Crossing Things Off the List

We are now halfway into our 3rd week of this self-contained life and I feel like we are finally getting the hang of this. Although, as I say this, I should point out that we are not without the difficulties of those ‘bad days’ where you feel like the walls are closing in.

Today wasn’t overly fancy. However, my one tip for you today is to think of those things you’ve wanted to get off your To-Do list that have been on there for weeks, months, and maybe even YEARS. For me, this meant finally teaching Wormy to tie her shoes. I remember needing to be able to do this in order to go to kindergarten (or maybe that’s what my parents told me?!?). Squid had to learn how to do it before she got through kindergarten. Now, Wormy has not heard boo about having to learn to tie her shoes. So we hadn’t done it. It’s not that we didn’t want her to learn…it just was at the bottom of the to-do list. WAY at the bottom.

It had been a struggle with Squid, so that is probably why this was not moved up on the list. We even had to learn a ‘new’ way to tie shoes that worked better for Squid.

Fast forward to today. I sat down with my hiking shoes and Wormy. She got one shoe, and I got the other. I walked her through it once, and she followed really well. I showed her some tips to tweak her skills on a 2nd try, and then she was determined to try it herself. On the 3rd try, she nailed it. I thought it was just luck. Nope. She did it again. I figured she wouldn’t remember how to do it in 10 minutes, so I made her show her daddy when he came up from his online meetings. Nope. Still got it.

FINALLY it was nice out today – sun shining, warm temps, so we went for a walk. I had Wormy tie my shoes for me. She still had it. In fact, I had tied one of my shoes before I had her tie my other one. The shoe I tied didn’t make it through the whole walk. The shoe she tied did. Maybe she should teach me?

In other news, I also think I have completed my New Years resolutions as well. Guess I need to revise them a little….

Hope you all had a great day!

Hogwarts School is Open!

Today after the girls got done with their online class work, Hogwarts was in session! Since we are *hopefully* going to Universal Studios in Orlando this summer (fingers crossed!), my husband and I have bought the interactive Harry Potter wands on eBay to save some money. Since Squid is a HUGE Harry Potter fan, after having completed the series in 2 months, we knew she would be begging to get a wand. We also knew Wormy wasn’t going to want to miss out on this, too. However, if you wanted to do this at home, you could just grab some branches from the yard! You can easily find spells online to learn as well.

Since the wands came in the last few weeks, I decided we should put them to good use. We are going to learn a new ‘spell’ each day and practice them so that hopefully by the time we get to go to Universal and try out our skills in Hogsmeade, we will be pros. I did not order myself a wand, so I used a good ‘ole fashioned music baton!

The girls don’t know it yet, but the Hogwarts Sorting Hat is arriving tomorrow as well. We will definitely be sorting the girls into their respective houses and having fun with that tomorrow. Listen for yelling if Squid doesn’t get put into Hufflepuff….

However, for today, we learned the “Silencio” spell. I drew the wand movements on our chalkboard and had them practice over and over again. The kept calling me “Professor McGonagall”. We then grabbed out favorite stuffed animal and practiced the spell on him/her. I also told them that they could use the spell on each other, but that they needed to remember to “unsilencio” each other, as well, or else the spell will no longer work. Hahaha.

After we got done working on our spells, we did this amazing Escape Room designed by librarians in PA. The Escape Room was really fun, and both girls were able to contribute answers to the questions. You can find it here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSflNxNM0jzbZJjUqOcXkwhGTfii4CM_CA3kCxImbY8c3AABEA/viewform

Until tomorrow, fellow Harry Potter fans!

Sample Lessons from My Online Middle School Band Class

I am going to share the lessons I have been giving my students in hopes that you can either steal them or they inspire you to create something exciting. This is my school’s 3rd week of online learning, as we haven’t had our spring break yet, so for those of you just beginning – maybe you can learn from my issues.

I split my assignments into 2 parts – one assignment serves as their ‘lesson’ time and the other is fulfilling my ‘ensemble rehearsal’ expectations. I usually only see my students once a week for a 20 minute lesson and once a week for a 60 minute band rehearsal.

The first week I was all inspired and took an mp3 of one of the pieces we had been working pretty hard on and popped it up on Google Classroom. I asked my students to create a video recording of themselves playing along with the recording. I thought this would be a great way for them to correct any rhythmic issues they tend to have. This worked out well for some of them, but others were not quite at the level this assignment called for. This is, of course, after we got the Chromebook cameras up and running.

I also asked the students to go https://www.musictheory.net/exercises/note and play until they had 30 correct. They then were asked to take a screenshot of their final score so that I could see how many questions it took for them to get 30 correct. This also worked well, after we got that website unblocked for them on their Chromebooks (I was really batting 1000 on assignments that week).

For my second week of work, I assigned them a movement of one of our easier pieces and had them video record them playing it on their own. The students seemed to develop less frustration with this, however, their rhythms were nowhere near correct. I will have to try something different for next week.

I also asked the students to visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ktKcnDfWs2c and comment back to me which music impacted the scene the most, in their opinion. The video is a silent movie scene set to 5 different musical backgrounds. The students can see how drastically music changes the mood of the movies. (We are working on a movie music unit right now, with our Spring Concert theme being “A Night at the Movies”). This was my most completed assignment to date. The students really enjoyed this.

Fast forward to this week – I am now getting clearer with my directions. In every Google assignment box, I break down my instructions into numbered tasks. I am curious to see how this works. I am hoping I will get less students marking each assignment as ‘done’ without actually doing anything.

The assignment this week is to record their piece “Silent Movie” for me with the background music. They were also supposed to go to http://www.musictechteacher.com/music_quizzes/cg_quiz_hoopshoot_rhythms.htm and play the Rhythm Basketball game, but my students’ Chromebooks don’t have Adobe Flash updated on them. I had actually emailed one of my flute students to make sure she could get to the site, so I thought I was all set on this one. I was feeling proud of myself for testing it out BEFORE I sent the assignment out. Until the Flash warning came out. The watch dog company that monitors their Chromebooks are not able to help out with this issue, and laughed at me because of how old and unsupported Flash is. Looks like my students get a free pass on this assignment until I find something else. I wish there were more FUN rhythm work things so that my students could get a bit of a brain break while still learning what I need them to work on!

Going to Jamaica!!!

Today’s staycation featured a visit to Jamaica. I had to work again today, so my husband had the lead on this one. He showed the girls the pictures from our honeymoon in Ocho Rios. The girls loved all of the pictures of food. There’s never any doubt they’re related to me! Ha!

They then got to experience a Dunns River Falls climb, through this YouTube video: https://youtu.be/SaeeaA8UmMU. It totally reminded me of our own climb up the falls.

Next, my husband showed the girls this video (https://www.visitjamaica.com/listing/luminous-lagoon/457/ and https://youtu.be/sIMWQwWeeYY) of the Luminous Lagoon, which is one of my favorite stops in Jamaica. It was so neat to be out in a boat looking at this glowing water as we went around the area. This was Wormy’s favorite of the things we showed her.

My husband also taught the girls about Bob Marley, and played his music for them. We had toured Bob Marley’s house when we were on our honeymoon, and my husband has always been a big fan. He also showed them Google Earth views of the island, and they had fun ‘exploring’ the area.

Throughout the day, we dressed up in our swimsuits (had to have proper beach attire on). We were going to set up beach chairs on the living room floor and read, but since it was so nice out, the girls went out to play instead (with clothes on over their swimsuits…it wasn’t THAT warm out). We also decided to move the indoor picnic for lunch outside as well. Thank goodness for lovely weather! We also drew some friendly messages in sidewalk chalk at the bottom of our driveway to say hi to the neighbors. Wormy’s said “Love you,” and Squid’s said “Stupid coronavirus.” We also decorated in hearts to help those on the heart scavenger hunts.

I was going to teach them the art of haggling with some printed off Jamaican money images and some little toys, but since it was nice out, we’ll save that skill for another time. We went for a nice long 2-mile family walk through the neighborhood. Then we came back and watched “Cool Runnings.” By the time the movie was done, the jerk chicken I had marinated was ready to be cooked. I served it with peas and rice, and this great bottle of Welch’s non-alcoholic sparkling strawberry daiquiris. The girls were panting from the heat of the jerk sauce, but they admitted to liking it….after they had some cheesecake to cool their mouths.

I can almost smell the jerk sauce by looking at this picture!
The spice made my girl’s eyes water!

Needless to say, both girls are very interested in going to Jamaica!

Going to Paris…virtually

In Day 2 of our touring the world virtually, we went to France. I wasn’t ‘officially’ working today, but as I’m sure some of you are experiencing, working from home means less boundaries on time. I’m still working on that…

We started off our day with breakfast – a tube of crescents that I popped some mini chocolate chips inside. When my husband and I went to Paris in 2007, we ate that every day for breakfast – though it is highly unlikely that they were crescents from a tube!

Good morning, Delicious!

Next, we toured my scrapbook from our trip so the girls could see what we did – touring Paris, Normandy, Reims, and Versailles/Monet’s gardens. Wormy got super excited to see that we went to see the real Water Lillies paintings in Paris, as they had just made their own versions of that art in her kindergarten art class. Then she was over the moon when we showed her our pictures from Monet’s actual gardens. Now she wants to go in person.

Wormy’s work
This picture is not even half as beautiful as it is in real life

We moved on to some virtual tours. We visited my favorite stop when we were in Paris – the Water Lillies exhibit in Musee de l’Orangerie: https://www.musee-orangerie.fr/en/article/water-lilies-virtual-visit The girls loved imagining themselves sitting on the benches soaking in the whole work!

Next up, we visited the Louvre virtually through this site: https://www.youvisit.com/tour/louvremuseum Wormy kept laughing whenever the sculptures didn’t have arms! They really liked looking at the glass pyramid from the outside and then when it was the ceiling above us.

Our last virtual tour was of the Eiffel Tower. This tour wasn’t quite as good, as it is actually just a view from the sky above the Eiffel Tower. However, we did have fun zooming in on the tower itself, as you could distinctly see the two viewing platforms with people on them. We also were able to find many of Paris’s landmarks from the views, so that was pretty neat, too. I know there are a lot of different links for this, so here’s the one we found: https://www.360cities.net/image/view-from-the-eiffel-tower. If you don’t like that one, or are looking for others, just pop it into Google.

Since I had 6 years of French between high school and college, I taught the girls how to count to 20, and we had a conversation consisting of greetings, how are you, and how to ask and answer what their names are. I also taught them a cute counting rhyme (“un-deux-trois, ou est le roi?”) and we listened to some French music from my collection. My husband busted out his National Guard berets, and the girls put those on. They were adorable! I had them dress in red, white, and blue, as those are the colors of the French flag, as well.

We talked about the Euro, and I showed them pictures of the paper money and coins. We compared what they use vs what we have (they use coins for 1 and 2 euros instead of paper, their coins are different denominations, etc). I just used Wikipedia for this, as it had a great picture.

My husband and I made chicken crepes for lunch and we had to make dessert crepes as well. The girls LOVED them. Thank goodness I have an awesome crepe maker my mother-in-law got me for Christmas a long time ago. That thing is AWESOME and so easy! We also had sparkling cider, since wine and champagne are big exports for France. The girls said they felt pretty fancy. They even said “Merci” after the meal.

Love this crepe maker!!!
Yummy nutella and cherry pie filling crepes – we also made traditional dessert crepes.

After lunch, we watched “Ratatouille” since that movie takes place in France. This counted as our down time for the day! The girls got some playing in outside while my husband and I were cooking the crepes. I was going to have them play boule (bocci ball for all of you non-French types), but we ran out of time today since we took a walk instead.

Going to Hawaii…Virtually

So Squid, Wormy, and the Husband are all on spring break this week. I am not. Since this is an awfully long stretch of time for them to be left to their own devices, I have planned some virtual vacations for them. I am going to share them all with you in case you are in need of some resources to make it through a long break.

Today, we are traveling to Hawaii. My husband and I went in 2009, so we are more than happy to share our vacation photos with the girls. When we got up this morning, we put on our Hawaiian shirts, leis, and bright colors. This helped our mood since this was the view outside:

For breakfast, we had the ever-popular SPAM and Eggs. We went to the Spam museum in Minnesota last summer, so we have a case of the variety pack of Spam. What better time to bust that out than self-quarantine?!?

yum, yum

After we finished breakfast, my husband showed the girls our vacation pictures while I did some video conferencing. After that, it was time to enter the world of Virtual Touring. I had a 30 minute “Travel to Hawaii” video that the girls watched, and a video from a helicopter tour we took on Kauai. However, even if you are not owners of this awesomeness, we quickly moved on to more general resources you can access. We visited these two virtual tours of Volcanoes National Park in Hawaii:

https://www.nationalparkstraveler.org/2013/06/take-virtual-tour-hawaii-volcanoes-national-park-video23427 – this is a very cool video of images from the tops of the volcanoes set to some music that Wormy really got excited about. I think the movie was about 3 minutes.

https://artsandculture.withgoogle.com/en-us/national-parks-service/hawaii-volcanoes/nahuku-lava-tube-tour – This was a really neat virtual tour done by a Park Ranger of some of the features of the park. You can click and drag to change your view and click other features to get supplemental materials. We were watching on it from our living room tv while screen mirroring from my ipad. The only reason I mention this is because I was using Google Chrome, and the interactive components did not work until I switched to Safari. Be sure to try it out in a few different browsers if you have trouble. Our favorite part of this was the fly over of the volcano!

After this, we explored two free apps on our Apple TV. The Trip USA app was a favorite, as there was a special on the Spam Jam festival in Hawaii. We also watched a virtual tour of Pearl Harbor. The apps both contain short little videos of different parts of the island, the US, and the world. If Hawaii isn’t your chosen virtual destination, be sure to check out somewhere else!

Squid had gotten a Sea Monsters kit for Christmas a few years ago, and we just hadn’t gotten to growing the little guys yet, so we also started that. I’m scrared…very scared! Haha

Hope this doesn’t eat me in the middle of the night!

By this time, after all of the Virtual travels, we needed to get up and bounce around. It was time to learn to Hula. We watched this YouTube video to learn some basics. We were being a little goofy, as in one of the Apple TV programs we watched, they said the Hula actually began as a way for men to prepare themselves for battle. Squid and I kept joking about getting ready to attack…

We were pretty good at the Kaholo, but I still need help with my Kawelu!!!

Next up the girls had the option of watching “Lilo and Stitch” or “Moana.” The girls chose “Lilo and Stitch,” and I went back to work.

After the movie, we worked on learning some Hawaiian words, through the help of: https://www.trafalgar.com/real-word/hawaiian-words-and-phrases/ There are a few other websites that offer audio files of the pronunciations, but some of them had a big long list of words. We only wanted a few.

Finally, we ended with dinner. My husband made Kalua Pork while I was working. It’s the recipe from the local Hawaiian store in Wauwatosa – Ono Kine Grindz. Basically you take a pork roast, cover it in Hawaiian salt and Wright’s liquid smoke, wrap it in banana leaves and let it do it’s thing in the oven. I’m sure you could just make your favorite pork recipe if you were looking for a meal idea. We served it with canned pineapple chunks to get the Hawaiian feel. Before the girls could eat, we watched performances from a Hawaiian luau through this YouTube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4Z1pqts5N0&feature=youtu.be

During dinner we listened to music by Israel “IZ” Kamakawiwoʻole, as he is one of our favorite musicians.

It wasn’t quite the same as going to Hawaii, but I got more work done and the girls didn’t seem to get bored. 🙂

How to Have a Weekend In When You’re Used to Being on the Run!

Today was weird in that it was hard to make a ‘weekend’ happen when you’ve already been home all week. We obviously were taking a break from schoolwork, since it is a weekend. But how do you make it seem different when our weekends are usually so busy?

We normally have dance class on Saturday mornings, so I attempted to recreate that for my girls. Squid absolutely LOVES dance class, so much so that she says she wants to be a dance teacher when she grows up. She was getting a little teary-eyed thinking of not having class. I asked the girls to get into their tutus, and meet me in the living room. I had Squid lead us in work on the barre (aka the back of the couch!) and Wormy led the stretches (and boy, is she bendy!!!). Then we practiced their dance class recital songs through the YouTube videos that their teachers have uploaded. I even wore a tutu, which made them laugh.

In the afternoon, we set up a FaceTime with my brother and sister-in-law. We usually do Game Nights with them, and we tried to set up a virtual game afternoon. We had two different versions of Apples to Apples and played that for almost 2 hours. It worked out really well to have different versions, as we couldn’t end up playing duplicate cards then, though I am sure that probability is pretty low with the quantity of cards in the game! It was a lot of fun, and we definitely had as many laughs as we usually do. My favorite part was when my bro & sis needed a snack, so they brought in some chips and salsa. I went to our pantry and did the same! Hahaha. I couldn’t just watch them eat chips & salsa!

After the gaming fun, we went for a short walk. It was cold and breezy out, but it was sunny, so we needed to get out anyway. It started off way colder than we wanted, but by the time we returned, we had worked up enough heat to feel a bit better.

The day actually went pretty quickly. We ended up watching some shows about Log Cabins before bed. We haven’t done much TV watching, so it was nice to cuddle and relax together. How did everyone else do today?

Top 5 Things to Keep in Mind for Online Teaching

I know so many of us as teachers were not prepared to move our entire face-to-face curriculum to an online one immediately. I was so shocked by how quickly things escalated that it took me 3 full days to remember that I had even completed the necessary requirements for our state to be a licensed online teacher (in my defense, I did this work 5 years ago through a local college and haven’t been lucky enough to use my skills at all yet!). I went back and reviewed my class notes, texts, and projects and have come up with these 5 things that will help as teachers work to modify their curriculum for online learning.

  1. Keep your original learning objectives in place. When you were teaching your students face-to-face, you had a pretty good idea of what you wanted your students to be able to do for the rest of this week, month, quarter, school year, etc. Don’t let all of the overwhelming quantity of free online resources distract you from what it was you planned to do. Make your goals and objectives FIRST and then search for the appropriate resources to assist your students with this. Not only will this give your newly-formed online curriculum direction, but it will make more sense for your overwhelmed students who are trying to make sense of everything as well.

2. Remember that the majority of your students are new to this as well, despite being “Digital Natives”. Yes, parents are always bragging about how their son or daughter knows more about their phone than the parent does. Yes, your students may have all the info on how to fix your classroom projector because they’ve seen other teachers in the building do something similar. However, the students only know the technology they have been shown or used themselves. They will still need clear instructions on how to submit a video using the platform you have chosen. They will need help navigating the time necessary for each task they are assigned. They will encounter technical difficulties along the way. Keep in mind we are all learning together. A great example of this all is my own classroom. We officially rolled out our online teaching yesterday. I am a band teacher, and I assigned one of my band classes 2 assignments – a music theory assignment involving the student going to musictheory.net and completing a note name quiz. They then had to take a screenshot of the page when they had accumulated 30 correct answers. For the second assignment, students had to make a video of themselves playing their instrument along with an audio clip I created of one of our concert band songs. I thought I was taking it easy on them as far as first assignments go. Boy, was I wrong! The school chrome books had apparently locked the students out of musictheory.net, and their cameras were also turned off by our watch dog company. How frustrating for all of us!

3. Some of our students have limited technology resources. It’s great if your school is 1:1 with technology all the way through. However, for the younger students who may not be, this is going to be more difficult than you may expect. Some families may only have one or two computers or devices that will enable work for school on them. If the parents are also trying to work from home, they will be using those devices to continue making a living. Additionally, siblings may have to share devices as well. In my online teaching classes, we were discouraged from making students check in with us all at a specific time. This can be very stressful for families who don’t have a way for that to happen due to the parents’ work schedules, or siblings’ online coursework. I’m not saying don’t try to check in with your students in person at all; I’m just saying that perhaps offering it as optional may be more manageable.

4. Most students’ favorite part of school is the social and emotional components. This was one of the most eye-opening moments for me in my online teaching coursework. It is important not to lose sight of the comaraderie that physically being in school entails. I use Google Classroom for my online teaching. In my stream, I posted a picture of my cat sitting above my head on the couch while I worked and said “Post a picture of your pet ‘helping’ you do your homework.” I also told my students it was “Crazy Hat Day,” and asked them to wear a crazy hat in their video recordings of the assignment for the day. Anything to give them a little release and enjoyment within their assignments will help! Also, think about their emotional health – I started off a little lighter on my assignments at first, and will build as we all get more comfortable. I made a video for my students reminding them that their online assignments might look intimidating at first. They should remember that they are normally in school for 8 hours a day. Their assignments are normally spread out over that time period. Now, they are logging in and seeing a full days’ worth of work waiting for them. Students who normally have a hard time focusing for an hour in your class are going to have to self-motivate to do a full days’ worth of work on their own timeline. I’m definitely not advising you to take a step back and demand less from your students – I’m just reminding you that they may need to ease into it at first.

5. Remember, you are doing your best in a tough situation! You did not ask for this. Your students did not ask for this. No one anticipated this at the beginning of this school year. You are doing the best that you can, and parents & students will see that. It is very much like when you took your first teaching job. You had grand ideas of how things would work in your classroom. As you got teaching, you realized you had to adapt your ideas/beliefs/methods, as you learned what your students needed and what your school expected. The same is happening now. Unfortunately, when you had your first job, you probably had more than a few days’ notice on what you would be doing. That may not have been the case for you in your jump to online teaching. Keep in mind what your big picture goals are for your students, take a deep breath, and don’t be afraid to experiment. You can adjust as you go. You do not have to be perfect. This is one of those moments where you get points for the effort you are putting in. Hang in there, everyone! With any luck, we will get to see our students in person again at some point! If not, at least we still can see them online.

Coronavirus Break, First Wednesday

We didn’t do a whole lot new today, but we did start a new stress relief idea. We set up a puzzle we had gotten for Christmas on our coffee table in our living room. When we need a break from things, or from each other, we head towards the puzzle table.

For a little while, we thought we might actually finish the 400-piece puzzle. Luckily, it looks like it will last one day longer.

Tomorrow, my girls start their online learning through school. I’m curious how this will all work with my husband and I doing our online teaching….4 of us all trying to do this all at the same time.

Coronavirus Break, The First Tuesday

Today I was lucky enough to be home, as I don’t usually work on Tuesdays. This meant I was running the household school today! *insert evil laugh*

We started out with a nice, leisurely cleaning project. Only there wasn’t anything leisurely about it. I was on a mission. You know how children seem to grow faster than the new clothes can come in? Well, I decided it was time to go through their entire clothes collection. We actually started with the dreaded mound of clothes on top of the dresser this weekend. Today, I convinced them to tackle two drawers’ worth. We dumped the drawers out in the middle of the living room (eek!), and then worked our way back to putting it all away. It actually wasn’t as terrible as any of us were expecting! Woohoo!

Next up, it was time for ‘writing class.’ Wormy (my kindergartner) traced letters, and Squid (my 4th grader) had a project in Book Creator she had not yet finished for school. No time like the present.

We then moved on to math, which doesn’t feature overly exciting plans from me – both girls just did flashcards (addition for Wormy and multiplication 15s for Squid).

Continuing onward, we worked again on our Junior Ranger packet for the Everglades. Today we learned all about conservation of the ocean. Wormy was having trouble understanding how coral needs clear water in order to continue to live. I demonstrated using super complicated and fancy materials – I plopped an outlet safety plug into a clear bowl of water, used my phone’s flashlight as the sun, and blocked it with my hand. I then asked her if the coral could get my sunlight, and then she understood. It’s days like this that I feel pretty good about my ability to think on my feet. We will see if I am as confident by day 21.

Not gonna lie – it looks nothing like coral!

Next up – time for a little geography. I tested the girls’ knowledge on their state locations by making them color on a blank map the states that we have visited together. We’ve got a little work to do on this, but maybe by next week, they’ll have a better idea of which half of the country they can find Kansas….

Time for some family reading – I read them some chapters from the Humphrey book we started. That hamster is so stinkin’ fun….if you are looking for a book that appeals to a 4-year age gap, check out any of the Humphrey books by Betty G. Birney.

OK, by now they were looking like we needed to get some energy out. Since the rest of the week looks a little…well, less than ideal weather-wise, we needed to get out. Squid led us in her dance class stretches, and Wormy proceeded to show us she probably doesn’t actually have bones in her body (ah, to be flexible again….or even just to move without creaking…). We then took a nice 2 mile walk out in the sun. It felt good. We were goofy of course – butt kicks to the next driveway….jumping jacks in the middle of the road (no cars were out – I was the lookout while Daddy led the workout)…race to the next mailbox. You get the idea.

We got back inside and decided it was time to cook. The girls have a kid subscription box to America’s Test Kitchen that they got for Christmas, and they hadn’t made Goldfish crackers yet. You can easily google a recipe – it was super easy. We only needed butter, cheese, flour, cornstarch, water, and salt. You could easily just cut them in squares (we got a fancy fish cutout with our subscription box).

The fish go marching three by…um…yeah, you get the idea

By that time, I decided school was out for the day, as this all took us from about 9 am until 4 pm. I had a few other things on our list, but we got a little wild and daring cleaning for an hour, so I’ll save them for tomorrow. The word on the street is that I still need to go in to my school to work, but we will see. Seems like things are changing by the minute these days. How’s everyone holding up?