I love the older books. I have many on my kindle and on an app called Read Era. I also find quite a few on the internet archive website. I tend to go down "rabbit holes" with my books. While reading Ancient History with the grandkids, I developed an appreciation for the Phoenicians; their sailing, exploration, and development of the alphabet. I ran across a children's book called Two Children of Tyre by Louise Andrews Kent. I bought it and really enjoyed it and look forward to the grands enjoying it as well. I also ran across a book called Phoenician Ireland which piqued my interest because of my Irish ancestry. I have that book on order now. It was authored by Henry O'Brien and Joaquin Lorenzo Villanueva in 1833. Another favorite "rabbit hole" of mine is any book that gives great detail of how people lived, dressed, socialized etc. in centuries past. Alice Morse Earle is an author that has written extensively on the subject in Colonial America. I've...
I homeschool my grandson and granddaughter. When homeschooling, one will notice that there is quite a difference between it, and public school. The homeschool, I think, provides a richer environment for learning. I discovered that the kids had not been exposed to much poetry. The poem below particularly, tickled them. FATHER WILLIAM by Lewis Carroll "You are old, father William," the young man said, "And your hair has become very white; And yet you incessantly stand on your head — Do you think, at your age, it is right?" "In my youth," father William replied to his son, "I feared it would injure the brain; But now that I'm perfectly sure I have none, Why, I do it again and again." "You are old," said the youth, "as I mentioned before, And have grown most uncommonly fat; Yet you turned a back-somersault in at the door — Pray, what is the rea...
I homeschool my two teenage, ADHD grandchildren. Homeschooling in and of itself is a challenge, but homeschooling ADHD kids has me giving a lot of thought to the distractions of education and just distractions in general. A distraction can be a good thing, especially after a prolonged time of work or stress but I live in a world where I have to keep two teenagers as well as other ADHD household members focused at least some of the time. The most obvious distractions are internet, TV and music; Internet being the main culprit because it is so often used in conjunction with education these days. Kids are brought up using computers and I believe has shortened the attention span of the world's population, how much more so the attention span of ADHD individuals? My only solution has been that I use as little technology as possible when we are doing school work. Just about everything we do is reading, writing and manual research. We don't use calculators for math. We have used the...
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