This Week and Next…

It’s been over 100 degrees for nearly two weeks. It’s been all but impossible to run a decent program…quite frankly, I’m grateful for the two day holiday. We are going to have to stay in today…it’s going to be 106 degrees. But next week we have a full week. School today and on Monday. Tuesday we will swim at Newburgh Pool, and Wednesday we will go to the Louisville Science Museum. Thursday will be a rest day, and then on Friday, we will finish the week up with swimming.

I’m hoping the rest of the summer is not as hot. It’s really oppressive, and to have to cancel the smallest of summer trips is a shame. But taking children into the heat for hours is just not safe. A small child can not maintain his body temperature safely in this heat, nor can many of them think to ask for a drink…the cognition is simply not there.

I’m trying to take a couple of days off to go to Chicago to visit my daughter. I’m leaving at 5:45 Saturday morning by train.  If any questions arise, please ask Mr. Terry.  I will be gone Monday and Tuesday.

Hoping for a better week next week.

 

 

Week’s Update…

Had a great week…swimming with some additions to the sharks, field trip to Pounds Hollow…movie today…and pizza party tomorrow. The weather is unpredictable and we are doing our best to keep cool and busy at the same time. Not always easy.

Next week it’s going to be hot as well. Sending out post cards tomorrow with my best guess at what to expect for next week. Hoping to swim on Tuesday and Friday…if it is 100 degrees or hotter, we can’t take the kids out. It’s a matter of safety with very young children who can’t tell us what their needs are.

Please bear with us during this unbearable time!

Pounds Hollow

We are traveling to Southern Illinois to swim in a beautiful lake in the Shawnee National Forest called Pounds Hollow Lake. This is a great exercise for the kids. Lake swimming is wider and more buoyant than pool swimming. The sandy beach is inviting to play in. It’s going to be hot today…in the mid nineties…we will leave school at 9:30 and arrive for an hours swim at 11:00 and we’ll eat lunch and swim again till about 3:00 and then drive home. Should be a great day!

Monday’s Tattler for June 11!

It’s a classroom day today. We are practicing making sentences, writing what we build out of words and then illustrating it.

These writing and drawing sheets will go home at the end of the summer as a keepsake.

There are hundreds of words for every child to choose from. Every Monday and Thursday we add about a hundred more. The project is to read the words and choose them to make a sentence.

Reading class is side by side art class. Children will be drawing something wonderful.

We are learning several songs in Music class. We are learning Lonely Goatherd and the verses to Take Me Out to the Ball Game. We are learning a poem about tree toads, and we are singing Noah and I won’t grow up.

We will feast on muffins for breakfast with fresh bananas and milk.

Lunch will be a lovely spaghetti with meat sauce, and fresh fruit and salad. It’s a yum!

In the afternoon we will begin the movie Pipi Longstocking. This is a learning by listening activity. We hope the children enjoy movies they have not seen.

Snack will be frosted spice cupcakes.

Monday’s Tattler

It’s a Monday in our first full summer week. It’s an education day…a gathering day…a day to get the week started with enough pizzazz to get us through the week! Muffins for breakfast, taco feast for lunch and chocolate cupcakes for snack. Swimming tomorrow and a field trip to The Exotic Feline Rescue Center on Wednesday in Brazil, Indiana.

Our First Stop…Lincoln National and Lincoln State Parks

It’s always a pleasure to start out the summer with a trip to Lincoln Park. It’s small and unpretentious. There is a little museum there, and I always have the children look through it and then try either to remember or to guess at the most important tool the pioneers had. They look at the tools, the bedding, the clothes, the wagon, the cow, the spinning wheel, and they report all those things. The answer is the ax.

We visit the grave of Abraham’s mother and then walk up to the model of Lincoln’s boyhood home. It’s a one room cabin with a fireplace and a loft. There is always cooking there, and as the fire burns on a hot day, one can glean just how uncomfortable it must have been wearing a woolen dress that had been washed maybe once in the past month. 

There are cows, sheep, chickens, horses, and a garden to look at. Some of the children love the whole thing. Some don’t get it at all…mostly because they left their DS on the bus. It’s hard to try to explain to the children what it must have been like back then. Spending a few minutes at the little farm won’t warm many hearts. The rangers are fabulous and tell us so many interesting things. But it’s hard to put on any real sense of historical perspective. 

Historical perspective is something most adults can’t bring themselves to understand. But we will take aim at the twenty-first century and see how many children come to understand just how lonely, how scary, how  independent these people were who came and built our country.

None of our children will remember the twentieth century. No one will remember going without a toilet, or not having running water. Few will remember such things as a milk man or know what a green grocer is or a haberdasher, a milliner, a butcher or baker. But on this trip, we will try to tell them stories that will endear them to the past. 

Part of our summer is an attempt to educate beyond books. It’s a time when we experience different kinds of things, take them in and store thoughts, memories and ideas that will create a broader and more intelligent and respectable person. This world of the pioneer is our introduction to this “broader life.” 

When we finish with the cabin, we will trot across the street and play on the playground, eat a fabulous lunch and then visit the cultural center for a talk about pioneers…just after we cross the dam and look at the lake where we will swim later this summer…

This is one of my favorite trips because I could live at that farm and be as content as a pig in a poke. But then I’m a child of every year. I know how to do all those obnoxious things like weave, spin, quilt, find wild fruit and make jam…bread…grow stuff…cook over a live fire…and that kind of thing I find is peaceful…