…or simply having a bit of fun.
Bang Goes the Theory Roadshow
Yesterday we went over to Poole to watch the Bang Goes The Theory roadshow. It was really well done. Possibly Sam was a little young to really get the most out of it. But as the whole thing was themed on what could kick a football hardest, man or a rocket powered football boot they had Jack’s attention. Definitely knew their audience.
After the show and lunch we spent a couple of hours in Poole park.
Where we met up with other home educators going to the later showing. Sam has decided he likes Monster very much as he ‘listens’ to him, the fact that Monster has the very useful ability to tune Sam out so Sam can chunter on as long as he wants is neither here nor there. Sam doesn’t need any response, as far as he’s concerned he has a captive audience.
Then we went to the ‘hands on’ tent where Sam had a go at shouting as loud as he could. Which was actually not very, as unlike everyone else who went for one sound like ‘ahh’, Sam went for a mini monologue
Then a potter about the shops, where I treated Jack to some cds as he is getting in to listening to music in his room. Michael Jackson’s Bad and Iron Maiden’s Number of the Beast — his choice
. Thornton’s ice creams and a discount book store rounded it off.
Then turning up on speck at the station, our train was just pulling in. At Southampton we had to run as connection was on the platform and then Pete picked us up. Never had such a smooth journey.
At home we watched the second half of the football, had a takeaway pizza, Jack wrote the first chapter of his new James Bond inspired story. Yes it is violent — I’m starting to accept that that is just boys (although not all boys of course) and laugh — taken me long enough. Sam coloured in a world map (that Pete drew and unjustly got berated for always missing off Iceland) — red, which probably meant he was playing a war game in his head and there was mass slaughter…
Another very good day.
I am the God of hellfire and I bring you …
…well, fire of course.
We started off sensibly by making a fire extinguisher from vinegar and baking soda.
And when that didn’t work (think I held it too far away) we illustrated why we always have buckets of sand at campfires.
We also looked at weighing a candle before and after burning it and results of depriving fire of oxygen.
Then we started building structures and burning them.
Ever more elaborate structures.
Then for good measure we threw on some paper caps.
Great fun was had by all.
Science Week
Carrying on with the Science week theme both boys did a Hands of a Child lapbook on the senses last week.
We looked at one of the senses each day
Hearing
We made a ‘Whisper-ma-phone’ (from the Lorax) and played a gme recognising sounds and locations when blindfolded.
Sight
We dug out a box of Optical Illusions Jack had been given for Christmas last year and had fun with 3d specs and kleidoscopes.
Touch
We investigated changes in texture by feeling dry lentils and ones soaked in water, did a scavenger hunt based on finding things by texture, made a collage and tried to identify items by touch alone.
Taste
We looked at the link between taste and smell, trying to recognise dried fruit (similar look and texture) with nose held.
Smell
Plans went a bit awry here so we just did the paper and pen stuff. Had planned something to do with strong smells and fans and timing how long the smell spread over the room.
Intech
Last week was National Science and Engineering week. On Monday since we still had Grandpa Bob staying (hence transport) and Jack was far from back to his best, we abandoned the books after lunch and headed to Intech, a hands on science centre near Winchester.
Over the years there have been numerous home ed trips to Intech, and everyone has raved about it. But because of the location and the fact they’ve usually been on a day where I need to be home by a set time we’ve never been so I was keen to see it. Well lets just say we won’t be going again!
Don’t get me wrong the boys enjoyed it. But we’ve been to a number of these centres and this one was poor in comparison. Too many things didn’t work, only about half the exhibits had explanations and there were few staff on the floor and they didn’t interact with the kids at all. It was all a bit tired and jaded. Bob and I couldn’t help comparing it to Techniquest down on Cardiff Bay, which is bright, fresh, lots of friendly staff around (usually students), everything well explained, twice the size and cheaper!
- periscope
- big periscope
- magnifying sound
- semaphore
- waves
- pullies
- skeletons
- heat sensors
- something to do with pain sensors?
- sound proofing
- earthquakes
- predicting the future
- Sam’s prediction
- landing a plane – carnage!
- floating ball
- shake hands – concave mirror
Science
Towards the end of last week we had a ‘sciency’ mood.
Voila…
Chromatography!
And not forgetting.…
Building structures out of spaghetti and marshmallows. Not connected to anything but I’d done it with my Rainbows the night before and it’s fun! Sam went on to add so many more bits of spaghetti to this that they looked like it had walls, but unfortunately it collapsed before I got a picture.
Last Friday I took Sam to a Science workshop at the Kings Theatre in Southsea. I spent many hours hanging around outside these things when Jack was younger and Sam was toddling so this time Pete took the day off so I could leave Jack behind (too old) and go in with Sam. As it happens because I’d stayed down stairs to wait/make arrangements for late comers by the time I got up to the room, he was seated in the middle and it was long and thin and I had no chance of discretely slipping through to join him. One of the staff were seated with them anyway. So I hung out at the back gossiping quietly. He had a lovely time though, if you want to see what they got up to it is best to look at Susie’s blog, she was more alert than me and took photos.
We then enjoyed a nice civilised lunch with friends at a nearby cafe. I must admit it was very nice just having one with me, no negotiating, trying to balance competing wants. And it is nice for Sam to spend time with friends his own age without Jack around. Although they are Jack’s friends too and he will join in with their games he gets bored after a while and is then a pain in the bottom. I should say the same is true in reverse. I have no doubt that the boys get on much better than they would do if they went to school, but it is also clear as they get older that they need their own space, sepearate friends and activities more and more. Tricky!
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.
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
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.
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).
Sam’s Curriculum 2011
For Sam focus remains on Maths and English, with everything else being mopped up with project work.
He will join Jack to study French and Latin.
I toyed with a more formal approach to Science but the book I bought looked boring so think we’ll stick to projects, joining in with Jack’s practical work and ad hoc investigations.
Maths
We’ll continue to work through a combination of Schofield and Sims and Heinemann.
English
We’ll continue with An Ordinary Parent’s Guide to Teaching Reading
We’ll use Schofield and SIms for handwriting, spelling and comprehension practice
And Developing Literacy worksheets for other aspects of English including creative writing
Latin
Both boys will be working together on Minimus.
French
These books are excellent because they work alongside each other. The books address the same themes in the same order, but obviously the work in Book 1 is more in depth than that in the Elementary book. This means we can study the main ideas and vocab together but boys can work at their own level.
Music
I hope to do a bit of music appreciation using this

Art
We will look at different artistic works and produce pieces inspired by them.
Project work
We will continue to work through Evan Moor’s Ancient Civilization History pockets
We also hope to look at
Dinosaurs
Ancient Greece (in more detail than the History pocket)
Space
Ancient Rome (in more detail than the History pocket)
Human Body
British Monachy
Olympics
London
But will go with the flow to some extent.
Jack’s Curriculum 2011
For once we begin the academic year with Jack working at the level he would be at school. We’ll ignore the fact that in some subjects this is our second or third curriculum.
The plan is to spend less time focusing on Maths, English and Science and introduce new subjects and do more project work.
Maths
Realistically I suspect that this is not enough to last the year but we will bulk out, with Maths puzzles, try some test papers and probably start on some KS3 Maths books we have, if necessary.
English
Last year I did a lot of work with Jack on writing for different purposes and audiences (everything he was writing sounded like it came from a Diary of a Wimpy Kid book) and it has definitely paid off. However, he is a bit fed up of writing exercises so this year the aim is quality not quantity. I hope to encourage him to start planning a bit more.
We have also time for reading built into our days so we aim to read the books linked to the comprehension exercises in to Jack’s English book.
Science
History
Geography
Jack wanted to use these
I’m not impressed. So the plan is to take the themes from it and expand them into projects.
Plan is to look at;
Coasts
Maps
Settlements
London
Rivers
These books form the core of our extension work
Latin
Both boys will be working together on Minimus.
French
These books are excellent because they work alongside each other. The books address the same themes in the same order, but obviously the work in Book 1 is more in depth than that in the Elementary book. This means we can study the main ideas and vocab together but boys can work at their own level.
Drama
Jack is doing drama lessons at New Theatre Royal in Portsmouth.
Music
I hope to do a bit of music appreciation using this
Plus Jack has fortnightly piano lessons.
Art
We will look at different artistic works and produce pieces inspired by them.
Project work
Jack is quite keen on the idea of these and as long as he remains so I will leave the entirely within his control.
He is starting with one about the seaside.






















































































