Monday, March 31, 2008

State bound!

On Friday, Avery competed at the PSIA district academic meet. She participated in two events and placed in both! She won 1st place in Ready Writing and 2nd place in Spelling, which qualifies her to do both events at the state meet in May. Avery is just thrilled!

Happy 3rd birthday, Griffin!



Griffin is so excited about turning three. He's been saying over and over since his birthday party yesterday, "I'm THREE now!" We had a small family celebration, complete with a "choo choo cake" and hot dogs cooked out on the grill. Today we celebrated the actual day by going out to dinner with Papa and Ronnie. Griffin has been singing "Happy birthday meeeeeee!" all day, and first thing this morning he asked for fire on a leftover piece of cake. I think he's got this birthday business down now!

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Taking the "home" out of homeschooling...

I often think the name "homeschooling" is misleading, because all the homeschoolers I know are on-the-go much more than they are at home. It is definitely true for us at any given time, but we've had lots of special opportunities come up lately. We've been dashing from one great activity to the next for about two weeks straight, starting with the field trips to San Antonio and Brenham.

The morning after we returned from Brenham, Avery had the chance to take a 4 hour writing seminar with bestselling author Julie Kenner. In addition to being an author, Julie homeschools her two little girls, and offered up this unique opportunity to our homesschool group. As an aspiring and avid writer, Avery jumped at the chance. I sat in on the seminar, and I was so impressed! Julie taught the kids all about the world of publishing, and went into depth about the mechanics of writing and editing books. Avery and her friend Maya were enthralled, and each took pages and pages of notes. Each participant also submitted a writing sample to be critiqued, and the feedback has been very helpful and interesting to Avery. Julie compared Avery's "ominous" writing style to the Series of Unfortunate Events books, which Avery has not read yet. She's excited to get her hands on one, so she can see for herself!

Just two days later, we were lucky enough to see the storyteller Jim Weiss perform. I've always said that I'd be willing to listen to Jim read the phone book, so hearing him tell fabulous stories from history and literature in person is an amazing experience. As if that wasn't enough, we also got to stay after and attend a 2 hour storytelling workshop. Nothing like learning from the master himself!

Just a couple of days after that, Avery and her friend Maya spent the afternoon with my aunt Lisa, another published author. She took the girls to lunch then back to her house to see her office and learn the tools of the trade first hand. She described what she does to research and plan a book, and showed the girls story boards that she uses to plan plots. Avery and Maya were able to ask questions and Lisa gave suggestions for problems that came up in the girls' writing. How inspiring!

In addition to all of these special activities, Avery and Maya are taking a writing class about heroes in literature. It has been such a great experience so far. Not only is it fabulous material taught by a wonderful teacher, but it's been a great chance for the girls to learn time management and responsibility. Maya's mom and I have turned it completely over to the girls, and they're learning how to manage assignments and preparations on their own. Each girl had a bit of a rough start learning time management and organization, but they're figuring it out on their own and Avery has now discovered the benefit of reading and starting her essays before the last minute. (This is a lesson that I should make an effort to learn too!)

We also took a field trip with our science co-op to see the dinosaurs at the Texas Memorial Musuem, and yesterday, we met up with them to see dinosaur tracks by the San Gabriel River in Leander. The kids had a blast frolicking in the river and came home completely soaked.

Oh, and I missed a hilarious photo opportunity when our Shakespeare group got together on Friday and staged Shakespearean swordfights -- complete with fake blood! They hid ziploc baggies full of "blood" in their clothing, and pretended to slay each other, splashing blood everywhere. I think it was just as fun to watch as it was to participate!

Road trip

A couple of weeks ago, we went with some friends on a two-day field trip. We went to San Antonio to see Slim Goodbody perform (and I use the word "perform" loosely). Our friends' Nana was kind enough to let us all stay at her house in San Antonio. She was also nice (or brave) enough to allow Courtney and I to dump the five children on her while we walked the neighborhood, trolling for goodies at the neighborhood garage sales.

The next morning, the kids were up bright and early -- which, of course, meant I was too. After packing everything up and refueling (mmmm...Starbucks), we headed to our second field trip destination: Pleasant Hill Winery in Brenham. The winery is owned by the parents of some other friends, and they invited us to tour the winery, learn the chemistry behind wine-making, roast marshmallows, and taste some wine (grown ups only, of course -- the kids got to taste some fresh grape juice). The highlight for Griffin was the hay ride we took to get to the creek for frolicking and snacking. What could possibly be better than tractors and marshmallows?

After the winery, we stopped off at a monastery in Brenham that breeds miniature horses. Strange? Yes. But they're so darn cute! We were tempted to throw one in the van and bring him home.




More pictures here.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Finished!



Originally uploaded by Lexy L.


Whew! Floors are finished, and we've finally cleaned the inch or so of dust that was on all of our belongings from the floor installation. We're thrilled with the way they turned out! You can see the whole set here.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

Pioneer Farms Homeschool Day



Originally uploaded by Lexy L.

Last month we went to visit our local living history farm for Homeschool Day. We met some friends there and had a blast exploring, enjoying the animals, and making butter.

I miss my...

This is Griffin's way of saying he wants more of something. For instance, when he finished his bowl of strawberries, he says, "Mama! I miss my strawberries." Then he hands me his bowl for a refill. Now we have all adopted this phrasing, and I'm guessing it will be in our lexicon forever.

Other child-inspired phrases that we still use all the time:

This one, other one, new one, different. Or if she was feeling particularly decisive that day, just diff one. (From Avery at age 18 months, when she'd stand in her closet to pick out her clothes for the day. We use it all the time when picking anything.)

"Der" in place of "the". Example: I'm going to have der pancakes. (Courtesy of Rhys, who replaced every "the" with "der" until about a year ago.)

I love Landers!!!! (This one was adopted a couple of months ago after leaving our friends' house, and Griffin spent the 20 minute car ride screaming it at the top of his lungs. You'd be surprised how often this phrase can be thrown into our regular family conversation.)

Never do dat! (Again, courtesy of Griffin and his larger-than-life temper.)

Have it the checkcard? (Avery, at about 18 months, would ask this every time we'd leave the house. We still ask each other this as we're leaving home.)

Candy!!! (Said with utmost excitement and fists thrown into the air in a victory pose. This phrase came from Griffin's excitement and the abrupt stop of his tears when Bill attempted to ease his sorrow's with a little sugary goodness. No matter the cause of the excitement, we will often thrust up our arms and say "Candy!" if something is going our way.)