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Cultural collisions
The other day I was in one of the library branches. I was being assisted by a staff member while I used a PC in a bank of computers to log on to the new audio book system available for downloads from the website. Next to me were seated two children, a boy maybe 10 and a girl maybe 8. They were viewing music videos that had very suggestive images of
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Forces for good or evil
Earlier this month I dropped everything I was doing to take an 8-day road trip with our eldest child to visit an art school she had her eye on for next year. The school was in Connecticut so, not wanting to drive all the way up there for a visit to just one place, I laid out a route that would include
Embracing sovereignty
This space has become a place where I muse on what God is teaching me. If it seems as though I repeat myself (as suggested by our editor!), it is because I am a slow learner. I do hear kind words from some of you that what has been written encourages you, and that is my prayer. Even if I am not learning
Our homeschool mission
Some time at the beginning of the past school year I recieved an e-mail from a witty friend of mine that ended with the words, “Hope your time is fruitful and wonderful as you dare to go where few will go … BACK TO SCHOOL WITH YOUR KIDS!” I chuckled, somewhat ruefully, when I read that as I
Long view of the kingdom
This year for the first time I attended the homeschool graduation exercises. I have gone to the banquet in years past but somehow never attended the actual commencement. I was not prepared for what I saw when I walked into the sanctuary at Central Baptist church. It was a sea of families about 2,000
Esprit newsletter — printed or electronic?
By Shan Hughey and David Tulis We are considering going online with our areawide homeschool newsletter Esprit. We are weighing this for two main reasons. The first is cost, and the second is convenience. Many of you appreciate or prefer accessing news online. The cost reason has two sides to it. To
Family resistance
It began as a slow trickle earlier this year but now has turned into a full blown flood of e-mail. Each time I open my in-box I am inundated with bad news on way too many fronts. The economy is faltering and getting worse; yet another troubling nomination for a cabinet level post; the pro-life movement
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Sovereignty & frailty
Many of you know that one of my greatest challenges has been figuring out why one child has had such difficulty with reading and writing. For the past four years or so, we have tried vision therapy, private tutoring, special consultants, not to mention a myriad of reading curriculums, remedial math and
Mirror images
Even though it is a timeless classic, I never could bring myself to read more than the first chapter or so of Jane Eyre when I was a girl. It was so dark, so bleak, rather oppressive, or so I thought. But last year when my 16-year-old daughter read it, loved it and started watching movie adaptations