Archive for May, 2007

For My SoCal Readers: Notice of Missing Teen

May 27, 2007 @ 8:09 am | Filed under:

The 16-year-old daughter of a San Diego County homeschooling family has been missing since May 19th. Helena appears to have left voluntarily with an unknown person or persons, possibly someone she met via the internet.

Ali
Her family is desperate to find Helena, a much beloved daughter and sister. They have set up a website to help spread the word. Because she is classified as a runaway, law enforcement agencies do not do the kind of widespread searching that would be the norm for a kidnapping case. Helena’s family, however, believes she was lured from home; she left behind her iPod, wallet, phone, jacket, and other personal items.

The family is organizing a Missing Child Team in the San Diego area. Please visit the Find Helena website for more information, and if you are too far away to help by distributing flyers, your prayers for Helena’s safe recovery will surely be appreciated.

“Can We Really Educate Every American Child?”

May 24, 2007 @ 11:47 pm | Filed under:

So asked Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, who was a guest on The Daily Show last night.

Her manner was quite charming, but I was really frustrated by her answers to Jon Stewart’s serious (if snarkily delivered) questions.

Jon Stewart: What’s been so controversial? Is the idea of No Child Left Behind that’s so controversial, is they say that everybody now is moving the schools just for the tests, and they’re sort of ignoring the other issues in education?

Margaret Spellings: There’s some of that. People say that we’ve narrowed the curriculum, but I know that if we’re not teaching kids how to read, they can’t do social studies or history, or any of that other stuff, so that’s important.

I had to smile at this, recalling my then-four-year-old Beanie recounting with great animation the so-called conquering of Britain by the Roman emperor Caligula, a year before she could read. I know what Secretary Spellings means, or at least I think I do, when she says kids "can’t do" history if they can’t read, but her statement points to the tremendous difference in how the Department of Education understands education and how, say, Charlotte Mason understood it, or how most of the home educators I know understand it.

Secretary Spellings is working from within a framework that says good reading skills are the first step to becoming educated. I’m coming from the opposite direction: what comes first is not reading, but being read to. I really wanted to jump up and call out to her: Couldn’t you just try it? Try reading the children excellent literature? Lots and lots of it? Put the tests away for a year and just see what happens when you read to them a great deal of fine prose and poetry?

But back to the interview.

MS: The other thing is this notion that, I mean, can we really educate every American child? I mean, we’re so far away from doing that, it’s not even funny. Half of our minority kids aren’t getting out of high school on time. Most of the jobs, the things that are going to make this country and them successful, require a couple years of college these days. So we have to close this gap, because—you talk about haves and have nots—

JS: Why is it so hard to get a handle on? Education—why is it such a bedeviling problem, not just for this administration, but for the administration before—for everybody. What is—is there something inherent in the system? If you’re the—forget about the Secretary of Education. If you’re the Education God. You could change one thing. You could smite the teachers’ union, if you wish—

Secspellings
(Margaret Spellings makes a whimsical "ooh, there’s an idea" face, but says she is kidding, of course.)

JS, continues: You could make it rain frogs, which would just be cool…But what would you do, in a perfect world? What is the most vexing part of this whole situation?

Interesting question. If the Secretary of Education had unlimited power and could change any one thing about public education in this country, what would it be? What does she see as the biggest problem facing our educational system? Any guesses?

MS: Low expectations. What the President calls "the soft bigotry of low expectations."

Jon Stewart seemed as frustrated by this answer as I was.

MS: No, seriously. We have to expect more from our kids. And we have lowered the bar and lowered the bar. Kids can and will rise to the occasion. Kids are bored in high school, they’re not being prepared, and we just have to pick up the—

JS: But who is it that expects less? Is it the parents expect less? Or the teachers expect less? Because in the same way that you said you don’t know a parent yet that would opt their kid out [of No Child Left Behind], I don’t know a parent who would ever say, "Hey, if he gets D’s, he gets D’s, whaddaya gonna do?" You know, everybody really wants the best for their child. Who’s got, who’s got the low expectations?

MS: I think a lot of times the system does. Especially for kids who have been "left behind" before. You know, frankly, poor kids. And that’s what we have to be about. If we’re going to continue to lead the world, we’ve got to educate everybody.

Is it just me, or is this a maddening response? If the U.S. Secretary of Education could make one vast, sweeping change to improve the system, the problem she would tackle would be the system’s low expectations?

What does that even mean? It’s nonsensical!

Here’s the entire clip, if you’d like to watch it:

 

CoH Correction and LibraryThing

May 24, 2007 @ 8:11 am | Filed under:

Just discovered a broken link in the Carnival—my apologies, T!

To read T.’s interesting comparison of Readerware and LibraryThing, click here. These are both tools for cataloguing and organizing your books. I’ve been slo-o-o-wly entering my book collection into LibraryThing over the past few months. (Here’s what I’ve done so far.) Jane helps me by reading off the book titles or ISBNs. I had this thought that we’d enter one shelf’s worth of books a day, but that was about 14 days and 1.5 shelves ago. Whoops.

T. is using an electronic scanner gizmo called a CueCat (available for $15 from LibraryThing) to enter her books into the online databases and is then exporting the files into her own Excel file. This CueCat thingie looks pretty nifty. I just might have to fork over the fifteen bucks to give it a try. I’m also wondering if a certain father-type person in, say, a suburb of Denver has one yet. Because, you know, a certain daughter-type person on the West Coast notes that a certain father-oriented holiday is coming up…

Linked Out

May 22, 2007 @ 9:11 am | Filed under:

Whew! The Carnival of Homeschooling is up and running at Lilting House. My clicky-thumb is tired.

But a few quick announcements before I run away from the computer:

Dawn has put out the call for submissions to her next Field Day, the delightful nature-study carnival she hosts at By Sun and Candlelight.

Let’s celebrate these final weeks of late spring,
and share the world of nature around us. What’s happening in the
garden, woods, fields, by the pond or the shore? How about through your
windows or just a step or two outside your back door? Nature happens
everywhere, in ways big and little. What does late spring look
like where you live? I hope you will consider telling us, for our next
Field Day will run on Thursday, June 7th, rain or shine!

Submissions are due by June 6th. Details at Dawn’s site.

Best of Bonny Glen

May 17, 2007 @ 7:16 pm | Filed under:

(back to main page)

My most popular post ever: “Every Face I Look at Seems Beautiful” (the patience post)

for followups, click on the patience tag

Our funniest posts

Posts on Family:

Giving Thanks for Chemo
Guitar-Playing Husband
The Quiet Joy
Who’s on Surp?
The Green Ways of Growing
A Word Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words
The Leukemia Notebooks
Lessons Learned During Scott’s Absence

Ain’t That America
The Junkyard Dogs
Our Backyard Gave Us a Going-Away Present
Helices (the Lemon Grove mummy post)

Posts on Home Education:

Tidal Homeschooling
Bubble Gum Math
Why I’m Too Busy NOT to Homeschool
Strategic Strewing
Finding Your Family’s Nature Spots
DUCK! (on habit training)

Around the World with Mr. Putty
Butterflies, or: The Benefits of Strewing
Home Education: Delicious and Nutritious
Nuts, Bolts, and Pegs
The Importance of Atmosphere

Articles on Rabbit-Trailing:

Life on the Trail
Chain Chain Chain
Rabbit-Trailer’s Soundtrack
Strawberries
Favorite Fictional Families


Little House Unit Studies:
(in progress)

The Martha Years
The Charlotte Years

Comments are off

A Low-Tide Day

May 17, 2007 @ 2:34 pm | Filed under:

We all slept late this morning. Scott had taken Jane to a Padres game last night, which pushed bedtime back for everyone, and I don’t think I opened my eyes before 7:30. Nice.

The baby was sorely in need of a bath. She hates baths. I wound up with three other kids in the bathroom trying to coax a smile out of our screaming princess; she is such a jolly baby that it tears everyone up to see her in distress. But she survived, and it turns out her feet are actually a sort of pink color. Who knew?

Jane kept an eye on the two little ones while I grabbed a shower for myself (bless you, Jane). When I got out, I found Rose tucked into my bed, reading Jane of Lantern Hill—a family favorite, and the book from which Jane gets her blog alias. She looked so comfy I would have liked to climb right in beside her and possibly steal the book. The part where Jane encounters the circus lion? It makes me laugh out loud, every single time.

But the baby summoned me to the living room, where I found Jane sprawled out with A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Some of her best friends have just completed a production of this play, and Jane wants to learn some bits by heart so as to join in the quoting fun the next time she sees them. We divvied up the parts and read a few scenes. Wonderboy perched between us, our own "little tricksy Puck," and amused us by echoing random bits of dialogue.

Titania: Full often hath she gossip’d by my side,
            
And sat with me on Neptune’s yellow sands—

Puck: YELLOW!

Titania: Marking the embarked traders on the flood—

Puck: YELLOW!

My apologies, Mr. Shakespeare.

During all this, Beanie was The Flash up and down the hall about eighty times. She is very fast.

Then Rose finished her book and turned The Flash into a penguin for reasons unknown to me. Penguins romped in the girls’ room until lunchtime. The baby ate toast crumbs off the floor, and possibly an ant.

Jane worked on the songs she is preparing for her piano guild audition. Is it called an audition? Testing? I don’t know the terminology. I do know that there is a Highland Jig kicking its heels all around my brain, over and over and over.

All the Midsummer Night’s Dream enthusiasm (thank you, Alice!) spilled into a debate over which of Noel Streatfeild’s Shoes books has that play in it. Jane insisted it was Ballet Shoes, and she was right. Naturally this sent the day’s make-believe careening in a new direction, and I believe that Posy and Petrova Fossil are currently practicing their fairy roles in the room that was so recently Antarctica, while  the oldest Fossil girl, Pauline, is putting the finishing touches on a purple crocheted slipper. Puck is supervising. He thinks she should add some YELLOW!