Sunday, February 7, 2010

Hard Work

Long time, no write. Our days are getting longer and schedules tighter. This homeschooling has become hard work! Oh, we've had our difficulties in the past. Teaching Liana to read was no easy task. But we had a little break the first of this school year. Each girl settled into a routine with a minimum of struggle and complaint. The past couple of months, though, the pace has quickened and it's become HARD! Not so much for the girls as for me.

It's Arielle. She has a lot to learn and I need to teach her how to work independently without relying on so much hand-holding from me. She needs to step it up a notch, but I have to show her how to do this. She started work on a research paper on the plight of Native Americans post-Civil War. There is plenty of information available, but she must learn to organize her thoughts and her writing. I think it is harder to teach a child to write than to read.

Arielle also has work to do for her literature class. She is reading a historical fiction book on the Nez Perce Indians and then she has to take the heroine of this book and write a series of correspondences with the fictional character Johnny Tremain--who lived a hundred years prior! The two characters will be pen pals and through the letters Arielle has to reveal the plot of both books. How can I help her if I am not familiar with the books? That means lots of research on my part to talk her through some ideas.

Arielle just finished Teaching Textbooks 7. The last set of lessons have been difficult. This program is set up for the student to work totally independently. But what happens when she just doesn't understand how to work the problem? There are solutions, but just because the child listens to the explanation doesn't mean she really knows the material. So day after day I sit through her lessons and re-learn math. We are on to pre-algebra now. It is all coming back to me! Actually, I liked algebra, so I hope I can convey a little enthusiasm to the child who "hates" math. (Isn't this mental gymnastics good for a senior brain like mine? Maybe I will fend off Alzheimer's!)

We need to spend more time on Spanish. We're only in Unit 3 of Rosetta Stone and the vocabulary is increasing rapidly. My need to see it on paper is hindering my progress. I wish there were supplemental lists of vocabulary to study. I tried making lists for Arielle and me, but that was extremely time-consuming.

So we move forward into this foreign territory of middle school. I love it though. I told a friend of mine who is also homeschooling that I wouldn't want to be doing anything else. Her only comment, "Interesting..." Maybe she doesn't agree. Peace comes when you are completely in the center of God's will. So for now, this day, that's where we are.