Jump to content

Menu

alisoncooks

Members
  • Posts

    10,167
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by alisoncooks

  1. 10 minutes ago, Homeschool Mom in AZ said:

    I'm shocked by the homeschool community in my new area.  I have never met so many adults with such learned helplessness in my life! 

    Is that learned helplessness or personal preference? I'm probably geographically close to where you are, but I feel no compulsion to sit outside on a damp or chilly day. Not gonna happen, lol. 

    • Like 1
  2. Thanks again for all the suggestions. I got sucked down the hole of researching the Killgallon stuff (still might see if it can be used somewhere...), but I think I'll start DD on Wordsmith Apprentice. (Which works because I already have it.)

    Speaking of already having something, while rooting through my writing stash, I found Treasured Conversations (never used with oldest as originally planned) but will work perfectly for younger DD next year. Woo!!!!

    • Like 4
  3. Cheese sticks

    precooked turkey bacon (I cook a bunch and then just reheat for 10 seconds)

    cottage cheese

    Will he eat deviled eggs? They don't seem breakfast-y...but why not!? 😉 

  4. Thanks for the ideas! 

    I'm thinking about using Cover Story in the fall with DD (8th). Is it different enough from Wordsmith Apprentice to use them back to back? (One being working at a newspaper and the other creating a magazine.) I don't want to "ruin" Cover Story by using something similar right before... any thoughts?

    • Like 1
  5. Oldest DD (7th) will finish her writing curriculum this week. I don't yet want to start next year's program...but I don't want to do nothing. 

    If you had 2 months to fill, what would you use? I have Wordsmith Apprentice on hand...but I'm not sure how long it'd take to finish (I suppose we'd have 4-5 months, if she works through the summer). This child is not a strong writer and would benefit from continued practice. 

    Any suggestions or thoughts?

    • Like 1
  6. I have girls (10 & 12).  They watch on Netflix: The Dragon Prince, lots of game-based anime (Wakfu, Beyblade, etc), the new Voltron series, Hilda, The Hollow (slightly creepy). Older DD says the new She-Ra is awesome for boys and girls. And they liked Puss n Boots and How to Train Your Dragon the tv series.

    On Prime: they like DIY Sci, Ninjago, and Just Add Magic (girl based). 

    (Mine also watch a lot of YouTube junk - mostly minecraft based.)

    • Like 1
  7. Our neighbor listed his house (which is similar to ours) this past week and had an open house on Saturday. I know at least 20 families/couples came. I told my DH that we'd just keep an eye out for what that house sells for -- I might be swayed to put ours on the market if there's demand! (Our house isn't especially nice but is a rarity in its price range -- a smaller 3br/2ba for <$250 -- that makes it desirable.)

    (ETA: I've daydreamed for a while about moving on to a house with less yard to maintain. I didn't realize that we could possibly list for as high as we can...)

  8. 1 hour ago, Sherry in OH said:

    It isn't just the size of the house that is an issue.   Layout matters.  A well-laid out smaller home may have more functional space than a larger home in which more thought was given to creating large impressive spaces than to traffic flow and the way people actually use their homes.  

    Open floor plans may be popular but they do make repurposing spaces difficult.     

     

     

     

    Yes! We've toured a couple of open houses recently. I was amazed that the 1400-1800 sq ft houses were feeling smaller than our 1150 sq ft house. Same number of bedrooms but things were not arranged to make best use of space! (We have bigger closets, bigger bathrooms, more closet storage, better flow, etc). DH and I could not figure out how these places were more square footage than us! (One must've included the garage...)

  9. 1 hour ago, Moonhawk said:

    Also i like the background pictures they choose for when you aren't using the TV but the Apple TV is on, lol. I have been known to turn it on just for those 😉

    Haha. Just the other day, my 10 year old asked me which Apple TV screen saver picture was my favorite.

  10. We like our Apple TV but have nothing else to compare it to. We have an older tv that we run it through. It's convenient for watching Prime, Hulu, Netflix.  I also mirror a lot of stuff for school on it. The remote is small -- but there's an apple remote app so when the remote is missing (lost in a couch crack likely) I just use my phone for it. (Don't know that I'd pay full price; bought ours second hand.)

  11. If you're Jane Austen fans, Netflix has a movie called The Jane Austen Book Club that I recently watched and enjoyed. It's a fluffy-ish romantic comedy (with some serious matters: infidelity, etc).

    Not one of the "greats" but a maybe a good light movie for between more heavy ones. 

    • Like 1
  12. 7 minutes ago, mom2scouts said:

    I'm surprised there are still libraries who use this method. Our library is more protective of patron privacy. People requesting books about bankruptcy, infertility, mental illness, marriage problems, or all kinds of other sensitive subjects probably don't want the books displayed with their names for the whole community to see.

    My small town library keeps holds behind the desk and private. 

    In the large, college town nearby, holds are like what is described above: shelved in the common area near the self-checkout. It is very weird to me. What's to keep someone else from grabbing a sought-after title? Or a child from pulling them off the shelf and relocated? 

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...