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craftyerin

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Posts posted by craftyerin

  1. My ILs live in NOVA, and we're here for a week. We've taken the stance that since we're here 1-2x annually, we need only hit a couple of touristy things in any one visit. So far, we've mostly done the zoo and the Air & Space Museum out at Dulles, which is very close to my IL's house. We've taken the kids downtown for a concert at the Kennedy Center, but have not yet done anything on the mall. I thought we'd do one day this trip. What are the best options for young 2nd graders? American History Museum? We did American History in school last year. Natural History? Although we have an excellent Natural Science museum in Houston (where we live). Suggestions? We probably have 3-4 hours of stamina. LOL

  2. My current house feels really comfortable. We have about 2700sf. It's plenty roomy, but we also don't have any rooms that sit unused. I really wanted a house that we would use ALL of. This works. On the main level I have the master + bath, living room, school room, kitchen + breakfast area, a half bath, and the laundry room. Upstairs I have a large playroom, three kids' bedrooms, and a full bath. No basements in Texas. ;)

  3. In New Orleans- you HAVE to go to the "new" World War 2 museum- oh my word it was awesome!!!

     

     

    I would actually caution you about taking little kids to the WWII museum. It is a beautiful museum, really an amazing experience, but it's very graphic and very somber. The docents recommended that we skip the entire 2nd floor with children, the Pacific front of the war. He said that the photographs from Japan and the Pacific islands were just more than he could recommend me walking through with kids. I believe my kids were ~5 and 6 at the time. I always meant to go back alone, but didn't manage to before we moved.
  4. We just moved back to Texas after my husband's job had us in New Orleans for several years. It's a fantastic city to visit with little kids, and just wonderful in the winter! 

     

    Laura is a beautiful plantation, and my kids handled the tour very well (we took their grandparents when they came to visit). It's a creole plantation, which means it was run by a French family, and has a different style, history, culture, etc than the image you may have in your mind of southern antebellum plantations. I loved it. If you want the more white columned English speaking plantation, there are certainly plenty of those. 

     

    If you're in the city during the last two weeks of December, you absolutely need to go to Celebration in the Oaks, the lighted holiday festival in City Park. It's just fantastic. Beautiful holiday display, lots of fun to walk around. I recommend going as soon as it gets dark (check times for when it opens) and not on a weekend. It can be very, very crowded, but is absolutely worth it. 

     

    Of course, wander around the quarter. If you stay near the river (Jackson Square, French Market) it is 100% family friendly. There is plenty to see and do down there. 

     

    The aquarium is nice, but the weather is so lovely in the winter, I'd recommend the zoo if you want animals. NOLA has a LOVELY zoo.  You can, as someone said, take a street car from the Quarter through the Garden District and Uptown, past Loyola and Tulane University to the zoo. That's a fantastic experience on its own. 

     

    Swamp tours are fun, but pretty far out of town, and if you're already doing a day out of town for a plantation, that might overly crowd your schedule. Plus, you're less likely to see gators in December. 

     

    Baton Rouge doesn't have much that NOLA doesn't. I wouldn't try to do both. NOLA has a new trampoline park, too (opened less than 6mos ago).  The Rural Life museum is good, but it's just one thing, and the vibrant history and culture in NOLA is more worthwhile, IMO.  

     

    Have fun! I miss it. I need to get back to visit soon... 

    • Like 3
  5. Would you share what you use for history?

    We did (most of) the AO Y1 literature list last year, but subbed out Island Story, 50 Famous Stories, and Viking Tales for a DIY study of early American history using picture books (lots of Jean Fritz, Betsy Maestro, etc).  

     

    This coming year, I'm planning to do (most of) the Y2 literature list, but am subbing out This Country of Ours, Island Story, and CHOW for SOTW 1.  Because we're going to be in ancient history, I'm switching out some things in the lit list, too. I'm saving Robin Hood for the next year, when I plan to be in Medieval history, and I'm moving A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales to the schedule (off of the free read list) in its place, since they're Greek myths.  I skip Trial and Triumph and Parables of Nature, too. Too preachy for me. ;) But if you're just looking at history, those probably weren't titles you were considering anyway. 

  6. Hmm I really like that idea, thanks! So you're saying use SOTW as the history spine and then use the other parts of AO? Every time I have asked about this (or seen others ask about it) on the AO forums, they act like its a mortal sin to change any part of the curriculum!!! lol

     

    So you did the AO history along with SOTW? I guess it wouldn't be that much extra reading to fit in....?

    This is essentially what I'm planning for next year, yes. And if you say so on the forum, they definitely act like you're committing a horrible crime.  :tongue_smilie: One of the moderators on the AO forum is a local friend. We get together for nature study sometimes. I keep my mouth shut about how much I am tweaking AO or she gives me a hard time! LOL 

    • Like 2
  7. I felt no guilt over tweaking a free curriculum.  I want to sub SOTW for the AO history?  Sure, why not?  Can I add a Delta Science in a Nutshell kit to our plans? Sure, no skin off my nose...and I'm still spending a fraction of the cost of TOG!

     

    The literature, poetry, art, music, nature stories, nature study, biographies, Shakespeare and Plutarch of Charlotte Mason are the cream & sugar of an educational diet.  Don't miss out!  You don't have to follow AO to follow CM, but AO sure makes it easy to find appropriate and quality materials.

     

     

    :iagree: This has been my thought process as well. I use AO as our base and tweak the things that I feel are antiquated, etc.  Despite the insistence of the women on the AO advisory and forum that you lose something important by changing the carefully designed AO plans instead of doing it as written, I think we have a lovely homeschool! 

    • Like 5
  8. Bravewriter's Jot it Down might be a good informal addition to add if you want to do some creative "writing" for him.

     

     

    I'm looking at writing for my rising-2nd grader.  He really enjoys dictating stories for me to write.  So far we've just done it whenever he has a story he wants to tell me.  But I'm wondering if I should start harnessing that in a more formal way next year.  His storytelling far exceeds his ability to write (both spelling & the actual writing of it) and I expect it'll take a couple more years before they even come close to lining up.   So...thinking here.  Do I try to find some kind of curriculum?  Make it a point to try to have him dictate to me more regularly?  I want to really encourage him with his stories and I don't want it to become a subject to dread.  So I'm hesitant to do anything too formal, like restricting him to certain topics, etc.  

     

    We are doing FLL2 & WWE1 next year, so I have that area covered.  

     

    Any thoughts?  

    Yep. I was going to suggest BW's Jot it Down! too. I'm using it with my 2nd graders next year. Sounds exactly like your kiddo! 

  9. I'm going to have three 2nd-ish graders next year! Plans so far: 

     

    All together: 

    • Ambleside Y2, with some tweaks. I'll be dropping their selections for history and subbing SOTW 1, and moving a couple of things around in their lit selectors to accomodate us being in the Ancients instead of the middle ages (where some of the Y2 lit better fits).  Can I still say I'm using AO if I'm changing that much? Debatable. LOL 
    • All that good Charlotte Mason stuff--art and music appreciation, poetry teatimes, nature study with journaling, handicrafts, etc
    • Salsa Spanish 

    My oldest (will be newly 8 at start of school year, has learning disabilities): 

    • MUS (continue wherever we leave off at the end of this year--can't quite tell where that will be, somewhere toward the end of Alpha, I suspect)
    • AAR/AAS (again, continuing, probably finishing 1 and starting 2, may be moving to Barton)
    • copywork and Bravewriter Jot It Down 

    My twins (will be newly 7 at start of school year): 

    • Singapore 2A/2B
    • Bravewriter's Arrow units for LA 
    • Bravewriter's Jot it Down, maybe transitioning to freewrites as the year progresses 
    • Song School Latin (finish 1, begin 2)

    Plus family read alouds at bedtime! 

  10. We're experiencing some of the same. We had been in the Houston suburbs, my husband's job sent us elsewhere for 4 years, and we just moved "back" but to a different suburb than we were in before.  So it's similar, but not the same. All of my friends from when my kids were preschoolers either live 30-45min away in our old suburb, or aren't homeschooling, or just have their own lives and communities that they've built up in the intervening 4 years, so it's not like I can just fall back into my old place.  I feel pretty lost and isolated, which is strange, because I "know" this city!  We've not connected yet with local homeschool groups because they're SO BIG and OVERWHELMING.  I need to just suck it up and try, though. Anyway, if you happen to be in Houston, send me a PM! LOL 

  11. I have a 5x5 Expedit cube shelf from Ikea (now discontinued, but they have the very similar one called Kallax) that holds all of our school stuff with room to spare. I have baskets in the bottom two rows to hide the ugly stuff and the books and more attractive materials on the top three rows. It's one of the first things you see when you walk in the front door of my house, so I've worked really hard to have it be at least somewhat attractive. LOL

  12. For selling, pack up every non-essential item you have (most personal decor included) and put it in storage if you can.  Your Realtor will try to talk you into doing this anyway, and a minimally decorated, clutter free home will sell faster.  The added bonus is that you are ahead of the game with packing.  

    oh, yes to this! We sold our home in two days, with three showings and two offers. I purged like crazy and my house looked GOOD.  It was totally worth the considerable time and energy I put into staging my house so that I did not have to go weeks of keeping it spotless and juggling homeschool and showings.  

  13. We're in the middle of that process right now. We're moving from New Orleans back to Houston early this week. My movers come today to begin packing up my house.  :w00t: I gathered up all of the "we use it every day without fail" school stuff late last week and put it all in one BIG tote bag. It will travel in the car with us. The rest of my school stuff will be packed by movers and might be buried for several weeks, but with what I have in my bag, we can do "good enough" school for weeks, should I feel organized and ready to start school before I unearth all of the school boxes.  I think that's unlikely, but I wanted to have it available just in case. 

     

    We have the luxury of DH's company contracting movers for us, which includes packing us, so I have not had to pack. I spent all day yesterday gathering the things I want keep in the car with us to have when we first arrive since we'll close on the new house and have keys and access for almost 24 hours before movers bring our furniture and boxes.  My kids made signs that say "DO NOT PACK" and we put those on my daughter's closet and one kitchen cabinet, both of which I had cleaned out for this purpose. I stashed my cleaning supplies, toilet paper, paper towels, sheets for all the beds, towels for everyone, suitcases with our clothes and toiletries for the week, the kids' scooters (so they can go outside and burn some energy!), a cooler that we'll put anything remaining in the fridge in tomorrow, etc. in my daughter's closet.  In the kitchen cabinet I put our paper plates, plasticware, a water bottle for everyone, meds (me and one of my kids are on a course of antibiotics right now), etc.  After movers finish packing and loading my house, We'll load those two areas to the cars, and head out.  

     

    One thing I'm really glad we're doing is a goodbye playdate for the kids this afternoon. We invited all of our good family friends to join us at the park for a couple of hours.  We got lucky with GORGEOUS weather, we're taking king cakes and water bottles, and it'll be a good chance for the kids to see their friends one last time before we go. 

     

    I can't think of anything else, but if you have questions, please shout! 

  14. We used FIAR for K, along with Singapore Essential math, handwriting without tears, and Phonics Pathways. If I had a do-over, I'd lose the FIAR activities and just read lots of and lots of good story books across many genres, do lots of field trips (this we also did) and focus on the things we've now come to enjoy as the "riches" of our Charlotte Mason based curriculum--nature study, artist and composer study, poetry teatimes, etc. I did like FIAR at the time, but in retrospect, I think it took to much effort for me to plan based on the amount we got from it. We'd have done just as well reading good books and enjoying ourselves. 

    • Like 2
  15. I loooove my ball winder! Mine is the one from knitpicks. I use it all the time to remedy situations just like you described--fixing collapsing half used center pull balls.

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