Posted in Inspiring, Wisdom, Womanhood

Come All the Way Home

Español: Regreso del hijo pródigo, Louvre
Regreso del hijo pródigo, Louvre (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Our gray cat, Earl Grey, has a big brother that is mostly black, and is the alpha-cat. We call him Black Jack.They are gorgeous, almost identical, except Earl is paler.

Jack has devoted himself to developing his dominance of our property during Earl’s recent trip abroad. With Earl’s return, Jack has sulked at our joyfully cuddling his little brother.

You know, the original Prodigal had an older brother. The older brother never strayed, never wavered in his loyalty to the family agenda.

He sulked, too.

It was just an agenda though, that held his loyalty. The family, itself, never entered his mind, we might think, from reading the Parable. He stayed home, labored diligently, amassed wealth, and never even asked for a small bit of food for a party with his friends.

We have to wonder why not.

Had he no time, at all, for people? Was the agenda so vitally important that he never enjoyed one perk, in all that time?

I imagine a stressed and angry man, telling himself that since Junior decided to bolt, all the work fell on him.

I imagine him using a self-imposed workload to excuse anger so abundant and so freely spent, that his few friends cared little for him.

I imagine he worked so hard, partly, because he would never have to share the results.

I imagine he gloried in all he was building for Dad—and that he would inherit.

He was weak.

In the midst of his wealth and strength, he flirted with self-pity, a serious weakness. Self-pity can cause you to forget the important things. It can cause you to forget to feel sad when your brother goes missing and to forget your dad’s sadness. It can cause you to think wealth is most important, to glory in wealth, to devote your life to self-wealth, self-pampering, and self-excusing.

It can cause you to be glad Junior is gone and to act messed up if he returns.

Both brothers suffered from the same problem: self. The younger spent everything on self-gratification. The older saved everything for self-gratification. Neither used wisdom, thought of Dad, nor were good sons.

The saddest thing is that only one repented.

The one who left had decided he would return as a servant, would devote the rest of his time to building Dad’s and Bubba’s wealth. Dad proved his righteous joy and reinstated Junior, but Junior would happily have gone without the robe, ring, and sandals.

He would have been satisfied to wash his brother’s feet, instead.

He would have been satisfied to work the rest of his life building up his brother’s “self”, instead of his own.

I can relate to Junior. Junior returned, physically and emotionally but we have no assurance that Bubba ever did return, emotionally. I’m guessing that from that time on, Junior was all the way home, and Dad knew it.

And Bubba had clean feet, but not much else.

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Posted in Inspiring, Scripture, Wisdom

Sunday Scriptures – 4

Shout with joy to God, all the earth!
Sing the glory of his name;
make his praise glorious!
Say to God, “How awesome are your deeds!
So great is your power
that your enemies cringe before you.
All the earth bows down to you;
they sing praise to you,
they sing praise to your name.”

                                                          Psalm 66:1-4

Posted in Inspiring, Sayings, Wisdom

Saturday Sayings – 4

1. At first I believed I could. Then I believed I couldn’t. I was right both times.

2. If you removed the rocks, the brook would lose its song.

3. If your mind should go blank, don’t forget to turn off the sound.

4. One thing you can give and still keep is your word.

5. We all face a series of great opportunities brilliantly disguised as impossible situations.

 

Posted in Home School

Do You Need an All-in-One Curriculum?

Twelve years curriculum all on cd's.Every man, woman, and child in your home owns a computer. You built them yourselves. You like them. You can’t help it.

You really wish someone would put everything your children need for their entire school career on a few disks, to save you some time. After all, when you prefer life in front of your computer, you hardly feel like shopping at curriculum shows in some out of the way huge city.

Funds are tight for you, too, and you’d be willing to do more than your share to save some money. You could use a true, budget-saving curriculum that has no frills but doesn’t charge for them, either.

And you’ve noticed lately that the house seems to be shrinking and home school materials haven’t helped that problem much—you never guessed it all would take up so much space! Isn’t there some tinier, tidier version that you could stuff in a bag or something, and not have to build shelves or buy a storage hut for?

Is this the 21st century or did I imagine it!

And whose bright idea was it to make the teacher book identical to the students’! Everything takes twice the space and funds, that way, and really, if you can’t score first grade math without an answer key, well, wow.

It just seems to you all the materials you need could be in one package and that could be the end of it.

Why prolong the agony?
Why keep going back and going back, just to get what you knew you would need, anyway?
Seems like if it were all pre-packaged, it could cost even less.

Is this you?

Do you need something that saves time, money, space, and doesn’t insult you?

Is it out there?

Yes.

A great old-fashioned schoolbook type curriculum has been committed to CDs and includes everything you need from lined paper for penmanship practice, through all textbooks, all the way to every outside reading book you will ever need to educate a child, ALL ON CDs. True, you’d want to print off some of it, since it is not interactive, but it is all there, from that first kindergarten matching exercise, to the last calculus test, and all points between.

At the risk of seeming to bend the guidelines, which I am NOT, (this is only an informative blog, please!) let me suggest you scout out the Robinson Curriculum.

It may be the answer to all your needs.

Posted in Home School

Do You Need Unit Studies?

Curriculum to draw a horse while studying horses.You probably seldom saw unit studies in your collective school past, except maybe on holidays or after the first snow.

Unit Studies is a relatively new term that conveys the idea of studying only one topic at a time in every school discipline.

So, if your children wanted to study horses and you were teaching through unit studies, they would read Black Beauty or something similar.
Their English assignments would be reports or essays about horses.
Math would cover statistics about horses.
You would teach the history of horses, complete with maps.
Spelling would include equine and other “qu” words and whether racetrack and several others are closed, hyphenated, or open compounds.
Biology might cover the horse skeleton.

Get it?

And often, every student is studying the same topic, so while the high schoolers are learning to render a horse in oil paints and apply the logic of game theory, the first grader is filling a color book about horses and learning to count the pintos in a certain mixed herd.

Some people love unit studies, and I have used them a time or two, myself, enjoying the results. They really ring the bell for people who thrive on research, and I do. The consummate teacher, whose every cell longs to provide all, all, all the input from the depths of her soul, will inhale this idea with great joy.

Often, the homeschool teacher who loves unit studies has a teaching degree, or had begun to acquire one, or always wanted to be a teacher.
Perhaps she has a lot of experience in teaching maybe Sunday School or some other public place, such as job orientations at her old workplace.
Something about her life has handed her a great amount of confidence she can do a better job than any old book.

Often she has given birth to children who also enjoy much “hands-on” experience in life.
They must contemplate while they learn (unlike the ones who grab up facts and contemplate later.)
These children seem to grow taller when they have a “project” in the works, and sometimes it is an ever-expanding project.
The wise teacher of this type of learner will keep a constant supply of projects in the wings, waiting for the right moment to introduce them.

One other important aspect of teaching through unit studies is the time factor: It takes a great amount of time.

Unit studies require a life of total devotion to providing content for the students.
You have to know, months in advance, what you are doing and what you plan to be doing.
There are no textbooks already planned out for you.
There are no answer keys.
Often there is no summer vacation for you.

Thing is, you love this stuff.

Also you need to know there is no maid. Either you have to provide that, yourself, or else you have to be okay with some things undone.
If your husband freaks over a cheerio in his chair, hmm.
If a sticky floor drives you crazy, hmm.

I counseled a lady who asked me, “My husband has told me that if I will homeschool our children, he will hire me a maid. Do you think I could do it?”
I told her, “With a maid, there is much greater time to devote to the business of teaching. I would only be concerned about the children not learning to carry their own load with chores.”

She took that counsel to heart.
She has the maid.
Her children have strictly enforced chores.

And she, for some reason, chose unit studies.

Are unit studies for you? There are companies that provide grace and guidance for those who embark for this journey. Check out Konos, Sunlight, and Weaver, to see if you could love this way.

And last, but not least!

Posted in Home School

Do You Need Disposable Workbooks?

Schoolbooks sitting around look like a stack of magazines.

You’ve seen these before, too: oversized, paperbound booklets, that look almost like magazines, with 30-80 pages, for reading a small amount and writing the answers directly into the book. You either loved them as a child, or else not.

As a home-educating mom, you may just learn to love them the way your teacher did: they make learning, and thereby teaching, so much easier.

If you, Mom, as the teacher, must be gone, you must leave someone you trust in charge of your students.
This person may love your children to pieces, but not feel your drive to be a good teacher.
This person may be your husband or your mom, so firing is not a resort.

But workbooks may be.

Workbooks are inherently geared to any teacher, including the student, himself. He reads a little, answers a few questions geared to comprehension, and then repeats.

Because the coursework is so intensively interactive, the student learns more, faster, and retains it longer.
Because the student can feel the acceleration of his learning, he gains confidence.
Because the incremental teaching and much-needed confidence is built into the book, the teacher finds the student needs less direction.

Sounding good?

The Non-Standard Student.

Perhaps you already figured this, but if your child is not inherently gifted for student-hood, workbooks can carry him along until those long twelve years are finally over. Many children finish the day’s work by noon, and still learn enough to do well on exit tests.

It’s just easier. Not only for the student, but also for the teacher.

On the other hand, if your student is far, far ahead of his peers—or maybe even of his teachers—a curriculum that could test and place him where he belongs could be a tremendous asset, in many ways.

Home Business.

Finishing by noon makes time for a home business.

And finishing by noon, daily, is not such a stretch, you will learn.

Early Graduation.

Finishing by noon makes time for doing two day’s worth per day, which can create time for graduating and starting college earlier than you thought.

For some students, it can mean graduating at age 18 instead of 20, after all.

For others, it can mean graduation from college by age 18.

It’s a thought.

Learning Gaps.

If you are taking a child out of a collective school environment, you probably have little idea where he is in his learning or where he should be.

He may have learning gaps or even be behind the kids his age.

But with workbooks come . . . placements tests!

Placement tests are the tool that lets you know exactly which book to buy for your child, and why. You can have the confidence that comes with knowing this material is exactly the right level for your student; not too easy or too difficult.

The Unsure Beginner.

Of course, you also are unsure about what to do or how to do it.

(Don’t feel bad; most professional teachers who begin homeschooling feel the same!)

But with workbooks, the self-explanatory nature goes both ways—for the teacher and for the student. Since the workbooks do all the work, you, Mom, will have more time, more confidence, and more understanding of what your child needs.

And more time for folding laundry? Maybe?

Accuracy in Placement.

You know this equals accuracy in spending, which is so important during these times of economic chaos.

Especially if you begin in the middle of a school year, you can buy only what you need because workbooks cover only three weeks’ worth of studies.

You could never buy half of a regular text!

Is this all ringing true for you?

If so, you may need to change to workbook style curriculum. Classic types are: A.C.E. and Christian Light.

Check them out!

Still not getting it? Try unit studies!

Posted in Home School

Do You Need Traditional Textbooks?

Loving the acculumlation of books!You have seen these before. You probably used them when you were a child. They are the big, hardbound books that don’t fall apart.

Traditional textbooks are good for people who:

Enjoy and trust the ways of tradition.

You learned from a book. Your husband learned from a book. Lincoln learned from a book. Washington learned from a book. Moses . . . well, Moses wrote a book, but it was a scroll, wasn’t it?

You want your children to learn the value of a book, how to take good care of it, keep it clean, not drop it in puddles. You want them to grasp it in their hands and at the same time realize its heaviness means all their education will spring from it every time they open it. Compact, tidy, fragrant from the realities of life. . . how can anyone beat a book for learning?

You know who you are.
You love the smell of a BOOK. A well-loved book is even better.
You love the way they look on the shelves.
You love the way they offer up to you the fingerprints of those who went before.
You want this love for your children, too, and know the exposure will teach them this love.

Want to reuse or several children to reuse the books.

Your household is big. Maybe not big enough to be famous, but not being famous means even less money for throw-away stuff.
You know a book will last through at least five children, and that would be a great start.
You know how to make a book jacket, and your oldest has begun learning how, too.
You know after the initial investment, you will be home free for curriculum, and that will be important.
Besides, you just like the way they smell.

Have children who are visual learners.

Your children do not need to fidget, handle, or talk in order to learn.
At an early age, they crawl up into the recliner and read themselves to sleep at nap time.
When you say, “Go play!” they go to the books.
They prefer to do science experiments by reading about it and say, “Aw, Mom, we can tell from the pictures and the questions what it will do!”
You’ve caught them writing little books, too, and drawing diagrams of the house they want to live in, someday.
They take one look at a map and know where they are on it.
The path from their eyes to their brains is short.
Lecture kills them.

You like things put away.

That all the pages of all their studies could fold up between two hard covers and slip into place on a shelf is pure bliss for you.
That today’s answers could double over and fit between those cover, too, is almost joy. That you could walk through the house without slipping on loose stuff is just too important.

Think about this style of teaching, learning, and living. Does it fit you, or describe your goal for you home school? You may need traditional textbooks. A few old-time favorites are Abeka, Bob Jones, and Rod and Staff.

Check them out.

Not quite it? Try this!