Thursday, November 26, 2009

Happy Thanksgiving!

Well, we made it. I didn't post every day and I'm okay with that. I am sorry that I said I would, I should have realized that it just isn't in the cards for me to post every day.

In saying that though, I do have some posts lined up for Christmas. I won't promise daily posts, but check back sometimes since I think I should be able to post most days. For instance, starting on Saturday I'm planning to post a couple of Advent calendars that I like a lot. You wouldn't want to miss that now, would you?

Have a fabulous Thanksgiving. Enjoy your families and your dinners (it's okay if it's not in that order of course) and I'll see you soon.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

I'm a big fan

of having my kids make and wear dorky turkey hats. I got them all into the Thanksgiving spirit with this one a few years ago:

Turkey Hat

I'm now wondering what depths I will have to sink to in order to get them to make and wear new ones. Hmmm. This is what makes holidays fun!

Friday, November 20, 2009

A cornucopia

I can't wait to make this with my kids. Every year we do a cornucopia craft, usually it's edible or it falls apart, but I'm hoping no one will eat this one:

Paper Cornucopia

I think it will be to hard for the little ones to make on their own, so maybe we'll make it together. I might sketch out the shapes first and just have the kids fill it in. Or maybe I'll have Harry and Sam do their own and help the little girls do one too.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Okay Guys

I think I missed a day--I'm sorry. I had an incredibly busy day yesterday and just crashed on the couch. Since I'm still recovering from the trip, a crazy day yesterday and Scouts today, it's just a link. But it looks so dang cute. And I was thinking it would be even cuter using an upside-down flower pot painted brown.

So here you go: Paper-cup turkeys

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Handprint Turkeys

I'm a big fan of handprints. I love seeing how the kids' hands have changed through the years. It's also easy and fun.

Have your child trace his or her hand. Then make a turkey out of it. The thumb is the head so give it a beak and a smile. (He doesn't know what's going to happen later.) Also give him a comb. Then color each of the fingers a different turkeyish color. Don't forget his legs. He needs some way of running.

That's it. We do this every year, so I have quite a collection of turkeys. Once I can figure out how to get my pictures up so they don't look so weird, I'll post pictures of what we've done so far.

Monday, November 09, 2009

Welcome

A few years ago I made a Welcome Banner from instructions I found in a magazine. (I told you I liked magazines.) I can't find the instructions, but it was super easy.

What You Need:
A piece of burlap--about the size of a large piece of paper
Felt cut outs of the word "Welcome" (I decided how big the letters should be and printed them out on the computer. Then I traced the letters onto the felt and cut them out.)
Felt cut-outs of some leaves in fall colors, about 5 or 6 of them (print out the clip-art from familyfun.com and trace them onto the felt, then cut them out)
Glue gun
A dowel rod or long stick, longer than the width of the burlap
A piece of rope
5 Pennies

What To Do:
1. After you have the words and leaves ready, lay them out onto the blurlap. When you like how they look, glue them on. You are going to use the top couple of inches for the stick, so place them accordingly.
2. Put the stick or dowel rod across the top, fold the burlap over it and glue the burlap down.
3. Tie the rope onto the dowel rod or stick so you can hang it.
4. Glue the pennies along the back on the bottom so that it won't fly around too much.
5. Hang and admire your craftiness!

Now, if I can only find mine...

Sunday, November 08, 2009

Fun for the Whole Family

One of H's Scout electives is to make a bean bag toss game. So I think we'll do this one:

Bean Bag Toss

It is a bigger project than most, but it might be fun Sunday afternoon family project.

Good luck. I hope it's fun!

Saturday, November 07, 2009

Corn on the Cob

Indian corn is always cool. I remember trying to eat it when I was little. That wasn't one of my better ideas. but this is:

Stuff You Need:
green construction paper
paint in Indian corn colors
glue
another piece of paper to glue everything else on

What to Do:
1. Cut out the shape of an ear of corn from the green paper and glue it to the other piece of paper. The green is the corn husks so leave some room between the sides for the kernels.
2. Dip your finger into one of the paint colors and use it to print a kernel between your husks. Without washing your finger off, dip it in another color and do the same thing.
3. Do this until your Indian corn is finished.
4. Let it dry.
5. Be happy!

Friday, November 06, 2009

More Leaves

Remember how I said I love fall leaves? Well, I do and I have a very cool brother-in-law who sent me some genuine colorful Virginia fall leaves. So we all have Ryan to thank for this craft, which may be a lot easier for those of you in Virginia and Utah to do than those of us in SoCal.

Stuff You Need:
paper
brown marker
glue
dried leaves

What to Do:
1. Draw the trunk of a tree on your paper.
2. Put glue on the top of the tree where the leaves would be.
3. Crush up the leaves into small pieces. You want pieces, not dust, so be careful
4. Put the leaves on the glue.
5. Admire your tree.

You could also put some on the ground around the tree to look like the leaves are falling.

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Leaves

Someday when you have an hour or two, I'll have to tell you all about my love affair with fall leaves. Leaves are fine the rest of the year, but in the fall...oh my! Sadly most of the leaves around here don't change colors, so I have to live vicariously through other people. It's just one of the sacrifices you have to make when you live in southern California. Anyway, I'm so excited to make these:

Salt Dough Leaf Prints

Oh so excited. I'll tell you how they end up.

Wednesday, November 04, 2009

Another Apple Craft

I love easy crafts and this one just works. I'm pretty sure that even my littlest could do it pretty easily and she's 22 months right now:

Tissue Paper Apple Tree

What you need:

a piece of brown construction paper cut in the general shape of a tree trunk
a piece of green paper, in the general shape of the top of a tree
lots of small pieces of red tissue paper to be the apples
glue

Okay, follow along, this is going to be tricky:

1. Glue the trunk shape to the treetop shape in the basic apple tree shape.
2. Give your child the small pieces of red tissue paper and let him or her crumple them into small pieces. Call those the apples, but don't let your child eat them. (They aren't really apples, we're just pretending.)
3. While she's crumpling the tissue paper, either dot the glue onto the tree where you would like the apples to be or cover the entire tree with glue, allowing your child to decide where the apples go.
4. Drink some apple juice or eat an apple while it dries.
5. Exclaim over and over again in a really excited voice how cute your child's apple tree is.
6. Watch your child smile.
7. Give your child a kiss and hang the apple tree on the fridge. If you don't have a magnetic fridge, hang it somewhere else. Maybe in a museum somewhere.


That's it. If you wanted, you could probably glue the tree to another piece of paper as a background, but you don't have to. I mean really, it's already adorable as it is.

Monday, November 02, 2009

I love magazines

Which is probably not a shock if you know me at all. It's a genetic affliction (thanks, Mom). But I try really hard not to buy every magazine I see. This is not easy, because I really do love magazines. Fortunately for me, the libraries around here sell donated magazines for either 10 or 25 cents. So occasionally I'll go a little crazy and bring home every magazine ever written. Except the ones with cars on the front. Those I skip. But every other magazine. And sometimes I even get lucky and someone has donated the most recent issue of one that I like.

Take, for instance, Family Fun. I like Family Fun--it does help my family have fun with the party, craft, and food ideas. But most of the time I don't feel like buying it retail because most of the craft, party, and food ideas are also found on their website, appropriately named familyfun.com. I saw the November issue at the library a few days ago and it looked great, in fact there were a couple of craft ideas I definitely wanted to use. But I didn't buy it. Mostly because I decided that I wasn't going to buy more magazines but also, at least a little bit, because I couldn't find it.

Today I found it--at the library! Yay. And I excitedly opened it up and found the craft I was dreaming about--Turkey Luminarias. They are prettier than they sound, honest.) Oh, it was exciting! Until I found this:

Turkey Luminarias

Fine, lesson learned.

Mini Yarn Apples and Pumpkins

This is a craft that I saw here:

http://www.makeandtakes.com/little-apple-yarn-favors

I don't want to repost the craft, so just click on over and check it out. It looks adorable and fairly easy. We're planning to do this tomorrow.

Somewhere else I found that another person had made pumpkins using the same method, just orange yarn instead of red. They looked cute too and I kicked myself for not thinking of that and buying orange yarn when I got the red.

Of course, there is so much you could do with the apple theme. Go pick some, make a pie or some applesauce, or a pie (that has Jason's vote).

Here are some apple-themed books.

How to Make an Apple Pie and See the World
Apple Farmer Annie
Up, Up, Up, It's Apple-Picking Time

That's just a few of the ones out there. I know you probably already have your favorites.

I hope that helps make your fall a little more creative and fun. Enjoy!

It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year!

Actually I'm not talking about Christmas. I love Thanksgiving. If I had to choose, I'd pick Thanksgiving as my favorite holiday. There isn't nearly as much stress and it's all about food and being together. And giving thanks, which really, we could probably all stand to do more in our lives. (And if you don't, that's fine, please don't take offense.) And while Christmas colors and decorations are prettier than those for Thanksgiving, there's something about the season that I just like.

So, we are big into Fall and Thanksgiving crafts around here. I've spent a fair number of hours searching around for my favorites--those that I can see actually doing with the kids. And even tossing some books into the mix. I will post one each day until Thanksgiving and then begin with the Christmas/Nativity posts. And this year I actually will do it--I've figure out how to use Blogger's auto post and will write as many up as I can and set them to post by magic!

So Enjoy--I hope this makes your fall a little bit happier.

Today's Craft:

Begin our yearly "I'm Thankful For..." Craft.

We always talk about what we are thankful for in the weeks leading up to Thanksgiving. And usually it's a tree of some sort. Last year we had a big tree on the wall of our family room with the leaves cut out of fancy paper and hung on it. The year before I think I just traced a tree on some paper and cut the leaves out of construction paper. The goal is to have the kids think about what they are thankful for more than creating a product.

This year I am putting yarn across our fireplace (which we've never used) and just hanging the leaves onto that. Or at least I will be, once I replace the tape the kids have decided to use. And by "use" I mean "pull off long pieces and twist them together until my Mom goes insane." Just to clarify. This year I plan to cut the leaves out of coffee filters for the kids to color with washable markers. Then the kids "paint" them with water and let them dry. The water mixes the colors and the end result is cool. You have to use washable markers or it doesn't work nearly as well. Once they are dry, they write what they are thankful for.

I won't post what the kids said tonight, but suffice it to say that we get some heart-warming ones and some where we look at each other and wonder why.

That's our craft for today. I will have pictures when I can buy some tape.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Nature Outing Monday

I've decided to have a theme to the days. Monday is Nature Day, Tuesday we do Geography, Thursdays, Shakespeare and that leaves Poetry for Friday. Wednesday is our day "off" because of all of the outside activities we have, although I'd like to figure out a way to make it our art and music day. So far, I've been too tired even though I know that I'm making it seem like a much bigger deal than it probably is. Can you tell I feel a little guilty and conflicted?

Anyway, we went on our nature walk this morning to the lake. We saw ducks and a couple of geese.The kids spent a good amount of time rescuing worms--pulling them out of the drainage ditch and putting them in the nice cool dirt nearby. We took pictures of some of the things we saw and tried to make sure we spent some time being quiet so we could hear the birds and whatever was around us. It was a nice time, although I wished I had my hat since it was already getting hot.

Once we got home, the kids had a snack and drew in their nature journals while I read a chapter of The Burgess Bird Book. That might be my all-time favorite homeschooling find. It's not just for homeschoolers and it's not a text at all. I love it, the kids love it, what could be better? You should read it.

I put Emma down for a nap since it was close to 11:30 and sent the boys off to do some math. Harry did his test from chapter 9 and Sam reviewed the +9's. They were giving him a hard time last week, so I had him spend some extra time on them. That seemed to do the trick and we moved on.

We had a Dutch windmill to build, so we did that while talking more about New Amsterdam. We are so behind on Story of the World, but that's okay. We will get back to it full time once we have spent some more time talking about the colonies. As much as I believe in the trivium and studying world history from the beginning to the end, I also think the kids should know about the early Americans. My plan for history right now is to continue on with SOTW, reading a chapter each week, but really focusing on the colonies and early America.

I also did some reading with Annika. She's interesting to me and I'm not sure if what I'm doing with her is working. This is one area where I'm having a really hard time not comparing her to the boys. They were both reading fluently by this point and she can't seem to always remember which letter is which, even though we've done so much to teach them to her. She's a different person, she's still really young, she'll learn when she's ready. I know all of these things, but I want to make sure I'm giving her the attention she needs to have a chance to learn. We did a vowel page from The Ordinary Parent's Guide to Teaching Reading and read/looked at one of the Bob Books. We also read a nursery rhyme and did a coloring page with it.

Harry did a spelling pre-test and will do the real test later on in the week. Sam "read" Tuesday--it's a wordless book, and drew some frogs.

We ended there for the day. I still need to read to the boys. Sam and I are reading Little House in the Big Woods and Harry and I, The Jungle Book. Our bedtime book is Bill Bergson, Master Detective. We are planning to do some Mad Libs in a few minutes and that'll be our grammar for the day. I also want to get out the markers and stuff and make some Halloween cards for the cousins.

Wow, it's kind of scary that I can talk this much about one day.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

One Month Review

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Math: Math U See. It’s working and I’m not changing anything that works


Science: Chemistry. Sadly this is my absolute worst science. I barely passed it in high school and am already a little confused about our lessons this year. I need to find more easy chemistry books that can explain it in a way that I can understand and explain. Then I need to read them first so that I’m not just sitting there confused when the boys ask me a question. Fortunately I'm married to a brilliant scientist who can more than make up for what I lack.


Latin: Harry loves this. Sam likes it. Which is perfectly fine. It’s been Harry’s dream to learn Latin and Sam has been along for the ride. For both of them it’s pretty much optional.


Language Arts: This is where the biggest problem is. Sam doesn’t mind Writing With Ease, but for him it’s pretty easy. He also does his grammar with very little problem, but that’s probably partly because he doesn’t have much writing to go with it. Most of it is oral.


On the other hand, Harry hates writing. He hates it with a passion. And I’m torn on what to do. On one side, he hates it and he’s only in third grade. Is it vitally important that he does a writing program yet or is it something that he can pick up as he enters middle school? Also, he is not at all fond of his grammar program. Doing both seems like overkill to me, but I’m not sure which, if either is more important. But not doing anything at all feels like walking off a plank with sharks underneath. What if I mess him up completely?

The other question this brings up, is it okay to just do formal grammar and writing with my younger child and not with my older? That seems kind of weird to me.


History: We have never had a problem with history before. At least not to the extent we are now. I made little notebooks for the boys with a sheet for each chapter so they would know what was expected of them. For each section there are a couple of questions for them to answer so I’d know if they were paying attention at all.


We do most, but not all of Sam’s work orally. He still has to write parts of it. But Harry is expected to write the answers to the two questions on his own. He’s been throwing a complete fit lately over it though. This morning he had answer one question in a complete sentence and freaked out. He finally did it after crying and worrying over it for thirty minutes. Looking back on it now, I should have told him to stop and put it away until later, but it’s hard not to get caught up in the drama.


Reading: I count this different than Language Arts because it’s just reading. Each of the boys has a book the two of us are reading together. I don’t expect a narration or any work from it because I want this to be something that we can look forward to each day.


Other stuff:


I want to add in Geography and continue with Shakespeare. I don’t ask the boys to do too much in addition to listening and talking about the what we’re reading, and it’s a lot of fun. I really look forward to that. I will eventually add geography into the mix, but it’s tough to add more in when I don’t feel confident about what we’re already doing.


Also, we’re kind of skating by with art and music by looking at a painting or two one day and then waiting a week to look at another usually by someone completely different. That’s frustrating, but again, I need to get everything else in order before I can add to what we’re already doing.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Danger, Will Robinson

or something like that!

I've spent today getting the nitty-gritty plans started for lessons that are supposed to begin next Monday. Of course that's when I pick up the books and see most of them for the very first time. So, while it would be nice to have a full day of lessons on Monday, I don't see how that will happen.

I'm finding myself in the "danger zone" of homeschooling though. I searched for some notebook pages and an easy plan for handwriting and found how one family is doing their Shakespeare studies. Well, that looks like fun. I can do that. And that led me to some nature study challenges, which led me to a neat geography program, which led me to a partridge in a pear tree.

See the problem with homeschooling, in my opinion, isn't that it's hard to teach your kids math or reading. It's more along the lines of knowing when to stop and call it enough. If you think about it, the world is full of fascinating things, most of which are interesting to study, and as a homeschooler, I get to pick which ones we study.

So while the list of subjects we are planning to study looked like this last week:

math
reading
handwriting
writing
science
history
Latin
grammar
spelling
art
music,

now it looks like this:

math
reading
handwriting
writing
science
history
Latin
grammar
spelling
art
music
Shakespeare
nature and outdoors
American geography
world geography and
Chinese (don't ask).

I need to drop a few subjects or try to fold them in with another. Or, better yet, buy The Latin-Centered Curriculum. I've heard that it streamlines language arts.

That way I could add all of the other fun stuff back in.

Getting Ready

It seems as though everyone is getting ready to go back to school in the next couple of weeks. While the kids aren't actually 'going' anywhere, I am finishing up my plans for teaching them the things they'll need to know so they aren't laughed at when they go to important dinner parties. Yes, I plan my childrens' educations so that they can fit in well at parties.

To that end, I've created a notebook for each of the boys. Harry's is green and Sam's blue so they are easy to find. Plus I'm reasonably sure that by this point they do know their colors. Annika is jealous, so I'll have to make her one too. In pink. Anyway, inside the super-cool, color-coded binders are tabs labeled with their major subject. Except Math. We are skipping Math this year so they can spend more time battling their Pokemon. (Kidding, we're skipping reading.)

Actually Math is self-contained in it's own little workbook and since I only got five of those little tab things, I left it out. The tabs are: History, Geography, Language Arts, Science, and Latin. In the front of the notebook, the boys find this:

Kids Daily

Each day I will write what they need to do--list the subject and the assignment. I'm hoping that they can work somewhat independently and they will see that the day will end at some point. Obviously I'll be right there if/when they need me, but this way they can see what they've already finished and what they still have to do. Interestingly, we have more subjects than will fit into the boxes, but I don't want to overwhelm them first thing in the morning. Life won't end if we have more to do or if we don't get everything finished, but on the whole I'll say that when the list is done, so are we.

Harry is going into third grade, so he'll be way more independent, and probably bouncier, than Sam, who is going into first. I'm anticipating that we'll spend more time in the first few weeks of school getting adjusted to things than doing serious school work. That of course, assumes that I set an actual start date. We'll see.

Oh, there's more coming. An awesome (if I do say so myself) organizer for doing Story of the World. And how I'm organizing language arts. I know, you can't wait.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

To Do, 2009

I've decided that both boys are going to be home next year, so I've had to plan what to do with them. So far, I've come up with:

Harry:
  • Grammar: First Language Lessons 3
  • Spelling: I'm not sure yet if I want to use a specific spelling program. Harry is a natural speller and it gets tedious. Right now I'm planning to use words from his texts that are at the level he is at and go from there.
  • Reading: We don't use reading texts, instead we tie his formal reading into his history work. For this he will be required to narrate what he has read and it will go into a special reading notebook.
  • Writing: Writing With Ease, Level 2 or 3. I'm testing him right now to see where he is.
  • Penmanship: He'll start cursive and continue to fix the mess that his writing became when he was in school. I use copywork for that--phrases from his reading or from other good books.
  • Math: Math-U-See Gamma
Sam: Annika:
Emma:
  • Eating Legos.
  • Following Annika around.
  • Pointing to the hamster.

Combined:
  • History: Story of the World 3: Early Modern Times. I'm excited about this--most of our reading for the year will be based off of this time period, so SOTW is kind of the basis of what we do.
  • Science: Classic Science, I think. It's an elementary overview, so I'm not positive. This is really the only thing that I'm not positive about. We'll also continue on our nature studies. We'll take at least one nature walk each week. The boys will have to find three things to draw and discover more about.
  • Geography: I found an interesting set of lessons that I'm planning to try with the kids. It'll take them on a trip around the world.
  • Art: We'll study artwork from the time period we're studying and try our hands at different techniques. My kids think I'm a talented artist, but I'm not really, so they will have to take outside classes for that.
  • Music: Harry is taking piano lessons, so he'll continue that. We'll also listen to music at lunch and breakfast.
I've already realized that I forgot to add in poetry, so I'm going to figure that out. I'm sure there's more that will come to me, but for now, these are the materials that I plan to use. Now I just need to figure out exactly how to use them.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

It's Over

Harry isn't going back to his school. I will call on Monday and tell them that he has started at a new school and won't be needing their services. I also need to talk to his teacher and get the work that he's done for her. He's way more excited than I am at this point. I had no intention of bringing him home until Spring Break at the earliest. I realized on Friday afternoon, though, that the school is toxic for him. And I don't say that lightly. I honestly believe that I would be shirking my parenting duties to send him back with what's happening.

So now what? I don't know. We will spend the time before Spring Break "deschooling," and getting used to being home. We will read a lot of books and spend some time catching up with each other. We will also have to work on getting rid of some of the behaviors he picked up at school. That won't be as fun as some of the other things!

I probably won't start him on anything really new for the rest of the year. We'll loosely follow the Ambleside Online reading list and work on some math facts. He told me today that he wants to learn how to do multiplication and division, so we'll work on that. I'm going to stay as far away from worksheets and meaningless things as I can. He's already done enough of that for the year.

In the fall I'll enroll him and Sam in one of the local homeschool charters and we'll start over again. But we're done with traditional school. It's just not worth it.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Myth Busters

People give many reasons for not liking the idea of homeschooling, whether they are considering it or they know someone else who is. Chief among the reasons they give is "socialization." People hate the idea that there are kids out there that aren't having the same experience as the other kids. They fear, among other things, that the kids are going to grow up not knowing how to relate to other kids, that they won't have a shared body of knowledge, and about a hundred other, made-up fears.

This is a false problem though, in my opinion. I went to school for something like 17 years. You can ask anyone who knew me in middle school, I didn't fit in at all. In fact, I still consider those the worst years of my life. But why? According to the theory that sending a kid to school, they will be socialized the same as the other kids. I should have fit in, I had the same opportunities as the other kids, the same shared school experience. But I didn't. So I spent three years crying almost every day after school because the other kids were mean.

Something happened today at Harry's school that makes me even more deeply skeptical of the socialization occurring at school. A kid said something that in any other situation would have gotten him sued for sexual harassment. But since it happened at the school, it's supposed to help Harry become properly socialized and learn to deal with people as he grows up.

Here's the thing. Harry is a normal 8-year-old kid. There is absolutely no reason for him to hear other 8-year-olds say things like he heard today. Not even so that he can be properly socialized. No reason whatsoever.

Monday, March 02, 2009

In case you were wondering...

Here are my plans for preschool this month:

March

Theme: Animals

Daily Theme Craft Letter/Craft Activity Story

Tuesday

3/3

Wild Animals: Moose

Moose

M: marble painting

Eat muffins

If you give a moose a muffin, moostache

Thursday

3/5

Wild Animals: Bears

Brown Bear craft

L: lines with rulers

Color hunt

Brown bear, brown bear, what do you see

Tuesday

3/10

Zoo Animals

Giraffe: link below

D: dot markers

Thursday

3/12

Zoo Animals

Elephant: link below

Z: zebra stripes

Tuesday

3/17

St. Patrick’s Day

Shamrock table top craft

G: glitter

Shamrock hop or make green in shaving cream

Thursday

3/19

Farm Animals

Create a farm with the kids

F: fingerpainting

Create a farm together

Tuesday

3/24

Farm Animals

Don’t forget that R loves tractors—do something with that

K: keys

Tuesday

3/26

Pets

Fish

P: purple and pink

Goldfish pick up


Sunday, February 22, 2009

School Days... or is it Daze?

I wish school was working for Harry and Sam, but it isn't. I had a whole post in my head to explain why it isn't working and what I plan to do about it. But I just realized that I don't want to go into the whole thing again. So, I'll give you a very quick rundown of the problems we are having and then talk a little about my dilemma.

Problem #1: Both boys are bored to tears. Sam literally as I have to drag him to the car kicking and screaming.

Problem #2: Harry is learning things from the kids around him that I wish he wasn't. Have you ever tried to explain the f-word to an 8-yo?

Problem #3: Homework. I'm sorry, but you've got my kid for 7 hours a day. I at least get the couple of hours before he goes to bed. We don't do busywork in this house.

Problem #4: Wasted Time. When you've got a kid who doesn't know the alphabet in a class with another kid who is reading a couple of levels above grade, guess who sits and waits for the teacher to pay attention to him. (Hint: it's the one who is reading higher.)

Problem #5: I have to wake up kids to pick up other kids from school. I could, potentially, be driving to and from school 4 times each day. Thank goodness Jason takes Sam, but that still means I have to be out 3 times. And it always hits at naptime. No matter what I do.

Solution: Bring them home. You all know that I wasn't thrilled to send them to school in the first place. So, do I start homeschooling them right now or do I wait until the fall? There are pros and cons to both options, which I will go into in a different post, possibly tomorrow, but more realistically later in the week.

Bye, gotta go prepare for preschool this week.

I'm sorry, so sorry...

I am really sorry that I didn't continue my Christmas posts. I meant to, but my eyes are bigger than my stomach. Or something like that. I always think I have more time than I really do. Although I'm not sure why I think I have time in December. We have Christmas, of course, and two other birthdays that month, just in our little family. In our extended family we have a lot more. Anyway, I really am sorry and I think I'll hold off on making any more promises any time soon. But, changes are coming up, so hold onto your hats.

Although, you can probably let go, what with the pace of things here being what it is.

(And if you understood that last sentence, applause.)