MGTutoring.com. A Rational Perspective on Education.

January 27, 2009

Another Homeschool Carnival

Filed under: Announcements,Education — Administrator @ 6:00 pm

The Life on the Road blog has The Adventure Edition of the Carnival of Homeschooling up.

Janine at Why Homeschool has an interesting post about physical activity and brain development. Cristina at Home Spun Juggling teaches us some things about “pill bugs.” Timothy Powers writes about debt and paying for his childrens’ college education. Margaret at Two Kid Schoolhouse writes about moms’ need to keep educating themselves, as well as their children. Beca at InspirationForMothers.com talks about a five things she does to try to control her anger with her children. Catherine at Petticoat Government discusses ideas in the Declaration of Independence in context of modern education. Others talk about nutrition, books, words, outings/vacations, woodworking, phys ed, and lots, lots more.

Check it out!

Online Drills: Multiplication and Fraction-Decimal-Percentage Equivalents

Filed under: Education,Mathematics — Administrator @ 5:06 pm

The company Quia has an online game you could play to help you memorize your fraction-decimal-percentage equivalents. Harcourt School Publishers has some products (to help with equivalents) you can preview if you register (for free, I think) on their site (I didn’t, so I could not check out the products). NCTM’s Illuminations has a circle(s) that is shaded to show you a given fraction-decimal-percentage equivalent. The site MathisFun.com has some multiplication drills.

Thanks to Mary H. and her son Colby for telling me about these!

January 26, 2009

Radio Station Change

Filed under: Art — Administrator @ 11:29 pm

Now on the radio: Sweet & Lovely, on Live365.com. The owner says about his station:

This station is strictly dedicated to the popular tunes of the Jazz Age 20′s and the Songbird 30′s. You will NOT find Bigband Swing favorites such as Glen Miller here. You will however find recordings of the finest vocalists of all time such as Lee Morse, Cab Calloway, Rudy Vallee, Ruth Etting, Annette Hanshaw, Jack Smith, Ted Lewis, Gene Austin, Cliff Edwards, Nat Gonella… just to name but a few! …

Good stuff.

A change-of-plans day: listen to music, start reading Han of Iceland by Victor Hugo, and lie around feeling tired because I’m a little sick…

At Hugo-online.com, they say about Han of Iceland:

It was received with mixed emotions; the writer’s imagination and language was praised, but the spectacular Norwegian setting and the horrible details were questioned. The historic authenticity was non-existent, which Hugo admits with irony in the preface. In the publisher’s preface of a Swedish 1830 edition, the unnamed translator explains:

It is not this translator’s intention to expound on this novels aesthetic merits or faults – both almost tremendous by nature.

She then gives account for some obvious factual errors in the novel, explains why she has decided not to correct them, and concludes:

A genuine Genius addresses us and invites us to follow him; his path leads through dreary dungeons, over corpses, blocks, and his hero drinks human blood. Our hair stands on end, but so irresistible is this Genius’ invitation, that we must follow, though frightful and almost against our own will.

Han of Iceland was in essence a representation of Hugo’s love for Adèle, through the characters of Ethel and Ordener. English horror novels had clearly inspired it and some contemporary reviewers regarded it as an imitation of Walter Scott’s writings. But it had unquestionable literary merits and was a remarkable début for such a young writer. And as much as it caused disgust in some people, it generated admiration in others. It was translated into English over twenty times during the 19th century. The first Swedish translation appeared in 1830 (see above) and the first Norwegian in 1831.

You can find and download the novel at Google Books; at the Internet Archive (as Hans of Icelend) provided by the University of California Libraries, by the University of Michigan, by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; and more.

Another Good Breakfast

Filed under: Exercise, Health & Nutrition — Administrator @ 6:06 pm

Blueberries, blackberries, cantaloupe, half an avocado, an omlette (four eggs with grilled red onion, grilled yellow bell pepper, sun dried tomato, a tiny bit of habanero pepper and some goat cheese), and some hot coffee. Yum.

This breakfast is in line with the ideas of Art De Vany‘s Evolutionary Fitness.

And again, the structure of production making this breakfast possible is mind-boggling and puts me in awe. (I first heard the idea of ‘structure of production’ in a lecture on economics from Richard Salsman. I do not know where the idea first came from.)

I didn’t eat until 10:30 or so. I went hungry for a few hours to “fast” and because I feel a little sick today — not anything that’s keeping me down or out for the count, but it is draining my energy. Hopefully the healthy breakfast will help me recover quicker than I otherwise would. I’ll have to have some hot green tea later, and maybe order some soup from a chinese restaurant.

Homeschool Carnival!!

Filed under: Announcements,Education — Administrator @ 4:21 pm

The Homeschool Showcase (Formerly The Carnival of Cool Homeschoolers) #16 is up on the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers Blog. I hope you get some some new ideas from it.

Mrs. Jenny Wren of Jenny Wren’s Nest tells — as Kris, the administrator of the Weird, Unsocialized Homschoolers Blog, says — “of her and her daughter’s recent experience making soap, prompted by a kid’s craft show that her daughter enjoys. Jenny gives us a list of ingredients and step-by-step instructions for the project.”

Amida at Journey Into Unschooling shows the collages her children made for each letter of the alphabet.

Some parents posted on “100 Terrific Sites to Find Primary Source History Documents,” “100 Great Sites to Celebrate Black History Month,” “50 Awe-inspiring, Free, High-Res Collections of Religious Imagery,” and “100 Fascinating Celtic Culture, Language & Lit Blogs.”

There are also posts about using a reward system, learning colors, using genealogy to learn history, crafting your own calendar, taking a vacation, humor, and the creativity of children in interpreting your words.

I hope it gives you some new ideas!

An Economist-Engineer-Physicist Joke

Filed under: Humor — Administrator @ 3:57 pm

An economist, an engineer, and a physicist are marooned on a deserted island. One day they find a can of food washed up on the beach and contrive to open it. The engineer said: “let’s hammer the can open between these rocks”. The physicist said: “that’s pretty crude. We can just use the force of gravity by dropping a rock on the can from that tall tree over there”. The economist is somewhat disgusted at these deliberations, and says: “I’ve got a much more elegant solution. All we have to do is assume a can-opener.”

From the Science Jokes page of Mr. Kevin A. Boudreaux, Instructor, Department of Chemistry at Angelo State University in San Angelo, Texas.

On the Radio

Filed under: Americana,Art — Administrator @ 3:56 pm

Right now I’m enjoying listening to The Kingdom of Swing station on Live365.com. The station plays swing, big band and jazz from the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s.

Check it out! Enjoy!

January 25, 2009

A Mathematician-Physicist-Engineer Joke

Filed under: Humor — Administrator @ 3:45 pm

A mathematician, an engineer, and a physicist are out hunting together. They spy a deer in the woods. The physicist calculates the velocity of the deer and the effect of gravity on the bullet, aims his rifle and fires. Alas, he misses; the bullet passes three feet behind the deer. The deer bolts some yards, but comes to a halt, still within sight of the trio. “Shame you missed,” comments the engineer, “but of course with an ordinary gun, one would expect that.” He then levels his special deer-hunting gun, which he rigged together from an ordinary rifle, a sextant, a compass, a barometer, and a bunch of flashing lights which don’t do anything but impress onlookers, and fires. Alas, his bullet passes three feet in front of the deer, who by this time wises up and vanishes for good. “Well,” says the physicist, “your contraption didn’t get it either.” “What do you mean?” pipes up the mathematician. “Between the two of you, that was a perfect shot!”

From the Science Jokes page of Mr. Kevin A. Boudreaux, Instructor, Department of Chemistry at Angelo State University in San Angelo, Texas.

Corroborating Bertonneau

Filed under: Education,Reading — Administrator @ 3:44 pm

In “Life as a Trained Monkey” by Karen De Coster, posted on Takimag.com on January 22, 2009, Mrs. De Coster says:

The answer to why people seem smart but can’t think is not so complicated as it first appears. There are plenty of (supposedly) “smart” people who can be trained, like a monkey, to cram for an exam (or exams); get a college degree; remember procedures related to an occupation; take steps to complete a task, etc., etc. It is the use of critical thinking that demonstrates the difference between being smart and possessing intelligence (intellectual ability).

I can tell you about accountants with MBAs who never heard of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, even when these institutions headlined the mainstream news each day. I can tell you about a CPA who won’t read non-fiction books because the “big words” are too intimidating. Most of my colleagues have never read a book—especially non-fiction—since the college days. Newspapers may make it into their daily regimen because, for most people, reading a newspaper is predictable in content and scope, and therefore it lacks the intimidation factor of a hardbound paperweight with hundreds of pages of unforeseen words and ideas.

These comments and observations corroborate Mr. Bertonneau’s comments.

As parents and educators, we need to be more aware of the distinction between educating to reason and educating to memorize (or to know without understanding).

January 24, 2009

A Semi-Hunter-Gatherer Breakfast

Filed under: Economics,Exercise, Health & Nutrition — Administrator @ 4:03 pm

Hunter-Gatherers didn’t have cheese or sausage, but it’s good stuff. The picture was taken with my cell phone, so the color is a bit washed out.

Chef Bruce Aidell’s mango and jalapeno chicken-and-turkey sausage; cantaloupe; blueberries; blackberries; white Stilton cheese with apricot pieces. And hot coffee.

Yum.

Wow…I just learned how to spell cantaloupe. It’s not cantelope. The folks at Dictionary.com say:

1730–40; < F, allegedly after Cantaluppi, a papal estate near Rome where cultivation of this melon is said to have begun in Europe, though a comparable It word is not attested until much later than the F word, and Cantaloup, a village in Languedoc, has also been proposed as the source.  From cantaloupe. Dictionary.com. Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random House, Inc. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/cantaloupe (accessed: January 24, 2009).

Interesting.

The amazing thing about this breakfast is what it shows about economics, capitalism and technology. (N.B. We have only partial elements and remnants of capitalism today; we do not have capitalism proper in the world — capitalism goes part and parcel with property rights which go part and parcel with natural, individual human rights…which are routinely violated today, not respected and protected.)

(more…)

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