Funschool Friday D

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D is for Dental Health.

D template  filled with paper dots.  Kids can use the hole punch for fine motor practice and then glue their dots onto the template.

ASL D and Dad

Letter sort – b’s and d’s.  Save frozen juice cans and make the letters on craft sticks. Put a corresponding letter on the can. Great visual/perception game

Dressing Trays:  Playdough, dots (punched). Intro the Montessori dressing frames if you have them.  If not, then gather pieces of clothing with zippers, buttons, and snaps and allow the children to try to tackle them independently.  Dropper and suction bottomed bath mats. Mix up some colored water and have children very carefully squeeze one drop onto each little suction cup. Include a small sponge and he can absorb each little cup when finished. This will occupy a preschooler for a looooooong time.

Math:  diamond shape, dimes, diagonal lines.  Have children sort the diamonds from the other cards in a playing card deck. Sort dimes from pile of change. Discuss how many other coin combinations make up a dime. Make diamonds of different dimensions (hey, alliteration ; )) on the geoboard. Look for diamonds in clothing (argyle) and rug patterns this week.

Number 4: make a page for the notebook with the numeral and a set of four things like 4 seasons, the four sides of a diamond, four limbs on a person, 4 gospels etc. Discuss 4 operations – add, subract, multiply and divide – informally by dividing a sandwich in two, giving two cookies to three friends, combining your legos with your brother’s etc.

Snack:  Veggies and dip or doughnut holes

Music: drums – make your own with empty oatmeal box.  Consider reading about Drummer Hoff.

Game: Duck, duck, goose

Dental Health – there are LOTS of fun activities here. We liked cutting out a large tooth from yellow cardstock and painting it white with our brushes to model thorough brushing. The painting with dental floss would be fun too. More dental printables and crafts here.

science project -(from same site) what are cavities?  Take an apple and poke some large holes in it with a pencil or kebab.  Let it sit for several days til the holes turn brown. Use as an object lesson.  Lots of links at the above site for brushing charts and more.

Some lit:

Whose Teeth Are These?

Going to the Dentist

Teeth are Not for Biting

George Washington’s Teeth  – a funny book in rhyme detailing our first president’s dental woes

Diddle diddle dumpling

Diddle diddle dumpling, my son John
Went to bed with his stockings on.
One shoe off and one shoe on,
Diddle diddle dumpling, my son John.

Practice the rhyme when dressing this week. Rolls off the tongue. <g> My oldest two boys used to sing song this nursery rhyme whenever a baby lost a sock.

Saint/hero:

King David – there is a very very cute book to make based on these pics. (would make great notebook pages) And there are more page ideas here.

Big Family, Small World

My friend Lynne’s musical family is featured in this article in the Sacramento Bee. (I hope one of those links works! The first has the pics) Lynne and I have been on the same little homeschooling list for over a decade now.  I can proudly say I knew her when she had just a wee, bitty family of say, less than half a dozen kids. : )  She is amazing – truly.  She is an incredibly gifted, creative woman who loves children and trusts them to learn.  Lynne has been my inspiration for a lotta years. <g>  You go girl!  Great article!

FWIW – comments

Hey all, I know some of you are wondering about whether your comment was posted or not. By and large the answer to that question is a resounding yes. Just not right on the spot. We have enabled comment moderation.  While one is free to say pretty much whatever one would like to in one’s own space, they are not free to say just anything in this space. Discussion is welcome, unpleasantries are not. Expletives are deleted without reservations. We are here to share our journey with family and friends, not looking for an argument. If something here is helpful then by all means enjoy. If it is not, then we understand that too. Let’s agree to disagree. : )

We just don’t like to come home and discover nasty mail from those who do not value children, bottom line. So please bear with us and please continue to share your thoughts. They have been a blessing, time and again. Thanks!

Never plan another menu

I am not kidding you.  Just with this one blog entry I may never have to scratch my head over this again.  Should you somehow need more than 175 week at a glance plans, take heart. They apparently do this EVERY MONDAY.  I am so never going to make another food list. 

Tell me though.  Am I the only one who puzzles over the 5 days of meals?  Do people fast the other two? Not that this would be a bad idea… Just wondering who shops for 5 days?  Not to worry though. We will cobble two lists per week if need be. Just seems odd.

Never plan another menu

I am not kidding you.  Just with this one blog entry I may never have to scratch my head over this again.  Should you somehow need more than 175 week at a glance plans, take heart. They apparently do this EVERY MONDAY.  I am so never going to make another food list. 

Tell me though.  Am I the only one who puzzles over the 5 days of meals?  Do people fast the other two? Not that this would be a bad idea… Just wondering who shops for 5 days?  Not to worry though. We will cobble two lists per week if need be. Just seems odd.

Friday Funschool C

Eggcaterpillar_thumb Thought I forgot about C didn’t you? <g>  Busy week here but we are set for tomorrow.

C is for caterpillars, Very Hungry Caterpillars, and the collage art of author/illustrator Eric Carle, who cooperates by supplying us with a number of C books.

ASL: C   and  cookie

C template, glue on popcorn kernels or cornmeal

Lit:

The Very Hungry Caterpillar  (by Eric Carle)

The Little Cloud

The Very Clumsy Click Beetle

Have you Seen My Cat?

Eric Carle’s ABC

Ten Little Ducks

Character:

OH!!! Hopefully Bloglines doesn’t get this posted before my postscript addition here. We found the most incredible book this week.  It’s called Cookies, Bitesize Life Lessons. Trust me, you WANT this book! The author uses cookies as her medium to explain abstract concepts like modest – as in, "you don’t run around telling everyone you make the best cookies, even if you know you do." or respect, as in, "respect means offering the very first cookie to your grandmother."  I love it. Absolutely love it.

Saint:

Christopher, the Holy Giant by Tomie DePaola (dramatize by carrying a baby doll on shoulders)

Trays:

cutting with templates, corn/spoon transfer, clay, Oreo cookie Matchin Middles puzzle, crayon resist and rainbow crayon coloring (3crayons taped together), chalk on dark paper, paper chains

Snack:

We will make cookies from pre-rolled dough and frost them green. We will arrange them in the form of a caterpillar for fun. Cooking with children is an obvious extension this week. The Mom and Me Cookbook is a lot of fun.  It is full of the outstanding photos and clear instructions for which DK is famous. Mollie Katzen’s Pretend Soup is another good bet.

Math:

intro coins – use them for the crayon resist, match them, discuss their value. Print the page linked and add to the binder.

Calendar – hang up a large wall calendar and begin noting the date each day. (we will add to this each week)  Additionally (or instead of!) print these pages for the preschool notebook and note them at the beginning of each learning time.

Shape:

Cylinder – more accurately a geometric solid.  Most of our kids know their basic shapes so I am digging out the Montessori solids. Look for can shapes this week to ID as cylinders

Art:

Collage! There are so many possibilities here.  We will start with something small and not messy : ) Take a sheet of clear contact paper and peel off the backing.  Lay sticky side up on table. Place an 8×11 piece of colored cardstock cut into a 1inch border/frame on top. Fill the center of the frame with torn tissue paper in various colors. Top with another sheet of clear contact paper sticky side down this time. Easy Peasy. <g>

For more ideas see these Eric Carle inspired projects which can be used for older children as well.

Song:

C is for Cookie (Cookie Monster’s song)

C is for cookie
That’s good enough for me,
C is for cookie,
That’s good enough for me, C is for cookie,
That’s good enough for me.
Oh Cookie, Cookie, Cookie starts with C!

Science – cotton ball clouds  and caterpillar life cycle (ck out the second life cycle link and scroll way down to the project – way cool and can fit in a page protector. My favorite ; ))  You can also be discussing healthy snack choices with reference to the Hungry Caterpillars digestive woes.

Ok, that’s more than enough to keep us hoppin’ this week. Time for bed!  Have a great week y’all!

Guerrilla Homeschooling

Is it even worth it to make up a daily schedule? How close to perfect should life get before we begin our school year?  These are among the questions tossed around by my homeschool buddies over the past couple of days. Those are questions with few definite answers. Loaded words in those questions: perfect, "school" year, and life. 

I was thinking back to an article Kathy Von Duyke wrote some years back.  It SEEMED like it was just a few years back but when I found it online I noticed that it was nearly a decade ago. Time flies when you are having fun. <g>  And we HAVE had fun.  Lots of fun. A cursory glance back over those years should have turned up more memories of struggle and frustration. We have lived in five different homes and three different states in that time. My husband was deployed, one son had major emergency neuro-surgery, same son was later flat on his back for an entire year while recovering from a different surgery, I had a surprise homebirth and then a solo one.  We lost my husband’s father. We battled the elements on the prairie. The dog died. I could go on. But why?  Those things all happened but they did not define us.

What I remember most from those years are sketching crabs by the ocean, a yellow baby blanket meticulously crocheted by my then ten year old daughter, chicks that fit in your hand, climbing Pike’s Peak, and the sound of Allen’s voice reading Narnia to the children while I made dinner. I remember the look of triumph on three little faces as they each began to read for themselves. I recall the very morning one little boy tied his shoes the first time. And another evening when his younger brother, with no instruction at all, announced he could do the same. I remember driving away from hospitals with Colin, yes, but I remember dropping him off at the college campus as well. Despite the challenges they have always, always been learning.

So what does Kathy Von Duyke have to do with all this?  She used a term way back then that struck a chord with me – guerrilla homeschooling. In a perfect world we could strategize, plot a course, and expect that with a reasonable amount of diligence we could run that course to the finish with few interruptions.  (insert peals of laughter…..; ))  In the real world, particularly a world that includes nine children, the picture looks a bit different. You might well stumble over that impressive teacher’s manual as you reach for the phone book to schedule a Dr’s appointment after yet another sleepless night with a croupy baby. You might kick it out of the way as you carry the laundry up the steps. It gets paint splattered by eager artists. It gets batter spilled on its cover from your kitchen helpers.  But hey, it’s ok because that manual makes a good booster chair for a little person who can’t reach the counter yet.

Do those manuals serve anything but utilitarian purposes?  Yes, if you take Kathy’s advice to heart they are meant to teach YOU. If you are tied to a scripted lesson plan you are handicapped. You will not be able to teach beyond the confines of your tether. You will not be able to wash, fold, stir, drive or rock while you learn together. You will be with your manual.  Good luck.

As the article points out:

"Children ask questions about their schoolwork at the most inconvenient times. In the world of guerrilla homeschooling, this means answering algebra problems from the changing table; stating the order of the planets while cooking, or counseling a frustrated child through a writing assignment; and still retaining a cool enough demeanor to deal with the squabble over toys that suddenly arose in your midst."

In the words of my teen boys – true that.

She advises moms to try to choose a subject each year in which to become an expert. Furthermore, she says the best way to do this is not to burn the midnight oil with dry volumes of teacher training materials but rather to read through the simplest children’s books on those subjects.  I have to agree. The best part is that you can read them aloud and kill two birds with one stone. Children’s books cover the basics in clear, colorful ways. You get an outline of the vital information which you can flesh out over time.

For the language subjects like math, phonics, and grammar your best bet is to get a handbook for yourself. I really like the "Everything You Need to Know About" series for the elementary years and the "Easy Way" series for high school.  Once you are up to speed you can ‘drop tutor’ as she describes. Meaning: you can tutor at the drop of a hat, as opposed to dropping everything to tutor. 

You don’t need a perfect world to teach well. You need a perfect strategy. You need a strategy that does not involve manipulating events that are largely out of your control. Each year I have discerned "what" we need to accomplish. We make checklists to help us stay on track and cover the necessary ground.  The "when" of it varies but it always happens and surprisingly well.  Real life and real learning are unnerving to those who are wedded to absolute control. With faith and a fun loving attitude you can roll with the punches and thrive. It just requires a bit of thinking outside the box. : )