Annual Evaluation

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While we’re not completely finished with our school “year” and our schooling runs through the summer…here I evaluate what worked and what didn’t.

Annual Evaluation

We typically finish up a majority of curricula in springtime, like science, math, history, and many extras. We spend spring and summer doing “light schooling” – we finish reading and complete history projects. We do lots of art and nature study and spend our mornings watching hummingbirds and playing outside in the sun. We spend the too-hot afternoons watching educational DVDs and shows on Netflix or playing educational apps and computer games. Evenings, we’re back outside to work in the garden, enjoy the cooler air, and watch hummingbirds and bats.

So here’s my evaluation of what worked for us and what needs tweaking this past “year.” I think I’ve finally hit my stride and we were pretty successful. My husband is quite pleased that we’re settling down and are more comfortable with our curriculum choices and not wasting time and money on products that don’t fit.

History

We love Tapestry of Grace. I use this primarily with Elizabeth, who loves history and outgrew Story of the World after one cycle through their 4 books in 4 years. We did Ambleside Online that 5th year since it was a survival year for us. I had Alex and we PCS’ed from Hawaii to Utah. We needed simple and free. I had coveted Tapestry of Grace since we began homeschooling and I knew it was time to take the plunge. Liz needed something with more structure than AO and this keeps us well accountable. We love all the choices and some weeks we do too much and other weeks too little, but it will balance out in the end. We are just finishing up Year 2 with TOG.

Tori and Kate are still really young. They would be just beginning the 1st cycle of history, but to keep my sanity, we’ve tagged along with Liz’s schedule. I have to read everything aloud – it’s time-consuming. Some weeks are more interesting than others for them. I plan to do better next year with maintaining their schedule and helping them to keep their notebooks organized. They began really loving the mapwork just about a month ago. Next fall, I plan to really do a full schedule with them for Year 3.

Language Arts

I won a copy of All About Reading Level 2 and Tori and Kate just loved it. We’re almost finished with the lessons and I read that Level 3 doesn’t come out for a few more months. We may wait and just focus on other things until then. We have journals and plenty of literacy games.

I bought AAR pre-level for Alex and he loves it. Ziggy is his bud!

TOG also has a LA component Writing Aids and we incorporate that into our notebooking work. I am excited to review IEW for Liz next month, who needs a structured writing program. We get lots of grammar practice from our Latin studies.

Math

The girls adore Life of Fred and Singapore and we had wild success with both. Liz finished up the Singapore 6B and focused only on Life of Fred. She also enjoys Kahn Academy and I think they’re filling in a lot of gaps for her. We did lots of games and math journaling.

Science

Apologia is perfect for our family. The girls are completing Land Animals and Liz finished up with General. They love the notebooking journals! We did appropriate nature studies, but had a really hard winter and didn’t get outside as much as I would’ve liked.

Music

The girls still love the Musiq Homeschool lessons. Liz plays around with it, but takes formal lessons from a neighbor. She just had her recital last month and it was flawless. We do composer studies as a family with TOG. I hope to start back up with guitar from Schoolhouse Teachers.

Art

We did artist studies along with TOG. We occasionally did extra unit studies if we had time to fit it in or it had extra cross-curricular significance.

Latin

We love Memoria Press Latin. Liz is finishing up Second Form and the girls are beginning with Prima Latina. They love it so much. I love listening to them learning derivatives and grammar. A review is coming up soon!

Practical

Liz is the cupcake queen. She enjoys baking and I hope to encourage her more, but we don’t need all the sweets in our diet. I hope to find an outlet for her creations. Any takers?

Liz has quite a successful babysitting service to our pastor’s preschool-aged grandchildren. Having such a flexible schedule has allowed her to attend them whenever needed. The boy is deaf and autistic and the girl has ADHD from FAS. I am sure this experience will be invaluable in the future. They love her and Liz adores them and works very well with them.

The kids are learning to use essential oils along with me. They are fascinated by how quickly effective they can be to change our feelings or owies.

All the children are learning how to be servant leaders. We’ve been focusing on relationships.

Bible

All the kids and I love The Dig for Kids. Alex is working on Raising Rock Starts Preschool. Tori and Kate read and did copywork with Hero Tales. Liz completed Who Is God? and  Who Am I? from Apologia.

We <3 We Choose Virtues! Use Code: MOMTIME15 for 15% off all orders through the end of MAY and every order comes with a lovely VIRTUE MOM pin.

I can’t begin to tell you how much I’ve grown with God this past year. I am so different than I was even a few months ago. He has changed my heart and our family is so much more successful for the Kingdom and on the righter path.

Other

Tori ran two 5K’s with her Dad. For this last one, she got 3rd place for her age group, after two 10 year olds! She was the youngest female in the race at age 7.

Liz is working towards promotion in Civil Air Patrol. She flew a plane from Provo to Salt Lake City a few weeks ago. She loved it.

Conclusion

When I look back at all we’ve accomplished, I feel good. I see how much progress we’ve made! The bad days {read: weeks, months} seem far away and the overall picture is success. I look forward to some downtime and planning for next year. We’re not changing much. Things are too good right now.

Click to see what others have to say. {linky will be live on Friday}
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Just Another Math Monday

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Kate is working on money pages from TouchMath. We’re slowly making our way through this unit so they understand it. I have some fun projects to share after Easter!

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We’re also finishing up Singapore math. I plan to buy the next level workbooks since the girls love it so much!

I printed out these fun shamrock grid coloring pages on abcteach.com and the girls did really well after I explained how to work the grid system. They only made a couple mistakes which are quite visible and easily corrected!

I found it fascinating how differently the girls completed their pages. Kate drew lines at the right diagonal and then went back to fill them in before moving to the next line. Tori did each block before moving on.

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I wrote numbers 1-10 on eggs and printed out some number cards and ordinal number cards with ordinal words. Tori matched up the 3 part cards and eggs! Get your Ordinal Eggs at Currclick!

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Rubeus wanted to help! Silly lovey kitty.

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Kate matched up all the cards and eggs super quickly!

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I plan to have Alex match up the numbers on the eggs with the numbers on the cards. And I may just have him count Starburst jelly beans and match up the numbers on the eggs. yummy fun! {I know they’re full of chemicals, but it’s only a couple times a year we fill up on candy!}

And I have some fun math games for the girls planned with the eggs this week! such as…{Check out this Instagram pic from my friend!}

Thank you for joining me on this Another Math Monday.

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Poppins Book Nook

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I am so pleased to announce a new book club: The Poppins Book Nook!

 

Join us each month for a new theme of books and activities will be posted (on the last Monday of each month)…

Check out this fun schedule!

Poppins Book Nook schedule

Here’s the list of participating bloggers:

Enchanted Homeschooling MomRoyal Baloo3 DinosaursMonsters Ed -Chestnut Grove AcademyGrowing in God’s GraceRoyal Little Lambs (me!) -Life with Moore BabiesTeach Beside MeThe Usual MayhemMum Central -Fantastic Fun and LearningKathys Cluttered MindPlay Create ExploreTwo Big Two LittleToddler Approved -Growing Book by Book -Adventures in MommydomB-Inspired MamaThe Fairy and The Frog -Edventures with Kids- Learning & Growing the Piwi wayA Gluten Free JourneyRainy Day MumMom to Crazy Monkeys

~Our first month’s theme is Royalty~

(Knights, Princesses, Castles)

Here’s a sneak peak into my selections…

I hope to maintain this idea of a book for each reading level…

Bubba, The Cowboy Prince…for my Alexander Bubba! He’s 3.

Pocahontas…for my early readers, Tori (7 on Sunday!) and Kate (6 in May).

A Carolyn Meyer Young Royals novel…for Liz (age 12)…she’s read lots of these!

Katie the Artist

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We discovered these books at a consignment shop and have been lucky to collect quite a few in the series. Of course, my Katie loves them! They are delightful books that follow the imaginative adventures of Katie into the world of art and historical places.

Every day, Kate asks if we can do art first. Every day, I tell her we have to do math and reading and history and science first. Art is her favorite subject! I use this as an incentive to get her to cooperate with the other subjects. We try to incorporate arts and crafts into everything we do for her since she loves it so much.

Currently, Kate’s other favorite thing is Song School Spanish. Review coming up soon!

Here’s a picture Kate drew the other day with markers of my cherry limeade. Even though the straw is floating, I was impressed by the 3D lid.

Kate's cup

We got Kate and Tori a guitar for Christmas. They’d been begging and we’re going through the lessons on Schoolhouse Teachers. Kate is also teaching herself to play piano. We use the KinderBach app and My First Piano Adventure. I am amazed at her musical ability. She’s always singing or humming.

guitar

Little brother Alex wants to do everything his sisters do. Here, Kate and Alex are painting with watercolors. These two don’t often get along.

watercolors

Alex also joined his sisters here with their Harmony Fine Arts lesson. They drew Giotto angels with chalk pastels.

angel drawing

Everything Kate does, she does it with style. Vacuuming is so much easier when you’re wearing a princess dress!

princess vacuuming

Kate is our free spirit. She thinks outside the box. She excels at everything she does. She can already read chapter books and she’s not even 6 yet. She soaks up knowledge. I pray that she grows up and does radical and amazing things for God.

reading

Another Math Monday

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We had trouble last time we had word problems. The girls read them and didn’t know whether to add or subtract. So now the girls have this handy dandy chart in their math journals to help them decipher the words in context.

math symbolsmath symbols

My SIL pinned this math symbols chart. Perfect!

I thought the girls would like this pattern activity (scroll down to box#8). I admit I lost way too much perusing her site and subsequent links and downloading all these fun mathtivities for later!

Unifix patterning

The girls loved making these Zero the Hero posters.

Zero the Hero

Princess dresses help Kate do her best during school time.

princess of mathZero the Hero poster

Then, we watched Schoolhouse Rock DVDs.

Grapevine Studies in a Classroom

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I love using Grapevine Studies in our home as part of our homeschool curriculum and personal Bible study.

Grapevine StudiesI was recently asked to lead the children’s program during our new Wednesday family nights at church. I immediately thought that I could incorporate stick figuring through the Bible! I contacted Dianna and received her blessing. I do love her!

 

 

For our first lesson, I chose to teach on the Three Kings, or Magi. Epiphany had just been last Sunday and I thought this would be a fun topic. The adults “de-greened” the church (took down all the holiday decorations) while I kept the kids occupied.

I began with a story about the “other” wise man that follows a lost fourth Magi through the crucifixion of Christ. It is so beautifully written and illustrated and I got all choked up in front of the kids!

I showed the kids pictures of the gifts the Magi brought baby Jesus. I brought some frankincense essential oil to let the kids apply to their wrists. They thought that was the coolest thing ever.

I divided the white board in the classroom into 4 quadrants and taught the lesson from the Bible and Grapevine Studies text. The kids weren’t sure about it all at first.

stick figure Magi lesson

I had the kids at two tables. I taught students ranging from age 3 to 10. The three older girls were “helpers.”

One table ended up being almost all girls. I had one helper at this table. Katie and Tori knew what to do!

gs2

 

The three older girls were primarily in my classroom as “helpers.” They sheepishly asked me for pages to do while I taught the lesson. I think that is the perfect testimony to how great Grapevine Studies are! The big kids wanted in on the fun too!

older kid stick figuring

The other table got the boys and two helpers.

Those boys really enjoyed drawing their stick figures. I know this was a new concept for them. That’s my Bubba there with his new Traceable page too!

Grapevine Studies

Katie modeled what to do with her Traceable page. She loves this new concept! It helps her focus.

traceable

I gave the boys different pages according to their ages and abilities. One Traceable and one regular page.

GS

For this lesson, the Traceable page only has two scenes whereas the older kids had four scenes on their pages.
I handed out some take home Bible verse pages about the Wise Men.After the lesson, we did this really fun 3 Kings paper chain craft. I prepped it all by tracing them out and all the cutting. The kids just colored them. It saved time and was still fun. Most didn’t even finish and had to take them home to complete them.

I’m pretty excited about using Grapevine Studies to teach the Bible to these kids every Wednesday night! I can’t wait to gather materials for my weekly themes.

Ain’t No Party Like a Time Lord Party

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Cuz a Time Lord party is not bound by typical temporal parameters and thus cannot stop.

The kids and I are quite the Whovians, much to the chagrin of my husband. I have the T.A.R.D.I.S. text tone and 10th Doctor theme ringtone on my T.A.R.D.I.S. blue iPhone. My minivan is T.A.R.D.I.S. blue and really needs some stickers and a cool license plate cover (hint,hint). I have T shirts and other geek paraphernalia on my Pinterest and Amazon wish lists. Hoping I get some for my birthday or something, ya know? (That’s in March…)

So, after seeing a post on Star Trek and homeschooling, I thought I better add my sonic screwdriver bit to the Interwebz.

Homeschooling with Doctor Who

I think Doctor Who is a cross-curricular mega lesson, folks. It’s got a little bit of everything, and with a sexy British accent, too! It just doesn’t get much better than that!

So, let’s break it down for how we can teach the little ones using the new Doctor Who episodes. (Because, to be honest, I need to ramp up my efforts on watching the old episodes myself.) Now, some episodes are wee bit scary. Use caution. Always watch episodes before letting your kids loose in a dark basement to watch Daleks and Cybermen and other monsters wreak havoc in the universe. And always converse with your children about the show. We love discussing the what if moments.

So here are my ideas for a Doctor Who unit study. I break it down by subject.

History: Pompeii episode, one of our favorite episode series is during the London Blitzkrieg and Part II, another episode of WWII with his buddy Winston Churchill – “Victory of the Daleks,” killing Hitler (or putting him in the cupboard), The Great Depression (an American episode!), kissing Madame Pompadour in The Girl in the Fireplace.

The Doctor is called “Caesar” in the episode “The Pandorica Opens.” makes sense, no?

The fictional history of Gallifrey. a list of historical instances (fact and fiction) in Doctor Who episodes

Math and Science: lots of technology and physics, relativity and time travel, astronomy, science…yet he struggles to simply count to 4…listing of science topics mentioned in Doctor Who episodes

Religion/Philosophy: alien life, the devil, aliens with god complexes, Lazarus scientists, The Ood, angel statues, The Silence…it all sparks conversation no matter what your belief system. We like to talk ‘round here and I am not afraid to introduce philosophy and discuss what other people believe and why. Apologetics at its finest!

The Time Lord Victorious as a god?

(Source: ThetaKoshei)

Here are two interesting articles here and here discussing this inner turmoil and the ramifications for the universe. I don’t necessarily agree with everything here, but it’s interesting nonetheless.

(Source: mockingheartbeat, via devianta)

The Doctor’s nickname is Theta Sigma, used in the New Testament Greek as an abbreviation for God.

(source: Pearsecom)

The Master vs. The Doctor. ‘nuff said.

The Doctor as a Messiah figure? Read this article.

He regenerates and wakes from his coma just in time to save the day in the “Christmas Invasion.”

And look at this scene from “Voyage of the Damned.”

(Source: fiftyshadesoftennant, via mcelise)

The Impossible Astronaut” (2011) kicks off series 6 with a pretty big and obvious allegory: the last supper.

  • Doctor Who invites all his most trusted “disciples” to a last evening meal
  • prominently featuring wine
  • and then insists that they do not intervene in what follows
  • His death is even attended by two women and a centurion!
  • And a mysterious stranger even shows up to help with the disposal of the body
  • The stigmata
  • The crucifixion position, which I think has been a feature of regeneration since 2005
      here’s a short list of

religion

      in Doctor Who episodes…he’s playing the psychologist in

our Christmas special “The Snowmen

    .”

He was being kind. All the power that The Doctor possesses and doesn’t utilize. Think about this for a moment. He can travel through space and time. All the changes he could make, but he maintains rules that he shouldn’t interfere. He does save people. Ordinary people who won’t disrupt the status of the universe. In The Waters of Mars, The Doctor realizes his potential and it is his downfall.

(Source: queencersei, via tennantsbluebox)

The idea of family. The Doctor needs companions. He’s lonely and they keep him in check. loving Rose. strong and smart Martha. important yet forgetting Donna. ordinary and expectant Amy and powerful romantic Rory. enigmatic Clara. His adventurous “wife” River. His lost “daughter” Jenny. He lives with the guilt of failing. But he must carry on and love the people of Earth.

Humor: great opportunities to teach about sarcasm and lofty British humor. I usually have to explain the jokes to my kids. Perhaps this is why my husband doesn’t like it. He can’t understand their speech or their humor. Oh well.

life lessons from Doctor Who article

Literature: “The Shakespeare Code,” Agatha Christie episode: “The Unicorn and the Wasp;” allegories to great sci-fi lit and shows: such as in episode “The Empty Child.”

He explains he’s like Gandalf in episode “Meanwhile in the TARDIS.”

List of literary characters mentioned in Doctor Who episodes. Mention of real books in Doctor Who episodes. Study the science fiction genre!

Writing: fan writing competition lessons (scripts)  

Art: van Gogh episode. Brilliant. “Vincent and The Doctor.” And they didn’t really change a thing. or did they?

image

(Source: The Ultimate Ginger via Velaroye)

a not very good list of art mentioned in Doctor Who.

Here are some printable Doctor Who foldables and coloring pages here. All sorts of flashcards at Quizlet. made by all kinds of people, so I dunno.

River and The Doctor

Set your sonic screwdriver sights on these resources:

article 20 historical figures in Doctor Who

definitive list of Doctor Who serial episodes on Wikipedia. or the official BBC episode list here.

Fun and Games from BBC

My daughters said I should make a tot or preschool pack for Doctor Who? Interested? Tell me in the comments what you’d like to see in there and I’ll get busy!

tardis

Apps

Winter Nature Walk

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Join us on our walk around our neighborhood?

I love the birches in this area. Their bark really stands out…and has eyes!

birches

an evergreen silhouette with the sun shining through it.

evergreen silhouette

a tree that still has leaves on it

leaves

Just look at that gorgeous bark! I think it’s a striped maple.

striped bark

crows in the tree. they were eating walnuts.

crows tree silhouette

and, look! a crow footprint in the snow.

crow footprint

this tree already has buds on it

tree in bud

this birch with buds and catkins

birch catkins

juniper berries. Tori was good to spot these.

juniper berries

a really big beautiful rock in someone’s front yard

big rock

a poignant picture of unpruned withered roses with rocks

unpruned roses

Tori was excited by how long her shadow was.

shadow

Rosehips along the next door neighbor’s fence. I love how they stand out against the gray and snow.

rose hips

our new nature display box. I found this at Hobby Lobby. perfect.

nature box

the girls hard at work drawing the milkweed pods

nature drawing

Tori is proud of her tree silhouette page

tree silhouette drawing

Katie is drawing the buds and crows in her tree silhouette

tree silhouette drawing

Alex drew his pictures too. He loves being a part of it all.

nature notebooking

Tools we use and love

Outdoor Hour Challenges

Winter Challenges

Notebooking Pages

Amazon.com Widgets

Sure glad we got in that walk since we’re in a blizzard this weekend!

Tori got a little rock set for Christmas and we’re going to explore that since all our rocks are under billows of snow right now.

Math Monday

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Nursery Rhyme math to coincide with our nursery rhyme readings in history! Most nursery rhymes originated during the Middle Ages and Renaissance to help teach lessons to children.

I got this journal free from a TpT shop. She must’ve taken it down now. She has lots of other fun printables though!

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We talked the math problems through and they helped me figure it out. I wrote it on the board and they copied it on their papers.

This one is Humpty Dumpty’s men. Five men…how many fingers did they have to help Humpty Dumpty?

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The finished page…drawing…words…equation

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Music Math!

Dad taught the count of the musical notes and helped them through counting their notes on these fun math pages.

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8th notes…counting by twos. they enjoyed having something different in math.

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Check it out here…Early Math with Mozart!

Back to work

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We worked on a nursery rhyme unit with our Tapestry of Grace studies this week. We practiced rhyming and picking out the main character in the poems. These notebooking pages come with the TOG lower grammar printable pack. I have a Mother Goose book that my uncle gave me when I was 3 and the girls loved seeing his inscription on the title page to me.

TOG history and litTOG nursery rhymes

We started some new copywork to go along with our Hero Tales Bible study. The girls love the missionary stories so far. We read the story each morning and the girls recite our character trait and verse. They copy the message and they draw something meaningful from the story. They love the drawing element.

copyworkcopywork

We’re on lesson 21 of All About Reading, Level 2. They’re coming right along. Almost fluent readers! Tori likes the hands on stuff more than Kate. And she needs the lessons more. Kate is almost bored, but it’s good review.

AAR2

Kate is putting story cards in chronological order.

AAR2

Our January poem. I made this on Publisher. Kate already has it memorized. She recited it for me today! She remembers it from last year. I guess I should find a new one, but I love this one. I plan to make a Montessori poetry basket to go with our snow unit this month. Stay tuned!

January poem

Mama’s favorite: Katie reading the Tacky the Penguin books while she waits on Tori and Mama to transition to the next thing.

reading girl

Linking up at Trivium Tuesday.

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