labfs39kids starts year three of homeschooling

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labfs39kids starts year three of homeschooling

1labfs39kids
Set 2, 2023, 6:38 pm

Hello, I am new to this group and hoping that there are still homeschoolers out there who would like to chat and revive the group. I started homeschooling my nieces three years ago, when the oldest started kindergarten. She is now in second grade, and her younger sister is three and wants desperately to "do school too".

I use bits and pieces from many different curriculums, aiming for project-based learning with a fair amount of experiential education and nature study. This year we are studying Space (using Blossom & Root as a starting point) and continuing geography beginning with Africa (using Build Your Library level 0 and building from there). The little one participates as she wishes, and I incorporate the Child's World curriculum as appropriate.

For math we use Singapore Math, and language arts is a hodge-podge of all sorts of things (Handwriting without Tears, a random spelling book, Grammar Made Easy, and novel studies from a Child's World second grade).

I would love to hear what you are up to this year. Please stop by and say hello.

Lisa

2labfs39kids
Modificato: Set 2, 2023, 6:45 pm

3labfs39kids
Modificato: Set 2, 2023, 7:03 pm

Second grader's list of books read since July 1:

1. Real Pigeons Fight Crime by Andrew McDonald (410L)
2. The Toad by Elise Gravel (690L)
3. Creature Campers: The Secret of Shadow Lake by Joe McGee (570L)
4. Dragon Masters: Rise of the Earth Dragon by Tracey West (510L)
5. Galaxy Zack: Hello, Nebulon! by Ray O'Ryan (580L)

4labfs39kids
Modificato: Set 2, 2023, 7:03 pm

SQUILT's Music Curriculum summer reading program:

"Skimbleshanks" from T.S. Eliot's Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats
Duke Ellington : the piano prince and his orchestra by Andrea Davis Pinkney
Stories of William Tell and his Friends by H.E. Marshall
Jazz Baby by Lisa Wheeler
Do Re Mi: If You Can Read Music, Thank Guido D'Arezzo by Susan L. Roth
Because by Mo Willems
Vivaldi and the Invisible Orchestra by Stephen Costanza
Vivaldi's Four Seasons by Anna Harwell Celenza
Some Creatures Have All the Luck (Antonio Vivaldi) by Ana Gerhard
God Bless America: The Story of an Immigrant Named Irving Berlin by Adah Nuchi
Bach's Big Adventure by Timothy Bush
Becoming Bach by Tom Leopard
Scalatti's Cat by Nathaniel Lachenmeyer
That's My Piano, Sir! by Ana Gerhard
Play, Mozart, Play! by Peter Sis
Before There was Mozart by Lesa Cline-Ransome
Mozart Finds a Melody by Stephen Costanza
Moonlight on the Magic Flute by Mary Pope Osborne
I am Mozart, too: The Lost Genius of Maria Anna Mozart by Audrey Ades
Poppy and Mozart by Magali le Huche
The 39 Apartments of Ludwig van Beethoven by Jonah Winter
Pitch Perfect and Persistent: The Musical Debut of Amy Cheney Beach by Caitlin Deems
Itzhak: A Boy Who Loved the Violin by Tracy Newman
Playing at the Border: A Story of Yo-Yo Ma by Joanna Ho
Listen: How Evelyn Glennie, a Deaf Girl, Changed Percussion by Shannon Stocker
Little Melba and Her Big Trombone by Katheryn Russel-Brown
Before John Was a Jazz Giant (Coltrane) by Carole Boston Weatherford
Trombone Shorty by Troy Andrews
John Philip Duck by Patricia Polacco

6labfs39kids
Modificato: Set 2, 2023, 7:12 pm

Africa books read so far:

Spine
Africa Amazing Africa: Country by Country by Atinuke
Amazing World Atlas (Lonely Planet Kids)
Geography (DK)
Wild Animal Atlas (National Geographic Kids)
Countries of the World (DK)
This is My World (Lonely Planet Kids)
Cool African cooking : fun and tasty recipes for kids by Lisa Wagner

Africa
Africa is Not a Country by Margy Burns Knight
Jambo Means Hello by Muriel Feelings
Princess and the Pea by Rachel Isadora
There Was a Tree by Rachel Isadora
Ashanti to Zulu : African traditions by Margaret Musgrove

Egypt
Pyramid by David Macaulay
The Egyptian Cinderella by Shirley Climo
The day of Ahmed's secret by Florence Parry Heide
Bill and Pete Go Down the Nile by Tomie dePaola

Morocco
"The Clever Snake Charmer" from Nelson Mandela's Favorite African Folktales

7labfs39kids
Set 2, 2023, 7:18 pm

I dislike cooking, but the girls love it so I do what I can! The frog cupcakes were horrid, but my first attempt at African cooking was okay. We made Moroccan Carrot Salad from Cool African cooking : fun and tasty recipes for kids by Lisa Wagner.



The recipe called from carrots, cilantro, olive oil, lemon juice, cumin, garlic, and paprika. I didn't think the girls would like it, but the 2nd grader thought it wasn't bad. They both took a turn peeling carrots, and the older one chopped them. The younger picked the cilantro stems and leaves apart and mixed the ingredients.

Next week: Algerian Chickpea Salad

8Dilara86
Set 3, 2023, 4:30 am

Although I am not homeschooling, I'm starring this thread! I am in awe of your commitment: there are so many ideas, and it must be so much work... The world cooking series is a fantastic concept, especially if it's done sensitively.

9labfs39
Set 3, 2023, 9:05 am

Hi Dilara, thanks for stopping by! The girls love to cook, and do so with one of their grandmothers, starting with biscuits and working their way up to bread. Last year the older niece did a project called Apple Pie from around the World, where they made a pie but investigated where each ingredient was from. I would like to expand that idea this year with more cooking related to the countries we are studying. They loved smelling and tasting the ingredients and enjoyed the fact that the garlic we used was from the garden. The problem is that I am a horrible cook. Even following a recipe seems problematic. But my failures are good modeling for resilience, right? LOL.

10BLBera
Set 3, 2023, 9:46 am

This looks like an incredible amount of work but also rewarding. You have so many great ideas. I gifted my granddaughter the Little Passports cooking program, and she has really enjoyed that.

11labfs39
Set 4, 2023, 10:28 am

>10 BLBera: The Little Passports cooking program sounds great. In fact, I got looking around the site at their different offerings and am going to subscribe to the Space one. Thanks for the tip!

12labfs39
Set 6, 2023, 8:25 am

I am always on the lookout for science books featuring women and girls as role models, and recently stumbled across Gutsy Girls Go for Science. It's a series of books that features five or six biographies of famous scientists in that field and after each one is an experiment. So, for instance, after reading about Bonnie Dunbar in Gutsy Girls Go for Science: Astronauts, we made a "robotic" hand out of cardboard, straws, and string. (Dunbar used a 50' long robotic arm to guide a satellite into the space shuttle with only 6" of extra room on each side.) I've also purchased Paleontologists, because the 3 year old is wild about dinosaurs. Other titles in the series include Engineers and Programmers.

13markon
Set 8, 2023, 2:47 pm

Stopping by to say hello and drop a star. I'm looking forward to hearing more about your space explorations.

And kudos to you for the cooking when you don't enjoy it.

14labfs39
Set 8, 2023, 4:55 pm

Hello, Ardene, thanks for stopping by. We've started reading about different types of spacecraft (probes, satellites, rockets, shuttles) and will start designing our own next week.

Because the kids love doing "kitchen science", today we made casein by pouring vinegar in warm milk. We strained out the lumps, squeezed out the water, and flattened them. After drying over the weekend, they will be able to paint their "plastic milk".

15BLBera
Set 16, 2023, 11:42 am

Lisa - Scout loved the Zoe and Sassafras books, which are (loosely) based on the scientific method. They are fiction and probably second grade level? It's been a while since we read them.

16labfs39
Set 16, 2023, 1:25 pm

>15 BLBera: Thanks, Beth, I'll check them out!


Here are the last of the SQUILT summer reading books:

Swan Lake by New York City Ballet
Song in a Rainstorm: The Story of Musical Prodigy Thomas "Blind Tom" Wiggins by Glenda Armand
The extraordinary music of Mr. Ives by Joanne Stanbridge
When Marian sang: the true recital of Marian Anderson: the voice of a century by Pam Munoz Ryan
Peter Tchaikovsky (Getting to Know the World's Greatest Composers) by Mike Venezia
Born to swing : Lil Hardin Armstrong's life in jazz by Mara Rockliff
Little People Dream Big: Stevie Wonder

17labfs39kids
Modificato: Dic 7, 2023, 7:52 pm

I came across an excellent series of four picture books on digital literacy and online safety by Jeanne Willis and illustrated by Tony Ross. I read two of them with my nieces, and they loved them. Excellent springboards to some important conversations that can never begin too early.


Chicken Clicking

Part of an excellent series of picture books on digital literacy, this one focuses on the ease in which online purchasing can lead to extravagance, the dangers of posting personal information online without your parents knowledge, and how online "friends" can turn out to be predators. Although the dangers are real, the story is told in very kid-friendly, accessible verse with adorable illustrations. This book led to lively discussions with my four- and seven-year-olds about online safety. Highly recommended for introducing these issues to young children.


#Goldilocks: A Hashtag Cautionary Tale

Part of a series of picture books on digital literacy, this one deals with the seduction of social media and how the desire for more likes can lead to increasingly dangerous behaviors. Goldilocks initially posts a few innocuous photos, but when funny cat photos cease increasing her following, she begins posting photos of others in embarrassing situations. When that grows stale, she posts selfies while breaking into a house, eating the porridge, etc. The Bears call the police, and Goldilocks has to do community service cleaning up the Bears' house. She realizes that she now has a record and that the online posts will never completely go away: forever she will be remembered as the girl who broke into the Bears' house. The book is a fun way to talk about online safety and etiquette with young children. Excellent lessons to begin teaching early.