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This week in homeschooling: We start a new US History study

History

The Golden Spike Ceremony at Promontory, Utah, 05/10/1869. National Archives photo.
The Golden Spike Ceremony at Promontory, Utah, 05/10/1869. National Archives photo.
We finished the second volume of “Story of the World” before Christmas, and I decided to take a break from that and focus on American history for a while. We’ve been reading our way through Joy Hakim’s “A History of US,” but I wanted to delve a little deeper and do some projects along with the reading. After a little bit of research, I ordered the “Time Travelers: Industrial Revolution through the Great Depression” unit study from Homeschool in the Woods.

We started last Thursday — when it arrived — but we didn’t really get into the “fun” stuff until this week. The first lesson is about the Transcontinental Railroad and Seward’s Folly; we focused mainly on the railroad. The kids wrote a newspaper article about the railroad, and they put together a small booklet that will eventually go into a lapbook. I think we’ve only done one lapbook in our homeschooling experience, so this is a new thing for us.

The “Time Travelers” study materials don’t provide a lot of text, so we’re going to keep reading the relevant parts of “A History of US” with each lesson. I put a couple of the unit study’s recommended books on hold at the library, but they took longer than I’d expected to come in. I need to work on my timing for future lessons.

We also watched a couple of videos: a short bit about the building of the transcontinental railroad from the “Heartland” episode of the History Channel’s “The Story of Us” series, which included some info about the use of nitroglycerin that Pete found pretty fascinating (‘splosions are cool, I guess); and the 1903 film “The Great Train Robbery.”

The kids have been eager to get to the history lesson every day this week. I hope their level of excitement about it continues!

Math

Poppy is alternating between her third-grade McRuffy math workbook, where she’s working on fractions and division, and Teaching Textbooks 4. Pete finished his kindergarten McRuffy book and has moved on the the first-grade book. He didn’t think he could handle that when I first got the book out — “But Mama! I’m not in first grade!” — but he’s been getting along just fine with it so far.

Reading & Grammar

Poppy has been reading a LOT of “Garfield” comics. And also drawing a lot of “Garfield” comics. And talking a lot about Garfield.

We finished the second “Penderwicks” book on Wednesday, and we started the third one yesterday. The books look and read like they were written decades ago, but the first one — “The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy” — was actually published in 2005. The kids love the Penderwicks, and I like them well enough. The kids — particularly “spunky” sister Skye — have bad attitudes sometimes and use some language that we don’t use around here, but the ultimate lesson is generally about being helpful and loving to your family members. And Poppy almost always comments on it when Skye’s being unpleasant, so I guess she’s been listening to me every now and then after all.

Wanna read more about homeschooling? Check out the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers weekly linky thing!

A week of varied levels of productivity on the homeschooling front

Instead of doing our homeschooling roundup by subject, I’m going to do it by day. Viva la revolución, and so forth.

Monday

Homeschool at ButterscotchSundae.comThe kids started their day doing some coloring while I read to them about Walter Raleigh and the Lost Colony. That’s always been one of my favorite history stories, and I was pleased that the kids were just as fascinated by it as I am.

We finished that up and then got ready for co-op. Monday was — cue the fireworks and trumpets — our last day of homeschool co-op for this semester. It was a good semester, class-wise, but it’s always nice to have a break. Poppy decorating cookies and cupcakes in her baking class (of which I was one of the teachers), and Pete made an illustrated book in art class. Then we had lunch and the kids played on the playground for an hour. And then we had our last class of the day. Poppy and I made snowglobes in “My Little Pony” class, and Pete made a sweet PacMan ghost patch for his torn khaki pants in PacMan class.

After class the kids played for awhile, and then we came home. And the 15 minutes I gave them to play on their various electronic equipment swiftly turned into an hour, but that’s OK because we all needed to decompress a little. The kids love co-op, but it is a crazy-high-energy muddle of chaos and it saps all of our energy.

After we’d recharged, we did the rest of the day’s work:

  • A Teaching Textbooks quiz; the intro to this week’s spelling list; and some work on contractions in grammar for Poppy.
  • And for Pete: The intro to his spelling list; a discussion about nouns and verbs; a math worksheet; a skip-counting game with his sister and me; and a little art time with some paint and a stuffed robot.
    Tuesday

    A couple of the kids’ friends were going to spend most of the day with us on Tuesday, so Poppy and Pete got off to a great start so they could finish early. They finished their handwriting while I read a chapter of “The Penderwicks” to them, they did their spelling, they knocked out their grammar — and then their friends’ mom called to say they’d changed their plans.

    Cue the massive disappointment. We were derailed for a little while, but we got back on track after watching a little TV. The kids did their math — Teaching Textbooks for Poppy and McRuffy math for Pete — and practiced their tae kwon do forms in the living room, and then we loaded into the car to go to Poppy’s dentist appointment.

    Wednesday

    We started Wednesday just like we start most other day: Breakfast, handwriting and a chapter of our read-aloud book. Next we talked about Walter Raleigh and the Lost Colony a little more while the kids did some related map work, and then we read a chapter of our US history book. It was about women’s education, and how once upon a time some people didn’t believe women were capable of learning. Poppy was shocked and offended.

    Wednesday is a big running-around day for us, because Poppy has her piano lesson, ballet class and modern dance. She doesn’t like ballet anymore, but she wanted to take one last class so she could be in “The Nutcracker” one more time. And like a big softie, I acquiesced. So we’re spending a lot of time running to and from the dance studio these days. Between piano and the dance classes, though, the kids did their math, spelling and grammar.

    Thursday

    Thursday is normally a tae kwon do day, but the kids had haircuts scheduled in the middle of TKD time this week. (Tuesday’s dentist appointment was at the same time, which meant no TKD at all this week. Pete was thrilled; Poppy less so.) We somehow managed to get all of the schoolwork* done beforehand, though, so it was a smooth and peaceful day.

    * handwriting; chapter book; spelling; grammar; geography; math; piano practice for P; Rosetta Stone Spanish

    Friday

    Oh, Friday.

    I overslept (after a rather long period of not sleeping last night), so our day didn’t get off to a productive start. Once we finally did get started on school, Poppy announced that she wasn’t feeling well. And clearly she wasn’t (I’ll spare you the details). So today we’ve spent a liiiiittle time doing school — reading a few chapters of “The Penderwicks,” working on their handwriting, doing a spelling test — interspersed with time cozied up on the couch watching “Littlest Pet Shop.”

    It’s possible that we’ll do math later. But not probable.

  • Birthdays, birthdays, birthdays and a little MacBeth, too

    Homeschool at ButterscotchSundae.comOne plus-side to the time change has been that I’ve actually been getting up early enough to get a lot done before we have to leave for the afternoon’s activities. It’s been a refreshing change.

    I am wondering, though: How is it possibly Friday already? This is our Big Week O’ Birthdays — Rockford’s sister’s was Sunday; mine was Monday; my dad’s was Tuesday; and Pete’s was yesterday — and it always goes by in a flash.

    The kids don’t “do school” on their birthdays, so we’re having a four-day week. I’m almost certain we got some schoolwork done this week, but I didn’t take any notes. So come along with me as I try to recreate the Week in Homeschooling from memory. (Fun for everyone!)

    Math

    Poppy has been concentrating on getting to the end of Teaching Textbooks 3, and she was very excited this week to finally get to division.

    Pete was most disappointed not to have any graphing or charts to work on this week, so he lined up his Halloween candy in a hands-on graphing experience. We learned that his trick-or-treating resulted in a lot of Kit-Kats.

    Reading

    Poppy read a “Judy Moody” book, a “Magic Treehouse” book and two issues of the “My Little Pony” comic book this week. She’s a reading machine. I didn’t do a great job of doing reading with Pete this week, but he did read a lot of signs while we were driving hither and yon!

    History

    We read about Shakespeare this week, and Pete was super into the story of “Macbeth.” Witches and war are always exciting!

    Possibly less exciting was our US History reading, which was about education in the 1800s. Oh well. We can’t all be a classic tragedy.

    Memorization

    Rather than memorizing a poem every week, I challenged Poppy to memorize one long poem. She’s been working on “The Walrus and The Carpenter” by Lewis Carroll, and this week she finished up the first Eldest Oyster stanza. Pete has been mainly concentrated on the short poems in “First Language Lessons,” but he’s been picking up parts of “The Walrus and The Carpenter,” too.

    Extracurricular

    Monday: Poppy’s “Nutcracker” rehearsal
    Tuesday: Tae kwon do
    Wednesday: Poppy’s piano lesson and two dance classes
    Thursday: Tae kwon do and Poppy’s the last day of supplemental soccer practice
    Friday: Nothing! Woohoo!

    Wanna read more about homeschooling? Check out the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers weekly linky thing!