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Showing posts from June, 2019

July - Independence Day Rabbit Trails

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Independence Day!  July is another vacation month where you might go visiting places that are steeped in American history.  But the first theme of the month is to learn why we declared independence from England in the first place. Here's a wonderful bunch of links to resources from The Homeschool Mom Jim Weiss recording about the Founding Fathers  - great audio to listen to in the car. Read Aloud for the whole family: George Washington's World A great independent read for teens is 1776 by David McCullough.  Reads like a novel!   If you need activity books in the car while driving to your destination spot, or just some quiet time activity, here's a kit from Dover Publications. My kids really enjoyed this CD Science The science behind fireworks! Or watch t his video (over an hour long ) and probably better for teens.  Count it towards your chemistry credits! Copy Work: The Declaration of Independence Quotes from our Foun

Cool Article on the Significance of Folklore

If anyone at all is focusing on fairy tales and folktales this June, here is a great article about why folklore is so important to reclaiming our culture from the many things that ail it!

Townsends Youtube Videos-Breakfast Video Recommendation

I am hooked on this youtube channel.   If you have any interest in how the colonists and pioneers lived back in the 18th century, this is your channel.  The host Don Townsend actually runs a store for living history re-enactors. He loves to try to cook the way they did back then and decipher the recipes so we can see (and he can taste!) how the food really was prepared with all the steps that went into it all.  But he also talks about every aspect of life back then from being a sailor on a ship, to camping out in the wilderness.  Usually, at least once a week he puts up a video. Every Friday he has a live stream which I guess goes on for an hour or more - that might not be so kid friendly.  Not because the topics are un-family friendly.  Don's a super nice, sweet guy.  But the format, while amusing and interesting to adults, might not please children as much.  But the regular videos will probably really appeal to kids.  And I, as an adult woman, find the whole thing so fascinating.

My Fundamentals of Unschooling

Here's a link to a list I call Fundamentals of Unschooling.    I truly believe that if you abide by these, your children will have a wonderfully rich education!

Theology of Unschooling - treating your child as a guest and the character building benefits of chores

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I remember encountering the idea that the unschooling parent should treat their child like a guest.  Children were not chattel to be lorded over, the thinking went.  Instead, they should be treated with deference.  You don't demand your guest do daily chores so why would you of your child?  If the guest chooses they can help out to be polite and so it should be with your child.  Because somehow asking your child to do chores is too authoritarian. I do think many parents attracted to unschooling in a radical way have their own problems with authority and also have a romanticized elevation of 'autonomy' as being the highest good.  And because they see any incursion of the child's autonomy as unjust in some way, they get to these really weird places where they think treating their own flesh and blood as a 'guest' is somehow more loving and respectful.  And also, they impose an unrealistic idea of autonomy on an immature and dependent child; a person in a stage of