April 30, 2025
Ending April with Memes
April 28, 2025
The decision to homeschool.
I'd say, round February-ish, I started becoming completely disillusioned with the public school system. It wasn't that I didn't enjoy teaching. It wasn't the students. It's not the school itself. It was the system. The system that dictated how much your kid was going to learn in a given school year: Knowledge being doled out on the terms of snow days, virtual learning ("learning") days, and sick days. I first realized this was a problem back in 2020 when my students were being quarantined when they weren't even sick and even when I went on maternity leave and, though the teacher who took my spot was hardworking, they couldn't find a certified teacher to finish out 4th grade for my students (going as far as asking me if I were going to take the "whole 6 weeks off" because they were out of options).
Education was been gate-kept. Not intentionally or with malice, but it has. This year, our school had 17 school days off between January and February due to district sick days, snow days, and federal holidays. That's 17 days of 1st grade my kid won't get back. That's 17 days of 3rd grade my students won't get back. Imagine how much content could be covered in 17 days.
Something happened in 2020 where we decided school was "extra", like organized learning wasn't one of the most important parts of childhood. And that trickledown effect has come with us into 2024-2025 and I honestly don't think it's going away.
So anyway: All of these thoughts and experiences were being mulled over in my head, and then I started to think about curriculum. Curriculum is the element of school I'm probably the most passionate about. Especially in elementary, if you don't have a solid uniform curriculum available to all students, and taught by all teachers, you get a mish-mash of skills and standards being taught. Each curriculum is organized a little bit differently, so if you switch from one to the other, especially moving state to state, you might miss a skill or standard that's already been taught. For example, if you don't get "telling time" at the end of 1st grade, you may not see that again until the end of 2nd grade. That's an entire year of not being given explicit instruction by a teacher on how a clock works. That's a lot when you're 7 years old. This is how you end up with gaps and it's how I ended up with a class of 4th graders on a military base who had had wildly varying experiences in 3rd grade in 2020 (some never seeing a classroom that year...Hawaii...). And then the kids didn't even have a certified teacher to carry them through the last 10 weeks of the school year in 2022.
So, thinking about Wells, specifically: When I considered that we'd be moving 2-3 more times before we "settle" somewhere and I thought about how many gaps there would be in his education because of that, I felt like homeschooling would be the right choice for next year. I wasn't planning on working next year, and this way he can get what he needs to be a successful 2nd grader and we'll see where we are when it comes time for 3rd grade the next year. He's one of the more advanced kids in his class and it would crush me to know he's missing bits and pieces if he gets, God forbid, a lazy/unskilled teacher or just has a major gap in whatever curriculum is being used. I've seen a lot lately online about how schools are failing our kids and, with the new school choice laws coming about in 2025-2026, I want to point out that you, the parent, are still 100% responsible for your child. You do not get to blame the school. You get to decide. You have to decide. You can't blame the doctor or the dentist if you don't like them; you find a new one. You need to find a new way for your child to learn, whether that's a new school or taking it into your own hands. You are their advocate.
I made this decision around the end of February. Scott hopped on board really easily for some reason, even though he hasn't liked the idea of homeschooling in the past. I ordered everything we would need to do 2nd grade and it's ready to go. I did do a lot of research and talked to many homeschool moms I know, mostly military, to get a feel for their "why". My "why" seemed kind of selfish at first ("it will be inconvenient to find him a new school and I don't want him to have to deal with that transition") but the WHY popped up after I'd already made the decision...
I'm relieved I made this decision when I did. It's a whole separate long sordid tale, but we probably won't be scuttling off to our new location (Kansas, guys, so not super exciting) as soon as June rolls around. Scott doesn't start work until later in the summer so we will list this house, try to sell it, and then buy a new one in Kansas. Financially, it makes the most sense. So we won't have an address by the time school starts! Meaning, I don't even know how I'd register him. He'd have to start 2nd grade here most likely or miss a huge chunk of 2nd grade. All that transition, when you have two kids who aren't particularly excited about moving in the first place, would make it worse. This way, we have the freedom to basically do whatever we want (like travel) until we find a place to live in Kansas.
It's a lot of change in not a lot of time but the relief in knowing I don't have to have it all figured out today is worth it. I've discovered that homeschool is just the way you do life and you make it fit your life, not make your life fit the local school schedule. With the military still dictating our every move, this is what makes the most sense right now.
But anyway, I'm excited. I will have a lot more to say after we get going but I have a loose plan and I have a curriculum I'm excited about...We still have a lot of life to get through in May, so I'll probably start plotting out the fall sometime this summer.
**Note** Wells has made tremendous progress in the last two years. He had a great two years of preschool, to start, and then he had wonderful teachers for kindergarten and 1st. He actually asked me why I'm taking him away from the school that has taught him so much (*crying emoji face goes here*). I gently explained that he wouldn't be at this school next year anyway since we're moving so it doesn't really matter. I would have no problem with him continuing onto 2nd and then me being his 3rd grade teacher but that's not the way army life works. (he also absolutely hates getting up for school at 6am so, win-win)
April 25, 2025
Friday recommendations (one movie, lots of music), 4/25
1. The Revenant. We watched this movie from 2015 on Tuesday night. I'd never seen it. I noticed it was in our Disney+ queue because Scott had been watching it at one point. Very much recommend.
2. The reason we ended up watching The Revenant is because Scott had been trying to get me to watch The Expanse, as he'd basically made his way through all five seasons (on Amazon) either after I went to bed or early in the morning on the weekends. He swore the characters and storylines are ones "you get really attached to".
No.
Don't do it. The first episode was good once you wrapped your head around how disturbing and weird 300 years from now could be. But I promise you, you will not care. It is awful. Every evening, Scott was like "ready to watch?" and I was like "ugh". I could think of nothing less fun than watching The Expanse. I don't care what's going on and there's way too much going on.
3. I fell down a Spotify rabbit hole last night. Do you remember The Spill Canvas? Gold. This video is what you would get if you were trying to recreate 2008 in a lab. Like, future generations could study it if they wanted to write reports about 2008.
Just kidding. No one writes reports anymore.
They have ChatGPT do it.
4. I hate ChatGPT. I hate it when educators use it, especially. Like, no. Do the work. Don't be lazy.
5. Speaking of a gold mine, do you remember Cartel? Never mind: THIS is 2008 in a bottle.
And then the actual gold standard of the early 2000s: Taking Back Sunday.
Or, cinematic gold: Brand New.
6. Honestly, kids today have it too easy: I had all of that ^^^ downloaded *quite* illegally back in college. And if you want to know where all of our Away Message Lyrics™ came from, they were from songs like those.
7. Okay, well, that was nice, but I spent last night listening to that music while putting reading data into spreadsheets because I'm woefully behind, put together half of a Walmart grocery order, and fed the dogs multiple treats after the kids went to bed.
I'm officially *officially* old.
April 18, 2025
Longest 4-day week ever
April 14, 2025
When do dogs start to listen? (asking for me)
(or when do kids start to listen?)
Another spring is here so dog-walking weather is back. When I didn't work, I would try to walk multiple times a week year-round with baby Sutton and two dogs since Wells was in preschool.
Now, Wells is almost 7 and old enough to listen and pay attention and not randomly scooter off into traffic.
Sutton, not so much. She has taken over the whining and complaining role that Wells used to fill.
(No one tells you that when your kids are about 4 years apart, one will get really easy all of a sudden and the other will slide into that hard age. They take turns, basically.)
I'm back to walking a puppy, which I haven't really done since 2014-15.
Here's the thing: Scout has always been terrible on a leash. Always. He's almost 12. He is still terrible on a leash.
Jett was worse than worse than worse on a leash. Jett was so bad that I took him to obedience school for a few months and they didn't even know what to make of him. He did not graduate (that I recall). I think we literally just quit. It was getting to be embarrassing. Joke was on them: he turned out to be the best possible dog to walk and 3-4 year old Wells often held Jett's leash because he was so obedient and protective of us when we were out.
Maverick, comparatively, is not that bad. He's more just dumb and I don't trust him. But a couple of shocks and he realizes what's up and he'll walk along at my side.
Scout does not care. He's also deaf now so it doesn't matter if he cares or not.
I remember taking Jett and Scout to a dog park in Colorado Springs in probably 2015, and they were awful. So so so awful. Like, it was embarrassing.
I talked to a man there who was older and he had a 12 year old dog who wasn't doing well, health-wise, and he said he'd love to have a disobedient puppy again. I get it: I'd love to have another day with puppy Jett (well, maybe 5 year old Jett). I understood what he was saying even if I hadn't experienced it yet. But anyway, I really thought Scout would've calmed down by this point. Even Maverick can hold it together. Scout is insatiable when he comes to running and sniffing and hunting. He hyperventilates the whole way to the destination, and knocks small children over to get to where he wants to be.
So while clearly this is personality-dependent, 12 is not the age when a Brittany spaniel starts to listen.
April 11, 2025
4 Friday things. 4/11
April 8, 2025
A few Amazon things.
I've been backing off on Amazon but I still will default if I need something. This is two months' worth of finds!
These sandals, I've been wearing as slippers around the house. I've been wearing a couple of pairs of shoes lately that I just need to throw away because they don't have arch support and I have very low arches. I'm paying for it, for sure. These help!