Thursday, September 9, 2010

Beyond Co-op Betsy Ross #2

Well, I thought I'd blog more over the last week while we were on vacation - but it didn't happen.  Our connection was very limited so I just stayed off the computer.  Not a bad thing to do while on vacation either.  I'll be playing catch-up for awhile though.  Here's a look at what we've been up to.  (Pictures to come!).  We left last Friday afternoon for an out of town volleyball game in Fayetteville.  (They won!)  We went from there to the beach.  Wonderful weather!  We arrived home last night about 1am. 

Early this morning (Thur), we had a field trip and picnic lunch.  Quick run to the grocery store.  Laundry.  Made a large fruit salad to take to a banquet for tonight.  Christopher was inducted into the Homeschool  National Honor Society.  Tomorrow we leave very early for another college tour.  We'll be gone for the day while Roger is home with the rest of the gang.  Saturday, Christopher is taking the ACT and Rebecca and I are going to the consignment sale.  Next week we have a birthday - and I need to get busy planning a party!  Just a few of the highlights.  :-)

Now, on to the co-op from last week.  We spent this co-op on the next 4 chapters of the book (5-8).  We picked 3 topics and it was really too much.  Two topics really seems to work better in this format.  Each person can take a topic to focus on.  It also helps to have one before and one after snack.  We observed this in the past and this was a good reminder.  It was fun - but we went over on our time.

Our first topic was flags from chapter 5.  We had a formal presentation on the flag from two Civil Air Patrol members.  The children were fascintated and loved watching them display the flag. 





They learned about flag etiquette.



They also learned that each fold of the flag symbolized something important to our country.



Each child was asked in advance to prepare a short presentation on another country's flag.  They each brought a picture and stood to tell something about the flag - what the colors or symbols meant or something interesting about the country.





They also looked at various pictures of the US flag over the years.  They each held a small picture of the flag and noted its appearance and then lined up in the order each flag flew for our country.  (No pics, sorry)

Next it was time for a snack.  We had similar foods to last time and also played a quiz to guess the foods.  This time, the quiz was based on the health properties of each food.  (I can post specifics if anyone wants them.  They just aren't on the computer that I'm currently using.)



Our next topic was Benjamin Franklin.  I covered a lot of information on him in last year's co-op and so this time we decided to focus on his weather experiments.  We demonstrated different weather measuring devices like a weather vane.



A thermometer.



Then the children made their own barometers to take home.



Our last topic was  Physical Conditioning.  We had talked some before our snack on eating healthy and now it was time to talk some about exercise.  I explained briefly the Presidential Physical Fitness Challenge.  There are 5 catagories in which you must compete in order to earn the award.  There are also 3 different levels or challenges.  Each of the levels is based on age and gender.  This is open for students ages 6-17.  We demonstrated and had the children work in 4 of the 5 areas.  (We did not do the 1 mile run.)

The first was a curl-up (sit-up). 



The second was a shuttle run.  You had to run 30 feet and pick up one block.  You ran back and place the block outside the line.  (No throwing!)  You did this a second time to finish the task.





The third area was either push-up, chin-up or flexed arm hang.



The last was a v-sit (stretch).


For more information, you can visit their website.  

It was a full and fun morning.  I love this style of learning!  Looking forward to our next meeting - next week!  I'm off to sleep now as morning is going to come wayyyyyy to early tomorrow (5am!).

Have a fun day!

Leslie

Saturday, September 4, 2010

College Visits

I'm not sure that 17 years ago, I knew that this day would come quicker than I wanted it too.   I remember those early years so well.  These have been full years - many memories and much to be thankful for.  I know that the future will be different - but can also have many sweet memories and much to be thankful for.  I'm not sure I'm ready to enter this new chapter.  I guess I don't have to be ready yet.  It's close though.  And it does bring tears to my eyes to think too much about it.  So I try not to dwell on it, but there is still much to be done to get Christopher prepared, especially over the next couple of months.  Praying for God to guide us, prepare us and to show us His path.

We have visited 2 college campuses over the last week.  Christopher didn't want me taking photos.  (Imagine that!)  He did take a few photos.  Creative - and definitely not the ones I would have taken.  Care to guess where we've been?  Can you recognize anything familiar?



This is the second campus.



This one might you give more of a hint at the second campus.  I know, it would help more if you could actually see the writing!



We have one more visit next week which will make 4 total that we have visited.  I'm not sure if we'll be going to more or not.  At this point, these are his top choices.  He is looking at 4 Universities.  Three are in-state and one out-of-state.  Three are public and one is private.  They vary in size from 12,000 to almost 25.000. 

It has been interesting to me to see the varied receptions we have received as homeschoolers.  At some, they don't really blink an eye and the expectations are really no different.  At one, we were encouraged to do a lot of additional work to prove what he had learned as a homeschooler. 

This is a lot to take in.  It's a big decision.  It is by far one of the biggest decisions he has had to make yet.  It ranks only second (in my opinion) to choosing Jesus as His Saviour.  I'm not sure that that decision though was as difficult as I think this one may be for him. 

He is planning to take the ACT and the SAT one more time each in the hopes of bettering his scores.  We are both hopeful that perhaps he will get scholarships, grants and aid to help finance his education.  Again, it will be interesting to see what things look like once everything is turned in and the decisions are being made.  I'm hoping that we will be able to apply early to his schools of choice.  A busy next couple of months.

Thanks for any prayers you offer for us.

Blessings,

Leslie

Friday, September 3, 2010

Some catch-up on our past week - Volleyball, Lentil, Science

Rebecca continues with volleball. She is really having fun.  Its nice that she has a couple of friends from our FIAR group  playing with her.



They had an unexpected game this week.  One of the teams had their opponents cancel and they wanted to know if we would fill in.  We found out just one day in advance that they would be playing.   The middle school already had a game scheduled and the JV team would now be playing a game in a different gym at the same time. 

They arrived an hour early to warm up.



Oh, they were playing in an unair-conditioned gym.  It was hot, but not as bad I had thought it might be.



Rebecca plays for the JV team.  The team that they were playing against is a Varsity team.  We all wondered how it would go.  They lost the first set and it wasn't pretty.  They rallied in the second set though to win!



They were playing the best 3 out of 5.  This is how it works for Varsity.  We typically play the best 2 out of 3 for JV.  Well, much to our delight ... they won the next 2 sets as well!!!  Go Lady Stars!  It was a very exciting win - perhaps because we didn't really expect it.  I'm so proud of the way that they played.



If anyone has tips on taking photos at a game - I would love to hear them.  It's low light so my sports setting doesn't work.  I am getting a lot of blurry photos on the other settings due to the action of the game/ball.  I know about the expensive lens that helps you to get more light.  It's just not in the budget.  So, with all that in mind - any tips?!  I would appreciate it.

Several of us went to see the UNC v Penn State volleyball game.  It was neat to see the level of play!  Penn State was #1 last year.  I think I enjoyed it more since I understand the rules and how the game is played.  I hope we'll be able to go back and see another one.



Last week, we rowed Lentil.  I have not been good about getting a lot of pictures.  But here are just a few.  We of course had to try lemons to see if it made our mouths pucker like the characters in the story.





He bent his head, but I think you can still see the pucker!



Eliana came up and joined us and I asked her if she wanted to try a lemon too.  She told me yes.  (Love having her answer my questions!)



This picture is dark, but still just made me giggle.



We rolled out our lemons to make the juicier.



After squeezing them, we made fresh lemonade.  Yum!



Daniel really enjoys the food activities.  I need to find more ways to tie this into his days to see if it will continue to help him in trying to eat new foods.  We also made homemade ice cream in baggies.  This wasn't a new activity, but it was funny and tasty nonetheless.



My oldest two are both doing Apologia Science this year.  We do labs with friends (as we have for years now).  The girls are doing Physical Science and the boys are doing Physics.  This is one of their experiments this week.  Love it when they work just as they are supposed to!



Thats a quick peek at some of what's been going on here.  More to come.

Blessings

Leslie

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Our first field trip

We had our first field trip with our homeschool group last week.  I'm just in one group - our Five in a Row group.  It's a smallish group (about 25 - 30 active families) and it has been a great support for our family!

Our first outing is always at a park.  It's just a fun way to reconnect with people you might not have seen over the summer.  It's also an easy environment for the new folks to come in and get to know some of the other moms/children.  I also think it's really important for kids of all ages to have time to play.  We all need time like this no matter what age or stage.  I know I enjoyed it as much as my children did.

We met at Harris Lake County Park.  A really fun park with lots of place to play!  There are trails, a lake, fields and a playground area.



I enjoy seeing the big kids and small ones all playing together.



I really love seeing my biggest and my smallest playing together.  Warms my heart!



Tried to take some random photos of the day, but didn't get as many as I would like.





Some of the older girls.



I got the boys to be still for a minute or two.  LOL



Can you guess why I didn't get many photos taken?  Here's a clue.



She was busy, busy, busy.  On the move much of the time.  I wanted to stand still a little more so I could talk with my friends.  I did have one precious friend walk around with me while I followed Eliana so we could talk!  :-)

The boys enjoyed some of the art at the park.



One of the blessings of having a big van - we had room for bikes and two additional children to come with us!



Unfortunately the trails were closed and so Christopher wasn't able to go on the longer ride he was anticipating.  We'll have to go back sometime soon!  Everyone would enjoy that.



We played for a couple of hours, ate a picnic lunch and then played some more.



It was a fun (and not too hot) day.  I love field trip days.  I look forward to our next outing!

Hope you are having a fun week-end wherever you are!

Blessings

Leslie

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Beyond Co-op Betsy Ross

We have started back with our co-op group again this year.  Most of the group is the same from our last year's FIAR volume 4 co-op.  We've lost one member due to a move (and we miss you Laura & boys!) and added two new families.  I'm excited and think it will be another fun year!

This year we are co-oping Beyond Five in a Row - Volume one.  We are starting with Betsy Ross and will be spending 4 co-op meetings as we row this book.  I think my family will probably enjoy it a bit longer than that as we got a later start.  The first meeting was at my house and my co-teacher and I were the same ones that started off the co-op last year. 



Here is a little about the set-up of our group for those who are interested.  We meet every other week for approximately 2-2.5 hours.  We will be rowing/doing 2 books each semester.  We will be meeting 8 times over the course of the semester and so each book will have 4 meeting times.  We also have 8 moms who will be splitting the teaching responsibilities this year too.  We teach in pairs for each co-op.  Each mom will have 4 teaching times over the course of the year (2 each in the fall and spring) and 2 times to host (1 time each in the fall and spring).  We looked at the books and tried to divide them evenly over the course of 4 weeks.  Here is what our schedule looks like.

Betsy Ross - The book has 17 chapters.  Each time we meet, we will cover 4 chapters (and in the last meeting there will be 5).  What that means is that the teaching pair can cover any topics in "their chapters".  For the first meeting, we had chapters 1-4 and covered several topics in those chapters.  We try to notify the group of the topics that we'll be covering at least two weeks in advance so that those topics aren't covered at home. 

Homer Price - There are 6 chapters in this book.  We are doing something a little different with this book.  We decided to cover 2 chapters in each of the meeting times.  We will be rowing The Clown of God in the other meeting time.  This is because this is the book we will be doing for our group's Family Event this year.  I think it will be a fun way for this group to get excited about that event.  It ends up being just 2 days before the event.

Thomas Edison and Boxcar Children will be rowed in the spring and are similar to these two.

So for our first co-op we met at my house.  We did not read the chapters (as we did the books for Volume 4) because it would  have taken too long.  One of the gals had the group idea to have her children do a summary of each of the chapters of the book.  I think that is a great way to refresh their memories of what occured during the book and to prepare them for co-op.

We started off with a devotion from the Beyond FIAR Bible supplement on kindness.  Next we did Sensory Awareness Activities.  Interestingly, both of the teaching moms have children with Sensory Processing Disorder.  We used activities found in the book Sense-abilities as well as on the internet.

We started with a discussion on the sense of touch.  What types of things can you feel?  (cold, hot, prickly, soft, etc.)  We then had texture bag filled with similar sized fruits (apple, orange, avocado, kiwi, peach, plum).  The children reached into the bag and tried to identify the fruit by touch.



They pulled it out after the guessed to see if they were correct.



The next texture bags dealt with shape.  There were a varity of items (peppermint stick, thimble, bolt, feather, eraser, etc).  Each child reached in and selected one item.  They were asked to give three adjectives describing the object and then to guess what it was.   They were very good at this.



An experiement on hot and cold involved them placing one index finger in a mug of ice water and the other in a mug of warm water.  After 20 seconds, they put both fingers into a mug of room temp water to see how it felt.  One finger (from ice water) said that this water was warm while the other said it was cold.  Interesting!



The  next experiment was done in pairs.  One person touched their partners arm with either one or two pencils.  They started holding them apart and then moved closer.  The partner tried to say how many points he/she felt.  It's harder than it sounds.



Another experiment involved cold when the children held ice for 30 seconds and then tried to pick up a grain of rice.  They were able to do it, but many couldn't really feel it.



We transitioned to hearing by talking about vibrations.  Put your hand on your throat to feel the vibrations when you cough, laugh, hum, growl.

We could see vibrations when we hit metal rulers.



We could also see it in the ripples made by adding food coloring to a bowl of water.  The children paired up to feel more vibrations when their partner talked into a balloon pressed against their ear.



We made a hydrophone by cutting off the bottom of a plastic bottle and placing it in a bowl of water.  The children put their ear to the bottle.  Two coins were hit together under the water and then above the water to note the difference in sound waves.



Pictures are going to be a little more scarce now as I was leading (and thus not taking pictures).  In order to get their snack, they had to first play a guessing game.  We had clues for various foods and they had to guess what they were.  The foods were either mentioned in the story or available during that time period.  Would you like to try it?  Answers are at the end.

1.  What is something that starts wet and becomes dry in order to eat?  Oldest recorded use is in Ancient Egyptian civilizations.  A bakery in San Francisco has a culture that has been in use since 1849. 

2.  Used to sooth tummies (it relaxes the smooth muscles around the intestine aiding in digestion).  An herb honored in Greek myth.  Something sweet enjoyed for hundreds of years.

3.  Originated in China and was a favorite food of Emperors.  Books on making jam were published in colonial America in the late 1600s.  It grows and is popular in the South.  It has a fuzzy skin.

 4.  This has seeds on the outside.  The most famous public eating of this food is at Wimbleton each year.  (It is served there with cream.)  US is the leading producer of this food. 

5. A snack enjoyed all over the world for hundreds of years.  It probably originated in Mexico.  It was an integral part of Aztec Indian ceremonies.

6. First introduced by a South American tribe in 1550.  It is and has been used as a staple when travelling long distances via ship, wagon, etc.  It is made by covering food with salt and then drying.  It is still popular today.

 7. This food was enjoyed in Ancient Rome.  Name was not given until the 18th century.  Term was used to describe fiery, spiced dishes condiments. 

  Answers:                                 

1.  sourdough bread, 2.  Peppermint sticks, 3. Peach (peach jam), 4. Strawberries (strawberry jelly), 5. Popcorn, 6.  Beef jerky, 7. Deviled eggs

We had all of the above for snacks and while they were finishing up, we had a discussion about Quaker children and what their lives would have been like at that time period - what types of chores did they do, what games did they play, what was life like?

We learned that riddles were popular and try our hand at solving some.  Here they are in case you want to try them out.

1.What flies up, but is always down?
2. When is a boy most like a bear?
3. What kind of room is not in a house?
4. What has teeth but cannot eat?
5. What has a tongue but cannot talk?
6. What has 3 feet but cannot walk?
7. What has a mouth but cannot talk?
8. What falls down but never gets hurt?

9.  What has four legs, a head, and a foot but does not live?

10.  What gets bigger the more you take away from it?

11.  What is more useful when it’s broken?

12.  What can be seen but not touched and when put in a barrel makes it lighter?

1. Goosefeathers. 2. When he is barefoot. 3. A mushroom. 4. A comb. 5. A shoe. 6. A yardstick. 7. A river. 8. Snow.  9.  A bed.  10.  A hole.  11.  An egg.  12.  A hole.

We then tried a couple of games.  The first was Blindman's Bluff.  I really wasn't sure how this one would turn out, but they really seemed to have fun with it and everyone wanted a turn to be "it".



We also played a game called Nine Men's Morris.  Sometimes people had a game board and other times they made one from materials they had on hand.  We did this by making a board out of chalk and then using different colored beans for markers.  We played one round so that everyone understood the rules.



Then we made up more boards so lots of people could play at the same time.



It was a fun morning - co-op always is fun!  I'm thankful for this fun way of shared learning with a delightful group of people.  I"m looking forward to our next c0-op later this week!

Blessings

Leslie