J-jo's Picks

>> Saturday, April 30, 2011

Although titled "J-jo's Picks", it must be noted that Bear enjoyed each of these books just as much and was found to be reading them to herself a lot!  Lots of books - all due back at the library after many renewals.  These were my "five-a-day" books for J-jo.  "Five" books we read every day for a week.  Obviously we read and reread way more than five.
Anyway, I want to remember what books they love!  Maybe they'll want to know when they grow up?

My Truck is Stuck

Please, Baby, Please

Please, Puppy, Please

The Little Dump Truck

Kitten's Big Adventure

Ou est mon nounours?
 
Some Dogs Do

The Little Mouse, The Red Ripe Strawberry, and the Big Hungry Bear

An Egg is an Egg (more of a Bear Pick)

Turnover Tuesday

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Perpetual Celery

>> Thursday, April 28, 2011

My mother in law taught me a neat trick.  If you buy a celery, cut of the tops and stick the bottom in some water, new roots will grow.  After enough roots grow, you can replant it in soil and the celery plant will grow new celery.  If you think about this, you can just keep doing this and never run out of celery.  Her plant is beautiful.  I just started ours a couple of days ago and it's doing really well.  You can see the new stalk already growing.
And tiny little root hairs.

Bear read us the book Roots .
This is a part of a great first grade level series covering seeds, flowers, fruits, leaves, and stems.

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Gluing a (Vegetable) Rainbow

>> Wednesday, April 27, 2011

We've been reading Planting a Rainbow 

and Growing Vegetable Soup 

 as part of J-jo's "G is for Garden" activities.  I think we'll be moving on to "R is for Rainbow" and "V is for Vegetable" soon.  I don't spend much energy coming up with activities.  Most of the time I just do one craft to go with the letter sound box, the letter sound box books, and some songs to do with the main object I've chosen to go with the letter.

I've come up with an idea to go with the these two books though.

A vegetable rainbow.

I cut out a bunch of photos of vegetables from the Burpees seed catalog.  (Not that I plant a garden, as I have a totally black, not green, thumb...but I figured that having some beautiful flower, fruit, and vegetable pictures might inspire me to do some neat activity for the kids.)
I chose fruit and vegetables to represent each color of the rainbow and brown and white.


Then I cut some construction paper of each color in half, and taped the edges together to form an accordion book.


The pictures and book are on a tray with a glue stick and J-jo and I will work together to glue the pictures on the right pages.  I have the other halfs of paper for Bear, as well as the rest of the catalog, so she can do the project from start to finish herself if she wants (I'm guessing she will once she sees J-jo's).

Another way to do this would be to have the child glue the pictures first, then laminate, and then tape the pages together.  I can always cut through the tape if I decide to laminate.

This post linked to stART

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The Curiosity Files

>> Tuesday, April 26, 2011

The Old School House has these great pdf's called The Curiosity Files in which Professor Ana Lyze and her research team set out to educate children (and their parents) about strange insects, rare diseases, beautiful gems, and blue footed birds.

Each one of these ebooks focuses on one curiosity (quicksand, cicada-killing wasp, puffer fish...).  The activities that follow the many pages of information are engaging multi-modal, addressing many learning styles and needs, and include: (list taken from the product information page)
  • Bible study, discussion ideas, and memory verses
  • Math, history, and geography investigations
  • Literature and suggested book list
  • Writing, spelling, and vocabulary activities
  • Beautiful copywork pages (manuscript and cursive)
  • Science observations, projects, and experiments
  • Discussion questions
  • Art, crafts, and drawing and coloring pages
  • Lapbook/notebook pages and helpful lapbooking links
  • Special needs, hands-on discoveries
  • Internet resources and video links
  • Complete answer key

When The Old Schoolhouse first gave me the e-book to review, I was really impressed by the visual quality of it.  I have traveled to the Galapagos and it was a pleasure to see all the beautiful photographs of the Blue footed Booby in the pdf.  However, I was skeptical about how I could use it with my 3.5 year old Bear since the activities are geared to 8 to 13 year olds.  Nevertheless, I was determined to try to adapt it to work for us.

The ebook starts out with a lot of information about the Blue footed booby.  I read and paraphrased some of it to Bear as she sat on my lap at the computer and looked at those great photographs I mentioned.

I also found the book Booby Hatch at the library to supplement the file.  It was one of the recommended resources listed in the ebook.


The activities suggested researching another Galapagos animal so we looked through the photos in a book I have about the Galapagos.
Here are some of the other activities we did:

  •  looked up where the Galapagos Islands are on the shower curtain map. 
 
  • measured just how far a blue footed booby can dive into the ocean and measured their wingspan. 
  • measured Bear's wingspan to compare it to the bird's.
  • figured out some of the word problems
  • did a writing lesson - it used a piece of text from On The Banks of Plum Creek (Bear was excited about this) and discussed sentence combining to make sentences more interesting to listen too.  We did this orally.
  • made a Galapagos Islands habitat sensory box - the box included blue aquarium rocks for the water, sand, rocks, shells, photographs of some of the Galapagos animals I printed from the Web (mostly the Blue Footed Booby), and some sticks to represent driftwood (not photographed). I wish I had the Galapagos Toob!
 Here's the Booby with three eggs in her nest.  (They don't make nests, but circle their nesting ground with pebbles and small rocks.)  Bear initiated this; it was neat for me to see that the information had sunk in.

  • skip counting by 2's and 3's (because the Booby lays 2 to 3 eggs)
  • reviewed the Montessori landform trays because Blue Footed Boobies are island birds
  •  made up our own Booby dances after watching Youtube videos of the mating dance


Again, I was truly impressed with how well laid out this ebook was and how the activities had extensions and adaptations to make it usable for a wide range of ages.  This is really beneficial for a homeschooling families with more than one child as you could use one of these Curiosity Files and address the needs of every child.  I liked that the activities were easily adaptable to make them more Montessori friendly.  The files remind me a bit of Five in a Row (without the literature) because as in FIAR, all the school subjects are related to one central theme (in this case, the blue footed booby).  Consequently, anyone who loves FIAR would probably love these.

Specs at a glance:

Publisher: The Old Schoolhouse
Price: $6.95
Format: downloadable product
Age range: 8 - 13 years (but obviously adaptable so that even a 3 year old can get something out of it)
See a sample here.
Other Curiosity Files are available; you can view the list here.




Disclosure: I was given this product for review purposes only. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own.

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We Play - Puddle Fun!

We had some strong rain in the early afternoon on Monday.  The sun came out around 5 pm.  Seeing the boots lined up neatly by our coat hooks, I thought, "why not go out and jump in puddles?"  So off we went.




And then today...the plastic bin turned over and got rained in during the night.  Guess it reminded J-jo of the puddles...  or maybe the bathtub?
 Bear dipped her chalks into the water to paint this board.
LOADS of fun!


Visit Childhood 101 to see how others played this week.

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Bear's Picks

>> Monday, April 25, 2011

 
Kid Tea - a funny book about how the different activities of the day (such as splashing in the mud, playing dress-up, playing soccer, baking with Dad) turn the bath water a different color each day.  "Dunk me in the tub, please, for green kid tea!"  The rollicking rhyme is great.  "Monday, fun day, mud-pies-in-the-sun day.  Brown and sticky, hands are icky, mud-is-on-my-nose day, squished-between-my-toes day."

We've just discovered Lynley Dodd.  If you haven't read her books, you must!  They are funny and she doesn't shy away from challenging vocabulary words like boisterous, cantankerous, pilfered and pillaged, and so many more.  The three we've read to date are: Slinky Malinki, Hairy Maclary Scattercat, Hairy Maclary's Rumpus at the Vet

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A Glimpse at Preschool

>> Sunday, April 24, 2011

 Practical Life:

Bear is so eager to learn to tie her shoes that I put out a pair of shoes with laces and she worked on tying a knot.  She tried to go further, but got frustrated so I ended that early and told her to master knot tying first.

Sensorial:

She mastered the trinomial cube (of which I have no picture) and was visibly proud of herself for doing so.

She also worked for a long time one day with pattern blocks. 
 This was the first time she initiated making her own pictures with the blocks.
 Math:

 Besides at least an hour's worth of "Where's the Cake?", Bear did a bit of work on time.  She can tell the time to the hour and half hour.  Next week, I'll introduce quarter after and quarter to.
 This was a follow up worksheet on telling time to the hour.

 We decorated eggs using fruits and vegetables for our dye red cabbage, carrots and onion skin, and frozen strawberries.
 We also used hole reinforcers.

 Writing/Spelling:

Our pretend play of being letter carriers turned into a writing lesson when she decided to write everyone real letters to deliver.  She wanted to write "are" and had written down just the "r" (she spells very phonetically, which is an important stage in spelling development).  I asked her if she thought it might need vowels.  "A magic "e"?" she replied.  I agreed, but pointed out that it might need a vowel in front too. I asked if she remembered what vowel went with the "r" to make "ar" but she didn't remember.  So I put down all the "ar" words I could think of, leaving out the "a".  I set out all the vowels and asked her if she could remember now which one would help the words say "car" "far" etc. After first choosing "o", she correctly chose "a".



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Where's the cake? A Math Game

>> Saturday, April 23, 2011

During Spell Outloud's birthday bash week, I downloaded one of the party favors pdfs and printed this great game called "Where's the cake?" in which you hide a cake picture under a number from 1 to 10 and the child has to guess where the cake is.  This game is great for number recognition but Bear already knows her numbers well beyond ten.  I still wanted to use the game because I knew it would be up her alley - I mean, it's the cutest cake printout ever!
So, I adapted it.

We lay out the number cards.  Bear grabs her favorite counters of the day.  She closes her eyes.  Mommy hides the cake.  Then Mommy gives her an addition question to solve.  The answer to the question is where the cake is hidden.  In the photo she is working out 4 plus 4.
 See the smile when she finds the cake:)
Another day we played it with addition and subtraction, and I even managed to sneak in a few very easy division and multiplication questions, helping her solve the problems with Gerber lids.

Here she is dividing 8 eggs into two groups.
 Here she is making two groups of 3 for 2 times 3.

I love how I was able to extend this game for her to enjoy at her level.  She enjoyed it so much she just kept asking me to hide the cake again and again.

Thanks, Jolanthe for this pdf!

Linked to Preschool Corner.

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Montesori Tot School

>> Monday, April 18, 2011

 I introduced J-jo to tongs this week. I went back through all my 18 to 22 month archives to see what activities I had done with Bear at those ages and found a bunch of things I still hadn't done with J-jo.  Tongs was one of them.

Tonging Easter eggs.
 Spooning smaller eggs.
 Easter related activities on his shelf. Clothespin bunnies on a cardboard cutout of a carrot (re-purposed a cereal box for that), sorting colored eggs (have switched the eggs to little Easter themed erasers since this photo was taken), rabbit nesting egg, and carrot container (Dollar Tree) with ten buttons for counting.
 Dusting
Helping Mommy bake muffins.
I presented the pink tower to him.  I was impressed with how well he was able to stack the cubes, even though he was nowhere near the correct order.
 Outside time.
 "Helping" his sister play Reading Eggs while I cook supper.

Linked to 1+1+1=1 and One Hook Wonder.



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