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September 30th, 2010

Homeschooling Review: Forces and Motion: From High-speed Jets to Wind-up Toys (Elementary Physical Science) by Tom DeRosa and Carolyn Reeves

forcesandmotiongroupThere are quite a few Christian-based science curriculums available for children to choose from in the realm of the life sciences.  Resources for physical sciences however, are much more limited.  This is what makes the Elementary Physical Science programs from Master Books so exciting!

Designed for students from grades 3 – 8 (simple graphing, division, and other age appropriate math skills are required), Forces and Motion is a hands-on; activity based learning approach that teaches first through observation, and then through the application of scientific principles and concepts after they have already been observed.  I love that – learning through life and the real application of science rather than just through book learning!

There are three books required for Forces and Motion, a student journal (consumable, but affordable with a suggested retail of $4.99), a teacher’s guide ($4.99), and the text itself ($12.99).  The supplies needed are a combination of common household supplies and some you’ll need to purchase from a science supplier.  I recommend you go through the program and make a shopping list before you begin.  The 20 investigations are recommended as an 18-week (or one semester) course of study with approximately 5 hours of work estimated per week.

The student journal is black and white, with room for observations (graphing activities, diagrams, and tables), short answer questions, math activities, true/false questions, fill in the blanks etc.) – these vary from lesson to lesson (not all of these are presented for each activity.)  A separate notebook will also be required for recording answers to the longer questions in the “What Did You Learn?” section for each activity.  Some of the questions are presented fully in the journal, others will need to be looked up in the text, such as the “Dig Deeper” research components.

The text is full-color, and looks much like a traditional textbook with many short segments included for each investigation (lesson.)  It includes the instructions for each hands-on segment, the explanation of the scientific principles, information on major scientists behind discoveries, discussion prompts, and more.

The teacher’s guide is very straightforward and contains a small, black and white copy of each page from the text along with some helpful notes and answers to the “What Did You Learn?” questions presented in the text (match those in the student journal).  It also provides some resources for additional biographical reading, and suggestions for some of the additional projects.

Personally, the three-volume approach isn’t as intuitive for me to use as a parent.  I love resources that are “all-in-one” grab and go volumes, so this format is a bit trickier for me to figure out.  If you are used to more of an Apologia approach for elementary science it might take a while to get the three volumes to flow together easily.

I wasn’t sure how Christian elements could be interwoven with physical science, but I was pleased to see an emphasis on the faith of scientists such as Newton, scripture references, creation apologetics, and praise for the Creator of our universe.  If you haven’t been sure how to tie together concepts such as friction, and God’s design of the world, this will be an incredibly helpful guide to get some conversations started.

I really like the emphasis on hands-on followed by scientific discussions and concepts, allowing children to have a real-life anchor to peg scientific concepts into.  While the format isn’t my favorite, I’m still pleased to see a multi-age resource provided for families that incorporates the nitty-gritties of physical science (the precursor of physics) in a real-life setting with math included as an integral, real-life-application part of the study.

CLICK HERE TO BUY THE ENTIRE SET AT CHRISTIANBOOK.COM!

CLICK HERE TO BUY THE TEXT, TEACHER’S GUIDE, AND STUDENT JOURNAL AT AMAZON.COM!

September 30th, 2010

Sickie Girl

My poor Kaelynn was up all night being sick :( .  She was doing so well the day before we came into the midwife but yesterday when we were in the city she went downhill fast.  This morning hasn’t been so bad so far, but last night was tough.

I’m so thankful for my husband who pulled sick care duty last night with her and is going grocery shopping right now so that we don’t need to take her out and can just run home as quickly as possible on our trip home.  Hopefully she won’t be ill on the way back, but I’ll ride with her just in case!

September 29th, 2010

Chi Flat Iron

Our youngest little love has the straightest hair of any of our daughters.  She also looks the most like Larry (that includes the light, colored straightish hair.)  Still, she doesn’t entirely have straight hair – you can catch a few wispy curls right along the bottom and sides.  I don’t know if any of our children will ever have poker-straight hair OR hair as curly as mine is on the other side of the spectrum.  Their hair is too fine for a heavy curl I think.

Good quality hair cutting shears like kamisori scissors are helpful when dealing with light, fine hair (it is HARD to cut!), but I don’t think fancy straighteners like  chi flat irons will be needed for these little girls as they grow.

Who knows though, pregnancy hormones have been known to change hair texture – maybe when they get older :) .

September 29th, 2010

Still Trying to Sort Out Grammar

…and of course I’m thinking of just putting something together myself!  Of course, I don’t know much about grammar….but hey, who ever let that stop them from self-programming part of their homeschooling curriculum.

I did score a vintage/Karen Andreola revised grammar book on bookmooch.com a couple of days ago (yay!) so maybe I’ll see how that goes before I get all crazy and dive into this on my own.  Might be best, since baby is coming in 10 weeks – I have a LOT to get done!

September 29th, 2010

Hair Cutting Shears

Larry’s hair is almost long enough to get back into a tiny pony tail now!  He actually had it tied back a couple of days ago and the girls were so shocked!  He did have a few loose parts come out at the front that he tucked behind his ears, and the ‘tail’ was sort of high, but he was pretty pleased with the result.  We won’t be needing any high-quality japanese shears for cutting his hair any more!

Rosie was telling me yesterday that she loves that God has given her curly hair! She won’t be worrying about the best hair straighteners to buy or needing chi flat irons. Actually, her hair has more of loose ringlets on the back so it wouldn’t be hard to straighten with a hair dryer if she wanted to go super-straight. I think those curls are lovely though!

September 29th, 2010

Computing Power

My seven-year-old daughter has been known to ask for her own computer, or for a second family computer (yes, mine is always busy…with me mostly! Of course when I’m not on the computer I’m with my little girls, or they are outside, but…anyway!)

In any case, she’d be happy to see another computer in the house.  We do have an older PC laptop that we inherited but we don’t have a ‘computing area’ set up after our move back to our farm so it’s pretty much out of action (and it has her favorite reading/typing software on it – poor girl!)

Because we have a home-based business my laptop pulls double/triple duty, it’s a hardworking machine!  Personal use, homeschooling resources, business product development.  You name it, it’s our single go to machine!

So, if you’re like us in that your existing machines are overworked, but not like us in that you have a new computer built into your budget, you might want to check out these Dell deals if you’re a PC user.

Personally, we gave up PCs years ago (too many hardware issues, and not enough warranty work), but Dells are pretty reliable and they have decent customer service by telephone if you run into troubles.

September 29th, 2010

Whoops, What a Surprise!

Well, I’ve been asking my husband when our midwife appointment is for the past week or so.    Our midwife always hands him our next appointment card but he often claims he doesn’t have it.  Well, this morning he did find the card, and our appointment was for….today!

It’s amazing how quickly our family can get ready to go from early morning state to ready for an overnight stay and getting the cows stashed away.  I think it took only 30 minutes all together, and with 3 children under 7 and a bunch of cows, I think that’s pretty decent!

We had a great appointment (I love our midwife), and everything is fine and dandy as usual :) .

September 28th, 2010

Book Review: The Sacred Cipher by Terry Brennan

sacredcipherThe Sacred Cipher by Terry Brennan has one of the most intriguing and captivating opening sequences that I’ve ever read.  Immediately plunging into a world of mystery, intrigue, and yes – danger, Brennan takes us into the life of Tom Bohannon as he works to discover the hidden secrets of a long-hidden scroll that leads him beneath Jerusalem to a discovery that will change the world.

Though Brennan did lose me in some of his more ‘directionally-oriented’ passages that describe directions, dimensions, navigation etc. (this is a common reading challenge for me), I was glued to the pages of The Sacred Cipher – definitely in for the ride.  His work is fun conceptually (whether we think the storyline is probable or not), and has tie-ins with biblical end-times world prophecy.

I also enjoy reading novels where the author clearly writes himself into the story in a prominent way.  Not only does our hero’s name mirror that of the author (T.B.) but he is also writing from life experiences when both he and his hero serve/have served at the Bowery Mission of New York City.  Our hero also has a strong Christian worldview, and an ongoing personal faith relationship that is evident throughout the book as he depends upon his Father for guidance and protection.  His faith also comes into play during his discussions with his skeptical companion.

If you enjoy reading code breaking, archeologically oriented adventure stories, add Brennan to your list of authors to checkout, I think you’ll enjoy his writing.

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW AT CHRISTIANBOOK.COM OR AMAZON.COM!

September 28th, 2010

Book Review: Planting Churches that Reproduce: Starting a Network of Simple Churches by Joel Comiskey

plantingchurchesI’m not a church planter, and I’m not familiar with the world of model-based church planting approaches.  However, when Planting Churches that Reproduce showed up unexpectedly in my review pile I decided to read it in any case.  Some of the terms appealed to me – simple church, house church etc.  Having been a part of fulfilling fellowships that operated in homes I was eager to hear what the author had to say about these approaches to body-life.

So, while Comiskey is writing to an audience somewhat different than what I represent, I still found his book to be interesting and inspiring in terms of the potential for small, cell and home based methods of fellowship.  Sometimes the language was more model-heavy and aptitude-heavy than it was Christ-centric, but Comiskey does make it clear that without Christ nothing is going to go well, and there are always exceptions to models and aptitude tests.

Comiskey draws upon his personal experiences as a church planter, as well as the successes and mistakes of others to explore some best practices for establishing reproducing fellowships.  This is a very well referenced title that – while brief – covers all of the basics and provides a great deal of material for further study in the appendixes and bibliography for further research.

Anyone called to plant smaller churches that aren’t so much program based, as they are people based will find much here to help them get a solid start.  The cell and celebration model (or networked house churches) is one that my husband has expressed when envisioning an ideal church, so I was excited to read that this model is actually being practiced elsewhere.

CLICK HERE TO BUY NOW AT CHRISTIANBOOK.COM OR AMAZON.COM!

September 28th, 2010

FIRST Tour: Petra: City of Stone by T.L. Higley

It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old…or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

My Thoughts: T.L. Higley is one of my favorite historical fiction authors!  I was so pumped when this book arrived, can’t wait to read it and share my thoughts with you!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Today’s Wild Card author is:
T. L. Higley
and the book:
Petra: City of Stone
B&H Books (September 15, 2010)

***Special thanks to T.L. Higley for sending me a review copy.***

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Tracy started her first novel at the age of eight and has been hooked on writing ever since. After attending Philadelphia Biblical University, she earned a B.A. in English Literature at Rowan University. She then spent ten years writing drama presentations for church ministry. A lifelong interest in history and mythology has led Tracy to extensive research into ancient Greece, Egypt and Rome, and shaped her desire to shine the light of the gospel into the cultures of the past. She has traveled through Greece, Turkey, Egypt, Israel, Jordan and Italy to research her novels, and looks forward to more travel as the series continues.

Visit the author’s website.

Product Details:

List Price: $ 14.99
Paperback: 344 pages
Publisher: B&H Books (September 15, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1433668564
ISBN-13: 978-1433668562

AND NOW…THE FIRST CHAPTER:

The streets of Rome lay barren and empty, sucked dry by the colossal Flavian Amphitheatre that had swallowed seventy-five thousand Roman citizens in a single gulp, and would hold each one captive until they had enjoyed the horrors that Julian now raced to prevent.

More time. He needed more time. Already the crowd inside the four-story rim of stone cheered for the first event.

Julian’s sandals smacked the black basalt road that led toward the amphitheatre. The blistering Roman sun pounded the moisture from his skin and left him panting. He had run most of way, since an old servant in Vita’s house had pointed a gnarled finger toward the east, toward the Forum, toward the arena of death.

Eighty arches ringed the outside of the theatre on each of its first three stories. The bottom arches provided access to the public, and the second story’s niches held statues of the gods and emperors, who now looked down on Julian as he sprinted across the large travertine slabs that paved the arena’s edge.

He ran toward one of the four main entrances and fumbled for the tessera, the stone tile he wore around his neck. The designatores at the entrance would insist on examining it, to see the sector, row and seat to which he was assigned.

Indeed, the usher at this entrance was full of his own importance, and held a palm to Julian’s oncoming rush as though he could stop him with only the force of his arm.

“Too long in your bed this morning, eh?” His smug smile took in Julian’s hastily-wrapped toga and sweat-dampened hair.

Julian thrust the tessera before the man’s eyes. “Here, here, look at it.”

Still the amused smile. The usher opened his mouth to speak again.

“Look at it!”

Daunted, the man let his eyes travel over the tile, then took a tiny breath and stepped back. His grin faded to a look of regret over his own impudence, and he bowed his head. As if that were not enough, he bowed at the waist and extended a hand to invite Julian to enter.

Julian did not wait for an apology. He pushed past the usher and under the vaulted entrance, then straight through the arena’s outer corridor and up a ramp that led to the cavea, the wedge-shaped sections of marble seats. This main entrance led directly to the central boxes reserved for the elite.

He exploded from the dimly lit ramp onto the terrace. The morning sun slashed across half the seats, the height of the amphitheatre leaving the other half in shade. The red canvas velarium, the awning used to shade the spectators, would be raised before it got much hotter, but for now, thousands of bleached togas on white marble blinded the eye and the smell of the masses assaulted the nose.

Julian crossed the terrace in two strides, slammed against the waist-high wall that separated him from the arena, and saw a figure dash at him from the shadows.

His mother’s hands were on his arms in an instant. “Julian, what are you doing?” Her words were frantic, as clipped and terror-filled as his every movement.

“They have Vita, Mother!”

She wrenched his body fiercely to face her. Julian stood nearly a cubit taller than his mother, but Ariella had retained all the strength of her youth, along with the beauty. “There is nothing that can be done, my son.”

He yanked his arms from her grasp. “Do not say that!” Julian searched the cavea behind him, full to overflowing with the purple-edged togas of senators. “Where is Father? Is he here?”

“Julian, think! You must think.” Ariella’s voice was urgent and low and her clutching fingers again slowed Julian’s restlessness. “You will bring more harm – “

“I do not care!” His voice snagged with emotion, and he fought to harden the feelings into action. “I must end this.”

“You cannot, son.”

He turned flashing eyes on Ariella. “It is my fault! Do you not understand? I should be down in those cages.”

Ariella’s eyes misted. “I would not lose both my son and his betrothed on the same day.”

Betrothed. The word washed more guilt over Julian’s stricken soul.

A senator, one of his father’s friends, walked past and paused to hold out an arm in greeting to Julian. “Fine day for the games, is it not?”

Julian straightened at once, resuming the noble bearing trained into him since childhood, and returned the man’s grip. He nodded once in agreement, but did not speak. The senator moved on, and Julian dropped his shoulders, ashamed that he had not made a statement.

Ariella seemed to read his thoughts. Her dark eyes held his own. “It will take more than a day to change the Empire.”

Julian looked out over the yellow sand of the arena. “But this day, Mother, this day we must!” He slapped a hand against the top of the marble wall. “I am going to find Father.”

“Julian, you know that he can do nothing – “

He spun on her. “No. I am tired of both of you, always moving about your circles quietly, behind closed doors, the truth spoken only in whispers.” He lifted his own voice as an example. “There is a time to speak!”

Ariella’s nostrils flared, but she said nothing. Turning from her, Julian stalked to the nearest break in the seating and ascended the tiers alongside his father’s section. Here, the nobility did not sit on wooden planks as the rest of the citizens, but were given cushions or even chairs for comfort. He scanned the rows of seats for his father’s graying head, and instead met his dark gray eyes.

Julian shook his head and opened his mouth to shout across the intervening seats, but his father held up a hand, then stood and excused himself from his colleagues. He slid along in front of a dozen other senators, and emerged at the end of the row beside Julian.

Quietly, he spoke into his son’s ear. “I have just now heard. It is outrageous.”

Julian’s hands balled into fists at his side. “You must do something.”

“What can I do, Julian? The emperor has ruled, and Trajan is not a man to be defied.”

Across the arena, Julian watched as a trapdoor slid upward and a huddled band of men and women were prodded onto the sand at the end of Roman spears. Julian’s heart pounded with the shortness of the time left and he turned on his father with the frenzy of desperation. “She is out there, Father!”

But his father’s eyes held only grief, not anger. Not the fiery anger that could change the future, even now.

Julian pushed past him, down the steps. If his parents would do nothing from their positions of influence, then he would stop this madness from a position of strength.

It had been his fault, all of it. Trajan had made his stance clear. As long as they kept to themselves, did not flaunt their disagreement with imperial policy, did not take a public stand, they would be left alone. But that had not been enough for Julian. Passionate about the truth, eager to show himself a leader and foolish enough to believe himself invincible, he had spoken too loudly, in too many places.

And now this. Vita and the others arrested, convicted, and sentenced without his knowledge. Julian had brought this on them all, but he had escaped their fate.

At the terrace level he circled the arena toward the imperial box. The amphitheatre was one of the few places where the public had access to the divine emperor. Julian grasped at the thin hope that he could get near enough to plead for Vita’s life.

He had not loved her. Not like he should, though he had tried. He had never known a more virtuous woman. The arranged match between them was a good one. But Julian had never felt more than the flame of admiration and respect for her, and he saw nothing but the same in her eyes. Still, they would have been married.

We will be married.

The foot-stomps of the crowd rose around him like a hundred thousand drumbeats. The cadence resonated in his chest and pushed him forward. He knew that sound. It was the sound of a mob hungry for blood.

Terror drove his footsteps. He could not look to the arena. Not even when he heard more trapdoors rise and the low growl of beasts begin.

The crowd screamed as one, and their shouts lifted to the pale blue sky like a puff of evil smoke from the underworld. Julian’s bones seemed to turn to water. He raced on. The emperor’s raised box was in sight.

But then they were beside him again, both his parents this time, grasping at his arms, pulling him backward.

“It is too late, son.” His mother’s voice held the grief of both the present and the past, for she had seen much sorrow in the arena in her day.

His father turned him to the wall to face the sand. “You must say goodbye, Julian. You must say goodbye.”

He let his parents hold him there at the marble wall. He scraped his hands across the top, then gripped the white stone.

Lions. Six of them. Circling, circling the knot of friends in the center of the bright yellow sand that had been brought from one of the hills of Rome and spread on wooden planking to soak up the blood of gladiator, beast, and the condemned.

The lions charged at once, but for Julian, the moment stretched out, like a thread of silk spun from a slow-turning wheel, and though the crowd still bellowed, in his head all had gone silent and he saw only his group of friends, crumpling in on themselves like sand flowing into a sinkhole.

The lions must have roared before they pounced, though Julian heard nothing, and felt only the relentless scraping of his own hands across the stone wall. He scraped until his hands were torn and bloody, wanting to bleed with her, wanting to bleed with all of them, as he should have.

The sun had risen to pour its rays into the center of the arena, and the yellow sand beneath them turned to molten gold in the light, an oval of liquid gold with Vita and the others drowning in the center of it. He saw her face for a moment, lifted to heaven.

His mind disconnected and drifted strangely, then, to the words at the end of the Apostle John’s Revelation, and his vision of the New Jerusalem with its streets of pure gold.

Would Vita fall asleep in this golden sand and wake to streets of gold?

The beasts did their job well and quickly, and when it was over and the mutilated bodies of his friends lay scattered across the sand, Julian woke from his stupor and felt the guilt of every lost life bear down on him as though the stones around him had collapsed on his head. He tasted bile rising in his throat, and turned away from the wall to retch onto the paving stones.

His parents held his arms as he emptied the contents of his stomach. He heard the jeers directed toward him. When he stood, the tear-streaked faces of both his parents matched his own.

But he found no solace in their shared grief. They did not have to bear the guilt of it as he did. As he always would. He pulled from their embrace and escaped the amphitheatre, running back the way he had come, running like a haunted man.

Days later, when his guilt and grief had hardened into bitter anger, he tried once again to change the minds and policies of the Roman government. But in the end he brought only more disgrace, and more danger, upon his family.

In the cool of the evening three days after Vita’s death, he stood at the terrace wall of his father’s lavish villa in the Roman countryside, looking down into the flowered gardens his mother had commissioned, and listening to the fountain that trickled night and day into the central pool. He inhaled deeply of the night air, dragging in the scent of roses.

His guilt over Vita’s death had not abated, and he had added to it with his actions in the days since. His brazen words in the Senate House, and later the Forum, had identified him as one who should have also met his death in the arena that day.

Perhaps that was his wish. To be arrested himself, to be thrown before the gaping yaw of a dozen lions, to be given what he deserved.

But his family. He had not wanted the same for his family. His only brother, long since stationed in some military outpost, had never embraced the family’s beliefs, but even he could be reached by the long arm of the empire, and brought back to face condemnation with the rest.

Behind him, slaves stirred to prepare the evening meal and lit torches on the veranda. His parents would appear soon and they would all pretend that their privileged life continued.

But Julian had made a decision. His life in Rome was over. To protect his family, he must disappear.

He thought of his brother’s stories of the provinces that lay at the edges of the Empire. Of Britannia, of Judea. But even there the Roman army could search out a man. No, he must go further east than even Judea.

There was a place, a hidden city he had heard tales of since he was a boy. Stories that had sparked his imagination and given him the desire to travel across the desert sand to discover the city tucked between the rock cliffs of Arabia.

Petra. Capital of the Nabatean kingdom, wealthy center of the east-west trade route, and beyond even the Roman Empire’s reach.

Julian rubbed his hands together, palms still raw from being torn open the day Vita died. Yes, it was a good plan.

He would flee to Petra.

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