Life, Love & Literature

Just another Home Education blog

Titanic

Last week we had a bit of a Titanic theme.

We started off on Sun­day with a visit to SeaC­ity in Southamp­ton.  The pho­tos aren’t great sorry but I was on no flash set­ting as I wasn’t sup­posed to take any, sneaked a few at the start but missed the one inter­est­ing bit which was the court room.

He’ll steer it away from that iceberg

eye spy…

Decid­ing who to save

mod­ern lifebelt

Titanic style lifebelt

The museum was rather rub­bish really, no soul and noth­ing that really fired mine or the kids inter­est.  We had a very nice day though as we met up with a lovely fam­ily we’d met through A Lit­tle Bit of Struc­ture.

For the rest of the week we worked though var­i­ous lit­tle bits to flesh it out.

fact work­sheet

We looked at replica packs and in par­tic­u­lar the posters and they drew their own with oil pastels. 

                             

We talked about why peo­ple would have been on the Titanic. Dis­cussed that many would have been emi­grat­ing and we looked at what they would take if they had to pack every­thing into one bag.

                           

We researched the dif­fer­ent types and prices of accom­mo­da­tion and made first class tickets.

 

We plot­ted the route using lon­gi­tude and latitude.

And used the time­line of events to prac­tice hand­writ­ing and telling the time.

We made and sank models

  

And hav­ing seen at the museum the diver­sity of nov­els avail­able that fea­ture the Titanic (Indian Jones and Dinosaurs stick out) they wrote Dr Who sto­ries on the Titanic.

                  

We also read

 

 

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Easter

Yes I’m late I know!

In the run up to Easter we found our­selves busy; see­ing schooled friends, attend­ing activ­i­ties at the library and hav­ing friends around and of course Pete was off the last day and a half of the week.  The result was although we weren’t ‘on hol­i­day’ there was not a great deal of work done, but what we did we had fun with.

We looked at symmetry.

   

And co-ordinates

  

Logic (sudoku)

  

And wrote stories

  

One of the advan­tages of my work is that I always have a bank of these sort of activ­i­ties to draw on.

Easter itself slipped by in a blur of Gang Show rehearsals, but we did find time to dye some eggs using home-made nat­ural dyes.

Unfor­tu­nately I didn’t pho­to­graph the imme­di­ately and they faded a bit, the photo doesn’t how them well (part. green and pink) but we were pleased.  They were all boiled for 10mins in a mix of water, white vine­gar and our colour.

Brown was cof­fee, yel­low turmeric, pink beet­root, blue red cab­bage.  The blue needed an hour or so soak­ing to get the colour.  Green were eggs dyed yel­low and then soaked in the blue dye.

We also found time for bak­ing, Easter nests and car­rot cakes.

Sam made the paper chick he’d had as a birth­day present and been hoard­ing for Easter.

We made Easter crowns

  

And of course there were choco­late eggs!

And finally here’s our sea­son table.

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Flags, Flying Horses and Feeling Blueggh!

Crikey nearly 3 weeks since I last blogged.

Rea­sons being, I have been rather busy of an evening mak­ing flag print­a­bles for all the Com­mon­wealth coun­tries (54 — if you include the sus­pended Fiji — if you’re inter­ested) for Activ­ity Vil­lage.  I am going to have to insist that every­one I know does a project on Belize so the colour­ing flag gets used, it took hours to draw!

After a few hours of that an evening I couldn’t face any more time on the com­puter and have been work­ing hard fin­ish­ing off the birth sam­pler I started at Christ­mas for a baby which is 6 weeks old this week.  Pleased with the result though, although it was a right night­mare to find a frame to fit it.

Apart from that we’ve also lost our groove. Every­one seems to have been ill since Christ­mas, Sam and I came down with stom­ach bugs since I last blogged and even now Jack is in our bed now as he has a chest infec­tion and is run­ning a tem­per­a­ture.  Every­one has been low, grumpy and snap­pish and it has seemed a much more pleas­ant occu­pa­tion of an evening to go to bed with my Kin­dle (have I men­tioned that I love my Kin­dle) than to reflect on the day.

We have been up to stuff though and I’ll try and fill in some of the blanks later in the week as too tired now.

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Pandas

To blow my own trum­pet a bit.  I’m really pleased with the way this theme has come out.  We loved doing the crafts.

Activ­ity Vil­lage Panda theme

 

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Preparation is key!

Not been a great week, not a bad one at all but not one I look back on and think ‘yes, got this sorted’.

Week­end was dif­fi­cult, again noth­ing par­tic­u­larly bad about it.  Kids just pressed the wrong but­tons a bit, I was just tired I expect (although Pete agreed).  Also I was in a lazy mood and didn’t go through and check that I had every­thing for the boys work this week or get much house­work done.  I shot myself in the foot there because my mood is often related to how clean and tidy the house is (nags at the back of my mind and makes me feel guilty and cross if it’s a mess).  So wasn’t feel­ing refreshed on Monday.

We had dif­fi­culty stay­ing focused, I got dis­tracted by (my) work — I usu­ally try and do an hour before we sit down in the morn­ing but had a big job I wanted to tick off, they were dis­tracted by Lego (now Jack has finally fin­ished build­ing his Christ­mas presents) and we were slow to start in the morn­ings, which imme­di­ately put us out.  Elderly neigh­bour wasn’t well and although I obvi­ously don’t begrudge it at all we found our­selves run­ning errands I hadn’t expected.

Didn’t have a map we needed so post­poned Geog­ra­phy as I thought it was worth buy­ing a local Ordi­nance Sur­vey map, hadn’t printed Sam’s Eng­lish so we were work­ing from work­books, I’d ordered a Chem­istry set for Jack so we could do some exper­i­ments but of course it didn’t have all the things we needed in there…

So les­son learned. Goal for next week is to have every­thing ready on Sun­day night!  And do the iron­ing and hoover­ing at the weekend!!!

This is some of what we did.

Made lots of drag­ons.  Can’t be both­ered putting up all the pho­tos but they are here with instructions.

And lots of pan­das.  This is Jack’s gor­geous bag.  They will be up on Activ­ity Vil­lage soon.

Look­ing at blood flow by hold­ing a hand in the air for 2 mins and then com­par­ing the colour with the other (should be white — drains of blood).

And showed how a heart valve only allows the blood to flow one way.

Learn­ing about the ori­gins of place names and find­ing examples.

Swim­ming.  Con­den­sa­tion, sorry, as soon as I wiped the lens it steamed back up - hydrother­apy pool and gets rather warm.  Dif­fi­cult to see but Sam has one of these and they are brilliant.

Jack made a cake on his own (I was banned from kitchen).  Wasn’t an over­whelm­ing suc­cess but was edi­ble and I love that he will try.

And I proved I’m worth the money I’m paid by not only mak­ing, but eat­ing (can’t stand waste), green eggs and ham.

And yes it wasn’t nice!

Apart from that the boys have been work­ing their way through the ‘Walk­ing with Monsters/Beasts/Dinosaurs’ dvds again.  They were so scratched Santa put new ones in Sam’s stock­ing hav­ing been a bit over watched.

 

 

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New Term

A few months ago Jack made seri­ous indi­ca­tions of want­ing to try school, rather than airey fairy one day type com­ments.  I’m ashamed to admit I didn’t react well and got a bit upset, not say­ing no of course, it has always been their deci­sion just overly neg­a­tive.  2 days later, PMT had gone and I’d done a U-turn. Once the ratio­nal part of my brain kicked back in I know full well it is curios­ity based on the fact most of his friends go rather than unhap­pi­ness at home that is the moti­va­tor, and I am rather proud of him hav­ing stuck to his guns when I was clearly against the idea.  Aca­d­e­m­i­cally it won’t do him any favours but doubt it will be that bad either, we’ve given him a good start and home envi­ron­ment will always play a major role whether a child is in school or not.  Also he’s a social being and I am so not, so the idea of let­ting him go off and do his social­is­ing with­out me is not with­out appeal.  And it might be nice to focus on Sam a bit more (he is very adamant that he doesn’t want to go), he has always kind of had to slot in around Jack.  Of course in the time that it took me to reach these con­clu­sions Jack cooled on the idea.  Based on the fact we have some days out and week­ends away booked we (to clar­ify by we I mean the entire fam­ily, Pete included!) have agreed to put the idea on the back­burner to revisit Feb time, and if he wants make inquiries then with a view to him start­ing after Easter.

With my ‘enjoy the moment’ frame of mind I’m not let­ting what might hap­pen in the future effect too much what we do now.  I let him type most things at home and I think this is some­thing where he does lag behind schooled kids.  And any­way at some point in 3 or 4 years he will start on GCSE’s so will need to write more quickly and leg­i­bly.  We’re try­ing to make it inter­est­ing though by tran­scrib­ing poems that he likes, thanks to work I have the fonts avail­able to pro­duce hand­writ­ing sheets eas­ily.  Aca­d­e­m­i­cally I sus­pect he is way ahead in many areas and where he does lag behind he is bright enough to catch up quickly.

I’ve rejig­gled (or rejigged if you insist — I quite like the word rejig­gled though even if it is a ‘com­edy word’) our timetable a bit to take account of var­i­ous things

  • With not aim­ing to attend Home Ed Groups I don’t need to work around them, so it is all about suit­ing us.  I’ve left space for our reg­u­lar catch up with Lisa and her boys and after­noons are always flex­i­ble.  If we’re in then we’ll work on crafty, sci­ence exper­i­ments type things but equally well these can be put to one side to catch up with friends or run errands.
  • So we are ‘school’ Mon-Thurs, with Fri­day as a day off for trips and out­ings.  Some vis­its to friends, oth­ers fam­ily days out.
  • Boys want to swim reg­u­larly and they don’t want to go to a group ses­sion.  So I’ve hired the local pri­vate pool in the vil­lage on a weekly basis.  Bliss, warm and only us in it.  Has the advan­tage of being near library too so two birds one stone.
  • Sam starts Beavers in a cou­ple of weeks.  He’s a bit meh about it.  Per­son­ally I think it will be good for him to do some­thing with­out Jack but won’t be sur­prised if he doesn’t like it.  He’s used to mix­ing with older kids and gets a bit non­plussed by kids his own age.  I’ve con­vinced him to try it for a week or three but if he isn’t keen then fair enough.
  • We found when Jack did piano prac­tice mid morn­ing it dis­rupted our flow, so moved it to first thing before we actu­ally sit down
  • Split work into two hour blocks , with a break.  Included project work and other extras along­side Galore Park.
  • I am not split­ting Jack’s work in to days but ask­ing him to man­age a weeks worth of work. Sam is still at the stage of doing what I ask when, he is not ready to self man­age yet.  Obvi­ously I expect less out of him than Jack and we’ll spend a fair amount of the time Jack is work­ing read­ing and colour­ing etc.

So this week started gen­tly on Mon­day.   We used Activ­ity Village’s New Year Doo­dle Fun to reflect on 2011

Jack’s fun­ni­est moment

Sam’s favourite mem­ory of 2011

Sam’s favourite outing

 

And the same resource to help with them con­sider goals and make plans for the upcom­ing year.  I am not unaware of the incon­sis­tency here, I want to live in the moment more but am encour­ag­ing the boys to develop plan­ning skills.  I’m good at plan­ning, they’re good at liv­ing for the now (in the way that chil­dren are) if we all get a lit­tle bet­ter and the other, every­one will hope­fully be hap­pier.  For the kids some of this sim­ply means work­ing out plans of sav­ing up for things they want and every­day think­ing ahead.  If they are told the bus is due in 20 mins get­ting dressed and ready (ide­ally in weather appro­pri­ate clothes) in an organ­ised man­ner!  But also par­tic­u­larly in Jack’s case it is about him tak­ing more con­trol over his education.

Jack’s read­ing plans

Also been mov­ing on with galore park.  Sci­ence involved sort­ing food labels

New projects were started, WW2 and Vil­lage Set­tle­ments in Geog­ra­phy.  We are using resources from Plan­bee.  They are les­son plans for school but adapt well for home use and I find them a good way of check­ing we have cov­ered the major­ity of NC top­ics.  Par­tic­u­larly like the geog­ra­phy resources as I strug­gle to find good UK based Geog­ra­phy resources.

Sales have also meant boxes of books turn­ing up with reg­u­lar­ity and caus­ing dis­trac­tion and excite­ment.  I treated us to a globe with my Ama­zon voucher which has given us all (Pete and I included some fun).

 

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Skipping along

When the best thing that hap­pens in your week is deliv­ery of a heated airer it is not a good week and one best skipped over.

On the other hand, those dri­ers have mas­sive queues (6000 peo­ple wait­ing for deliv­ery when I rang a few weeks ago to enquire where it was) and I am sick of wear­ing slightly damp, smelly clothes so maybe I am not absurd to be excited by it.  Although get­ting excited over a clothes horse — even a fancy elec­tric one, makes me feel incred­i­bly sad and mid­dle aged.

But doesn’t change the fact last week is best forgotten.

This one, for­tu­nately, is better.

We’ll still ‘work­ing’ but in a very relaxed way.  Jack is in charge of mak­ing sure every­thing on the timetable for this block is fin­ished before the end of the week and Sam is just pick­ing what work­books to do, a few pages of a morn­ing to keep things ticking.

And not for­get­ting we’re mak­ing lovely lit­tle card vil­lages with our colour­ings from the Activ­ity Vil­lage Advent cal­en­dar.

Mon­day morn­ing was spent work­ing and tidy­ing, before Lisa and Har­vey popped around for the afternoon.

Tues­day was the last Cubs before Christ­mas so we spent a lot of the day shop­ping for and mak­ing gifts for the lead­ers (and lots spare for us)

I will admit to being a bit lazy and not spread­ing the bis­cuits between 2 trays so they spread to one giant bis­cuit (these are ours — lead­ers got some that held their shape). They are cin­na­mon bread, although recipe there is off.  Not sure why as it is mine but… should have 150g of sugar in (I used caster this time as it came out of cup­board first, have used soft brown in the past), 125g but­ter and 4tbsp golden syrup.  And I used mixed spice instead of gin­ger but that was a feel like a change thing.

We started off try­ing to paint the details in a choco­late mould with dif­fer­ent colour choco­late to make pretty choco­lates, soon gave up and made choco­late mice (melted Dairy Milk and a dash of orange essence) which were much sim­pler.  Left over choco­late got tipped into lolly moulds.

Each leader got a mouse and some bis­cuits in a cel­laphane bag tied with Christ­mas ribbon.

And of course cards.  Which we car­ried on with today and they fin­ished everyone’s. I sim­ply sup­plied a load of pre­folded cards, some stamps and inkpads, sparkly pens, Tatty Ted die cuts and scrap paper and left them to it.  I just have to do my bit of writ­ing and address­ing them.

Cubs is only about 8 mins walk away but 4 mins into the walk there was a tremen­dous hail storm.  Really hurt and we were soaked through.  So Sam and I man­aged a hot bath (and left Pete to get Jack) and there was hot choco­late and bis­cuits before bed.

Today has all been about tidy­ing up and get­ting ready to put up the dec­o­ra­tions.  Well the ones in their rooms, not ready for down­stairs yet.  A week before Christ­mas is plenty.  Unfor­tu­nately Sam started to get unwell as the day wore on.  His asthma has been bad for a lit­tle while but seems to be get­ting a cough/infection to go with it.  I came in from hoover­ing the stairs though to find that Jack was doing a good job of look­ing after him though.

Jack does delib­er­ately wind Sam up a lot, but he is a very good big brother really :-)

So dec­o­ra­tions never made it up as Sam fell asleep while I was doing the final tidy­ing up.  Jack and I spent a pleas­ant evening though, we played table foot­ball and Strat­ego and he had a go at some of the tunes from his new book.

He’re hop­ing Sam is on the mend tomor­row and we can pot­ter on with of Christ­mas preparations.

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Christmas is Coming…

…and over the last week I can feel the change as we take the foot off the pedal a bit.  Con­cen­trat­ing more on fin­ish­ing off projects, crafts and socialising.

The game of the moment is ‘cars’.  They have spent a long time pour­ing over the atlas plan­ning their round the world trip.

And Twister!

Last night was a christ­massy night!  At Rain­bows Sam joined in, mak­ing rein­deer food.  Which we appear to have lost but prob­a­bly just aswell as the glit­ter leaked through the organza bags I’d bought.  The church floor was very sparkly despite a lot of sweeping.

When we got home I sent them upstairs where they found I’d treated them to (much needed) new pjs and a not so nec­es­sary but much wanted Blue Nose Friend and a new book to share.  I got lots of cud­dles (although Jack’s were by proxy — he sent Sam down to give me a cud­dle when he found them and then I got a lot of cud­dles from the rab­bit) and thank yous.  I can’t sur­prise Jack very often any­more, he’s too old and cyn­i­cal, so I love see­ing his gen­uine delight.

They hung and filled their fab­ric advent cal­en­dars which I made many years ago now :-)

And put up the Blue Nose Friend pic­ture ones that I couldn’t resist.


Then we snug­gled down…

…switched on the elec­tric fire, turned off the lights and read our new book by torchlight.

Today they coloured the first pic­ture from Activ­ity Village’s online cal­en­dar.  Jack’s is an alien house and we are dis­play­ing them in the win­dow. Sam is stand­ing his up to make a model village.

We used the stock­ing frame from the Activ­ity Vil­lage cal­en­dar to write their Santa letters.

Then Jack did a bit more work.  I’d said a morn­ings work of his choice so he wrote up a report about Eid as part of his Islam study (Cubs badge :-) ).  Then we cud­dled up and read some of Wreck of the Zanz­ibar by Michael Mor­purgo, the book from Jack’s Eng­lish chap­ter.  Lunch in front of Blue Peter.  Then they played ‘cars’ and com­puter while I fixed a very wob­bly com­puter cup­board and wrapped 30(!) Christ­mas presents for the Rain­bows ready for Santa to bring next week.

 

 

 

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Colds, books and things to come

Apolo­gies for short and rare posts at the moment. Have spent the last three weeks really strug­gling to shake off rot­ten colds and fail­ing badly.

Then we’ve been dis­tracted by book­cases col­laps­ing which has resulted in a major clear out and fur­ni­ture rebuilding/rearranging.

Besides our nor­mal aca­d­e­mic work much of what we’re doing I haven’t wanted to include on the blog for pro­fes­sional reasons.

I’m work­ing on writ­ing an Art Course for Activ­ity Vil­lage, which involves pro­duc­ing pieces inspired by famous works using a range of art mate­ri­als and approaches.  We are hav­ing great fun with this and the boys have pro­duced some won­der­ful pieces.  Need to pick a Da Vinci as I really, really want to see the new exhi­bi­tion at the National Gallery.

And of course Christ­mas is on the hori­zon! As every­one else has been mak­ing Hal­loween crafts we’ve been busy mak­ing a mess with glit­ter and sequins as we work on Activ­ity Village’s Advent Cal­en­dar.

Really excited about this year! Helps that I’m way on course to have done my part by mid Novem­ber for once, rather than strug­gling to stay a few days ahead :-)  Adina has pro­duced some gor­geous pic­tures (we don’t always do the colour­ing part but will this year — envis­ag­ing a big dis­play in my front win­dow). The crafts are lovely and sim­ple, not that I’m blow­ing my own trum­pet — but I am gen­uinely really pleased with them, boys have worked hard to help and had fun doing so (helped by pay­ment by blue nose friends!).  And the print­a­bles we’re cre­at­ing are lovely too, helped by some gor­geous illus­tra­tions that are a plea­sure to work with.

 

 

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