Thursday, December 30, 2010

Year End Reflections


The past few months have been overwhelming with lots of interruptions while I try to keep my daughters on target with their education. As 2010 draws to a close, I think back on where we are and where we are heading.

The postcard project was a big disappointment. Within days my girls sent out dozens of postcards. A few trickled in back to them, but they came so slowly that the girls lost interest. Many we did receive were not "real" postcards but ones that were ordered on-line without a real picture of the area where the family lived. Also, the children did not write the postcards, as my girls did, but general info was pasted on the card. They weren't personal at all.

Liana has to take the California Achievement Test in January. She is stressed about it. She hates being timed and noise bothers her when she is working. In our state, I cannot administer the test. It has to be given by a certified teacher, so the homeschool co-op at our church offers this service every January. Liana doesn't pay attention to detail, so she doesn't notice misspelled words or punctuation errors. We have been steadily working on her Teaching Textbooks math program but I don't feel it is up to par with some other programs. Arielle has to take the test next year for 8th grade. I think I will give it to her at the end of this year as a practice so we will better know what to expect next year. (Tests I administer cannot be turned in to our school district.)

We did not reach our goals in science. Arielle had a short book on the study of the earth's water that our evaluator suggested to gently direct her to more serious science next year. We still have a few more weeks to go. Liana is almost finished with Zoology 3, which she has enjoyed. I want the girls to both complete these books so we can do Jeannie Fulbright's Anatomy all together for the rest of the year. Next year Arielle will tackle Jay Wile's General Science.

We spent the past few month studying South America. This has been a great adventure mostly because we ended up learning the story of the five missionaries killed in Ecuador in the 1950's. Arielle read an excerpt from Through Gates of Splendor and she read the book Bruchko by Bruce Olson, and then we watched End of the Spear. I am fascinated with this story and the outcome of this tribe who became Christians. Then Liana and I watched a recent documentary about these people and I read Steve Saint's book End of the Spear, which is a much more detailed account of what happened after the spearing. Highly recommended! We have just a few countries left to study in South America and then we will go back to American History, post-Civil War. That doesn't seem quite so exciting.

Arielle has her second literature class next week. Her assignment: read an autobiography or biography and write a short summary of the book. Then interview a live person in the same profession and tie it in to the story. That's why she read Bruchko. Today she is interviewing a friend of mine who returned from a misson trip to Peru this year.

Our home is filled with music again! Arielle got a guitar for her birthday and Liana got a violin for Christmas. Liana will have some lessons from a friend of ours who is a professional violinist, but Arielle is learning on her own and doing quite well!