Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Friday, November 14, 2014

Week 9: Pilgrims

We took last week off of school as a chance to regroup. Not much regrouping was done and I was kind of a homeschooling failure this week. I decided that working up to Thanksgiving, we're going to do three units: Pilgrims, Indians, and Turkeys. This week was Pilgrims. I didn't do nearly enough prep work, so this is what we ended up with on the fly:

Literature
I usually save literature until the end of the week, but Lucy doesn't really know the story of the first Thanksgiving, so we started out with this book:
The First Thanksgiving by Linda Hayward
Math
I found this cute printable and decided it was time to start working on ten frames with Lucy. We've never tried them before, but we jumped right in and she did great! I've been trying to think of a good way to reinforce the teen numbers and this fit the bill. There were two sets of cards: the marked ten frames and a number. She counted the dots in the ten frame and matched it with the number.



We also did a pilgrim puzzle from this free download to review the skip counting we learned two weeks ago. And finally, we made our own Mayflowers out of tin foil and put them in the bath tub ocean. I gave Lucy a jar full of pennies and told her to pretend the pennies were Pilgrims. We learned that there were 102 Pilgrims on the Mayflower, so I told her to see if she could fit 102 pennies in her boat. Her first boat capsized within seconds, so I showed her how the one I made with higher walls kept the water out better. So she tried again, and started counting pennies as she threw them in the boat. She made it to 41 before the boat went under.
I could not get a good picture of this whole process. Haha.
Alphabet Activities
I severely lacked in creativity and printed off a few worksheets from this printable pack.

I also pulled a couple of pages out of a workbook I had laying around, not really sure if Lucy would be interested/ready to do it, but she did really well!

Crafts
And here's my super creative craft of the week:
A strangely orange Pilgrim! Haha. I combined yellow, red, and white to try and get that lovely flesh-color, but apparently failed. Inspired by this.

Field Trip
The one fun thing we did was a spontaneous field trip to Presley's house. My friend Kelly is homeschooling her daughter Presley, who is Lucy's age, so we decided to get together and re-enact the story of the first Thanksgiving. It was hilarious and adorable. Kelly has the pictures on her phone, though, so you're just going to have to take my word for it.

First, we made a pilgrim hat and bonnet for the girls to wear (which stayed on their heads for about four seconds). Then we talked about why they wanted to leave England and how crowded and awful the long boat ride was. To illustrate how crowded it was we put Presley, Lucy, and both of the little sisters in one laundry basket. Haha. Then we talked about the gross food the Pilgrims had to eat: hardtack, smoked meat, and moldy cheese. We gave the girls crackers, salami and [non-moldy] cheese to eat, and emphasized how sick they would get of eating the same things for 66 days! We also discussed how boring it must have been on the ship with no toys, and how the Pilgrim kids used to sing songs to pass the time. I asked the girls if they wanted to sing a song and they decided on "Let it Go." Lol. So the girls and both us moms belted out "Let it Go." Finally, our ship made it to land and we talked about how the Pilgrims had to work so hard building their houses, and only took breaks on Sundays to worship God. We pretended to build our houses, then stopped to sing Jesus loves me, then went right back to building.

We discussed the many hardships the Pilgrims faced: sickness, lack of shelter, lack of food, and fear of the Indians. But then we talked about Samoset and Squanto and how they proved that the Indians weren't scary at all, but rather wanted to be their friends! At this point, we made Indian vests out of paper bags and headdresses out of construction paper.
My stellar photography skills back in action.
Finally, we talked about how the Indians saved the Pilgrims' lives by helping them, and how the Pilgrims wanted to thank them - and God, so they had a big feast. At which point we ate macaroni and cheese and called our lesson complete! Thanks Kelly for inviting us over!

P.S. Our entire lesson was based around this book:
If You Sailed on the Mayflower in 1620
It got rave reviews on Pinterest, so I ordered it from the library. I was surprised to see how incredibly long it was. I didn't actually read it to Lucy. I just read it myself to refresh my memory and have a jumping off point.

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Week 7 Recap: Spiders!

In the spirit of Halloween, we spent last week studying spiders. I'm starting to get a little lackadaisical with school, as you'll notice in this recap. We're going to do a pumpkin theme next week, but then I think we're going to take a week off. I need to regroup and get excited again. It's starting to get boring - which isn't good for me or Lucy. Anyway, here are our spider activities:

We started the week by reading some spider facts via this free printable:

Alphabet Activities
I introduced word families for the first time, now that we know the vowels. I decided to pick a consonant and then work on all the blends we could make with it. We did "t" so our blends were -at, -et, -it, -ot, ut. I found this great idea on Pinterest to make a word family spider. Lucy amazed me with how well she caught on. I thought about writing the "at" part on each of the legs, but she ended up writing each word by herself without a complaint! (I didn't want to overwhelm her on the first day, so we only did the "-at" blend.)

At first, I just asked her to think of some -at words, and she came up with a few. After she couldn't think of anymore, we got out the alphabet cards and went through them one by one to see if we could make words. "Bat: word! Cat: word! Dat: not a word." I didn't count ahead of time, but it worked perfectly that we came up with 8 words for the spider's 8 legs. (I know vat is a word, but I didn't think Lucy would recognize it. ;-) )


Later in the week, to reiterate the blends/word families, we got out the Scrabble tiles to make some words. I searched the Teachers Pay Teachers website for free word family worksheets and found these ones. The pictures were admittedly tricky. I had to tell Lucy what most of them were. And I think there was a mistake on one of the sheets, but that's what I get for being cheap. ;-)
The mistake. They're all supposed to be "ut" words, but that last one has got to be "bus."
She loved this activity and really sounded out each letter to make the words. 
Lena loved it too! 
Math
I saw this little diagram on Pinterest and knew I could turn it into a spider activity:
I loved the idea of seeing how many ways we can get to 8, and identifying patterns in addition. So we made another spider and started adding:
In case you can't tell, I wrote the first number and the plus sign, and Lucy filled in the number we needed to get to 8.
She did great with the first few (1+7, 2+6), but started to get confused around 3,4,5(I had her fix the 3 and 4 after I took the picture.) and then took off again with 6,7, and 8. (She surprised me with her knowledge of  0, although I know she's seen the Curious George episode about 0 roughly 16,000 times.) And it didn't really work to include the equal sign once we got to the right side of the spider. I didn't think ahead enough. Haha.

We also did a little spider graphing. I found a packet of multi-colored spider rings for $1 in the dollar bins at Target. There are the same amount of each color, so I just hid a few of each color before giving them to Lucy, so our chart would show some variation. I couldn't find a printable graph that was quite what I was looking for, so I made a very rough one in Excel. Lucy counted the spiders, then filled in the appropriate number for each color.
I forgot there were four colors when I made the graph, so I drew in another column. Haha. We're high tech around here.
We talked about which color had the most and which had the least. Then we made a graph out of the spiders themselves for another visual:

Literature
I had a surprisingly difficult time find books about spiders at the library, so we ended up just reading Eric Carle's classic, The Very Busy Spider. My super-inspired, creative craft was to punch some holes in a paper plate and give Lucy a skein of yarn to thread through it. We added one of the spider rings at the end.

I totally flaked on sight words for the week. She did a couple sight word worksheets, but that was it. Oops! And, in case you've been wondering, I haven't totally dropped Bible lessons from our curriculum. I've just decided to use her Cubbies lessons instead of coming up with my own thing. We do a lesson, she learns a verse, and there's usually one other hands-on activity to go along with it. Perfect!

Friday, October 17, 2014

Literature: Leaf Books and Crafts

We finished up our fall unit with a few books about leaves.

There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed Some Leaves by Lucille Colandro
Who Loves the Fall by Bob Raczka
Fall Leaf Project by Margaret McNamara 
Then we did one of Lucy's favorite crafts: watercolor coffee filters. I pre-cut some coffee filters into leaf shapes, then told Lucy to go crazy with red, yellow, and orange markers. We've done this coffee filter craft a bunch of times before with a spray bottle, but today we tried something new and got the medicine dropper out. 
Lucy loved using the dropper.
The key to this craft is to color it thoroughly with marker. The one in the picture above is one I did. Lucy just scribbles and the colors don't come through as vibrantly.

We'll hang them in the window once they dry. Aren't they pretty?
After we did that project, I made Lucy write her vowels and numbers 1-5, then we went outside to collect some real leaves:
It was windy. Lol.
We couldn't do a leaf unit without leaf rubbings! Lucy did not get the concept of holding the crayon on its side. Can you tell which ones I did and which ones she did? ;-)
Sorry, that's a terrible photo.
And then she glued a bunch of leaves on a paper:

Fall/leaf unit complete! Next up: spiders!

Friday, October 10, 2014

Week 5 Recap: Monster Mania!

Letter: o
Number: 5
Sight Words: the, and, in
Verse: "While we were still sinners, Christ died for us." (Romans 5:8)

Alphabet Activities
I made these adorable monsters, then had Lucy draw an "o" mouth on each of them. We pretended that the monsters were screaming "ahhhh!" like the sound "o" makes. Lucy thought my drawings were hilarious and was much more willing to write an "o" when it was disguised as a monster mouth instead of a plain ol' letter o.

Math
We didn't do much for math this week. Just a number 5 worksheet, and this "roll-a-monster" dice game. I don't think Lucy learned much, but she had fun. :-)
Literature
Lucky for me, our library has a display of monster books out right now in anticipation of Halloween, so I just picked a bunch that I thought Lucy would enjoy. Here's what we ended up with:
Creepy Monsters, Sleepy Monsters by Jane Yolen
Monsters Munch Lunch by Abigail Tabby
Big Monster, Little Monster by Mary Tillworth
Go to Bed, Monster! by Natasha Wing - This one was our favorite because the little girl's name is Lucy. And there's a part in the story where the monster has to go potty. Lucy is obsessed with all things potty-related. And potty has a short o in it! ;-)

Our literature activity was making monster stomping feet. Lucy painted a couple empty tissue boxes on Tuesday, then we added eyes and teeth on Wednesday.

Sight Word Activities
We combined our Bible lesson with our sight word activity this week. We read the story of Jesus' temptation in our Jesus Storybook Bible, then talked about how Satan is the worst monster of all. But I assured Lucy that someday Jesus is going to stomp Satan's head (Genesis 3:15), and we were going to pretend to stomp him today too. I made a bunch of mean monsters with sight words on them, then she put on her monster stomping feet and stomped the words as I called them out.

Next week: All things fall!

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Week One Lesson Plans

I have written and re-written these plans like 15 times. But I think this is what I've settled on for our first week of homeschool! It's going to be long. Prepare yourself. (And I did a bunch of copying and pasting from a Word document, so the spacing is kind of messed up. Sorry.)

We're going to start the day after Labor Day when all the public schools start, so our first week is actually shortened. I figure that's a good way to ease into it anyway. To see a more detailed layout of our daily schedule, read my entry here.

Weekly Themes
Letter: Ii (We're just going to focus on the short i sound for now - and we're starting with "i" per Kelly's Abeka curriculum.)
Number: 1
Sight Words: the, and, it
Verse: "Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you. He is Christ the Lord." (Luke 2:11 NIRV)

We will review all of the above every morning during circle time.

Tuesday
Alphabet Activity: Igloo match-up, scavenger hunt style
 - I haven't totally figured out the logistics of this yet. I want to hide lowercase letters on "blocks of ice" around the house, then have Lucy match them with uppercase letters on the igloo. Kind of like this:
Picture credit


"I" worksheet from book
 - One of my focuses for this year is to get Lucy to write her letters correctly. I bought some cheap-o letter workbooks from Dollar Tree that have a page for every letter that we'll be working on. 
Link - but don't pay Amazon prices. Go to Dollar Tree and spend $1!
Daily letter, number, sight word work
- I bought "manuscript paper" from Dollar Tree. Every day Lucy's going to write our letter of the week, number of the week and sight words of the week. 

Bible Lesson: Jesus is Born
 - We're doing the New Testament through the Jesus Storybook Bible, which starts with the Christmas story! Haha. We've read this one a few times before, so we're taking a new approach. Instead of focusing on the fact that Jesus came to earth as a baby, we're focusing on why Jesus came to earth. Here's the little blip I wrote that I'll do before we read the Bible story. It doubles as a review of the Old Testament stories we did last year.

- Craft: "Jesus is My Super Hero" cape.
  - We're going to use one of Justin's old t-shirts to make this no-sew cape. I found a reverse clip of a "Super-J" here. I originally planned on printing it on iron-on transfer paper and ironing it to the cape. But transfer paper costs more than I want to pay, so I think I might just make my own stencil for Lucy to paint. That'll be more hands-on for her anyway, since she can't really iron. 

Wednesday
Wednesday is usually going to be our day off. We have Storytime at the library in the morning and Lucy's going to start going to Awana on Wednesday evenings. But since we already have Monday off this week, we're just going to do a shortened day on Wednesday. We'll skip the alphabet activities/writing and just work on one of our "specials" for the week:

Senses: I'm going to find stuff for Lucy to touch, taste, smell, etc. 

-        Touch (blindfolded)
o       What is it?
o       What does it feel like? Hot, cold, wet, sticky, scratchy, smooth?
o       Ice, others – point out which one starts with i
-          Taste
o       Sweet: ice cream
o       Sour: lemon
o       Salty: pickle
o       Bitter: any suggestions that won't totally make Lucy gag?
o       Make chart, point out which word starts with i 
-          Smell (blindfolded)
o       Can you identify the smells?
o       Popcorn, soap, coffee, crayons, play-dough, something that starts with i?
-          Sound
o       Loud, quiet, high, low

-          Sight (not totally sure what to do for this one)


Thursday 
Math Activities:  Inches (because it starts with the letter "i")
   -   Measure stuff, write down how long it is in inches: “The table is ____ __nches long.”
Number “1” worksheet from our math workbook.
Link - again, don't buy this on Amazon. I got it at Sparta Variety for $2.99
Daily letter, number, sight word work

Literature
-          Curious George Builds an Igloo
o       Igloo building


o       Point out sight words in book 

Friday
Alphabet Activity
-          Alphabet/sight word Bingo
This is from Oriental Trading, but I'm going to make my own - mostly with lowercase letters. Plus the 3 sight words we learned this week. 

Sight word worksheets (from Pinterest)
This packet is $5. Not sure if I'm going to spring for it or just try to make my own.
*Edited to add: I found free worksheets here!*

Daily letter, number, sight word work

Put the sight words we learned on the word-a-pillar:
Source

Special: Senses
-          Sucker taste test: I found an idea on Pinterest that taste tested ice cream. But Lucy's not enough of a ice cream connoisseur to taste differences. Plus, ice cream is expensive! So we're going to do it with dum-dum suckers. Lucy definitely knows her sucker flavors. Ha.
Source
-          Read a book about senses
Link
-         Make a booklet like this:
Source

As of now, I'm not planning based on themes. I'm working off the week's letter and kind of
doing what I want for math and specials. But I'm definitely open to change! We'll see how the first week goes!