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Shelly in the Country

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Posts posted by Shelly in the Country

  1. The soup was probably of the "ready to eat as is" variety as opposed to the condensed version. What does the label say?

     

    I just dug one out of the trash and it is condensed soup. I used myself as a guinea pig and tasted a spoonful. It tastes like my normal Hamburger Soup...

     

    My dh has warned me that when he was still living with his folks they once got a can of green beans from Aldi with a pickle in it. A cautionary tale. :lol:

  2. I threw together a batch of Hamburger Soup in the crockpot this morning. I use canned tomato soup as the base. I opened up three cans of condensed Tomato Soup from Aldi's that I purchased on Sunday. They were oddly runny. Usually canned tomato soup is kind of thick and viscous. I generally use a spoon to scoop it all out. Today it just poured into the crockpot. I kept going anyway because I was in a hurry. Now that I have time to sit down and think about it, I'm wondering if there could be something wrong with the soup. (Please tell me there's not...otherwise I have to come up with something else for dinner.) Could it be the heat? Our house is air-conditioned, but the cans were stored in a warmer area of our kitchen (cabinet between the stove and a very sunny window).

  3. I bought the National Geographic Visual Atlas of the World this past year and I really like it. It is very thorough :001_smile:. We had been using a Student Atlas which really didn't have the detail the kids needed. They are pricey (I found one Used for a good price.), but I was getting tired of looking things up on the Internet for the kids, or hitting the answer key for their map assignments. There are also gorgeous pictures inside of different historical and natural landmarks around the world. My kids have even browsed through it for fun.

  4. Do you lecture?

    Do you assign pages from a book?

    Do you do discussions verbally or in writing?

    Do you read all the notes and incorporate them into lessons which you then verbally teach your kids?

     

     

     

    For my dd10 (who straddled UG and Dialectic last year and is fully dialectic this year):

     

    I assigned the readings for the most part. I read a few things aloud. My dd is supposed to look through the Accountability and Thinking questions as she reads to get an idea of what she is supposed to be able to discuss. I read the notes before our discussions each week. I like to do discussions on Mondays, so I have her read all the resources in preparation for the discussion during the week prior to "Discussion Monday" :001_smile:. The only writing she has been doing has been for the Student Activity Pages. I intend to ease her into outlining starting this year. Our discussion consists of going over the Accountability and Thinking Questions. If there is anything she didn't pick up from her reading the prior week, I try to fill in the blanks in a lecture-style.

  5. I think it is a step to finding the truth in the argument. Before you can determine if an argument is true, you have to determine the logic behind it. Is the way someone arrived at a conclusion logical? If you determine it is logical, then the next step is to look at the premises and see if they are true.

    Studying logic helps you follow the line of reasoning in the argument-which is an important step. to finding the truth

     

    :iagree: And the connection to "worldview" is that everyone goes in with certain presuppositions. Depending on where you start in your argument (what premises you assume to be true), you can end up at a very different place than someone else in the end even if you are both "logical". (I've only ever studied symbolic logic and it was several years ago, so forgive me if my terms are confused :001_smile:.)

  6. So, who is right, am I overreacting and being precious or is she rude and disrespectful? What says the Hive?

     

    No idea. I don't think there is an online etiquette book...

     

    As an evangelical Christian, I generally try to ignore it if one of my FB friends posts something offensive. I haven't had a problem with anybody posting any debate-type things on my own page either. My dh has though. He just deletes any comments he doesn't like and "unfriends" if necessary. <shrug>

     

    If one of my "friends" on FB annoys me continually, I just turn off their Newsfeed. Then if I wish to check in with them, I have to do it manually.

  7. 2 yo's are hard...

     

    I try to stagger my two oldest kids. My 10 yo is mostly independent now. For the few subjects where she needs me, I try to set my 6 yo up with independent seatwork. His schoolwork load is much lighter than hers, so I put off all of his Mommy-intensive work for the afternoons when she is doing her reading. I only do a little bit of phonics and math with my 4 yo. I let her color at her desk in the schoolroom after she is done with her work if she wishes.

     

    Oh, and we do assignment sheets. It is very helpful for my older kids to know what they can move on to next when they finish an assignment. I print out a checklist for each of them each morning from HST. They each get their own bookshelf.

     

    I have no suggestions for 2 yo's. 2 year olds are hard...

  8. We've never had cable, so I'm not sure what rates are like.

     

    We have Netflix (3 movies at a time). I don't remember what that is off the top of my head but I think it is less than $20 per month. We would probably have Netflix regardless because we do like to rent movies on occasion and there are no movie rental stores near us. We have the streaming over the Wii now, which is fantastic! My dh had a PC hooked up to our TV before they offered it for the Wii, but this is much easier.

     

    We pay $45 per month for our landline for unlimited local and long distance calls. We do not have cells. We pay $34 per month for DSL. There are taxes in there somewhere :001_smile:.

  9. I just started The Elements this week with my 10 yo. She's loving it. She told me today, "I think we just found the Stanley Schmidt of the science world!"

     

    (Stanley Schmidt is the author of Life of Fred.)

     

    I am also interested in her other offerings :bigear:.

  10. If you have not yet read Albion's Seed, I think you will enjoy it.

     

    Albion's Seed: four British folkways in America by David Hackett Fischer. Looks at 4 different waves of immigration into America and how their culture and beliefs shaped their region and shape America even now.

     

    (from my looking for more big picture books like Albion Seed thread)

     

    http://www.welltrainedmind.com/forums/showthread.php?t=84362&highlight=Hackett+history+plants

     

    Thanks for the book rec.! That sounds really interesting....so does the Thomas Sowell book in the thread you linked. Sigh. My Amazon wish list is entirely too long.

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