Archive for » August, 2009 «

FBF: The Charleston Cake Lady (and a Recipe!)

Welcome to Flashback Friday!

Today we’re not going back too far….to only 1998.  I was a young mother of a two year-old redhead living in balmy Charleston, SC.  I attended a MOPS group for a couple of hours every other Tuesday, and it was there that I met Teresa Pregnall, otherwise known as The Charleston Cake Lady.

Is she not the cutest little lavendar haired little lady you’ve ever laid eyes on?!

Mrs. Pregnall was the guest speaker at my MOPS group.  She talked to us about how she accidentally got into the mail-order cake business, how she was a guest once on the Today show (or it may have been Good Morning America…can’t quite remember), her former job on the board of Alumni Affairs at the College of Charleston, and most importantly, she talked about her cookbook and sold us some copies.

That book changed my life.  Before that I was intimidated by baking in general.  Sifting was an unknown territory.  Cake testers were frightening.  Flour was horrifying.  Rolling pins were…well, er…well, were…unspeakable terrors. (I still have issues with rolling pins!)  But Mrs. Pregnall’s baking methods were clear and concise.  She told us to not use low or non-fat ingredients for baking….they are cakes afterall…they are supposed to be fattening.  She gave us permission to start with cake mixes (doctored cake mixes were a new thing to me at the time).

I fell in love with the Charleston Cake Lady the first time I pulled an absolutely perfect Chocolate Chip Cake out of my rickety old oven, and my guests that night ooohhhed and aaaahhhed and devoured every crumb.  I never looked back, and I’ve baked with almost 100% success over half the items in her cookbook, Treasured Recipes from the Charleston Cake Lady, which is still available at Amazon.  (Just click the title to get to the link to buy new and used copies.)

In honor of this great lady, who passed away about a year ago, I’m sharing the recipe for the Chocolate Chip cake, which is easy, fun and delicious.  Here we go….

You will need:  1 box butter recipe golden cake mix, 1/3 c. granulated sugar, 8 oz. sour cream (NOT low-fat or nonfat!!!), 2/3 c. vegetable oil, 3 large eggs, 1 tsp pure vanilla extract, 1 pkg. (12 oz.) mini semisweet chocolate chips, and 1 container of chocolate frosting

Preheat your oven to 325.

Grease and flour a 12-cup Bundt pan (or just spray it with butter-flavored Pam).

That pan was my grandma’s, and even with the vanishing non-stick coating, with a thick coat of Pam, your cake will pop right out when it has cooled!

In a large mixing bowl, blend the cake mix, sugar, sour cream, and oil on low speed for 1 minute.

Add the eggs one at a time, blending well after each addition.  Increase the mixer speed to medium and beat for 4 minutes.  If you don’t have a stand mixer, it will feel like your arm is going to fall off….but hang in there!  It’s worth it!

Add the vanilla extract.  Fold the chocolate chips into the batter by hand and stir gently until evenly distributed.

Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 50 minutes, or until a tester inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean. 

While the cake is baking, lick this bowl clean. (This step is courtesy of the Pirate Mom.  A refined Charlestonian lady would NEVER tell you to do such.)

Remove the cake from the oven and allow it to cool in the pan.  Invert the cake onto a plate and marvel at the beauty.

Now, this next step is not from the Charleston Cake Lady.  It is pure Pirate Mom.  Take your container of frosting and microwave  (remove the inside seal and return the lid loosely first) for about a minute and stir it well.

Then pour about 3/4 to all of it on the top of your cooled cake, allowing it to drip down the sides and into the middle.  Unforunately, I forgot to take a picture of this step and the finished cake in all it’s ooey, gooey glory, but I’m sure you can just imagine the above cake with rich chocolate goodness all over the top.  UMMMM-UMMMMM!

I highly encourage all of you to check out the cookbook at the above link.  Mrs. Pregnall includes several other doctored cake recipes, delicious pound cake recipes and many traditional Charleston recipes, like ones for Benne Seed Wafers and Punch Bowl Cake.  Trust me….you’ll feel all Southern and proper (and a little fat).

The Pirate’s Life For Us

Many a documentary have been produced about pirates and how they live(d).  Blockbuster movies have tried to capture their essence.  Rides at Disney World have attempted to portray the mystery.  And still we wonder about them.  Our curiosity peaks at their mention.  Who are pirates and what do they do all day?

Well, wonder no longer people!  In honor of…

 

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…I’m going to share a-day-in-the-life-of-home-schooling-pirates.  Buckle your seatbelts…this is bound to be a bumpy ride!

Here’s what happened on…

5:30 AM

My alarm on my cell phone goes off.  I press snooze four times.  By 5:55, I’m up and stumbling into the kitchen.  I see Big D ironing a shirt for work, and I have a momentary wave of guilt wash over me for not having the foresight to get that done myself.  I assuage this feeling by putting together a lunch for him.  He’s already started the coffee, so I go take a shower while the stimulants continue to brew.

When I’m finished and dressed, Big D is sitting at the table reading…

I make myself a L-A-R-G-E cup of coffee and disappear upstairs to read e-mail, catch up on the news and blog.

7:00AM

Both older kids are up now, and they make themselves cereal and get dressed.  I finish up blogging just in time because Jack Henry is awake now and ready to be fed.

I get him dressed and employ Harrison to entertain him for a few minutes so that I can make my bed and do a couple of other things downstairs.

While I nurse the baby, I use my laptop one-handed to surf facebook and read some blogs.  The kids get started on some independent work downstairs at the kitchen table.

8:15AM

The baby is fed, and we’re ready to start for real.  I strap Jack Henry into his highchair and sprinkle a handful of Gerber puffs on the tray to keep him busy for a while.

My stomach growls, and I realize that I forgot to eat breakfast myself.  I fix a quick bowl of Kashi with fresh blueberries and down it.  Jack Henry is totally happy with his puffs, and the older kids seem busy, so I decide to go do my make-up and hair since Annaleigh has a tutorial class today and we’ll be out and about.  While I am in my bathroom, Annaleigh and Harrison have some kind of wild, knock-down-drag-out fight.  I come in to referee, yell my head off at them, threaten them with expulsion from TaeKwonDo if they ever lay a finger on one another again, and then, a little hoarse from this episode, proceed to finish my hair and make-up.

When I come back, I read our Bible passage to much more subdued kids, and we pray together.

9:00AM

I go over a to-do list of assignments with each kid and make sure they have it all written down in their planners.  I begin a language arts lesson with Harrison by copying some sentences to classify on our chalkboard.

He finishes that while I feed Jack Henry some cereal and fruit.  Annaleigh packs up for her tutorial science class, and Harrison gathers some things that he can do in the car, like his math lesson and a reader.  I realize that I have something on the front of my shirt, so I quickly change it.

9:35AM

We’re out the door and on our way to Annaleigh’s science class.

We drop her off at 9:45.  I try to take a picture of her going into the back of the church, but she’s embarrassed because some of her friends are standing around.  Eight graders!  I take it anyway…

Sometimes the boys and I just sit in the parking lot in the van and do school and listen to the radio and read since the class in only an hour and fifteen minutes, but today I go to Target.  They have diapers on sale, and I have a coupon.  I also have to fill up my van.

I also pick up a few more items that are on sale and that I have coupons for, and I marvel that I saved $14….ch-ching!

This Target has a Starbucks inside, so do I reward my frugality with a $2 coffee?

Oh yes, I do!

11:10AM

We pick Annaleigh up from class, and she is thrilled that I am still taking pictures of her.

In the backseat, the boys work on math and a bottle of juice.

We stop off at Kroger.  It’s highly unusual for me to do this during the week (except for milk runs), let alone during the school day, but Harrison had a baseball tournament all weekend long, and this is the first chance I’ve had to get to the store.  If I don’t go now, we will have to eat half a box of crackers, 12 grapes, and chocolate pudding for dinner.

12:15PM

We arrive home.  Jack Henry is passed out cold, so I leave him in his carseat and put groceries away.

Annaleigh makes lunch for herself and Harrison.  They choose HotPockets, which I just bought on-sale and with a coupon. (I saved $23 dollars at Kroger….that’s $37 for the day!!!)

I love that they still use their Princess and Star Wars plates.

While they eat, I get up a groggy Jack Henry, determine he is too tired to sit at the table to eat lunch, so I nurse him and put him down for his Round One nap.  I come back downstairs and warm up some leftovers of meatloaf and mashed potatoes for my lunch.  Jack Henry is in his crib all of about fifteen minutes before he starts howling.  I bring him down and feed him lunch.

He likes it.  I promise.

He then goes down for Round Two nap.  He fusses for about ten minutes and then passes out.

1:30PM

The big kids are back at the table, working on more math, vocabulary, and spelling.

While they finish up, I sit on the sofa and read aloud a chapter from each of these…

…and scratch Clara’s ears because she insists on being in my face the entire time.

After I read, we all kinda go our separate ways.  Harrison plays Lord of the Rings on the computer.  Annaleigh reads over her drama script.  I start some laundry, clean up the kitchen a little and veg on the couch with my laptop.

4:00PM

Jack Henry wakes up.  I nurse him again.  Then I start dinner prep.  I already have some chicken in the crockpot, so I put some rice in the steamer and make a salad.  Annaleigh and Harrison entertain Jack Henry on the back porch with some bubbles.

5:20PM

I realize all of sudden that I forgot to take Harrison to his TaeKwonDo class, which started at 5:10.  Oh well.  He can go on Thursday.  Big D gets home, changes clothes and plays a little catch with Harrison in the backyard for a little while.

While I make final dinner preparations, the kids unload the dishwasher, and Jack Henry spends some time in his playpen.

6:00PM

We finally sit down for dinner.

After we eat, Big D feeds Jack Henry his favorite food:  a Yo-Baby banana yogurt.  I clean up the kitchen, and then help Annaleigh with a nagging math problem, while Harrison finishes labeling his map of Alabama for geopraphy.

7:15PM

Big D and Harrison go to the garage so that Harrison can work on his pitching with the backstop a little bit.  I take Jack Henry upstairs and get him cleaned up and in his jammies.  Annaleigh checks her e-mail and facebook.  Jack Henry and I watch a Praise Baby DVD and read (and chew on) some books.

 

8:15PM

I nurse Jack Henry for the final time and put him to bed.  Meanwhile, the kids take turns getting showers.  They brush their teeth, read for a while, and both are settled by 9:30.  Big D and I also get ready for bed.

10:00PM

Big D is at the kitchen table working on his laptop.  I join him and read a chapter of Crazy Love.  I read aloud a Psalm.  We decide to log into Annaleigh’s facebook account just to make sure she doesn’t have a secret boyfriend or something.  She doesn’t.  Big D changes her profile picture to a goofy shot he had taken over the weekend.  I tell him that Annaleigh will die a thousand deaths when she sees it.  He leaves it on there and logs out.

I go upstairs to begin loading the 2, 542 pictures that I took today.

11:15PM

I look at the time and gasp.  I had meant to be in bed by 10:45.  Big D is in bed but is still awake.  We talk for a while and he rubs a knot I’ve developed throughout the day in my neck.  I check to make sure the baby monitor is on, set my alarm for 5:30AM and finally, I go to sleep.

So now you know what pirates really do all day.  Go and tell all your friends.

That was fun, wasn’t it?  I think I’ll do this once a week.

Or not.

Jack Henry: What Will He Be?

One of the most fun things about having a baby is watching him grow and develop into a little person.  One with his own quirks, his own likes and dislikes.  I can’t help but wonder as I watch and interact with Jack Henry on a daily basis what he will turn out to be

A marine biologist?

A computer “geek”?

A world traveler?

A zoo keeper?

A rock star? (Or a hair stylist?)

A scholar?

A podiatrist?

Ahhhh….the mysteries of life…..but alas, I have no more time left to ponder them because, speaking of Jack Henry, he is calling me from his crib, demanding to be fed.

(A dairy farmer?)

A Home Schooling (Horror) Story

The following is based on a true story….

Once upon a time, in a land far, far away, a home schooling pirate mom woke up to her dining room table looking like this….

She was a nice, neat pirate, who liked order and cleanliness.  She was an unusual pirate.

Innocently, she called her pirate children down for a day of school and said, “Today, children, we are going to decorate covers for our notebooks.”

So that’s what the children did.  Her children, however, were ordinary pirates who enjoyed mess, mayhem and gore.

When they were finished, the pirate mom’s table looked like this…

…and the pirate mom screamed, and cried, and gnashed her teeth, and said, “Now we have to go eat dinner at Cracker Barrel because we can’t see the top of our table.”

The End.

School Pictures

I am not a photographer.  I have a point-and-shoot camera.

Big D is a photographer.  He has not one, but two, top of the line SLR cameras.

But Big D has a life, and I do not, so when I saw that this week for the….

 

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…was school portrait week, I knew I would have to try to photograph my kids, because there is no way in our busy week that I could ask Big D to drag out his backdrops and tripods and such.

Here are my results…

Bonny Annie, my oldest, is smart, creative and fun.  Her academic strength lies in the language arts areas, yet she wants to be a missionary doctor someday, and is aptly fascinated by science.  She loves to read and be crafty.  She likes to watch good movies, Meet Me in St. Louisbeing an all-time favorite.  She loves drama…on stage and off.  She is a blackbelt in Tae Kwon Do and wins medals at every tournament she attends.  She takes great care of her baby brother and nitpicks the middle one.  She is turning 13 in just a couple of weeks.  That scares me.  It scares me badly.

Dirty Harry, my middle child, is athletic, sensitive and hilarious.  His favorite subjects include reading, history, science and spelling.  He doesn’t like math, but he’s a grade ahead of where he’s supposed to be.  He loves Legos and the Wii.  When he grows up he wants to be a professional baseball player, but if that doesn’t work out then he wants to be a Navy chaplain.  He is also a black belt in Tae Kwon Do and is currently playing on a nine year-old travel baseball team for our town.  He thrives in dirt, sweat and grime. 

Cap’n Jack Henry, my baby, is in pre-pre-pre-pre K.  He is happy, hungry and loud.  He likes books, teething rings and stuffed animals.  He will be a year-old in November, but how can that be???  He was only a little over five pounds at birth, but he’s more than tripled his weight since then and all of the problems that the doctors anticipated when he was in the NICU for a week have dissipated as he’s turned out to be a healthy, thriving young un’.  He is a joy and fills our days with laughter….and diapers.

And that’s it.  Those are the students who grace the corridors and desks of Hilltop Academy, drinking our milk and breaking our chalk. 

I am blessed.

We Were Teaching Him to Count….Honest!

Jack Henry has recently discovered table food.  He has a pretty mighty gag reflex, so we’re taking it rather slowly.  Since the other two were in this stage, Gerber has marketed a wonderful starter food:  the puff.

The puff is truly genius.  It’s not too sweet, so you don’t have the guilt of letting your baby stuff himself with Fruit Loops or the like.  And then it disolves very quickly, so it’s virtually impossible to choke on them.  They also come in a wide variety of baby-friendly flavors, our favorite being sweet potato so far.

We’ve come up with a new function of the puffs though that I think the world should know about:  learning to count!  By accident, we discovered that if you lick the puffs they stick quite readily to the skin.  Observe….

We would never just randomly stick food to our baby’s face without a purpose, so we told him that was ONE.  One puff, Jack Henry.  There is ONE puff sticking to your forehead.

Let’s give him a second to grasp the concept…

Feel the one.  BE the one, Jack Henry!

Okay, now TWO….

Awww!  What a cute two!

Now THREE….

Uh-oh.  We have a problem with three.  Better move the whole operation…

There.  That’s better.  THREE…

I think he’s getting it!

I tell ya’, Sesame Street has nothing on us.  Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to go over some algebraic functions with Bonny Annie using spaghetti and meatballs….

 

Christmas in August (Mongolian Style!)

When Big D got back from Monogolia a couple of weeks ago, he came bearing gifts…

It was a lot of fun going through the stash because most of the items he chose had a story attached, and it was interesting to hear about the culture of Mongolia as told by its wares.

For one, it is hard to get good coffee in Mongolia.  Just ask Bernie, who is trying to run a good, quality coffee shop in its capital city.  They do have, however, MacCoffee, which is single cup of coffee (cream and sugar included) in a little packet.  All you do is add hot water.  It is pretty good.  Dirty Harry drinks them with extra cream, if that tells you anything.  MacHotChocolate and MacGreenTea is also available.  The kids love the chocolate, but the green tea strangely tastes a little like soap.

He also brought back authentic, non-soapy-tasting  green tea, cute little mugs, and a press/brewing thingy…

The thing is I’m not a huge fan of green tea.  Except for, I’ve now discovered, in this form…

Green tea Kit-Kats.  Bliss.  Once you get past the fact that your candy bar is neon green, it is bliss.  Pure bliss.  And sadly we haven’t discovered a way yet to get them here in the states.  So if any of you are traveling to Asia in the near future I will pay handsomely for a case of these babies.

Wool items are big in Mongolia.  Because, for one, they have a lot of sheep, and two, it’s cold most of the time.  Both of the kids got hats, which I forgot photograph, and I got a really cool shawl thingy (which was actually made from camel fur).  Big D got all the partners at his office traditional Mongolian hats.  There is one female partner, and she got this….

I’m sure she’s wearing it all over Nashville.

Above is a wool perpetual calendar.  The little gehr (Mongolian tent)  slides along to display today’s date.  And at the bottom it is adorned with pieces of sheep bones.  Monoglians do not waste, so when they have some spare bones, they hang them on their calendars.  Clara, by the way, is very plagued by those bones.  About every other day I catch her licking them.

A little wooden doll.  We also have a wrestler and a little clown-like person.  The above one is now in Indiana Mimi’s dining room.

Paper art is also very popular.

The above is an elaborate form of origami.  The figures are based on a popular Mongolian folk tale where the animals all want some kind of food at the top of this tree, so together they make a ladder to reach and share it.  Big D wanted it for his office as a reminder of team work and comraderie.  Well, somewhere on the trip back home, the rabbit decided he had had enough of team work and hopped down.  Big D thinks he can be glued back, but the little quartet is currently sitting on my mantle like that, which means they will probably be there, unglued, until 2013.  Because that’s how we roll.

This ornament was made from discarded beer bottles (thanks, Renee!!)…

It serves as a good reminder to pray for Mongolia because alcoholism is major problem in that country.

I saved the best for last….

A goat leg whip.  And I thought Clara was bothered by the bones.  This thing still has the fur!  It may very well be the solution to our house-training woes… (I jest.  Do NOT call PETA.)  Hey….Arby, maybe you could smuggle one of these into Wrigley Field some time…?

I’ll have more on Mongolia soon hopefully.  Between jet-lag and having to be back at work, Big D has been hard-pressed to get all of his photos in order.  I’m sure you’re just dying to know what he did with all those lights.  In the meantime, he has a good sampling of photos posted here for your perusal.

 

Where it ALL Happens…

(A quick side note before I jump right in here…..Sheesh!  I’ve been trying to blog since Sunday night.  We started back-to-school on Monday…more on that later…and I have not had a spare minute since it seems.  Sorry.  I think I am going to have to start getting up at 4:30am to blog.  Or maybe hire a nanny.  I’m not sure, but I’m going to find a way to be on here more regularly!  Promise!)

Okay, now on to business…

 

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This week the theme for the Not-Back-to-School-Blog-Hop is school rooms.  I have had a lot of fun perusing the pictures that everyone has posted of their rooms and such.

We are trying something new this year…the dining room table.

I have never liked the idea of doing school at the table.  Mainly because before Cap’n Jack Henry came along and took up a lot of our space, we had a whole bull-honkin’ school room.  I also didn’t want my dining room/kitchen space to look like this all day long….

But this is the way it has to be for right now.  As you can see, our living room (in the background) is home to much of Jack Henry’s “stuff”, so it just makes sense for us to be down here where he can be entertained.  The kids and I all have totes that we keep the books and manuals that we will need for the day, so it makes clean-up in the afternoons easy.

The above was a picture from our first day back to school.  It went fairly smoothly.  We only had two major meltdowns.  Jack Henry did great.  He spent part of his day at the table with us eating reading a book.

I found a little basket that we already had and filled it with small plastic cups.  It made a great table organizer for all the odds and ends that we need throughout the day.

Chalk?  Chalk?!  Why would we need chalk?  Well, because this messy area is going to be a wall chalkboard by next week…

Yep!  The whole wall…I can’t wait.  That area has been a dead zone in our house for a while, a total catch-all for clutter and junk.  Now, at least it will be functional.

Of course even with all the new bells and whistles of the dining room, the kids still find other places to hang out and do their work.

There’s our loft, complete with overflowing bookshelves and the comfy denim furniture…

Both of them have their own desks in their rooms where some work gets done…

Above is Bonny Annie’s desk, obviously.  I’m not the only pirate fan around here, you can see.  It’s in our blood. 

I’m sorry I can’t show you Dirty Harry’s desk.  It is…well…umm…dirty.

They also like to read in their beds.

Bonny Annie again.  I could show you Dirty Harry’s bed, but then I’d have to shoot you.

And then, finally, one of my students occasionally does his lessons on the sofa….

Sorta.

Good gravy.  I can NEVER send that one off to school, can I?

 

Straight Up! Paula is Leaving!

Being the AI fan that I’ve always proclaimed to be, I could not pass up the blog fodder of Paula Abdul’s departure from the show.

What?!  No Paula?!

I don’t think it’s even been 24 hours since her Twitter announcement, and already people are saying it may not be true.  That it may, in fact, be a ploy by her agents to garner more money.  Apparently $20 million is not enough to wear tight-fitting shiney clothing, sit in a swivel chair, take prolonged sips from your “Coke” cup, and make garbled critiques that nearly need a translator for a couple of hours a week.  Whatever.

Actually I don’t mean to bash Paula.  I love Paula!  Paula is one of the reasons that the show is so entertaining.  Without Paula, the show will not be as nice.  It would be less colorful.  It might even make sense.  And what fun is that?!

And please don’t even get me started on that new judge, Kara Something-or-other, whom I suspected from the beginning was Paula’s replacement.  I could say about one hundred things about how and why I don’t like Kara, but it all comes down to this:  she is boring.  She says basically the same things as Paula most of the time, only more logically and coherently.  Blah.  Who needs logic?  I much prefer the mayhem and mess that is Paula.

I have always said that I would not watch this show without Simon, and that is true.  But now I’m wondering if I’ll be able to watch it without Paula….?  And with Kara….?  I guess I’ll find out in January when the show airs.  IF it’s really true, and FOX decides against offering her more money to keep her from walking.

Give it to her FOX.  Let her be forever your girl…

…because that kind of entertainment is priceless.

Books, Books, Books!

Somehow in my sick, twisted, raised-in-the-80s-and-cut-my-musical-teeth-on-hair-bands mind, I imagine the above title to be sung to the tune of “Girls, Girls, Girls” by Motley Crue.  But you don’t have to do that to read this entry.  As a matter of fact, you’re probably better off NOT doing that at all.

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The above blog is hosting a back-to-school blog carnival of sorts, with this week being curriculum choices for this school year.  So, in the spirit of homeschool camraderie, I’m sharin’!

Bible:

Annaleigh is using the following…

It is a part of Sonlight’s Core 100, which I’ll talk more about in a minute.  Good grief….I think I need to probably do this Bible curriculum too.

Harrison will be using this…

His also came with Sonlight’s stuff, Core 3.  We’re studying American History this year, so the Indian prayer guide is a good tie-in, and I think I will read it aloud to both of them.

Math:

Annaleigh is taking math at her tutorial this year (Hallelujah!), and this is what they are using in this class…

Harrison, who is taking math with me ($#@&*@#!!!), will be using this…

He will be using the DIVE cd that goes with this edition, however, for the actual lessons.  So Lucky Me only has to grade his work.  And Lucky Him too.

History:

Like I stated earlier, we use Sonlightfor history, and this year we’re starting a two-year study of American History.  Annaleigh will be using the first half of Core 100

Sonlight uses mainly good literature instead of textbooks to teach various subjects, with a strong emphasis on chronological history.  We’ve used it since Annaleigh was in 2nd grade, and it is fantastic!  Core 100 is actually meant to be a year curriculum, but we’re dividing it into to two, simply because Harrison’s studies (core 3 and 4) take two years, and I like to keep them together for history as much as possible.  I’m just adding in extra stuff as I come across it for Annaleigh, which is easy with American history.

I’m very exctied to be able to use these with both kids for the next two years…

I found some cool study guides for these at Rainbow Resource that I’m going to use for Annaleigh as well.

Harrison is going to be using Core 3

We read most of these several years ago when Annaleigh went through this core, and I can’t wait to read them again….very good selections!

And then here are some extras that I’ve picked up here and there…

Science:

Annaleigh also takes science at her  tutorial.  Here is what she’s using…

She took the General Science course from Apologialast year as well, and these courses are highly recommended.  Annaleigh loved the course and claims she learned so much.  But perhaps that’s because I’m no longer teaching her for this subject….hmmmm.

Harrison and I are going to use this…

Normally, I use Sonlight for science as well, but I decided to take a break this year.  This curriculum goes through the seven days of creation, teaching scientific facts as you go along.  It also encourages notebooking, which I really love to do with the kids.

Language Arts:

Here’s a look at Annaleigh’s material….

She will do two lessons a day from the Easy Grammar, completing it in the first semester, and then we will spend the second half of the year going through the research paper book.  In addition, she gets a healthy dose of literature from her history curriculum that I’ve already covered.

Harrison will use these…

This will be the second year I’ve usedShurley English with him, and I like that it is all-inclusive.  It covers grammar, writing and vocabulary.  And….bonus….he really likes the program!

I use this for spelling for both of them…

Every year I always get them a new record book, which I think makes the program so much easier.  You don’t have to photocopy all of the forms from the book.  I also have the activity box, where your students can choose practice activities like writing their words in sidewalk chalk on the drive or singing them into a microphone.

Art:

Annaleigh will be using the one on the right and Harrison the other.  I have used various Barry Stebbing books before, andI have found them very user-friendly and thorough.

And I think that about does it!  Harrison will be using a transition handwriting book, which reinforces good printing skills the first half of the year, andthen covers beginning cursive in the second half.  Annaleigh also has a home ec program that she’s working through.  Both will continue foreign language studies:  Annaleigh in French using Rosetta Stone and Harrison in Spanish using Power-Glide.  PE will include TaeKwonDo and baseball.  Annaleigh also takes a drama class at tutorial.

I don’t have a music curriculum yet, and as you can tell by how I started this entry, I sorely need one.  Any suggestions?

Here is the calendar for this back-to-school carnival, in case you want to join in….

 


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