Jump to content

Menu

Kay in Cal

Members
  • Posts

    1,366
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Kay in Cal

  1. We are satisfied users of Amy's soap as well! After a lifetime of "saving" the fancy soap for the guest bathroom or for special occasions (what were these supposed to be, I now wonder?), I've finally decided that wonderful soap is an everyday luxury I can both afford and enjoy. Amy's is wonderful, so check it out if you haven't!

     

    My sons really enjoy the Dragonsblood as well...:001_smile:

  2. not mine, nor anyone in our family...

     

    We were just driving out on an errand, and when we turned right out of our alley, drove upon the scene of an assault. The perpetrators were just running away, and a young man was lying in the road bleeding.

     

    I jumped out of the car and went to help him, he was conscious but had bad head and facial injuries--they had kicked and beat him in the street. His friends (other young men and women, with a bunch of young children--a birthday party at the park?) were totally confused, and his girlfriend (?) just kept screaming at him that he was a f'ing idiot. I managed to get one of his friends to give me his shirt to keep pressure on the head wound, but even with the help of a nice loud older woman I was unable to talk them into not moving him before the ambulance came. Need to work on my bossiness, obviously!! After about five minutes, they picked him up, threw him in their car and took off a minute or two before the police and ambulance arrived. Hope they made it to the hospital OK!

     

    So everyone in the neighborhood was out to watch, the cops are still out there taking statements, and my adrenalize is racing still. Dumb dumb kids--involved in gangs and violence and whatever... breaks my heart to think of anyone's son lying bleeding in the road while his friends run for their cars. Ugh.

     

    Practically speaking I realized--I need to put together a better emergency first aid kit (not just a tiny one you buy) for the car. I didn't have accessible plastic gloves, and though I avoided getting much blood on me I could have done more if I wasn't worried about that. Also, I need some big old gauze pads (sanitary pads work great, if I remember right). All in a big plastic tool box I can swing out of the trunk! Somehow I end up using my years-old first aid training fairly regularly. I took the Red Cross course that was for EMTs in high school, and it has served me well.

     

    OK, enough of a debrief, thanks for listening! Still got a sermon to finish! :tongue_smilie:

  3. We're finishing the Life Science year right now. It has been a great success... my ds loves science, and this has been a great balance of easy to implement and meaty enough for him. We really love it! There are some crafty type activities, but most of the experiments are really good basic science.

     

    I've already bought the Earth and Space for next year, and we're ready to go... so sad there aren't more levels available:crying:

  4. In California it is pretty easy--you file an afadavit once a year stating that you are a "private school" with however many teachers/students you have. So eventually we'll list two teachers (dh and I) and two students (dss). You are required to keep attendance records and immunization records (or letters of opting out of immunizations). I've never heard of anyone actually asking to see those records, but the law says you need to have them.

     

    No standards, tests, portfolios or other oversight... just one letter a year.

     

    Of course, we'll see what happens with the current court case (in which the judge stated homeschool parents need a teaching credential to teach their children), but it's looking now like nothing will change--the ruling was vacated and the statements out of Sacramento have been supportive.

     

    From the California Homeschool Network website:

     

    "My feeling is very much in line with the governor in that it is a parental choice as to how they will educate their children," said Chris Bertelli, assistant secretary of education. "To require a credential for a parent that is home-schooling is ludicrous." "No other state in the country requires a credential," Bertelli said. "It would be nearly impossible to enforce and would do so much more damage than good."

     

    "As long as they are a private school registered with the state then as far as we are concerned they are a legal home school," said Victor Thompson, director of student support service for the L.A. County Department of Education.

  5. Strangely enough, I agree. It actually took me a month to get on this board I was so afraid of the new format, but now I really enjoy it.

     

    I think this board is LESS cliquey--because there is always more going on, more threads, a larger community. It may be less close knit, but on the old board if you weren't in "the" conversation, ofttimes you weren't "in" the conversation, if you know what I mean. Here the fireworks are regional...

     

    Though I do miss the drama of some of the old days... middle of the night flame wars between friends who will remain nameless, and the drama to end them all--the online "unmasking" of JGEMom. We had friends over that night, and they and my dh were calling up for updates. Those were the days! Now I'm feelign old.

     

    "When I was a kid, we used to have to walk 5 miles through the snow, uphill both ways...."

  6. I have a strong reader 1st grader this year... we're doing GWG 3 after doing FLL in K. I had the same reaction the repetition! GWG really starts at the beginning, IMHO, but they do have a 1/2 book as well.

     

    We never did go through phonics with my oldest ds, it was just too repetative. We did start at the beginning with Spelling Workout A last year, and we're about to start D. He's a natural speller, but it does seem to catch a few words that are tough for him (he missed "couldn't, wouldn't" etc in the pre-test this week). There probably are some really awesome programs out there, but we're blowing through this one pretty fast, and then on to vocabulary, which I think he'll enjoy in a year or two.

     

    Anyhow, I would find her level and work there, don't worry about holes...

  7. Another Latin Prep question...

     

    How does the original "So, you really want to learn Latin" series relate to Latin Prep? Are they simply different versions of the same thing? Does one lead into the other? And what happens after Latin Prep?

     

    Thanks so much!!!

  8. I used hypnobirthing methods with both my births... I was in the hospital, but went totally natural. I also used a doula with both, which helped me to focus and use my tools. I can honestly say I loved both experiences, really enjoyed the actual process of giving birth. The key for me was to practice, practice, practice... by the time the actual deliveries came along, I could go into a super relaxed mellow state instantaneously.

     

    This is the method I used:

    www.hypbirth.com

    If you watch her video, dh and I are in it talking about our first hypbirth. It really is fairly miraculous the way you can control your own body, your perception of pain, your stress level, etc... but preparation is the key! Feel free to email me if you want more info or to hear my long-form birth stories!

  9. I'm another non-budgeting non-buy and buyer!

     

    I decide what curriculum we will be using, and we buy it, usually in the spring. Some things (like SOTW) we have scheduled out and those are used for one school year. In most areas (soon to be 2 ds's) moves at his own pace, so when something is finished, I get the next level. That may or may not be at the actual "year" break.

     

    Thus far we haven't had too many mid-year curriculum shifts (one this year--from LC I to Minimus).

     

    Supplies (pens, paper, etc) are always bought as needed out of our household budget.

  10. If you are as much of a cookware geek as I am, you might want to go check it out.

     

    We went to Costco and discovered they have a great deal on Le Creuset! They have 3 piece sets--11 3/4 inch skillet, saucier pan w/ lid--for $189. They had two colors, flame (kind of red fading to orange) and cobalt blue. I have this skillet already, and use it daily, and the saucier pan is on my Amazon wishlist. We couldn't afford it today, but I'm planning on going back at the beginning of next month and getting the set--if they still have it. It really is an awesome deal!

     

    The prices I found online (discounted from store retail already) for both separately:

    Saucier Pan, 2 1/4 Quart : $144

    Skillet, 11 3/4 Inches: $119

    I didn't check the size on the saucier pan, but I think it is the 2 1/4, (if I'm guessing wrong and it's the 3 qt, you'd be saving more money), the skillet I did think to check the size. The Costco price saves you $74 off of online buying--a whole bunch more off retail.

     

    So if you are interested in trying out Le Creuset, here's your chance to do so relatively cheaply, or add to your collection.

  11. I've got a few things on my shelves as read alouds, but I'd like to spend at least the second half of the year focusing our literature study on Shakespeare. He's already watched movies of "Much Ado About Nothing" and "Midsummer Night's Dream" and enjoyed both of them.

     

    Thoughts? Any other suggestions for Shakespeare for next year? My ds is a strong reader--he's finishing up the second of the Harry Potter books right now for his fun reading--but he'll be 6, ya know?

  12. We school year round--

     

    We do a Monday-Thursday schedule, with Friday being catch-up and field trips and family outings.

     

    We take off: 1 week at Thanksgiving, 3 weeks at Christmas, 1 week at Easter, 4 weeks in the summer (based on family vacation). This year our vaction is running from mid-July through mid-August, so we'll start "next school year" in mid August.

     

    We also do some school work during vacation--whatever is pressing/interesting/needed. And I don't stress about missing a few days here or there. For example--this next week we're going to Las Vegas for a board game convention for two days. It's just a little mini-vacation for dh and I--but we'll miss a couple of days of school. No sweat!

     

    I'm a big believer in "moving at your own pace", so most of our school books don't actually line up with the grade change. We just keep moving on. "Content areas" like history and science are the only exception, those I do schedule out to cover over the year.

  13. Ramen noodles, tofu and veggies.

     

    Boil water, then cook several packages of ramen noodles (I use "oriental flavor" of Top Ramen) and broth according to package directions (ie, for two-three minutes), drop in a bag of frozen veggies (I use "stir fry" mix), and wait a minute or two for them to thaw. While the noodles are cooking, cut a couple of packages of firm tofu into bite sized cubes, and put into the bottom of large bowls. Spoon noodles/broth/veggies over tofu.

     

    Fast, full of veggies, plenty of protein, super cheap (our family of four eats for less than $5--4 packs of ramen, 2 pounds of tofu, 1 bag of mixed veggies) total time: about 5 minutes, plus however long it takes water to boil on your stove. Plus, only one pot to clean!

  14. I know what you mean... I was 10 years old and sitting at dinner with my family and mentioned how proud I was that "the United States had never lost a war". My dad (never one to mince words), looked at me slightly confused and said, "We sure as hell didn't win the Vietnam war." He was a Vietnam vet, and career military. I was so embarrassed-- I could hardly believe that they had never even mentioned THAT little gem in school, and the war had ended just in the past few years at the time. We just never ever got "that far" in our class work--more pilgrims, more Indians, more Lincoln, ya know?

  15. I have copies of both editions, plus a lending copy of the new edition. I also bought copies for all of our parents and siblings so they would have a better idea of how we homeschool.

    I used to reread it every year... now I tend to refer to certain sections as needed. We don't do everything exactly as WTM says, but it is certainly our inspiration!

  16. I think it is more personality than gender. My ds did fine with FLL 1/2 (though we skipped almost all the repetition), and has done just fine with GWG 3 as well. I like that GWG has so much less repetition and that he can do it more independantly.

×
×
  • Create New...