Thursday, June 21, 2012
2012-2013 School Pictures
PAYMENT IS EXPECTED ON PICTURE DAY. Packages range in price from $15-55.
We will have Senior portraits in February during Enrichment Classes, followed by picture retakes and group photos (of groups such as Cub Scouts etc.). There will not be another day for Senior pictures. If you are unable to make this date and you are a Senior, then you must contact Angela Dick, Yearbook Coordinator, so she can determine another school location for you to take pictures at.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Welcome to Gainesville
- Morton Museum - Free. Rotating displays about Cooke County and local Texas
history. - Amelia's Attic - Across from the courthouse on California Street. Great antique store. Fun for browsing or purchasing. It turned my 10 year old into an
antiques-loving kid. It's also a great way to discuss history when the kids pick
up something and say "What is THAT?" - Weises - Commerce street across from the courthouse. They sell old-fashioned Dr. Pepper WITH SUGAR at the back of their store.
- Frank Buck Zoo - Admission. BUT they have a great deal on an annual family pass.
Welcome to Denison
- TX travel information center - located on hwy 75 north of Denison. Great for pamphlets, information, and kid fun. Most workers aren't real kid friendly.
- Randel lake - take hwy 75 north watch for signs. This is the main source for Denison's water supply.
- Eisenhower State Park- hwy 75 north exit 72 turn left and follow signs. Hiking, camping, fishing, programs, etc. Admission fee
- Carpenters bluff bridge – Main Street, go east watch for signs. Old one lane
bridge crossing red river. - Waterloo park - playground, hiking/mountain bike trail, duck feeding, fishing
pond. - Eisenhower birthplace - admission fee
- Katy Depot- railroad museum, old train, radio station, etc.
- Historic driving tour - directions can be gotten at the Chamber of Commerce on Woodard.
- Frontier village – Loy Lake Road off hwy 75. Historic village with museum. Museum is free, admission fee to village. Now has HUGE bust sculpture of President Eisenhower out front that can be seen from the hwy. Drive around behind frontier village into the park area to see a old very large tower (used to be a water tank).
- Park with ruin type pillars - north side of the old TMC. Park in parking lot
across the street from the old TMC and walk into the park on the north east
section of the parking lot. There is a pavilion type area back there that has
columns made from the old Denison railroad bridges, with a brick floor made of
the old hand made bricks that used to line Denison streets. There is a plaque
that tells the history of it all. Take your camera! This place makes awesome
pictures.
Books-A-Million Reading Program
This program is only offered at the Sherman, Texas location. Drop by their store to pick up the form and get all the details.
Children who are not yet readers may participate when a parent reads the books to them.
25 Years of Homeschool Freedom in Texas
by Nicki Truesdell
In April 2012, Texas homeschoolers
celebrated 25 years of freedom to educate their children without
restriction. The amazing opportunities that your children have through EC are
only possible because of those who stood up for your right to homeschool.
Each homeschooling family has chosen to homeschool for reasons very important and very personal to
them; you no doubt felt convicted that this was the best option for their
family. And Texas is one of the best states in the country to do just that.
This freedom has always existed,
but it was threatened severely in the 1980’s. According to Tim Lambert with the
Texas Homeschool Coalition, “…the 1980s were a perilous time for home school
families all over the country, but especially in Texas. More than 100 families
were prosecuted by the state for teaching their children at home in those
years. The Texas Education Agency (TEA) had taken the position (reversing
almost 70 years of policy) that home schools were not private schools and
therefore students being taught at home were truant. Everyone who decided to
teach their children at home in those days understood they were taking a chance
and that they had to be involved in
the political process to protect themselves.”
The following is an excerpt from
the Handbook for Texas Homeschoolers by Tim Lambert, President of the Texas
Home School Coalition:
Home education has been an accepted method of
education since the days of the Texas Republic. The state department of
education, the Texas Education Agency (TEA), had never attempted to regulate,
oppose, or discourage home schooling in Texas until 1981. In that year, the TEA
issued a policy that stated, "Educating a child at home is not the same as
private school instruction, and therefore, not an acceptable substitute."
The matter did not come into open conflict until the much publicized case of the State v. Short, (Dallas County, 1982). In this case, Richardson ISD took the Short family to court for educating their daughters at home. Dave Haigler, the lawyer for the Shorts, was interviewed on the CBS evening news after the judge had ruled against the family; however, the next morning, the justice of the peace reversed himself and ruled in favor of the Shorts. The legal argument of vagueness of the law became the standard defense used by home schoolers all over the country.
As a direct result of the change in the TEA's policy, over 100 families were prosecuted by school districts for violation of the compulsory attendance law. In those days, the attitude of most home school families in Texas was one of fear. At home school meetings, people did not give out their addresses or phone numbers and the thought of a list of the group getting out to the public created much anxiety and apprehension.
In March 1985, attorney Shelby Sharpe, along with several home school families and curriculum suppliers, filed a lawsuit against all the school districts in Texas on behalf of all home educators in Texas. In what became known as the Leeper vs. Arlington class action suit (Leeper v. Arlington I.S.D. No. 17-88761-85), home educators asked the court to give a declaratory judgment on the question of whether or not the legislature had intended home schools to be private schools when they enacted the compulsory attendance statute in 1915. The basic question was, are home schools private schools?
In the Leeper court proceedings, one point that was established and never challenged by the state was that in the early 1900s, when the compulsory attendance law was passed by the legislature, over 70 percent of the students in Texas were being taught at home. Lawmakers would most certainly not have enacted a law that would have had over half of the population in violation of it. It seems that home education was the norm in Texas even in the early 1900s.
While the Leeper case was pending, Texas Attorney General Jim Mattox was seeking to negotiate with the lead attorney in the case, Shelby Sharpe, to get him to drop the suit in exchange for regulations or rules passed by the TEA. The case was not dropped. Finally, the attorney general encouraged the TEA and the State Board of Education (SBOE) to set up a new accreditation agency within the TEA. This agency would accredit private schools. The purpose of this was to settle the issue of what is a private school by defining it as one accredited by this body.
The SBOE held a public hearing on this issue in April of 1986 in Austin. To the shock of the TEA and SBOE, approximately 6,000 people appeared to testify and protest what they perceived to be government intrusion into private education. This rally came to be known as the "Austin TEA Party."
Several legislators testified that neither the TEA nor the SBOE had any authority to deal with private education because the Texas Legislature had not given them that authority by statute. The Texas Education Code applies only to public education. The SBOE finally passed a resolution asking the Texas Legislature to define private schools or give them the authority to do so. The legislature refused to do either.
In January of 1987, the class action lawsuit finally came to trial. The trial lasted for a week and a half and included expert testimony from such national figures as R. J. Rushdoony, Raymond Moore, and Sam Blumenfeld. On April 13, 1987, presiding Judge Charles J. Murray issued a decision (binding on all 1,100 school districts) which was a complete vindication of the rights of parents to educate their children at home in the State of Texas.
I was at the Austin TEA Party, at the age of 14, with my parents.
When my mom and dad got wind of this hearing we, along with three other
homeschooling families, traveled from Collinsville all the way to Austin.
There was a lot fueling this mad dash to the capitol:
1) My mom and dad had been completely dedicated to homeschooling
from the start. There was never any talk of "trying it out" or going
back to public school later. They were sold.
2) My parents had already been arrested for homeschooling, and they wanted to be sure
that wouldn't happen again.
Add caption |
March against pornography when 7-11 and the Southland Corporation started carrying pornographic magazines in their stores. |
March against abortion in our tiny hometown of Terral, OK. |
As with most homeschooling families, we survived on one income, and had little extra. But we packed our tents, sleeping bags, and camp stove and took off. We camped at a KOA campground and ate sandwiches from a cooler.
The group of kids from Collinsville at the Capitol in Austin, April 1996. |
Why? Well, I’ll tell you:
Some of you have heard my story,
about how my parents were arrested for homeschooling. But the story doesn’t
really belong to me; it belongs to my Mom and Dad and to my aunt, Kari
Davidson, whom many of you know. They
were the homeschool parents who experienced a literal rude awakening early one
morning in October of 1983. This arrest took place in Oklahoma, and was the
result of an anonymous complaint.
Police officers knocked on our door at 7:00 that morning. A very apologetic deputy informed my parents that they were under arrest for truancy, and he needed to take them to the Jefferson County Sherrif's office. (Three days before, my dad had been fired from his job in this very office without warning and without explanation.)
My parents immediately called our Pastor. The Pastor went to inform my aunt Kari, who lived across town, that the deputy was on his way to her house, since she didn't have a phone. He arrived at the same time the police showed up, so it was a complete surprise to Kari. She grabbed her Bible, a toothbrush, and a sweater, because for some reason she remembered hearing that it was cold in jail!
All four of us kids stayed with the pastsor’s wife, while the pastor followed the offenders to jail in his own car.
Mom and Daddy were members of Home School Legal Defense Association, so phone calls were quickly made. John Eidsmoe, who was a professor of law at Oral Roberts University at the time, took Kari's case at no charge, since she was a widow. Michael Ferris, John Whithead, and Charles McLaughlin were all involved.
The legalities of homeschooling were a big deal at this time, as homeschooling had begun to grow in popularity. At the time, there were 7 homeschool defense attorneys in Texas. But no one expected a problem in Oklahoma. Oklahoma was, and still is, one of the best states for homeschooling, so this was unheard of!
Bail was set for $200, which our Pastor graciously paid. So Mom, Daddy, and Kari were fingerprinted and processed, but never locked up. They spent the day in the Sheriffs office while the attorneys were contacted.
The court date was set for January of 1984. Meanwhile, John Whitehead called the Oklahoma Attorney General and the State Legislature. Kari had a phone installed at her house in order to keep up with the case. We visited with the attorneys handling the case. Our families even went to the home of Kirk and Beverly McCord (whose name you may recognize as the founders of the Home School Book Fair). We, the children, were questioned privately to prepare us for the court proceedings.
In December, Kari received a phone call from another Oklahoma homeschooler who said that 300 other homeschoolers were planning to march at the courthouse where the case would be heard. She was so happy just to know there were other families actually homeschooling in Oklahoma!
Just days before the case was to be tried in court, the Terral School Superintendent dropped the case. He even came to our home and apologized to my parents for the inconvenience. Kari, however, did not receive a letter or an apology.
I was 11 years old when this happened. My sister was 8, and my cousins were 7 and 4.
Here we are with a local church member who came to perform a weekly "chapel" service for us. |
I remember the fear of having police officers knock on our door so early in the morning, and finding out that they had come for my parents. I also remember spending the day at the Pastor's house, waiting for my parents to come home. I did have some worry that they might have to stay in jail. We had only been homeschooling for just over a month, so it was scary to think they had done something really wrong.
As far as my Dad remembered, they were the first to be arrested for homeschooling in Oklahoma.
(As a side note, homeschooling in Oklahoma has been legal since it’s statehood in 1908. All it took for an arrest was the perfect mix of an uniformed school district, a compliant sherriff’s office, and brand new homeschoolers with no knowledge of their rights. Unfortunately, this still happens all over Texas and the United States.)
My family’s story, although quite dramatic for us, is a simple one compared to many others. There are numerous families who have been through worse. Thanks to the good people at Home School Legal Defense Association and Texas Homeschool Coalition, much is being done every day to protect this very basic parental right. Arrest may not happen to you, but your support of these organizations will help protect families whose rights to homeschool are in danger.
In all the history of the world,
freedom has never magically appeared. Battles for freedom of any sort had to be
fought…sacrifices had to be made to win and keep freedom.
I, for one, am humbled by their sacrifice and thankful that they
were willing. They suffered many hardships and losses, but they also produced
some of the greatest men and women in history.
The American
colonists did likewise. They did not simply wake up one morning and decide to start
a revolution; they recognized the threat to future generations and took it upon
themselves to do something about it in their
lifetime.
John Adams said, "I
must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics
and philosophy."
You do not
have to be an activist; you should be knowledgeable and aware. All
homeschoolers need to be willing to act on information regarding threats to our
freedom.
The freedom to educate our children
is vital to the future of America. We can thank the pioneers of the modern
homeschooling movement for standing up for that freedom. But it is our
responsibility to keep it.
Texas Homeschool Coalition has
played a vital part in preserving the freedom of Texas Homeschoolers. They work
closely with the Governor and the State Legislature, closely examining every
piece of legislation for threats to families who educate their children.
In closing, I would like to thank
my mom, Debbie Barnes, my Dad Andy who passed away in December, and my aunt
Kari for the legacy that they have given to me and everyone here. These pioneers
in the homeschool movement paved the way. Now it’s up to us to keep the way
open for our children and grandchildren.
Save those empty ink cartridges!
Red River Enrichment Classes has joined the Worklife Rewards program with Office Depot. This program allows us to recycle 10 empty printer ink cartridges each month for Office Depot reward of $2 each. We use this money to pay for copies and supplies (class descriptions, handbooks, nametags, etc.)
So, please save your ink cartridges and bring them to EC for recycling, and help EC at the same time!
College Prep - Homeschool Dual Credit
If you are looking for another dual credit option, consider the College Prep program from College Plus.
"CollegePrep is a one semester dual credit and collegiate preparation program for homeschool high school students ages 14-18. CollegePrep does not require your student to increase their workload, take additional classes, or force you to buy extra curriculum.
Through CollegePrep, your student earns high school and college credit, at the same time, for what they are already learning, using curriculum you already own. And, this counts as an honors course on your student’s high school transcript.
During your student’s one semester in CollegePrep, they can earn 12 accredited and transferable college credits, which are also worth 2 high school credits, for what they are learning in subjects like History, Science, Math, and Literature."
College Prep Website
Monday, June 4, 2012
Red River 4H
Red River 4H meets the 2nd Tuesday of each month, September through May, at St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Gainesville, TX.
Children may take part in a variety of activities, such as clothing projects, food shows, volunteer opportunities, agriculture, Share the Fun, and much more.
The Red River 4H group is led by a fantastic RRCH mom!
For more information, contact:
Katy Smith 817-980-0147
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