The HIGHLIGHT of my week (as a mom) was participating in a book club with several other women from our homeschool group. We began studying Sally Clarkson's book The Mission of Motherhood. If you've never read this book, you must. It is just what I have been craving. As the title implies, it is about motherhood being a MISSION, not just something we fit into our lives. I truly believe it is my mission during this season of my life to nurture, educate and spend time with my children. The verse that stuck out to me from the evening was this; 1 Thessalonians 2:8:
In our science text we learned about different types of feathers and did an experiment with feathers we had found in our yard. It involved putting oil on one feather and putting it in water, and then putting a plain feather in water. It was a good example of what waterfowl do when they preen themselves. We also began our bird logs in our notebooks and wrote common and Latin names for the birds we are seeing. I'm amazed at how many birds we have in our hard now that we are looking for them and attracting them with feeders!
While we are still on the subject of science, I have to tell you about meeting the most wonderful, generous science educator, Janice van Cleave. I simply visited her website a few days ago and inquired about her materials for homeschoolers, and she sent me a HUGE box of science experiments, books she has written, and all kinds of fun science accessories for my children. I was floored by her generosity and passion for science. This week she talked me through a color changing pencil experiment called Chameleon Dyes. If you visit her website you can see what it's all about! This is Janice, and we'll be using A LOT of her science materials this year!
We continued learning about Julius Caesar this week, and this has really interested my children. One fun activity we did was talking about measurement in ancient Rome. When they measured things in "feet" they literally meant the length of a person's foot. So, the kids traced their feet (don't ya love the patterned paper? - from my leftover scrapbooking scraps!) and measured their height in their own "feet" and then compared that to today's standard 12 inch foot. We also watched a documentary on Netflix (Sunken Ships of Rome) about sunken ships off an Italian island and the secrets they revealed. I was amazed at how nicely this tied into our reading of The Wadjet Eye this week, too. If you're studying ancient history, The Wadjet Eye is a must read!
I pulled out a book about maps this week and wanted to make sure the kids had all the basic geography facts cemented in their brains! We reviewed the continents, oceans and terms like topographical, cartographer, latitude, longitude, etc... and then the kids took turns calling out grid coordinates and finding places on the map. To reinforce coordinates, dad and GMan played plenty of Battleship this week, too. This was GMan's first experience with the game, and he greatly enjoyed playing - although we still need to work on him giving away the location of his ships!
GMan's Lego passion continues (I don't see it waning any time soon), and he earned a Creator set from me for reading all the way through his children's devotional Bible. He spent a month of Sundays (literally!) reading his Bible in church and he finished it last Sunday. I was more than happy to reward him with some Legos. We got the set on Monday evening. He didn't have time to build before bed so he said he was going to get up early Tuesday and build. Fine with me. I had no idea early meant 4:30 a.m.! Here's his finished project; this is the first time he has built with the directions and no help from mom or dad. He looks tired, doesn't he???
Both children are illustrating the poem The Months by Sara Coleridge (in First Language Lessons). Last year I had fun nice spiral bound books for children to write stories in, but we're using them for copywork with illustrations this year. I don't have a formal handwriting program for the children, but when they do copywork or Writing With Ease lessons we talk about good penmanship. GMan is really wanting to learn cursive, so I may have to look into that for him in the near future.
The kids finished notebooking pages about Oklahoma this week and we read a story about Will Rogers. Next week we'll study Kansas. Don't ask me how we're coming up with the order we study them - it's totally random! We chose Kansas because sang Home on The Range this week, and learned that it is the state song of Kansas.
We culminated the week with going to see Dolphin Tale. All I can say is WOW. It's the best movie we've seen in quite some time. The kids really want to go see Winter the dolphin in Clearwater, FL now. I know we can work it in when we make our annual trip to S. Florida to visit my mom and dad, so it's something we can all look forward to.
On an exciting note, my husband found out he is traveling to New York City for business in October. We thought it would really be nice if I could go along and we could have a little alone time. Thanks to a couple of dear friends of mine who will be keeping our children, I get to spend three days with my husband (while he's not working!) in NYC. AND ---- I'm so excited about this ---- I will most likely get to meet Jess and Theresa from my other blog, Three Thinking Mothers!! (They live just outside of NYC.)
Tomorrow is a big day for both kids: It is opening day for GMan's baseball league, and it is Miss B's very first swim meet!! We'll be going all day with sports, but I'm so glad they each have something they love and are passionate about!