Thursday, April 4, 2013

Space night

A unit would not be complete without a culminating event. The boys really love to have a '________ night." They enjoy including daddy in their studies. They enjoy eating a special dinner. And the enjoy having an obstacle course because a culminating event would not be the experience without one!

After doing a bit of research on Pinterest (lol), I found out that tonic water glows when a black light is on. This happens because of a substance called quinine. Finding tonic water in Walmart took an immense amount of patience. The walmart I went to did not keep it by the water or the soda or any other non alcoholic beverage. Nope. why would it be? So after I bought the black light, jello (click on jello to see the original poster) , push lights and other such space gear, I got to drag my 2 rambunctious boys into a liquor store (in walmart) with a multitude of glass bottles so that I could spend less than a dollar on tonic water. Bah! This is why I hate you Walmart! Well that's one of 1,000,000 reasons.

Anyway, the tonic water was a must have. Since space is dark, I chose to capitalize on that rather than break my back coming up with a zillion space crafts and such, we just did a lot in the dark. For dessert, I made jello jigglers using tonic water. They taste a little funky but they do glow. I cut them into stars, placed glasses of tonic water around, shut off the lights and turned on the black light. fun times! I had to turn the lights on a bit so you could tell what you are looking at.

Excuse me while I rewind a bit. We started the night with a special dinner. We ate meteroids (homemade chicken nuggets), planets (peas), and saturn's rings (homemade onion rings). The actual meal really wasn't that good but the boys thought it was neat.

After dinner and dessert, we each picked a planet and created a push light. I spent time printing pictures online for this activity.  This idea came from play at home mom.

Then while I nursed the baby. Bob and the boys played glow stick hide in seek. They took turns hiding glow sticks and letting the others find them. the boys like to run to the room they hid them in and laugh and point. i guess they'll get it eventually.

We had to have our obstacle course. We used the push planets and glow sticks to light the course. The boys ran thru over and over. I hid a few glow in the dark planets (purchased them at Dollar Tree) in a pile of pillows so my little astronauts could discover new stars and planets. Once they were thoroughly sweaty and tired, we thru them in the tub (in the dark of course) with their glow sticks. They were pooped and had a great time!





Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Space!

A few weeks ago, we did a unit on space. The boys really enjoyed it. Of course, now everything must also have a "night" so we did a space night as well. I will post that separately.

Space seemed to involve a lot of art activities. We used beads to make saturn's rings which was fabulous for Dawson's fine motor skills. Of course, I wasn't too keen on them pulling the beads off the rings and throwing them all over the house--not good on the feet or the vacuum. We created mars using wax paper, tissue paper and paint.

We painted push lights to make planets. That idea came from Play at Home Mom. I was hoping that the boys would get more into it but after one planet they were over it. The do look really neat though and they came in handy during our space night. I took PHM suggestion and bought the push lights at Walmart. I really hate walmart but I went for the sake of learning!

We spent a bit of time talking about the moon. We discussed how it rotates around the earth and why we see less of the moon. My dear husband helped me to create the moon phases using oreo cookies. We certainly enjoyed eating them during "school." The boys really enjoyed creating craters. I took a few rocks and some cloud dough - flour and baby oil- and let them drop the rocks into it to see how craters formed. Afterward, the kids spent some time playing with the cloud dough. Anything messy is always a hit!


We talked about the sun. I created a sheet that showed the earth is different positions in relation to the sun. I had the boys glue summer and winter apparel to the different sides to show which position indicated which season.

We reviewed the planets each day. The boys can tell me which planet earth is (3rd) and which planet is the biggest (Jupiter). They know there are 8 planets. I had them write (dictate to me) what they learned. Dawson said, "There are these ball things (planets). There is a lot of space between the ball things. There is a moon." I just had to laugh. glad he learned about the ball things!


One of the most fun things we did was make a rocket. To do this we needed two plastic cups and two rubberbands. The boys decorated their rockets and then launched them. I included the original directions if you click on the link. The boys really enjoyed this. We got them to go quite far.
 I never like to include the mundane stuff we did because there is quite a bit of it. We read books, went to the science center, did some worksheets, reviewed some skills. ya know, the stuff no one but us wants to hear about. Hope you have a great week!







Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Planes, Trains and Automobiles--ok--maybe just Planes!

We have been doing lots with school. For me, the easiest way to plan is to randomly pick a theme and then come up with some things to go with it. Pinterest is such a wealth of ideas. We recently did planes/flight.

As usual, the boys really wanted to do science experiments. The first one we did was seeing which weight of paper would cause an airplane to fly the farthest. We used cardstock, printer paper and tissue paper. Ollie hypothesized that the cardstock would fly the farthest and Dawson thought the printer paper. We quickly discovered the printer paper was the winner! The boys loved flying the airplanes. One other experiment we did was to see if a flat sheet of paper or a plastic bag would fall to the ground faster. The boys stood on the coffee table and dropped them. It's fun to teach them about drag and air pressure!

The boys learned a few terms- lift, air pressure and thrust. To demonstrate air pressure simply took a bowl of water and a cup. The boys and I pushed the cup straight down in the water and discovered that the bottom of the cup stayed dry! We did a thrust demonstration with a rubberband and folded piece of paper. The boys pulled the rubberband back and let the paper go flying across the room. For lift, we cut a strip of paper and held the small end in our lips allowing the strip to hang down past our chins, then we blew on top of the paper and watched it rise! Such fun. Later in the week, we had a quiz of terms.

I also gave the boys straws and some balls and pieces of paper. They spent time using their air to push the objects around. It was funny because the boys thought they were really tough. It kind of brought out their Hulk!


We practiced our ordinals by gluing passengers in our plane windows in a certain order. We wrote about what we learned. We learned letters that we in different words about flight. We followed directions to color airplanes. I made an airplane snack. We got back out our airplane playset. I wanted to take a trip to the airport but we haven't yet. I think we will soon though! We made airplanes out of toilet paper tubes.


 Overall, we played. We learned. We had fun. Sounds like a productive week to me!









Elenora is 6 months old!

I can't believe my baby is 6 months old. It's gone so fast. She actually turned 6 months on the first and I intended to post this sooner but we've had rounds and rounds of illness here are my house. I think we are finally on the mend. These pictures of Miss Pudgy Pants were taken prior to her having any food. Those rolls are 100% mama milk induced. Not a lick of formula or anything else! Gotta love that!

I can't even begin to tell you what an amazing baby I have. She is so content. Always. She rarely cries. So much so that sometimes I wonder if something is wrong with her but she's bright eyed and meeting milestones . I'm guessing she is going to be calm. I wonder what that will be like? Last week, I got sick. I mean really sick. I got so dehydrated that I lost most of my milk supply. Nora never cried about it. She whined a bit while nursing. She was squirmy and wiggly and wanted to nurse a lot. She began to wake at night again (only with cooing- she doesn't cry at  night) but she never cried. See, I'm telling you, super mellow baby. She would not take a bottle or a sippy of expressed milk but she still never cried.

We started food last week with a bit of avocado. She seemed to like it at first but really doesn't. She doesn't seem to like banana either. Ey, ey, ey...we may be nursing till she's 12. Ok. Not really. Even I wouldn't do that!

At 6 months old, she can coo, smile, laugh, sit up unassisted and roll over (front to back). She loves to jump in her jumperoo and is beginning to walk around her walk about. She can pick up things and bring them to her mouth and she's found her toes. She loves her brothers, especially Ollie. She laughs at him all the time.


 I'm such a blessed mama to have three beautiful, healthy children. I love having a daughter. I'm thankful God saw fit to place one in my life to care for and serve.

We have a doctors appointment today so I will update with her stats then! Have a happy Tuesday!



Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Superhero night

For a fun addition to our superhero theme, I created Superhero night. We started off the night with a special dinner. I made batman biscuits (boy that huge wilton cookie cutter set has come in handy), superman soup, captain america shields and spiderman sundaes.  Now things always look better in my head but this was for the boys and they thought it was awesome. It's a good thing they are too young for pinterest or they'd see all the super awesome stuff those moms are doing!

After dinner, the assignment was to create your own superhero. Everyone (Mr. Fun-hater included) had to come up with their own persona, powers and create a costume. Then we took pictures and Bob created special badges to be given out when they passed their test. While bob worked on those, the boys watched a couple superhero shows.

Here are the superheroes and their profiles:
Dawson: Captain America-Able to eat entire body weight in a single sitting, Stronger than all two year olds the world over, A will as strong as stone

Ollie: Super Dream Creature Man- Blow fire like a dragon, fly, shield he can fling and knock people down and shield comes right back,super strong when lifting concrete, change into any super hero

Me: Super Mama- Caffeine gives her super strength, Hugs that melt anyenemy, x-ray vision makes delicious treats, wrangle several villians at once


 Bob: Super Dev Man- Shoots conditional expressions from eyes, wrap enemies in closures, super duper bitwise operator kick, immediate function chop

Following the shows, it was time for the obstacle course. I'm thankful for the circular layout of our house. It made it easy to set this up. We have balance beams so those were included and the rest was around the house stuff. I think we did the course 30 times. They loved every minute.

The whole night was a success. Ollie just tonight asked if we could have another superhero night. It was worth the effort!



 Until next time, it's supermama signing off. Happy playing to all and to all a good night!




Friday, February 8, 2013

superheroes!

My house has taken on a while new life. The boys have recently become completely infatuated with superheroes--x-men, avengers, batman, spiderman, teenage mutant ninja turtles. It doesn't matter as long as they have a super power. I decided to put this new interest to work and developed my lessons around superheroes. We did some super science lessons, super math, super reading and super fun activities. Lucky for me, there are people who have already created some great printables that we were able to use. Look here and here for those.

The kids love science experiments. I'm really focusing on 3 parts of the scientific method- problem, hypothesis and conclusion. I just want my kids to start thinking scientifically and developing ideas. I like inquiry based learning so it's really great to watch them experiment to make discoveries.  One of the activities was really simple. We simply cut a bar of ivory soap into 4 pieces. We stuck one piece on a plate and placed in the microwave. The kids stood perched watching it. It was really neat. They were jumping up and down hollering. We did it four times and then they played with it. The crumbly mess was everywhere but Ollie asked an interesting question, "What happens when we put it back into the microwave?" So we did and it did the same thing again even though it started in a different form.

We also made a sparkly explosion. This experiment is all over the internet. It was just a vase, some food coloring, some glitter, baking soda and vinegar. The kids made their predictions and we took turns adding different components. Even Nora was fascinated.

I also made a discovery box about magnets. Each boy received a magnet (just a strong one off the fridge) and they shared a box of items to test. I included plastic, wood, paper, fabric, a coin and metal. Dawson was especially fascinated. Finding out magnets had super powers was pretty awesome.

One of the things the kids enjoyed the most was was capes. I kept thinking, "I really must go to hobby lobby and buy some fabric to make capes but I really hate to drag everyone there and I really don't want to spend money." So I took an old sheet and cut them out. I also debated staying up late and sewing and whatnot but in the end sleep won and I decided to let them have just plain-old-unfinished-capes. Oh the horror! haha. I gave the boys paint and they went to town painting there very own cape. SO.MUCH. FUN!!

 We did telling time, counting, sorting, patterns, measurement. We read superhero books. We played games. We learned a lot. We even had a superhero night. I'll blog about that in another post. Homeschooling is the best!







Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Winter

I've finally gotten back into the swing of things with my little ones and school. I decided to go with a winter theme since well, it is winter! During the two weeks of winter theme, we also had co-op here. The boys love the time with their friends.

I have found that pinterest in a wealth of knowledge for ideas. I found printable resources here and here. We did three different science experiments. I have been working on using the scientific method with the kids. We currently only talk about the purpose, hypothesis and conclusion. I have the kids draw a picture about the experiment. During this unit, the boys melted colored ice to discover what colors were made. They observed snow and recorded their observations. And they also added sugar and salt to snow to see if that affected the speed in which it melts. They really enjoyed the discoveries they made. Ollie had a hard time realizing that the melting experiment was not a contest. He thought he lost because he was the one who added the sugar and Dawson added the salt. Of course, the salt melted the fastest. Oh, the unfairness of it all!

We did a few different art projects. I worked with the boys to cut snowflakes. On their sheets I wrote the word snowflake on Ollies and S on Dawsons. We talked about the letters and sounds. then they glued them down and used watercolor paints on them. I am huge fan of watercolors. We use them all the time. We also painted with snow paint (just mix shaving cream with some elmer's glue and add glitter). When it dries, it keeps it's shape and makes a nice 3 dimensional piece. I had seen a few people on pinterest sending their kids out in the snow with squirt bottles of colored water to paint the snow. unfortunately, I did not have big squirt bottles so I improvised. I kept my kids inside, handed them a pie plate of snow and some food coloring. Viola! Snow art. They thought this was fabulous.

We made two different snowman snacks. Pictured here:




I found this great game. I wish I could find the source but I cannot. When I searched pinterest, I found about a hundred so I'm sure you can find it too. It's called Roll & Build snowman. The kids rolled the dice to see what part to add to their snowman. It took me a while to realize that the dice had only 1-3 on it! oops. We were able to finish building once I found a proper dice!

For math, we used marshmallows twice. Once, I told them it was snow. Ollie worked on his addition and subtraction while Dawson counted. The second time, I drew little mugs and they places the marshmallows in them. We also made patterns with snowflakes. Ollie cut a snowflake in half, then 4ths and 8ths. We talked about fractions and he identified different ones like 3/8, 1/4, 1/2.

I cut different sized snowflakes and had Dawson order them smallest to biggest. I also cut some in different colors and talked to Dawson about the colors.

We used socks and had a snowball fight. I made snow playdoh (just homemade playdoh. Don't add food coloring. Do add glitter.) I will say that if you make snowdoh, buy bleached flour. I use unbleached so my snowdoh was more of an off white. We read books and wrote stories. We played outside. We watched a few videos about snow and how it forms.



 Our unit was full, full, full!  The kids had a blast and much was learned.