Sunday, March 18, 2012

snow day!

Last Tuesday we got snow; honest to goodness big flaky soft packable snow!  And not just a little bit either, six inches.  That's amazing.  There still wasn't very much down by the water, but up on the bluff where we live it stuck around for two days.

It didn't start until Monday night at about 9:30. We hauled the girls out of bed because we weren't sure if it would still be there in the morning. 




The next morning I woke up early and headed down to the bay.  I got some beautiful pictures there.







Friday, March 16, 2012

Color Curriculum

My latest project has been putting together a curriculum for a six-week after school art program.

I am going to take this curriculum to the elementary and offer to teach an after school art class.  I have had so much fun putting this together, learning about artists and coming up with projects!  Next week I am going to practice my first lesson in a kindergarten and 2nd grade class.  this will give me a better idea of skill level, interest, timing etc.etc.etc. that you can only learn by doing. 

This curriculum is all about COLOR!
Week 1:  Introducing color- Primary, Secondary, Tertiary, warm and cool
Week 2:  Creating an illusion of blended colors with Pointillism-Artist: Georges Seurat 
Week 3:  Complimentary Colors in Pop Art- Artist: Andy Warhol
Week 4:  Color and Emotion- Artist: Vassily Kandinsky
Week 5:  Color without form-Surrealism-Artist: Jackson Pollock
Week 6:  Color without association-Artist: Henry Matisse

I've tried out the first two lessons on my kids and have been impressed with their work and excitement about the artists so far. 

Leah's color wheel

Leah's "warm and cool" flowers

What do you think?  As a parent would you be excited about this curriculum for your child?

My favorite dish...crow



Pretty much any time I vow I will NEVER do something.....I inevitably do. 

Example:

I will NEVER marry a red head.  Check



I will NEVER drive a mini-van.  Check


I will NEVER home school my kids.  Check




Technically I'm only home schooling ONE kid.  Leah.  For the past two years Lars and I have been concerned with her performance in public school.  Granted we have probably contributed to the problem by moving so much.  L really takes a long time to adjust to new environments.  Her problems really started in third grade...when we moved the day before school started.  (Oops) 

I don't have a problem with public school, in fact I truly value and appreciate it.  Leah has had spectacular teachers.  I've been really very pleased with them, it's more the class size that I have a problem with.  She started this school year with 30 kids in her class.  There have been several move-ins during the year and last week L came home and announced that their class was up to 38!  I don't care who you are and how many years you've been teaching, once you have 38 fourth graders in one class it just turns into crowd control.  The few disruptive kids get all the attention and the sweet, quiet ones...like Leah, are appreciated but overlooked. 

I was expressing my frustrations to my sister on the phone who home schools her seven brilliant children.  She told me about Connections Academy which is in essence, public school on line.  http://www.connectionsacademy.com/home.aspx  They follow your state public school curriculum, have kids do the same state standard testing and assign the kids to "classes".  Each child is assigned a teacher and talks to them on the phone.  They even have art in their curriculum which all public school in Oregon no longer have because of funding...or lack of.

This appealed to me because I know myself...structure and follow through are not my strong suits.  All of the lessons are already planned.  I am not the teacher, I am the "learning coach".  Any questions about the lessons can be directed to the teacher through email, a phone call or video chat.  I can still be the good guy :)

Monday Leah got approved for the program and she started Tuesday.  They are shipping her all her books, supplies and a personal computer this week.  She is super excited about it and so am I.  It will be so nice to know exactly where she is at with her subjects and know that she is getting the one on one attention that she needs to get caught up.  More than that though, I hope this really builds her self confidence.  She compares herself to everyone else, so working solo for a while may eliminate that problem. 

A TOAST, to another hearty helping of Crow.  May this one go down more easily than the last.  :) 

  

Sunday, March 11, 2012

storm warning

Leave it to a country song to get me thinking!  I don't usually listen to country music, but there is one stretch on hwy 101 between Newport and Waldport that drops every radio station except for opera and country...therefore, I now sometimes listen to country music.  :)  Anyway, a song came on that I had never heard before by Rodney Atkins called, "If you're going through Hell".  (full lyrics here http://www.cowboylyrics.com/lyrics/atkins-rodney/if-youre-going-through-hell-16751.html )

One part caught my attention and brought to memory an experience I hadn't thought of in a long time.  The chorus is,
"If you're going through hell
Keep on going, don't slow down
If you're scared don't show it
You might get out
Before the devil even knows you're there"

(I did not take this picture)
The memory this conjured up was from a road trip my husband and I took about eight years ago when we drove from Idaho to Iowa for my sister's wedding.  On the way back to Idaho we took I-70 rather than I-80 hoping that Kansas wouldn't be as painful to drive through as Nebraska was. 

It was worse. 

It was a beautiful day, blue skies and sunshine.  Because it was Kansas, and there is not so much as a hill in Kansas, we could see for miles down the road ahead of us.  We noticed a dark haze in the distance.  We figured it was just a nasty little rain cloud and kept on trucking.  As we got closer the clouds kept getting darker and more dense.  Then the rain started.  Soon it was raining so hard we couldn't see the road even with the wipers on high. The rain turned to hail; big midwestern hail, not these pansy west coast pellets.  On the radio all of the stations were interrupting their regular programming for a severe weather warning.  "Anyone on Interstate 70 between mile posts...(wherever we were)...need to take cover now.  Tornado warning.  Get off the road!"

Being raised in the midwest I knew we needed to get under an overpass.  Well, everyone else on the road must have also been from the midwest (or just didn't want severe hail damage to their car) because the overpass looked like a parking garage on black friday.  There wasn't a chance we could get under cover unless we got out of our car and ran up the embankment to hide under the bridge.  We pulled our little Ford Focus to the side of the road and sat there for a few minutes trying to decide what to do.  We had our baby in the back seat, black storm clouds around us and hail beating down on us.  Drawing upon problem solving skills learned in childhood we realized if you, "Can't go over it, Can't go under it, You gotta go THROUGH it!"

We decided to take our chances and gun it out of there.  Lars hit the accelerator and we barrelled through the hail.  Thirty seconds later we were out of the storm and back into the blue skies and sunshine like nothing had ever happened.  I kept staring out the back window at the think black wall of clouds watching it look smaller and less intimidating until it looked again like nothing more than an angry rain cloud.

For the 90 seconds that we were surrounded by darkness and fear, our situation looked completely hopeless.  It was only after we made the decision to get our tails out of there were we able to "see the light".  So when I heard that country song, "If you're going through hell, keep on going, don't slow down..." This experience came to mind and gave me a powerful reminder to "KEEP ON GOING!" 

I need to stop being paralyed by fear.  Things look the worst when you're in the middle of it.  I'm going to get out of the darkness of self doubt, feelings of inadequacy, confusion and fear faster with my foot to the gas pedal rather than sitting fearfully under the storm clouds.

A friend shared this poem today and it spoke so much truth to me.



Our Greatest Fear —Marianne Williamson

it is our light not our darkness that most frightens us




Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.
 
Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure.
It is our light not our darkness that most frightens us.
We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous,
talented and fabulous?

Actually, who are you not to be?
You are a child of God.
Your playing small does not serve the world.
There's nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other
people won't feel insecure around you.

We were born to make manifest the glory of
God that is within us.

It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone.
And as we let our own light shine,
we unconsciously give other people
permission to do the same.

As we are liberated from our own fear,
Our presence automatically liberates others.

—Marianne Williamson
Return to Love by Marianne Williamson, Harper Collins, 1992
 
 

I found myself a new mantra, "This little light of mine....I'm gonna let it shine." :)

That's just nasty


E: Sometimes I like to bite my nails.
Me: Yeah?  That's kind of gross.
E:  Well, I don't do it too much anymore because I have a loose tooth.
Me:  Oh, that's good.
E:  It just means that I have to use my back teeth instead of my front ones.
Me:  That sounds tricky.
E:  Not really.  I just wait until you clip my nails, and then I pick them up and chew them.
Me:  (dry heaving)


A different night

Me:  Hey E, look at the moon!  Isn't it beautiful?!
E:  It looks like a giant toenail.