Showing posts with label nuwaupuyee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nuwaupuyee. Show all posts

Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Our Nuwaupuyee for the week - Jan 2013

Raahub yasar!!!





Thanks to recommendations from the Nuwaupian family, I've upgraded our nuwaupuyee poster so it only has the words we're learning in our script.

It's an exciting and slightly nerve wracking step as I'm not great with languages, but the Paa Taraq have given me sufficient motivation to commit to speaking and studying it daily with the children.

4 days a week, we begin Mir with dance and stretching then Nuwaupuyee which has been working well for us..

I want to say a big TAWUHAAT to the teachers of the classes on http://nuwaupic.com/ , you're all doing a really good job and I appreciate you all very much.

Also tawuhaat to the family helping out on the facebook Nuwaupic study group at http://www.facebook.com/groups/nuwaupic/ 

The words we're studying this week are from the Zaman wu Garah (Day and Night) video on Nuwaup.com found here, which are

Today - Panan Zaman
Tomorrow - Ghadad
Yesterday - Barah
Before - Baa'ad
After - Qabal
Next - Tayal
Later - Fwatur
We can - Enen Qadur
Good night - Wawad Garah  



Hatap yasar
Mut Bastat En Rayay


Paa Munzal Nathur Amun Nabab Rayay Akh Ptah Djedtwy - Hu Kawan Harar!!!

Tuesday, 16 October 2012

Our Nuwaupuyee of the week poster

Raahub Yasar,

To make learning new nuwaupuyee (our language) easier, the kharadu (children) and I made this little poster.



It's 4 pieces of black craft/sugar paper stuck together then decorated with ankhs. The words of the week are stuck on with tape that we carefully remove and replace with new words or sentences each week.

If you are teaching your kharadu or yourself, you may find it helpful to have something like this up so that you can see it very regularly. We have ours up in our living room, which is also the dining room and mir (school) room too, so we see it all the time. I aim to practice the words with them daily, just by getting them to look at them and we'll all say them out loud in Nuwaupuyee and english.

This picture is of last week's words, this week (commencing Mon 16th Oct 2012) our words are

Yakax - take
Safaf - see
Sawaf - look
radad - give
and the sentence - Panan zamam enen eahaw aalam nahaw... - today we will learn about ... ( I can use this every day during our mir studies several times and even get them to say it to me and let them teach me something :-)

Hatep yasar and be sure to subscribe to the blog by adding your email address in the box at the top right of the page and share with anyone you think would like it.

Mut Bast.tet En Re
(Leah Salmon)

Saturday, 22 September 2012

My visit to the 7th annual Homeschooling Fair in London

Raahub yasar,

A lovely sister invited me to a Homeschool fair the other day and Shaep (ayi nafurmul hamat - my beautiful husband) and I decided to go and check it out.

It was very short notice, we were running late on the day, but I'm so glad we made it there, even if it was for just over an hour!


Mawas (baby) Nafurtat and I outside the fair in Notting Hill Gate, London

It was held in Westbourne Grove Church near Notting Hill Gate in London, which was a great venue. As I we walked into the reception area, I look up and saw a material posters (or whatever you call those things!!!) saying "school is not compulsory", that instantly put a smile on my face :-) 



Shaep and I walked through to the market room, which just had a few people milling around the stalls by that  time. We had a look at all the tables, which were all stalls of other homeschooling parents and I saw this great quote that resonated with what Paa Naabab Yaanun has been teaching us for years and is another reason we didn't want our kharadu exposed to their system of edited dictation  (education)


There were a few book stalls that had some free handouts and leaflets and books for sale, at one of the tables we saw the only sister in the room and she quickly indentified herself as the one who'd invited me to the fair and I gave her a big hug!!! Here she is at the stall:


Here are some of the leaflets that I picked up with a directory of different homeschooling groups, the laws around homeschooling, useful websites and frequently asked questions on homeschooling. The book I picked up called "Early Years" which is published by Education Otherwise (at http://www.educationotherwise.net/ a long standing resource for homeschooling advice and guidance) has a lot of good ideas around what to do in your homeschool, but most of the contact details in the resource section were out of date which was a shame. 


As we got there later in the day, we missed the talk I really wanted to hear which was the panel of young adults who had been homeschooled, who were there to answer questions on their experiences.

The funniest moments in the last 2 talks we did manage to hear part of were 
- One of the speakers said that she didn't think grammar, reading and spelling work books were completely necessary and that children can learn words from things around them in real life. She said her son learnt from the words around him while travelling on the trains so the first words he learnt to read were "Danger, High Voltage"!

 -  The other speak said that when she was pregnant she's say to herself "As soon as this baby is 3mths old, I'm going back to work" but when her child was born she said "I didn't want to let her go or give her to anyone, why would I have you just to give you away!"

- The first speaker also showed this slide during their talk that was a bit of a laugh too - Sorry the picture's not great, but it says "I expect you all to be independant, innovative, critical thinkers, who will do exactly as I say!"



It was a good day, if we go again next year, I'd like to get there earlier to take in more of the talks and more specifically, see how we can reproduce this event for our Nuwaupian yasar.

Here's the website to the event so you can keep up to date with the event for next year https://sites.google.com/site/homeeducationfair/

Hatap yasar

Mut Bast.tet En Re




Monday, 10 September 2012

Our Nuwaupuyee for the week

Raahub yasar,

The recent update that was delivered to us last week called Nimrod (at http://wu-nuwaup.com/outformation-class/nimrod/) from Mursal.tat Nysut.tat: Nerua Nafur.tat Atum-Rayay wu Mursal Nysut: Ptah Khaf Rayay Hepet Atum Rayay (Nerua's dress was lovely by the way), focused on the importance of our language Nuwaupuyee (formerly known as Nuwaupic). - The video of the update is at the bottom of this post.

If you didn't already know, there is a whole website now with Nuwaupuyee lessons on it at http://nuwaupic.com/

We aim to speak as much nuwaupuyee as we can, but this update really did give us a wake up call as to just how important it is, so we're going to learn a few words and phrases a week ans build from there.

So last week we learnt these words:

Nawam - Sleep
Jabab - Bring
Please - Ealal
No - Nual
What - Sanas
Here - Hunanu
That - Pafaf
What is that? Sanas kawan pafaf?
What colour is that? Sanas lawun kawan pafaf?

I'm going to spend another week on these then move onto 5 new words and 2 sentences a week from next week.

We went on a family walk which lasted about an hour in total,during the walk we went through the words then did lots of practice. As we walked I'd ask them "sanas kawan pafaf? and point at different things, or I'd ask "sanas lawun kawan pafaf? and they know most of the colours in nuwaupuyee so they could answer in nuwaupyee too, which allowed us to have a little nuwaupuyee conversation as we walked.

Homeschooling and learning can happen everywhere you go :-)

Hatep yasar

Mut