
These are actually our chickens. They are typically as befuddled as I am.
That's what I do. I run around like a chicken with my head cut off. Something's gotta change around here! Today as I blearally stared at the piece of lined paper before me on the school room table, thoughts of how to possibly tweak my schedule so as to curtail some of that headless chicken feeling overtook me. I've been ruminating all evening, so much so that I haven't much else to offer you, poor reader, until I get this mess all figured out. I'm toying with going back to a schedule that makes the most of the afternoon hours while baby and toddler are sleeping. I did that once before with success, but something about letting go of our current craziness unsettles me, as if perhaps the unfamiliar must somehow be scarier than the familiar, which really isn't working at all. Goofy. In the meantime, go enter that contest if you haven't already. And on the 16th, the Bluedorns at Trivium Pursuit have a special offer for you that will be posted right here as well.I'm off to play with my Excel Spreadsheet. The life I lead!
- Theme: Isaiah 33:6
- Prayer
- Song, currently working on several Psalms
- Draw To Learn the Book of Proverbs (yes, we're still working on this)
- Sunday Advent Countdown Calendar (scroll down the page and click on the link under "Educational Helps")
- Scripture Memory:
- Ruth Heller Grammar books: the younger ones illustrate the words while the older ones illustrate, define, and create sentences.
- Grammar Ace: Sonlight’s sole grammar curriculum, we’ll use this one to reinforce concepts and to shake things up a bit.
- Word of the Day: the younger ones illustrate the words while the older ones illustrate, define, and create sentences.
- The Mystery of History, Year Two (Mondays and Tuesdays)
- Science Units (Wednesdays and Thursdays) (see Elizabeth Foss's beautiful Serendipity blog for unit studies)
- Gratitude Journals- we'll be journaling all we're thankful for... more on these later...

Our Turtle Guy Studies a Friend
When we began homeschooling, we looked carefully at curriculum across the spectrum. And admittedly, science isn't my first love, so I leaned even more heavily on elementary science curriculum than anything else.
One fortuitous night several years ago, I was reading an issue of The Old Schoolhouse magazine. An interview with Apologia author and nuclear chemist Jay Wile revealed to me that science in the early years isn't really science-- it's nature study. Aha! This rang so true with me and allowed me to breathe a sigh of relief. Suddenly the pressure was off.
Now we have two sons studying their way through Apologia junior high and high school texts, and we are seeing that they will be more than sufficiently educated in the sciences, from physics to chemistry to biology and beyond. There was no need to try and attempt such subjects in the elementary years, so now we focus on lighting a fire of discovery for the younger kids, helping them develop a love for nature and the universe God created.
I choose a subject as a theme for the year and then we check out every good book our local library has to offer on our current science (or nature, if you will) focus. Last year it was astronomy and this year it's oceans. We view DVDs, take nature walks, draw in our nature notebooks, and take relevant field trips. We take advantage of free sources on the web. Some of our favorites have been: