Sunday, September 19, 2010

Some highlights

I've always been about moments rather than the big picture, and I want to share some moments from the first three weeks of our new school, Taller Colibri.

On our observational tour to list simple machines, we had to stop to let a gigantic tractor cross in front of us, its gears madly turning, leaving gouged mud in its wake.

Jacobo designed a full-on roller coaster that successfully made a wheel fly through the air.

Pancho coaching Max on how to hit a soccer ball with his head.

Geni at recess, opening up seed pods and showing them to the baby goats.

Over a few days, Samuel crocheted a tiny cap for a finger puppet.

Max set to work writing a book in the handmade notebooks Suzana had made.

Steve took the older group to the Graphic Arts Institute, where they pored over Leonardo DaVinci's sketches of machines.

Maestra Suzanna, the world's best teacher, taking the class on daily walks to the nearby river, where the kids keep a journal of its changes.

Maestra Rachel created a journeyboard lesson for the kids, who are now slowly painting a pictoral tale.

Every few days, someone asks hopefully, "What do we do tomorrow?" It's a beautiful life.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hi Serena. This is the first time I've commented on your blog, but I've been a reader and fan for quite a long time. I'm hoping we can correspond by e-mail because my husband and I are planning to move our family to Oaxaca in the next year or so. Oaxaca (more specifically Etla) is my husband's home town and I'm from Wisconsin here in the USA. My younger son is turning 5 in Dec and my older son will be 18 in June of next year so we are waiting for him to graduate from highschool and then he can decide if he wants to came with us. I'm very curious about your experience with moving to Mexico with you family and everything else that happened along the way (schools, places to live, health insurance, ect, ect. ect). My e-mail address is stefhayford@yahoo.com if you wouldn't mind sharing with me. Thanks so much!