annecy and the surrounding area

     

    Bordeaux

     

    Nice, Marseille, and many, many locations along the Côte d'Azur, including Cannes and St. Tropez

     

    Many Places in Provence, including Avignon, Arles, Nimes, Èze, Grasse, St. Paul de Vence.  I visited la Camargue and the Pont du Gard also.

     

    My aunt and I took a week long road trip around the coast of Brittany and Normandy, stopping in Brest, Bayeux, the beaches, Mont St. Michel, among other things.

     

     

     

    So, if you know France or have been somewhere in France I haven't mentioned, I'm hoping for suggestions of where to go and what to see. I'm thinking 2-3 days.

     

    Thanks!

     

    • Like 1
  7. Ooo, I've always wanted to take some extended road trips/history lessons.

     

    I'd definitely prepare them a little for the places you know you will see.  My boys have retained many more memories from places they've learned about in advance.  But, if you don't do that, I think bringing along some living books, and maybe some journals/coloring pages for them to do while you're traveling would be a great idea.

  8. Since we're offering up ideas for sessions - I'd be down with something geared to those of us who run a secular homeschool but still want the truth/beauty/goodness of a classical education. It gets pretty exhausting to keep having to read through the religious books/blogs/etc and pull out what is useful to me in my own homeschool. Secular classical homeschooling 101. ;)

     

    Maybe something on self-education for us homeschooling parents. 

     

    I could use some hand-holding for 'jumping in' to a classical homeschooling style NOT from the beginning. Going from traditional school, or unschooling, or whatever else, into a classical style...it can be a bit overwhelming. 

     

    Otherwise, I'll probably listen in on any of them that I possibly can. 

     

    Oh, and actual teachers/professors vs. people who have written (and presumably think I should buy) a particular curriculum would also be great. 

     

    What she said!

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