We spent Labor Day weekend hanging out with friends, gardening and riding our bikes. Tuesday was Teo’s first day back at Rose K. I was surprised that I got teary eyed saying good bye to him in the morning (since he has been attending “school” for more than a year now). But, he is now four, and this will be his first year at school without Miles. I am not surprised at how easily Teo assimilated himself back at school. He has always been the more independent and naturally happy one. It helps too that his school is just an amazing environment, with wonderful families and a dedicated teacher.
Tuesday was also Miles’ first official homeschool day. He spent the morning after breakfast working on his “Singapore Math” workbook, and then we went to the Berkeley library for a few hours, eventually checking out a gazillion books on bees.
Since deciding to homeschool, I have contemplated many different styles of homeschooling: being enrolled in a formal private homeschool institution, not having a curriculum at all, I even thought of getting my teacher’s credentials so that I could one day teach at an actual school. But in the end, we ended up partnering with FAME (www.famecharter.org), so technically we are public schoolers because FAME is a charter school. But we are free to choose our own curriculum and we get money from the state of California for school supplies and enrichment classes! Miles is now enrolled at Sienna Ranch for outdoor education, carpentry, a clay class and chess. He has also started formally taking fiddle classes with Catherine.
This is the long way of explaining why we have a gazillion books on bees. I decided that the best way to teach Miles is to ask him what he would like to learn, and from there spend a month or more learning all aspects of that subject. So, bees it is. We will learn the history of bees, the science of bees, incorporate bees into our math, draw bees, and live bees for the next 30 days or so. Friends of ours have beehives so it will be fun to visit those later in the year.
We are also spending Fridays going on a hike with other homeschoolers and friends. Today, we spent the entire morning and afternoon doing an Alvarado Wildcat Park loop. There were five adults and twelve kids, 19 months to ten years old! I am ready for a nap, but amazingly the first thing the boys did when we got home was to play outside. They are building “nests” in hopes that a bird family will come move in. I hate to tell them that birds probably won’t use a nest on the ground so close to where Lola, our dog, runs around.







