Sunday, April 29, 2012

Week 33 - 2012

Ahhhhh, trying to catch up after having my father-in-law as company for the past week....  My son visited the last school on our list for shadowing this past week.  He is going back to school next year, so I am shortly out of a job.  I've got to start trying to line up what I'm going to be doing with the rest of my life!  I know that I am going to teach some classes for homeschoolers, but am not sure yet exactly what or exactly where....

Nothing much new to mention for the past week save for some history.  We began reading through the time period of the 1970's, using our Kingfisher encyclopedia, Usborne Atlas, Haywood atlas, Remember the Ladies, and Words that Built a Nation.  We're also looking a little at the geography of Australia and Oceania.

In addition to books we've already been working on, my son began reading and working through some books related to U.S. government:

The Presidents, John Holms, and See How They Run, Goodman and Smith:

The Presidents Sticker Book (High Q First Activity Books)

(There are updated versions of this available and it has quizzes in the back.)

See How They Run: Campaign Dreams, Election Schemes, and the Race to the White House


In science reading at home, he read several books about planes, including Usborne's book on Jets:

Jets - 9780860200512

Last Sunday evening, a mother duck who had hatched out eggs in our back yard was walking around with her babies.  Evidently she was ready for them to go to the lake but I didn't open the gate for her as it was so late in the day.  She was determined, however, and squeezed them out through a hole.  Four of them didn't make the transition and she left them.  When I dropped my son for his piano lesson on Monday and then returned home, they were chirping loudly.  I caught them, boxed them up, and when I picked up my son, we went down to the lake, found the rest of the brood, and returned them to their family.  I just saw a local paper from later in the week and there was a shot of one of them in there!








(There are 13 in all!)



Soccer went well today.  My son scored four times!  They have lost most of their good players this season, and lost many games, so this was a big deal!


I think that covers the most eventful happenings of the week....  Next week he is doing achievement testing, so I'm letting him off school save for his outside classes and some test prep.  He'll still be finished right alongside the public school kids, so this will work out fine.  I can't believe that my years of homeschooling are so quickly drawing to an end....

Regena

Monday, April 23, 2012

Week 32 - 2012

My son finished up his reading about creation of the Bible this week and began reading a book of devotionals which he will continue for the rest of the year.

He only has two more lessons in his Videotext Algebra to finish up and is continuing with his outside Algebra II class.

He continued reading To Kill a Mockingbird this week for his outside class, as well as reading Huck Finn at home.


We're continuing with review of his vocabulary words from last year using an online source that provides flash card practice with spelling, matching, word/definition scramble, and a test for each chapter or set of words.

He's continuing writing for me at home using a resource that covers the topics of the Cold War Era, as well as writing for his outside lit class.

Spanish and Latin continue as usual.

Geography Club met again this week to get back on track with their regularly planned meeting dates.  They finished up South American studies and continued with two more Western states.

In history this week, we read about the decolonialization of Africa and the establishment of Apartheid in South Africa using our Kingfisher encyclopedia; Usborne Atlas of the 20th Century; A Child's Eye View of History (re: apartheid); and Haywood's Atlas of the 20th Century.

My son read chapters 32 and 34 of Story of the World (just the chapter halves that cover Africa). 

I read aloud Witness to History: Apartheid in South Africa, David Downing, and we discussed at length.

Apartheid in South Africa


I began reading No More Strangers Now, Young Voices From a New South Africa, Tim McKee.  Great stories!

No More Strangers Now: Young Voices from a New South Africa

My son began reading Warriors, Warthogs, and Wisdom, Growing up in Africa, Lyall Watson (South Africa).

Warriors, Warthogs and Wisdom


In science, co-op class has concluded and there was no chemistry.  In our little home class, we talked about hovercraft and tried one out.  They are classified as aircraft and piloted like an aircraft, rather than like a boat, because they don't use rudders in the water, but skim along on air on top of it. Unless they are on a track system such as a monorail, they are floating on air and can skim off in any direction if not kept under appropriate control.



We looked at a cutaway illustration of one used for both passengers and vehicles and talked about its parts. The most important are the propellers used for thrust, the lift fans that create the plenum chamber (a body of air floating under the craft between it and the surface), and the rubber skirt that helps keep the plenum contained. They use rudders for turning purposes, as well as turning the propellers.

I had a model of one, but there really wasn't anything to build. You could design several types by changing the types of propellers and containment areas on top, but the vehicle itself was already self-contained. All I did was add batteries and the cover over the lift fan. We scooted it without air to see the force of friction on it, then with the air on to see it glide very much like an air hockey puck. It worked great on my glass table top (low friction) and even on my very dirty floors.

We looked at a mock up of the pilot's control panel, which looks very much like that of an airplane cockpit.

We looked at the different types of hovercraft in use: search and rescue; military transport (and talked about how fast they can make rounds, how much payload they can carry, etc.); racers (and the fact that they create no wake); ferries (safer for animals in the water because there's no propeller or rudder in the water); polar exploration; barges, including big oil rigs.

We looked at some examples of some different styles from the past, including round ones that look like flying saucers, and some proto-types for the future.

Then they put together a helicopter and flew it. They also created a second model and tested it out.

We talked about how helicopter pilots and engineers refer to the spinning rotor as if it is a single, disk-shaped wing that they call the rotor disk.

We looked briefly at a mock-up of the cockpit of a helicopter and talked about how the rotor disk can be tilted to move the vehicle in a different direction.

We looked at different styles of helicopters: flying tankers used to put out forest fires; military choppers; land and sea rescue (this is the first copter they made); small choppers used by radio and TV crews to follow weather and traffic in cities (this is the second copter they made); and ultralights.

We talked about tiltrotor craft, such as the Osprey, which is a combo helicopter and plane. It can carry 3 crew and 24 passengers, but can do take off and landings in tight places like a copter.

We looked at proto-types for new styles of helicopters, such as another tiltrotor called the Humming that really looks like a UFO!

Here are the kits we used for these:

Helicopters with Toy (Flight Test Lab) Cover             Flight Test Lab: Hovercrafts: Build and Launch 4 Different Hovercrafts!


One of them put together a snap together model of a Stealth plane while the other put together an Apache helicopter.

Snap Together Model Kits             Military Model Kits

Regarding the Stealth: we talked about how the U.S. denied its existence until 1990.   How it is designed to evade enemy radar by being virtually invisible to emitted radar waves (flat, geometric surfaces and non-metallic materials throughout).  How it was created by the famous "Skunk Works" team at Lockheed.   How it minimizes infrared heat signature by diffusing its exhaust outlets with cool air to decrease the heat of the exhaust plume, and how armament is carried internally in a weapons' bay.

Regarding the Apache: we talked about how unattractive it is but that its mission is to seek out and destroy enemy armored vehicles and strong points during the day, night, or under adverse weather conditions, and it is well suited for all that.   How it is used to fight, survive, and live with front line troops on a battle field.   How it is the most advanced helicopter gunship flying today.   It is specifically designed to compliment armored weapon systems on the battlefield.   It combines lethal firepower, mobility, and survivability.   The model was designed from an actual vehicle and info provided by Hughes Helicopters.

One of them finished early, so we put together a fighter plane 3-D puzzle, which wasn't too cooperative.   We talked about how fighter wings are smaller than other craft because their jets reduce the need for longer wing lengths.   He took home a book on fighter jets to look through.

He also took home another 3-D puzzle of a helicopter.   Those don't come with instructions, just a picture, so I hope that he won't have trouble with it as we did with the fighter!
Here are their planes (the balsa plane is the one he made at the USAF Museum a few weeks ago; the Leyden jar they made is also on the table....):







At home, my son read:

DK's What's Inside?  Planes, Hockman and Kingfisher's How Things Work: Planes, Gliders, Helicopters, and Other Flying Machines, Jennings.

Planes    

Soccer and bowling continued, as did piano.  That's about it for the week....

Regena

P.S.:  I HATE the new Blogger format!  Why is it that something perfectly good always has to be changed for something that is much more cumbersome, doesn't work nearly as well, and doesn't have as many features - all in the name of "progress"???

Friday, April 13, 2012

Week 31 - 2012....

What's new this week:

My son's foot finally seems healed enough to allow him to return to soccer play.  His first outdoor game will be tomorrow, so we'll see how that goes.  He had his last P.E. class last week, so I'm glad he's able to get back into soccer play.  He continues with a once weekly bowling time of 90 minutes, so he's getting some upper body work, too....

He began reading an illustrated version of Huckleberry Finn at home this week.  He has gotten into his lit class work regarding To Kill a Mockingbird, too.  I believe he really likes the book, as I've caught him reading it after school....

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Illustrated Junior Library Series)




We began work on gravity and flight topics in our little physics related class at home....

We continued reading Marrin's book about America in Vietnam, as well as reading about other topics of that era from Words that Built a Nation.  We'll try to get that reading wrapped up next week so we can cover some topics related to Africa and apartheid....

Words That Built a Nation











I have him working on various writing projects for me at home right now from a workbook covering J.F.K.'s era, Russian Communism, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the Cold War....

John+F.+Kennedy%27s+Inaugural+Address%3A+History+Speaks+.+.+.



I think I forgot to mention last week that my son was reading chapters 18-25 in History of Us, volume 10.  This week he read chapters 26-30, and 32-35 (he read 31 earlier).

He read about Langston Hughes this week, and read popular selections of his poetry:

Poetry for Young People: Langston Hughes
   
Book Jacket


His geography club met.  They work on two different states each week.  They finished covering South America this week, as well.

Next week he's going to shadow at another high school.  We need to get things wrapped up by the end of April and get a decision from him on what he wants to do for next year so that I can get my ducks in a row, too....

Regena

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Week 30 - 2012

This week was spring break for most of our town, so some of my son's classes didn't meet.  That gave us more of a chance to catch up from the field trips of last week.  It also gave us some wiggle room to recover from my continuing problems due to the illness of last week, and my son waking up with the same thing mid-way through this week (although I treated it more appropriately and he didn't get nearly as bad as I did)....  It's amazing how much better an illness turns out when you get on it and treat it, rather than ignoring it....

He worked through several lessons in our Videotext programming this week.  We only have about five more lessons to go to complete the Algebra I portion of that series.  (He's doing Algebra II work with his outside instructor; I've just followed with this at home for extra drill work and to help him remember more basic concepts of algebra work.)

He completed several Spanish workbook pages at home, since he had already completed his homework for that class.

He did have his outside lit class this week.  He is working on his last packet for A Separate Peace and doing a two page paper on how the Treaty of Versailles contributed to World War II.  He has begun reading To Kill a Mockingbird, which is going to be their last book for this school year.

At home, he completed Gay-Neck and read The Land I Lost, Huynh Quang Nhuong.  He also read Voices from the Past: Vietnam War, Kathlyn and Martin Gay.

       

Vietnam War (Gay, Kathlyn. Voices From the Past. )










He has completed his book on World Religions that he's been reading for a while as part of our Bible studies.  He is now reading How the Bible Came to Us, Meryl Doney.

How the Bible Came to Us   -     
        By: Meryl Doney


He continues to struggle through his Latin work.  I wish that the program we use had created videos do go with the grammar books as well as the primer books.  They are changing that program up, now, so I'm hopeful that they are integrating the books and including videos that cover everything.  Hopefully that will make them simpler to use for those who may pick up the series in future.  If he stays home for next year, he's going to do Cambridge Latin with an outside group so that he will have more teacher time....  Since I am no Latin scholar, once they get to a higher level, I'm not all that much help (because I really don't want to learn it with them, so I haven't applied myself)....

We are doing some revision work in his vocabulary and grammar books right now.  He tends to do better with correction if I wait a while and come back to it, rather than correcting his work each day.  Often when I do this, he will see the mistakes and correct them very quickly on his own, without further input from me.  Because the vocab book I use is pretty hefty in terms of number of pages (Vocabulary for the College Bound), I elected to split it up over the course of three years.  I now have him using some online vocab exercises created to go with some of the lists from last year as a review.  We should be able to cover a number of those lists by the end of the year.  Next year, we will have even more review of the words built in, again, if he stays home.

This is the website I use for review:

http://quizlet.com/subject/vocabulary-for-the-college-bound-student/

In geography, we're almost finished with the workbook on Europe that he has been working on for a while.  The last section of the book involves a lot of online research and it's tricky finding time when we're home long enough to get that work accomplished.  I'm hopeful that we will get it completed, though, this next week.

In history, we are finishing up the Vietnam era and will be moving on to studies of Africa next.

I finished up reading Mother Teresa this week, and began America and Vietnam: The Elephant and the Tiger, Albert Marrin, which I think is quite possibly one of the best books ever written for young people to sum up the complexities of this involvement, taking it right back to World War II.  I also read Places and People: Southeast Asia, Anita Generi, as we discussed this region of the world.

Albert Marrin



      Southeast Asia (Places & People Series): Anita Ganeri

Next week, my son will begin reading Langston Hughes's poetry, as well as other works.

We've had a little chill in the air here, after weeks of unseasonably warm (80 degree) weather.  Figures, since I finally planted some early vegi's....  We'll see how they fare.  My Dad says they are supposed to get snow next week (and they are south of me)....

Regena

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Week 29 - 2012

Wow, I got waylaid by some sort of sinus or upper respiratory infection late last week and still haven't recovered.  We haven't been sick so often around here for years, and I'm not enjoying it!

We spent last Monday at the spring homeschool day for the USAF Museum in Dayton.  That place is so amazing, and they do such a good job with their classes on hs day!  Since we're studying modern history and physics this year, everything they had to offer was right up our alley.  We enjoyed seeing the changes they've made to the Korean War, Vietnam War, and Cold War exhibits, as well as all the satellites they've added to their displays.  I'll spare you the millions of pictures we took (as this may be our last visit for a while)....

 National Museum of the United States Air Force

They're finally getting ready to add a fourth hangar, which has been in the works for years.

 Trainer Crash Diorama

 Missile and Space Gallery

 Early Years Gallery


We missed my son's lit class on Monday, and caught up with piano later in the week.  The rest of his work progressed as usual, so I won't bore you with the details of that.

On Wednesday, we had our last music/art appreciation event of the year:  The Royal Winnipeg Ballet, performing Moulin Rouge at Centre College's Norton Centre (an acoustically perfect venue).  It was visually stunning!  I think this was the best event we've been to all year.

We weren't allowed to take photos, but here are some I found online:













My son continued his co-op science class and outside chemistry lab.  At home, we finished up working with the electronics workbench, reviewed some work I'd given them to do at home, and began doing some experiments with static electricity, including making a Leyden jar.  We also split water, burning off the hydrogen we collected (and talking about electrolysis).

Here's a look at what we covered in history and literature for the week:

My son continued reading A Separate Peace for his outside lit class.  He continued with Gay-Neck at home, as well as reading from the poetry of Walter de la Mare. 

He read chapters 8-18 in History of US, volume 10. 

I wrapped up our Korean War studies and began reading about the Vietnam Era from our Kingfisher World Encyclopedia and Haywood's Atlas of the 20th Century.  We're also reading about Southeast Asia in general during this time period. 

From First Facts About American Heroes, I read about Jacquelyn Kennedy, Neil Armstrong, and Rachel Carson.


From Remember the Ladies, we read about women of the 60's.

From The Great Ships, we read about The Enterprise (the first nuclear powered aircraft carrier).

I read aloud Cuba: After the Revolution, Bernard Wolf.

Cuba: After the Revolution

I can't believe how close we are to the end of our school year!

Regena
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