My annotated bibliography is up to 43 items, and it is on its 8th page. I'm almost starting to be happy with it. I've spent the last three days solid on research, and I can almost "see" the homeschool movement as a whole with others' eyes. It's not too hard, because I never formed much of a picture on my own. I never really thought about what was happening around me on a macro scale when I was growing up.
At the same time, I'm beginning to "see" the public schools as a whole, since the start of the great education experiment of the 1800s. The course of the experiment fascinates me, because it explains a lot of the problems around us in the larger society. Right now, though, I only have a fuzzy, big-picture view. I am purposefully not trying to cultivate much more right now, even though my interest is piqued, because I don't need to travel much deeper than the surface level on the overall history of education for the purposes of my current project. I definitely want to learn more at some point.
My mom and I were discussing a few evenings ago what I can do with my project when it is completed. She suggested that I turn it into an eBook and sell it. Sounds good to me! I'm sure it will be highly useful to other researchers and interested persons - perhaps for this extensive annotated bibliography alone! This discussion led off into a conversation about grad school and about writing in general. I told her that I would like to write a nonfiction book for an audience at large, about what it is like to grow up homeschooled. It would be partially serious, partially humorous - I don't think I could write such a thing without it being funny. That, and I want desperately to work on
Erthe. We together came up with a scenario that greatly appeals to me. Instead of departing for grad school the year after I graduate from PHC, I will probably take a year off in order to write and publish my first book(s). YAY!!! I've been longing to write for
so long! If I had to go away to grad school immediately, I think I would just starve. Or whatever the mental equivalent is.
This could work out quite well. I was talking to Maggie, my roomie, on the phone some weeks ago, and we mentioned writing the homeschooling book at least partially together for practicum. That would be ideal, and so much fun! If we wrote the outline and a few chapters during the school year, we'd be ready to go during the summer. This is one book I
know I could write. Further, few other people could, and, the way I'm envisioning it, nobody else has. I'm excited just thinking about it. :) :)