Booklists and Hard Copies

I've gotten several emails with variations of this theme:

I was just looking on your serendipitysite for more specific curriculum ideas, book titles, etc., and started printing and writing down the many, many book suggestions/ideas you have listed, but realized I’d use a lot of ink printing plans you have laid out and/or would be up for many hours writing the most helpful titles down, so I was wondering if you had a “book” or hard copy of the resources, book titles, ideas, themes, etc. in a book, syllabus you could sell to me.

And the short answer, right now, is "no." There is a longer answer (as long as Karoline stays asleep). Many of the booklists will eventually appear in the revised version of Real Learning, along with a new chapter or two. But writing booklists is a ginormous project, particularly when I'm writing booklists that I'm not planning to use right now. I envision well-developed booklists for pretty much every subject I plan to teach (or have taught) using living books. Huge project. What you have on Serendipity are plans for my family.  I am using them. That's time I can invest. I write those because they will be the underpinning of our family life and family education. I need them written down and I want them to be functional. I truly enjoy writing in blog format and I feel called to share. But I also know that I have to pace myself. Life would have to stop around me for me to get all the booklists finsihed at once. In the next few weeks, I hope to enlist the aid of a couple of children to retrieve all of the titles from the Alphabet Path posts and make them into a booklist. And I think it's reasonable to expect that I can do the same for the Colonial America posts (only in that case, I'd have to do it, because I'm working from a 6-year-old hard copy and I'm adding and deleting as I go). I'm wondering if it wouldn't be very helpful to all of you if I put all the Colonial American plans up at once, but that idea leads me to part two of the long anwer:

There will never be a published, printed version of my lesson plans. First of all, something in me says that to print them and sell them somehow is to say that they are finished and that they are "perfect" enough to sell. I don't believe that about them. They will never be finished. Even if I put all of Colonial America up tomorrow (don't hold your breath;-), I will add to it and tweak it as we do it. There is always a new book or two, or there is a book that goes out of print. And then there are the ideas that spring up as we are inspired. In the end, it will look much different than when I did it six years ago. That's a good thing. I'm writing these plans for my children in my family. I can't begin to accept money from someone else for them, implying that somehow I think they are finished and ready for her children. I'm too much of a "tweaker." If I thought I was selling them and I couldn't go back and edit at will, you would never see anything. I'd never finish. What you are seeing, as someone recently called it, is a "rough draft of the day." It's the recipe from which I'll work. If you did it exactly, it would probably be fine. But I never follow recipes exactly. Ever. Often I don't have the right amount of every ingredient. Sometimes, I make allergy substitutions. Sometimes, I think the recipe writer uses way too much sugar or salt, and I cut back. I expect you will do the same if you use my plans as your rough draft. But I'm not too keen on printing, packaging, marketing and mailing my rough draft.

Also, these plans are pretty link-dependent. It would take additional work to figure out a way around that for the print version. I don't have time for additional work right now. I'm trying mightily to get my rough drafts finished so that I have the ease of a "boxed curriculum" with the blessing of a tailored curriculum, all before the school year begins.

And finally, these plans are not all mine. They were written a little at a time by four different people. Someone roughs out a post, puts it in a draft folder, and we all contribute when we can. Which is very tricky, because no more than one of us can actually be signed into Typepad to work at a given time--I get the early morning slot and then I need to stay out of the way lest I click "save" and end up deleting someone else's work in progress. This techonological annoyance actually keeps any one of us from working very much every day. And it keeps me personally from working after my children awaken. So, rest assured that no children were neglected in the writing of these plans.

All of these things come together to keep us from presenting plans in a published version. And because we aren't looking at this as a professional endeavor, we are committed again and again to the idea that it is a ministry. First, it must bless our families. We've noticed that as we progress in the planning, our children are catching our enthusiasm for the subject matter and for the books we're previewing. That's a good thing. And every once in a while, they are also blessed to see how their contributions are beneifting other people. Mary Beth does a lion's share of the linking. We put the titles up there and she writes the codes. But that's not all she writes. Since, way back around letter "H" or so, she's been the creative mind behind the Alphabet Path stories. She researches the fairies, the flowers, and the saints, she kicks around ideas and bounces them off of me. I make suggestions and she writes. Then, in an incredible display of humility I can only hope to attain someday, she lets me go in and heavily edit her writing. You get a polished version--but the story started in an eleve-year-old's brain. Can you even begin to imagine the joy it brings to my heart that I'm writing stories and lesson plans with my daughter? No, you really can't;-) That experience alone is reason enough to keep doing this. But, imagine her joy when she discovered a little girl at her ballet school reading a Flower Fairy book. When Mary Beth asked if she liked the fairies, this little darling said, "Yes, and I like Michael and Mrs. Applebee, too." And suddenly, my daughter was an author and someone "out there" in the world knew "her" characters.

All that said, what about your time and effort and ink? I do have some ideas for that and I know that a very smart lady in western Loudoun county does too. Perhaps I can persuade her to share some examples and maybe this week I can make some PDFs and show you how I print from the blog and then hand write on the printed lists for my own use. My scanner now talks to my computer, so we do have the technology to do that.

But I hear Karoline and she's reminding me that we're all out of time for now.


My Heart's at Home Daybook~July 11

I've really enjoyed The Simple Woman's Daybook. It's nice to focus at the beginning of the week and stretch my brain just a wee bit to think about certain things every week. I find myself referring to it in my head as I move throughout the week. So, when I saw that Kara, at everyone's favorite crunchy blog, has a daily daybook, the wheels started turning. What would a daily daybook look like? Too much minutia? Too boring? Too binding? Maybe, but it's my blog and it could be whatever I wanted it to be, because my blog is one of the few things in my life over which I retain an illusion of control. So, I thought I'd take a stab at a daily daybook of my very own. If I could set about at the beginning of every day with some of those intentions in front of me, perhaps I'd get dressed every day rise to the occasion. Or maybe not. But it could be fun to try.

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Outside My Window ...the pansies have truly petered out and do need to be pulled. My children are very attached to them and have protested every time I suggest that we yank 'em.
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Towards a daily rhythm ... I've learned that the  daily schedules I created just last week are going to be rocked to the core. So...I'll ponder the revised version for a while. Can't re-write yet; too many variables still to be decided. But the nice thing is that iCal is like virtual post-it notes. Just keeping dragging and dropping 'til we get it right. And it might look a little differently every week if early movement is any indication.
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I am thankful for ... wise counsel.
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From the kitchen ...
for breakfast:
Blueberry scones using Gluten-Free Pantry mixes
farm fresh poached eggs

Lunch:
Grilled cheese
and for dinner:
 Spiced Pineapple Rice from Vegetable Heaven
Firecracker Beans also from Vegetable Heaven
Mixed Green Salad with Roasted Beets and Goat Cheese (my new obsession)
Fruit Salad of Watermelon, Canteloupe, and Blueberries

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To live the liturgy...On the Feast of St. Benedict
God our Father, you made St. Benedict an outstanding guide to teach men how to live in your service. Grant that by preferring your love to everything else, we may walk in the way of your commandments. We ask this through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. .
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I am wearing ... a white eyelet skirt, a CAMISOLE (necessary for all maternity shirts these days), a pink shirt and strappy pink sandals.
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I am creating ...a cookbook for Michael to take with him when he lives in an on-campus apartment this year.
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I am going to breathe deeply ...20 minutes on the stationary bike today, while listening to talks from the IHM conference.
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Bringing beauty to my home ...I'm seriously considering painting my kitchen yellow tomorrow. Going to bring home paint swatches today. And (shh...don't tell my husband) I might not stop with kitchen.
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I am hoping ...for the house to stay as tidy as it did this week. It almost looks as put together as it did when we had company last Sunday. Almost. It's amazing how much more is possible when one feels a bit better. My glucometer is my friend. It's hard to function when your blood sugar is perpetually low.
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Around the house ... I need to touch up spots Michael missed when he painted the basement.

One of my favorite things ...watching ten minutes of Sports Center in the morning with Nicholas so we can see yesterday's top ten plays and the morning's top headlines, all before Daddy, the sports producer, awakens.

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A Few Plans For The Rest Of The Day: I'm going to finish curriculum shopping at the Northern Virginia conference. I've just found out Gracie will be with us again this year, so I need to find a few things for her. And then I have a wee bit of list for the rest of us, too;-).
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Here is a picture thought I am sharing~

Pointeshoes

These things wear out very, very quickly.