BrimWood Press history and worldview curriculum for homeschool

Science End of Year Roundup

apologia roundup

We can’t express just how much we love Apologia science.

Liz completed General Science this year. She has completed the entire elementary series. And now the girls are working through it! I love everything about it.

General science gives a great overview of all the sciences. Liz especially likes physics and can’t wait for that program {in a few more years}! We’re starting physical science after summer break.

238409: Apologia Exploring Creation with General Science, 2 Vol, 2nd Ed.

Apologia Exploring Creation with General Science, 2 Vol, 2nd Ed.

I got the journal for Liz to keep all her work together. She has organization issues and there’s a handy little schedule in the front that she would just check off each assignment as she completed it.

495703: Exploring Creation with General Science, Second Edition, Student Notebook

Exploring Creation with General Science, Second Edition, Student Notebook

Dad’s a scientist. He helped lots this year with Liz and her experiments. He extended some of them to further teach her the concepts well.

Liz liked the simple experiments. Even when they go wrong {or Mama doesn’t have the correct type of toilet bowl cleaner, sigh}

She was much more successful making this DNA strand model out of pipe cleaners.

We still have this baby taking over my kitchen windowsill, sprouting plenteous roots.

Liz enjoyed the anatomy lessons too. And reading sideways on the floor apparently.

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The girls are still plugging along with Land Animals and we hope to finish over the summer. I focused more on math and language arts with them since they’re only just turned 6 and 7.

337013: Land Animals of the Sixth Day: Exploring Creation with Zoology 3

Land Animals of the Sixth Day: Exploring Creation with Zoology 3

The girls absolutely LOVE these journals. It’s like notebooking and lapbooking all in a great spiral notebook.

495628: Exploring Creation with Zoology 3 Junior Notebooking Journal

Exploring Creation with Zoology 3 Junior Notebooking Journal

We kicked off our school year in science by taking Tori and Kate to the zoo for a special primate event. We had lunch with staff and and special animal guests.

We even got to help the primate keeper with enrichment for the lemurs!

The lemurs get excited with drawings on the windows of their habitats.

Here’s the girls’ recent reaction to learning about rumination (chewing cud). ew

The girls really enjoyed our map work (learning where the animals live in the world) and learning the animals’ footprints at the end of each chapter. We played games and completed most of the experiments or crafts. Kate is rather obsessed with animals and I often find her reading an animal encyclopedia rather than doing what she’s supposed to be doing. Since they’re studying Latin now, they’re fascinated by learning the proper taxonomy names.

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e-Science e-Camp

I just got word from Aurora at Supercharged Science that her online science camp (e-Camp) is now OPEN for pre-registration. The camp begins June 1 and ends August 31. You get access to over 150 activities. They sell out super fast since it’s individualized.

Pre-registration enrollment in e-Camp is just $87 for the whole summer. All you need is 1 enrollment per household. The more kids ya got, the sweeter the deal! There’s even a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Read my Supercharged Science review here.

Science e-Camp is taught by a real mechanical engineer, airplane pilot, astronomer, university engineering instructor, and rocket scientist (Aurora herself)! For K-12 kids.

Supercharged Science
Click the link below to get all the details before it’s too late:
–> www.sciencelearningspace.com/members/go.php?r=14238&i=l43

Special Bonuses for the First Ten People who sign up:

  • Free Science Experiment Manual 160+ of Aurora’s favorite science experiments ($40 value)
  • Bonus Science Activity DVD with dozens of additional experiments to keep the learning going after e-Camp is over ($45 value)
  • Online e-Camp Enrollment for the whole summer at the K-12 level ($171 value)
  • {Total Value: Over $300 of free bonuses if you’re one of the FIRST ten to sign up for Supercharged Science e-Camp!}

    What will your kids learn?

Here’s what is covered in e-Camp:

  1. Bernoulli’s Principle
  2. The four aerodynamic forces of flight
  3. Maxwell’s Four Equations
  4. Properties of Light
  5. Five states of Matter
  6. Sound, Resonance, and Natural Frequency
  7. Newtonian Physics and Newton’s Three Laws of Motion
  8. Law of Gravitation
  9. Four Fundamental Forces of Nature
  10. First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics
    Wow…I think I need to sign up too.

Click the link below now to learn more and to register:

–> www.sciencelearningspace.com/members/go.php?r=14238&i=l43

supercharged science online

If you’re not familiar with e-Camp, here’s the scoop:

e-Camp is an all-out totally fun AND educational online science camp.   

Imagine sending your kids off to a really great hands-on summer science camp.  BUT, you get to decide what day and time they go.  This is e-Camp.

Plus, it’s designed so they can do it on their own – just set them up and they’ll be engaged for hours.  So it’s perfect if you don’t have time to work with your kids, or if science isn’t really your thing.

If you want to keep your kids’ learning this summer, but you also want it to be totally fun, this might just be the answer.

As a parent, you can feel good because even though they’re having a total blast, they’re actually learning good solid science. 

The kind of learning that really relates to the world around them.

Rather than try to explain it all, I’ll leave that to Aurora herself.

I have seen her stuff, and I can tell you that she really over-delivers.

Last year, over hundreds of kids enrolled in e-Camp in fewer than 4 days!

Registration for e-Camp 2013 is only open for 3 days, until this Thursday.

Click below to learn about it:

–> www.sciencelearningspace.com/members/go.php?r=14238&i=l43

P.S. NEW! This year, Supercharged Science has introduced a brand new Advanced e-Camp for teens. There are now two levels to my summer e-Camp program: K-8 e-Camp and Advanced e-Camp. The K-8 level of e-Camp includes projects and experiments in chemistry, flight, rocketry, physics, lasers, sound, electricity, robotics, and so much more. The Advanced e-Camp is for high school as well as advanced 5-8th graders, and it focuses on the most popular areas of rockets, robotics, electronics, and lasers.

Supercharged Science Review

My family reviewed Supercharged Science  with its experiential e-Science program.

All four of my kids got involved which I loved. It’s not often I can work in lessons that a 3 year old, 6 year old, 7 year old, and almost 13 year old can do together and enjoy and learn!

Supercharged Science

If you have questions, you can call or email for help and they’ll get right back to you.

Nine steps the e-Science program provides in their detailed lesson plans:

  1. Unit Description: This answers the “What is it?” and “Why should I care?”
  2. Outcomes/Goals: What do you want the students to learn?
  3. Objectives/Highlights: Detail the key concept and topic into chunks.
  4. Introduction: How will you present the topic to the students?
  5. Development: This stirs up interest and gets students motivated to learn.
  6. Practice: Bringing the key concept to life.
  7. Further Study: Answering questions and gaining momentum.
  8. Evaluation: How well did you teach and how well did they learn the material?
  9. Closure: Before moving on, celebrate your success!

(Note: The e-Science program does not cover creation nor evolution so all families may participate. The focus of the program is on how to launch the rocket, build the robot, use a microscope, take measurements and data, etc.) YAY!

Here’s a screenshot of all the units available. Overwhelming! We watched some of the videos that went along with what Liz has been studying.

escience units

Here’s my littlest scientist ready to explore!

little scientist

We watched lots of videos about math. Tori really enjoyed those. She’s our math girl!

We learned about the scientific method with water and pennies. This was review for Elizabeth, but rather new for Tori and Kate, and of course, Alex.

The experiment is titled “Underwater Presidents.”

The girls hypothesized how many drops of water the penny would hold before it spilled over the edges.

I walked them through the process and we read the lesson together. We observed our materials and discussed what could happen and why.

ready to learn

My kinesthetic learner, Alex, loved this. He was such a big boy!

concentrating

Kate repeated her experiment three times to get an average result.

water drops

Alex wanted to do this over and over and over. He loved it. We must do it with other coins to compare our results!

help me, Mom

We wrote up our materials, procedure, drew a picture of what we did and wrote down our results and conclusion. We discussed why the different pennies took different amounts of water: dirt, different size drops, bumps in paper towel slanted the penny, etc.

Get our experiment lab sheet printables here.

drawing the experiment

Liz has been studying anatomy lately and they offer conversion charts so you can cross-reference their program with one you’re already using. perfect!

Liz and I watched a video together about nerves and that was amazingly entertaining. The narrator was just fun.

We decided to make a working hand model as a family. My husband, Aaron, had to do most of this one without kid help since it involved slicing and hot glue.

gimme a hand

The kids watch the video about how to make the hand model.

I read the text material aloud to the kids and we demonstrated the hand model and explained how it all worked and we looked at our own hands and felt the muscles and tendons and discussed the different bones.

watching the video

Liz demonstrates how the hand works. Hers is the one on the left. ha.

one of these things is not like the other

Dad extends the lesson. Kate looks at the insides of a chicken bone. We discussed what blood does and how bones are made.

dem bones

What do we think?

Overall, I really like the idea of the program. It got me out of my comfort zone and the videos walk you through the experiments so that’s easy for me to follow. We’ll use it as a supplement to our current science program.

The kids loved watching videos.

I am really horrible at fitting in arts, crafts, experiments…and I really felt convicted that I don’t do more of this with my kids. They LOVED the together time with BOTH parents, so we’re going to try to make it a regular “Science Sunday” at our house whenever possible schedule-wise.

Many of the experiments weren’t feasible for us since we didn’t have some of the materials or they were too dangerous for me to finagle with four kids. Thankfully, my husband is a scientist! He didn’t care to get crafty, but he did it for me. And for science. They offer a shopping guide for each unit so you can glance at that and see what you have already and what you need to acquire so you can be prepared.

The recommended age level for the program we reviewed is K-8. The program offers many choices within the site to choose from based on ability and resources. Some of the more advanced experiments are phenomenal, like building a hovercraft and alternative energy! When the kids get a bit older, I would love to utilize some of the more bizarre and advanced experiments. I can hardly wait. Now that the weather is getting nicer, I want to build rockets and do some of the fun and messy experiments.

There’s a list of recommended resources, like a science gift guide with books and games and equipment for your science lover! There are oodles of experiments for award-winning science fair projects. If we ever choose to participate in one, this is where I’ll look for ideas!

Here’s the purchase info:

Membership benefits:

  • Videos of teaching real science to your kids, just like I do in an actual classroom
  • Text-book type reading to support the material in the videos
  • Hands-on activities and experiments, with videos that guide your kids through them. These activities and experiments are what really ignite a passion for science in most kids.
  • Homework exercises/quizzes so you can see what your kids are really learning, and tips for how to keep track of your progress in a real a science journal
  • A live science class in difference science areas every few weeks where you can connect with me personally
  • Parent resources for helping you give your kids the best science education they can get
  • A place to ask me questions (lots of them!)
  • Recordings of everything so your kids can do the program on whatever schedule AND at whatever pace suits them.

Supercharged Science e-Camp is open from June 1 – August 31, 2013. It’s $87 for the summer.

supercharged science online

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Grafted into the Vine

Elizabeth really likes the general overview of Apologia General Science. She’s breezing through it – even after having forgotten most of what she learned from the Apologia Exploring Creation series. This mama perhaps wasn’t as diligent as I should have been with taking advantage of all the fun experiments and learning experiences as I could have been. But I had three babies and we did what we could.

Liz is especially enjoying the anatomy modules – much to my chagrin since she really wasn’t on board when we studied it a couple years ago.

She’d been asking me to get her a more advanced book on body changes. Of course, at age 12, she knows the basics of human development. I certainly wouldn’t wait until she begins her first menses to let her know what’s happening! Not sure what she was wanting, I half-heartedly searched for an appropriate book online to no avail.

I’m not pleased with the secular emphasis in even so-called Christian books. They seem to skim over the implications of premarital sex and lust and not address important issues from a Biblical perspective.

When she asked about it again, I questioned her. I was frustrated because all the sex books I’ve found are blaringly inappropriate for her. She doesn’t need to understand the issues of abortion or homosexuality or teen pregnancy yet. She didn’t even know anything about those until very recently.

Alas, my little geeky girl wants a book that explains in detail the chemical changes in the body that cause the physical changes. What a relief!

reading

I like that most of the experiments in General Science are simple enough that Liz can do them by herself. We’re all pretty fascinated by a branch of ivy that we are rooting.

Which brings to mind the verse:

 

I am the vine; you are the branches. If a man remains in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.

~John 15:5

rooting ivy

Like we are branches on the vine of God, so are our children extensions of us. When I get frustrated with behavior or attitudes, I must remember that they are His children first and I cannot change their hearts. I can only pray for them to accept His teachings and internalize them in their own hearts. I pray that someday I can sit back in my rocking chair and see the faithful tendrils growing forth from my legacy.

Linking up here:

Middle School is Tough

I need to a better job showcasing Liz and her schooling. Middle school isn’t all cute and craft-laden. It’s lots more work than what the littles do. And it doesn’t make for fun pictures.

Except when I get wide-eyed leave-me-alone stares.

Liz loves notebooking with PowerPoint and Notebooking Publisher. yay for technology!

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Visit NotebookingPages.com to learn more about their memberships
and their new web-app, The Notebooking Publisher™

 

I snapped a pic of Liz’s DNA strand. She’s going through Apologia General Science. She does most of the experiments with Dad, so there aren’t usually any pictures since I’m not involved.

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Liz is enjoying Tapestry of Grace. We’ll learn about her namesake Elizabeth I next week!

She continues to adore Life of Fred math. She is now on Elementary Physics, a pre-algebra book.

Some of Liz’s favorite things…

Her aStore

Apple Tasting

We had us an apple tasting! Kind of like a wine tasting, but with kids and no cheese or olives or fancy crackers. We did have water cups to cleanse our palates. Way to keep it classy! Winking smile

We bought every kind of apple we could find. We ended up with 10 plus one from the neighbor’s apple tree. So, 11 apples to taste and compare and graph our findings. Alex was excited to get started.

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Liz helped Alex. He tried most of the apples. I didn’t make him graph anything. He just told us if he liked it or not. And he liked to tell me the colors.

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Here is Tori’s completed graph. I see that she didn’t name her favorite or least favorite. She did circle two favorites and X the one she did NOT like. If you’d like a copy of the graph, click HERE or on the picture.

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I sliced the apples into fifths and we discussed fractions. We just read Fraction Apples, so it went well.

We counted seeds. We discussed color, texture, and taste. I helped the girls with their graphs by letting them copy mine.

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Alex ate half the Honeycrisp. Overall, that was everyone’s favorite. And the most expensive. He kept staring at it and saying, “I like it!” and biting it. So cute.

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Planetarium and IMAX field trip

 

When I heard we could go see an IMAX about Pangaea for FREE, I was excited.

And the planetarium is always free. This doesn’t get any better!

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All we had to do was make clay dinosaurs since the IMAX is Claymation. Easy peasy!

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The nifty electricity ball

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working on their scavenger hunts from the planetarium’s website.

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a really cool projector-illuminated Earth…

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We saw meteors, moon rocks, and Mars rocks.

Katie is irritated with me here that I interrupted her “scavenging.”

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Display of different kinds of space rocks

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Alex was fascinated by the pendulum that showed the movement of Earth

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The movie was great. We had popcorn, slushies, candy, and it was 3D! Alex did really well sitting still and watching it and keeping his glasses on. The film was snarky and fun and Claymation! It gave us some opportunities to have conversation about Creationism and evolution and dinosaurs. We had just learned about Pangaea in our Apologia Exploring Creation with Land Animals book!

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