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Work At Home Kauai

{Work at Home Help}
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is there anyway to take work home from school and hand it in at the end of the week?

i live in florida and was wondering ive heard of programs where insted of going to school you got work for the week and had to hand it in at the end of the week does anyone know about that ?

That sounds like a Home School Co-op.
In a co-op, several families will join to “co-operate” on teaching some classes. Usually at least one of the parents has a specialty, for example, biology. That parent might agree to teach one class and do a lab or other enrichment activity each week, but the kids still have “homework” to go and read the book and answer questions on their own.

Programs like the one you are asking about are usually local or might serve one just two or three counties. You would need to ask around the local support groups to see if one is available near you.

There are a handful of larger more long-established organizations like this, but they are rare. Here is one: http://www.thekingsacademy.org/
They offer classical style homeschooling and have a lot of the “extras” like sports and foreign language–things that it might be hard for parents to do alone.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I forgot to mention University-Model Schools®
These are college-prep schools and usually meet two days a week for high school, sixth grade might be two only half days, and kindergarten might be just a couple hours a week.

Here is a link to the national association: http://www.naums.net/index2.html
You can find a list of existing ones there.

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work at home kauai

Finding Maluhia in Kauai

Kauai is the oldest and most remote of the major Hawaiian Islands. It is where Pele, the goddess of fire, fell in love with the mortal prince Lohi’au, and where the mythical Menehune people live in the hidden forests and valleys above the taro fields. It was the last holdout when King Kamehameha sought to unify (a/k/a take over) the islands, and I think it is the most magical and serene place on earth.

The north shore of Kauai is home to an eclectic mix of folks; celebrities and vacation homeowners from every state on the mainland, tourists who aren’t looking for high-rise hotels or condos (no building on Kauai can be taller than a coconut tree), and locals who choose the ultimate laid-back lifestyle to surf and coexist with the land of aloha spirit. It is here, in Hanalei town, I meet an artist who paints with his mouth. I have been walking the beaches of Hanalei and riding waves by the iconic pier for days. I am looking for a way to slow down deeply after a year that hardly bears recollection. Na ke Akua e ha ‘awi mai I ka maluhia … God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change …

Completely disabled, he is not physically a pretty site, however, he is anything but a sad man. He tells me God closed one door when he was paralyzed after a car accident in 2002, but opened another. What might sound cliché is his simple reality. He tells me he did not take his art seriously enough and spent most of the time surfing, but that has all changed now. He earns his living with his mouth – not by songs or words, which seems a profound irony. His name is Moses and I find its spiritual significance interesting: his art astounding. His painting of the Hanalei pier is a fusion of light and sea. It would be very difficult for Moses to go out there on the pier now, to see the sunlight and clouds play together in the shadow of the vast Napali cliffs. Perhaps his mind, his eyes, his heart and at final turn his mouth, have bonded with spirit of Lohi’au, because I can see so much fire and passion for this island in his painting. Most importantly, it is filled with both the aloha and maluhia he has found in his life and art.

I am home now and it is grey, but I am not. My resolution for the new year is working well, something I would have formerly thought impossible. Each morning I look at the painting Moses created with his mouth and find inspiration in his reflection of a place I was honored to experience. I move more slowly, savoring a bit more of the moment: my life, my love, my family, my work, my friends. I vow to chuck away just one stupid and needless stress each day and move one more tiny step toward maluhia. I think it is working.

Mahalo Moses!

Copyright 2010

Christine Scioli

All Rights Reserved

About the Author

Christine Scioli owns Zan Media, a film and video production company, http://www.zanmedia.com

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