Friday Funschool G

G is for Goats (you didn’t think I could pass this up did you?)

G template covered in gold glitter glue.   

ASL G and Goat and Girl

Color: gold

Craft: This glitter bracelet is nothing more than masking tape and glitter.

DLTK has a number of goat themed printables . They suggest printing 3 of the goats and the troll on heavy paper and adhering to popsicle sticks to reenact the Three Billy Goats Gruff story they will hear this week. It would be fun to have a little "bridge" to set up with a board on some cinder blocks for them to tramp over. Games like this do double duty as dramatization and phys ed (balance).

PE: Speaking of which, golf is a good game for this week. There are kiddy sets available. You can improvise with a coffee can set on its side. 

G is for Peggy Kaye’s Games for Learning. The book series (Learning, Writing, and Math titles) target K-3rd graders but many games are well suited for preschooler, especially those familiar with letters and numbers. The Grasshopper Game and many others are online now.

Geo Math: G is for Geoboard.  If previous preschool co-op experience is any indicator kids LOVE geoboards. We had two and they were in constant use. We had the square board but I would very much like to add a circle geoboard to the mix. Here is a pattern if you would like to make one or make up your own patterns for the children to reproduce. There are so many possibilities. You can make shapes of various sizes.  You can progress to simple outlines of objects. You can make half of a picture and they can do the other half. Mirror images. Older kids can figure area and perimeter of figures. There are books available to get you started but you can easily take off with this on your own. Here are some pics of geoboards in the classroom.

Geometric G is also for geometric solids. Honestly, we don’t get a whole whoppin’ lotta use out of these. They are a Montessori standby though so I have them and we refer to them. I made up command cards such as find the solid that has x number of faces or x  number of points (corners) or looks like a can or whatnot. This site has printable cards to use with them. Preschool geometry is really very simple. A great game when sitting in waiting rooms is to find something shaped like a rectangle or count how many circles are in the room (ie doorknobs, buttons etc).

Number: 7  Introduce the seven days of the week with this song (sung to the tune of Clementine):

There are SEVen days,  There are SEVen days, There are SEVen days in the week – Sunday MONday, Tuesday WEDnesday, Thursday FRIday, SATurday.

They WILL learn the names easily this way! If you hung up the wall calendar a few weeks ago you can make 7 bears (copy to a word document and size to fit your wall space; add eyes and mouth) labeled with each day/name on the belly and 3 moveable hats that say Today, Tomorrow, and Yesterday on them. Everyday when you review the song you can place the hats the correct day bears. Hands on Math has printables and directions for a calendar wall.

And G is for Graphs.  This is an area that is easily overlooked at home but very easy to incorporate. PAge 4 of this document has a simple graphing game to print and play with dice. It is one of several ideas found in one of my favorite math programs – Mathematics Their Way which is a fortune on Amazon. Many similar ideas are found in her other books like the Workjobs linked at left which can be had for pennies.

G is also for Grace and Courtesy lessons.  Montessori recommended going over things like how to blow one’s nose and introductions and such. We take for granted that everyone knows these things and get annoyed when children mess up.  You can help prevent frustration by having reeeally brief little sessions about these things.

Other trays: cutting work – cut grass! make a scissor tray with strips of green construction paper for them to cut into fringe like grass. Bend some of the ‘grass’ and glue onto blue paper. (thank you Jean Warren!)  Make a grating tray.  We got a 6 sided grater at Walmart for less than $3. Add a bar of soap and they will keep busy discovering what happens when grating over each size opening.  Discovery Bottle – Glitter Bottle

Golf tees! Buy some this week from your sporting goods section. We will have another manipulative using them next week. We made a great game with a remnant of pegboard leftover from a garage organization project. Put some large wooden beads or scrap 1by 2 wood on the bottoms so it is elevated a few inches when it sits on the table or floor. The children make pictures, letters, patterns with colored golf tees dropped into the holes. HOURS of fun. Like the geoboards I found the kids go back to this game over and over over and…….  I will get pics uploaded this weekend.

Science: G is for growing. Growing grass is a very satisfying preschool room project. You can fill a shallow box with potting soil and sprinkle wheat or barley or regular grass seed over it, tapping the seed down lightly. Keep a mister nearby. Children will love spraying the box to keep the seeds moist. A spray bottle is a better bet than a watering can given their enthusiasm. ; )

Angel718605 Bible/saints:  This is the month of the Holy Angels for Catholics.  We will read through the Catholic Children’s Treasure Box set’s continuing story about a Guardian angel and make this simple Guardian angel craft with doilies and geometric shapes from our math work. We will learn or review the Angel of God prayer and add it to our binders. We will likely read about the angel Gabriel this week and add the picture of the Annunciation to our binders with their narrations. This site has some puzzles etc the big kids can work on.

Lit:

Beatrice’s Goat

G is for Goat – Polacco (I love this ABC book!)

Catch that Goat

Aesop:  The Goatherd and the Wild Goats

Snacks: graham crackers, grapes, gummi candy

And finally, G is for Giggle. Be sure to do some of that this week. : )

A Beautiful Mess

This is what Elsie Flanigan dubbed her blog. Aptly so. Her scrap style is very artjournal-esque: lots of doodles, notes, color. Its messy but addictive. That is how I explain the amount of time I have spent pouring over the pages. I have a lot of pics to scrap. I have no printer at the moment. You have no idea how the idea of hand journaling stresses me out.

Looking at Elsie’s reminds me to consider this a rare opportunity. Many of the pages featured in the early scrap magazines (and the early albums on my shelves…) now look dated and cute with a K. They suffer from bulletin board syndrome. : /  These art journals draw me in and make a person WANT to look at someone’s snapshots. I am a bit of a visual control freak though. Gotta admit I still miss my printer. But my daughter just asked a question I can’t resist…. "What are you going to make Mom?"  I don’t know.  Something. With her.

Friday Funschool – F

F F is for Fish

ASL: F  and  fish

F template: glue on feathers or use a stamp pad to fill with fingerprints   Speaking of fingerprints, don’t miss this opportunity to share the fun of Ed Emberly’s fingerprint book!  It has a 5 star rating for good reason. Even little people can make great designs with a bit of help from your pen. The look on their faces when they see what happens to their fingerprints is priceless. : )

Lit:

Anthony_2 Saint/Bible story:

St. Anthony preaches to the fishes or the story of Jesus and the Loaves and the Fishes (a boatload of lessons for this story at the link – pun intended ; )) or the Fisher of Men story. We will print this classic art image as well as one of the Loaves and Fishes for Art appreciation as well.

Montessori Trays:  fabric basket, felt board – there are lots of premade sets available or you can get books like Fun with Felt from CHC to make felt saints to go with your studies(can’t find it online so will try to track down a resource later!), feely bag – we took a large ziplock bag, tossed some foam fish into it and filled it with blue shampoo to make a fish ‘pond’. Another feely box option is to put one of a pair of objects into a medium sized can with a large sock pulled over it. The child can reach in but not see the objects. They must pair by touch.  I will upload the pics of both to the Funschool Flicker next week. The sensory box can have feathers this week. (this is our take on a sensory table which is bigger and more expensive) Discovery bottle – ocean (blue food color in water for half the bottle, oil in the rest) Foam work  One of my Montessori homeschool mom friends has made file folder type tray games with craft foam figures like this. Darned if I can find her or her pics!  If you are out there please send me your link!

Snack: Goldfish crackers, fruit rollups, fruit salad (yummy yummy – sorry, I broke into song for a minute ; )) fig newtons, and fish sticks

Math: Fewer/Less than (see lit list) Throughout the week look for opportunities to compare amounts of similar things. Are there fewer apples or oranges left? Are their fewer pennies or nickels in my purse? Are there fewer socks or towels in the wash?  You can have the same discussion about full/empty as an alternative or addition.  Use a ruler to introduce "foot" measure.

Shapes: review previously learned shapes with pattern blocks or geometric solids

Science –  If you are a brave mom you can dissect a whole fish from the grocery store. Its smelly but cheap and memorable.   You can learn about all sorts of fish at enchantedlearning and print out pages to color for the binders. Betta fish make excellent low maintenance pets for the preschool room.  Flower fairy F – Forget me not  You may want to explain to your students that in Victorian days the Forget Me Not was a popular image for embroidery patterns, especially those given to friends.

montessorimaterials has a few different fish card sets to print. Montimats has free fruit and flower cards here.

Lit:

Swimmy

The Fisherman and His Wife

Goldfish and Chrysanthemums  sweet story about a girl who creates a tiny koi pond to cure her Chinese grandmother’s homesickness

Surrounded by Sea by Gail Gibbons

One fish, two fish, red fish, blue fish

More, Fewer, Less

Fish for Letters game: label paper fish with a letter and paper clip. Fish with a magnet on a string and have the child name the letters he catches. You could ‘fish’ for fridge magnet letters too.

for beginning readers this little fish rebus style story is good fun

Art:  Chinese fish mobile craft or the paper bag fish or the paper plate fish or this very nice Japanese koi fish project   DLTK has even more fish crafts to go with the Fishers of Men verse from Scripture and from the Jonah story.  Footprint craft ideas found here.

Drama – Face painting

Fingerplay (starts with F and is another preschool mainstay:

Fish Story

One, two, three, four, five
(Hold up fingers while counting)
Once I caught a fish alive.
Six, seven, eight, nine, ten
(hold up additional fingers)
Then I let it go again.
Why did I let it go?
Because it bit my finger so.
Which finger did it bite?
The little finger on the right.
(hold up pinky on the right hand)

Lisa’s Legacy

Funky   Today was the day. Does anyone else follow the funnies like I do?  Every time the paper arrives I run through the same sequence: first For Better or Worse, then Funky Winkerbean, then Baby Blues, and Zits.  You have pretty much got life’s whole spectrum right there.  Today you got the end of life’s spectrum when Funky’s Lisa Moore died from a breast cancer recurrence. It’s the funnies. It’s not real. Still, I sorta got a knot in my stomach opening the paper the last couple weeks watching her move through chemo and then hospice care. The story was compelling. It hits home because an old friend of mine was recently diagnosed with breast cancer herself. I worry.

This is a fictional account of many people’s real life. None of us gets out of here alive of course, but sadly, many of us go way too soon. Funky Winkerbean’s artist/author has established Lisa’s Legacy to help those living this story today.   Lisa’s Story – The Other Shoe is a compilation of the strips where can catch the whole story if you missed it in the paper this year.   

Funschool Flickr and other news

Ta Da!  I figured out how to set up a Funschool Flickr badge dealy this morning. If you go to the right sidebar you can find images from Friday Funschool here at the ranch. The images are several weeks behind the plans at this point due to camera woes but they will be coming as time goes by. Meantime you can check out B and C images. We have had a really good time. : )

Elizabeth and Katherine have had a really good time with their little people as well. They are sharing their letter adventures on Serendipity. These stories mesh very well with Funschool plans and in fact they are using some of those too. It is a beautiful thing when moms put their heads together!

The wheels on the bus go ’round and ’round…

It has been one of those days where most of my waking hours were spent glued to the van seat. We were out very late last night running kids around and doing late night grocery shopping.  I woke up the sun this morning so I could get Brendan to the eye doctor. For most of his young life he has struggled with ‘gunky’ eyes on and off. The verdict is that he has a partial tear duct obstruction and it is going to need surgery. That part wigs me out a bit, but just a bit. We are very familiar with surgery by now. Inpatient, outpatient, you name it and Colin has probably had it. While there is always a risk with general anesthesia I tend to feel confident that God has it all in hand and the hospital environment isn’t too terribly off-putting – even if there are those dang flashbacks to deal with. : /

What is hard on a personal level is the reality that this relatively minor fifteen minute procedure will require not only today’s consultation but also a visit to the primary care Dr to declare him well enough for surgery, a pre-op visit with the eye Dr to confirm that the primary care Dr has correctly declared him well enough for surgery, a trip to the pharmacy for eye drops to be begun before the procedure, a reworking of our milk share pickup for that day, childcare arrangements at home, and likely a pre-registration at the hospital.  Agh. Funny how your schedule can vanish before your very eyes isn’t it?  Good thing I wasn’t too wedded to it. Still the whole prospect is less than appealing. Way less.

Keep B in prayer if you would.  We will keep y’all posted.

Where the dog and the antelope play

Deer_2 We have seen a LOT of pronghorn antelope in the back pasture this year. They won’t let me get close enough to get a picture I am satisfied with but I wanted to share these anyway.

They say the antelope is one the fastest mammals alive. I am pretty certain the Bearded Collie dog is right behind them because Wally can go from the back door to the back 40 in about five seconds. I couldn’t tell you how what that translates into in per hour speeds but in practical terms it means now you see antelope, now you don’t. Or, if Wally sees the antelope before you do, don’t bother looking for the camera. ; ) The first pics are taken out back. The bottom pic is from a nature site so you can see what they look like close up.

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