Monthly Archives: August 2013

Labor Day Weekend with my Womb-Mate

We’re heading to Palo Duro Canyon to camp and relax over Labor Day weekend with my twin brother, Herschel, and his family.  On most days, and because naturally conceived twins occur in just 1 of every 89 births, I consider myself lucky to have a twin of my very own; however, on just a few of our shared days, having a twin has been a detriment to both my physical and emotional well-being.  I might not tell these stories if they were about one of my sisters, but my head still smarts from Herschel’s last visit and I believed I have reason to worry about what he might do over Labor Day with tarantulas in the canyon.  Herschel can take it, so four of our low points are the topic of today’s reminiscence.

When we were growing up, visiting my grandparents in Tucumcari meant time on a farm.  The entire house reported to the kitchen table before sunrise for breakfast and morning devotions and the house shut down when Papa went to bed not long after sunset.  Days included feeding and checking on the cows with my grandfather, setting irrigation tubes with Nana, hunting crawdads in the irrigation ditches, swimming in the cow’s water tanks, shooting tin cans with .22 rifles, walks to The Kings Throne in the valley beyond the shop, and climbing over the hay bales piled high in the hay barn.

When we were a little older, and because there were so many of us cousins, we often got to ride in the back of the pick-up.  We’d sit up on the edge of the bed and hold on as Papa navigated the ruts in the road.  One day, Herschel and I were sitting on the tailgate when I was “pushed” from the back of the pickup truck.  Papa, unaware that I was no longer with the crew of cousins, continued down the path as I flipped in the air and face-planted on the dirt road.  The inside of my lower lip took a beating as I slid to a stop.  I slept with a spliced-open aloe vera leaf between my gums and lower lip for what I remember being weeks and weeks.  Herschel and I often disagree about the specifics of this story. I may or may not be remembering it accurately.  He claims I simply fell.

I am, however, completely confident about the accuracy of the next three stories.

Middle school was difficult.  I matured earlier than Herschel, as is common with girls, and was literally a head taller than Herschel in the sixth grade.  Herschel and I were not close in those years.  I was boy-crazy and Herschel thought I was ridiculous.

When we were in the seventh grade, our father was the band director in a tiny West Texas school system.  The band hall was our home away from home and our 7th grade band time was in the late afternoon.  One afternoon I walked into band to find that Herschel had written on the band hall chalk board at the front of the room, “Marea is on her .”  My dad hadn’t seen the message.  Apparently it had been on the board for the entire day.

I would not say that we grew up in poverty and looking back I’m grateful for the foundation I had.  I, unlike so many children today, lived with my biological mother and father and three siblings.  We were raised in a church and were raised with strong work ethics.  Our parents loved us and we had extended family that modeled compassion.  I remember many happy times.

We always had food on the table, though at times it was peanut butter sandwiches for a day or two before payday or beef tongue because it was an inexpensive meat option.  We always had clean clothes in the closet, though they were often hand-me-downs or garage sale finds.  My mom did not go to a salon and my haircuts and perms were “mamma dos”.  I say all that to say I was not introduced to facial bleach or waxing as soon as I should have been.

Herschel moved to Norman, Oklahoma after high school graduation.  He was working on his undergraduate degree at OU and because I was at ENMU and then at Howard Payne University in Brownwood, Texas we saw very little of one another for several years.  I’m not sure at what point I was visiting in Norman and was able to meet several of his friends for the first time, but I believe it was after graduation at his wedding rehearsal.  One of his friends said something to the effect of, “I’m so glad to meet you!  You’re not at all what I pictured!  Herschel said you two didn’t look too much alike.  He said you could grow a fuller mustache than he could!”  Argh.

More recently Herschel and his family were visiting over Memorial Day this year and I had just moved out of my classroom.  For 15 years I had used a white wooden rocking chair for myself during our whole class rug time and I don’t mind sharing that it was a garage sale find.  The rocking chair was not terribly sturdy and had been gorilla glued multiple times.

We were visiting with several family members in our courtyard and I was sitting in my rocking chair.  Herschel came behind me and began rocking me, tipping my chair back further than it should have gone.  I had no sooner said, “Stop Herschel, the chair’s going to fall apart,” then the chair’s gliders separated from it’s seat and back in mid air.  I fell back, hitting the base of my skull on the concrete edge.   No real lasting harm done but I’m literally anxious when I sit in a rocking chair now.  I used to love them 🙁

Herschel, I am truly grateful for you.  Through our ups and downs, I’ve always known that I could count on you.  Our good times far outweigh the remembrances I’ve shared here, though the four stories I’ve recounted above make for an interesting read, don’t you think 🙂  I was privileged to have you as my “man” of honor when Franklin and I married and was blessed to be in the delivery room with you as you coached Alison through Elizabeth Marea’s birth.  I cherish your friendship and the “bro”mance you have with my husband.  Thanks for making time, several times a year, to hang out with us and “do” life together, even if it’s often from a distance.

Our Home School: The First Two Weeks

We’re officially two weeks into home schooling, and after an interesting conversation with a friend about home school critics and a documentary that aired on 20/20 last year about home schooling I decided to share our daily schedule with you.  The documentary painted a very disparaging picture of home schooling families, a picture that is contrary to what I know to be true of my sisters and now of myself.  I know that home schools vary from family to family, but I offer our home school happenings here to provide a example of a Type-A mommy who is both academically concerned and discipleship minded.  Feel free to contact me should you have any questions I don’t address.

I made some initial decisions about curriculum based on conversations I’d had with my sisters.  I added to those curricula with materials I found available at our local university’s Instructional Resource Center and materials recommended by another veteran home school mom.  I planned the months of June and July; however, I know my plan will be dynamic, changing as I “study” the results, this being uncharted waters for our family.

We jumped in Monday, August 12th at 7:00am.

Two years ago we started morning Bible study with the family, so beginning our day with family Bible time was a given.  We’re using the Veritas Press Bible cards (Creation-Joshua) as a guide this year and are reading from The Child’s Story Bible.  This adaptation is a narrative story format that is both easily understood by our children and beautifully written to keep the adults engaged.  The kids and I are journaling after prayer and reflection as a family.

After Bible, we moved straight into memory work.  I was surprised that my children didn’t know the books of the Bible.  Obviously I’d assumed that these are somehow learned through osmosis.  We started with the Old Testament.  I downloaded a fun video from YouTube (Worship for Kids’ “These are the Books of the Bible”) and streamed it with our AppleTV.  Emma and Caden watched (and sang with) the video twice in a sitting and read through the list of books I’d typed out as a reference after each viewing.  Of course they sang the song throughout the day as it just sticks in your mind and they had mastered the song by Thursday evening.  The second week was spent, Bible in hand, as we learned about the 5 categories of books of the Old Testament and enjoyed 10 or so rounds of an old fashioned “sword drill”.  I said a book, the kids found the book and category on our chart, we talked about the general location of the book based on our song, and practiced finding the book.

Our next subject in the morning is geography.  As we were planning this summer, I found that Emma knows little about geography that she hadn’t learned herself through independent reading and Netflix documentaries.  Last year she learned the states and capitals in school, but hadn’t learned them as a part of an in-depth study on regions.  She doesn’t recall learning much about US waterways, landforms, climate, populations, or maps.

We began with The Middle East, as it correlates with our history curriculum, and will spend 6 three week chunks of time this year learning about major regions in the world.  After 3 weeks in geography and social studies, we’ll spend 3 weeks in science and classic children’s literature read aloud time.  For science we’ve chosen the creation-based Apologia Science curriculum “Zoology 2:  Swimming Creatures of the Fifth Day.”  The student text can be multi-age and two workbooks are published, one for early readers and writers that we purchased for Caden, and one for intermediate students, which we purchased for Emma.  Emma sees herself as a marine biologist or working with animals as a career.  She is thrilled with our content rich approach in general.

I’ve chosen 4 fairly challenging “read alouds” for our geography/history unit.  The past two weeks I learned more about The Middle East (land, climate, people, history, countries, and communities) than I’ve ever learned on the evening news in years.  We took notes and transferred the most noteworthy for 6 “major” Middle Eastern countries, the land dispute, religion, and terrorism to a display board notes organizer.  We’ll finish our display with the map and pictures this coming week.  Emma also began a rough draft for her culminating essay.

I divided the Middle East map items I want the kids to master into three weeks’ work; week 1 was political features, week 2 they will focus on waterways, and week 3 we will add landforms.  They will round out this unit with a cumulative map test.  Emma is responsible for about 30 features and Caden has 18 to learn.

At roughly 9:00 each morning we took a break to complete daily chores, harvest the garden, and shower.  If the shower weren’t officially a part of the routine, I’m not sure it would have happened!

At 9:45 we began our math and language arts time.  Emma is working with a video supplement for Saxon 7/6.  Each lesson is taught, via a video of direct instruction on an animated “blackboard”, and fact fluency, lesson practice and mixed practice is much the same that would be found in the classroom setting.  Emma wanted to complete 2 lessons a day the first week, as the first 10 looked like they would be review for her, and recognized immediately that I was there to grade her work, provide time for corrections, and move on quickly to a language arts activity.  She was so happy to realize that “waiting” is not going to have to be a part of our home school routine and that she will receive a quick re-teach on problems she knows she’s struggled with.

Emma was challenged daily by Wordly Wise.  A vocabulary curriculum that’s designed for deep understanding and application of 20 new words a week, Emma struggled the first several days.  It wasn’t “easy” and Emma was emotionally frustrated by the challenge.  She’s used to quickly completing work without much critical concentration.  She and I were both pleased this Friday with her progress week 2 compared to week 1 and the critical thinking she had to grapple with.

Her literature the first three weeks is a daily self-selected article from Holt, Rinnehart, and Winston’s The Ancient World: Prehistory to the Roman Empire content-are reader.  Most of the selections are primary sources and the comprehension questions have led to some important cross-curriculum conversations.

While Emma was working through her Saxon lessons, vocabulary practice, and literature comprehension each day, Caden and I had time for his math lesson, spelling, vocabulary and grammar practice and guided reading.  In one week he zipped through 2 chapters of a state adopted curriculum, Harcourt Math, acing both “chapter” tests and is ready for what would be, if he were in the public school classroom, the 6th or 7th week’s work tomorrow, day 1 of week 3.

Facebook allowed us to “survey” for both a histogram Emma worked on this week and 4 surveys, tally tables, bar and picture graphs Caden worked on.  We were both shocked and grateful that we received literally hundreds of responses to our “input” requests!  Caden had so much fun with math, stating our math time together was his favorite part of the week.

Emma and I checked all her work, Emma made corrections, and we worked on her spelling and grammar (Phillips Easy Grammar Grade 6) lessons while Caden started “The Magic Tree House” books on CD.  He’s got a great attention span and enjoyed listening to these stories for most of an hour while Emma and I worked.  He’ll start book 9 Monday and when piano begins again this will also be piano practice time for Caden.

After a lunch break we finished our “school day” with history.  We are using Margaret Wise Bauer’s The Story of World: Ancient Times this year.  We’re listening to a CD reading of the chapters, taking notes, creating a time line, and completing the activity pages from the curriculum guide.  We supplemented our reading with two primary source readings on Tutankhamen’s tomb.

Monday and Tuesday afternoons the kids played well together, and Wednesday and Thursday afternoons we had cousins’ play-date time.  Friday was (and will be) more of an out and about kind of a day.  Week 1 we had public library time and went to Clovis for the Curry County Fair animals and exhibits.  Week 2 the kids had cooking class with their grandmother (warm homemade tortillas for lunch – yum!) who plans to pass on her Hispanic cooking secrets this year.

Emma and Caden have Tae Kwon Do, the ENMU Children’s Choir, and piano lessons to round out their week.  My clarinets are both being re-padded in anticipation of Emma and I beginning clarinet in September, we will continue our Spanish acquisition at ENMU when the language lab community hours are set for the semester and when our backyard swimming pool is closed for the season we will look into swimming lesson at ENMU’s nat.

I’m certainly not saying that this is or should be the model for all home schools.  I do not presume to know, after 2 weeks, much of anything, but I’m grateful to have the flexibility to do what I feel called to do and what I feel is appropriate for my children.  I’ve made decisions knowing these two children more intimately than any human on Earth, with the exception of their daddy, and I know that what feels right for me might not feel right for all home schooling families.  Many families are even more academically focused with a classical bent that I’ve yet to wrap my mind around; however, I do hope that in sharing our story a more balanced understanding of what home school looks like can be achieved than the picture portrayed by the 20/20 documentary.

And because there’s certainly more to our story than the schedule and curriculum alone…

After managing 18-21 in the classroom the last 17 years, managing 2, and specifically 2 whom I can discipline, was fairly easy.  Reading aloud for an hour every morning was a wee-bit taxing, but is nothing compared to the alternative of having to repeat every directive over and again and teach with a “teacher-voice” in the classroom.  Caden and Emma were attentive and interested in everything we did, worked hard to do their best, wasted little time during “school” and accomplished at least 2 weeks worth of academics each week without the “down time” that is a given when the classroom teacher is managing 20+ students at a time, many of whom are not interested, not ready and not willing.

Our oldest son, Bailey, is a senior this year, is taking classes at our local University, has just started his first job, and has a sweet girlfriend named Hannah.  In being home, I’ve had so many short conversations and several longer stretches of time with him; opportunities that I’ve missed in the past.  I’m so excited to enjoy this year and this season of life with him!

I knew this year would be a blessing for all of us, but I didn’t realize the many blessings of it would be so easily seen the first few days.  I do believe this year will be amazing for our family and I’m so grateful that Franklin was willing to let us take this adventure, that I have home-schooling sisters who’ve forged the way for me, that I’ve begun to build some support-system relationships locally and that my family is willing to live a more simple lifestyle to allow this.  My stress level is nil, when compared to years past, and my family seems to be settling into a less hurried schedule.  Words cannot express how blessed I am.  And to you my friends… blessings!