The dog is Fergie.
Rather than make new posts, I'm just going to add to this as the day goes on.
11:30
The mail came, and just reading the cover of The Smithsonian magazine, I learned something. I put it down until tomorrow.
An mp3 player came from Hong Kong. The packaging and instructions are always interesting on those. I put it aside for Marty to look at later. It's for our Saturn, which has a tape stuck in the tape player and only radio besides that, but this will work in there and we won't have to buy a new car stereo.
The Estey Organ newsletter came, and I was reading through because I'm in correspondence with someone who wants to buy one and I don't want to sell mine. The museum they're working on in Vermont, where the organs were originally made, has several Junior Organs, they say (the kind I have). Maybe they'll sell one to this guy.
Back to trying not to learn now.
12:03
The Radical Unschoolers' Network is new, and fun. I knew how Holly had answered the three requisite questions, but today I saw Marty's:
what does "radical unschooling" mean to you?
What does "Marty Dodd" mean to you?
how long have you been unschooling or homeschooling?
since i stopped going to school
names and ages of children
i don't know, i haven't met any of 'em yet
Holly was member #123 (good number) and she wrote:
what does "radical unschooling" mean to you?
I don't report the news, I just make it.
how long have you been unschooling or homeschooling?
Never really counted.
names and ages of children
Keith is 52 and Sandra is 55 (7/08)
http://familyrun.ning.com/
1:30-3:00 lunch with Kirby and Katie Gist, at Pars where Marty was working.
Loved the waiter, Julian. Talked to him about unschooling because we had our Learn Nothing Day shirts on. He bragged up Marty behind his back. I gave him some URLs and he gave me his e-mail. We checked before we left to see whether he was working Saturday; he isn't. I came home and e-mailed an invitation to the party Saturday.
That wasn't much learning. Good session for the day.
4:45 Keith called for a ride from work. Problem with motorcycle handlebars. Drove the 15 miles or however far to Honeywell. Keith drove back, and on the way we stopped and unloaded old computers and some stuff at Goodwill, with Kirby and Katie and I forgot to do.
5:30 or so Keith has bright idea to go back to Honeywell and fix his bike. I didn't take a book. It took an hour. The sun was beating down on rocks and parking lot. I walked around looking for volcanic river rocks in the bought-and-delivered rocks in the divider islands at the parking lot. Found 30 or so. Kept coming back to put them in a towel in the backseat of the car. I was feeling sorry for myself, and sorrier for Keith, but wasn't learning much.
7:00-7:30 or so, followed Keith home slowly. When we turned into our neighborhood his tailpipe fell off. We came home, he got other tools, I offered him a ride back, but he said he should walk off the frustration. No learning for me. I came to look for more blog posts on Learn Nothing Day and found some really good ones. Learned that learning doesn't stop. (No, I already knew that.) Learned that one poor child hates Learn Nothing Day. That made me sad. I never meant to make anyone unhappy.
Came in and Marty asked me how to spell "science" in French. I said the same, but prononced differently. He didn't like the answer; I said "Google language tools." They already had a translation page up. He was putting duct tape on the sides of his project, and writing "science" in Japanese and Russian on different sides.
8:00 more or less, helped Marty with his "Science Project." Learned he and Kirby spent $40 on Everclear and fruit juice to make punch for the party. They let me taste it with a straw and it tastes honestly very good. It's in a five gallon water cooler, and I helped clear out the back fridge enough to hold it. Put a deep pie pan under it just in case it leaks a bit.
Marty said that some states ban the sale of Everclear because it's basically moonshine, and too strong. He said it was banned in New Hampshire and California--six or seven states altogether. I did not know that. Learned something. DOH!
8:45 called Hotel Albuquerque to see what time they start serving breakfast. Tomorrow is Ramon King's birthday and we always go to breakfast early on her birthday to celebrate together. She lives a few hundred yards from the Hotel Albuquerque and they open at 6:00. Perfect. But I need to go to sleep pretty soon to be clever and charming that early. Keith wakes up at 5:00 a.m. anyway, but with the motorcycle compromised and the van in the shop since Tuesday, and Kirby in town, what will be driven by whom tomorrow has not been decided. I need a Ramona carriage about the time Keith goes to work is all I know.
Marty doesn't work tomorrow, so there's his vehicle. Kirby has a parade of friends through so there are some vehicles. We'll do okay.
10:00
Holly is off at a swimming party "with schoolkids." She wore and Brett wore their Learn Nothing Shirts the other day. Brett and Kirby are playing Halo. Marty was texting when I went in. I took a picture of them in their shirts, and Marty took a photo of me in mine.
ALL DAY I waited to see if anyone would notice and comment on my unschooling page being gone. If it was mentioned anywhere, I missed it. I'm going to restore it now and go to sleep, but if anyone wants to see what they missed, it's here:
http://sandradodd.com/learnnothingday/cover, but today it was sandradodd.com/unschooling.
On June 18th we lost the big spreading Siberian elm that has shaded the front yard and the front half of this house since before we bought it in May 1993. Part of it fell (quietly!) into the street and then the village sent workers to take the rest down. Pulling into the driveway today I noticed a pile of the decayed wood was now fanned out beside the stump. Checking it out reveals that something has dug a burrow deep down into the heart of the stump roots. I shall try to resist sitting in the window tonight trying to catch a glimpse of whatever it is as it leaves.
ReplyDelete"The Estey Organ newsletter came, and I was reading through because I'm in correspondence with someone who wants to buy one and I don't want to sell mine."
ReplyDeleteBefore I remembered you had a musical instrument by this name, I was afraid someone was trying to convince you to sell them a kidney!! Glad you're not selling your organ ... and hope you're having a Happy Birthday [G]
Thank gawd Learn Nothing Day is over. I failed miserably.
ReplyDeleteIt was a HOOT!
We had a blast yesterday :)
ReplyDeleteWould have loved to spend the day with you but the peeps we were with were great too :) I'm glad you got to be with your whole family. I'm working on my pics from the day. Should have some up later.
Hello Sandra-enjoyed reading your blog. Our family has been homeschooling for over 4 years and we are adding this to our Favorites tool bar on the computer. The dog on your front page is our Fergie you can read more about her on: http://openspacerestoration.com/2008/06/30/dog-will-work-for-food/
ReplyDeleteBart
Thanks!Fergie (I added the link up top, too.)
ReplyDelete-=-. Our family has been homeschooling for over 4 years and we are adding this to our Favorites tool bar on the computer.-=-
ReplyDeleteI meant to say that this is the first time I've heard I was on someone's tool bar!!! That's big, like "I printed it out and put it on the refrigerator." First time I heard that, I still remember how thrilled I was.
A toolbar. I have Joyce on mine, but otherwise just things like photobucket, playlist, yahoolists, plurk. Oh! I have RUN (Radical Unschoolers Network) on there.
I just got an e-mail from Kirby, my 22 year old son, while he was reading these comments. I left out the mushy stuff, but he wrote:
ReplyDelete"You mentioned in a comment on your blog that you were excited to hear of someone adding the page to their "Tool bar" and I wanted to show you a small snap shot of my screen. (Check out the upper left hand corner, and it's been that way! You can't make this stuff up)"
there's the sreenshot. He has SandraDodd.com on his toolbar. But I'm his mom, so it's not quite the same (but still very cool!).