Sunday, 26 September 2010

Tot School: A New Year Begins

Tot School

I found out about Tot School a little over a year ago, and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed doing school with my 2-year-old.  She’ll be 3 in a few weeks, and then we’ll be getting ready to go back to England.  Because of our hectic schedule and me trying to fit in 3 weeks of school with the other two before we go back, I haven’t really done much with Gabriela yet.  When we get back and settled, I’ll be using the Letter of the Week Preschool Curriculum from Confessions of a Homeschooler, but I’ll also be doing regular sort of Tot School stuff with her.  I’ve been searching stores, yard sales, and my own storage boxes for things I can take back to England to use in Tot School, so my mind has been busy working on ideas!

In this post, I’ll show you photos of what Gabriela has done so far here in the US.  I have plenty of tot toys and activities in storage that I could have gotten out for her, but that hasn’t been as easy to do as I thought!  Still, we have managed to do a bit.

1.   We began school while visiting my husband’s parents in Iowa.  Gabriela enjoyed playing with some tiny erasers (whales and monkeys) I found at the Dollar Tree.  She sorted them and took them in and out of the little zipper bags they came in.  She also poured them from one container to another.007015 018

2.  I found some Same/Different flash cards at Target, so I did some of those with Gabriela.024

3.  Field trip:  Family picnic at lake165

4.  Field trip:  Omaha Zoo063227 048

5.  Field Trip:  Wildlife Safari Park042 055crop

6.  Playground

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7.  One of the most important things Gabriela has gotten out of her time in the US is being with family—lots and lots of family!  She has spent loads of times with her grandparents in Missouri (my parents) and also with my sister and her husband.  On our trip to Iowa and Nebraska, she spent time with her grandparents (my husband’s mom and stepdad) and loads of aunts, uncles, and cousins.  She also got to see a few great-grandmas, one of them for the first time.  At the end of the trip, she got to meet her grandpa who was visiting from Arizona (my husband’s dad) for the very first time.  Though I have loads of photos, I’ll respect the privacy of our relatives and not post their pics on my public blog.  This is only the second time Gabriela has been in the US, and last time she had just turned 1, so it’s been great to see her bonding with family members here.

8.  Field trip:  Brookfield Zoo, Chicago104 133 176 157 186 203 221 212 216 234 254 286 287

9.  We’ve had school a few days out at the cabin my parents are working on.  I’ve left a few things out there for Gabriela to work on.  One is this Oreo Matching Middles game.095

10.  Another is the magnetic fishing puzzle: 105

11.  I also have a variety of wooden peg puzzles:123

12.  A nice, BIG preschool book (My Big Book of Early Learning):

125 130

13.  Winnie-the-Pooh blocks.  These are typical wooden alphabet blocks, but some of the sides make a picture when placed correctly.  I made the pictures for Gabriela, but her favorite thing was stacking the blocks:137

14.  Hyperdash—I’ve been wanting this game ever since I read about it on 1+1+1=1.  I couldn’t find it anywhere in England, so I determined to buy it on my next trip home to the US.  I was waiting until I had an extra $21-$22 to buy it, but then I found it at Wal-Mart on clearance for only $5!!!  I was so excited!  Anyway, all 3 of the kids love it!  It’s a great game for all ages (including me)!069

15.  Pink bouncy ball—My mom took Gabriela to the grocery store with her and bought her a ball.  So we’ve been playing with it together.075

16.  Cardboard Puzzles076

17.  Sweeping skills…she does this one on her own and loves it.  I really need to find a child-sized broom for her.  Our house in England is all carpeted (all but the tiny bathroom), so she doesn’t really get to sweep there unless I let her practice outside on the patio.  : )030

That’s all for this week (and this was more than one week’s worth of Tot School).  For more Tot School posts, visit 1+1+1=1.

Saturday, 25 September 2010

US Geography Travels: Missouri

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Our geography travels for the 2010-2011 begins!  Our first stop is the state of Missouri, which I consider my home state.  My parents, my sister, and I were all born in Missouri, and I have spent most of my life there.  Also, my older two children were born in Missouri.  We are actually in Missouri right now, so it seemed like the most natural place to start! 

I really wanted to take the kids to Laura Ingalls Wilder’s home and museum in Mansfield, to the Gateway Arch in St. Louis, to the Pony Express Museum in St. Joseph, and to the capitol building in Jefferson City.  However, lack of finances and time have prevented all of those!  Isn’t it sad?  I’ve personally been to all of those places, and the kids have been to the Pony Express Museum before—they just don’t remember it that well.  They have seen the Gateway Arch both from the air and from a car (at a distance).  We have less than a month left before we go back to England (and a total of 15 days left in Missouri).  After we leave, I’ll try to post some photos of the places we DID go to in Missouri!

Week 1

Monday: Located Missouri on a map, found capital, major cities, and borders.  Listened to “Middle United States Song” from Geography Songs.  We also labeled and colored in Missouri on a US map page (I got a pad of these maps at a teacher workshop years ago).017

Read a chapter from Little House on Rocky Ridge (it’s a long book for a 2-week read-aloud—I began in the middle of the book, where they had just entered Missouri).041

Discussed St. Louis:

Tuesday: Notebook page (I made this form myself, but I based it on Jolanthe’s Country Fact Sheet.)014

Flag page (I got this from Apples 4 the Teacher):032

Began “Famous People” chart--This is another form I made myself…I don’t know how to post my forms for people to copy, but it’s easy enough for anyone to make and not at all fancy.  Here’s the finished chart (though I should have added more spaces):016

Discussed Daniel Boone and watched a You Tube video:

Listened to The Missouri Waltz:

Read a chapter from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Wednesday: Discussed rivers, hills, forests in Missouri

Map page from Enchanted Learning:033

Discussed George Caleb Bingham and look at some of his art. (Click “art” to go to a page with lots of links to his paintings.)

Read from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Thursday: Read from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Discussed Laura Ingalls Wilder and watched the trailer to LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE: The Legacy of Laura Ingalls Wilder on Youtube (embedding disabled—click on link)

Friday: Reviewed “Middle United States Song”

Discussed Dred Scott and George Washington Carver.

Read from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Ate a peanut butter treat (Carver)

Week 2

Monday: Missouri map puzzle—I bought this puzzle at a teacher supply store when I doing my student teaching in Springfield, MO.  Isaac was the first person ever to use my puzzle—it was still in its shrink wrap!  He isn’t really into puzzles, so I ended up helping him.  I did point out counties we’d been in and landmarks shown on the map.004 005

Discussed Harry S. Truman and John J. Pershing.  I have a movie about Truman, but it’s in England (and we’re in Missouri).  Pershing was interesting.  Did you know that he is the ONLY person to be promoted in his own lifetime to the highest rank ever held in the United States Army?  He and George Washington are the only Americans ever to have the status of a 6-star general, but Washington was promoted to that status after his death.

Read from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Tuesday: Notebook page on St. Louis Gateway Arch015

Discussed Scott Joplin

Read from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Wednesday: Read from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Discussed J.C. Penney and Walt Disney

Thursday: Discussed Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) and Tom Sawyer

Read from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Friday: Discussed Twain’s book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (FYI:  This trailer does contain one instance of the “D” word.)

Read from Little House on Rocky Ridge

Looked through books Images of Missouri and The Spirit of America: A State-by-State Celebration (the section on Missouri).  We also looked at my Missouri photo scene placemats.  I don’t remember where I got these placemats, but I’ve had them for years!006 039 038

To conclude our travels through Missouri, Isaac had a Missouri treat—an ice cream cone!  The idea came from the book American Grub: Eats for Kids from All 50 States.  Now to get the story straight, I went to Wikipedia and found out that although several vendors at the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair claimed to have invented the waffle cone there, it was most likely only popularized at the fair.  Most people believe that the cone had already been invented a long time beforehand.  At any rate, we counted it as a good enough example of a Missouri snack to end our studies with!012


For more geography or history posts, see Children Grow, Children Explore, Children Learn
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