homeschooling · learning · parenting

But really, how do I do this?

My life these days is a work in finding a new normal.  After a very difficult pregnancy, I am exhausted.  I guess I did not expect my body to respond this way.  I usually bounce back from pregnancy and c-sections rather quickly…I usually feel so good afterwards.  This time has been different…bed rest I suspect is the culprit.  I feel as if I cannot get a handle on my days yet.  Will I ever be able to manage again?   I say all this to say this,

“Sometimes I do not get it ALL done.  In fact, sometimes this homeschool mom barely scrapes by.”

I have been here before, and I wonder at how I could so easily forget the very thin feeling of barely scraping by.  And then it comes to me.  Instead of feeling a sense of lack, I should be offering thanks.  I know from experience that everything comes together in time and that my anxiety is based on lies…I cannot do this, everything is falling apart, I am not enough.  It is my need to push and perform that is driving this anxiety.  My husband tells me I am beautiful and that I am doing a great job.  Why don’t I believe him?

Today I am trying to give thanks for this very special season and to listen to my husband.  I give thanks for this dirty house and piles of laundry…and school books everywhere…and lunch left out on the bar…and thank you notes to write…and clothes that don’t fit… and pain and exhaustion…and all the wonderful undone of my life right now.  Giving thanks truly is the first step to the question, “How do I do this?”

How do I do this? How do I homeschool in the midst of finding a new normal?  I don’t quite know yet, but I do know what I have done in the past.  I imagine some things will change.  Below is a list of things I do, and some very important things I do not do.  Your situation is different than mine.  Maybe its a move, or unemployment, or illness, or burnout, or whatever.  Whatever you are facing, the task of homeschooling in the midst of daily life can at times be very challenging.  I hope this list is encouraging, perhaps personal, and most importantly honest. Do not give up…I’m not.

Like my daddy used to tell me, “Mandy, you ain’t got no shine.”  His reference to my tomboy undone style was not a criticism.  It was his way of saying he liked my wild hair, and Wrangler blue jeans, and unpolished manners, and happy- to- be- near- you friendliness.  I am getting in touch with that girl today.  There is something very attractive about a woman who seems a little undone, real, gritty, and undeniably happy.  My life is not always picture Pinterest pretty…in fact it never is…but it is red dirt real.  Here is how I do it…the list could go on for miles, below is just a few of the highlights.  

Here is the real dirt…

What I Do…

  • I do the next thing.  That means I just keep going… doing the next task in front of me… trying not to worry about the future.  I say to myself, “This is my task, I do it unto the Lord.”
  • I get up early…when I don’t I see a marked difference in our day.  Getting up early changed my life for the better, and is key to how I get things done…especially homeschooling.
  • I pray alot…the kind of prayer that accompanies me as I go about…while I’m cooking, folding laundry, teaching a reading lesson, playing at the park, or changing soiled sheets in the middle of the night.
  • I keep close to my mother and listen to her advice.
  • I go to the hermitage and talk with my Spiritual Father.
  • I buy quality books and avoid high maintenance curricula.  I have studied and researched to find simple and beautiful books and teaching materials that do not overwhelm me or my kids.  I love to KEEP THINGS SIMPLE. We are a hybrid … a mixed bag of Charlotte Mason/ relational/ unschooling/classical/ Montessori/ style homeschoolers.  I have no idea how to classify what we do, but it works.  
  • I go on dates with my husband.  This is crucial for me and my husband.
  • I ask my husband’s advice and try to listen to his practical solutions to problems that arise.  His level headed, but sometimes difficult to accept advice helps me to keep things real.  He is my number one go to for help.
  • I have one good friend that I share my days and secrets with.  I do not have the energy or time to maintain more friendships, and this makes the one I have very special and enjoyable to me. 
  • I write.  Whether I am blogging, journaling, sketching a scene for my novel, or just running a dialogue in my head, I am always writing.  I sometimes have a hard time justifying the time I spend blogging, but so far I have managed to keep my blogging about writing which is why I began blogging in the first place.  Writing helps me wrap my brain around my life and inspires me to live intentionally.  It helps me be a better mother, wife, and person.  I organize my thoughts when I write, and this frees me to homeschool from my heart.  Writing is crucial for me.  
  • I schedule schoolwork by the week and not the month or year.  I realize that this is impossible for some people, but it is the only system that works for me.  In fact, I may not write anything down at all until after we have done it.  My curriculum planner is more like a journal…it gets filled up as we accomplish things.  I have grade level book lists, math and grammar spines, and a general idea of the seasonal projects I would like to do, and then I just go about doing the next thing.  This gives me the freedom to follow my kid’s interests and accommodate special needs.  I love this way of homeschooling.
  • I enrolled my older kids in an online homeschool program.  This has been wonderful.  It was time to let them go a little bit so that I can concentrate on the littles.  For high school subjects that are very teacher intensive I purchase curriculum that comes with lectures, solution manuals, and built in schedules and grading.  This is great for math and science.  Take a look at DIVE.
  • I drink coffee…
  • I cook to unwind…
  • I listen to all kinds of music…
  • I laugh out loud and try not to take myself so seriously…
  • I dance in the kitchen with my kids…
  • I say sorry when I am wrong (and that is often).
  • I take naps when I can.
  • I plan meals a week at a time and shop with a grocery list.  I cannot manage once a month shopping, even if it would save me a weekly trip to the store.  I have grocery lists and menus set up in Excel, and I print and highlight.  This helps alot!  (This is an area where I am struggling right now.)
  • I never expect the laundry basket to be entirely empty…it NEVER is!
  • I plan dinner at breakfast and get it started.  (Another routine that I am struggling to resume.)
  • I expect the unexpected and I try to be at peace with interruptions and distractions.
  • I try to be gentle.

    What I don’t do…
     
           

  • I do not schedule my day in half hour segments…please spare me the guilt.  I just follow a rhythm of morning, afternoon, and evening routine.
  • I do not knit or sew, or hang around people that do…just joking, but really I am not cut from the crafty mold.  My mom, the artist, gave up on me long ago.  I am a lost cause.
  • I do not own an iPhone, iPad, iPod, or any other handheld device beginning with i.  If I did, I would be the worst addict of all.  Better keep the cookie in the cookie jar.
  •  I do not cook gourmet organic meals.  I love to cook, and I love to eat.  However, I do not stress about organic.  I pray this prayer instead, “ if they should drink anything deadly, it will never harm them.”  I buy lots of fruit and veggies, and I cook healthy meals the best I can.  Regular veggies are better than no veggies, right?
  • I do not apologize for not answering the phone during the daytime rush hours.
  • I do not pretend to know the first thing about extreme couponing…I tried it once and ended up in the hole.
  • I do not give grades…we just keep at something until it is mastered.
  • I do not read blogs that make me feel like pond scum…you know the ones.  If they ain’t real..they ain’t worth my time.
  •  I do not ask advice from people who have no clue of my situation.
  • I do not exercise in the wee hours of the morning…I feel like active housework is all I can manage right now.  In time, I would like to resume my neighborhood walks.
  • I do not micro-manage my two older students.  They basically handle their own schedule and online classes.  This gives me the opportunity to be with my littles.
  • I do not put make-up on everyday.  In fact, I have become a make-up minimalist over the years.  I rarely wear it, and when I do it consists of mascara, a little cover up under the eyes, a soft blush, and a shear lip gloss. 
  • I do not make my own bread.  I make artisan bread, an occasional sour dough bread in the bread machine, and quick breads, and that’s about the extent of my homemade bread making.  
  • I do not do co-ops.  We have in the past, and they were wonderful when all of my kids were younger in regard to socialization and fun.  However, I cannot manage teaching a class outside my own home at this stage in our family, and the tuition based co-op near us has not offered a class selection that I deemed worthy of our precious time.  Co-ops are very time and energy consuming, and I always weigh if the cost is worth the effort.  In the past it has worked for us, but right now I have decided to stay home and spend my energies elsewhere.
  • I do not keep a perfect house.  I like to get up and put order to the house before school starts.  This seems to frame our day and keep things running smoother.  In times past I have set up a daily cleaning schedule, and this worked great for a season.  However, I find that we have come into a stage where I will need to do a once a week cleaning on Saturday, and leave the weekdays open.  I want to be available as this is vital to relational learning, and this is impossible if I am anal about housework and order.  I have to accept this new normal. 

I could go on and on, but really anyone can homeschool, and homeschool well.  I get comments all the time from mothers who claim that they could never homeschool.  I believe them, if their image of homeschooling is this perfect little home, with perfect little children, a perfect little school room, a perfect supportive husband, and perfect days filled with learning and adventure.  NOBODY can do that!

However, anyone can share their days with their children…anyone can live life with their children…anyone can learn and grow as a homeschool family…anyone can DO THIS!  The trick is to look to the Lord and keep grounded in the heart.  Never compare, and never assume that life is perfect for any homeschool family.  We all struggle, and we all have areas where we shine.

Welcome Home Wednesdays

           

    books · faith · homeschooling · learning · parenting

    Reading, Writing, & Arithmetic

                   

    Education as Communication          

    As my children grow I am concerned about the mind and how it processes information and how it is developing.  A child that has no academic skills can scarcely have a decent conversation or express himself properly.  Academic education is essential in the arena of communication.  To begin the wonderful process of learning to communicate, I concentrate on awakening the mind with great literature, lots of outside in nature discovery, many conversations, playing nursery rhyme games, learning to read independently, and learning to do simple math.  I also use dictation as a pathway to writing.  I believe in an easy approach, very gentle, and free to adjust to the needs of the young child.  If a child’s life is full of all the things I have written about in this series, I believe this experience is quite enough.

    This foundation of reading, writing, and arithmetic continues even as my children get older.  I feel that if they are reading good books and having great conversations about the books, learning to communicate with sentences, and if they are progressing in their understanding of arithmetic this is more than enough.  The extra classes get swept up in all the conversations of life and left for the child to pursue as their interest leads them.  I may introduce science and history and art as we go along, but I try to always keep it organic to what we are experiencing in literature or our daily life.

    Here are some my favorite resources for reading:

    The Ordinary Parent’s Guide to Teaching Reading  
    This phonics based reading program is absolutely my favorite homeschool resource.  The pages of this book are worn, stained, written in, and filled with memories and reminders.  I have taught three children to read with its simple and straight forward approach.  No bells and whistles, just plain old reading instruction.  I look forward to using the same book with Elinor, age 3, starting this year.

    Reading Strands
    This is published by the same people who offer the Writing Strands curriculum.  I do not use the writing curriculum, but the Reading Strands book is a great resource for the Socratic method of discussing literature.  It gives great examples of literature conversations, and it also has wonderful reading lists for all ages.  I return to this book all the time.

    Caldecott Medal Winners
    Nothing is better than building a great picture book library in the home.  Even my older girls still love a good picture book.  I also have added many Orthodox picture books to my growing collection.  Reading aloud to young children is a great privilege and joy.  This Caldecott list is a great place to start.

    Newberry Medal and Honor Books
    Some of the greatest books I have ever read were written for young adults.  This list is an invaluable resource for those who want to expose children to life changing literature.

    The New Lifetime Reading Plan
    I bought this book, I think it is the first edition, for myself when I was twenty years old.  I have referred to the concept many times.  Over a lifetime I plan to read and read well.  I use this persuasion on my children.  If you are going to read, read well.

    A few writing resources:
    In this section I have not bought any resources that I think are any better than dictation and copywork.  I use the Bible, a child’s own thoughts, lines from literature, and whatever comes to me to help children begin the awesome journey of sentence writing.  All writing requires is one well put together sentence after another.  As the child grows in confidence and creativity the sentences become paragraphs, and paragraphs become stories.  Essay writing comes afterward when a child has had enough life experience to have an opinion, to stake a claim in the world of ideas and argument.  This Rhetoric stage requires more instruction.  I am yet to have a resource list for this stage.  So far, I have used the five paragraph essay, and basic story writing instruction mostly found on the internet.   

    A few arithmetic resources:
    Blocks, beads, M&Ms, pennies, and other fun things to count.  Calendars, tally marks, and counting the inventory in the pantry.  Colors, shapes, and seeing them everywhere.  All this stuff is free and easy to teach a young child.  Why buy a curriculum?
     
    Math-U-See
    AS the child grows, but is still very young…2nd grade… I like to introduce adding and subtracting.  Keeping with my foundation of math in the real world, I like Math-U-See as a spine.  It is just what it says, it is math you can see.  I use the manipulatives consistently, and I love how it teaches place value.  Numbers are abstract and very foreign to the concrete brains of youngsters.  This curriculum does a great job of making numbers tangible and fun for young mathematicians.

    Key Curriculum Workbooks 
    My kids have loved these workbooks, and I guess I would pay a lot for them.  Fortunately they are very economical.  The price is not reflective of the value.  Again, the approach is simple and the content is engaging.  I have been pleased at how well my oldest daughter learned fractions, decimals, and percents through this curriculum.  She even did their Algebra workbooks..can’t complain there either.  My second daughter finished fractions and the process was almost painless.  I was a little worried with her because she does not like Math all that much.  Love these workbooks!

    Orthodox Homeschooling
    faith · family · homeschooling · learning · parenting

    Wanted: Constantinople Catechism

    “I am earth and ashes.” Genesis 18:27

    My journey to Orthodoxy was a rocky road.  I was a devout Catholic, enjoying the security of certainty. There is something very spiritually cathartic about a Pope, infallibility, and answers to almost every life question.  I was sold, and I spent my days trying to find out how I could be a better Catholic.  This led to a type of surrender of conscience that at times was very difficult.  (Very loving and good Catholic friends would tell me that my struggle in this area was because my conscience was defiled, or not informed.)  Not that the Catholic Church ever led me into uncharitable waters, or immorality.  But, what did happen to me was a loss of heart.

    As I have tried to emphasize in earlier posts, the experiences that I write about are my experiences.  I know many Catholics who did not and do not have my experience, and therefore my statement is not a judgement of Catholicism.  It is just my story.

    After feeling this emptiness for some time, I began to examine the way I was catechizing myself and my children.  It was here that I think my true conversion to Orthodoxy began.   

    I usually hate to give definitions of words as a proof of my opinion, but in this case I could not resist.  So here it is, a definition of catechism:

    1: oral instruction
    2: a manual for catechizing; specifically : a summary of religious doctrine often in the form of questions and answers
    3 a : a set of formal questions put as a test

       b : something resembling a catechism especially in being a rote response or formulaic statement

    I always start with the question, “What is my purpose?”  So in this case I asked the question, why do I desire to catechize myself and my children?  For me the answer was this, to know and love God and experience Him in the heart.  Now, the word know here is inadequate and somewhat misleading.  It’s just the only word I can use that I understand.  This knowing is not the kind that would make me or my children superior to others or equal to God.  It is more about a warm sense of love that abides in the heart.  A real presence of love, humility, and simplicity.  Can a man or woman be a friend of God?  Can he/she know Him in a way that is genuine and life giving?  I think so, and I believe that if the goal of catechism is not primarily centered around repentance and humility it will puff up and make me and my children unbearable and fierce.  And this is the opposite of my original desire.
      
    And that leads me to the definition of catechism as defined by the online Merriam Webster Dictionary.  Just listen to these statements, “a manual”, “a summary”, “questions and answers”, “a test”, “rote response”, and finally “formulaic statement”.  Do these statements in anyway conjure a feeling of repentance, warmth, love, friendship, heart, simplicity, or most importantly humility.  Not for me.

    About a year before we converted to Orthodoxy, I abandoned the traditional catechism methods of the Catholic church, the Baltimore Catechism and my personal choice of the Faith and Life Series.  I just couldn’t do it anymore, and I was very sad about it.  The spiritual formation of my children is very important to me, and I was at a loss as to how I was going to teach my children about God and the Church without these resources.  But, the fruit I began to see was not worth the security of certainty.  My children and I advanced greatly in our knowledge, knowing rote answers and becoming increasingly smarter.  But, as I mentioned before it was at a loss of heart.  We were becoming defenders of orthodoxy and tradition, but I was not seeing the humility I desired in myself or the simplicity and wonder I wanted for my children.        

    The Orthodox are not insulated from this loss of heart.  If we take literally the definition of Orthodoxy as “right belief”, we run the risk of seeking the right in everything…and the wrong.  Orthodoxy is not about right and wrong, formulated answers, and rote responses with the criteria of being “orthodox”.  There is no manual of Orthodox belief that constitutes the wholeness of our faith.  The wholeness of our faith is contained in the Life of the Church, which is the Life of Christ.  The best way to catechize an Orthodox child, or adult for that matter, is framed in three words, “Come and see.”

    For me, very little formal instruction is needed.  When we come and see it is essential that the participation be dynamic, and a natural extension of the domestic Church.  When prayer, fasting, and almsgiving are the active disciplines of discipleship in the home they serve as fuel to the fire, and Church becomes the consummation of a whole life lived in Christ.  The Church’s liturgical and sacramental life is essential in the recovery of heart, the discovery of heart.  The disciplines of the Church are only tools to obtain union with God. It is grace, it is all grace.

    Why do I need a manual when I have the liturgical and sacramental life of the Church?  Why do I fear that my children don’t “know” enough about their faith?  Why do I look for the wrong kind of fruit?  Because as I have mentioned before, I am prideful.  For some reason my children’s knowledge or lack of knowledge is a reflection on me.  It is also coming from the fear that if my children do not know how to defend their faith with facts and irrefutable statements they will somehow loose their faith when they go out into the real world.  But this kind of knowledge is not a defense against unbelief.  Believe me, I know. I am living proof that intellectual knowledge about my faith is no match for the unbelief that is in the world today.  

    In reality, catechism in the Orthodox homeschool curriculum has very little to do with rote answers and manuals.  For me it has everything to do with the heart and a progression in virtue.  All that being said, I do trust that there is a way to catechize my children.

    The Life of the Church:

    • Go to Church.  The hymns, the homilies, the icons, they all inform and enlighten.
    • Follow the Church Feasting and Fasting calendar.  
    • Participate in the sacraments.
    • Pray, Fast, and give Alms.
    • Read the Scriptures with my children.
    • Memorize prayer, especially the Lord’s Prayer, the Trisagion, and the Psalms.
    • Read the Lives of the Saints.
    • Keep Icons ever before our eyes and pray with them.
    • Have alot of conversations about all of the above.  

    And that’s all, that is all I need.  If I am desperate for a Constantinople Catechism…there it is.  This is my belief.
      

    At the beginning of this post I mentioned that my conversion to Orthodoxy was a rocky road.  It was my husband who came first.  He lead me to books, to websites, and we had many theological arguments.  I was a hard nut to crack, even with my doubts and struggles.  However, one evening we attended a talk that was held at a local Orthodox parish.  The minute I stepped into the Narthex I felt something happen.  My heart leaped within me.  I knew I would never return.  I had studied the major theological differences between the two Churches, but I was tired of changing churches like I changed my sheets.  It was my heart that I desired.  It was God I longed for.  In the Orthodox Church I found that place, I found my home, and ultimately my heart.  

    And this is everything I want for my children. 

    Orthodox Homeschooling
    faith · family · homeschooling · learning · parenting

    Conversation: The new worksheet.

    There are a few kinds of worksheets that I think are worth the ink and tree it takes to print them.  One is the kind with math facts on it. (I use grade level math curricula.) Another is a copy work or handwriting worksheet or workbook.  I add another to the list when my kids get older.  I use parsing and diagramming worksheets in workbooks, or maybe a compact grammar workbook to reinforce writing.  But for the most part, most of our learning is done through conversation.

    I say conversation is the new worksheet because I think more and more people in the homeschooling world are discovering the benefits of conversation as the best means of bringing about true education.  Worksheet in this post is just a symbolic way to represent my opinion of what modern education has become.  And by no means do I claim that conversation as a means of education is new.  It’s only new in that I, a  modern educator, am unfamiliar with this ancient method.  I am learning, and I continue to discover new things in this area. 

    In a house full of girls there is no shortage of words, and sometimes I wish everyone would just be quiet.  But, I would not change this very organic way of learning.  In a way, conversation is more taxing, but in another sense it is more natural, therefore it is less stressful.  Being engaged as a mother is very time consuming and hard emotionally.  It requires an active and intentional lifestyle on my part to be able to engage my children in conversations that are instructive and meaningful.  I cannot check out, in any way.  I, as well as my husband, must be on a journey of discovery and enlightenment.  And out of this wellspring comes a dynamic and active learning environment.  Ultimately our real life and academic life are not separate.  They exist together creating a type of synergy that results in a knowledge of self and our world.

     I do not think this kind of learning is possible without the acknowledgement that man is a created body and soul.  And this is where I have a problem with public education.  When the public intrinsically denies the unseen, when it denies the created nature of both the visible and invisible, I believe it fails in educating children.  The conversation of life cannot happen because of this denial.    

    The goal today is to teach children what to think, not how to think.       

    Conversation is the way we learn how to think.  It is a lifestyle.  No subject is separate from the other.  Science, religion, mathematics, philosophy, morality, etc. can a should be studied as a whole.  And this does not start in high school or when a child matures enough to understand.  It is my belief that these subjects are a part of the human experience, from birth until natural death.

    The Church acknowledges this type of education through its sacramental understanding of the world. Very young children are Named and Churched.  They are invited to the communion cup, to the baptismal font, they are Chrismated and brought into the fold, into the Church.  Education is no different.  If education is to be true in essence and practice, it must be from birth and it must be sacramental.  True education must have the efficacy of grace and mystery, what we Orthodox call sacramental.  This is the reason that we as Orthodox Christians are seeking home education as an answer to the nothingness we see in the public arena.  We are not mad at teachers, or administrators, or text book writers.  We are seeking truth, we desire the true, effective, and sacramental education of our children.  In essence we seek Theosis.  We desire that what Christ is by nature, our children become by grace.

    The ongoing conversation of life is a truly remarkable way to educate children.  Any subject, anytime, anywhere, and what is so great is that this type of learning is very organic in the sense that it is the child engaging with his/her world through the wonderful process of reason.  Reason is not a Western discovery.  It is a God given gift that can be used to become more human, more real, more whole.  This is what I define as education.

    The best way to converse is to have something to converse about.  This is where reading and writing come in, and it will be the subject of a future post.  But, for now I just want to say that there is no place to start this conversation.  Like, let’s begin with conversation #1.  The conversation is circular, we just start where we are.  One way that we get great conversations started in our home is through a little game that my cousin plays with his kids.  It’s called, “Best and Worst.”  At the dinner table each person states the best part of their day and the worst part of their day.  This makes for lively conversations, and you would be surprised where some of these conversations end up.

    • A truly deep and moving guide for this kind of holistic education can be found in a book entitled Conversations With Children: Communicating Our Faith written by Sister Magdelen.  Sister Magdelen shares conversations she has had with children about the Orthodox Faith and Tradition.  However, this method can be applied to all subjects, and as she points out in the book, “It [is] risky to select conversations about religion as if it were a separate subject.  How we think or act on one issue affects how we think and act on life as a whole, our own life and that of all humanity.”
    • Although I would not classify our homeschool method as unschooling, I do use unschooling methods in our homeschool approach.  One book that I love is The Unschooling Handbook: How to Use the Whole World as Your Child’s Classroom.
    • Also, this talk given by Dr. James S. Taylor is very good, and worth a listen.  Poetic Knowledge and Education. He also has a book entitled Poetic Knowledge: The Recovery of Education that I have not read yet, but it is on my list.
    • For a detailed illustration of this method Plato’s Republic is a good reference.  In it,  Socrates uses conversations to bring about enlightenment.  

      My goal for this homeschool year concerning this method:

      • Keep a daily record of conversations I have had with my children.  I think it would be a beneficial reminder on days when I panic that I am not doing enough.  It will also help me to be at peace with not using a grading system.
      The conversations of a family are fractal in nature, their is no possible way to determine the exact shape that is being created by the ongoing and engaging conversation of life.  The shape of the heart, the mind, the body, and ultimately the soul of each member of the family is formed within this oral tradition.  And this is not worksheet education. 

      Orthodox Homeschooling
      faith · family · homeschooling · learning · parenting

      Almsgiving: Sharing, Chores, and Blessings

      I married when I was eighteen, and four days later my husband and I hopped on a plane headed for Honduras, Central America, to work as missionaries on the small island of Roatan.  My parents and two brothers were not far behind us, all of us together, stepping out in faith to serve God and others the best way we knew how.  In the days leading up to the missionary journey my mom and dad planned a beautiful wedding for my husband and me, and they also systematically sold or gave away EVERYTHING they owned.  I was still living at home, and I saw my room empty, a little at a time, one trinket and garment at a time. Cars, furniture, dishes, appliances, tools, all of it…gone.  When everything was done my family was driven to the airport by a close family member with everything we owned packed in six suitcases.  I stored my wedding gifts, but everything else was gone.  Slade and I had two packed suitcases to our name.

      I cannot exactly describe the impact that this emptying had on me.  When I read the stories of the saints who gave away all they owned I can sort of relate.  Of course, my journey did not continue in this way, but I do know what it feels like to own practically nothing.  I also know what it feels like to give away a life, to leave a certain kind of life for one that is completely different all because you want to serve God or someone else.  It’s not as romantic as you may think.

      I remember those early years of marriage, and sometimes now when I set in my beautiful home filled with pretty things I cry.  I cry because I know the joy of giving far outweighs receiving, and I wonder if my knowing makes me more responsible.  What I have seen with my eyes, people who are joyful in severe poverty, people who love God, living in a cardboard shack on the edge of the dump, uneducated people who love their children and keep dirt floors impeccably clean and worship even though they cannot read and wash there clothes by the sea and share even though they have nothing and struggle with preventable illnesses and walk to church and try to give strangers the pictures off their walls just because they mentioned it was pretty.  See, my crying is not because these people I saw were suffering, it is because they were joyful.

      In America our excess makes us sad.  However, the Church provides for the spiritual bliss of both the rich and poor.  Almsgiving connects these two peoples in a very genuine and real way.  One gives and the other receives only to discover that the giver receives and the receiver gives.

      So, how do we open this world up to our children?  I have narrowed down three areas that I think make it introduce and train children to be almsgivers. Please remember that we are all sinners, and the things I share are the deep beliefs and convictions of my heart.  That does not mean that we live this out perfectly, it only means we are trying and failing and trying again…over and over and over.

      Three ways I teach heartfelt almsgiving to my children:

      • Radical Sharing
      • Daily Chores
      • Counting Our Blessings

      Radical Sharing
      From the start a child enters the world as a part of a whole.  He is a part of a family, a part of a community, a part of the world.  Children are not autonomous, they do not have the ability to act freely or care for themselves.  They arrive with needs, and they must be cared for.  A child literally could not survive without the giving of others, they are dependent.  In this way a child is always in a humble position, and it is in this way that I think children should remain in their place.  It is the same position we are all in with God.  We are completely dependent on his care and therefore we should approach God in humility and repentance, this is the Orthodox way.  Children are not to be disrespected, neglected, or treated unkindly.  Exactly the opposite; they should always be loved and love sacrificially.  However, in the secular world the example of Christ and His love for us is not the model.  What we have today is child worship, along with a strangely mixed cocktail of neglect, abuse, overindulgence, and hate.  Yes, I said it…hate.  This world is becoming less and less friendly toward children, all the while claiming to put children first.  Its a weird dichotomy that I have not figured out.  But, enough of my soap boxing.  Back to sharing.

      It is with this belief that I approach sharing.  If something belongs to my children it is because my husband and I gave it to them, or some other person gave it to them.  For example, why is it wrong for children to share bedrooms and toys, as if this giving will harm the child’s identity or self-awareness or boundaries.  This kind of thinking is not Christian.   The bedroom and toy do not belong to the child, they do not own the bedroom or toy.  These things are blessings, gifts, luxuries that took the sacrifice of another to provide.  To share them is the very heart of almsgiving.  If a person realizes that ALL he/she has belongs to God, the act of almsgiving becomes and remains joyful.  However, if the mantra is, “Mine, Mine, Mine” the joy of giving is clouded and diminished.

      Through sharing children learn to let go of their iron fist grip on “stuff.”  It is difficult to teach a child to share, and even more so as they grow older, especially if as a youngster they were spoiled and overindulged.  Sharing is the first step to learning how to give.  What can children share?  Everything.  Toys, space, bedrooms, clothes, food, pets, attention, and much more.  Older children can share as well.  Their privacy needs increase, and I always keep that in mind.  However, the teen years can become a nightmare if the the young adult is not required to share.  Parents must discern and let the teen grow, but we do not have to accommodate selfishness and pride.

      To teach a child that he/she is a part of a whole, a part of a family, and that the very nature of family demands sharing is crucial to the child’s ability to learn and grow in almsgiving.  Over time I believe that the joy of sharing can and will be discovered.  Sharing proclaims to the world that all we have belongs to God, therefore all we have can be shared.

      Daily Chores
      Work is a true act of giving, especially if it is done for the sake of the whole.  When children are brought up to share their stuff, it is easier for them to share the load.  Think about it.  We adults have to share in the work load of this world.  There are many things that must be done, and we all have to do our part.  And sometimes we have to do for others because they are unable to do for themselves.

      The home is a great place to learn this.  When children are given a share in the work load they become aware of the needs of the whole.  I especially see this when chores outside of cleaning their own room, or making their own bed, or things that solely pertain to them are given.  When the chores began to include folding laundry that doesn’t belong to them, or washing dishes that they did not use, or dressing a younger sibling, or cleaning a bathroom that everyone uses my children began to mature and become more giving.

      Right now I am completely dependent on my husband and children to care for me and this house, and honestly we have not had alot of drama over this.  Sure there have been days when everyone feels stretched to the limit and attitudes reflect that.  But, all in all I am amazed at the level of skill and diligence that my girls have demonstrated.  They are also compassionate and loving when I know they are tired and stretched.  Not always, but most of the time.  The house has kept running, we are a team, we are all part of a whole.  When someone on that team is unable to do for themselves it is up to the others on that team to carry the burden.  To me this is family.  To me this is almsgiving.

      Soup kitchens and shelters and mission trips and volunteering are chore oriented, but they have glory attached to them.  This kind of almsgiving is definitely crucial and meaningful, but small things are where we learn to do things in secret.  Like changing your little sister’s dirty diaper and cooing with her while you do it.  Nobody is watching, only God sees, and this is true almsgiving.  When a child’s heart is broken in the right way his/her service at the soup kitchen or shelter is genuine.  It is based on previous training that has shaped a worldview of service, sharing, and burden baring.  I saw this over and over again in the years my husband and I were youth pastors.  The children who were trained at home were the ones who cried their eyes out on mission trips when confronted with poverty and disease.  They saw things differently, and they worked the hardest.  I try to train my children to bare a portion of the family burden, to see their value in their service to others.  In this way work and chores can be joyful.

      Count Our Blessings
      Is it really a blessing to be a part of a family that practices radical sharing and daily chores?  Well, I think so, but sometimes my kiddos don’t see the benefit.  That’s ok…they are children.  However, I sense a sort of contentedness in my children that many kids lack.  They are not little saints, always happy to work or share, but down deep I can see true happiness.  I see a kind of self esteem that is genuine and peaceful.  I really think, without them knowing it, my children have learned true happiness through sharing and work.  They know that they are valuable, not as objects of worship, but as individuals with certain God-given talents and abilities that contribute to the health and happiness of the whole.

      Serving others is the key in helping children feel connected and not alone, it makes them feel that they are needed and matter to others.  My kids matter to me outside of what they do for me, but I know the look in their eyes when they serve me a glass of ice water when they know I cannot make it myself.  I know how they bounce around when they have completed their chores and everything feels orderly and peaceful and good.  I have seen them take a younger sibling in their arms to comfort and console, and when the younger snuggles up and settles down the older feels loved and valued and cherished.  This is the joy that a giver receives.  This is the love that the receiver receives.  It is the foundation of all relationship and fellowship.  It is communion lived out.

      Almsgiving is the recognition of true blessings and sharing those blessings with another person.  All the sacrifice and work and sharing become the joy of the giver’s heart.  I would like to end this VERY long post with something I wrote on another post:

      Almsgiving is not exclusively about money…in its deepest since it is about mercy, a kind of pity that breaks the heart of the giver. It just so happens that money is a readily available resource. But one is reminded of the apostle’s words, “Silver and gold have I none, but such as I have give I thee.” Even those who have no currency are still expected to give what we have been given and give with a broken heart full of mercy and joy, and that is not a religious mandate or a sterile practice. It is life giving.

      If the foundation is laid, giving money will be as natural as cleaning a toilet or feeding a pet.  It all belongs to God, everything.  Our time, our talent, and our treasure.  And this is what I call Home Schooling.  It all begins at home.

      Make chore lists that reflect the needs of your family.  Better yet, just ask children to contribute on an as needs basis, make them aware of the present moment and the needs that arise in that moment.  Ask children to stretch themselves, and to practice radical sharing.  Help them see the blessing of living in an Orthodox family where the disciplines of Prayer, Fasting , and Almsgiving are practiced and lived.  If we as parents pray with our kids, work with our kids, and give with our kids, then we are striving for The Kingdom of God, we are getting closer to God.  This is how we let our light shine.  It is also why I homeschool, the REAL reason I homeschool. 
      An interesting article about children and overindulgence.

       

      cooking · faith · family · homeschooling · learning · parenting

      Fasting: What’s for Dinner Mom?

      My kids ask what’s for dinner at the breakfast table.  They also wake up hungry and have very strong opinions about what they will and will not eat in the mornings.  Before I addressed this problem when my two oldest were younger, I felt like a short order cook.  I quickly began to realize that this demand, the demand of their little stomachs, was not a healthy thing.  So, I set about to get at the heart of the matter- I had breakfast ready, or almost ready before they woke up.  When they came into the kitchen in the morning there was only one option.  Also, if I did not get breakfast cooked in time I would give the girls two choices and that was it- take it or leave it.

      When my husband was a child he was allowed to eat whenever, wherever, however, and as much as he desired.  His family hardly ever sat at the table, and he ate alone in front of his TV in his room.  He was not trained, or should I say his stomach was not trained.  As a result he is now an adult struggling with gluttony, he is a slave to cravings and addictions in this area.  He hates this, and is struggling to mature in this area by overcoming his passions.  In a real way, I think he understands true fasting, not because he is so great at it, but because he fails at it and keeps trying.

      In my family, food was treated more organically.  I was raised on a farm, and my mother cooked nutritious meals.  We also sat at the table 99% of the time.  We did not have the money to eat out, so when we did it was a treat.  Most of our food came from a garden, and I developed a taste for fresh vegetables and farm raised meat.  I was not allowed to snack whenever I wanted, and sugar was a rare treat.  My mom loved to bake, and so I did not have all the packaged and processed sweet treats that my husband did.  Food was always about fellowship.  Our southern ways can sometimes backfire in that we think food defines an occasion.  This is definitely the case with me.  I have an expectation with food that desires a certain feeling.  Needless to say, I also struggle with keeping food in its rightful place.

      When we became Orthodox I realized that I did indeed have passions and cravings, and so when the struggle began to follow the church’s fasting rule it was difficult. It is still difficult for me.  In my struggle I have tried to bring my children along with me.  I talk to them, we plan meals, and we share our struggles with one another.  Fasting has changed the way we eat, therefore it has changed the way we live.  In that sense, fasting is one of the most important parts of our homeschool life.  And fasting is not just about the days on the calendar when we are restricted from eating certain foods.  It is about the totality of our relationship with food.

      I do not know all the aspects or spiritual benefits of fasting.  I have read alot about it, and I know our Lord fasted.  I also know that the Church has maintained the discipline for a reason. These facts are enough for me to trust the Church and make fasting a priority.  My goals for fasting change every year.  Some years we have fasted better than others, mostly due to pregnancy and breast feeding.  Since I am the main cook, it is hard for the rest of the family to fast during these times.

      Here are just a few things I have learned about fasting with children.  These are great for adults too (I try to follow these things too, and I struggle):

      • Teach children to pray and thank God for their food.  This is number one in my book.
      • Do not allow a child to dictate what he/she will and will not eat.  This requires diligence and patience.  I see children who will not eat much of  anything, they are so picky.  This is something I feel strongly about, and I believe is the heart of training children to fast.
      • Train children to say please and thank you for food that is prepared for them or given to them.
      • Eat at the table as much as possible… together as a family.
      • Limit appetite triggering foods: sugar and junk food mainly. (This is a hard one.)
      • Set limits on how much or how little a child is allowed to eat.  This rule is very relational in our home.  A teenager eats more than a toddler.  A toddler is not always hungry.  There are different circumstances.
      • Teach children where their food comes from and how to cook themselves.
      • If a child refuses to eat a certain food, keep offering it for at least a year.  If a child refuses to eat all together, set their plate on the counter.  When they return and claim to be starving, offer them their plate.
      • Teach them to limit the amount of food that they put on their plates at coffee hour, buffets, and pot luck dinners.  Also, it does not hurt older children to get at the back of the line and learn to be content with what is left.
      • Let children eat when they are hungry, but watch out for boredom or emotional eating.
      • Keep celebrations and relate pleasure food with feasting times.  If we never fast, how can we feast?

      My goals for this year in the area of fasting are:

      • Say a prayer of thanks over every piece of food that enters our mouths (this may be done silently at times).  Even at snack times.
      • Work together in the kitchen to prepare fasting meals that are nutritious.  Let the kids take on some of the fasting meal planning.
      • Stop eating right before we get full.  This will take alot of practice..over and over and over.

        Homeschooling families eat most of their meals together.  This is a real opportunity of grace.  I could write about the nature of fasting from my point of view, or how I believe deep in my heart, but I just do not feel qualified or ready for that.  But, I can say that training the stomach is a highly spiritual and physical struggle, and that is why it is a pillar of our daily homeschool life.  How do you teach your children to fast?  Do you have recipes you can share or ideas to make fasting meaningful?
        Let us encourage one another, and Happy Homeschooling! 

      books · homeschooling · learning · parenting

      Great Picture Books

      When I go to the library I like to have a plan when it comes to picture books.  Let’s face it, not all picture books are equal.  I let my Littles explore themselves, but I also have an idea of the books I want to take home.  This list has not been updated since 2009, but I plan on making my own and sharing it here later this year.  This list contains an alphabetical list of great picture books, including most of the famous Caldecott winners.  The A-Z list is handy if you would like to incorporate literature into alphabet units.  Enjoy!

      http://www.scribd.com/embeds/10272554/content?start_page=1&view_mode=scroll&show_recommendations=true

      faith · homeschooling · learning

      The Living Church Calendar

      After completing my daily prayer plan, I then proceed to the Church calendar.  Until this year we have only tried to fully participate in the Major Feasts and Name Days.  This year I am adding additional feast days to the calendar.  For this step I first gather my supplies:

      • A Church Calendar for the current year.  I use the one that our parish offers for free.  For the new year I look up an Orthodox calendar online. (This also helps for moveable feasts.)
      •  My family calendar that has already been filled with possible extra-curricular activities. 
      • Curriculum planner that also includes a monthly block calendar.
      • A pencil with a good eraser.
      • Some scratch paper to jot down ideas that come to me while I am planning.
      • My laptop for quick references to my favorite websites for inspiration and direction.
      • Two copies of my daily prayer plan.

      Then I dive in.  Here is the process:

      1.  Place all the Major Feasts on my calendars and block off days that I know we will need for Church services, crafts, field trips, activities, etc.  Here is where I use the websites for inspiration and ideas.  What are other Orthodox mothers doing during these days?  I search the web, and I use a book entitled  Making God Real in the Orthodox Christian Home.  I also have used The Children’s Garden of the Theotokos…what wonderful ideas for me, a beginner.  During this process I jot down ideas on my scratch paper with the dates, and a few activities we might do.  When the days get closer I finalize my plans and buy supplies if needed.
      2. I look at one of the daily prayer plans and label it Feast Days and decide what time of the day I can best fit in these activities.  I usually go for the morning, in place of our academic schedule, usually 10 AM to 12AM.  However, this year we are going to have a more fluid schedule due to the hours my two older children will be on the computer for academic classes.
      3. Then I go to my calendars and pencil in all the name days.  Name day activities usually happen in the evening when daddy gets home, maybe with some daily preparation.  That allows us to bake a cake or shop for a special meal.  Often we go out to eat for a name day, and that is very special.  My goal this year is to try and save any stories or special prayers on this day until dad gets home.
      4. This year my two older children are going to have a set academic schedule.  Therefore, I will have to be very flexible and plan according to what day of the week it is.  I have already adjusted wake times, 6th hour prayers, and lunch to accommodate their daily schedules.  The school that they will be attending is St. Raphael Orthodox Online Homeschool.  This is the first time I have ever had outside help with homeschooling, and I am super excited.  With the new baby, a toddler, and a pre-independent reader I am relieved to have the help.  This year feast activities will be at different times depending on which day of the week it is.
      5. Now that I have the Major Feasts and Name Days put into the calendar, then I go to the special saint days we would like to add.  This year I am using Reading Through the Year of Grace from St. Theophan Academy as a guide.  I will add web articles and books when I can find them for my older kids, but they seem to like picture books and crafts.  We will see.  I put down the saint day on my calendar, and then plan to touch on that saint sometime in that week.  When I finalize my calendar, I hope to offer it here as a PDF file on the free resources page.
      6. As our parish and the hermitage where we go make service times available I also put those on my calendar so that I do not plan alot of school work, major projects, or outside activities on that day.  I ALWAYS have conflicts in schedule, but that is where I discern.  I do not always get to attend services, but we try to make an effort.  This year has been really difficult due to a difficult pregnancy.

      Websites to Help:
      The Twelve Great Feasts
      God is Wonderful in His Saints

        How do you fit in the feasts and saint days?  Are you feeling inspired?  Share with us, and Happy Homeschooling! 

      faith · family · homeschooling · learning · parenting

      Prayer: The Cornerstone

      After writing the Prayer in Action post, I wanted to touch on a few details about prayer that I keep in my mind and heart as I homeschool my children.

      • Why is prayer the most important part of our homeschool?
      • What are our obstacles to prayer?
      • Going slow: attentiveness and attention.

      Why is prayer the most important part of our homeschool?  I think this can be summed up rather quickly for me.  It is because prayer is, and I quote Abba Pimen, ” [where] we unite to God with our minds.”  There is a popular classical homeschool resource entitled The Well Trained Mind.  It is interesting to note that nowhere in that how-to book is prayer mentioned.  If Christ is the perfect man, body and soul, and prayer is the way that I unite with Him, why do I assume that the mind is not best placed in His hands?  Cannot God form the man in a way that does not diminish him/her in ANY way?  Acquiring  the mind of Christ IS the ultimate education.  I have nothing to fear.  Will my children be prepared for the real world, I ask?  Absolutely.  This is the Orthodox faith, this is our belief.

      What are our obstacles in prayer?  The greatest obstacle in prayer for me is unbelief.  I do not believe fully that prayer is life.  Sadly, I believe algebra and Great Books, and dictation, and handwriting, and math facts, and histories, and art projects are more essential to the training of my child’s mind.  This is what I myself realize about homeschooling as an Orthodox Christian: I as the parent must believe.  When I do not, I must struggle to believe.  I must pray myself, and open my heart to Christ.  I must be in this world, but not of this world.  Distractions will indefinitely present themselves, but how I handle the distractions is what really matters.  Like the long phone conversations with my mother in the mornings, or the quick check of my email that turns into a sink whole, or how I schedule outside activities, or how I skip the third hour prayers in favor of finishing one last long division problem.  That does not even include the distractions of my mind and body, the worry, the fatigue, the stress, the shopping, and cooking, and cleaning, and disciplining…the list is limitless.  But, in the midst, prayer is still the most important thing, even when I fail and struggle.  I want  my children to see me struggle and keep going.  I want to bring them on this journey with me.

      Going slow: attentiveness.  Prayer is not a race to the finish or a box I can check off.  Like, whew, that task is complete.  Prayer is life.  That means that I try to always keep in mind that I and my children should try to connect to the words we are praying.  This demands that we go slow.  Better to have shorter prayers and attentiveness than longer ones and distraction.  Standing before the icons silently for a minute or two before we pray helps.  Memorization through repetition helps.  Discussing certain prayers and what they mean helps.  Going slow is very helpful.  There is something to be said for just saying the prayers and forming habit, and this is definitely part of making prayer the top priority. But ultimately, I desire that my children connect to God, not just say their prayers.  How this exactly happens in their minds and hearts is a mystery, but I do know that being attentive is something that we must practice and practice and practice.

      In the end, I must trust and believe.  God can and will provide.  I would like to conclude with a comment I received in a previous post on the subject of Orthodox Homeschooling:

      Now that I have kids in college I can say that making the Church calendar our most important calendar was the wisest choice I made. If our kids don’t acquire the phronema then all other educational endeavors won’t matter. The mind of Christ is all we really need. A friend once told me that the most important thing we can teach our children is to pray, especially the Jesus prayer. She said God will enlighten us or reveal to us everything we need to know, when we need to know it, if our minds are full of prayer.
      We acquire the mind of Christ organically not through any one set of “classes” but through prayer. St Gregory of Palamas was a great defender of prayer as being the way of acquiring wisdom and knowledge yet he was very educated himself.
      You have put in words what I have known in my heart but wondered if my convictions were wrong because there was no boxes to checkoff or schedules to keep that would say ‘yes your kids are learning what they need to learn’
      I still have a truck load of kids to get through home schooling and yes I am trying my best to teach them to read, write, and do math but as a less stressed mom wondering if they are getting it.

      (BTW we have not perfected prayer by any means, just the understanding that prayer is the one thing needful.) ”

      I think this mother pretty much sums it up. What are your thoughts?  Do you and struggle with prayer?  Are you further down the road and willing to offer your experience and wisdom?  Do you think prayer is the most important thing for the Orthodox Homeschool?  
      I hope to hear from all of you.  
      faith · family · homeschooling · learning · parenting

      Prayer: In Action

      Now that I have given a little background on my experience and homeschool outlook, let’s get down to to the where the rubber meats the road.  It’s fine and good to have these ethereal dreams and beliefs, but some thing has to be done, or this belief is worth nothing.

      I highly recommend that you visit this website and read two posts on prayer.
      Our Aim in Prayer
      and
      The Rule of Prayer

      Quoting from the second article, I would like to begin this post with a confession.  Here is the quote:

      “It is so easy to find people in the Church who will read and study a lot, and show great zeal in doing external works.  However, it is so hard to find people who will take time to struggle to pray. Why is this so?

      The Elder Ephraim was once asked this question and immediate he said, “Yes, yes”; in this way confirming that this is absolutely true and then he went on to say:

      Abba Pimen says that prayer is the most difficult of all virtues to acquire.  In prayer we free our minds from all the distractions of this world and we touch God with our minds.  In prayer we unite to God with our minds.  And the devil hates this therefore he does all that he can to stop us from accomplishing this.  In prayer we must concentrate on God, we must turn away from all thoughts and distractions and immerse our minds in God.”

      My confession is that I struggle very hard with prayer.  I am one of those people who likes to study and read, but I struggle when it comes to prayer.  The truth is that we have had a very rocky road when it comes to establishing this cornerstone of our homeschool life.  There are mornings when we get up late, and in my foolishness I will skip prayers in favor of chores, breakfast, and sadly just so we can start real school.

      In fact, it seems that on the mornings when we skip prayers and scripture readings our day goes better.  How strange is that?  But, in the above articles I think the author alludes to why this is so, “…the devil fights against us most at that time so then we must be persistent.”  Not diminishing the fact that I am to blame, however I we have an enemy.  And he fights us when we pray.

      This is where planning is so crucial, and I think very necessary.  With a plan we can persist, and we can continue to practice prayer.  It’s our Rule of Prayer.  I start with the day- just one day isolated and looked at in its fullness.   Prayer is the cornerstone, the most important thing we will do in the day, therefore I put prayer before anything else on the schedule.  This does not ensure that I will treat prayer as the most important daily work, but it does keep me accountable, and reminds me to keep trying.  Here are a few tips that help ensure that I pray with my children .

      1. Establish a waking time for myself.  This is crucial for prayer.  In the evening prayers we pray, “Raise me up again in proper time that I may sing my morning hymn.”  In proper time....  For me, this has always been a semi- early waking time.  I strongly desire a time alone before the children get up.  I like to pray my personal prayers, read the daily readings, and have my coffee.  I also like to get breakfast started and start some laundry.  7 AM is a good time for me.
      2. Establish a waking time for the children.  Considering the different age groups in our house, and the fact that we are adding a new addition in a few days, it has always worked for us that the children all get up at the same time.  That means that I do not require a very early waking time for kiddos.  Between 8 and 8:30 is good.
      3. Determine our Scripture reading and lives of saints study method.  I have used many, but what has stuck with us is to read scripture together before we leave the breakfast table, during lunch we read the lives of the saints- feed the body and soul at the same time.  Make the connection.  I have used all  kinds of materials to do this.  Right now I am planning to read the Old Testament throughout this year.  We will see how this goes.  The littles might abandon us, but as long as they linger and hear, maybe playing with blocks on the kitchen floor or play dough at the counter, that is good enough for me.   Also, I have abandoned the short snippet stories of the saints for this season in favor of books that go deeper into the life and piety of a saint.  I ask my spiritual father for suggestions in this area, and he is always spot on as far as the books he suggests.
      4. Make sure to plan evening prayers even though the school day is over.  My husband usually leads these prayers using A Prayer Book for Orthodox Christians.  And then our day of prayer is finished.  I encourage the children to say there own prayers before they fall asleep.

      Note:  The website Orthodox Prayer, linked above, is really a wonderful place to learn about prayer.  It has examples, explanations, and articles that are truly helpful.

      What is your family’s Prayer Rule, and are you willing to share?  What works for you and yours?  I hope this post helps motivate and encourage.
      Happy Homeschooling!