Monday, January 9, 2017

Sonlight Core H Week 6A Jan.2-8, 2017

Sonlight Core H 
Week 6A 
Jan.2-8, 2017
Dd's watercolor Star Wars

Hello Friends!
We were still on Christmas break from our band classes, but the churchs' Olympians group started back this week.  It has been beyond cold, but it looks like Michigan was one of the better states to be in, with the east coast getting a blizzard and so much snow!  And their road crews ill-prepared for cleaning it all up!  


A very sweet young lady at our church, who is the same age as Dd, plays the violin in her school orchestra, and had agreed to come over on Thursday to listen to Dd play and give some critique.  Hailey, is her name, and she is just the kindest, most bubbly teenager I've met in a long time. Rewarding her efforts, we popped in a pizza to compensate her for her help as she shared some pointers for improvement. Because Dd had been asking for a pizza for a week straight, it was a good two for one!  Hailey has a VERY nice violin, the tone was SO much better than ours!   After playing their violins, discussions, and pizza we went to the church for the "Strings Group."  Hailey has been in this musical group for months already, but Dd hadn't felt brave enough to try it yet, so, as a team we all went together!  There were two guitars, one that also played the harmonica, the ukulele, and our two teenagers both played their guitars.  I guess playing the guitar is similar to the violin?!  Dd has a ways to go on learning the guitar, but this group will be a free group that will also provide her with the opportunity to get to know some of the people in our church better.  


Grilling in the snow!  So, Dd decides barbecue chicken, grilled fresh green beans, and carrots sounded perfect for dinner on Friday, in the super frigid temps we had here in Michigan!  It took us almost 20 minutes to get the charcoal going, it was so cold!  The meal turned out great, and I was glad that I never say 'no' to Dd making meals!!!  I'm sure some people might make plans for meals, and not just wing it like I do, so often!  Dd has a natural talent for cooking just about anything!  I'm happy with celery and peanut butter!

I'm walking out through the snow to take the chickens a special treat!

Chickens: They are doing very well cooped up inside, although I really worried they might fight among themselves, it appears I was wrong!!!  I am trying to keep their interests up with fun meals with our left-overs.  If I cook meat in a 9x13 pan, after I remove the meat, I will use that juice and fat to add to rice or oats and then feed it to them.  They are thriving!  Zeus, the only rooster, has had a few flair ups with Dh and Dd.  I keep feeding him out of my hand, holding him, and generally trying hard to keep him as tame as I can.  We will 'let him go' if he gets mean....we just don't need a rooster, though appreciate the potential baby chickens if we ever were to decide to increase our numbers.  I'll keep trying to work against his nature and hope for the best.

Our lessons update:
Sonlight really jumps through history so fast, and leaves out so much, that we have been adding in BiblioPlan history Companion textbooks to fill in all those precious details.  But, we have been behind for too long, and I decided to stop going forward until I can get us caught up again, though I know we will only fall behind again shortly!  I do feel like the BiblioPlan is worth all the extra work and hours of reading, though it makes scheduling tricky.


Church:
After over a year at our church, we are seriously considering becoming members.  It is so hard to sign on to a specific church that isn't exactly what you are use to, and with considerable differences to weigh.  Overall we feel like this is a lovely church, and I've about weighed out the problems I have with allowing the grace needed for all human interactions.  Really, what kind of relationships would we have if we didn't give grace freely and receive grace freely?  So thankful the Lord gives me abundant grace for all the trillions of mistakes I make, think and do!  Grace seems to be the balm that remedies my concerns over joining this church.  I do have specific 'fears' that could possibly never come to fruition that pop up in my mind---like how I am very different than many people in our congregation and do see the world very differently--politically and just in a general tolerance level.  I guess all my summers in New Hampshire filled me with a deep code of  "Live and Let Live" and be generous with grace! that helps a lot too!!!  I'll keep you posted on when we actually commit, because we really do consider this a serious thing.  

Music:
Believe it or not, this was not a big music week!  Dd put in some time with her violin, and an hour and a half with her guitar, but her poor saxophones only saw about 30 minutes of action!  Over the holidays the kids are fairly allowed to play as much or as little as they want; but with an encouragement to do try and play, which apparently fell on deaf ears this year!!!  Dd has thoroughly taken the full dose of vacation from her piano and sax's!  I do think she did some piano, but not like she should have!  I tried to remind a bit here and there, but, really, this is her thing and I try not to treat music like I do our math, science, history, or reading subjects.  She can succeed or fail musically and I try to not get too bossy about it, but, it is hard for me to let it go and watch her loaf!  

Our lessons this week:

Bible:
Sorry to add another story in the middle of our academic section, but after finishing the Veritas Press bible curriculum I am floundering a little bit.  We have been trying out a college bible study book called The Harmony of the Bible, but it just seems to be bible reading and not comprehension like was wanting.  So, at the end of the week I brought out the Bob Jones high school bible books I bought used (but still expensive), to try.  We are starting with That I May Know Him, Selected Studies on Jesus Christ in the Gospel of Mark.  Next week I'll assign Dd to also do the private bible reading section by herself so she can start that, at week 6.  I'll give this second option a few weeks to see how it does and evaluate.
Harmony of the Bible:
His Ministry Launched, His Person, Proclamation, and Baptism:
All read with Bible and Believer's Bible Commentary:
Matthew 3: 1-12 
Mark 1:1
Mark 3: 1-2
Mark 1:2-6
Mark 3:3-6

 That I May Know Him, Selected Studies on Jesus Christ in the Gospel of Mark, Bob Jones:
pg 1-8

Church/Volunteering:
Dd attended church and Sunday School
Dd and I volunteer to co-run the Wed. night Olympian's games 


Study Skills:
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Study Skills by Randall S. Hansen and Katharine Hansen
This week read pages 30-47, then skimmed through the rest of the text.  Though I tried really hard to make this text work, it really is not for a freshman in high school.  They talk a LOT about what to do when your in college and how to work with your professors.  We decided to put this book back on the shelf for now.


Writing:
IEW SWI-B, Lesson 12
Dd did a fantastic job doing a report!!  Yay!  Writing is something she likes to do on her own, and not 'IEW' types of writing, generally.  But, she was assigned to write a report, on HER CHOICE!  She picked Princess Leia Organa, think Star Wars.  She did a really good job, not just enough to get it done, but even typed it up on her typewritter!

I contacted IEW to find out what we should order next, as we are almost done with this book, and they said to do SWI-B Continuation, not SWI-C, like I thought I should order?!  We did SWI-A a few years ago, and thought we would skip through like that, but apparently we were to be doing the 'continuation' at the end of each one?!! oops!

Thank you card (for Christmas): one card done

Letter to friend: one this week.

This is the hill I have to pull down our huge trash can each week!  Every other week I have two to bring down, and don't forget the even harder task of pulling those big bulky things back up the super-steep hill...in the snow...in the freezing weather!  Sophie comes with me to sniff the deer trails.  

History:
BiblioPlan Companion Early Modern History Vol.1:
Ch.1: The Spanish Empire in the New World
and 
Ch. 2: The Scottish Reformation, the Dutch Revolt
(I think I wrote five pages of notes on all this history!  So much I didn't know!!!)

George Washington's World by Genevieve Foster
pg's ix-34
Dd has been looking forward to dropping Kingfisher for this book for months!  I gave her the choice between those two options (of course I owned the Kingfisher, and not the Foster books already!) and she didn't hesitate on this preference.  We really loved Foster's August Caesar's World in Core G.  Foster does a great job of telling history in story form that is so easy to understand and with great details that aid in remembering.

DVD: John Adams 
with Paul Giamatti and Laura Linney, based from David McCullough's book of the same title (which is fantastic read, btw! highly recommend!)
Uncle Jeff gave Dd this DVD set collection that recently came out.  There are some amorous moments that we fast forwarded through, not sure how detailed they were--I didn't stop to find out and didn't have the time to watch three discs before sharing with her.  So far it has been good.  Dd loves America war books and movies.  We had watched the fist disc last week, and this week we watched Part 3 & 4, on Disc Two.

DVD: Unbroken, written by Joel Coen
our library had this DVD, it is on WWII and POW camps.
After a near-fatal plane crash in WWII, Olympian Louis Zamperini spends a harrowing 47 days in a raft with two fellow crewmen before he's caught by the Japanese navy and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp.


Watercolor Dd completed this week


Art:
big art week! she is really having a lot of fun drawing and doing watercolors...at least 10 hours this week.  


Geography:
BP Advanced Maps:
Week 34: The Spanish Armada
Week 1: The 7 Continents (plus a lot of little stuff too)
Week 2: Scotland and the Netherlands


Math: 
Math U See: Geometry
5 A-E


Poetry:
Painless Poetry by Francis McPake
pg 67-74
The frustrating part of Dd reading THIS book is that she continually tells me she doesn't like this material, but refuses to switch to a new poetry book or poet until she completes this entire book?!
I guess we are not going to recommend this book, though I've liked it well enough.

Latin/Word Roots:
Word Roots by The Critical Thinking Company
pg 57-60

Agnes, yet again curled up in a blanket trying desperately to get warm...poor kitty! She is always cold!

Science: 
Apologia: Physical Science: 
Module 3: The Atmosphere
Text: 55-73
Student Notebook: pg 35-41
(hoping to do the experiments in week two of this module)



FUN READING:
Uncle Jeff gave Dd these two books she has been reading this week:
1. Undaunted Courage 

Undaunted Courage: The Pioneering First Mission to Explore America's Wild Frontier

Goodreads summary:

 4.22  ·   Rating Details ·  34,600 Ratings  ·  1,835 Reviews
'This was much more than a bunch of guys out on an exploring and collecting expedition. This was a military expedition into hostile territory'. In 1803 President Thomas Jefferson selected his personal secretary, Captain Meriwether Lewis, to lead a pioneering voyage across the Great Plains and into the Rockies. It was completely uncharted territory; a wild, vast land ruled by the Indians. Charismatic and brave, Lewis was the perfect choice and he experienced the savage North American continent before any other white man. UNDAUNTED COURAGE is the tale of a hero, but it is also a tragedy. Lewis may have received a hero's welcome on his return to Washington in 1806, but his discoveries did not match the president's fantasies of sweeping, fertile plains ripe for the taking. Feeling the expedition had been a failure, Lewis took to drink and piled up debts. Full of colourful characters - Jefferson, the president obsessed with conquering the west; William Clark, the rugged frontiersman; Sacagawea, the Indian girl who accompanied the expedition; Drouillard, the French-Indian hunter - this is one of the great adventure stories of all time and it shot to the top of the US bestseller charts. Drama, suspense, danger and diplomacy combine with romance and personal tragedy making UNDAUNTED COURAGE an outstanding work of scholarship and a thrilling adventure. 


2. Signing Their Lives Away 
by Denise Kiernan
by 

 3.84  ·   Rating Details ·  547 Ratings  ·  137 Reviews
In the summer of 1776, fifty-six men risked their lives and livelihood to defy King George III and sign the Declaration of Independence—yet how many of them do we actually remember? Signing Their Lives Away introduces readers to the eclectic group of statesmen, soldiers, slaveholders, and scoundrels who signed this historic document—and the many strange fates that awaited them. Some prospered and rose to the highest levels of United States government, while others had their homes and farms seized by British soldiers. Signer George Wythe was poisoned by his nephew; Button Gwinnett was killed in a duel; Robert Morris went to prison; Thomas Lynch was lost at sea; and of course Sam Adams achieved fame as a patriot/brewer. Complete with portraits of the signers as well as a facsimile of the Declaration of Independence, Signing Their Lives Away provides an entertaining and enlightening narrative for history buffs of all ages.

Happy Trails to You! Until We Meet Again.....
.......

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Sonlight Core H Week 5C (mostly vacation) Dec. 26, 2016 - Jan 1, 2017

Sonlight Core H Week 5C
 (mostly vacation) 
Dec. 26, 2016 - Jan 2, 2017
My Christmas present from Dd this year- a Wood Thrush

Hello Friends!



The family Christmas party was held on the last day of the year, Saturday, this year in Indiana.  Dh had Monday and Friday off this week! (Plus, Monday Jan 2nd!)  We spent half our time in Michigan and the other half in Indiana, on our family farm, the other half.  Indiana in January is like October in Michigan. 



 It was nice having a break from the cloudy, soupy Michigan weather to enjoy the sunshine of Indiana.


With my new vacuum in hand, Dd cleaned out two vehicles for us.  She really likes our new cordless vacuum and got busy breaking it in!  That is a double gift--the gift of the vacuum, and also the gift of Dd doing the cleaning!  


We had a few warm days--the chickens got to get out and free range


We did lessons on Tuesday, and specifically worked on our BiblioPlan Medieval Companion.  We are WAY behind in our BP Companion compared to where we are in our Sonlight Core H.  BP isn't something you can rush through; you must take your time and slowly read through it.  My goal is to try and catch up.


The "D" family hosted the "Girl's Club" this month, on Wednesday.  Dd made a big batch of No-Bake Cookies to share with the group.  They played 'Mafia' and had a great time together.


Thursday Dd and I packed the van and after Dh got off work we headed south to Indiana.  It was after midnight before we finally arrived at the farm.  The first three hours of driving were very difficult with all the snow on the highway---especially around the state divide between Michigan and Indiana.  




Dh got to hunt Friday morning and evening---but, he didn't see anything but squirrels!  The wind was so gusty that most things hunkered down and stayed in.  Meanwhile, Dd and I helped Giz with her preparation for the big Christmas party.  I was glad we could be of help to her.


The party on Saturday went well.  It was nice to see everyone, as we generally only see them once a year and it is fun to see how everyone has changed over the year!  Dd played for hours with Norah and Charlotte (maybe 2 & 4 years old?).  Uncle Greg got Dd a Star Wars blanket and Star Wars watch.  Uncle Jeff got Dd a bundle of Civil War books.  Uncle Jeff is a history teacher in a public school, whose major passion in life is the Civil War, so he always gives Dd the best Civil War books!  Giz and Grampy gave Dd some Star Wars "Rey" clothing, to help out her Rey costume that she made.  Dd didn't like the pants and top she wore under the fabric costume, so these items should help her improve her costume.  Oh- and Giz found two pairs of Star Wars socks!  One pair is dark gray with black Republic symbols on them, and the other pair is of R2D2...cute!


Sunday we packed up the van, cleaned up the farm house, ate lunch with a big group of family, and then headed back home.  Luckily our arrival was before 8pm, so we could go to bed at a decent time and not at midnight again!  It is a seven or eight hour drive between our Michigan home and our Indiana home!



 Academic progress for the week:

History:
BiblioPlan Companion Medieval History, Vol II.
Ch. 34: The Spanish Armada, the Counter-Reformation: Completed
(This concludes our Medieval BP books, and we move to the Early Modern texts next.)


DVD:
America, The Story of Us

*Really fun, visually exciting DVD of American history---many library's have this---recommend!



Audio's:
1. Stella Bain by Anita Shreve: Completed
This was a seven hour audio, we heard one hour previously, this trip we heard six hours to complete the WWI story.
Goodreads summary: An epic story, set against the backdrop of World War I, from bestselling author Anita Shreve.



When an American woman, Stella Bain, is found suffering from severe shell shock in an exclusive garden in London, surgeon August Bridge and his wife selflessly agree to take her in.


A gesture of goodwill turns into something more as Bridge quickly develops a clinical interest in his houseguest. Stella had been working as a nurse's aide near the front, but she can't remember anything prior to four months earlier when she was found wounded on a French battlefield.

In a narrative that takes us from London to America and back again, Shreve has created an engrossing and wrenching tale about love and the meaning of memory, set against the haunting backdrop of a war that destroyed an entire generation.



Our barns at the farm


2. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull by James Rollins: In process (1 hour in)
Goodreads summary: “The name is Jones. Indiana Jones.”



He’s back. Everyone’s favorite globe-trotting, tomb-raiding, wisecracking archaeologist is finally at it again–hurtling headfirst into high adventure and relying on his wits, his fists, and his trusty bullwhip to get him out of deep trouble. But the man in the jaunty brown fedora and battered leather jacket is no ordinary digger in the dirt. From the fabled lost Ark of the Covenant to the legendary Holy Grail, he’s salvaged the world’s most amazing artifacts, while beating the baddest villains and defying the most breathtaking odds. 


Now it’s 1957, the atomic age is in full swing, and McCarthy-era paranoia has the nation on edge. But for Indiana Jones, the Cold War really heats up when his latest expedition is crashed by a ruthless squad of Russian soldiers. Commanded by a sword-wielding colonel who’s as sinister as she is stunning, the menacing Reds drag an unwilling Indy along as they brazenly invade American soil, massacre U.S. soldiers, and plunder a top-secret government warehouse. Their objective: a relic even more precious–and powerful–than the mythic Ark, capable of unlocking secrets beyond human comprehension.......




Sophie was willing to go on hike after hike with me this week at our farm.  This is one of our big fields.


Busy Hands/ Home Economics: 3 hours
Baking: Wed and Thur were Dd's baking days!  She made 3 batches of No-Bake Cookies!
Sewing: 2 hours
Vacuuming: 4 hours- house and auto's
Cleaning Auto's: 4 hours
Wrapping presents: 3 hours
Chicken Care: 3 hours
Kitchen/Dishes: 1 hour
Party Prep for Giz: 3 hours (setting tables, making food...)


Art: 
4 hours watercolor, 3 hours drawing
Dd has been doing watercolor painting this week; I think she gave Giz one of them for a gift.  She also did some drawing in her new sketch book with her new pencils!


Writing/Typing/Language Arts/English: 4-5 hours
Dd spent two days on the typewriter, typing up her story---one that she wrote.  I've not read this story, it is something she is doing on her own.  She has been enjoying the typewriter a lot this week!  Hours of typing---good thing I enjoy that sound!


FUN BOOKS:
(I didn't give her any Readers for the week; just let her read on her own.)

Eldest (the Inheritance Cycle #2): by Christopher Paolini
Goodreads summary: Darkness falls ...Despair abounds ...Evil reigns ...Eragon and his dragon, Saphira, have just saved the rebel state from destruction by the mighty forces of King Galbatorix, cruel ruler of the Empire. Now Eragon must travel to Ellesmera, land of the elves, for further training in magic and swordsmanship, the vital skills of the Dragon Rider. 



It is the journey of a lifetime, filled with awe-inspiring new places and people, each day a fresh adventure. But chaos and betrayal plague him at every turn, and Eragon isn't sure whom he can trust. Meanwhile, his cousin Roran must fight a new battle back home in Carvahall - one that puts Eragon in even graver danger. Will the king's dark hand strangle all resistance? Eragon may not escape with even his life .


A wonderful book, full of fantasy and suspense. 


Dh and I found this section of holes...perhaps a mice den?


Confessions of a Murder Suspect
by James Patterson
Goodreads summary: James Patterson returns to the genre that made him famous with a thrilling teen detective series about the mysterious and magnificently wealthy Angel family... and the dark secrets they're keeping from one another.



On the night Malcolm and Maud Angel are murdered, Tandy Angel knows just three things: She was the last person to see her parents alive. The police have no suspects besides Tandy and her three siblings. She can't trust anyone -— maybe not even herself. 


Having grown up under Malcolm and Maud's intense perfectionist demands, no child comes away undamaged. Tandy decides that she will have to clear the family name, but digging deeper into her powerful parents' affairs is a dangerous -- and revealing -- game. Who knows what the Angels are truly capable of?



Harry Potter and the Cursed Child: COMPLETED
The Eighth Story. Nineteen Years Later.


I always like finding woodpecker holes--I found a few this week!

Based on an original new story by J.K. Rowling, Jack Thorne and John Tiffany, a new play by Jack Thorne, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is the eighth story in the Harry Potter series and the first official Harry Potter story to be presented on stage. The play will receive its world premiere in London’s West End on July 30, 2016. 



It was always difficult being Harry Potter and it isn’t much easier now that he is an overworked employee of the Ministry of Magic, a husband and father of three school-age children.




While Harry grapples with a past that refuses to stay where it belongs, his youngest son Albus must struggle with the weight of a family legacy he never wanted. As past and present fuse ominously, both father and son learn the uncomfortable truth: sometimes, darkness comes from unexpected places.



.............

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Sonlight Core H Week 5B Dec. 19-25, 2016

Sonlight Core H 
Week 5B 
Dec. 19-25, 2016

Hello Friends!

This was a big week, between the Christmas Band Concert, the Christmas choir, going to the movies to see Rogue One, "V" family party, three days of migraines (Tue, Wed, Thurs), and, of course, Christmas itself!  We got a few things done academically too!

We had two extreme's for our weather too--snow, snow, snow---then on Sunday the wind started up and brought in some warm air.  I was glad Dh was able to get off after half a day to pick Dd and me up and drive us to the high school where the bands were to play.  
The week started with me finally getting whatever bug Dd had been fighting, but it only kept me down about 24 hours.  Tuesday was Dd's concert--she played the Tenor sax in the Beginning Band, and the Alto sax in the Intermediate Band.  The program had lots of different bands and quartets and specific instrument groupings---like a 'flute ensemble' and woodwind groups....hours of listening pleasure.  We didn't stay for all the bands; Dh had work early in the morning.  It was a fantastic show.  I recorded it and will post it on YouTube and share a link here for any friends or family wanting to see it.

Can you see what is eating under our feeders?

Thursday, our friends, the "V" family had a pile of us over to their house for a little Christmas party.  It was lovely to sit around and chat with the other mom's while the kids played games.  They were suppose to make paper ornaments, but the older kids preferred to play "Mafia."


Star Wars' newest film, Rogue One, turned out to be a disappointment for us.  We can honestly saw we have loved the other movies, but this one was very bleak...so much death that it was beyond feeling the loss. I don't want to ruin it for anyone who hasn't seen it yet, but we were united in our disappointment.  Dd was particularly disappointed in the soundtrack, and something about how they didn't do the music right in the beginning...they broke from their usual format, or some-such-thing.

Here is a closer look---

Church on Christmas was particularly lovely!!!  Dd had been practicing our two songs that we did with the choir.  The whole service was 'special' after 'special.'  Of all the churches I've ever gone to, this one has the most musical congregation!  There are four women who play the piano and choir in rotation, a 'stringed instruments group,' and various choirs and solo singers.  In some of the churches we have visited, many of the musicians take on the role of being the entertainment for the audience to watch; but the musicians here, 90% of the time, invite the congregation to sing with them and they just lead.  The difference being that it FEELS like we are all together in our singing praises to the Lord, as a group, as a united voice of worship.  When our church sings, the sound is so surprisingly loud (in a great way) and harmonious.  It really is such a blessing to me to find a church that has this quality so well in hand and done right. It is very hard to describe.

Meet Harry and Sally!  These two opossom's stayed in a big bush that was covered with snow (think mini igloo) for a whole week.  They came out to eat seeds a few times each day!  So cute!

Presents were mostly books this year! Dd and Dh both got quite a lot of them!  I got an upgrade on my vacuum; that Dd has been enjoying so much!  That makes the gift twice as awesome since she may be more willing to help with the vacuuming!!!  She took the new vacuum out on Monday and cleaned out two cars! Without being asked!  She just likes it so well she has been looking for places to vacuum! Yay!!!  I splurged on myself and bought a new purple (eggplant color) blanket!  Dh splurged on himself and got a few socket, socket driver, pneumatic accessories, and upgraded drill bits.  Dh bought me two dvd sets--- the complete set of Miss Marple with Joan Hickson!!!! and Vera, another British show I enjoy. Dd gave me a watercolor painting of a Wood Trush--really nice, and a crocheted sweater/poncho..awesomely soft!

 Dd had been begging for some cowboy boots for two years, and they were on sale in the fall, so I bought them then (with her trying them on first), and then hid them away in my closet for her big gift.  She is loving them!!!  So happy she got something she loves so much!  Plus, they are great for doing chores and taking care of chickens in!  She looks like a real 4-H girl now! She also got new art supplies--drawing pencils and sketch books...

Our Christmas dinner--we splurged on a case of real Rootbeer! Dh cooked a whole turkey, asparagus, GF stuffing from scratch, Sweet Potato mash, gravy from scratch, and root vegetables.  What a lovely meal!

Academics this week:

The BBC Manual: Turning Your Bedroom into a Bible College by Gregg Johnson
pg 52-57

Typing/Language Arts: 4 hours
Dd got her hand-me-down typewritter out and started back, full-force, into typing again!  This week she typed up a long letter to her dearest/oldest friends; the LeFeb family!

History:

Sonlight Reader:
The Ghost of Tokaido's Inn by Dorothy Hoober: COMPLETED
Goodreads summary: 
While attempting to solve the mystery of a stolen jewel, Seikei, a merchant's son who longs to be a samurai, joins a group of kabuki actors in eighteenth-century Japan.

BTW: for book reviews or summaries, you can go: http://www.goodreads.com/
and type in any book you'd like to read about.

Story of the World, Vol 3, Early Modern Times:
ch's 9-16

Kingfisher History Encyclopedia:
pg's: 258, 265, 247, 260, 261, 274, 254, 255, 264

Sonlight Timeline & Mapping:
Week 4 & 5

BiblioPlan Commentary, Medieval, Vol II:
Ch. 33: Queen Elizabeth and William Shakespeare

BiblioPlan Advanced Maps:
Week 32: The Changing Church
Week 33: First Colonies in North America

DVD:
AMERICA: The Story of Us
**Dd actually asked me to check this out again, as it is so fun to watch!  Check your library and see if they happen to have this fun history dvd collection---your kids will actually love watching it, and you will too!**

With all the snow we've rec'd these past 3-4 weeks, we've had ALL sorts of visitors to our feeders!!!

Electives:

Drawing/Art: 10 hours this week
Watercolors: Painted me a Wood Trush, and Dh a Christmas Tree! 

Music:
Alto Sax: 1:00 hour
Tenor Sax: 1:00 hour
Violin: 40 min
Piano: 2:00 hours
Sang, choir, at church (two songs), plus the practicing we did at home: 1:00 hour

Chores: 10 hours
Chicken Care, Laundry, Dishes, *vacuuming!*, cat litter, major bedroom clean-up this week, especially in her closet.

Sophie!  I spoiled her this week and added extra stuffing to her dog bed!

Fun Audio:
(Star Wars) Vortex by Troy Denning
Goodreads summary:
In Book Six of the bestselling nine-book Star Wars Fate of the Jedi series, the suspense crescendoes as the Skywalkers and their treacherous Sith allies race against time to discover the origins of the mysterious Force-entity known as Abeloth. When they begin to uncover secrets better kept hidden from mortal minds, no one is surprised to see the uneasy partnership erupt into violence. But they are surprised at where the investigation leads: to the home of the reclusive Fallanassi, who may hold in their hands the future of the Jedi Order itself.

Fun Books:
Eragon (book 2) by Christopher Paoline- In Process

Fever Code (Maze Runner Series #5) by James Dashner- In Process


Busy Hands:
baking and cooking this week...perfecting her No Bake Cookie recipe, plus spent 4+  hours baking with Dh for his co-workers (he gave lots of cookies/fudge..to his co-workers).

We had a lovely, quiet Christmas!  Dd checked out a Harry Connick, Jr. and Michael Buble Christmas music for me to enjoy all week!  I watched Prep & Landing repeatedly!  Not to mention other holiday movies like: The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, A Christmas Story, Elf, The Polar Express....so fun!  We don't have any hook-ups to watch tv, so we check out, or own, what we want to watch.  

............................