Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Combining two kids to one MBTP level

My son reads like a pro.  My daughter just this week learned to sound out "cat". (Go, Miss L!)  So they aren't really at the same level, but I am using the same "level" of MBTP curriculum for both kids.  Right now, they are both in the 5-7 level.  I alluded to this in a previous post, but I tried for a while having my son in the 6-8 and my daughter in the 5-7, and it was too much for me.  The two levels didn't mesh in content very well, and I had trouble doing the work for both of them while they were both in that sadly-short-attention-span window each day.  Plus, we were new to homeschooling at the time. I probably should have allowed my son to "de-school" for a while after the unhappy kindergarten experience, but I was high-strung about things.  And probably my daughter just wasn't ready yet.  So we took a break of many months, during which I did a lot of research into homeschooling methods and curricula and my kids did Time4Learning on the computer.  We all relaxed during that period, and eventually the kids became less-than-enthralled with the computerized options.  So one day, I pulled out the MBTP again, with both kids doing the same lesson just to see how it would go. 

It worked!  The attention span window was open long enough to also do math or one other morning thing, and they were extra engaged because they like each other's company and can share ideas. I am lucky that the two of them are less than two years apart in age, that helps, but because the 7-year-old is clearly "gifted" and advanced in reading well beyond his grade (but a reluctant writer) and the 5-year-old is only now to the Hop on Pop stage of reading, so I was concerned I couldn't make it work as the were too far apart in skills. 

But I needn't have worried.  To bring the MBTP 5-7 up to my 7-year-old son, it is a simple matter to give him the "advanced" options provided in the curriculum, ask him for more writing, more advanced ideas, and give him more advanced books that go along with each lesson.  I usually do it on the fly.   My 5-year-old daughter gets the recommended materials and the basic options in the curriculum.  For example, in the social studies unit we are currently working through, which frequently asks for the child to look through internet links or geography books for pictures of how different people live, eat, and play, I put two or three applicable books of complementary content but different level on the table between them.  Almost always, they pick they book most appropriate for their own level: my son usually prefers this DK Geography of the World, and my daughter usually goes for the old classic, People by Peter Spier. 

I won't say that this method of combining will work for them forever, but because my daughter's reading is only getting better, I think eventually it might actually be easier.  We'll see.  Yes, my son often knows the answers to the questions before I ask them, but I think that would be true of almost any curriculum.  Because MBTP is not our only curriculum choice, he is stretched intellectually in other subjects.  Meanwhile,  MBTP fills in gaps I would not have noticed on my own, and is helping him make connections I might not have thought. 

Anyway.  Back to nuts and bolts.  Two kids, one level, this is what it looks like when they are each doing a "final project" on the same topic. 





The 5-year-old gets more verbal guidance.  The 7-year-old did more work with the presentation materials and more independently.  Those papers on the wall, hard to read in the videos, are his words dictated to me with his own drawings below to illustrate the concepts. 

I know MBTP is not for everyone. Yes, it's often discussing simple things that my kids already understand.  But, what's key for me, is that it is helping cement their understanding and draw connections to other parts of life while gently encouraging a variety of writing and expression skills.  Drills and workborks, while they have their place (for us, that place is just math and phonics) are not happy ways for us to develop skills.  And, it is not too difficult for me to implement and the kids enjoy it. That's as much as I can ask for.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

When left to their own devices

During the kids' copious free time, often they choose to play Lego and/or Playmobil.  Sometimes they read books.  Frequently they choose that old standby, run in circles while screaming.

But sometimes they sit quietly and tell each other stories. 



All together, now:

Awwww.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Fibonacci Spirals in the Woods

A few weeks ago I ran across the wonderful videos by Vi Hart combining mathematics with doodles and plants and flowers.  These start by beautifully demonstrating how many plants and flowers grow in spiral forms that follow the Fibonacci series of numbers (you remember, in which each number in the series is the sum of the two previous-- 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, etc.)  Part 1 is below. 


This captured my imagination. So during one of the sunbreaks, the kids and I watched this again, then headed out to the trails in the woods out the back, to see if we could find any spirals.  Being mid-winter, it's not the best time to go looking, but we did find cones from a Douglas Fir and some kind of lonely pine tree (we forgot the identification books in our haste to get outside). 


Then, we brought the cones inside and got to counting. 



Like Vi Hart, we used different colors to help keep track of the rows of spirals.  Glitter glue was involved. 


And it worked!  For both types of cones, Fibonacci numbers represent!




If/when we try this again in the spring or summer, I'm going to make sure we have *fresh* tubes of glitter glue on hand, and find larger cones or flowers to count.  These little guys were still tight and tiny.  Definitely a fun diversion, though!

Miss L just saw the video screen again over my shoulder as I type this and asked to watch it again.  So, until next time...


Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Sensory Experiences

Someday, I'll need to do a post about our curriculum choices, but one of the cornerstones of what we use now is Moving Beyond the Page (MBTP). After trying different levels and permutations of how to make it work for our family, what seems to be working now is using the level appropriate for my younger child (right now, the 5-7) with both kids, but and enriching and supplementing as we go to make it more difficult for the older as well.  He's the trickier one anyway, I haven't found any curriculum that will work for him without modification, so I might as well stick with what *I* like for now and just find the way to use it with him. 

Anyway, we're just wrapping up a MBTP unit on the senses (Level 5-7, Concept 2, Unit 2).  This has been great fun, with lots of little projects and experiments using sight, sound, touch, smell, and taste.    Often, several at once. 

Or taking some away.


The kids were blindfolded so often in these lessons, to try tasting things they couldn't see, or walk down the hallway using only touch, or to identify their location in the house using only sound, that I think those bandannas have new permanent creases.


One of Big K's favorite experiments was one in which I (unbeknownst to him) poured a small amount of clear soda into several glasses, then added a drop of food color to each glass, making the soda in each glass a different color.  The kids then tasted each one, we wrote down their impressions of the flavor in each glass, then blindfolded them and had them taste each glass again.  Of course, the answers were very different this time.  The objective--teaching the kids that sometimes your senses can trick other senses, came through loud and clear and was definitely a "lightbulb moment".

Another thing I liked about this unit was the frequent suggestions to go outside and practice using your senses outdoors.  Being mid-winter, we're often reluctant to go outside in the cold and the damp, but the recent snowfall made for some very interesting sensory observations!  For Miss L, yes, all of the 5 senses were represented.


Then, the snow melted.  Mud, everywhere.  We're having a bit of a run of sun this week, a very different but welcome sensory experience! 


The next unit, which we will start in a day or two, is "We're the Same, We're Different" and explores what makes people similar and different, both nearby and different cultures.  Looking forward to it!

Monday, February 6, 2012

Washington State Geology - Resources for Homeschoolers

It's true for any location, in addition to selections from the below list, you and yours need a rock hammer and a hand lens to really get into geology.  And most importantly, get outside!  Indoor learning is great too, but it is nothing without the context. 

Jessica's list of Washington State Geology resources for homeschoolers:

Books
General geology  for the youngers:
·    Magic School Bus Inside the Earth by Joanna Cole
·    Any rock/mineral guidebooks with nice pictures (like Eyewitness books, Smithsonian Handbooks, DK Pockets). Rocks and minerals resource recommendations will be the subject of a future book list.
Regional geology, field trip ideas, and out and about information, appropriate for all ages:
·    Geology of the Pacific Northwest by Cynthia Brown (great for late elementary!)
·    Hiking Washington’s Geology by Babcock and Carson
·    Roadside Geology of Washington by David Alt
·    Gem Trails of Washington by Garrett Romaine
Further regional geology overviews for high school/adult:
·    Restless Northwest: A Geological Story by Hill Williams
·    Geology of National Parks by Harris and Tuttle.  Fairly technical and pricey, it includes sections on North Cascades, Olympic, and Rainier National Parks as well as many, many others across the USA. This one I always consult before planning a trip.
Specific topics for the intrigued:
· Channeled Scablands and Ice Age Flooding
Cataclysms on the Columbia by Allen, Burns, and Sargent
· North Cascades
Geology of the North Cascades by Tabor and Haugerud
· Mt. Rainier
· Mt. St. Helens
Several great books listed in my Eruptions book list

Web links

TV Shows/DVDs, most available through Netflix or Library
·    Cash and Treasures with Kirsten Gum A Travel Channel series on hunting for gems , now off the air.  A few episodes took place in Washington.
·    How the Earth Was Made  Great documentary series from History Channel.  Season 2 Ep 10 is Mt. St. Helens.
·    Mystery of the Megaflood: Nova  Describes the Channeled Scablands of Eastern Washington and the fascinating story of J. Harlan Bretz.

Saturday, February 4, 2012

A month of Vikings

Yesterday, we wrapped up our informal history study of the Vikings.  I think the kids learned a lot over the last month, from mythology to longships to trade routes. 

We started by putting Viking times in context by browsing through A Street Through Time once more, but our main "spines" were read-alouds of a few pages at a time from Eyewitness Viking and Usborne Viking World.
 



Big K also read Time Warp Trio: Viking It and Liking It and Horrible Histories' Vicious Vikings while the Beena really enjoyed browsing the Viking section of Usborne Time Traveler.  Early on we read a simple version of Beowulf and many tales of Norse Mythology from the wonderful D'Aulaire Book.  The kids, they do love their monsters.  We finished up by reading Harald the Ruthless.  


I like to tie subjects together whenever possible, so along the way, not long after our visit to the aquarium, we folded in some science by reading The Cod's Tale (fabulous book, like all of Mark Kurlansky's books) which has several pages about the Viking use of dried cod, which in part allowed them to sail long distances and settle briefly in North America.  A few informal and impromptu art projects were generated from The Story of the Vikings (Dover Coloring Book) and Viking Designs (Dover Clip Art). 


And because I like to engage in what the kids are studying too, I read A Viking Voyage: In Which an Unlikely Crew of Adventurers Attempts an Epic Journey to the New World and The Far Traveler: Voyages of a Viking Woman

Next week we'll segue into expanded medieval study, which I think will take a couple months.  I'm drowning in options planning this one, rather than the relatively sparse pickings for kids' books on Vikings.  Thinking to start next week by reading about the Silk Road, linking the Vikings with Constantinople and on to other parts of the then-known world, then circling back to a few pages in the Usborne World History Encyclopedia to set the scene before diving into the era of castles and knights with both feet.  Here we go!

Friday, January 27, 2012

Lego Man in Space



Just showed this to the K-man. I think his minifigures should probably beware.