Sunday, November 24, 2013

Week Twelve -- The Captain Crunch Catastrophe

The Hannah House, on average, eats a reasonably healthy diet. (Well, most of us do. Some of us are super picky and think the five basic food groups consist of fish sticks, chicken tenders, tater tots, fruit smoothies, and jelly sandwiches). However, I do try to keep the processed stuff to a minimum. But like every superhero--y'all know all moms are superheros, right?--I have a kryptonite. And that kryptonite is grocery shopping with a child. The bright lights and endless rows weaken me. Disorient me. And somehow things get thrown in the cart at random and, often times, unbeknownst to me . . . 




This isn't always an issue, and sometimes even provides much needed amusement (like the time I spent twenty minutes trying to figure out why I'd bought three boxes of microwave popcorn). But Little Bug on Red Dye #40 is akin to experiencing the downfall of the Titanic: panic-inducing, confusing, and the prospects of survival are grim at best. Thankfully Mrs. R, who possesses the patience of a saint, worked with us through our Captain Crunch Crack episode and we were able to salvage the day. Mom has since thrown crack cereal away . . .








Alas, every day is a new day, so we learned a lesson about careless shopping and then moved on to learn about the four seasons of the year.














We certainly never turn down an opportunity for a good play on words in the Hannah house

















Another homeschooling mom shared a link to some great Thanksgiving videos at Scholastic. Little Bug and I watched a video filmed aboard a replica of the Mayflower. In true boy fashion when the twenty minute video ended all my son could talk about was the fact that the ship had a "poop" deck.












We finished our diorama on the Lakota people.


















And, finally, we donned helmets for some more space traveling . . .












to planet Earth! Cole decided he liked this planet best. Surface H20, oxygen and all that jazz.








Oh yeah. 
There was also math.







Saturday, November 16, 2013

Week Eleven -- To the Moon and Back




Know what's fun?

Eating Oreos.

And that made learning about the phases of the moon far more interesting. For the next few weeks we'll be journaling the moon and it's phases and using the awesome Star Walk iphone App to discover even more of what's hanging up in the sky. Thankfully Spain and its rain are cooperating with us this season.









                         Our Thankfulness Tree is growing!














November is Native American Heritage month and Little Bug had the privilege of hanging out with his Great Grandpa Larvie this summer--a Lakota member of the Souix tribe. We decided to learn a little more about the Lakota people by working on a diorama over the next two weeks. We built a tipi (or tepee) to place inside and labeled things like the sun, tree, and water with the proper Lakota vocabulary.









We used the opportunity for a journal prompt where Little Bug decided that if he lived in a tepee he would sleep. I guess he doesn't feel the same living in our house as sleep seems to be his least favorite activity. Ever ;)









On Friday we fueled up the rocketship and flew on over to Venus. Cole decided to make it a short visit because of all the volcanoes and, you know, the 400 + degree Celsius temps. Smart kid.











  
Coloring a turkey
Saving the world. Again ;)






Sunday, November 10, 2013

Night Sky Study


There's so much to fill a study on the night sky. I decided to break up the ten weeks by studying one planet a week for eight weeks (anyone else still feel weird ignoring poor Pluto?) and then one week for asteroids/meteors and one week on constellations.

We started with one of those giant science fair tri-fold boards, painted it with a mixture of blue and black.








And you can't exactly travel into space without a rocketship, right?










Or an alien hat.

So. With all space exploration necessities in place, we were able to travel to our first planet, Mercury.










Each planet will have a fact sheet to accompany it. After reading through the fact sheet, we answer a few questions about the planet and then both sheets go into our Space Exploration Notebook.








Week Ten -- Night Sky and Equations

I think a common fear that many homeschooling parents harbor is that one day the lessons will go above what they feel comfortable teaching. That really shouldn't happen in 1st grade and, thankfully for us, it hasn't.

Yet.

But when you realize you're teaching your kiddo some basic equation work, your stomach gets a little queasy and you start having flashbacks and begin to panic that your child might need a smarter momma if you continue to homeschool.

Me, a worrywart? Never.

Luckily, the Math U See program has videos we watch together with a very nice instructor who has much better explanations than I could ever give.





I learned how much Little Bug really hates handwriting. He insisted turkeys didn't say 'gobble, gobble' but simply 'gobble' just to keep from writing that one extra word ;)  Which was fine. Momma just added another worksheet that required writing for the day. *cackles*







It was time to choose a new Nature Study and this term we're focusing on the Night Sky which you can read more about here. So each week we'll be visiting a new planet. This week we traveled to Mercury.










And of course no one goes space traveling without an alien hat ;)

Week Nine -- Journey To the Center Of the Earth

This week we started off with learning about landforms, which fit in nicely with the book we've been reading, Paddle To The Sea. We did a simple color, cut, and label worksheet that covered the major ones. But I knew we'd spend a bit more time on Cole's favorite, the volcano. 


Little Bug had a blast with the paper mache and Mom had so much fun cleaning it up (note the sarcasm ;) ). 



For the month of November we're working on building our Thankfulness Tree. Each day we write down something we're thankful for and glue the leaf to the tree.



We also did a couple activities learning about the layers of the Earth. We built and labeled a diagram and also recreated the layers with playdough.