Thursday, November 29, 2007

Reading "Twenty and Ten"


I read Twenty and Ten. Twenty and Ten was fun to read. Well, not really, a little bit. So it was about there were some kids hiding from the Nazis. They had some Jewish friends with them. They wanted to hide the Jewish friends so they teased the soldiers and told them that themselves they were the Jewish people and so a shot came through the window — I guess a soldier was trying to shoot at them. The kids did a brave thing.

I went to listen to a lady talk. Her name was Diet Eman. She said that she helped some Jewish ladies hide from the Nazis so that was a very good thing Diet Eman did.

Note from Mom: I learned that Diet (pronounced Deet) would be speaking in Grand Rapids to a group of homeschooling families on my birthday, so I asked that a trip to see her be my gift. To prepare Addy, we read Twenty and Ten, which was part of this year's curriculum anyway. We only read it earlier than scheduled. In the story, a group of 20 French schoolchildren sent to live in the country with a nun during the war decided to hide 10 Jewish children. They showed great courage in doing so. That story is historical fiction, but based on real accounts of the war. The book gave Addy the general idea of who the Nazis were, though she keeps saying Yahtzees like the dice game.

We listened to Diet speak on Tuesday night. Addy had a really hard time deciphering her thick Dutch accent, but I assured her she will appreciate the experience when she is older. Now age 87, in her early 20s Diet was part of the Dutch resistance during World War II. She and her fiance coordinated the effort to hide hundreds of Jews from the Nazis, finding homes in the countryside of Holland and stealing ration cards and identification for them. She was eventually captured by the Gestapo and held prisoner. Her fiance was killed. She survived and now lives in Grand Rapids.


Bob thought it was quite an understatement that during several parts of her talk, she explained, "That was a terrible time."

Just this February, Diet was granted U.S. citizenship. She said filling out the forms was challenging: Have you ever been in prison? "Yes." Have you ever been deported? "Yes." Have you ever tried to topple a foreign government? "Yes." General Eisenhower had personally signed a letter of thanks to her on behalf of the United States of America for helping Allied forces escape, so she included a copy of that letter with her application. Citizenship granted.

I hope to read Diet's book, Things We Couldn't Say. I also understand that as part of his MSU master's thesis, a man filmed a documentary about Diet and others' efforts in the Netherlands during the Holocaust called Making Choices.

Monday, November 19, 2007

I was elected as a treasurer





I go to 4-H. I was elected as the treasurer. On Monday night at November 19th. I am excited ’cause I like to take care of money. It will be lots of fun for me. The kids voted for me to be the treasurer by raising their hands.

Saturday, November 17, 2007

How to make a Moses basket



I got dried cattail leaves and weaved them together to make a little Moses basket. It was very fun, but at the end I couldn't really do it.
We read about Moses in our Egermeier's Bible Story Book. We didn't have handy any bulrushes as his mother used, so we gathered some cattails from a ditch. As you can see, we did this project awhile ago, on a warm October day. I built the base and taught Addy how to weave in the sides. It later crumbled apart before she had a chance to float it down the river in town as she wanted.

Inside, Outside, Upside Down

This is Addy reading the Berenstain Bears book "Inside, Outside, Upside Down." It was the first book Glenn read all by himself. (less than 3 minutes)




Learning math by bowling




I bowled to learn math. I kept my scores in a timeline book.

8-3=5 That’s Mama’s score.

8-1=7 That’s my score.

It was fun. After that my mom took videos of us doing ring-around-the-rosie.

This was back on October 17 when we had an usually warm day. I just couldn't keep the girls cooped up inside for school.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Learning about the states




Mrs. Johnson taught me geography. I had lots of fun learning geography.


I am at co-op. Co-op stands for cooperate. Co-op is fun to learn sometimes, but while the adults are just talking and getting ready for co-op we sometimes like to play outside or just run around inside the church.


I wrote out the names of the states, even though I didn't know them. The rules were Mommy could not help me with it, but we could go up to a table and look at what that state is called and try to remember how to spell it and then when we get back to our seat we can write it on where it is on the map.
Addy is in the bottom right corner of the picture in her Laura Ingalls outfit. Look for the big, blue bonnet. She wore it a few random places that week, for no particular reason. Dori is the little person with her hand on the table in the corner.

At the Klackle Apple Orchard

I went to the Klackle Apple Orchard. My class was cancelled, so I had to go with a preschool class. But I am homeschooled and my class is a breastfeeding class.


I read a Johnny Appleseed book for school before we went to the Klackle Apple Orchard. The Klackle Apple Orchard was fun. Last year in my class I didn't pick pumpkins. I guess this year we got to pick pumpkins because it was fall time.


We picked the brand of apples Golden Delicious.


I picked a pumpkin flower. The guy who was riding the tractor for that year said we could pick a pumpkin flower. He said all it would do is die. But when we put the flower in the flower press, it was surprising to me when it came out. It was surprising to me that it stayed orange. We took it out of the flower press and we put tape over it to put it in my science notebook and I labeled the parts.


A breastfeeding class? What she means is that a group of families who met through La Leche League formed a group last year called Homeschool Preschoolers. We continue to meet to do group activities and take field trips. I guess Addy will always think of them as our breastfeeding friends. The weather was a little gloomy the morning of our field trip to the orchard, so everyone else bailed on us. We still went and joined up with a class for our educational talk and tour. The rain hid behind the clouds and we had a lovely day.