The Sowers Series: David Livingstone by John Hudson Tiner

Title:  David Livingstone, African Explorer (The Sowers Series).

Author:   John Hudson Tiner

Product Description:  This is a soft-cover, 191 page book describing the life and adventures of David Livingstone, missionary, scientist and explorer.  He determined to open up a path to the interior of Africa and persevred despite tremendious obstables.  This book gives insight into his spiritual life, as well as fascinating details of his journeys and relationships with the people around him. It was written to inspire young people and aquaint them with Christians of character from long ago. It includes some drawings and a map for reference.  For ages 9 to 14.

SDA Notes: I can’t think of something of particular interest here.

My Thoughts:  I read this aloud to our seven and nine year old girls and we all enjoyed it. It was riveting and gave us real insight into the hardships of live in the 1800’s and a great example of piety, perseverance and persistence. I would highly recommend it.

Review by:  Heather K.

Now it’s your turn. You can rate this product by hovering over the stars below.  Please feel free to add additional comments that may be helpful for others in making a decision towards using this product. 

Thanks Heather! We appreciate those that are helping with curriculum reviews. If you’d like to help out by writing one or more reviews, please email Melissa at adventisthomeducator@gmail.com

Curriculum Review: Christian Light Education, Grade 2, Math

On Thursdays, we will begin to share reviews of curriculum and other homeschooling products via our blog instead of the newsletter.  If you’d like to get notices of our reviews, please sign up to get the email updates.  You will need to click the blog tab at the top of our website and it will be in the side bar to sign up under “Don’t Miss New Posts”.

PRODUCT:  Christian Light 2nd Grade Math Curriculum

PRODUCT DESCRIPTION:  This curriculum uses 10 workbooks for the year, called “Light Units”.  Each one contains approximately 17 lessons.  There are two quizzes and one test for each unit.  Every lesson takes 30 minutes or less to complete and includes an interesting or unusual fact, a speed drill, flashcard and counting exercises. The lessons introduce one new concept and then reviews previously taught concepts. The explanations are simple and clear so that the student can often work without a teacher’s help.  The workbooks are printed in two colors:  black and green.  Each unit is on a particular theme, like “Spring”, for example.  The story problems in each lesson center on that theme.  The teachers guide includes some extra tips and also serves as the answer book.

SDA NOTES:  People are always modestly dressed in the pictures, and pictures may include women with head-coverings. There is nothing I have found offensive and plenty that is good and healthy in this curriculum.  There is a recipe in one of the lessons that even includes granola.

MY THOUGHTS:  We really like this curriculum. It is inexpensive and thorough. It seems to have enough practice on the various concepts, but not too much.  It is also very easy to understand and use.  When I have called “Christian Light” with questions, they have been very considerate, pleasant and helpful.

Review by:  Heather K.

Thanks Heather!  We appreciate those that are helping with curriculum reviews.  If you’d like to help out by writing one or more reviews, please email Melissa at adventisthomeducator@gmail.com

Now it’s your turn.  You can rate this product by hovering over the stars below.  Please feel free to add additional comments that may be helpful for others in making a decision towards using this product. 

Prayer for AHE and AHE Families

Hi everyone,

I’m not sure if you are all familiar with the book 40 Days;  Prayers and Devotions to Prepare for the Second Coming by Dennis Smith.  I am beginning this study with some ladies at church and since we do not have meetings coming up with specific people to be praying that God will reach to bring to the meetings, I instead am focusing my prayers on specific needs or requests that God is placing on my heart.

One of my Prayer Pages will be focused on AHE.  I am sharing with you all for a specific reason.  One, the book says we should alert those we are praying for.  🙂  Two, we should ask for requests concerning this person/request.

My focus on the AHE prayer page will be in the ministry of AHE.  I want to pray for the families (in general) that are homeschooling and trying to follow God’s calling in this area.  I want to pray for the ministry that we are reaching out in areas that God desires us to reach out.  I want to pray over AHE’s current ministries (the email lists, the facebook page, the website, the study board) to be sure it is as God would have it.  I have concerns that have been brought to my attention that I will be praying over, as well.

So, I am asking that you all, since you are all part of AHE (you are all Adventist Homeschoolers), that if you have concerns or thoughts concerning AHE that you feel free to bring them to my attention so that I can pray over them in the next 60 days (I give myself 2 months to cover my 40 days of prayer since I sometimes “miss a day” of the specific requests).   Please send those thoughts to Melissa at:  adventisthomeducator@gmail.com

Also, I am asking that if anyone wishes to join me in praying for the AHE ministry, that they feel free to join me.  I know that God has blessings to impart on AHE families and on the ministry itself if we would just ask and pray for God’s leading.  So please join with me if God places this on your heart.

Warmly,

~Melissa

Prayer for AHE Families

Dear Heavenly Father,

We thank you for your unending love.

We thank you for this season in which others are more open to hearing your message.  Please help us share that message this busy season with others that we meet.

Be with our homeschooling families as we work to teach and train our kids in what is right.

Give us strength.

In Jesus name we pray,

Amen.

Prayer for AHE Families

Dear Father in Heaven,

We thank you so much for your love and care over each of us.  We ask you to forgive us for the things that we fail in, give us strength to overcome with Your help.

Today Father, I especially pray for our homeschooling families that are reading.  May they have the Holy Spirit poured out into their homes, that their homes can heal and grow closer to you.  May your Spirit reign in the homes and give light to our communities across the world.  We look forward to the soon coming of Jesus; help us to be ready and to share with those around us.

Thank you Father for hearing this prayer.  In Jesus name, Amen.

T-shirt ART Project…CANCELLED… see comments below

We are going to host a fundraiser for AHE.  We will be selling some bags and t-shirts with a designed logo for the 2011-2012 school year.  To do this, we need your help!

T-shirt Art Project:

We will be accepting designs created from moms, kids, dads (grandparents, etc… ) from families that are currently homeschooling.

The design can be anything related to homeschooling, it doesn’t HAVE to be related to AHE.

The design should have a place for 2011-2012 dates on it somewhere, although it doesn’t need to be prominent.  *If not included in the design itself, it can be included in a tagline below the design such as “2011-2012 design by “Robbie”, homeschooler”.

There will be no prize, as indicated earlier.  Please see comments below.  We simply are not able to come up with art ideas on our own and hope that out of kindness of your hearts, you would like to join us in trying to find an appropriate design.  The art project gives your kids something to work on, for art, but we never meant it to be a competition of a sort.

Deadline for submissions:  SEPTEMBER 29th, 2011

Submit your art to:  adventisthomeducator@gmail.com

Have FUN with this!!!  🙂

A Lifestyle of Learning

This is the time of year when everyone’s talking about “back to school”. Even though every homeschool family is different, this is the time of year when homeschool forums and lists tend to ask the question “when does your school year start?”. One of the groups I’m on asked this, and when I replied that we school year round, I mentioned that we have a “lifestyle of learning”. I honestly don’t know where I learned that terminology, or if I made it up, but it fits our family beautifully. Someone asked what I meant by that, and how we accomplish that, and I answered her, but off-list (because it was too long an answer for the format of that list). And then someone else asked if I’d write it up as a blog post so she could see it too, and so . . . here I am . . . I didn’t really want to clean the kitchen this afternoon anyway LOL . . .

So, what is a lifestyle of learning? How does it look in our family? And how did we get here?

(I’d suggest getting yourself a nice big glass of sweet tea (or your beverage of choice) and settling in, because I can pretty much guarantee this is going to be a book . . . you know me!)

When we first made the tentative decision to homeschool, back when Sassy & MiniMe were about the age that Little Bit is now, I honestly didn’t realize that homeschool could be anything other than “school at home”.  I looked into the future and saw us getting cute little desks for the girls, setting up the spare room like a “school room”, or us all gathered around the dining room table doing workbooks and reading textbooks. I expected us to have set “school hours” and . . . the whole nine yards. And then I started researching homeschooling, and a whole new world was opened up to me . . . gradually, I came to realize that homeschool didn’t have to mean sitting at desks (or the table) doing workbooks. And I began to realize that we were ALREADY homeschooling our children, and could do more by just shifting our thinking a little bit. I started listening to my children’s questions, and trying to really answer them . . . when they asked “why”, if I knew the answer, I told them, in terms a preschooler could understand. If I didn’t know, sometimes, if we were home, we’d go look it up. Somewhere in there, they also learned that their Papa (my dad) is a treasure trove of information, especially about mechanical things and how things work. MiniMe is my “how does it work?” child (that part is NOT “MiniME”, it’s “MiniPAPA”) and by the time she was 3 or 4, she’d ask me how something worked, I’d tell her I didn’t know, and she’d say “I’ll ask Papa” . . .

Learning to HEAR your child’s questions, and help them to learn the answers is a huge step toward developing a lifestyle of learning.

Something that goes hand-in-hand with this is developing (or maintaining, because young children are born with this) a natural curiosity in your child. I’ll never forget when a friend of mine took her son to “get your child ready for kindergarten” parents’ meeting at their local public school. It was a wealthy area, and I guess it was not uncommon for a few children each year to have attended a Montessori preschool prior to going to the public school for kindergarten.  As a part of the meeting, this came up and the school personnel “jokingly” (I think?) said that they could always tell which children had attended a Montessori preschool because they were the ones wandering around the room touching everything and asking questions, “but we cure them of that” ha ha  . . . when my friend related this to me, I was appalled! Why would you want to CURE children of that natural curiosity and love of learning?!?!?!? On one level, I DO understand that in a classroom setting there’s a need for order and quiet and . . . sameness, but still, it’s so sad . . . GOD gave our children a love of learning. A curiosity to learn and know and figure things out, and the way we, as a society, for the last howevermany generations, “do school” SQUELCHES that! How sad!!!

And so, if your child is still young, and has the curiosity, ENCOURAGE it!! Take time to answer his millions of questions on a side note, I found, as my children were in the 4-5 age range, that they would ask questions over and over again, sometimes, if I thought they knew the answer, or if I didn’t know the answer, or if there wasn’t ONE answer, I’d push the questions back at them, “Why do YOU think it does that?” or “You tell me.” when they’d ask a question. Often they’d know the answer, or think about it and come up with a good answer, if there was a right/wrong answer and they were wrong, we’d discuss it further and I’d answer it. Sometimes we’d still end up looking things up if we didn’t know the answer.

So, how does this work for “school”? Now that they are older, we do “do school” to some extent. I wrote yesterday about our curriculum choices for this year, so right now our mornings are mostly spent doing Bible, History, Spanish, etc. Some days we sit at the dining room table, some days we sit around the family room. Some days (not right now when it’s a gazillion degrees outside, or rainy like it is today) we go out on the patio. . .  But I also recognize that learning happens other times.  It happens when we are at the grocery store and I let them figure out whether it’s cheaper to buy the prepackaged lettuce or a head of lettuce, or, alternately, which brand of tomato sauce is healthier. It happens when we drive and listen to Jonathan Park  or Your Story Hour. It happens when we have dinner with an old friend who mentions that she recently started keeping bees, and the girls proceed to bombard her with questions about beekeeping . . .

But another aspect of a lifestyle of learning is to recognize that, since learning happens all the time, it’s ok to NOT do the “schoolwork” part of our day sometimes.  If I only counted the things I listed in my curriculum post as “school” then we didn’t do much school last week when we were in Pittsburgh. But as you can probably tell from my blog posts about the trip, we DID do alot of learning. Since we don’t take a “summer break” from the schoolwork part of our day, it gives us freedom to skip it when we have better things to do. In the spring and fall when the weather is gorgeous I’ll often send the girls outside for the whole day. In the winter when we have a perfect sledding snow, or snowman snow, they play in the snow. But last winter when the snow was here forever and icy and no fun to play in, we certainly didn’t take “snow days” just to be taking snow days, we did school then, and took “sunshine days” when the sun came back.  When it’s a gazillion degrees outside we stay inside in the air conditioning and do our schoolwork. When we get a chance to go fun places and do fun things, we jump at them, that’s all learning too.

One thing that the question of “how do you have a lifestyle of learning” made me think about is how the girls take advantage of opportunities to learn. At Erie Zoo, when there was a zoo employee with some “props” near the Zebras, the girls went over and got to feel a zebra pelt, learn about how the stripes on different types of zebras are different. See a model of a zebra skull and learn how they use their teeth and tongue and stuff. The girls actively asked questions about each item, and even though this particular employee didn’t seem real thrilled to be there, the girls got alot of good information out of her. In most cases, we’ve found that employees/volunteers at zoos, museums, national parks, etc. are  thrilled to meet children who are interested in whatever the topic is. One of the employees at Williamsburg last time we were there, commented that she loved homeschool week because the homeschool children ask so many great questions. There’s always the few employees who are just there for a paycheck and try to brush off the questions, and sometimes I’ve stepped in and moved the girls along (sometimes I do that because there are other people waiting to ask questions too, although there have been some times when I’ve started to move them along and the (adults) waiting to ask questions have stopped me, they’re enjoying listening to the girls’ questions and the answers to those questions and are happy to keep listening. So it’s just a matter of being aware and figuring out what needs to happen each time).

A lifestyle of learning really boils down to adjusting your mindset. View life as a learning adventure, open your eyes to the learning that is taking place all around us. If your state requires it, DOCUMENT that learning that’s taking place everywhere (if not, just notice it and enjoy it, unless you want to document it for your own records). When your children are making up a story about when they’re grown up and ask you “Mommy, when I’m 25, how old will Little Bit be?” don’t just absentmindedly say, 19. Stop and ask them “how old were you when she was born? So What’s 25 minus 6?” and help THEM figure it out. Not only will it save you, later that day, telling them how old she’ll be when they are 30 and 40 and 50, it will also be a math lesson that is much more acceptable to a child than sitting down and doing a page of math drills. And occasionally, as needed, remind yourself that the school system does things the way they do, not because it’s the best learning environment, but because it’s the easiest way to keep a large number of children from creating total chaos given the adult/child ratios that exist there. Since you have a much smaller adult/child ratio (unless you’re the Duggars LOL. And Even then, since several of the older children are now “adults” they’re still better off than the average classroom), you don’t have to do things in the same way. You don’t have to have your child do a worksheet to “prove” that they read a book, you can just ask them, “so what did you think of that book?” chances are they’ll give you an ear-ful and you’ll certainly know if they read it or not, and probably if they understood it or not. It would be hard for a teacher to do that with each of the children in the classroom, and a “group discussion” allows the child who didn’t read to just sit quietly and the teacher might never notice. But you only have one, or a few, children who read the book, so just ask what they thought.

Similarly, I see no point in “reading books” beyond the “learn to read” stage. I make sure we have plenty of interesting looking books around and keep an eye on when/if/how much they’re reading. There’s no “assignment” to read, and they’re learning to love reading, which is the whole point. If we’re going in the car I’ll often suggest they bring a book along. Or if we’ll be somewhere that they’ll need to wait quietly for awhile. I can tell that their reading is improving by noting the difficulty of the books they read (not by using “reading books” just being aware. When Sassy recently read Eight Cousins with only minor questions about what words were or what they meant, I figure she’s doing fine for an 8 yr old. I’ll also sometimes have them read Bible texts and such aloud as part of Bible or their Sabbath School lesson, which also helps me gauge how they’re doing in reading.

So hopefully somewhere in all my babbling you learned abit about how to have a lifestyle of learning, whether you choose to send your children to public school or private school, or do school at home, or be as eclectic as us, you can still have a lifestyle of learning and help your children love learning now and for a lifetime.

Today’s post is courtesy of  LaRee .  You can read the post on her blog Broad Horizons.