I’ve been neglecting this blog
lately. I feel like I’ve lost all sense of homeschooling rhythm. However, when
I read my previous entry and reflect on what she’s done in the meantime, I see
that we are chugging along albeit at a slower pace these days.
Her poem
for this week is Maya Angelou’s “Awaking in New York.” She has copied it in cursive into her
notebook. The goal is for her to read it
aloud a few times throughout this week.
She also did cursive copywork from Emily Dickinson’s poem “To Make a
Prairie” last week which is a very short poem.
Seneca’s
artist for this term is Henry Ossawa Tanner.
Here’s a link to the biography that she read on him. https://www.amazon.com/Henry-Ossawa-Tanner-Boyhood-Dream/dp/1593730926/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1523973307&sr=8-5&keywords=henry+ossawa+tanner
For
history, Seneca read Who Was Daniel Boone? from the Who Is/Was
series. She types her written
narrations. I’m fine with her doing it this way because typing is a much-needed
skill and this gives her good practice.
She prefers typing to writing. Her
Daniel Boone narration cracked me up. Here’s an excerpt of what she wrote: He built a coffin for himself because he knew
he was going to go soon. He would also polish it (which is very weird) he kept
it in his sons house, at age 84 he died his last words were quote “My time has
come.” end quote. He even said before he died that he had very good naps in it.
Joke time- can you imagine you knocked on some
old guys door and you kept knocking then he finally answers and he says “Sorry
I was late at coming to the door you see I’m old and my now life is really
awful and you see I’m going to die soon and so I built a coffin for myself and
I just was taking a nap in it.”
Please note that I am very aware
of the grammar mistakes. I’m sharing her original typed response. These written narrations help me to gauge how
well she is or is not applying grammar concepts. It also helps her to just get into the habit
of writing.
Seneca continues to work on
multiplication and three-digit addition and subtraction.
Our big event here was that she
was in a ballet production of The Wizard of Oz at the Opera House! The show was amazing. They brought in professional dancers to dance
the roles of Scarecrow, Tinman, and Cowardly Lion, but all of the other roles
were done by the students of the school.
It is so new that the choreographer (Vadim Fedetov) and the composer
were both able to come take a bow at the end of the show. Speaking of bows, Seneca missed the bow
because she hurt her toe in the second dance that she did. Everyone was so proud of her for holding it
in on stage and not letting on that she was hurt. Back stage the tears started, but seemed to
subside. It was when she got into my car
that the floodgates opened. I took her
to the hospital for an x-ray. Nothing is broken, but she did perhaps sprain it
so no dancing for a couple of weeks.
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