May/June Homeschool Miscellany

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During May, 12yo decided to get into fruit sculpture, and made a ridiculous amount of stuff out of bananas. Because I was really preoccupied with I can't remember what at the time, the only thing I caught a photo of was this "sword".

I did have time to make a trip to Spotlight to pick up some elastic and some fabric for 14yo to make a blanket thing that apparently only needs tying together.

The blanket was taken to her boyfriend's place to complete and doesn't seem to have come back since.

The highlight of the month was 12yo's first trip to the redone museum. We started off the same way 16yo and I had started, heading to the top floor with the intent of working our way down.

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He's not quite as dinosaur obsessed as he used to be but still thoroughly enjoyed that section as I knew he would. And we took a "Youtube thumbnail" with the megalodon.

He deviated from the route 16yo took though (as per usual I was following their lead and letting them decide where they wanted to go), and we ended up in a section about the cosmos which contained these beautifully painted emu eggs

along with the more generally expected stuff.

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This flowed into a geological type room

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and then into the crystal room which 14yo had been excitedly telling me about from her last date/trip there with her boyfriend. She's into crystals at the moment so I wasn't surprised that it was her favourite room but after getting in there I could see why. One of the pathways in was this cool tunnel.

And we had to do another Youtube thumbnail parody.

Then we went through the rest like normal people.

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With the shorter attention span, 12yo moved a bit faster through the galleries than his older brother and before long we ended up in a relatively recent history gallery containing a lot of recent technology (including an iPhone 3GS which I still have in my house and had been joking that it and my second or third gen iPod belonged in the museum, apparently it does XD). He got really interested in these ridiculously old games

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and then we moved into the next gallery which had some stuff which looked like it was from the early 1900s. 12yo told me bits and pieces about some of the firearms that he saw, some of which I was able to verify from the information boards and some that I would have had to look up.

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He was quite keen to see the blue whale skeleton so we headed in that direction next. I was a bit sad at the accessways that have been cut into the buildings to faciliate better movement between the museum buildings but it did make for a very impressive reveal.

12yo informed me that the whale is posed in the attack/lunge position it would assume before charging into a group of fish to eat them. I'm not sure if he got it off an information sign or somewhere in his very self-guided studies but either way it was confirmed by a sign. From what I've noticed of photos or 3d reconstructions of other museums, it seems to be a popular way to pose whale skeletons, guess it looks nice and dynamic and takes up less space.

12yo spent a lot of time being amazed by it, and then we went down into the gallery and sat in an out of the way corner admiring it for a while and trying a few shots, one of them being this one taken by 12yo while we were sitting on the floor:

We wandered around and had a look at the display cases that were on the same floor before heading through the Australia-specific section where 12yo was most intrigued by this water cycle/usage touch display

while I spent about the same amount of time trying to figure out how they did it.

We eventually ended up in this other gallery which I think was also in an original part of the building that contained a lot of interactive displays. 12yo spent a lot of time colouring what I think is a replica of the Parthenon murals and being fascinated by the display itself.

We headed down onto the floor and played with the interactive displays down there before heading home.

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12yo has also been doing homeschool group which I haven't taken any photos of aside from this quick snap during one of the science classes as there are always a lot of other people around.

He's made a few more friends there which has been great as he quit gymnastics and doesn't always get to catch up with his friends from there, and most of the kids from judo are younger than he is.

14yo has been mostly designing various cosplays and props, drawing and finding video game references in random things:

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She's still very up in the air about further studies but she's 14, I'm in no particular hurry.

16yo and I headed in to a TAFE as he has expressed interest in what he calls "gutwork" which apparently means working on big machines (there seems to be a slight preference towards the giant rigs that can be found on minte sites but otherwise it doesn't seem to matter if it's a big machine or a big vehicle as long as it's big). The TAFE we went to does the same course that one of his friends is currently doing (which involves working with big vehicles). The options we got given were to go to school and use a school based entry in (nobody liked that idea), do a "general education" course next semester as part of the homeschool plan which would get him qualified to do a pre-apprenticeship next year after which he could hopefully start an apprenticeship, or do a different "general education" course next year which I'm under the (possibly mistaken) impression is longer, harder or both and then go down the same route.

Waiting on a definite decision from him about whether he wants to start next semester (if that's the case he better get a move on unless there's a closing date that we missed as I haven't had a chance to check on that yet) or next year.

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26 comments
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If I was ever imprisoned I'd fruit-sculpture myself a master key and break out.

Hoe many hours a day do you spend home-schooling? Like, over a week for instance. I imagine it to be more time-efficient than traditional schooling.

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🤣

It's kind of a never ending process. I guess if we actually paid attention to the actual school curriculum and if we had any desire whatsoever to sit down and actually do it we could probably cover the year in maybe a term.

We're all over the joint as far as the curriculum goes though, there's stuff that's apparently covered in primary school and first years of high school that we haven't gotten to or are otherwise disregarding and they started a lot of the high school stuff well before they "should" have.

I haven’t been actively teaching them much after they learned how to cross reference, we're mostly in voyages of discovery together and trying to provide opportunities to do things and sometimes making them do things as they’re at a stage where they would rather not do something in case it turns out boring and they’d rather spend the time doing something they know they’re going to enjoy instead 😑

But some weeks (or months) we’re insanely busy and active and other ones we appear to be really slack 😅 so kind of hard to give an average sorry 😅

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could probably cover the year in maybe a term

Figured.

Seems like you're on top of things and they'll benefit from how you're going about it. Most of what I learned was outside of a primary or high school class room.

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I am so not on top of things 😅 I’m doing my best, they have to do stuff too 🙃

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They'll probably blame you whether they turn out ok or not so yeah, best not to worry.

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RoFL! I am quite sure that they will XD

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It's inevitable. I blame you for me being a fuck up and you didn't even raise me!

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BAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAAAAA yeh that would be a neat trick seeing as I think I'm younger than Taraz XD

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Blame transcends time and space Ry, everyone knows that.

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I believe a kiwi fruit would be your best option but you may need to freeze it or it would mush up the lock.

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You know, great minds think alike as the kiwi fruit was my first thought when contemplating my hypothetical prison break and what fruit might be best to fashion a key from.

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From my point of view, home schooling is much more efficient than education in formal institutions, this from the consideration of the flexibility of schedule, amount of hours invested, personalized attention and use of creative strategies. As for aspects such as socialization, as some people point out, this is guaranteed through extra activities outside the home such as sports, arts, among others. For me homeschooling is a wonderful option. And if you could make a skeleton key out of a banana, although they are stronger for apples and pears ha ha ha ha.

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I don't have an opinion on home schooling as I don't have children but I think it's something I would certainly want to investigate if I did.

I also have no need to break out of prison, but I'll bank your apples and pears skeleton key idea away against the day the need arises! 😁

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I really thinks your children are having a wonderful education. Fun and learning are the best. My son is bringing me to a wildlife park today. I'm sure he will have lots to teach me.

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I hope so, I know they don't think so at times but then they do prefer it to being at school (even though only one of them has a true frame of reference having tried school before XD)

Kids are great for reminding you about all the things you might have either forgotten or pushed to the back of your mind thanks to adulting traps :)

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Friend why do you say that ridiculous figures with bananas poor thing your son that is edible art ha ha ha ha, I love the museum I love them I think I would have been as excited or more than your son especially with the megalodon and the stones. Museums are wonderful spaces where the past, present and future find a place to coexist. I love your experiences especially for your sincere comments ha ha ha ha. An excellent hug

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Not ridiculous figures, a ridiculous amount of stuff, I think he used almost one whole bunch of bananas making banana art XD

He did eat them afterwards, that child could eat bananas for his country x_x if there are bananas everyone else that eats bananas is lucky to get any.

Museums are awesome. This one was closed for four years for extensive renovations and while some of the modifications have made me a bit sad (because they had to make some very heavy modifications to the original buildings which I think are heritage listed), overall everyone involved did an amazing job.

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What a beautiful museum, I admire your pictures, the painted emu eggs are a beauty, that shark is magnificent, the glass room is great, if I were there I would take lots of pictures. 😃

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It is a beautiful museum! And I have taken a lot of pictures, this is the second trip here and the first one also had a lot of pictures and the next one probably will as well XD

And should you visit I imagine you would also take quite a few as well, there's a lot of interesting things in there.

Those eggs really are beautiful aren't they?

I'm glad you enjoyed the photos :D

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Interesting activities during these months, I had not heard about making sculptures with fruits hehe, but that's the good thing about homeschooling, there is no limit to use the imagination and any material can be used to create something, and activities outside the home, such as museums, are a great opportunity to continue learning.

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My boys do stuff like carving fruit into art forms or assembling boxes into other things instead of "normal" art stuff like drawing and making sculpture out of clay/plasticine/etc (though youngest will do that sometimes too) XD

Yep that is one of the great things about homeschooling, we can do whatever we like and still manage to cover a curriculum if necessary, and go to cool places without the insane peak time rushes ;D

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I love museums thank you for sharing that wonderful museum visit, I think one of the most educational and entertaining places out there not only for children, youth and adults is definitely museums. I feel that is where we understand many things that happen to us today as we learn about our history and culture from our ancestors. Congratulations, you always take us on a super entertaining ride with your kids, and I think the one who makes sculptures brought out some of your artistic streak.

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Museums are awesome :D There's actually a special exhibition on (one of the visitng ones that apparently circulates through museums) and I'm hoping it continues into next week so we can go.

I'm glad you enjoy the monthly trips :D I do try to keep things fun but sometimes I'm not sure if it reads alright as I'm tired when I do them but I have to get them done as this is also my reporting tool ^_^;

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