Monday, October 15, 2012

Monday Homeschooling

Here's what we've actually gotten done today. The kids are going to have to get the rest of their work done with the babysitter this afternoon while I'm visiting a client and going to study group.

Patrick

Did p. 9 in Spectrum Spelling 6
Did lesson 115 in Saxon Math 7/6
Copied chapter maxim for Latin Alive! ch. 2
Watched lesson 2 on Latin Alive! DVD

Delilah

Did 2 pages in Spectrum Spelling 4
Did lesson 4 in Saxon Math 3
15 minutes on www.ixl.com

James

Did p. 68 in SRA Phonics

Ben

Still needs to do something

Mom

Should be reading about prenatal screenings instead of blogging.

Friday, September 28, 2012

James and John

John and James
All of our children love their new brother. James in particular is convinced that we had John in order to provide him with a brother so that they could be like James and John from the Bible. He loves Johnny and insists on me forking the baby over as soon as I get home from work.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

"But it's supposed to be a day of rest!"


Here's Delilah doing her CLE Math 307 Lightunit test today. She was pretty offended that I made her do a math test on a Sunday, but since it had been assigned for this past Thursday, I didn't feel bad for her.

Patrick is spending the evening catching up on the Saxon Math lessons that he was supposed to have completed this week. He is also not impressed with my plan to try to get him back on track.

The only studying I'm planning to do myself today is watching a webinar on stress in pregnancy. I signed up for it for free through http://www.injoyvideos.com/index.php?id=73&page=Webinars

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Study time :)

He's coming!

My student/work day (after hanging out with the family earlier today) ended up looking like this:

3:30pm- Chat with a midwife on facebook about coming and speaking to our midwifery study group in October. Midwife agrees, excitedly text preceptor and everyone in said study group. Realize that baby John is officially rolling from his back to front when put on carpet; take picture to post online.

4:00pm- Visit briefly with client.

4:40pm- Arrive at birth center, type up note. Spend two hours researching prenatal education and outlines for topics to cover at prenatal visits. Wash skirt and baby's outfit after baby poops through his clothes while laying on my lap. Type up Prenatal Checklist draft. Spend another half hour reading prenatal handouts from different OB and midwife practices.

8:00pm- Head home. Say hi to kids before bed. Spend an hour reading Gail Hart's book Research Updates for Midwives.

Now Tim and I are going to watch a movie with Patrick before bed :)


Saturday = Delicious

Driving back from Corvallis today, I told Tim, "We eat really well on Saturdays." It's probably the most delicious day of the week for our family:

Organic coffee.
Honey lemonade.
Chocolate covered potato donuts.
Plums and grapes.
Kids playing violin on the side of the road.
Running into friends (gently, of course!).
"Occupy the Library" giving away free books.

That's right folks, what these things have in common is that it's Saturday at the Corvallis Farmer's Market. We've gotten into the habit on Saturday mornings (when I'm home) of waking up and going straight to the market for breakfast and shopping. We usually run into people we know and there's a rotating variety of tables from interesting community groups (Lego League, Occupy the Library, Corvallis doulas).

The outdoor market runs until November 17th: http://locallygrown.org/home/

Deviled eggs.
Apple pie.
Tuna salad on organic honey wheat.
Carrot raisin walnut muffin.

It's the place where when kids ask for a treat, they're asking for xylitol gum or organic chicken nuggets! It's my new favorite grocery store. It's the... First Alternative Co-op

Chocolate cheesecake from the Co-op

These are two of the things that I love about our move to Oregon. We live somewhere that supports farmer's markets and health food stores. There are plenty of restaraunts that are into local cuisine (maybe not in Lebanon, but nearby) and more breweries than we've ever had living in other states. 

Delicious cider

This tasty cider, for example, was being given out at the Chamber of Commerce business after hours :) It's crafted about 25 minutes from my house and they're opening their Tap Room next Saturday, September 29th. Check them out at: 2 Towns Cider

We're still about as far away from our home on the East Coast, but I feel like we're settling in here and there's lots to eat :)

Friday, September 21, 2012

The Internet is Back

So a while back, our neighbor lost their internet. This affected us because they were letting us share their wifi; so there was some time there that we were without internet access at home. During that time, I wasn't able to follow through with my exciting blogging plan. Enter the Comcast Internet Essentials, internet that's only $9.95/month for people who have children who would qualify for free school lunch (were those children to attend school). Now (hopefully), I'll be able to get back to blogging about homeschooling, midwifery studies and raising the Baers.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Do your work!

"I can't write. My hand is broken."
"James, focus."
"Get your face off the table."
"Do the next one."
"Can you do the next problem before I count to ten? 1, 2, 3..."

It took an hour and ten minutes. It's one page. One page of math problems where you write the number that comes before and the one that comes after. Not exactly rocket science.

He didn't have any trouble figuring it out. What he had trouble with was the sitting, the writing, the actual focusing on something that he hadn't decided himself that he wanted to do.

I decided it was going to happen anyway. The worksheet was getting done. So it did; it just took over an hour, but now it's finished.



Homeschoolers like myself hear other parents say things like "I could never homeschool" or "I don't have the patience for that." Me neither. Being patient is hard and today was no picnic. Most days my children are pretty good about getting their work done. For James, today wasn't one of those days, but we got through it. It was more an exercise in parenting than in homeschooling. I decided he needed to do something and I saw it through so that he would know that I really meant he had to finish it. We don't homeschool because I have an extraordinary amount of patience; we manage to homeschool despite my lack of it.

Linn County Fair


Patrick as Issac Newton



Yesterday the kids and I went to the Linn County Fair, since there was free admission until 3pm. They all liked the "Super Science" area, where there were lots of things to play with and signs explaining the physics behind it. Patrick sat through a whole cooking demonstration across from the science area, mostly so he could eat the samples at the end. 

We walked around inside the exhibit hall and looked at all of the booths. Patrick says that his favorite was the cooking booth and Delilah liked the Boys & Girls Club booth, where kids had to guess how many sugar cubes represented the amount of sugar in different foods.

There wasn't a lot of time to hang out at the fair, as Patrick had to get to his dog-sitting job by two, but we made sure to visit the petting zoo.

The fair is free admission for kids under 12 all weekend, so if you haven't been yet, it's something to do.

http://www.linncountyfair.com/



Tuesday, July 17, 2012

What if Latin were his primary language?

Patrick, looking at John (the 6 week old), asked me this morning, "What if I taught him Latin now? What if Latin were his primary language? Then it would be really easy for him to learn other languages."

It made me laugh, but Patrick had a point. Learning languages early helps you retain them, right? So what if I start folding the younger kids in with the older ones during their language study time? Maybe we'll try it. Mostly though, I was entertained that Patrick spends time thinking about what it would be like to teach his baby brother Latin.

We're lucky this year to finally have friends for whom Spanish is their primary language. Sure, it means that James comes to me and says, "My friend taught me a bad word in Spanish," but I'm hoping that they'll learn some regular words too.

Here are the sites/resources that we use for language learning:

www.classicalacademicpress.com

http://www.headventureland.com/

http://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/spanish/

Monday, July 16, 2012

We've arrived in 1492


For the next two weeks in our history studies, we're learning about "explorers," circa 1492.

Today, we read the first section from Story of the World chapter 31, about Christopher Columbus. We also read p. 9-23 of Where do you think you're going, Christopher Columbus? Then Patrick read about Western Exploration in the Kingfisher History Encyclopedia and wrote a paragraph about it.

I took the kids to the Lebanon library today, where we found the "Drive Thru History" DVD. The first episode is about Christopher Columbus, the Khan-Polo Connection, Florence, Setting Sail in Spain and Amerigo Vespucci. The kids are going to watch it with the babysitter when I'm at the birth center on Wednesday.

We also checked out books about Ferdinand Magellan, Christopher Columbus and Vasco da Gama. The plan is to read them together and have the older two write reports about what they learned.

If I can make it the the UPS store, I'll copy the student pages from the Story of the World activity guide for the kids. Delilah likes the coloring pages and that gives them something to do while we read aloud.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Teaching the Bears

Lately, I've been wanting to start another blog. I stopped doing the Syracusedoula blog for obvious reasons (not in Syracuse, not really a doula), but we still have cool things going on that I'd like to share.

Patrick helped pick the blog title, because we're learning and we're Baers'.

Everyone in the house is learning and growing. In the fall, I'll have four homeschooled students. They're officially going into Kindy, 1st, 4th and 6th grade. We have a new baby, born June 1st. I'm a student midwife, apprenticing and doing academic work through the National Midwifery Institute. Tim is working to pay our bills, helping out at church, playing board games & video games and hanging out with bands.

Aside from wanting to share what we're doing, I'm excited about starting a blog again because in the past, blogging about homeschooling has made me want to do cool things with the kids so I could post it. Kinda like how being in Weight Watchers makes you want to eat healthy foods.

So hopefully I'll manage to post about what the kids are doing in homeschooling, how the midwifery school is going and what we're all learning about.

Patrick and baby John
James and Ben


Delilah and baby John