Book Club for Kids

Since our history co-op will be disbanding in the fall (as three of the four families will be enrolling in co-ops that will use Story of the World, our history text, so no point in doubling up) we need to shift focus and use our history group time for some new activities. One of the moms proposed we do a book club with the kids once a month and on alternate weeks we do a handicraft, nature study, or field trip that’s somehow related to the book. We’re discussing logistics but I proposed we pick a book for September through May and we each pick two or three titles we would like to host for the book club discussion and related activity.

We were brainstorming titles today and here are some –

Katie
Little House on the Prairie
James & the Giant Peach

Heidi
The Chocolate Touch
poetry unit – Shel Silverstein
A Christmas Carol
Mary Poppins

Other ideas…
Pippi Longstockings
Pollyanna
Treasure Island
Stuart Little
Shakespeare for kids by Lambs

I’m excited because this lets me commit to a novel a month with the kids and we can use them for our Teaching the Classics program as well. We’ll do a story chart with the kids and hands on activities with friends… I think it will help the stories stick for them better, too. Right now after reading Charlie and the Chocolate Factory we learned our friends were also reading it and we scheduled a tour of the local candy factory. It’s fun to read these books, it’s more fun to plan great activities around them, and it’s always great to do it with friends – my friends and the kids’ friends.

Isabella’s Crown Jewels

For our history group we’re studying Ferdinand and Isabella and the activity was to make crown jewels, like what Isabella sold for the Columbus voyage. The kids had a blast, it was a great activity for everyone from the 2 year old up to the 7 year olds.
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New Co-op Option

We considered joining a newly formed co-op for this fall but they began their semester the week we had Joseph. Realizing the time frame, I knew I would not be up for participating so we passed. Last night I ran into one of the co-op founders and we chatted and I’m thinking we may go ahead and join the co-op mid-year, with their approval. It’s based on the classical approach of education and uses the same history program we are using (Story of the World.) We’re on a different year than them so this year we would leave the day early and skip history, then do the book over the summer and catch up with them next fall for history. Christopher would be in their 1st/2nd grade class, Mo in their kindergarden, Bennett and Emy in their preschool class and Joseph with me helping in preschool or nursery. The kids would get spanish, music, science and fine art (to include public speaking) along with PE. So a lot of classes in the day! We would all have lunch together, too.

I’m excited because I think Emy and Bennett are both ready to try a more structured learning time, similar to nursery. Christopher had a year of preschool with Miss Amy and Moira had two years of APPLES, a speech-therapy preschool program. Both were just one day a week but it gave them some “school” time with another teacher and friends, circle time, group learning, etc. I want Bennett to have that chance this year and Emy wants to do whatever he does. They both are loving nursery at church so a Monday co-op day would be fun for them, I think.

We won’t buy it yet but the spanish class uses Rosetta Stone and we will pick that up at some point. They’ll do chemistry this year and physical science next year. I’m happy to think I’ll have the resource of other teachers to cover these enrichment classes. We’ll still cover language and mathematics at home but for things like public speaking they obviously need a public – this class gives them the group needed for those type of activities. There will also be field trips and holiday parties. We know several of these families already from another group we’re in and several of them are in our stake. The group isn’t one specific religious group, they are diverse but many are members of our church. They meet at another church that’s just down the street from our home.

Plus, I’m excited to think that I even feel up for this possibility. It means I’m getting the hang of five kids!!

Roman Chariot Races

I did not capture pictures at the park when the kids raced with their friends but it was an adorable history group planned by Amy. Here are the kids in their chariots at home, racing around the living room/dining room circuit. I think we had already lost some wheels at this point… 🙂


Story of the World Co-op 1-15

I forgot to post this, for the week we studied the Phoenicians we made pita bread and it was SO GOOD and we ate it with honey butter. It’s a very easy recipe and a staple now for us, I’m trying to turn it into bread bowls for dinner tomorrow. It’s not like flat pita pockets, it’s more like the flat greek bread since it has yeast and does get puffy.

“Phoenician Bread”
6 cups flour
2 t salt
1T yeast
2 c warm water
1 T honey

Let the yeast dissolve in warm water, stir in honey then salt & flour, slowly. Stir until dough is stiff to mix.

Put dough on floured surface, knead 10 minutes and place in buttered bowl. Cover with plastic wrap or damp towel.

Let rise 2 hours, dough should double.

Punch down, divide into 10 balls.
Let rest 15 minutes, then shape into 6 or 7″ rounds (like mini pizza crusts.)

Preheat oven to 450 degrees, place dough on cookie sheet & bake 10 to 12 minutes on lowest rack in oven.

Story of the World Co-op Chpt. 17

Book 1, Chapter 17, no clue what week we’re at!

Studying Babylonian Empire and King Nebuchadnezzar – apparently he went crazy and started eating grass like a cow? I’m learning a lot! So we had a chocolate dirt cake, chocolate mud frosting, and green coconut grass. It was SO GOOD.

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And here are the kids making hanging gardens on painted bowls, using various stickers of fruit, plants, flowers, and trees along with some silk flowers and Christopher added a colored waterfall and pond. A wonder of the ancient world! 🙂

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And Emy hugging Mojo & Mommy:
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Story of the World Co-op

I’ve had friends ask about how this works so here it is:

Story of the World is a series of 4 volumes covering ancient through modern history. It’s the classical approach, teaching history & geography in a linear fashion. There are the reading books and the activity guides (totally optional, copyright is given to copy maps and various activity sheets in the activity guide for family use but not for groups – so you can buy it once for all your kids.)

Each week we read one chapter from the reader, it takes maybe 20 minutes and we try to define words as we go then I have Christopher narrate back to me what he got from it. Moira listens but she’s 4 so I don’t push her to narrate – just tell me something interesting.

So we’re reading every week but our group is meeting every other week. A few families rotate hosting and we pick an enrichment activity to go with the chapter – not from the guide, since we didn’t all buy it, but that’s good for ideas. The kids come having heard the chapter and the hope of the activity is that it will give them a good visual/tactile memory to cement the concept. That’s my goal, at least! The group session isn’t a lesson or very academic, it’s the hands on “fun” stuff like making maps, carving cuneiform, etc.

Once I’m feeling less wretched I hope to do an enrichment activity at home the weeks we’re not meeting with the group. We’re also going to start a timeline and begin some map work, but that’s not going to happen until next year.

So, I think Story of the World is a great investment – several friends said it was a good read for THEM to gather a better perspective of history & the timeline. It’s a four year rotation so we’ll repeat this same book and add more extras (historical readings from whichever time period we’re in, maps, timeline) and the kids will read it on their own then. It’s designed to be a simple read, though they need some vocabulary help. By letting them hear it now we get them familiar with the story so when they’re reading it in another 4 years it’s something they’re comfortable with and we can explore in more depth. Like reading Shakespeare summaries now – when they start the actual plays I think they’ll enjoy them more by knowing some rough idea of what’s happening.

The books can be found inexpensively (around $10) and the activity guides are around $20. I don’t think the activity guides are crucial, but helpful if you need ideas. We also purchased an independent set of blackline maps to print (I think there’s a link to the right?) that’s broken down by time period, both with and without cities marked. I really like those.

I think there are a lot of benefits from the group – I am more accountable for getting readings done promptly, the kids get to enjoy learning from and with others, everyone shares their creativity, and there are the social benefits for both mom & kids. It’s fun to learn with friends. Plus there are more elaborate or messy crafts and projects that it’s nice to do for a group but I would be less inclined to do for just our house.

Our group was created just from a group of homeschool families – some already using the books, others just getting introduced to them. Buying the book isn’t a big investment up – $10. Even if it’s not a sole history curriculum, it’s an enjoyable and informative read for the kids. I was surprised at how much our kids pick up from it and ask for more – I worried it wouldn’t capture their interest. It does. 🙂

Story of the World Co-op Week 4

This week we studied Hammurabi and Babylonia. I bet I’m spelling those wrong but I’m too sick and tired to look… 🙁 Last week it was Joseph in Egypt, so this week we did a bit of both for our project.

Dayna printed out each of the kids’ names in the Babylonian cuneiform and gave them modeling clay and little tools to write their names – mostly lines and triangles which they made with Trivial Pursuit wedges. They also colored pictures of Joseph in his coat of many colors. The little kids played with (and ate) play-doh. 🙂

Christopher’s high points from his narration – the code of Hammurabi was fair laws and he said he got them from the gods (and we discussed the similarity to the law of Moses.) The Babylonians had a calendar and clock like us and they were the first to divide the year into 12 months, day into 24 hours and hour into 60 minutes.

After reading the chapter on Joseph we read the story in Genesis as well.

I’m really, really enjoying the history group and I think the kid are, too. It’s one hour every other week but it’s been a good way to see their friends and cement some of the history stories we’re reading at home. Plus I love the chance to see friends, too. 🙂