AQED/QAHBE Symposium 2009

Yesterday was the AQED/QAHBE (Quebec Association for Home-Based Education) Symposium…

I had avoided going the last years because there was not much that interested me in the presentations that were offered, but this year I decided to take a chance and go. I am  happy that I did so…

We left in the morning at about 6am and got there at about 7:15 and we were in the first arrivals… there was an intro and then the presentations started…

The first I went to was called “Eco-Education” and was basically about the language around homeschooling and about how the word “homeschooling”  misrepresents the act by giving the impression that it is “school at home” when it is so much more (or even not close at all to that model in the case of unschooling).  The words of “Eco-Education” in this situation doesn’t take on the meaning of ecological (though they can be intertwined) but takes on the meaning of “eco” as representing our “habitat”… our environment etc…

The second one was on “unschooling”… lol… I actually ended up taking a bit and I am glad I did… I had mentioned when I presented myself that I was an unschooler and that I was there to mingle with other unschoolers… and  soon after we left the room I was aproached by a woman who presented herself and her partner and we ended up talking for an hour or two about unschooling and eating lunch together… it was really great to meet them and I hope that we can keep in touch because they were great people whom I would love to know more… Sadly they live far away but I hope that there will be other ways to keep in touch…

I also met a cool homeschooling mama that came all the way from NB to meet other French homeschoolers…

After lunch there was a seminar but I ended up ditching it and talking with another couple that are in the other homeschooling group that I go to at times and we ended up talking for another hour about unschooling and kids and family life etc…

It was really refreshing to be around so many like-minded people…

In the afternoon I went to two other presentations…

One was on Waldorf and I kind of regret going to that one… though I went to a walforf school when I was young, I did not see it at all in the same way as was described…

The last one was on a theory called Parent-Guide, Parent-Complice, which turned out to be a really cool presentation about parenting… many of the things presented in the book reminds me about a little bit of  “Hold onto your kids” mixed in with “Playful Parenting” with a little bit of “NVC” thrown in… among other ideas that seemed pretty interesting…

After, I met with my friends and we headed out for supper and we had a great time eating and sharing before finally heading home at about 9pm…

Anyway… I am really happy to have been there and I had a lot of fun and I am honestly looking forward to next year…

Electrium…

Yesterday , the boys and I headed to the Electrium...

The Electrium is in Ste-Julie on the south shore of Montreal and is a place run by Hydro-Quebec to learn all about electricity…

Electrium

The tour starts out with a few minute long films that were fun and held all of the kids attentions…

then they learned about safety,

learning about safety...

then electricity/magnetism in Nature with electric eels and other fish, the human body, static electricity, power and circuitry…

It was really quite informative and most of all it was a lot of fun…

The boys loved it especially because everything can be touched and tried…

Khéna

Xavier learning about how a circuit works….

trying the circuits...

This of course was a big hit…

Colin

Xavier

But I think that this was Colin’s favourite part… the guy who was showing the tour let him go up even though he was a bit small… he told Colin not to take his hand of the ball and Colin listened so well that it was hard for him to hear when it was safe to do so… he just stayed so still and didn’t move…

hair raising experience...

If you are near or in Montreal the Electrium is on the south shore not too far away from the Island. It is free and though it is not a big place it is a lot of fun and even for little kids…

Drawing…

Colin has been spending hours upon hours drawing… he will grab a stack of paper and then sit at the table and just go… he can literally spend his day drawing…

I guess for some this isn’t a big deal… but Xavier doesn’t sit down to draw more than once every few weeks…. so this is new to me…

Colin Colouring

In the last weeks his scale has changed, what was once one or two Star Wars Characters  on a piece of paper has become full stories with all different characters, monsters, spiders, animals etc…. The details have changed greatly also… I love to sit and watch him draw and I love seeing where his imagination takes him….

Colin Colouring

I thought I would share this too… this is our kitchen wall next to where the table is and is often the first thing people notice when they come over…  I love displaying things this way!

Kitchen Wall

New books…

We have a lot of books in our home, neither Xavier or Colin bring them out on a regular basis… we need to make some trips to Montreal more often and go to the library there because our local library just doesn’t cut it… there are no English books at all… it sucks because we could walk there…

Their interests are changing of course, and because they know our books, and the topics are not what are interesting them at the moment, books have just been collecting dust (except for a few of Simon’s that the boys love)… so a bit more than a week ago I asked the boys to each choose a book online… something that they would really like to read or look at…

Colin choose the “Star Wars Complete Visual Dictionary

star wars visual dictionary

which is an amazing book that shows each character in full colour… there is so much detail on each page but it is not overwhelming… great book!

Xavier has been playing Baldur’s Gate and Neverwinter nights and has been interested in learning more about the game of Dungeons & Dragons and has been looking through Simon’s old Monster manual for a while now… so he got “Monster Manual: A 4th Edition Core Rulebook

imagephp

He was  a bit disappointed that some of the monsters that he likes got cut out of the book but that doesn’t stop him from loving it and looking at it often…

Though they were a bit on the more pricey side then I usually would buy, I love the choices that they made because I know that these books will grow with them for a long time…

And the greatest part was that they were so excited to get their books and when they came they were so enthralled with them that they spent the day just looking at them…

Looking at new books...

(I put  this post up about an hour ago but I have to add this.. a few min ago)

reading before bed...

perceptions and expectations…

In the time that I have been a parent I have come to realize that most of the problems that we have come out of the way that perceive things and what we expect from our kids..

With babies, the largest of the expectations are around sleeping and nursing habits and the need to be held. Not only do things work against parents that try to take control of these needs, but the more they try the more they disrupt the natural patterns and needs are just not being met which will cause further problems.

I wrote this a few years ago in a post about sleep issues and CIO (cry-it-out):

If so many children have “sleep issues” and have to be trained out of “desperation” then it is clear that the “sleep issues” are a norm. If they are the norm then it is clear that the real “sleep issues” lie within the parents expectations of the child and not what is physically and physiologically normal for the child. If people would stop fighting their children over when and where their children sleep, then sleep would not be such an issue.

After three kids now, I believe this to be true even more than I did then. In our family, Xavier being the first got the raw end of the deal at times. He was a great sleeper, but I remember a rough patch we all went through when he was about 9 months and like most babies, he didn’t sleep much (and had a nursing strike) because his brain was so busy processing all his new skills. The more we expected from him, the more resistance we were met with and the more stress that we had which led to us to want to have more control. Luckily we decided to listen to him more and go with the flow and no longer have expectations of what he “should” be doing…  and the “problems” quickly went away. I realized that the less expectations I had about what he “should be doing”, the less stress I have and the better things are in the end.

Looking at the problems that we have in our household now, I still can see that it is what we perceive and expect is what often gets in the way of solving the conflicts we encounter. This is something that I have believed for a long time, but as I said, learning about NVC has filled in the gaps for me and has made it more clear.

Something that happened recently was a fight between Colin and Xavier (not a rare occurrence btw)… The situation was that Khéna was already outside and Xavier was dressed and ready to go when Colin wanted something out of the fridge…Xavier told him he couldn’t have it and a fight ensued. In the moment what I perceived was Xavier being bossy and telling Colin what he can’t have and Colin fighting back. If I didn’t know what I know now, or wasn’t putting it in practice, I would most likely try to fix the problem by over-talking, because I expect him to be nice to his brother and expect him to not to be bossy and “mean” and have to empathy. Some may even think that I should have even made him say sorry to his brother for hurting his feelings.

but what would any of that have accomplished?

I looked at the situation and tried to find out what Xavier was needing…

so I asked him… “what is it that you want right now?” he responded by directing the attention back to not wanting Colin to have the chocolate milk.

so I asked him… “is it because you would like some too?” he said yes and I just saw all the tension leaving.

So, I said “no problem, you can have some too…  next time though, it would be easier if you just said that… ok?”

I served two glasses and Xavier and Colin talked about what they would do outside. There were no hard feelings between anyone and everyone got what they wanted/needed, and the more I do this, the more they talk about what they need instead of jumping on each other, not, every time of course, but life lessons like that take time to learn.

We might expect kids to behave a certain way, but we must not expect them to know those behaviours automatically, nor believe that they can be learned though punishments or by our reactions to what we perceive. What we need to do is get to the reason why they do things and then teach them to react differently in the future. It is a harder and longer process but it is so much more rewarding for all.

Does this mean that we should never expect things from our kids? I am not saying that at all… I am just saying that there are realistic and unrealistic expectations. I expect that my kids will tell me what they need, when they are hungry, when they are tired etc… I don’t expect them to magically do so on a schedule that comes from my expectations. I expect them to explore and learn… but I know I can’t expect them to do so on a certain schedule in a certain manner.

One of the problems that I see is that in the last generations, parenting has been learned through books. Limited texts that tell parents what to expect and when, without leaving the place for individuality and furthermore making parenting all about the parent and not the child. The problem is that all kids are different and they have not read the books that we read. They don’t know what they are expected to do, they just do what comes naturally.

A quote I love..

“Children are the books… once you start reading them you will never want to put them down…”

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