I couldn't resist posting this cute poem. I found it at the Snail Facts site. See link below in the Boy's snail post.
Mistress LB
SNAIL
It hasn't any windows
It hasn't any doors
Although it has a ceiling
It hasn't any floors
'Twas built without a builder
A hammer or a nail
Because you see this funny house
Belongs to Mr Snail.
Author unknown
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
A shout-out to Auntie P!
Hey P,
You are most welcome to borrow my copy of Pocketful of Pinecones. It is a delightful read. I am really surprised the library doesn't have this one!
Mistress LB
You are most welcome to borrow my copy of Pocketful of Pinecones. It is a delightful read. I am really surprised the library doesn't have this one!
Mistress LB
Snails!
Today while we were delivering food for the Food Bank, we saw some common garden snails. They were crawling all over the walls in the garden, and sliming down the pathway. They were eating the grass in the planters, too. They are light brown on top, and their shells are mottled brown, black, and yellow. They have tannish undersides, and four tentacles, two of which (the longer, top ones) have eyes. These eyes however, cannot see actual images, just changes in lightness and darkness. They are all sensitive to touch. Humidity is important to snails. If they get too dry, they start to aestivate.(For the young ones, humidity means temperature(hot and cold), and water in the air. To aestivate means the snail draws itself into the shell, in order to withstand unfavorable conditions. If you still don't understand, ask your parent.)
Anyway, back to the original subject, now an answer to that age old question: Can snails come out of their shells? The answer is yes. If you plan on keeping snails (as I'm sure you will by the end of this blog), you will notice that after you wash the snails( you must do this weekly), they will sometimes come out of their shells and slime around. This will surely be an interesting time to observe them. Snails move by coating their foot (a muscle-like appendage on their belly) with mucus(snot). The snails need to live in a humid environment, however, if the environment is too humid, then mold will grow and kill the snails. They also need calcium of some sort, and a piece of shell from the beach will suffice their needs. Calcium is essential to shell growth. Keep them in a gallon jar (we are using an old pickle jar) with some cheesecloth over the top(secure with rubber bands) .Layer some wet paper towels over the bottom of the jar. The snails will eat this, so you don't need to give them anything more, although if you want, you can give them a treat such as lettuce, carrots, and occasionally apples as long as you clean the jar afterwards. Most land and water snails have a structure in their mouths called a radula. The radula works like lots of little teeth to scrape away little bits of the food. There now you have something to do with the "common garden pest" the snail. Hope you enjoyed this.
The Taxonomy of the common garden snail:
Phylum: Mollusca(soft-bodied marine animals)
Class: Gastropod(snails, slugs, and limpets)
Subclass: Pulmonata(slugs and most land snails. Mantle cavity has become a lung.Hermaphroditic)
Order: Stylomattophora(two pairs of tentacles, with eyes on top of the second pair)
info for this post is from The Big Book of Nature Projects, by: The Children's School of Science
Some snail links:
Snail facts lots of fun stuff here for little kids
brown garden snail this site describes how the snail got to America and all over the world, and is now considered a pest in California.
garden safari This site has cool pics of snail eggs.
eye to eye with garden snails experiments and teacher notes
BBC snails basic info, good pics
and last but not least, eating your garden snails!
Signed,
The Boy
Anyway, back to the original subject, now an answer to that age old question: Can snails come out of their shells? The answer is yes. If you plan on keeping snails (as I'm sure you will by the end of this blog), you will notice that after you wash the snails( you must do this weekly), they will sometimes come out of their shells and slime around. This will surely be an interesting time to observe them. Snails move by coating their foot (a muscle-like appendage on their belly) with mucus(snot). The snails need to live in a humid environment, however, if the environment is too humid, then mold will grow and kill the snails. They also need calcium of some sort, and a piece of shell from the beach will suffice their needs. Calcium is essential to shell growth. Keep them in a gallon jar (we are using an old pickle jar) with some cheesecloth over the top(secure with rubber bands) .Layer some wet paper towels over the bottom of the jar. The snails will eat this, so you don't need to give them anything more, although if you want, you can give them a treat such as lettuce, carrots, and occasionally apples as long as you clean the jar afterwards. Most land and water snails have a structure in their mouths called a radula. The radula works like lots of little teeth to scrape away little bits of the food. There now you have something to do with the "common garden pest" the snail. Hope you enjoyed this.
The Taxonomy of the common garden snail:
Phylum: Mollusca(soft-bodied marine animals)
Class: Gastropod(snails, slugs, and limpets)
Subclass: Pulmonata(slugs and most land snails. Mantle cavity has become a lung.Hermaphroditic)
Order: Stylomattophora(two pairs of tentacles, with eyes on top of the second pair)
info for this post is from The Big Book of Nature Projects, by: The Children's School of Science
Some snail links:
Snail facts lots of fun stuff here for little kids
brown garden snail this site describes how the snail got to America and all over the world, and is now considered a pest in California.
garden safari This site has cool pics of snail eggs.
eye to eye with garden snails experiments and teacher notes
BBC snails basic info, good pics
and last but not least, eating your garden snails!
Signed,
The Boy
Thursday, July 06, 2006
We're getting closer!
Yesterday, day 1 of our summerschool term, it took the kids 9 hours to get 4 hours of work done. Today, it took 6. I am really hoping tomorrow we can actually get it down to 4! I am ever hopeful!
Mistress LB
Mistress LB
Intensive summer school term
Due to illness and life last year, we didn't finish several textbooks, so are doing an intensive summer term. We won't do our yearly assessment testing until the end of August. We just started yesterday, and I am hoping today and tomorrow go smoother. Here are the goals for summer.
For the Boy: When asked what grade he is in, I am telling folks "Eighth and a half". He is not ready for high school work yet, in several areas, and will be taking co-op classes in the fall; my goal is to strengthen his writing, latin, and math skills, and to develop some strong study skills . He will be doing his best to move through almost a whole year's text in math, doing a chapter a day sometimes.
For the Girl, we are strengthening her math and Latin, to prepare for co-op classes in those areas. She will be doing pre-algebra in the co-op class, so we are focusing on building up her 4 math functions, and she needs some work in division.
So, for the Girl, the days look something like this:
Math, Latin, and Grammar (just building it up a bit this summer- we will replace it with writing in the fall), an hour a day.
Same for the Boy, but we are focusing on the writing lessons as much as grammar.
For both kids, but mostly for the benefit of the Boy, we are doing weekly contracts- we both intital that this is the work he is expected to complete for the week, and he acknowledges that if it isn't done, nothing fun happens, and he gets an "F" on it. I know it sounds drastic, but if you had been trying to teach this student for the last 3 years, you weould feel this desperate, too!
To keep track of our work, support the contracts, etc. we are using the agendas by Franklin Covey. This is the Girl's, this one is the Boy's, and this is the one I am using, although it bums me out that mine doesn't start till August, even though the student agenda starts in July. Bleah! I will be using mine to plan and keep trackc of the kids' work/schedules, but I will mostly be using it to keep track of the work I assign myself (reading of ancient lit,latin, etc. This is the second year we have used these planners, but the first year that I will used the column for teacher comments and will actually mark their grades in them (remember, I gotta keep transcripts this year!).
Both kids do their instrument practice (horn for Boy, Piano for Girl) daily as well.
1/2 hour of literature reading a day (Little Women for both of them), about a half hour of me reading Calendar Quest (scroll down and click on it to read more) to them, and that is it for the daily stuff. We bought all the ingredients for the Physics experiments, and will be doing that about 2 times a week. I will add other subjects in this fall, but for now, I still want them to have a few hours of free time- it is summer, after all. So if they are integrity, they can be done with their school day by 2 pm and still have the afternoon for fun stuff.
We shall see.
I am still working with next year's schedule/plans. After reading The Latin Centered Curriculum, I am trying to figure out how to simplify and still get in all I want to. I will post more thoughts on LCC soon. There were some really good thoughts on literature that really hit home with me.
Mistress LB
For the Boy: When asked what grade he is in, I am telling folks "Eighth and a half". He is not ready for high school work yet, in several areas, and will be taking co-op classes in the fall; my goal is to strengthen his writing, latin, and math skills, and to develop some strong study skills . He will be doing his best to move through almost a whole year's text in math, doing a chapter a day sometimes.
For the Girl, we are strengthening her math and Latin, to prepare for co-op classes in those areas. She will be doing pre-algebra in the co-op class, so we are focusing on building up her 4 math functions, and she needs some work in division.
So, for the Girl, the days look something like this:
Math, Latin, and Grammar (just building it up a bit this summer- we will replace it with writing in the fall), an hour a day.
Same for the Boy, but we are focusing on the writing lessons as much as grammar.
For both kids, but mostly for the benefit of the Boy, we are doing weekly contracts- we both intital that this is the work he is expected to complete for the week, and he acknowledges that if it isn't done, nothing fun happens, and he gets an "F" on it. I know it sounds drastic, but if you had been trying to teach this student for the last 3 years, you weould feel this desperate, too!
To keep track of our work, support the contracts, etc. we are using the agendas by Franklin Covey. This is the Girl's, this one is the Boy's, and this is the one I am using, although it bums me out that mine doesn't start till August, even though the student agenda starts in July. Bleah! I will be using mine to plan and keep trackc of the kids' work/schedules, but I will mostly be using it to keep track of the work I assign myself (reading of ancient lit,latin, etc. This is the second year we have used these planners, but the first year that I will used the column for teacher comments and will actually mark their grades in them (remember, I gotta keep transcripts this year!).
Both kids do their instrument practice (horn for Boy, Piano for Girl) daily as well.
1/2 hour of literature reading a day (Little Women for both of them), about a half hour of me reading Calendar Quest (scroll down and click on it to read more) to them, and that is it for the daily stuff. We bought all the ingredients for the Physics experiments, and will be doing that about 2 times a week. I will add other subjects in this fall, but for now, I still want them to have a few hours of free time- it is summer, after all. So if they are integrity, they can be done with their school day by 2 pm and still have the afternoon for fun stuff.
We shall see.
I am still working with next year's schedule/plans. After reading The Latin Centered Curriculum, I am trying to figure out how to simplify and still get in all I want to. I will post more thoughts on LCC soon. There were some really good thoughts on literature that really hit home with me.
Mistress LB
Saturday, June 24, 2006
Nature Study revisited
I originally posted this in January, 2006 on my other blog. Here it is again.
Nature Study
This one is for Laney, who asked me to describe how I teach Nature Study. I hope it isn't too disjointed to follow.
There are lots of things in our homeschool that I don't think go very smoothly sometimes, but this isn't one of them. I really do this ala Charlotte Mason. My inspriation to start this was A Pocketful of Pinecones by Karen Andreola. I would also read The Charlotte Mason Companion for more nature study ideas.And lastly before I start, here is a great link Jane posted on the WTM boards just this morning that has tons of great ideas for Nature Study in winter.
The important thing for us in this group is not how well we draw, but doing it on a regular basis, learning as we go, and having lots of fun in nature. Before I had the group to keep me in integrity, I averaged one drawing about every 2 months in a 3 yr time period. Now I average 2 to 4 a month, sometimes more. Two of us moms are learning to draw for the first time, and the one that just joined our group is very good. I like having lots of different levels/styles to round us all out.The goals I have set specifically for the kids are to use quiet voices in nature (especially when we are birding) so that we actually have a chance to see some of it; to get them comfortable with drawing in nature and not to feel self-conscious about it; and to learn to appreciate and take care of our natural world.
We started out with just 2 moms and 3 kids, and now, in our second year, we have 3 moms and 5 kids, ranging in ages from 4 to 13. Keeping it small is a good idea, especially with the wide age range. We meet on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays from approximately 1 to 3, although we have been quite flexible on our times, sometimes meeting earlier in the day if we are doing more of a field trip. We have met at our various homes, mostly keeping it in the backyards, at Kubota Gardens (a fave of all of us, and where we all adopted trees to watch over the upcoming year), at the zoo (where the kids surprised us once by drawing for literally an hour and then not being ready to leave), Camp Long (a great place to go when studying ponds, and where the kids want to do an overnight field trip), the afformentioned Burke Museum, or the Arboretum.
Just some of the topics we have covered are trees/leaves, birds (this is a fave topic which gets revisited often), shells (I have a big box of these, and they are surprisingly challenging to draw!), insects (Papa has a great insect collection which is fun to draw from on a rainy day, as does the Science Center.), and owls. We have had one lesson on contour drawing, and will focus on more drawing lessons when I get my tushy in gear and start learning ahead of them like I am supposed to be doing. Sometimes we just go out and draw whatever we find. That is fun, too.I usually don't have too much of a plan as to what we will be studying ahead of time. I prefer to keep it fluid, and go with what interests the kids. I will sometimes email the kids the week prior and give them a choice of two topics (Do you want to collect and draw leaves in my backyard, or do you want to go visit and draw our trees?).
Once I know what we will be studying, I go to the science shelves in my schoolroom (unfinished basement), and grab every book I can on the subject, including any and all field guides on the subject. I sometimes also will go to the library and just pull out whatever is currently on their shelves, too. Put it all in a tub, and have it all set up with our other regular supplies/resources, and either load them into the back of Whitey the minivan, or set it on the table on the back porch. The other moms bring resources also, and we all have different ones, so we usually have a wide variety to use/choose from.
In addition to these, I always grab The Handbook of Nature Study and Sketching in Nature. These are the main tools I am using to teach myself and the kids about our subjects and how best to draw them. I also refer to Artistic Pursuits, often, for simple drawing tips.My standard supplies include drawing pencils, colored pencils, watercolor pencils, CrayolaTwistables, our nature journals, plain sketch pads, etc.
**A note on the art supplies-I don't use all of these for every lesson, just pick and choose what will work best or what has been motivating the kids lately. The watercolor pencils are new- we are just getting started learning how to use these out in the wild.
Nature Journals: We have tried out many different ones, from the first one at Tanglewood (which looked okay, but was too flimsy, and had a bad binding that always came off), to a more scripted version. One of my students has a great waterproof 3 ring notebook her mom made of cardboard, taped over to avoid the rain. It has held up well, and provides a nice hard surface on which to draw. What we use most now are a 5 by 7 blank sketchbook, and this one from Rainbow Resource. The next time I order from them, I plan on buying several of these- I want all kids in my group to have this one, because on days when I have been too lazy to plan, it is easy enough to teach right out of this book. Two of us moms also have this NJ, based on the book Keeping a Nature Journal (I have checked this out time and time again and really want to own this- a very good book!) by Claire Leslie Walker.
If I know I am going to the zoo or going to be doing contour drawing or something really sketchy, I use the sketchbook, otherwise I take the pretty, hardcover one.Once we are all together and ready to go, I will teach a very simple short lesson. If we are studying ants, say, I would read pertinent tidbits from HONS, and maybe a poem if I found one. We might go over the 3 body parts of insects, and in general talk about observations we have made in the past of ants. I would show the kids the books to choose from, in case they want to do any research while we are working. Then we would probably all take a jar and head out to find some. We would probably draw one in our journal, either from real life, or one of the field guides. One of the moms takes lots of pics, and uses them in her journal.
I always make sure we use Latin names whenever possible to label drawings, and encourage the kids in their drawing skills.When we first started, I praised every drawing and commented only a little. Now after a year, I will encourage them to draw only the lines they see, add more detail, write a paragraph about where we were when we saw it, a poem, etc. I am trying to stretch them a bit now. Of course with the littles (4 and 6), it is still praise, praise, praise. I have been having my two olders pair with the littles on things like owl pellet disection, etc. and I think there will be great value in this. My kids are realizing how much they know by tutoring the littles.
After they have worked hard for at least an hour (this time has increased greatly since we first started, and is much shorter for the current littles- I try to bring something fun but nature oriented for them to do while the olders are still working), hopefully a bit longer, I let them play. They either play in our treehouse or engage in imaginary play in the backyard, or run free at whatever park/place we are at.Once we figure out how to use the Boy's digital camera, I will try to post some of the things we have done.I probably haven't covered everything, but that's it in a nutshell. Let me know if you have specific questions.
LB
addendum: Here are a few links from one of the other moms in our group. I haven't visited these sites yet, but will today. Cool! New things to explore!
Charlotte Mason Nature Study ideas.
backyard naturebug guide
bird guide
enature
more bugs
Nature Study
This one is for Laney, who asked me to describe how I teach Nature Study. I hope it isn't too disjointed to follow.
There are lots of things in our homeschool that I don't think go very smoothly sometimes, but this isn't one of them. I really do this ala Charlotte Mason. My inspriation to start this was A Pocketful of Pinecones by Karen Andreola. I would also read The Charlotte Mason Companion for more nature study ideas.And lastly before I start, here is a great link Jane posted on the WTM boards just this morning that has tons of great ideas for Nature Study in winter.
The important thing for us in this group is not how well we draw, but doing it on a regular basis, learning as we go, and having lots of fun in nature. Before I had the group to keep me in integrity, I averaged one drawing about every 2 months in a 3 yr time period. Now I average 2 to 4 a month, sometimes more. Two of us moms are learning to draw for the first time, and the one that just joined our group is very good. I like having lots of different levels/styles to round us all out.The goals I have set specifically for the kids are to use quiet voices in nature (especially when we are birding) so that we actually have a chance to see some of it; to get them comfortable with drawing in nature and not to feel self-conscious about it; and to learn to appreciate and take care of our natural world.
We started out with just 2 moms and 3 kids, and now, in our second year, we have 3 moms and 5 kids, ranging in ages from 4 to 13. Keeping it small is a good idea, especially with the wide age range. We meet on the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays from approximately 1 to 3, although we have been quite flexible on our times, sometimes meeting earlier in the day if we are doing more of a field trip. We have met at our various homes, mostly keeping it in the backyards, at Kubota Gardens (a fave of all of us, and where we all adopted trees to watch over the upcoming year), at the zoo (where the kids surprised us once by drawing for literally an hour and then not being ready to leave), Camp Long (a great place to go when studying ponds, and where the kids want to do an overnight field trip), the afformentioned Burke Museum, or the Arboretum.
Just some of the topics we have covered are trees/leaves, birds (this is a fave topic which gets revisited often), shells (I have a big box of these, and they are surprisingly challenging to draw!), insects (Papa has a great insect collection which is fun to draw from on a rainy day, as does the Science Center.), and owls. We have had one lesson on contour drawing, and will focus on more drawing lessons when I get my tushy in gear and start learning ahead of them like I am supposed to be doing. Sometimes we just go out and draw whatever we find. That is fun, too.I usually don't have too much of a plan as to what we will be studying ahead of time. I prefer to keep it fluid, and go with what interests the kids. I will sometimes email the kids the week prior and give them a choice of two topics (Do you want to collect and draw leaves in my backyard, or do you want to go visit and draw our trees?).
Once I know what we will be studying, I go to the science shelves in my schoolroom (unfinished basement), and grab every book I can on the subject, including any and all field guides on the subject. I sometimes also will go to the library and just pull out whatever is currently on their shelves, too. Put it all in a tub, and have it all set up with our other regular supplies/resources, and either load them into the back of Whitey the minivan, or set it on the table on the back porch. The other moms bring resources also, and we all have different ones, so we usually have a wide variety to use/choose from.
In addition to these, I always grab The Handbook of Nature Study and Sketching in Nature. These are the main tools I am using to teach myself and the kids about our subjects and how best to draw them. I also refer to Artistic Pursuits, often, for simple drawing tips.My standard supplies include drawing pencils, colored pencils, watercolor pencils, CrayolaTwistables, our nature journals, plain sketch pads, etc.
**A note on the art supplies-I don't use all of these for every lesson, just pick and choose what will work best or what has been motivating the kids lately. The watercolor pencils are new- we are just getting started learning how to use these out in the wild.
Nature Journals: We have tried out many different ones, from the first one at Tanglewood (which looked okay, but was too flimsy, and had a bad binding that always came off), to a more scripted version. One of my students has a great waterproof 3 ring notebook her mom made of cardboard, taped over to avoid the rain. It has held up well, and provides a nice hard surface on which to draw. What we use most now are a 5 by 7 blank sketchbook, and this one from Rainbow Resource. The next time I order from them, I plan on buying several of these- I want all kids in my group to have this one, because on days when I have been too lazy to plan, it is easy enough to teach right out of this book. Two of us moms also have this NJ, based on the book Keeping a Nature Journal (I have checked this out time and time again and really want to own this- a very good book!) by Claire Leslie Walker.
If I know I am going to the zoo or going to be doing contour drawing or something really sketchy, I use the sketchbook, otherwise I take the pretty, hardcover one.Once we are all together and ready to go, I will teach a very simple short lesson. If we are studying ants, say, I would read pertinent tidbits from HONS, and maybe a poem if I found one. We might go over the 3 body parts of insects, and in general talk about observations we have made in the past of ants. I would show the kids the books to choose from, in case they want to do any research while we are working. Then we would probably all take a jar and head out to find some. We would probably draw one in our journal, either from real life, or one of the field guides. One of the moms takes lots of pics, and uses them in her journal.
I always make sure we use Latin names whenever possible to label drawings, and encourage the kids in their drawing skills.When we first started, I praised every drawing and commented only a little. Now after a year, I will encourage them to draw only the lines they see, add more detail, write a paragraph about where we were when we saw it, a poem, etc. I am trying to stretch them a bit now. Of course with the littles (4 and 6), it is still praise, praise, praise. I have been having my two olders pair with the littles on things like owl pellet disection, etc. and I think there will be great value in this. My kids are realizing how much they know by tutoring the littles.
After they have worked hard for at least an hour (this time has increased greatly since we first started, and is much shorter for the current littles- I try to bring something fun but nature oriented for them to do while the olders are still working), hopefully a bit longer, I let them play. They either play in our treehouse or engage in imaginary play in the backyard, or run free at whatever park/place we are at.Once we figure out how to use the Boy's digital camera, I will try to post some of the things we have done.I probably haven't covered everything, but that's it in a nutshell. Let me know if you have specific questions.
LB
addendum: Here are a few links from one of the other moms in our group. I haven't visited these sites yet, but will today. Cool! New things to explore!
Charlotte Mason Nature Study ideas.
backyard naturebug guide
bird guide
enature
more bugs
Friday, June 23, 2006
A new blog
Okay, I have been thinking about this for a long time, and then I just decided to do it tonight. This blog will be where I (hopefully) post samples of the kids' work, and talk specifically about their homeschooling adventures. I am hoping they will post a bit here too. Probably won't be much here for a while, but I will post updates on my other blog when I post here.
LB
LB
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