One of Daisy's favourite, shady, reading spots in summer |
This week Daisy is spending time setting up her initial course selections and getting started. She'll be working through Maths, English, and, Digital Studies courses with Te Kura this year; we've bulked up the English course to include components we are wanting to Daisy to have had exposure to, which will include lots of reading, discussion, and complementary lectures.
Here's a rough outline of what our first week back looks like...
Morning Book Basket (yes, we still start our learning day this way and share the reading load between us)
- The Book of Esther ~ The Life Application Bible KJV (this a lovely bible to read and discuss together with young adults)
- A Child's Anthology of Poetry ~ Edited by Elizabeth Hauge Sword Reading from: I Saw a Man Pursuing the Horizon ~ Stephen Crane p.58, to: Souvenir of the Ancient World by Carlos Drummond De Andrade p.65 (this book is purely for read-aloud enjoyment, and a gentle re-entry into this year's, potential, poetry study)
- The Fallacy Detective ~ Nathaniel, and, Hans Bluedorn Intro p.3 to Lesson 4 p.37 (Daisy is reading this to us)
- The Student Leadership Challenge ~ Kouzes & Posner (Daisy is reading this to herself, and then we're discussing it together)
- Poetry and Film, intro unit NCEA
- awaiting contact from Te Kura teacher (tap, tap ... anyone out there)
- Started .... but I can't remember what Daisy said she was working on
- Photoshop (select areas)
- Art
- Card crafting
- Life Skills (which also still includes raising and selling livestock. She has three miniature Angus this year, a first ... photos will follow in another post sometime.)
- Learning to Drive (I've been out of action for a while with less-than-health and surgery, so this didn't even 'get started' last year. Daisy's quite happy as she's in no hurry to learn to drive.)
- Piano and guitar
- Various :)
- The Traitor's Game ~ Jennifer Nielsen, narrated by Jesse Vilinski (epukapuka audio) younger listen by a favourite author for Daisy
I can't believe I've never found this blog before.
ReplyDeleteI will need to spend hours here to reap all the beauty and value in these pages.
Thank you for all you've done here and I hope you will consider writing more here.
I know I would get so much out of you writing about your situation now and life as a mother and homeschooler after the children are grown. I could really use some help in that area and I don't seem to be able to find it. It seems like most things are written for the woman I was 20 years ago, the just-starting-out woman.
Thanks again.
Thanks for your comment posted here; writing about life after home educating, from my perspective, is an idea I've been entertaining: hopefully I can carve out some space to try posting about that ...... 🙂
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