Thursday, October 29, 2009

Nature Walk 101

This week we ventured into the woods with our Classical Conversation's group. Tracking in lots of wet grass, mud and creatures, we had a blast.
When I ran across this post from Lorrie, I had to share her additional insight. Check out her other resources, they are wonderful.

Fall is my favorite time of the year to go on walks with the children. We love to look for signs of fall in His glorious creation and enjoy the fresh, cooler air. How is a nature walk different than walking for exercise? This is not an aerobic workout; we walk and talk and run and laugh, babies fit in perfectly because we go slow, stop often, and learn about birds, bugs, plants, tracks, scat, rocks, features of the landscape, the sky, etc.

On our nature walks we bring:

· water bottles

· a stick of cheese or some crackers in a pocket

· binoculars

· little magnifiers

· field guides to plants, or birds, or whatever your special interest is

· notebooks to draw or write about what you see

· a sack to tote home treasures in

· and most importantly, your curiosity!

How can you bring more home without making a mess? Have a pretty basket outside under the eaves that is just for these treasures. We put our treasures in it and return them to nature the next time we go out. For instance, if Haley found a huge leaf she couldn’t leave (pun intended), she brings it home and puts in our treasure basket along with Kiley’s rock, Dessa’s feather, and Luke and Jay’s inevitable sticks. The next day, or the next time we take a walk, we each take our treasures out and deposit them somewhere. You can add a rock to the driveway, throw the leaf away, and the boys can add the sticks to their pile up in the trees – where they carefully keep their 50 or so favorite sticks. I tell them these walks are “No Deposit No Return.” If you don’t empty the basket you can’t bring anything home. Do these treasures ever make it indoors? Only if we are making a display and bringing a taste of the outside in.

A nature walk is so much more than science. It is a joyful time, anxieties seem to fall by the wayside and I can focus on my children and delight in the simple things. We find so many things to praise Him for, not only in His creation but for the many blessings in our lives. When I walk outdoors I am not surprised that Jesus went to a mountain to pray. Of course, He was alone and He wasn’t a mother, but I can pray and walk with my children beside me. The reality is if I was only able to pray when I was alone, I wouldn’t pray very often.

Thoreau talked about sauntering. This is a nature walk! Walking with the sole intent being to discover whatever is in front of your eyes that you are usually too busy to see. The sauntering we do brings to our attention “new” wildflowers, a lovely butterfly, or an eagle flying overhead (one time we saw four of them over the lake). Sauntering results in finding beauty in beetles. They are kind of fun to watch but I don’t usually make time to watch. Sauntering results in seeing the things that are around me every day in a new way: the way the rain splashes on the water; the sweet way my seven-year-old says “actually,” the bits of older boy peeking through what my nine-year old does, and the lovely young ladies my girls are becoming. Sauntering is good for the soul: mine and my children’s.

What you see on a natural history walk changes with the seasons. There is always something new. Get outdoors and search out the wonders to be found in plain view!

“Look at the birds of the air, that they do not sow, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not worth much more than they?” Matthew 6:26

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Creation vs. Evolution

In the unending quest of challenging our children to have an answer for those tough questions, I recently came across a "new-to-me" site.
I haven't had the pleasure of perusing all the archives, so I am not stating that I stand behind everything that they have written, but from what I have seen so far, it is fabulous.

Real Science--Are you reading and studying about real science in your homeschool this year? Become informed about the controversy and the arguments, not for the sake of argument but for the sake of giving your children an education whose foundation is truth, not conjecture. Learn some real science and be enlightened to the truth--the whole truth!

They also have a home school corner which a plethora of free resources and downloadable e-books.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Plant and animal cells

There's nothing better than live plant and animal cell animation...go check it out for this week's science memory work. :)

Cells Alive - Plant and animal cell animation

The Biology Corner - plant and animal coloring sheets

A wonderful site for printable worksheets.
Plant and Animal Cell worksheets

Friday, September 18, 2009

Free Lapbooks - Ancient Egypt

For many homeschoolers, we desire to do all the fun, creative hands on projects, but time gets in the way.
A wonderful resource for lapbooks is the Homeschool Share site.
Have fun browsing all the remarkable resources that have been put together through a wealth of creativity.

Free for your use is an Ancient Egypt Unit Study to go along with our studies.

Monday, September 7, 2009

The Euphrates Today

Here is a New York Times article on the current state of the Euphrates River as it shrinks. As we study Africa and the Middle East, I love to show kids interesting real life pictures of the areas as well as just the maps. It takes teaching geography to a new level.

Iraq Suffers as the Euphrates River Dwindles

Friday, September 4, 2009

Making Books with Kids

Susan Gaylord offers an amazing site for making books with children. I just love all the ideas she gives for making books with kids and she has detailed instructions, along with a blog, where she has additional tutorials.
Enjoy some of her free activities below.

Free Activities

Wish Scroll Accordion Book Stick and Elastic Band Book
Step Book Step Book Hot Dog Book
Index Card Accordion Book Who Am I Book Palm Leaf Book

Friday, August 28, 2009

Weather Unit Study for Kids

All About Weather
from BrandenburgStudies

All About WeatherDebbie Brandenburg from BrandenburgStudies is giving away this excellent E-Book, including the Test Booklet and Answer Key!

No matter where you live or who you are, the weather affects your life. From the high humidity and heat indexes, to frozen weather, weather is all around you. In this unit you will learn about:

-What is Weather?
-Weather Basics
-Cloud Formations
-Seasons
-Storms of Every Type

Grab this amazing freebie offer while you can by clicking HERE to go to the download page.

Thank you, Old School House Mag. Friday Freebie

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Ancient Egypt - sites for children

Guardian's Egypt - Hale Bopp Comet over the Pyramids at Giza - Copyright (c) 1997 - Andrew Bayuk, All Rights Reserved

As I am preparing for our Classical Conversations Cycle 1 year to begin. I have found some wonderful Ancient Egypt sites that will be a blast for the kids. I have an entire file that I will slowly be updating to this site, so check back as I have time to upload these resources.

1. Ancient Egypt - Guardian Egypt
An amazing site with everything imaginable about Ancient Egypt.
In the site owner's words, "Now, through the marvel of modern technology, you can visit Egypt, both past and present! You can actually "surf" the ancient world! Here are my Egypt pages which provide great pictures, facts and information about Egypt, and offer many links to Egyptology and Egypt resources throughout the Internet.

2. Tour Egypt - kids on tour in Egypt

Egypt for Kids by Tour Egypt


3. A huge variety of Ancient Egypt printables including lesson plans, acrostic poems. word scrambles, venn diagrams and more.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Free Home Schooling downloads

I know how much we home schoolers love to find free resources all in one place.
My friend, Joy from the Five J's, has a plethora of one stop wonders on her blog.

She has categorized them by subject to meet all your needs.


Make sure you thank her for all her hard work. :)

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Foundations Revisions for Cycle One

This post is specifically for those families taking place in Classical Conversation's Foundations Program.
This is the list of Memory Work revisions that took place when editing Foundations Manual Edition 2 to the newly released edition 3.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Free Unit Study - Book of Virtues

I just got a head's up from HomeschoolFreebieOfTheDay.com
about this amazing resource being offered for free.
The generosity of home school mom, Patty Thompson, is amazing.

This week's Subscriber Exclusive is an outstanding
Unit Study Companion to William Bennett's "The Book of Virtues",
created especially for home schoolers by Patty Thompson.

Each of the ten units in this 992 page study companion
(TOLD you it was HUGE!) covers 10 of the stories/poems/essays
that are included in the Book of Virtues. Each story has
worksheets, notebook pages, vocabulary, character study sheets,
copywork, 1-2 projects (plus a long-term project) and a Lapbook
with an optional unit wrap up activity. And to top it off there's
a full lesson plan for older kids, and a separate one for
primary aged children.

The Book of Virtues Project (at Shriver Academy blog)

Check it out... it is a wonderful character building resource
that can be tweaked and used for all ages. All you need to go
along with it is a copy of Bennett's original "Book of Virtues"... and
that can be found el cheapo - like 99 cents - on ebay, etc.
It is a WONDERFUL book, by the way, and all home school families
ought to have a copy.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Father's Day Coupon Book

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Easter Egg traditions

Confetti-Cascarones – No one is sure if this tradition came from Renaissance Italy or Mexico’s Empress Carlota, but it sure is fun to crack confetti-filled eggshells on the heads of unsuspecting family members. Start saving egg shells a week before Easter so you are sure to have enough. Tap the narrow end gently and break an opening the size of a dime or a nickel. Empty the contents into a bowl to use later and clean the inside of the shells with lightly running water.

Let them dry and decorate them with paint, markers or some traditional egg dyes. When completely dry, use a funnel to fill them with confetti and seal the end with a bit of colored tissue paper, using a brush to paint on watered-down glue. Be sure and have your camera ready to capture the fun this delightful Easter tradition will create as every family member takes a crack at it.

Friday, March 27, 2009

Free Spanish lessons

Since our younger children are enjoying some fun Spanish classes, I knew you would all be interested in this wonderful opportunity.

LearnSpanishToday.com offers 11 free online Spanish lessons called Visual Link Spanish™. These lessons teach beginning sentence structure and conversation in an easy way.

Enjoy this freebie.
(thnx Old Schoolhouse)

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Monthly meal plan

Check out the link for all these recipes and more!

Check out Balancing Beauty and Bedlam for the link to all these recipes and more!

Friday, March 6, 2009

Tradition ideas for St. Patrick's Day


Friday, February 27, 2009

Teachinging Children to pray

Teaching our kids to pray is a very vital part of our parenting. Home schooling and prayer go hand in hand, don't they?
There are many free resources to use when teaching about prayer. It has been a blessing for our family to grow in this area, and hopefully these are a few resources that can help all of us in this process.

Teach Us To Pray has some really cute activities to help reinforce prayer. Here is a tutorial on how to make a Prayer Jar. Make your own Prayer Jigsaw Puzzle, or Scripture Flipper. Here is a huge collection of prayer coloring sheets.
Have you heard of Prepare and Pray? This is a curriculum geared toward teaching real life skills while acknowledging God as the true source of our well being. Here is a sample chapter of the Prepare and Pray Curriculum. They also have a sample chapter available for their Blessed Assurance Curriculum.

Thank you to the Old School House Magazine for providing this info. :)

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Valentine's Day ideas

(Click the sweet girl below to download the hearts of loving kindness tradition detailed below, the love muffin recipe, 10 things I love about you, and directions to make your very own love journal. These will print out ready to give as a sweet little gift, so using cardstock works well.)Hearts of Loving Kindness

Hearts of Loving Kindness – Use pretty hearts during the month of February to teach the value of loving kindness to the loved ones in your life. Find a small box or jar and decorate it (invite your children to help) any way you want: with stickers, artwork, photos or a big red ribbon. Place all of the hearts inside and tell your family members what it’s all about.

Every time you see someone doing something kind for someone else, write their name and what they did on a heart. String it up on a ribbon and hang it in the kitchen or family room for all to see. You can put four to six hearts on a ribbon by cutting a slit at the top and bottom of the heart and slipping each heart up the ribbon and then tie a knot at the top of the heart to hold it in place. The more hearts your family sees dangling, the more they will want to add to the festive display.

You will have plenty of opportunities during the month to talk about how and why we do things for others simply out of the "kindness of our hearts." Make it a family tradition to focus on the value of loving kindness every February and be sure to preserve those precious memories in a Valentine’s Day Book with a photo of family members holding their Hearts of Loving Kindness.

SEE Balancing Beauty and Bedlam for more tradition ideas

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Best ever Spelling Site

This is one of the best spelling sites that I have come across, and it's FREE!!

SPELLING CITY offers you the capability of typing in all of your spelling lists.
It teaches, tests, and has games galore to trick your kids into thinking they are having fun. :)

I use it for my 5 year old with her sight words, and have even insisted that my teen refreshes his spelling with some advanced vocabulary words.

Enjoy - I have made it a regular part of our school day for those times when I just need a little distraction.

*make sure you set up a user account so that you can save all of our spelling lists. Great for weekly review.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Free Art ideas for the kids

If you have a budding artist in your family, then you will love this week's freebies!

Kinder Art
is the place to go when looking for ways to teach art to your kids.
You can choose from
Art History and Appreciation, painting lessons, artistic snacks, and many others! All of these free lessons have step by step instructions for the youngest child in your home to the oldest.

Thank you Homeschool Magazine for pointing me to this resource.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Largest full moon of 2009 this weekend

NASA Science News for January 8, 2009

The biggest full Moon of 2009 is coming this weekend. It's a 'perigee Moon' as much as 30% brighter than lesser Moons we'll see in the months ahead. Get ready for moonlight!
FULL STORY CLICK HERE

Check out our RSS feed at http://science. nasa.gov/ rss.xml!

Thursday, January 8, 2009

The Atoms Family - activites/song

Many of you asked for the words to the song that I sang on Atoms ("family").
This site has some great print offs and activities that go along with our Physical Science subject matter.

The Atoms Family activities

Atoms Family
I used this worksheet (created by Kathleen Crawford, 1994)
to introduce atoms to my students. It really makes it easier for the students to remember the charges of protons, neutrons & electrons and where they are located in the atom. The kids also have fun singing "The Atoms Family." :)


I can't wait to see which precious parent will delight us with this wonderful snack creation!

Atoms Family Atomic Math Challenge
Atoms Family Challenge
This worksheet (created by Kathleen Crawford, 1994) builds on the atoms family album. This has the students determine the number of protons, neutrons, and electrons in various elements. It's fairly simple but the kids really get the hang of it!

EDIBLE ATOM snack idea:
Printable Version for your convenience!

Supplies:
Lots of candy...
Large sugar cookies, M&M's, skittles, marshmallows, peanut butter chips, chocolate chips, sprinkles, frosting, popcorn, raisins, jelly beans, plates, napkins, milk (optional)etc.

Set the candy in bowls at different stations in your room or on each lab table. The object of this lab is for students to choose an element from the periodic table and design the atom complete with protons, neutrons, electrons and if you get really crazy you can have them add mesons, quarks and gluons. I found that if you limit them to any element with an atomic number of 8 or less it makes the lab work much smoother.

Before the student atom creation can be eaten, the student must make a labeled drawing of their atom and give all information of the element on a 3x5 index card. (Atomic Number, Atomic Mass, Symbol, Element Name, 1 use for the element, metal, non-metal, or metalloid) After you check that all info is correct... then it's eat 'em up time.

My kids loved this lesson. They never had so much fun learning about atoms and elements. You could also do this type of lesson with molecules.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Start the New Year Right!

The Year in Review.  Each year is filled with love, laughter, triumphs and disappointments. This tradition helps you create a collection of important events, memories and experiences to share as this year comes to an end and a new one begins. Purchase a scrapbook and acid-free glue or photo corners. Fill the book with photos, stories and memorabilia. Focus on situations in which family members or friends persevered against obstacles or challenges, achieved goals and followed dreams. Set aside a page for each member of your family to write their reflections and resolutions for the New Year. In the end you will have a wonderful keepsake and a beautiful record of a year well spent.