Archive for October, 2009
Posted on October 30, 2009 - by Kay
Year 1: Week 9
(October 26 – October 30, 2009)
Our school week will see the heavier loads on Tuesdays and Thursdays, as those are the days that ds is at Mother’s Day Out so that dd and I have less interruptions. Each activity is designed to take only 10-15 minutes at the most as this is one of the defining characteristics of a Charlotte Mason approach to education.
*Please feel free to leave your comments or questions below. I always love learning from other people!*
- Literature – Free Reading:
Swimmy, by Leo Leonni.
We love Leonni books, and this is no exception. Kate was really intrigued by the illustration style – he used sponges cut in different shapes to paint with. Would be great to do a craft with sponge painting along with this book!
- Here’s where I tell you one of the things that I love about homeschooling…
FLEXIBILITY.
It turns out that we had company coming over this week and we REALLY needed a solid day of cleaning to make the house presentable again. So, instead of stressing about school today and trying to figure out how to fit in the ‘normal’ schoolwork with a full day of cleaning, I decided to put off until Thursday all of our ‘formal’ schoolwork and just allow today to be a day of learning about how to clean a house. Kate was a real trooper and really did help most of the day, doing dishes, picking up toys, and putting away laundry. The way I see it, she will be living on her own someday and need to have her own cleaning skills honed by then.
So, today, was one of those days… - Literature – Free Reading: Nobody Laughs at a Lion, by Paul Bright and Matt Buckingham. (Really cute book about a lion trying to find what he’s best at. Great way to teach that we all have unique strengths and differences and that just because someone might be better than us in one area, doesn’t mean we don’t have our own unique thing, too.)
- Science: Watch Sid the Science Kid: The Bug Club DVD during nap time.
- Literature – Free Reading:
Mars Needs Moms, by Berkeley Breathed.
Do any little children truly appreciate their mothers? This book reminds us all what moms are really good at and why we should appreciate what we have. Because on Mars, they don’t have Moms, they grow like potatoes from the ground… So sweet.
- To Start: Pledge/Calendar/Weather
- Reading Log: We’ve started a reading program called Book It!, where Kate sets a monthly goal of how much she wants to read (either pages, time, or number of books). At the end of the month, if she’s reached her goal, she gets a coupon to Pizza Hut for a free personal sized pizza. She’s set a goal for November of 20 non-school books.
- Memory Work: “Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.”Phillipians 4:8 (NLT)
- Bible: Adam and Eve’s First Sunset, by Sandy Eisenberg Sasso.
- Literature: “The Farmer and the Stork”, from Aesop’s Fables (Milo Winter Edition).
- Geography:
- Chapter 8 of Paddle to the Sea, by Holling C. Holling.
- Fill in another square of our Paddle to the Sea Story Board with a picture depicting this chapter and a one sentence summary on the back.
- Natural History: A Tree is Nice, by Janice May Udry.
- Complete “How We Use Trees” mini-book.
- Discuss and diagram the Oxygen–>Carbon Dioxide Cycle between plants and animals.
- Literature: “How the Rhinoceros Got His Skin” from Just So Stories, by Rudyard Kipling.
- Foreign Language: Watch Signing Time!: My Favorite Things DVD during nap time.
- Literature – Free Reading:
Tortoise and the Hare Race Again, by Dan Bernstein.
“Ever since the lazy hare lost The Great Race, he has had trouble getting any kind of respect… Meanwhile, the champion tortoise is sorry he ever beat the hare. He can’t stand all the attention, and wants to go back to his quiet life at the shell station… This hilarious send-up of Aesop’s fable is filled with high jinks and pun fun.”
Posted on October 23, 2009 - by Kay
Year 1: Week 8
(October 19 – October 23, 2009)
Our school week will see the heavier loads on Tuesdays and Thursdays, as those are the days that ds is at Mother’s Day Out so that dd and I have less interruptions. Each activity is designed to take only 10-15 minutes at the most as this is one of the defining characteristics of a Charlotte Mason approach to education.
*Please feel free to leave your comments or questions below. I always love learning from other people!*
- Literature – Free Reading: Old Macdonald Had An Apartment House, by Judi Barrett. (Cute story about Old MacDonald as the Super of an apartment building. As his tenants move out, he uses their old apartments to plant vegetables. Great use of imagination as the carrots grow down through the ceiling of the apartment below, etc…)
- To Start: Pledge/Calendar/Weather
- Natural History: Record our observations of the Monarch caterpillars we’re rearing.
- Memory Work: “Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.” Phillipians 4:8 (NLT)
- Nature Study: We are starting a tree lapbook and will work on it a little bit at a time over the next 2-4 weeks. If you’d like to know more, check out my post about lapbooking.
- Go to a local park with lots of different kinds of trees.
- Pick out 3 trees to observe more closely.
- Using one of these blank mini-books, make a bark rubbing.
- Then collect 1-2 leaves from that same tree to paste onto another flap of the same book. Or make a leaf rubbing (same technique as a bark rubbing above).
- Draw a picture of the tree on a third flap of the same book.
- Optional: Collect or draw a seed from the same tree. You can use this “Tree I.D.” book which has a flap for seeds included.
- Using those clues collected above, try to identify that tree.
- Repeat the same steps above for the other 2 trees you’ve chosen to observe.
- Read The Oak Inside the Acorn, by Max Lucado. This book is a beautiful story that incorporates the story of a little girl growing up into the life cycle of an oak tree.
- Fill in the “Life Cycle of an Oak Tree” mini-book.
- Collect acorns for our Fall Centerpiece for the dining table.
- Learn about Conifers and Broad-Leaved (deciduous) trees. We are using Tell Me, Tree: All About Trees for Kids, by Gail Gibbons.
- Add definitions to “Vocabulary” accordion book.
- Complete “Types of Trees” flap book.
- Add information we’ve learned so far about the differences and similarities of coniferous and deciduous trees to the “Comparing Trees” venn diagram.
- Pick out 3 trees to observe more closely.
- Breath by: J. Daniel Beaudry
Tree, gather up my thoughts
like the clouds in your branches.
Draw up my soul
like the waters in your root.In the arteries of your trunk
bring me together.
Through your leaves
breathe out the sky.
- Phonics – Additional Reading: NASCAR ABCs, by Paul Dubois Jacobs and Jennifer Swender. (Most ABC books aren’t all that great, but this one was perfect for my 4yo ds who loves race cars! It didn’t try to dumb all the words down, but used real terms (with a glossary at the back for those of us who didn’t know them all). Fun book!)
- To Start: Pledge/Calendar/Weather
- Natural History: Record our observations of the Monarch caterpillars we’re rearing.
- Memory Work: “Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.”Phillipians 4:8 (NLT)
- Bible: “The Good Shepherd” (Psalm 23), from The Jesus Storybook Bible, by Sally Lloyd-Jones, pgs 130-135.
- Literature: “The Gnat and the Bull”, from Aesop’s Fables (Milo Winter Edition).
- Literature: “The Plane Tree”, from Aesop’s Fables (Milo Winter Edition).
- History:
- “Cincinnatus”, from Fifty Famous Stories Retold, by James Baldwin.
- Add this story to the timeline in our Book of Centuries.
- Math: Place Value Abacus Chips Lesson from 100 Best Ideas for Primary Math, by Holly Sar Dye, M.A.
- Geography:
- Chapter 6 of Paddle to the Sea, by Holling C. Holling.
- Fill in another square of our Paddle to the Sea Story Board with a picture depicting this chapter and a one sentence summary on the back.
- Natural History: “Reddy Fox’s Sudden Engagement”, from Animal Tales, by Thornton Burgess. (during Tea Time)
- Literature – Free Reading: Elmer and the Lost Teddy, by David McKee. While we love Elmer stories – Elmer is a special multi-colored elephant that stands out amongst all his other elephant friends – this one wasn’t really our favorite.
Posted on October 15, 2009 - by Kay
Year 1: Week 7
(October 12 – October 16, 2009)
Our school week will see the heavier loads on Tuesdays and Thursdays, as those are the days that ds is at Mother’s Day Out so that dd and I have less interruptions. Each activity is designed to take only 10-15 minutes at the most as this is one of the defining characteristics of a Charlotte Mason approach to education.
*Please feel free to leave your comments or questions below. I always love learning from other people!*
- Music Appreciation – Free Reading: Zin! Zin! Zin! a Violin, by Lloyd Moss. (Another Caldecott Winner – we seem to be on a kick with those lately. This one is about the different instruments of the orchestra – beautifully descriptive phrases about each highlighted instrument makes you almost hear the instrument. Great introduction to the different sections of the orchestra.)
- To Start: Pledge/Calendar/Weather
- Natural History: Record our observations of the Monarch caterpillars we’re rearing.
- Memory Work: “Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.” Phillipians 4:8 (NLT)
- Bible: “The Young Hero and the Horrible Giant” (David and Goliath), from The Jesus Storybook Bible, by Sally Lloyd-Jones, pgs 122-129.
- Phonics: Review Short Vowel Sounds, idea from Better Phonics and Beyond in 5 Minutes a Day, by Lisa Deters, pg 9.
- Fill in the vowel sound for each of the following words: “a” words: b_t, t_p, p_n; “e” words: h_n, n_t, b_lt; “i” words: w_n, p_g, sw_m; “o” words: d_g, kn_ck, p_t; “u” words: c_b, r_n, t_b
- Read the words aloud being to sure to correctly pronounce the short vowel.
- Place each complete word in a chart under the correct category of “things you can do”, “kinds of animals”, and “things you can use”. Can any words be used in more than one column?
- World History:
- “How Caligula Conquered Britain”, from Our Island Story
- Add this story to the timeline in our Book of Centuries.
- Literature: “The Lion and the Mouse”, Aesop’s Fables (Milo Winter Edition).(Also found online here.)
- Math: Place Value – watch this video, then do pg 184 in Brain Quest Grade 1 Workbook, by Lisa Trumbauer.
- Geography:
- Chapter 6 of Paddle to the Sea, by Holling C. Holling.
- Fill in another square of our Paddle to the Sea Story Board with a picture depicting this chapter and a one sentence summary on the back.
- Poetry: “Looking Forward” and “A Good Play”, from A Child’s Garden of Verses, by Robert Louis Stevenson. (during Tea Time)
- History – Additional Reading: Pocahontas, by Ingri and Edgar Parin d’Aulaire. (One of the “Additional Readings” suggested by AmblesideOnline.org for Year 1.)
- To Start: Pledge/Calendar/Weather
- Natural History: Record our observations of the Monarch caterpillars we’re rearing.
- Memory Work: “Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.”Phillipians 4:8 (NLT)
- Literature: “Shepherd Boy and the Wolf”, from Aesop’s Fables (Milo Winter Edition).
- Literature:
- Read “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”, from Tales from Shakespeare, by Charles and Mary Lamb.
- Use barbie dolls, puppets, and stuffed animals to ‘act out’ the story as we read along. There are too many characters with unfamiliar names in this story to be able to read it off the page alone. Following along with the puppets and barbies, Kate was actually able to understand the story and then retell the major points after we were finished reading.
- Math: Place Value, from Brain Quest Workbook: Grade 1, by Lisa Trumbauer, pgs 185-188.
- Phonics: Digraph ‘ch’, from Brain Quest Workbook: Grade 1, by Lisa Trumbauer, pgs 23.
- History:
- “Horatius at the Bridge”, from Fifty Famous Stories Retold, by James Baldwin.
- Add this story to the timeline in our Book of Centuries.
- Natural History: Dot & Jabber and the Great Acorn Mystery, by Ellen Stoll Walsh. (during Tea Time)
- Composer Study – Free Reading: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Mozart Finds a Melody, by Stephen Costanza. (during nap time.)
- Nature Study: Nature walk at the park across the street from Mercer Arboretum.
- Math – Free Reading: Bean Thirteen, by Matthew McElligott. This cute little book about 2 bugs and their quandry over what to do with the ‘unlucky’ bean thirteen is quite cute and has some great math concepts incorporated, too.
Posted on October 6, 2009 - by Kay
Shape Shooters
I got this idea from 100 Best Ideas for Primary Math, by Holly Sar Dye, M.A., to take Kate for a walk around the neighborhood. During our walk I encouraged her to look for different shapes and to take pictures of those objects for us to look at later. We would be “Shape Shooters” – shooting pictures of shapes on our walk. (Clever, I know…) I asked her to look for at least one circle, rectangle, square, triangle, diamond, oval, and octagon.
I was pleasantly surprised at how much fun this activity was and how easy it was to find all sorts of shapes just on our cul-de-sac. I even brought along my husband’s fancy camera so I could shoot a few with her and really enjoyed shooting completely different subjects than I normally do.
We took quite a few of the shots during our 15 minute walk. It would have been a MUCH longer walk if we hadn’t needed to get back quickly to eat lunch! Kate didn’t want to come back!
(Continue reading this article…)
Posted on October 6, 2009 - by Kay
Year 1: Week 6
(October 5 – October 9, 2009)
Our school week will see the heavier loads on Tuesdays and Thursdays, as those are the days that ds is at Mother’s Day Out so that dd and I have less interruptions. Each activity is designed to take only 10-15 minutes at the most as this is one of the defining characteristics of a Charlotte Mason approach to education.
*Please feel free to leave your comments or questions below. I always love learning from other people!*
- Literature – Free Reading: The Twelve Dancing Princesses, by Marianna Mayer. (Beautifully illustrated version of this old story. Different from the ‘Barbie’ telling, this one has a little more depth of the characters and plot differences. Beautiful language used also. Definitely for kids with a little longer attention span.)
- To Start: Pledge/Calendar/Weather
- Natural History: Record our observations of the Monarch caterpillars we’re rearing.
- Memory Work: “Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.” Phillipians 4:8 (NLT)
- Copywork: “There is no woman in Rome so much like a queen as our own dear mother.” (from Cornelia’s Jewels in the History lesson below.)
- Bible:
- “The Teeny, Weenie True King” (Samuel annoints David), from The Jesus Storybook Bible, by Sally Lloyd-Jones, pgs 116-121.
- Add King David to the timeline (1000-960 BC) in our Book of Centuries.
- History:
- “Cornelia’s Jewels”, from Fifty Famous Stories Retold, by James Baldwin.
- Add this story to the timeline in our Book of Centuries.
- Literature: “The Boy and the Filberts”, Aesop’s Fables (Milo Winter Edition).(Also found online here.)
- Math: Shapes – Go for a ‘shape walk’ around the neighborhood. Take a camera on the walk and have Kate take pictures of the different shapes that she finds on our walk. Look for at least one circle, rectangle, square, triangle, diamond, oval, and octagon. (Read my post about being “Shape Shooters” for more details.) **This idea is from 100 Best Ideas for Primary Math, by Holly Sar Dye, M.A.
- Phonics: Ending consonant sounds (l or ll and s or ss), from Brain Quest Grade 1 Workbook, by Lisa Trumbauer, pg 21.
- Science: Can air help things float?, from How Does a Ship Float, by Jim Pipe.
- Poetry: “The Average Hippopotamus”, from Be Glad Your Nose is on Your Face, by Jack Prelutsky. (during Tea Time)
- Natural History – Free Reading: A Mama for Owen, by Marion Dane Bauer. (Another book about Owen and Mzee and their incredible friendship. Beautiful drawings lend a soft tone to this book and the telling of the story is very sweet.)
- To Start: Pledge/Calendar/Weather
- Natural History: Record our observations of the Monarch caterpillars we’re rearing.
- Memory Work: “Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise.”Phillipians 4:8 (NLT)
- Geography: Chapter 5 of Paddle to the Sea, by Holling C. Holling.
- Artist Study: Raphael Sanzio: Peruse different paintings and accompanying explorations in Raphael (Art for Children), by Ernest Raboff.
- Natural History: Chippy, Sweetvoice, and Dotty, from The Burgess Bird Book, by Thornton Burgess.
- Math: Practice making shapes using rubber bands on a geoboard.
- Literature: “Hercules and the Wagoner”, Aesop’s Fables (Milo Winter Edition).
- Phonics: Compound words, in Grade 1 Phonics educational workbook, pgs 22-23.
- Literature: “Felicia and the Pot of Pinks”, from The Blue Fairy Book, edited by Andrew Lang.
- Poetry: “Please Bury Me in the Library”, from Please Bury Me in the Library, by J. Patrick Lewis. (during Tea Time)
- Foreign Language: Watch Signing Time!: My Neighborhood DVD during nap time.

