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BlueGator

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Posts posted by BlueGator

  1. I read The Well Trained Mind when I was considering PS vs HSing. The first chapter by Jesse Wise resonated with things I had seen and heard for years in the PS system.

     

    Here read the first chapter:

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0393047520/ref=sib_dp_ptu#

     

    I am not anti PS teacher or PS student. I am strongly support education.

    I think the PS system is broken because things like the Columbine school shootings, and inappropriate relationships with Teacher - Students, and peer pressure bulling that have been in the national news.

     

    If the original poster's HSing #1 reason to HS are offensive, then I too must apologize for HSing, supporting HSing and HSing parents because of what I've seen in the PS systems.

  2. Yes.

    Kindergarten in Germany is from 3-6, and they are all private. And one thing to consider is that Europeans, in general, are not as flipped out about the human body as Americans are.

     

     

    I think it is shocking when the behavior described by the op is no longer shocking.

     

    Yes.

    My son attended German kindergarten. He did indeed have time in his skivvies in the summer when it was really hot outside and they were playing in the sprinklers. In his skivvies. He was never nudie. Neither were any of the other children. But guess what? They ALL were when they changed into their swimsuits for pool time!

     

    His class of fifteen kids had two full-time teachers and 2-3 aides who were doing their internships (all female). Each of the other two classrooms had the same ratio. I'm not exactly sure when something weird was going to happen, or how it was either going to a) get past all of those people or b) happen in such a way that all of those people were going to get their stories straight to tell the parents (a bunch of over-protective German mothers), but somehow, my kid survived intact and happy.

     

    The same thing for Belgian grade school, where he also changed into his swimming clothes in the classroom.

     

    Innocence isn't lost, parenting, and culture, is.

     

     

    I wasn't describing sprinkler time and changing into swim suits. I was referencing a German Homeschool family that had come to America to escape persecution from the German authorities. Also, I am of German descent so it doesn't become a racial issue.

     

     

    Yes.

    ETA: German Home schoolers? There is no such animal. Homeschooling is illegal in Germany.

     

    True, families are under persecution for trying to keep their children out of the German PS schools for these reasons.

     

    Yes.

    ETA: German Home schoolers? There is no such animal. Homeschooling is illegal in Germany. There are people who have refused to put their children into German schools, and there are people who have removed their children from German schools, but that is all. Just because one does not like a social construct does not mean that one can apply one's own (the American version "homeschooling").

     

    I was not applying an American version, I was only referencing an article I had read and my opinion that it was an accepted in places, specifically German kindergartens. I'm sorry if I offended you, maybe the families that emigrated here were lying about the German kindergardens & PS schools that they come from.

     

    I've been following their stories in the news during 2007 and 2008 and have never met the families. They didn't seem like "religious zealots" if that is what you meant by American version of homeschooling.

  3. Does someone have the responsibility to report this to Child Services? That's a huge red flag of something very bad, very wrong happening in those children's lives that they would do that.

     

    I know it's shocking that kids would do that, but what lies beneath it? All I can think is that someone needs to help those kids. Now.

     

    I think it is an epidemic that can not be fixed.

     

    Those boys have been intensly sexually stimulated or physically abused. There is no one in the PS system that will see a problem with that.

     

    German HSers that imigrated to US said several German kindergarden PSs had naked playtime in the back of the kindergarden class. It's a matter of time before this gets main streamed and is a protected right.

  4. A pediatric dentist in Wisconsin had the coolest waiting room we had ever seen. It was decorated with a north woods theme and old Smokey Bear posters that were purchased on E-Bay and framed. The had a tiny wooden slide for the youngest and cool stuffed real animals to look at while you waited.

     

    They cut a round circle in one wall that led to the dental cleaning room. The child entered via the circle. Very fun!

  5. Read, read, read, read and counting, puzzles, playing with toys and a lot of field trips (1 a month) to the zoo, children's museum, library, parks, swimming with Mom, a few swim lessons, coloring, play-dough and music. We also would get a zoo membership each year and we visited often.

     

    I would create a "school box" with the special things you do only when it's time for school. You can change the things in the box for each month or season. The box can include a library book, markers, stickers, special puzzles, mini inexpensive or homemade music instruments and music tapes.

     

    If you are a Christian, I love Karen Henley for Pre-K ideas. She has a song called the Kitchen Band that is adorable.

     

    Limit the school or school box time to no more that 20-30 min a day.

     

    We started table work with DS when he was 4. Then we started little ABC or color workbooks.

     

    I would look into FIAR - Five In a Row for 3 - 4 years old and some simple math manipulative's, board games and very simple card games.

     

    DS worked on a very simple scrapbook with me when he was 4 and older. He picked out the pictures, paper, stickers, colors and dictated what the pages were about. (I did all the cutting.) He did most of the gluing onto the page after I put the glue onto the paper or picture.

     

    He loved looking at that scrapbook. I would get a small one (6" or smaller) if I had to do it again. :)

     

    Does that give you some ideas?

  6. Not all children's literature is easy to understand as a quick read. When, ds was 8, I read The Gammage Cup: A Novel of the Minnipins by Carol Kendall out loud as part of a book club it took a lot of time to get started. The initial chapters were detailing so many characters that we had to create a chart to keep it all straight. We kept "trudging" through and we loved it once we established the characters.

     

    Also, Jane wrote here first novel when she was twenty. She was working on manuscripts in her teens. So, I don't think life experience is a qualifier for Austen. You can defiantly tell the difference in her opinions between P&P and Persuasion.

     

    P&P has a young idealistic perspective on love and marriage. In Persuasion the heroine sees herself as "too old" for marriage and resigns herself to her lot in life, till Wentworth finds out she still loves him.

  7. http://www.welltrainedmind.com/forums/group.php?groupid=74

     

    Check out the Social Club 9/9/9.

    1> User Control Panel

    2> Social Club

    3> 9/9/9

     

    It took me a little while to figure it out. I thought it was read 9 books in 2009. Nope, nine books in nine of your self defined catagories in 2009 = 81 books.

     

    I started making my catagories, then changed them a few times. I was daunted at first when the number when from 9 to 81. :tongue_smilie: But after I thought about it, there are a lot of books that I want to read for fun that never get read because of my focus on school lessons.

     

    So, just got back from the local library where I had put hold on several books. There were 5 books waiting for me. I feel like I'm in heaven. I am going to figure out how to post the catagories, books and my impressions on a blog or my own web site.

     

    On your mark get set.....:auto:

  8. Here, give this page a try:quote]

     

    They laughed out loud. :001_huh:

     

    ETA: But y'all have convinced me not to try it just now. I think I'll put my efforts into finishing AGG & really enjoying that. Afterwards, poor ds might like something a little more manly!

     

    I'm a Janite so I was going to say in utero is probably too soon, but once their born I would give it a go. :confused:

  9. http://www.specialteas.com

     

    After buying fun tea at the mall I looked for a place on line that was much cheaper and better than the grocery store brands.

     

    I found special teas. July of this year was my first order. My husband loved their loose peppermint tea. I made huge bats of it in my soup cooker with a tea filter like a little tube sock. DH said it had a much cleaner taste that the grocery store brands. Also, I stepped the tea for only 7 min per the specialtea customer service advice.

     

    My favorite flavor was Rooibos Lemon Chiffon which they won an award for. It was very creamy and smooth! LOVED IT!

    http://www.specialteas.com/Lemon/781-Rooibos-Lemon-Chiffon.html

     

     

    http://www.specialteas.com/Tea-Preparation/Paper-Tea-Filter-For-Pots-Box-of-60.html

  10. Here, give this page a try:

     

    It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.

    However little known the feelings or views of such a man may be on his first entering a neighbourhood, this truth is so well fixed in the minds of the surrounding families that he is considered as the rightful property of some one or other of their daughters.

    "My dear Mr. Bennet," said his lady to him one day, "have you heard that Netherfield Park is let at last?"

    Mr. Bennet replied that he had not.

    "But it is," returned she; "for Mrs. Long has just been here, and she told me all about it."

    Mr. Bennet made no answer.

    "Do not you want to know who has taken it?" cried his wife impatiently.

    "You want to tell me, and I have no objection to hearing it."

    This was invitation enough.

    "Why, my dear, you must know, Mrs. Long says that Netherfield is taken by a young man of large fortune from the north of England; that he came down on Monday in a chaise and four to see the place, and was so much delighted with it, that he agreed with Mr. Morris immediately; that he is to take possession before Michaelmas, and some of his servants are to be in the house by the end of next week."

    "What is his name?"

    "Bingley."

    "Is he married or single?"

    "Oh! single, my dear, to be sure! A single man of large fortune; four or five thousand a year. What a fine thing for our girls!"

    "How so? how can it affect them?"

    "My dear Mr. Bennet," replied his wife, "how can you be so tiresome! You must know that I am thinking of his marrying one of them."

    "Is that his design in settling here?"

    "Design! nonsense, how can you talk so! But it is very likely that he may fall in love with one of them, and therefore you must visit him as soon as he comes."

  11. Just a quick glance at your blog and what you have linked to tells me you are interested in jane austen. quote]

     

    I've worked on my website for almost a year now. Right now it is the best it's ever looked I think. It gets so cluttered after a while, I give up. I like taking pictures and just got it where I can feature my favorite picture.

     

    When I try to write about politics, homeschooling, my son or family it seems so intense, emotional and convoluted when I read it back. Editing and rewriting then becomes a chore.

     

    Thanks for idea about Jane. I think I'll give it a try.:001_smile:

  12. OK, I thought you were asking for advice from veterinarians. :lol:

     

    You see, people get mixed about when I write. :001_smile:

     

    I don't blog, I'd run out of things worth reading pretty quickly, though I never seem to tire of talking. ;)

     

    That's just it, I can talk forever. It seems logical that I could type one of my soliloquies into a blog, but it doesn't seem to flow like talking.

     

    Webster

    Inflected Form(s): plural so·lil·o·quies Etymology: Late Latin soliloquium, from Latin solus alone + loqui to speak Date: circa 1613 1 : the act of talking to oneself 2 : a dramatic monologue that represents a series of unspoken reflections

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