So… it’s been a while since I did an “official” wrapup, though I did share the biggest highlight of Sarah’s December and January, her cross-country trip with Dan to Arizona.
I had mentioned at the end of December that I was looking for a new format for this wrapup, because it really takes me a long time to put together, but those of you who commented told me how much you like it. The downside is that when things get busy, like they did at the end of January and again at the end of February, I just can’t finish a big post!
So this will mostly be a roundup of March, but I’m going to try to pop in some highlights from the end of January and February as well in order to get caught up. Then, who knows? MAYBE I’ll do something crazy like post once a week in April so it’s not so overwhelming. (Don’t hold me to that!)
(As always, if you want a more frequent peek at what we do, you can always find me on Instagram and Facebook. You can also check out our archive of previous wrapups here.)
Outschool
By far the biggest new discovery for our family last month was Outschool. It’s a platform for independent online K-12 classes taught by all sorts of people – from certified teachers to hobbyists to trade professionals – and it’s amazing.
So far, Sarah has taken:
- Total History: Germany in One Lesson
- Characters We Love: Friends
- A Taste of Shakespeare: Middle/High School
… and of course, the aforementioned Shakespeare Roundtable is underway.
She’s also signed up for “The Butterfly Effect” – Vincent Van Gogh; Meet People Who Have Changed The World on Thursday, April 5.
I cannot speak highly enough about Outschool, which has been super-fun for us. In fact, Dan and I have even talked about signing up to teach classes ourselves! Many thanks to my local unschooling friend Nikki for mentioning this to us.
Shakespeare and other theater
So of course you saw the multiple Outschool Shakespeare classes.
In addition to that, in the realm of theater in the past month or so, Sarah has also:
- Watched a movie version of Hamlet starring Mel Gibson
- Worked heavily on the set crew for a production of Bridge to Terabithia at Dreamwrights
- Seen a production of Beauty and the Beast at our local high school
- Discussed how Shakespeare uses folklore, assisted by a phenomenal antiquarian book Chris owns called – you guessed it – Folklore of Shakespeare
We also watched some cool videos about Shakespeare’s use of meter:
And this cool mini-biography of Shakespeare:
On the topic of other performing arts, then there’s this gem:
And finally, Sarah also shared this with me: A collection of celebrities reciting Poe’s “The Raven” as part of a benefit:
As you can tell, theater was pretty much our big focus!
What comes next?
On the Unschool Rules Facebook page, I asked what everyone wants to read more about once Sarah finishes her compulsory school years – more stuff about unschooling philosophy and ideas, or more stuff about our day-to-day lives post-“school.”
You’re all incredibly unhelpful, because pretty much everyone said both. Yeah, I said it. Unhelpful. I was hoping for “clear direction” and I got “keep writing whatever you happen to think of,” which … well, don’t say I didn’t warn you.
Anyway, there were a lot of people who want to know what’s next for Sarah, and you MIGHT have noticed it’s something I don’t talk too much about. Sure, part of it is because we’re sort of live-for-the-moment types, but part of it is…
… because we just don’t know.
First of all, let me be clear that Sarah is her own person. Whatever she chooses to do – this summer, next year, five years from now – is going to be what she wants, not what Chris or Dan or I decide for her. We feel super-strongly about that. But it means that unlike a lot of kids, who are told “You have to go to college,” or “You have to get a job,” Sarah has to do the hard work of choosing. And honestly, she just isn’t quite ready to decide yet.
But that doesn’t mean we are hands-off. Our role is to talk with Sarah about responsibility, options and goals, and to put resources in front of her that might help. We’ve looked at a program called Transitions, part of The Janus School, which caters to students with learning differences. We’re not sure yet if that’s in the future, but we spent a day last month visiting with Sarah and trying to find out if it’d be a good fit as she tries to figure out adult life on the autism spectrum.
All I can say is, when Sarah knows, you’ll know Until then, I hope you’ll be happy hearing about the day-to-day, because we really feel like that’s where our focus should be right now, and it’s where all the coolest stuff is happening!
Books
- What’s So Special About Shakespeare? – You’ll be hearing more about this book soon; it’s been a big part of our Shakespeare kick and it and some other books by the same publisher are part of a learning theme we’ve got going on about “rebels.”
- The Walking Dead Vol. 12: Life Among Them
- The Walking Dead Vol. 13: Too Far Gone
- The House at Pooh Corner – When your almost-18-at-the-time daughter asks you to read your favorite childhood book aloud to her, you don’t pass that up.
- The Sun’s Coming Up… Like a Big Bald Head – Sarah’s favorite actor, Norman Reedus, has a photography collection, and this is it.
- 2018 World Almanac – We’ve read and gone down huge rabbit trails about the solar system, the periodic table, actors’ birthdates… this book was our best impulse purchase so far this year.
- The Book of Useless Information – Sarah read most of this entire book aloud to me one night while I was supposed to be doing grad school homework.
- Seeing Things: A Kid’s Guide to Looking at Photographs – Don’t be mistaken about the title – this book is great for all ages. Since Sarah is getting really into photography and videography, Chris got this for her as a present and she was looking through it in conjunction with the Reedus photo book.
Movies and TV
- The Walking Dead – Which is, of course, immediately followed by an hour of The Talking Dead.
- Full House – Mom and Sarah officially finished all bazillion seasons! Now we have to find a new show for them.
- Despicable Me
- Scooby Doo 1 and 2
- Boss Baby
- The Truman Show
- Zootopia
- Meet the Robinsons
- Paddington – I think I loved this more than anyone, and now I really want to see Paddington 2.
- Fiddler on the Roof
- Finian’s Rainbow
- Alice Through the Looking Glass
- Ferris Bueller’s Day Off
- Moana
- RENT
- Sing
- Groundhog Day – Of course we watched this in February.
- Family Feud
- Groundhog Day – See what I did there?
- The Kid – A Charlie Chaplin film; Sarah and Chris have been diving into Chaplin together!
- Looney Tunes – Chris and Sarah get a kick out of watching this together too.
- Cinderella
- The Whole Nine Yards
- The Green Mile
- Rescue dog show – This was neat! I don’t remember what channel it was, but it was a dog show of all rescues, and it had events like sitting on couches and stuff. It was great.
- The Oscars – Of course movie-lovers like us had to watch.
- Chaplin – A great biopic starring Robert Downey Jr.
- In Search Of – In which Chris and Sarah learned about communicating with yogurt. No, really. This is a neat documentary series with Leonard Nimoy that goes into weird areas.
- The Villain – Not Mr. Schwarzenegger’s finest hour, but we love him anyway.
- Saved
- Dr. Strange
- Keeping the Faith
- Night at the Museum – I’m not saying we like Ben Stiller or anything…
- Nanny McPhee
- Black Panther – If you haven’t seen this yet, please, make it a point to. It’s amazing, and I say that not even really liking “superhero” movies much. It’s not – it’s an “awesome people” movie much more than a superhero one.
- Independence Day
- The Twilight Zone
- The Olympics – Last but certainly not least. This was how we spent a huge chunk of our February, and it led us on a ton of rabbit trails about geography, culture, politics, sports and more.
Games
- Rummikub
- Ticket to Ride Europe
- Parcheesi
- Blokus
- Gloom
- The Walking Dead Trivial Pursuit – A birthday present Sarah has REALLY enjoyed, and which the rest of us can get next-to-no questions right on.
- Lanterns
- FIFA 18
- The Sims 4 – Sarah has always loved the Sims, and in this go-around she’s got two brothers who are musicians and I get to hear them practice their instruments, which is pretty cool.
- Assassins Creed: Origins – If you don’t yet know about “discovery mode” in this game, you have to check out this article. Sarah has spent hours showing us things like the “bent pyramid,” which I’d never heard of, the inside of the Sphinx and a ton more great historical sites, all of which are packed with cool facts. This is why video-game learning is so awesome.
- MLB The Show 18
- Destiny 2
- World of Warcraft – Sarah got game time for her birthday and is back to playing this, one of her long-time favorites, again.
- Fruit Ninja – Bonus to getting a Chromebook with a touchscreen for her birthday: The ability to play Fruit Ninja.
Recent rabbit trails
I mentioned in September’s post on our unschooling planner system that our “rabbit trails” are the most fun we have in unschooling.
Here are just a few we touched on in the past few months:
- The New Deal, voting and other rights for people with disabilities, FDR and Kennedy, thanks to a cool history tool we got to review.
- Gay actors playing straight characters and vice versa.
- Based on some videos from Clearwater Marine Aquarium, river otters and sea turtles and how they breed and why they might need to be rescued.
- Thanks to a local Greek food fest, we got into a winding discussion about Greek orthodoxy and the Greek langague.
- Viral and bacterial illnesses, when a young friend of hers got very sick and needed to be hospitalized, but doctors couldn’t figure out what was wrong. In great news, her friend is now home and recuperating.
- After attending an AMAZING concert by my favorite singer, David Byrne (formerly of the Talking Heads), we talked a lot on the way home about the violent deaths of many people of color, thanks to his last encore song, a cover of Janelle Monae’s protest song Hell You Talmbout (worth a listen here).
- European history, Pol Pot, the Dark Ages, and famous death scene photos.
Other fun stuff
- We all colored maps showing what states we’ve been to (Sarah is winning).
- Sarah continued to work on creating fan video edits for her Norman Reedus fan Instagram account.
- We tasted Universal Yums from Greece, France and Poland, and with the Poland ones we also did a cheese-tasting party based on some many cheeses we had recently acquired.
- As part of Sarah’s We Rock class, she learned a bit about how to play a three-string guitar, or riff machine.
- We found, for $1.50 on clearance at our local Staples, a zombie coloring book, and Sarah colored us some amazingly detailed undead friends.
- Sarah continues to enjoy sorting her stamp collection, which has led to conversations about the Republic of South Maluku, which I had definitely never heard of, flags, and a bunch of other great stuff.
- We’ve been talking about dogs a lot since our Goldendoodle, Coby, passed away in October. Then we found out that there are a bunch of new Doodle breeds – like Bernedoodles (Bernese Mountain Dog plus Standard Poodle) and Sheepadoodles (Sheepdog plus Standard Poodle). I subsequently lost my stuff, because they’re phenomenal.
- For the third year, Sarah took part in 4-H Capital Days, where she went to Harrisburg, debated a bill on the Senate floor, and met our senator, Mike Regan, who told her a cool story of how he helped a young boy and his family get a diabetes monitor after an insurance denial so that his parents could stop staying up all night to check his sugar.
- We had some birthdays – Sarah turned 18, my mom turned 83. We enjoyed restaurant dinners out for both of them, and Sarah got a tattoo as a gift from Dan and me, an amazing Chromebook as a gift from Chris, and a very sweet video from a longtime friend/extended family member named Jerry. (And back in January, Dan celebrated his 31st birthday!)
- Sarah, who loves penpals and letters, wrote to a fellow Walking Dead fan and artist in Japan named Ai, and to her longer-time penpal Christina in Taiwan.
- We had our big 4-H Auction, the main fundraiser that keeps our county 4-H Center building running all year. Chris successfully won a gardening-themed basket from Sarah’s alpaca club, but generously put it up for rebid to help raise more money, and Dan and I successfully won a cheese basket for an exorbitant (but certainly charitable) sum. That’s where the cheese for our Cheese Tasting came from. We also managed to donate $20 for four hot dogs because of a lack of change and a general feeling of generosity.
Updates from around the family
Since our “curriculum plan” for this year featured not just Sarah but the other house adults, I figure I should give monthly updates on our progress too. So here’s a look at what’s new with the rest of us.
An update from the me, Joan
I’m still trucking along with two grad classes this semester, carrying a high A in both right now.
I managed to read six books in January, 10 in February and 10 in March. Tops among them were The Librarian of Auschwitz by Antonio Iturbe (which will make you cry exactly as much as you might guess a book with Auschwitz in the title would make you cry) and The Speckled Monster by Jennifer Lee Carrell, a great look at smallpox variolation in Britain and Boston in the 1700s.
If you’d prefer a fiction read instead, I’d say go for Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman or Caleb and Kit by award-winning YA author (and friend of mine!) Beth Vrabel.
I mentioned in the last update that I started new medications for my bipolar, and they continue to be amazing, though I had to call an audible and request a dosage reduction because I was veering way too far into “comatose” for my liking. I’m more alert/awake/functional now.
I also got to go on my annual scrapbooking weekend with my best friend, Nina, and we have something like four or five scrapbooking days planned in the next two months. With all of those, I should be able to get 2017’s album done by the end of May, then I can spend the rest of the year working on my current backlog project, a book of everything between when I was born in 1982 and when Sarah was born in 2000.
What’s new with Dan
Dan says:
“In January, I spent a bunch of time catching up on work and freelancing post-Arizona trip. I hit a bit of a lull in reading books, and mostly worked through longer internet articles. The few books I did read were mostly disappointing, with exceptions in Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine [which Joan mentions above] and Almost Midnight by Rainbow Rowell. I also finally managed to watch Get Out, which was a great psychological horror movie.”
Updates from Chris
Chris and Sarah have been doing a whole bunch of stuff lately, and he wrote me a pretty detailed update.
“One of the things Sarah and I did was focus on art, storytelling and creativity. We enjoy watching old Looney Tunes cartoons (especially Road Runner and Tweety & Sylvester), so we researched some images of cartoon characters and I did my best job of imitating the sketches, describing the process to Sarah as I made the art. It took a lot of patience, slow-going, and trial and error. But we were pleased with the final products, which included Wile E. Coyote, Tweety Bird, Pepe Le Pew and, switching to Hanna-Barbera, Shaggy holding a frightened Scooby Doo in his arms. So now we have some more art for our walls… We also like to do silly sketches and let our imaginations roam, which is how we ended up with a PG sketch of young Vincent Price with a tattoo on his bare buttocks.”
Yup, Vincent Price’s butt. #unschooling, friends.
“Another part of our creative efforts was co-authoring stories together. We use old postcards, chosen by Sarah, as our launching pad for whatever fictional stories strike our imagination. Back in December, we co-wrote a comic-romance piece about Napoleon – and then we completely changed gears in early March and wrote a ghost story. These are truly co-authored efforts. She comes up with the characters and settings and basic plot, and then I work to gently steer the whole thing into a viable short-story structure, asking her many leading questions and having her create much of the dialogue and other key moments. Then, when we’re done, we create a ‘book cover’ for our story, using the original postcard as the starting-off point. Sarah brings a great sense of art direction and cool typographical ideas to the table.”
More from Chris: “On my ephemera and history blog, Papergreat, some of the things I researched and wrote about in January and February included Lancaster humorist Jakey Budderschnip, the Great Blizzard of 1888 and old bookplates.”
“Some of the books I’ve read since the beginning of 2018 include Stories for Nighttime and Some for the Day by Ben Loory [note from Joan: I recommended this!], Plutona by Jeff Lemire, Break Out: How the Apple II Launched the PC Gaming Revolution by David L. Craddock, Welsh Churches by H.C. Trengove and Cosmic Engineers by Clifford D. Simak. Plus a bunch of Ms. Marvel and Captain America comic books to round things out. In March I added The Only Harmless Great Thing by Brooke Bolander.”
On the less-exciting front: “At work (LNP), the big event at the start of the year was the Philadelphia Eagles’ victory in the Super Bowl. While I did not get to watch the game with Sarah, it afforded me the opportunity to share information about the newsroom workflow and efforts required to put out a newspaper on a very short deadline (we only had 90 minutes after the game ended) following the Eagles’ triumph.
I must also add that in sad news, Chris was in a car accident (not his fault) that left his car totaled. That was not an exciting end to March!
My mom (also Joan) weighs in
Sort of pun intended, because she says “I think all we did in March is eat.” She’s not wrong. Also we started April by eating a TON when we all got together for Easter, so…
She and I also had a good time going to a tea with some of her friends, and she’s been participating in a Bible study with ladies from her church every week. They just finished studying Titus and will pick up with another book soon.
Back in January, we also celebrated the end of one of my sisters’ radiation treatments for breast cancer, so that was great news!
And Chris and Sarah got Mom a jigsaw puzzle of classic candy wrappers, and she and I worked together on that and completed it all in two nights at the end of March.
So what’s new with your family this month? How is your 2018 starting out? Drop me a comment! I love hearing from all my “blog friends!”
The post Unschooling: Our March 2018 adventures appeared first on Unschool RULES.