Friday, July 30, 2010

the third day

walls, doors, doorways,

baseboards, carpets, picture frames
fridge, behind, under, over, stove, window sills,

counters, cupboards, fixtures,
couches, behind couches, behind entertainment centers,

tables, shelves, corners,

shampooed, scrubbed, shined,




and sparklified.

see any spots?

now.
on to the second half of the house.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

a funny

So her Mama is in total scrub mode today (and loving it!) - scrubbin' high shelves in the kitchen, washing walls, cleaning out containers, washing the fridge...

and the children know I'm Madly (and joyfully) cleaning.

They also know that I want to super-shine their bedrooms while I'm at it (I'm totally taking advantage of this super-speed energy I have and being sooo grateful for it),
so I asked Madd how her room was coming.
She hasn't really been in there.
"It's good."
I smiled.  "Is it?  Is it ready for me to shine up and vacuum?"  It's been a nightmare, pretty much.
"I'll go see..."
She comes back in just a second....
"Well", slightest pause, "It's pretty much the way I want it!" 
lol

Good enough for her, I s'pose.

regular ol' olm

Pretties


shrink film

Bubbles

Learning
Mancala. 

  Energy!
 egg toss
momentum and collision


egg crush
arch, force
the incredible can smasher
inertia, force

tracing.
with chalk.

ropeswing.

I'm telling you - this rope is always a favorite around here.
It gets used and played with every day.

Mancala online.

which led to XFactor

which led to our wooden Mancala game again (because someone had the laptop, playing it, and we're all hooked on Mancala)
and again

Prehistory 'scapes

kid knex creatures

research

videos and rest

and finally, more Mancala online.  : )

a really, really fine and fun day.
all is well.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

monday

Madd started her day with her faery puzzle.

Trevy and I started ours by playing a few rounds of Subtrax.


It had been a few days since I had gotten out the Play With Us : 100 Games From Around the World book, so I did some perusing of that to see if there was something fun for us today.
I found Auale', a version of  Mancala from West Africa and the Antilles, and so sighed, and yet again tried to learn how to play.
Which took me to the online game after a while, and I finally figured it (the online version) out.  woohoo!  It's only taken me six months,  : / ,  as none of the directions have ever made sense to me.  But now I can play with the babes!


We played a game from the Phillipines called Buwan, Buwan, which means Moon, Moon, on the trampoline.
You draw a large round circle, and put a cross into it, dividing it into a four-pieced pie.  Whoever is It must stay on the lines while she tries to tag a player.  Whoever is caught is the next It.

'Course, this brought to mind new games for Maddie, and she asked her Daddy to play Draw, Play with her - she made that one up the last time we played new games from the book.
Let me just say that Draw, Play is a really great game - it's perfect for Littles, as you get a clue both from their drawing, and then again by their acting it out and making noises.  It's usually possible between the two to figure it out.  And it's really fun!
The game soon turned to prehistoric creatures, and sure enough, Trevelyn got in on that action.


Trev was wowed by his Dad's version of a Tyrannosaurus, so I went inside to get a book we have called "How To Draw Prehistoric Animals".
It's nice to have things around.  


Mancala.
With Trevelyn.
Over lunch.
So glad that I finally learned how to play!
Next up to learn??  Go.

Swim.  As if.


Time to get ready to go!
To the park!... to meet Cousins


and to see dancers from Sudan and to watch and hear some Barundian drumming.




Add in some dark clouds and one or two rainy sprinkles, and we have a terrific way to end a wonderful summer's day.


I'll take it.
And say that Life is so, so good.

Monday, July 26, 2010

The Way of It

Before I even began this post I was trying to figure out -for days- why I even wanted to write it in the first place.

I don't, right this minute, feel compelled to explain or sell Unschooling.
I don't feel that I have to justify anything to family or friends or The World At Large about the Whys or the Whats or the way we do things.
I don't feel sad -today, right this minute- that the children -people- of the world are suffering needlessly and tremendously in the way they are being educated or raised.
(Understand that these are oftentimes concerns of mine generally, just that I am not saddened and affected by them today.)

So why write about the Way at all?
Hmmmm.

Maybe it's just because there are a few folks who drop by here for a visit, to peek in to see what it looks like for us.
And maybe I just want to say that it looks like This, and it looks like This, and it even looks like This, too.

I wrote a list of things that we have on hand (surprisingly) for Trev as he moves into the next stage - into the stage of Mediumhood.  : )
We have loads of things for Littles for building and creating and sculpting and measuring and estimating-- but what do we have for the next step??
Thus, the list.
To remind myself that the answer is "Quite Enough".
Well enough.
That we do, we have, and we are - Enough.

A couple of weeks or so ago -around the time that I started that list I mentioned- I tracked down (and it took some work to find it, as I hadn't done so in two or three years  : )  ) our local "this is what all children should know" list according to our state laws and core curriculum.
My intent was not out of any fear, you must understand-- but more of a "are there some things that I am blindly neglecting, and that are important?"
"Things that are simply just not on my "radar"?"
"Are there some good ideas that I'm not considering?"

I don't cotton with grades, and it's probably pretty apparent (I hope -wicked grin) that I don't have much respect for the status quo.
I don't play and learn with my children out of a sense of fear or ego (pray God), but rather for the Joy of the thing, and to be a good Mama and to provide them with tools that I think will be helpful in developing their greatest selves, and their personal Truth.

So -
what does The State say?
I realize I'm meandering and walking slowly and weaving - but bear with me - this is the way my ordinary conversations in my life go, too-- be thankful we're not talking lying on the grass or on the telephone ; ) -
Putting aside the fact that I don't put much stock into formal education (be that private or public schooling), and that I take to the ideas of John Taylor Gatto, John Holt, David Albert, Naomi Aldort, et al, and that I feel that public school is a moot point as well as the need being obsolete,
what I read upon the State's Pages...
leaves me nothing but feeling content and comfortable and Knowing.

A year or more ago I had a pocketful of money, and was looking for Juice, so I went into a local teacher's/educator's shop.
I walked around, picked things up, read the back.... picked up shiny, slick workbooks, lesson type notes, looked through games, beads... you know the stuff.
I walked out without buying anything.
We can just dig in the garden, instead, I thought.
I could make this, myself.
Why buy this when we can use real money?
But - they (my children) already ARE in possession of fabulous vocabularies.
But - we don't need a list of directions... we already know how to do this. 
And so it went.

It was much the same at the state's site.

I must admit that I had a tiny moment of fear as I first checked in - like I was being judged for my competency, and even more painful - that my children were going to be judged and be found lacking in their intelligence.
Mmmm, No.
No.

It didn't happen.

Now certainly I give a certain amount of credit to their inherent intelligence -
for instance, Maddie doesn't know all of her letters.  I'm not worried that she never will.

Trev doesn't write - as in penmanship.
It doesn't concern me.

They are not familiar with terms and words such as Conjunctive and Phonological Awareness and Syllabication and Digraphs.... but somehow we manage to muddle through.  [rolls eyes.]

Science, for 4th grade, looks like weather and the water cycle and forms of water and soil and rocks and fossils.
Puh-lease.
; )

Social studies looks like our state and its ecologic conditions.
Just as if we didn't know -by personal experience- what our state is made of.

There is dance.
And Art.
and Phys Ed.

There is Library Media - this is the Wikipedia Kid, remember-

and there is Mathematics.
?? - Not so worried that it's fretful with this one -
We play Hex.  And Carmen Sandiego Math Detective.  And Math 1-2.  And with cuisenaire rods. And Blokus.  And Qwirkle.
And we measure things with the scale.
And cook.
And suppose
and estimate
and conjecture
and think
and process.
We don't do long division or too much multiplication, yet - but it's not a concern and put anywhere near the "Never Will" list.

So was there anything?
Any cause for concern,
any ideas,
any "uh-oh"'s?

Well - upon reading that list, I did get the idea of putting together a bunch of materials for making a story with sound effects -
locks, water noises, animal noises, roars, steps upon the earth, growls...
and then yesterday morning Trev mentioned that he'd like to create a film with sound effects.
A prehistoric film.
My camera, his imagination.

Well.
: )
What can I say?

We play
and Discover
and Imagine
and find out
and wonder
and think
and suppose.

We use all of the things around us, near us, and offered to us to do so.
I cannot and will not apologize for that.

And I certainly shall not say that it isn't enough.

And now I really must go swim with my family, and then get ready for the African music and dance concert.
:)
We'll see you in a few hours with today's Doings.

Love and Joy, friends.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

sundaysunday

vroom vroom.
first thing we were off for a family-bike-ride.

then
to the park, amigos!
but wait.  that one's (apparently) under construction.  hmm.
no matter!  we'll just go home and pack up a picnic and head to another!
oh!  that one, too!  ??
: )

to home, then, and....

a picnic lunch on the front lawn

research for Mama.
Art.  via Drawing With Children.

swimming.  you know it.  (why else have a pool in the backyard? especially when temps are in the mid-nineties!?)

letters and numbers

research on the mouse lemur (Madagascar)
the aye-aye (from Madagascar)
and the hippopotomus

Lewis and Clark Exploration card game

JumpStart 3rd Grade
another robot found!

a new batch of bubble solution

swim.

Go!  Diego, Go!  123.

a little Carmen Sandiego : Treasures of Knowledge

Grandma's (that would be my grandma) Peanut Butter Cup "Cookies".
think - sans the "cookie" part.  oof.  Thanks Aunt Kathy.  Again.

double-time on the end-of-the-day neighborhood bike ride.  : ) 

whoooooeee!  hills are hard work!
so Swim!

and dinos in the sandbox.

well.  let's call that Good (as in "Done"), shall we?
fine by me.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

saturday

the day started for me with helping Trev - he wanted to paint his Monolophosaurus.
that set the tone for the day, I guess, for there were many Create! projects to follow.



there was a picnic on the grass

and play in the playhouse.

there was art created with foam pieces,

and there were water color projects,


and drawing projects,

and paperboat creations.

there was swimming
(of course)

and imaginary games of Mario,
and Diego
and Prehistory.

There was a fair - with roller coaster-

and skeletal assembly

and a tea party.


More Prehistory,
(in the mud, in the sandbox, on the grass),

more Paint

and more tea (with real cookies, grapes, and cherries, this time).


Dino Squad on the wiiiii/netflix (that would be the girls)
and Jurassic Park Operation : Genesis for the boys.

duck, duck, goose on the trampoline.

creating puzzles.

swimfest
- their daddy's here... must swim and pretend that they cannot hear him from all this fun and splash and noise -
lalalalala...

Friends go.  Eventually.

To the garden for supper trimmin's then

and
Barbie
American Dragon
and
a story for Mama.

 'nilla pudding

and lastly a neighborhood bike ride
(for a little end-of-the-day exercise).

and now, we're for quiet
and peace
and rest.

that's all, then.
and that will do.

Friday, July 23, 2010

friday... with friends

A couple of days ago we had a disaster in the pond - the pump burned up, and we had to immediately rescue Maude.  Peek had died the day before - I suspect he was poisoned from the burning pump fumes.
Smoke, sizzling, fear of electrocution, a rescue with the dog's water bowl, water consequently spraying onto the patio which held Mama's laptop and camera... a burial, a tearing out of the pond and then patching (it had a couple of holes in the liner - not from the burnt pump) and then (phew.  that was a lot of Somethings) funally a trip to the petstore this morning for the babes with their dad to find our newest family member and a companion for Maude.  He is named Harold.  (Harold II, but still Harold.)
Back to normal, then!
And hopefully he will like it here.

Madeleine picked our first red tomato this morning.

Friends are coming!

Swimmin for the girls

Spore (Xavier loves Spore, too)

Prehistory 'scapes for two

and for the other two...

Maddie and Soleil love to play in Madd's playhouse.  But ordinarily it's still a disaster from the last time they played together.
"Want me to straighten up in there, so you guys can play?" asked her mother.
"Yeah!!"
I organized a bit, put the veggies with the veggies, the breads in the bread drawer, the dishes and spoons and pan in the big box.
Lots of spider webs and dirt.
"Hey!", thinks Mama.  heehee.
"Hey, girls....  Want me to get some soap in here, and you guys can wash all these dishes?"
"Yeah!  That will be fun!"


And so it was.  Of course.  For quite some time.
(Had to do the tea party dishes, too, don't you know.)
"Don't forget to wash your kitchen!"

And Mama will just sit here in the shade (it's 93degrees at the moment) and smile and drink this taaaaaall glass of iced water.  : )

Rope swing!  (Always a favorite).

Dino creations.


And then sculpting.

 They made some beautiful things!  (More on that tomorrow.)

Swimmin' for the boys,

"how to draw" research for Maddie,

and then "just readin'."

A movie -and some shady, quiet time- was up next for a handful of minutes.

Pool's empty!
That's my cue.  Just four o'clock -and/or a few minutes more- and Mama and a glass of beer, then.  
aaah.

Soon enough kicked out.  Cuz the cannonballs are flyin'.  : )

Supper has been planned - and already prepared by the you-bake pizza place, so no worries there...

Music, then.
Mama's feelin' the Summertime, tonight.
Sittin' in the mornin' sun...
I'll be sittin' when the evenin' comes
To be followed, friends, by Janice Joplin, Bob Dylan, Jimmy Buffet, and LedZep.

Rumps in freedom and stuffed animals and imagination games were played upon the trampoline.

Supper...

and To the Park!





Home-again-home-again
jiggety-jig

and into the pool.
oof.

The pallets are made (the friends are sleeping over), Mama gets some reading time on the couch, and the babes are kicking it here on the floor with some videos.

Works for me.