All posts by Penny

Homeschool record 11 – 17 February


Lessons

  • Narration in French: episodes 6 – 10 from the Feuilleton d’Hermès (greek mythology)
  • French reading consolidation: finished reading through Léo and Léa, she has a hard time reading cursive… Also read Le Fantome de la Bibliotheque.
  • Writing: contined to work on French spelling sounds
  • Recitation: began learning ‘le Lapin de Septembre’; to be completed next week
  • Maths: intended substraction facts practice – but I stupidly drew a substraction table, Antonia grasped the pattern after the 6th entry, so it turned into a number pattern lesson, followed by a consolidation of negative numbers (small numbers – big numbers), then Mike pitched in to explain some property of substraction whereby the result of say 5 – 3 is the same as that of 3 – 5, but with the opposite sign.

The Unschooled Stuff

Language arts

  • She dictated her first ever French story to me. This followed a lot of oral French storytelling and informal poems.

Reading

  • We read several picture books in French together: Barbapapa, Le Fromage Magique,
  • I read aloud a particularly good set of library books this week and also La sorcière du placard aux balais from Contes de la rue Broca
  • We’re also into Claude Ponti again with our new book Le Chateau d’Anne Hiversaire
  • Some independent reading

Maths/Logic

  • Still playing with multiplication – she sure picked that up easily
  • We printed out a map of the town centre and had Antonia lead the way from the car park to the ice cream shop


Science/Nature

  • Examined the buds on the flower basket. We set up a stop motion video experiment to film a bud unfurling into a flower
  • Made and installed a bird feeder – project from Youpi
  • Went for a long walk down to the river – really lovely, antonia very exploratory, clambering and so on, especially in the south facing parts of the mountain. Made a collection of lichens as well as taking numerous photos.
  • Picked out some other interesting nature activities from a library book
  • Brainpops especially health, immune system, weather
  • Forgotten from last week: examined the jewellery counter in a search for real diamonds, noted price, size and relative glitteriness. Also looked at real rubies, sapphires and emeralds.
4 mosses

History/Social Studies

  • Noted the location of road name signs in the city

Practical Life/Cooking

  • Helped make pancakes
  • Made chocolate and pastry snails over at a friend’s house

Arts/Crafts

  • Made herself a photo tour of the house, very sweet, it contains individual portraits of each of her toys, items of interest to her…
  • Made several figurines and some jewellery with the sculpey clay her American relatives sent her.
  • Made Mike a Valentine’s Day card
  • Made drawings to illustrate the difference between raiding (stealing) and trading (exchanging)
  • Made a drawing of a witch (green with hairy legs!)


Music

  • She figured out the melody from the 2nd movement of Eine Kleine Nachtmusik on the piano
  • She did a lot of improvising and got a bit upset because she couldn’t really record her improvisations long term, so we’re on a search for a solution
  • Watched The Magic Flute (again)

Sports/Activities

  • Dance class
  • Swimming class
  • Ice skating

Games

  • M and A have been playing the new pirate game he brought in the US. I gather he is looking for ways to make it harder, even though he has lost every time so far!
  • Also Solitaire and Quoridor

Out and about

  • Trip to the airport (again), to pick up Mike
  • Two play afternoons this week and one sleepover
  • One trip to the children’s playground and ice cream shop
  • Shopping for Valentines Day flowers and chocolates and also for books

Special mention

  • The adults have been testing out the new microscope – a hair and moss spore capsules. We decided to get the hang of it ourselves before letting Antonia loose on it.

Why we’ve (sort of) given up TV

Antonia’s never watched a lot of TV/Video, and when we started homeschooling it was part of the initial setup that there would be no TV watching until the evening, except very rare treats or educational things. It’s not that we’re completely against that particular medium. We’ve always weighed the pros with the cons.

Pro
She got a lot cool ideas from watching TV and video that she was motivated to try out in the real world: kite flying, skating, various crafts, and of course she had parents who made sure the things really did get tried out.

Con
She learned some undesirable behaviours. Being a sweet little girl whose parents supervised her viewing, this wasn’t so much to do with violence. But we did notice her modelling her behaviour on female characters in ways that we felt were undesirable, and ultimately detrimental to her.

Pro
She learned about the difference between images and reality by making comparisons between what she saw on the screen and the equivalent in life, because we made sure she had opportunities to do so.

Con
She got to watch plenty of dumbed down, repetitive junk, adverts, and other nonsense.

Pro
Some films that she watched spoke to something very deep in her, and I think she benefited from having them in her life. There were also documentaries in which she saw things she remembers to this day.

Con or neutral, depending on point of view
I think TV contributed to making her very ‘picture-orientated’. And conversely, less word-orientated. Although she reads very well and enjoys being read to, she only wants books with pictures in.

Pro (probably)
It might have helped her French.

On the whole, we were more balanced towards the pros. But just lately the balance tipped.

Con
The things she has been watching are even more dumbed down now that she is older. She’s certainly getting less in the way of new ideas or psychological fulfillment. But I’m not very enthusiastic about the programs for older kids – they seem to have thrown any notion of quality or meaningful content out of the window when making them.

Con
When she was little(r), lots of repetition was good because it helped her decode what she was watching. Now I feel uncomfortable that she clearly relies on everything being repeatable ad infinitum. It never occurs to her to actually give her full attention to things. But repetition seems inevitable or at least it’s always possible, with too much TV or video viewing.

Con
I didn’t like that watching TV had become a habit: something she systematically did in the evenings. And of course, she had to watch something to feed the habit, even if she’d seen it a hundred times, didn’t really like it, didn’t want to see it much that day.

Con
And I could just see her flip into passive mode! Whereas, when she was little, I could see her actively engaged in trying to understand, compare, etc…

Con
We felt there were a lot of other things she could be doing. I suppose our days are seeming a bit shorter lately. She stopped napping finally, but goes to bed earlier. We’re out just about every afternoon (nature walks, city walks, socialising). We do about an hour and a half of lessons in the mornings. I wanted her to have a lot more free time to do her own thing.

TV Withdrawal
The disappearance of TV time went rather well. I did it while Mike was away, and everything seemed different anyway. I told her we were going to do without TV for a bit, and made sure I was ready with an activity, a story or something like that at TV time. Every day for a week and a half, she asked me if she was going to get to watch TV that day. I said “not today” and she went off and did something cool and productive without another word. At the end of a week and a half, she stopped asking. The habit seems to be broken, rather quickly too. I think that proves that the activity had no real value for her.

She hasn’t been screen free all this time. She’s been to the cinema, which is something I’m promoting now. She’s watched a few films and documentaries, played some computer games, watched Brainpop, she’s even watched a bit of junk TV with her friends. But it’s not linked to a particular time any more, it’s not a regular event, and it’s generally something that’s been picked because she really wanted to watch it, not just what the box was dispensing that day.

Valentine’s Day nature study

We don’t usually do Valentine’s Day around here. How come I suspect someone who spent two weeks away from his daughter could refuse her nothing? I’m very happy to see some spring flowers anyway. We had fun examining the new buds in detail.

The primroses hide down under the older leaves and flowers. Their sepals gradually get pushed back to reveal the colour.

This (is it a Begonia? – no, it’s a Cyclamen, thanks, Marie) keeps its petals furled up. It was only on closer inspection that we noticed that the stem doesn’t unbend. The petals just open till they point straight upwards, and the flower stays upside down.

The daffodil pushes up from the sheath at the top of the bulb. It grows from the outside of the plant, not the centre, as the primroses do.

The Hyacinth doesn’t seem to make new buds. But the flowers at the tip of the stem are still tinged with green.

Homeschool record 4-10 February


It was a very intensive week for us – they are not all like this by any means.

Lessons

We had finished the maths program up to the beginning of March last week, and planned to concentrate on language stuff, French especially. I wanted to make time for narration and recitation which have tended to get squeezed out due to lack of time. I decided not to include any other subjects for a week or two, and just keep things short and simple. One of our goals has been to help her make a bigger voice through recitation especially – her dance teacher mentioned that her contributions can’t be heard well, in a group of six kids. I think we are making progress in this direction.

  • Reading: re-reading through Leo and Lea to iron out a few difficulties and gain confidence upto section. The current problem is that she tends to read the same mistakes she makes as she is speaking, instead of being guided by the phonetics. Lessons 1 – 38.
  • Recitation: learned Le Ver, by Pierre Coran and La Biquette from 101 poesies et comptines. She initially tried to learn Le Secret, by Rene de Obaldia, which she loved, but it proved too long and complex for her.
  • Narration: we have started the Feuilleton d’Hermes again. In which I learn the value of doing French narration first thing in the morning. She does it well when she can summon her confidence, badly when she gets all tied up with the idea that she doesn’t know how to express something (she does!). Episodes 1-5.
  • Writing: we started off with our regular dictations, but have switched to a rapid review of the more complex French spelling sounds and some basic grammar in view of the upcoming inspection.

The Unschooled Stuff

Language Arts

  • Dictated two poems for her blog, marking a turn away from her previous nature and prettiness orientation towards humour and funny characters.
  • Wrote a postcard to a friend, addressed and posted it.

Reading

  • She likes to read aloud with me, each of us taking a turn to read one page. We’ve read The Enchanted Tree House 2, started 3, also Horton Hatches the Egg (again!), and one French book where she played the relatively minor role of Josette.
  • I know she has done some reading on her own in French and English, but I have only a vague idea of what.
  • I’ve been keen to emphasise French, so I’ve read loads of French picture books, + our usual dose of Horrid Henry.

Maths and logic

  • Worked through some puzzles from her puzzle book.
  • Telling time for real and some practice from Lapin Malin CE1- she’s got the hang of the 24 hour clock, but it takes her a while to figure out the time. Some opportunities to figure out durations, time till some future event, etc…
  • She’s playing around with the multiplication concept in various ways
  • Money: she’s buying little things with her pocket money, we’re keeping her pocket money accounts weekly, and she’s getting some additional practice from Lapin Malin,
  • Addition and substraction practice also courtesy of Lapin Malin
  • She’s weighing out her ingredients for recipes unaided.
  • Invented a game called beehive with quite complicated, but workable and consistent rules.

Science / Nature

  • Out at night examining hailstones and building with them.
  • Two other shortish outdoor walks at night to look at constellations, the new moon, and to convince herself that she is very brave!
  • Long nature walk to favourite stream: especially noticed male and female hazelnut flowers, toadstools and lichens, mosses and the variety of their spores. Investigated some new spots in the area, now that there is little undergrowth.
  • Interest in clouds sparked by dance class, discussed cloud types and looked at cloudspotters gallery
  • We watched some of the David Attenborough documentaries: Life on Earth, reptiles, birds and mammals

History/Social Studies

  • Finished reading the comic strip history of the Isere vol1 – prehistory to 1000 AD
  • City walk: we’re working on general observation and awareness in the urban environment and orientation skills, but I also asked her to pick and photograph a fountain. We might start a little collection, though they have no water at this time of year.
  • Sent postcard, so we ended up discussing workings of the post, which box to post the letter in, pick up times, etc…

Practical Life / Cooking

  • She made two batches of sable cookies pretty much following the recipe by herself.

Arts / Crafts

  • She finished her big unicorn coat sewing project, and has toyed with a few smaller sewing things.
  • She made a drawing of Mr Clever with speech bubble. Her drawings suddenly have a more polished, rounded look.
  • Made a very nice Kapla jug
  • She made numerous paper masks this week, and a small abstract paper artwork in an envelope.

Languages

  • We have spoken vastly more French than English all week, and I really think I can feel the difference. Some stubborn grammar errors are starting to fade away, or at least, she’s developed the ability to recognise and correct them.
  • Watched two episodes in German of Pippi Langstrumpf
  • Listened to video of kids songs in Hindi

Music

  • After much work on the Cuckoo, Suzuki 1, piece 3, she has declared it ‘finished’. She has already taught herself the right hand of piece 4.
  • Has done a great deal of piano improvising and managed to pick out a couple of tunes she knows.

Sports/Activities

  • Dance class – I think they are spending all term on sky things, she is really in her element there.
  • Swimming class – went brilliantly for her
  • We spent some time playing throwing and catching games with balls, balloons, stuffed animals…

Out and about

  • Trip to the library.
  • Three park/children’s playground trips.
  • Wild play afternoon and dinner with friends
  • Nice shopping trip to choose things for her
  • Hung out at the local pizza joint for a while

Special mention

  • For autonomy and consideration in getting her own breakfast and entertaining herself all morning while her sick mother recovered a bit.

Homeschooling in France

This was one of the more public-spirited themes of my old blog, and I’m putting the information back here, in an more orderly manner. If you’re homeschoolers thinking of moving to France, or you’re English-speakers already here and thinking about homeschooling, here is a quick guide.

Legalities

Parents can choose to homeschool their children, using whatever method they like. However, the legality of unschooling in France is a subject of debate, and sometimes of law cases.

Last year the law was changed to state that in the context of homeschooling, only the children of a same family can be educated together. It isn’t possible to form systematic lesson groups with the children of other families. You can, of course, use a tutor for all or part of your own children’s education.

The law specifies that children must ‘receive instruction’, from September of the year in which they turn 6 to the age of 16. There is also a legal definition of what children must know by the age of 16, and the method of instruction chosen must be intended to produce this. At 16, children educated at home must have a level in each area ‘comparable to that of children educated in the public schools’. The law also specifies that children living in France must master the French language.

Do ex-pats have a special status? The truth is, I don’t know. I’m not sure if there’s a legal distinction between ex-pats and immigrants. I thought there was a forum for homeschooling ex-pats in Paris, but I can’t find it again. I have also heard of a lady in my area who homeschooled her children in English according to the American public school curriculum during a three year contract, but I have not met her, and don’t know what legal framework she was operating under.

The associations

There are three national homeschooling associations. They can provide information, exchange of ideas, moral support, legal support, a way to meet other homeschoolers. They organise regular meetings at a national level. You can find the details of homeschooling law and the standard letters you need to send on each of their sites. I don’t feel that the membership fees are very expensive.

I feel I wouldn’t be giving complete information if I didn’t mention some ‘politics’ associated with them. Obviously, I can imagine some people coming forward to dispute whatever I say. LEDA, the first association, has a reputation for being more supportive of relaxed homeschoolers and unschoolers. CISE has a reputation for being more ‘schooley’. I’m a member of both and have found the reality to be more nuanced. I think it is true however, that members of LEDA are more likely to be ‘alternative’, by French standards, in other ways as well. Members of CISE are more likely to be ‘conventional’, except in the one respect of homeschooling.

LAIA is a fairly new association, and I’m not a member of it, simply because it came along after I joined the other two, and three seems too much. It seems to me that they would like to militate for changes in the law in favour of less regulation and probably an easier ride for alternative educational methods, (especially unschooling?). CISE on the other hand is openly in favour of homeschooling within the law, and working to get officials to respect the law. None of the associations have any official party political or religious bias, and none, in theory, take a stand on the parent’s choice of educational method (except maybe in the case of unschooling?).

There are a sprinkling of english speakers in CISE and LEDA for sure, and quite possibly also in LAIA. There are other languages as well, of course. I believe CISE has started a discussion forum for bilingual homeschooling but I don’t really have time to frequent it just now.

There are also local informal associations in many places for organising meetings and so on.

Formalities

These are defined by the law, but I’m putting them separately. There are two basic types of homeschooling: you can use an accredited correspondence school, or not. In both cases you must send a homeschooling declaration to the ‘mairie’ (town hall) you depend on at least 8 days before the start of each school year, or within 8 days of removing your child from school, if it’s the middle of a school year. A standard letter is available from the homeschooling associations. In both cases, the mairie should arrange a visit to your home, in the first year and every other year thereafter. The purpose of the visit is to find out why you are homeschooling, and that you are actually doing so: your children are ‘receiving an instruction’. In theory the visit should occur ‘soon’ after your declaration.

The second formality applies only if you are NOT using an accredited correspondence school. In this case you have to send another homeschooling declaration to the board of education, at the same date. Again, you can use the standard letter from the homeschooling associations. The board of education will arrange for yearly inspections to ensure ‘that the teaching dispensed conforms to the child’s right to instruction’ as defined by the law. These inspections may take place at home, and they often do. But sometimes, you may be summoned to the board of education. After the inspection, you will receive a report. If the level of instruction according to the law is deemed unsatisfactory, a second inspection may be required. If the instruction is still deemed unsatisfactory you may be ordered to send your child to school.

The reality of the formalities

Our anxieties obviously center around the social and educational inspections. What happens in practice can be very varied, and the behaviour of the officials can be unpleasant or flat out illegal. Or of course, it can be fine. The worry is that you don’t know beforehand. The social visit could consist of some combination of the following: nothing so far (my case in a small village); a respectful visit from somebody delegated by the mayor, they’re a bit curious about what you’re doing and a bit embarassed at intruding into your life; a visit from a social worker who asks how much you earn, and suggests you might need to see a psychiatrist! That’s illegal, actually case 1 (mine) is illegal also…

The educational visit could consist of some combination of the following: an inspector making an appointment to visit your home and arriving with an open mind; an inspector informing you that s/he’s coming the day after tomorrow, that it’s up to you to rearrange your other engagements, then showing up with a bunch of tests – s/he’s got no idea how to assess your children otherwise; you being summoned with your child to the board of education offices, where they want you to sit in a waiting room while your child sits an exam, then lecture you on how school is necessarily the only thing for kids! I would tend to feel that’s illegal – the education received by the child has not been assessed as the law requires. A lot of homeschoolers here would agree with me. The consensus amongst homeschoolers is that we can legally insist on being present with our children during the inspection. I do not think there is really a consensus on whether we must accept inappropriate public school inspired tests.

After this you get the report, and it’s probably optimistic to expect it to be glowing. No matter how or what your child is doing, there is every chance that it could be better/would be better in school! In theory, the report could say that the inspection proved unsatisfactory and you have to do another one. I don’t think this happens very often, but I have heard of people being bullied back into the schools or into correspondence courses by the sheer nastiness of the BoE inspectors. Sometimes the BoE people do not know the law, and I think that in general, appeals to the law or moves in the direction of legal action can be successful, but hey, you have to be willing to fight!

The social climate and general atmosphere

In general, the response from members of the public or people we know has been positive to homeschooling. In any case, people are often relatively guarded in commenting on the private lives of other people. There is some debate on homeschooling in the national media, but not on a huge scale. We suppose homeschooling is growing in popularity, but it is still very much a tiny minority choice. The attitude of the government/board of education is tolerant but barely. The law specifies that schools are considered the foremost place of education, without forbidding homeschooling as a matter of parental choice. There seems to be some fear of homeschooling as a means of isolating children from society and inculcating them into religious sects. In general, homeschooling on a day to day basis is a pleasant experience.

Children in France generally spend long days in institutions from a very young age – babyhood actually. By long day, I mean 8.00/8.30 am to 5.30/6.00 pm. School usually lasts 8.30am to 4.30pm, but many parents leave their kids in after-school care so that they can work. Wednesday is not a school day, but it is often spent in organised activities: the school curriculum does not include music and arts necessarily, and is low on sports. There has been school on Saturday mornings, but this will end with this school year. The reason I mention all this is that it can make arranging social opportunities for homeschooled children more challenging than it would be in the US. The other kids are just not all that available for play, poor things, and homeschooled children are relatively thin on the ground. It can be done, in various ways, depending on the child’s needs, but it is harder work.

If you came here looking for information on homeschooling in France, I hope this helped. Leave me a comment, if you know anything I don’t, or if there is anything you would like to know.

What’s a homeschool blog for?

When my blog disappeared into thin air one day, I was obviously a bit upset. I had posted almost daily for over a year, and I had a neat post all lined up and nowhere to put it. It wasn’t quite the end of the world, but I did wonder what had happened. Had my six-year old somehow accidentally clicked her way through several screens and buttons to delete my blog? It seemed a bit unlikely – she’s known how to operate BrainPop for ages. She screams whenever things go wrong. And it’s quite a lot of screens and buttons. Did I have a secret enemy? Kind of an exciting idea, eh! Some ruthless hacker who cares that much about how I educate aforementioned six-year-old! Or did Blogger mess something up? Possible, possible, … and they didn’t answer my emails begging for help. Hey! maybe I have a secret enemy at Blogger!

After 24 hours of withdrawal symptoms, I discovered one important reason why I have a homeschool blog. I started it to keep records of what we were doing. Actually, it had replaced a previous, private and monthly website, because it was simpler and easier to update. The day after my blog was deleted, I received our convocation for the yearly homeschool inspection. Note that I didn’t know when this would be because it could have been anytime between December and June.

Suddenly, I needed all those blog posts for real! Luckily, I had the photos on my hard drive, and Mike received all my posts as emails, and never deletes anything, so I can get them. It just isn’t as easy as clicking on the Maths label, and copying down everything we did. Now I’ve remembered just how important the record part of my site is to me. I am going to be much more proactive about keeping those records for now on.

When I first started my blog I used it as a place to think aloud. Like most homeschooling parents, I care a lot about what I’m doing, but I’m often in experimental mode. Not specifically experimenting on my child, but I’ll try out various ideas for size, and maybe implement 1% of them. I did that quite a bit in the early days. Then it turned out that a few people discovered my blog and stopped by fairly often. Ooops! I got a bit of stage fright! Did I really want to ramble on about some wild idea that I might not be committed to, and have people associate me with it? Errr… probably not. I really wanted to present the ideas I had fully explored and was committed to. If anyone criticised me, I would at least feel on firm ground. But in retrospect, the blog loses some of its value for me if I can’t try out ideas in it. I’m going to have to think of a way of doing that whilst letting people know whether I really mean things or whether they are thought experiments.

With a few people stopping by, with there being a few blogs I liked to read and sometimes comment on, I inadvertently started to develop a tiny public presence. I suppose I asked for it. Especially when I took over the Evolved Homeschoolers Webring, which had mysteriously disappeared, kind of like my blog. I fully admit that I’m not nearly as proactive as my predecessor. I’m really just a placeholder for something that I felt needed a place. We tend to take evolution for granted in Europe. Outdoors education is another matter. It’s something I can feel militant about, what with kids in France spending most of their lives locked up in institutions. But I didn’t really know I had a peer group. One day I stumbled across the Learning in the Great Outdoors blog carnival, and was surprised to discover I was a contributor! Some nice person must have submitted one of my posts on my behalf. I was pretty excited about the idea of writing posts on purpose for this! Actually, I was planning one on astronomy with younger kids when my original blog disappeared. Now there’s an idea that’s been fully explored in our family!

I suppose homeschool blogs vary. Some give out a clear direction, others are a bit vague and multi-purpose. Mine is probably going to be one of the latter even in its new, better protected incarnation.

Test Post

Yellow House Homeschool is back! Mike is a genius! I have my own url, top security hosting, responsive customer service, and very, very low fees. Yeay!

What happened to the previous incarnation of Yellow House Homeschool? Nobody knows!