Oceans – Pandemic Homeschooling, Theme 2

Here is my second themed group of books, activities, and snacks to help you get through this period of Social Distancing at home. Click here to return to the list of themed posts.

Books

โ€œManfish: A Story of Jacques Cousteau,โ€ Jennifer Berne, available on Overdrive
The treasure of the sea : Thea Stilton Special Edition Series, Book 5,” Thea Stilton, on Overdrive
โ€œDark Day in the Deep Sea,โ€ Mary Pope Osborne, on Overdrive

Field Trips

Visit Castle Island. The weather isn’t very good, and most people aren’t going out, so why not take advantage and get you and your kids some exercise and outdoor time! If it isn’t busy it’s very easy to stay really far from other people.

Castle Island is accessible by MBTA Busses # 7, 9 and 11 and has free parking. Take a walk around Pleasure Bay, look for sea glass on the many beaches, collect sea shells and stones. Fly a kite. Play on the playground but bring hand sanitizer. Ride bikes.

Other area beaches accessible by transit: Orient Heights, Revere Beach.

Virtual Field Trips

Monterey Bay Aquarium‘s live animal cams: aviary, coral reef, jelly, kelp forest, Monterey Bay, open ocean, moon jelly, penguin, sea otter and shark.

Activities

Snacks

  • Bears at the Beach Jello snack
  • Crackers with blue dyed cream cheese and โ€œfloatingโ€ goldfish crackers
  • Sandwiches + fish cookie cutters = fun

Lack of Diversity

Greater Boston is still quite segregated, thanks in large part to redlining policies of the recent past. For anyone who didnโ€™t already know this, and if you want to see for yourself, take a round trip ride on the Red Line from Alewife to Ashmont and then on the Mattapan High Speed Line to itโ€™s end. The average racial makeup of the passengers drastically changes at Downtown Crossing and Park Street. You might also recognize that the Mattapan High Speed Line trolleys are the same as an โ€œhistoricโ€ trolley on display at Boylston Station on the Green Line.

Boston is still far more diverse on average than the small town in New Hampshire where we lived when our kids were born. Most of the time in NH, wherever we went my family was the least โ€œwhiteโ€ which made us the object of intrusive questions: Is your husband Asian? No. Are your children adopted? No. Are you the nanny? No. I started dyeing my hair darker just make it easier for strangers to see that my kids do have some of my features and would leave me alone.

Arriving to the diversity of Greater Boston was a breath of fresh air. Our family has a number of non-typical identifiers and we felt so much more comfortable here. I was disheartened to discover that the local homeschooling community (that I could find at that time**) did not have the diversity of the larger community. Arriving at our first homeschooling event, after coming out of public school, I felt so much like I did the day I took my young kids on a day of exploring the T and saw the segregation for the first time, I had no idea.

I have no suggestions or solutions for this social and economic dynamic. Itโ€™s important to know about, however. Maybe this post will help someone new to homeschooling understand a tiny bit more about Greater Bostonโ€™s homeschooling community. Maybe Iโ€™m trying to explore how homeschooling has been an unexpected journey of self-discovery in trying to figure out who my family is and what our relationships are with people in the wider world.

** This year I discovered a group on Facebook dedicated to Boston Homeschool Families of Color. I’m so glad to know there is diversity in the homeschool community and I hope one day everyone can more easily come together.

Stats to Show Why BBHSing is Getting Harder

From Wikimedia Commons

Remember how in BBHSing is Hard, Part 2 I discussed the ongoing demographic shift that keeps making it harder to be a BBHSer? Today, I happened to see an article about that very dynamic, here’s an excerpt:

โ€œThe sharpest decline in the(sic) Bostonโ€™s population of children, the study found, has been among middle-income families with children.

โ€œโ€˜These are families that tend to be above the income cutoff for subsidized housing programs and yet earn below what it takes to afford the fast-rising housing costs in many of these high-income cities,โ€™ researchers wrote. โ€˜In todayโ€™s Boston, there are almost 6,000 fewer middle-income households with kids compared with 1980, even though our city has grown in total population.โ€™โ€

Occasionally, Iโ€™ve spoken about our housing challenges with area homeschoolers. Itโ€™s unbelievable how casually insensitive people can be. I think some just cannot even imagine what life is like for the rest of us. It really brings to mind the parable of the brass pot and the earthenware pot. Three of these things are not good responses to the other:

Our landlord is raising our rent $250 which a 13% increase and we canโ€™t afford it. We canโ€™t find any affordable housing within an hour of Boston, I donโ€™t know what Iโ€™m going to do.I know just what you mean, we had to pay $600,000 over asking price for our home.
I know just what you mean, we own our home but want more space and we canโ€™t find a home we want to buy.Oh, North Central Massachusetts? I was thinking of buying a 40-acre farm up there. Thereโ€™s a 200-acre farm in Vermont for the same price that I would love to move to.

I started this blog with the hopes of finding and bringing together other BBHSers for mutual support. We’re a vanishing tiny minority in a group that’s already a minority. Yo, clay pots! Hit me up in the comments!

A Word of Caution about the ICA

First a note about myself: I have a BA in art history. I completed one year in a graduate program in museum studies. I am a supporter and defender of the arts and museums. I appreciate art. I make room for all kinds of art to exist in the world. I accept there are works that I will not personally enjoy, but fully embrace those works as important to the culture. Some art isnโ€™t safe, some art is challenging. Some art, just like some parts of life, is not for children.

We visited the ICA yesterday to take part in a program on the exhibition โ€œWhen Home Wonโ€™t Let You Stay.โ€

First of all, this is a heart-rending exhibition. Not only is it about the experiences of people who must leave their countries, it is also about how other countries treat refugees. Most of the art displayed was excellent, introduced ideas, and evoked strong emotions and thoughts.

Toward the end there is a dark room with three monitors at a childโ€™s eye level. There are headphones hanging from hooks below them and benches to sit on while watching. At first it appears to be relatively innocuous, certainly thereโ€™s no indication of imminent danger – one person on each screen in front of a neutral backdrop speaking. There are easy to read subtitles on each screen that can be read comfortably 15 feet away.

We passed through that room without stopping, to view โ€œAmerican Library.” Our guide mentioned mildly and in passing that there might be some difficult topics on the videos in the prior room and parents should use discretion. I understood that as a PG-13 kind of warning. I shepherded my 10-year-old son away from the doorway in โ€œAmerican Libraryโ€ so he wouldnโ€™t see the videos. However, while looking around the library together, I didnโ€™t notice that he went back to the doorway to watch them.


Kids! AmIRight? They LOVE videos of almost any kind, if thereโ€™s a screen in a room playing anything, it grabs their attention immediately, like a Siren singing to Odysseusโ€ฆwho you will remember had to be tied to the mast of his ship to prevent him from throwing himself to the deadly Sirens.


The next thing I knew, my son was next to me visibly upset, beginning to cry, asking to leave. Downstairs as we waited for our group, he wanted to distract himself on my phone and by walking through the gift shop to look at cute things. When I was finally able to get him to tell me what he read on the screen, he told me a detailed, horrifying story of torture with a sexual element to it.

He could not participate in his groupโ€™s art making session, he was too upset. When I sat with him to encourage him, we made something together to help him process what he was feeling. Instead of a quilt square about our familyโ€™s migration stories, he made tear drops falling into a puddle, and told me and another parent that heโ€™s scared because heโ€™s small and not strong and doesnโ€™t want to get hurt or die.

Processing distress at the ICA
Source: BBHS

This is the third time weโ€™ve gone to the ICA and my kids were exposed to excessively disturbing material in a way that was impossible to avoid, particularly because no appropriate warning was given. These were materials no functioning parent willingly exposes their kids to: NC-17 level imagery and descriptions of rape and torture. Both my sons still occasionally bring up a video installation that we saw over a year ago. I really hope this latest experience doesnโ€™t have lasting effects on my younger son.

I donโ€™t understand the curatorial decisions of a museum that welcomes families, but subjects the public to such extreme imagery and words, without warning and sometimes without a way to avoid those works and still visit the rest of the exhibits. It feels like intentional infliction of distress.

More MLK Jr. Day Free Admission – ISGM & The ICA

The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum is just around the corner from the MFA. Both museums are offering free admission and activities to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The Gardner limits the number of people in the museum at any given time, so it may be a better option for people who don’t want to deal with the crowds at the MFA on free days. Though you may have to wait in line before getting inside.

The museum opens at 11 AM, and MLK Jr. Day activities run 1-4 PM.

Join social justice project Wee The People for an interactive, family-friendly workshop that guides young and old in unlearning and reclaiming the legacy of MLK. Together we will explore MLK’s practice as a radical disruptor and honor his most important act of love: resistance. Activities include sign-making tributes to protest movements, a #ReclaimMLK photo booth, and timed acts of resistance inside the Museum.”

https://www.gardnermuseum.org/calendar/event/mlk-day-20200120

Free general admission to the Gardner is a rare occurrence. If your name is Isabella or your family is Active Duty in the military, you can get in free anytime. Children 17 and under are always free as well. EBT cardholders can get $2 admission for up to 4 adults. The BPL has a $5/person museum pass available that admits 4 people on weekdays, 2 people on weekends.


Update, January 16, 2020: I’m no longer recommending the ICA as a family destination.

The Institute of Contemporary Art in the Seaport is also offering free admission on Monday 10am to 5pm. One great feature of this free admission day is that there will be FREE, first-come first-served tickets for Yayoi Kusama: LOVE IS CALLING. Right now tickets are sold out through the end of the month, and ticket sales for February go on sale today (1/15/2020) at 10am. So if you want to see Yayoi Kusama’s exhibit and can’t get tickets, head over first thing to the ICA on Monday!

It doesn’t appear that they have any special MLK Jr. Day events, but the ICA is opening two new exhibits that day: Tschabalala Self: Out of Body + Carolina Caycedo

The ICA is accessible by Silver Line Waterfront out of South Station. You can walk from either the World Trade Center stop or Courthouse. I do not recommend parking for BBHSers because of the expense. The ICA does not have its own parking lot, but you can find their recommendations for parking here.

Bostonโ€™s First Night 2019, Family Events

New Yearโ€™s Eve is almost upon us. With a sleet and rain storm on tap for the next two days, Iโ€™m crossing my fingers that the weather will be good enough and safe enough for a little celebrating Tuesday.

Bostonโ€™s First Night has been through a lot of changes over the years, and isnโ€™t nearly as big as it used to be, but it still has a good number of events for families. All events are now FREE! You just have to pay attention to which events require tickets so you can go early to get some.

This year I hope our family can check out:

  • The Greater Boston Chinese Cultural Associationโ€™s Arts & Crafts and Cultural Performances running 1pm to 4pm in the McKim Exhibition Hall at the Boston Public Library at Copley Square.
  • One of Improv Bostonโ€™s performances on the other side of the BPL at 1:15, 2:30 and 3:45. These are free but ticketed performances. Go early to get tickets!
  • My kids might not be thrilled at this one, but Iโ€™m really looking forward to The King of Instruments organ performance at Old South Church at 3pm. Have you ever heard an E.M. Skinner organ? They are WONDERS and make such beautiful music. Itโ€™s so powerful, you experience the music with your whole body, not just your ears! And they can make all kinds of sounds, including trumpet and flute sounds. Itโ€™s like an orchestra packed into one enormous music machine. The program says theyโ€™ll have music for the whole family, so hopefully the kids will enjoy it too.

Some other lovely events in the early afternoon for families are the Puppet Showplace Theater performances in the Copley Mall, and interactive drumming sessions and ballroom dance instruction both at the BPL. Click here for the full schedule of events.

Thereโ€™s a several hour break between those family events and the next events we might attend.

The Skating Spectacular on Frog Pond starts at 5:30pm. But the Peopleโ€™s Procession from Copley Square to the Common starts at 6pm. So weโ€™ll have to choose between them. Finally, the Family Fireworks light up over Boston Common at 7pm. I love heading home at 7:30pm on New Year’s Eve. I definitely feel like we celebrated AND get to leave before the city gets crazy with New Year’s revelers.

Because of that few hours break between activities and fireworks, Iโ€™m not sure what weโ€™ll do. As a BBHSer, I love the free holiday festivities, but I donโ€™t want to spend a lot on food in a more expensive Boston neighborhood. Iโ€™ll have to research where we might go before we head down to Copley Square on Wednesday. If you have any tips for cheap eats within a reasonable walking distance of Copley Square and Boston Common, please share them in the comments below!

Free Holiday Fun this Weekend – 12/14 to 12/15


Kendall Square Holiday on Ice Celebration – 12/14

Every year the Kendall Square outdoor skating rink opens for the season with a skating show featuring professional skaters, international competitors, and lots of holiday fun. The show is free. Skating is free for the day as well (skate rentals cost extra) 11am-9pm.

Details: Saturday, December 14, 2019, show begins at 2pm, free, 300 Athenaeum St, Cambridge, MA.


“Entre Les Rangs” – Ongoing until 2/2/2010

There’s a very fancy public art installation that just opened up in the Seaport this week. While I don’t usually enjoy the District 1-ness of the Seaport and the events held there, I do enjoy free public arts and exposing my children to them! This one looks like a community experience akin to the “The Gates” many years ago in Central Park in NYC. From the descriptions, it sounds to me like the best time to go is night, but I’m sure it’s captivating any time of day. “Entre Les Rangs” translates to “Between the Ranks” or “Between the Rows.”

Details: December 9, 2019 to February 2, 2020, free, Seaport Commons, 85 Northern Ave, Boston, MA.


Blink! at Faneuil Hall – Nightly through 1/1/2020

This exuberant light and music display has become an annual tradition in Boston. During the day on Saturday, December 14, 2019, you can also enjoy “Candy Land Play-A-Thon” from 10am to Noon where each participating child receives a free game or gift. From Noon to 5pm you can take “Selfies with Santa” and make a Christmas Photo Frame while supplies last.

Details: Saturday, December 14, 2019, free, Candy Land 10am-Noon, Selfies with Santa Noon-5pm. Blink! holiday lights, nightly 4:30pm-10pm every half hour, Faneuil Hall Marketplace, Boston, MA.


Family Hike: Short Days, Long Nights – 12/15

The Arnold Arboretum is hosting a winter solstice themed family hike, with a storywalk and chickadee craft. Meet inside the Main Gate at the visitor center.

Details: Sunday, December 15, 2019, 2pm to 3:30pm, free, Hunnewell Building Visitor Center, 125 Arborway, Boston, MA.


โ€œA Light Through the Agesโ€ the Meaning of Chanukah in Story and Song – 12/15

Central Reform Temple of Boston will offer the eleventh annual presentation of โ€œA Light Through the Agesโ€, a celebration of Chanukah in story, song and light. This beloved holiday tradition for people of all faiths offers a unique opportunity for the greater Boston community to experience the inspiration and broader significance of the Festival of Lights.” Free but registration is required.

Details: Sunday, December 15, 2019, 4 pm, free, Central Reform Temple, 15 Newbury St, Boston, MA.


Holiday Concert Featuring the Copley Singers – 12/15

On Sunday at the St. Mary-St. Catherine of Siena Church, the Friends of the Charlestown Branch of the Boston Public Library is hosting a holiday concert where the audience is welcome to sing along to festive and solemn Christmas carols from Europe and the Americas, from ancient to modern times.

Details: Sunday, December 15, 2019, 3:30pm, free, 55 Warren Street, Charlestown, MA.


Have any free and fun holiday events you think another BBHSer might enjoy? Please share them below in the comments, thank you!!

Free Holiday Fun this Weekend – 12/7/19 to 12/8/19

Double posting today! After writing about Saturday’s Tree Lighting on the USS Constitution, I realized a post about weekend holiday events would be useful and fun too!

Old South Meeting House – Holiday Open House – 12/7

We took a tour of the Freedom Trail for the first time this fall and had a lot of fun. But we decided to skip the sites with admissions fees, both to keep costs down and to try to finish the trail in a reasonable amount of time ๐Ÿ˜‰

Well, this weekend we might head over to Old South Meeting House for their FREE Holiday Open House!! It looks like a really fun and interesting program, PLUS we can get another stamp for our National Parks Passport.

Details: Saturday, December 7, 2019, 10am-4pm, Free Admission, 310 Washington St, Boston, MA.


Photo by Luis Quintero on Pexels.com

Brandeis Ballet Club’s Full Length Nutcracker – T accessible, 12/7 & 12/8

Seeing the Nutcracker is a wonderful holiday tradition for some. But tickets to most productions can be expensive. Looking for a cheaper alternative to the Boston Ballet’s production? The Brandeis Ballet Club is putting on their 4th annual, full-length Nutcracker! They’ve put a modern twist on the classic ballet.

There is free admission for students and non-students alike!

Details: Saturday, December 7, 2019 at 12:30 pm and Sunday, December 8, 2019 at 5 pm. Free and open to the public. Shapiro Campus Center (SCC) Theatre, Brandeis University, 415 South St, Waltham, MA.

T-Accessible! 0.3 mile walk from the Brandeis/Roberts stop on the Fitchburg commuter rail line. 0.7 mile walk from Bus #70 stop at Tavern Rd and Weston St.


Live Nativity on Boston Common – 12/7

If you hit up the Old South Meeting House on Saturday, you could continue your holiday festivities in the evening with a Live Nativity on Boston Common, featuring live animals and readings in English and Spanish! This event is put on by Renewal Church Boston in Back Bay. It’s free, but they are collecting gently used winter accessories such as scarves, hats and gloves to distribute to the needy.

Details: Saturday, December 7, 2019, 5pm to 8pm, Boston Common Parade Ground near Frog Pond. Spanish reading at 7 pm.


Candlelight Labyrinth Walk – 12/8

Looking for something more contemplative? I’m intrigued by this event held by the Armenian Heritage Park on the Greenway in Boston. The simple description reads:

Candlelit Labyrinth Walk: In Peace & Harmony. Meet & Greet. Celebrate Walk the Candlelit Labyrinth. Tie a Ribbon with Your Wish on the Wishing Tree. Enjoy Hot Chocolate & Luscious Cookies. RSVP appreciated

Details: Sunday, December 8, 2019, 4:30pm to 5:30pm, Free, Armenian Heritage Park, Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway, Boston, MA


Holiday Concert by the Harvard Wind Ensemble – 12/8

My son’s saxophone teacher is performing with the Harvard Wind Ensemble this weekend in a free Holiday Concert. We can’t wait to see them perform!

Details: Sunday, December 8, 2019, 8pm, Lowell Hall, 17 Kirkland St, Cambridge, MA.


Know of any other great and free holiday events this weekend or anytime later this month? Please share them in the comments below! Thanks!!!

Winter Socializing on the Cheap

This BBHS family lives in a tiny apartment. It’s so small, we barely have enough room for all 4 of us to sit and watch TV. If we have one more person over for dinner, we have to move the couch and bring the table out of the kitchen. If you come into our apartment, I would say, “welcome, let me give you a tour, here’s all of it!”

Having playdate, or teaching a class together over here isn’t comfortable or practical. In warm months we can meet people anywhere outside, but when it turns cold we have to be creative about where to spend time with friends. This post is dedicated to BBHSers with similar challenges to having friends visit.

Places that are Free

A Library is a great place to meet up; it’s free, children’s rooms often have board games kids can play together, or other activities such as crafts, movies and more. The downside is that there aren’t many opportunities for gross motor activities if the kids are bigger than toddlers. I always appreciate libraries where the kids’ room is separate from the rest of the library. The Main branches of the Arlington, Boston, Cambridge, Somerville and Watertown libraries all have very nice, seperate kids’ rooms. In Cambridge and Somerville, there are playgrounds right outside as well.

The entrance to the Children's Library at the Copley branch of the Boston Public Library.
The BPL’s Children’s Library at the Main branch. Source: BBHS

There is a winter games day meetup at the Arlington Fox Library organized on the Homeschoolting Together Boston group. This is something you might consider starting up at a library nearer to you! This location is convenient to the 77, 79 and 350 MBTA busses.

Hiking/Going for a walk is also a good, cheap activity that’s better with friends. In winter you just have to have good enough outerwear and know where the nearest bathrooms are. If you need some inspiration or ideas on city locations for hiking, check out Outdoors Rx! When you register and sign up for their newsletter you can join their organized activities in and around Boston for free. If you just want information on where to spend time outdoors in nature in the city, check out their brochures on Boston (Roxbury, Dorchester, Mattapan), Chealsea/Revere, Framingham, and Waltham.

Almost Free/Cheap

Go with your friends to a museum’s free/cheap day! Or take advantage of library free admission museum passes. Most of the bigger museums in the area have days and times with free admission or admission by voluntary donation (which can be zero dollars, too). Visit the website of a museum you’re interested in to find out if they offer free admission days/times.

The Museum of Science is a decent place for indoor, gross motor opportunities. You can easily get a free admission pass from various libraries. There’s the Science Playground on the top floor (although they got rid of the running feature) and the Charles River Exhibit on the lowest level for some wonderful sensory play. If it isn’t busy, it’s not much of a problem for the kiddos to run a little bit. I’m not advocating full on running, just noting that it’s an indoor space where it’s more acceptable for the kids to get out some big movements. Also, there’s a lot to see without needing a ticket, such as the little zoo and hands on lab (check schedule for topics and hours) both downstairs from the Discovery Center, the ball machine and the solar system exhibit outside the Omni Theater.

If you have favorite go-to places for meeting up with friends in winter, I’d love to hear about them in the comments!

Summer Plans – Community Boating, Near Charles/MGH

Community Boating Inc. has a 10-week Summer program for kids ages 10 to 17. Called the Junior Program, it offers lessons in sailing, canoeing, paddle-boarding and wind-surfing. They have STEM classes, games and activities through the season.

A group of tweens and instructors in life vests standing on a dock in the Charles River on a sunny summer day.  There are sailboats in the background.
First day of a beginner sailing class in 2018, source: BBHS

Last year I sent my two for beginner sailing lessons and because of their extremely generous sliding scale program, they qualified for $1 memberships!!!!!!!!! OMG!!!!!!!! (Please pardon my excitement, our BBHS household doesn’t typically qualify for aid programs though we totally need them)

Anywhoo…the best way to describe the overall program is that it’s kind of like a Boys & Girls club where kids can come and go during open hours, no adults besides instructors are allowed inside during Junior Program, and there are specialty classes they can choose to take.

Once a kid passes their sailing tests they can check out various kinds of boats and go out on their own.

There are some drawback to this program you should be aware of. It’s not an easy thing to get to the CBI location. You have to take the pedestrian bridge over Storrow Drive and it’s a long walk. (I’m getting older and the walk over from train platform to CBI was really long for me.) There are no reliable cheap places to park near the pedestrian bridge. We saw many parents pull over near the base of the bridge and let their kids out to take themselves to CBI. This is fine for older kids, but might be tricky if your kids need accompaniment. Other families, like ours, took the T. Some kids take themselves to and from the train.

Another drawback – if you need to accompany your kids to and from – is what to do with yourself while they are there. If they go for the whole day, it’s not so hard because you can easily leave and have time to get things done before returning. But if they only go for the lessons, that’s 3 hours you have to fill for yourself. The West End branch of the BPL is reasonably close enough if you want a free place to be to get out from the sun and heat.

Registration for Summer 2020 has already begun. I whole-heartedly recommend this program!