Category Archives: Homeschool records

Homeschool Record : 10 – 16 March 2008

pavement-drawing.jpg

Lessons

  • Maths book: subtractions, plans, calculator, solids. Freres lyons maths exercises
  • Spelling: review of numbers in French, the sound o, au, eau; use of s or x for plurals
  • Writing: capital letters, dictation 1 from CP dictation book
  • Narration: Le Feuilleton d’Hermes

The Unschooled Stuff

Reading

  • Lots of independent reading during car trips, evenings at home
  • Co-read: Le Fromage Magique, various parts of Martine a la Maison, the end of The Magic Treehouse 3, Mummies in the Morning
  • Read-aloud: Tistou les Pouces Verts

Maths/Logic

  • A little phase of doing mazes several afternoons in a row
  • Play revision of telling the time, multiplication tables by 1 and 2
  • Discussion of advantages of weighing chocolate versus counting squares

Science/Nature Study

  • Examined a dead leaf under the microscope. Learning to use the slide table controls and focusing knob. Learning about the depth of a small sample under the microscope.
  • Went out for walk in the rain: catching water in cup, muddy puddles, mud, shiny pebbles and happy mosses and lichens, then home for hot chocolate, …
  • Inspected our growing sunflowers: measured height, observed second leaves sprouting, identified possible young apple tree among the weeds (from the seed case), removed others.
  • Watched 2 episodes of David Attenborough on Life in the Undergrowth
  • Lots of discussion of bees and their ways

Arts and Craft

  • Lots of free drawing
  • Looked at pictures of various greek gods we’ve been reading about, etc
  • Four seasons watercolour series
  • Snowflakes and other origami and paper cutouts, masks
  • Playdough and other modelling things
  • Made a Kolam design for the terrace

Practical Life

  • Finished making chocolate truffles
  • Made chocolate mousse
  • Picked and made crystallised violets

Music

  • Piano practice
  • Went to a harp concert
  • Cuddled up to watch Swan Lake on DVD, while I read le Peuple des Abeilles
  • Listened to bagpipes and looked at traditional Scottish costume with kilts

Sports/Games

  • Played Blind Man’s Buff, then turned it into a sensorial alphabet puzzle game

Out and about

  • Dance class
  • Swimming lesson
  • Day of downhill skiing
  • Day of play with friends

Homeschool record: 3-9 March 2008

Lessons

  • Maths: substractions from maths method and using Petit Professeur; Freres Lyons program: tests for pre-operative thinking and half of first module; made dodecahedron calendar
  • Narration: from Le Feuilleton d’Hermes
  • Writing: Capital letters in cursive, copywork
  • Memory: Reviewed poems, months, days, seasons
  • Reading: Mimi Cracra toute l’annee: mars et avril

The Unschooled Stuff

Language Arts

  • Blogged about microscope photos and dictated a poem

Reading

  • Co-read the end of Charlotte aux Fraises, Lou la Brebis
  • Read aloud: Lettres de l’ecureuil a la fourmi by Toon Tellegen; Martine au zoo
  • Independent reading: Hairy McLary

Maths/Logic

  • Played with geometric blocks
  • Snakes and ladders with various rules and dice combinations
  • Tangram puzzles
  • Independent practice of mental substractions and column additions
  • Started learning to use the calculator from her maths book
  • Made the cube and tetrahedron from flat shapes out of her maths book, then made them out of magnetic rods

Science/Nature Study

  • Lots of birds on our bird feeder, we spent time observing and identifying them
  • Sheep’s wool compared to plant fluff under the microscope: she learned how to manipulate the slide table a bit
  • Watched Seasonal Seas, David Attenborough
  • Did a make your own fossil from a snail shell experiment
  • Looked at pictures in a book about bees, then watched In a Beehive on the Magic School Bus

Arts and Craft

  • Looked at paintings by Whistler
  • Looked at paintings by Caspar David Friedrich, discussed painting media and supports a bit
  • Did the warm and cool colours module in GeeArt
  • Paper cutout picture based on Matisse
  • Drawing with shapes: represented Plune and Grossoleil from Ponti
  • Made a very beautiful white mask and snowflakes
  • Went to the art museum and sculpture park
  • Lots of free drawing

Practical Life

  • Planted sunflower seeds
  • Began a batch of chocolate truffle

Music

  • Piano practice and improvisations

Sports/Games

  • Lapin Malin CE1
  • Pirate game
  • Chess
  • Swimming class
  • Dance class

Out and About

  • Ate at an Indian restaurant
  • One sleepover and two other afternoons with friends
  • Went to the cinema with a friend to see Voyage a Panama

Other stuff

  • The evil homeschool inspection: 2 hours of hard work and answering questions for a strange adult
  • Post-inspection space out time: watched Harry Potter and Azur et Asmar

Homeschool record: February 25 – March 2

homeschool-time-pie-chart1.jpg

Lessons

  • Maths: made pie charts contrasting use of time in school with homeschool, and talked about the differences; began work on substraction module in our maths book
  • Memory work: reviewed days of week, months of year, seasons, location, capital and symbols of France, the poems learned so far
  • Narration: from Le Feuilleton d’Hermes
  • Oral conjugation of verbs in French
  • Writing: capital letters in cursive, spelling of common words in French
  • Piano: officially began work on Suzuki 1, piece 4
  • Non-fiction: Co-read un festin au moyen age by Aliki, about medieval feasts; Au royaume des dragons by Serge Strosberg, about Darwin in the Galapagos

The Unschooled Stuff

Language Arts

  • Invented a sock puppet story play about 2 snakes
  • Wrote a blog post for her fungus and a very silly poem

Reading

  • Independent reading: Loebel’s Owl stories
  • Co-read: one of the Winx books, Charlotte aux Fraises: Bienvenu a Fraisi-Paradis, Baba Yaga, Le chateau d’Anne Hiversaire, Usborne Young Readers book of monsters
  • Read-aloud: Le petit cochon fute from Contes dela rue Broca, Max and Moritz, Tistou les pouces verts, Peau d’Ane

Maths/Logic

  • Antonia made a map of our village, copied from the Google map
  • Played with mosaic blocks
  • Played with cuisenaire rods

Science/Nature Study

  • Remembering the names of such flowers as are around in two languages
  • Drew a rainbow with great concern for colour order, but it ended up inside out!
  • Started germinating sunflower seeds
  • Brainpops: leap years, acne(!), multiplication
  • Discussion of leap years, talked about Pirates of Penzance which she knows

History/Geography/Social sudies

  • Major discussion of prisons and law and order inspired by the Tistou book. I am really happy as this is the first long read-aloud book in French that has ever captured her interest. Without any conscious previous input from us, it’s interesting that she vehicles the ‘social norm’ idea of prisons that the book sets out to counteract.
  • Went out for Japanese food and looked at a kimono

Arts and Crafts

  • Made herself a bound book containing spirograph drawings, a game, a compass rose… and scribbles
  • Saw a Hong Kong animation, McDull dans les nuages
  • Watched Mr Bean (I couldn’t), laughed like a hyena and developed an affection for Whistler’s Mother
  • Drew a portrait of Mike from life
  • Collage of natural objects
  • Made a watercolour
  • Looked at art calendar

Practical Life/Cooking

  • Built and decorated the stunning multi-tier cake

Music

  • Lots of piano improvisation

Sports/Games

  • Went swimming
  • Built a huge Kapla zoo with little train, animals, people over several days
  • Did most of Lapin Malin CE1

Out and About

  • Afternoon at the park
  • Went shopping for art supplies
  • Three afternoons and one whole day with friends
  • Walk to favourite stream with friends

Other stuff

  • Some of our reading led us into major ethical discussions so I now know that she distinguishes between beauty and goodness (she didn’t till quite recently). She’s starting to perceive a relationship between power and badness explicitly and struggles with other issues: why are people bad? what is the role of external consequences versus conscience, are people who are rough and rude necessarily bad (Baba Yaga)?

Homeschool record 18 – 24 February

Most of this week’s records got lost in a computer accident, but I think it was a quiet week on the homeschooling front, with lots of free play with friends. There was quite a bit of socialising on the adult front as well.

Lessons

  • I think we did them on one day: narration from Le Feuilleton d’Hermes, and a bit of dictation

The Unschooled Stuff

Language Arts

  • Wrote herself a to do list, probably inspired by Frog and Toad
  • She finished teaching herself the Lapin de Septembre poem

Reading

  • A lot of independent reading due to travel time in the car and some adult time.
  • We co-read Magical Animals from Usborne Young Readers

Maths/Logic

  • Got Mike to print her out a list of long numbers e.g dodecahillions or whatever they are, and discussed scientific notation with him
  • Played with the tangrams

Science/Nature Study

  • Walk of exploration along favourite stream
  • Various brainpops
  • Watched a David Attemborough on mammals
  • Informal review of continents and oceans on the globe – and how to find the shortest route across the globe using a piece of string
  • Learned and spotted the constellation Cassiopeia

Arts and Crafts

  • A fair bit of free drawing
  • Some experimental watercolour painting
  • She made a paper sculpture of a fish
  • We made modular origami houses together
  • We looked at Matisse’s paper cut-outs
  • She designed and built an indoor tunnel tent cabane

Music

  • Lots of piano playing
  • Listened to some jazz

Sports

  • Got her first beginners ski pass and outgrew it the same day. She skis as fast as the slope will let her, swerves around fearlessly, but I have no idea if she can stop.
  • Ball throwing and catching practice.
  • Went swimming

Games

  • Played a computer game on Mike’s cell phone. I don’t know why.
  • Played Poisson Rouge a little bit
  • Lego, a little bit

Out and about

  • The back end of the sleepover on one day
  • Afternoon with friends at the park and their house
  • Another whole day of play with friends who then came to dinner
  • An adult dinner party
  • Went out for lunch in a restaurant

Special mention

  • I tried to get her morally prepared for the homeschool inspection. Unfortunately, I don’t know what it’s going to be like. We discussed various behaviours that might not be ideal, mostly by modelling them, so we had a good laugh. Some of them came as a surprise to her (we don’t have to give the inspector a present!), and I just don’t think she is at a suitable social development stage to handle the kind of ‘professional’ relationship to adults that I think they are going to dump on her.

Homeschool record 11 – 17 February


Lessons

  • Narration in French: episodes 6 – 10 from the Feuilleton d’Hermès (greek mythology)
  • French reading consolidation: finished reading through Léo and Léa, she has a hard time reading cursive… Also read Le Fantome de la Bibliotheque.
  • Writing: contined to work on French spelling sounds
  • Recitation: began learning ‘le Lapin de Septembre’; to be completed next week
  • Maths: intended substraction facts practice – but I stupidly drew a substraction table, Antonia grasped the pattern after the 6th entry, so it turned into a number pattern lesson, followed by a consolidation of negative numbers (small numbers – big numbers), then Mike pitched in to explain some property of substraction whereby the result of say 5 – 3 is the same as that of 3 – 5, but with the opposite sign.

The Unschooled Stuff

Language arts

  • She dictated her first ever French story to me. This followed a lot of oral French storytelling and informal poems.

Reading

  • We read several picture books in French together: Barbapapa, Le Fromage Magique,
  • I read aloud a particularly good set of library books this week and also La sorcière du placard aux balais from Contes de la rue Broca
  • We’re also into Claude Ponti again with our new book Le Chateau d’Anne Hiversaire
  • Some independent reading

Maths/Logic

  • Still playing with multiplication – she sure picked that up easily
  • We printed out a map of the town centre and had Antonia lead the way from the car park to the ice cream shop


Science/Nature

  • Examined the buds on the flower basket. We set up a stop motion video experiment to film a bud unfurling into a flower
  • Made and installed a bird feeder – project from Youpi
  • Went for a long walk down to the river – really lovely, antonia very exploratory, clambering and so on, especially in the south facing parts of the mountain. Made a collection of lichens as well as taking numerous photos.
  • Picked out some other interesting nature activities from a library book
  • Brainpops especially health, immune system, weather
  • Forgotten from last week: examined the jewellery counter in a search for real diamonds, noted price, size and relative glitteriness. Also looked at real rubies, sapphires and emeralds.
4 mosses

History/Social Studies

  • Noted the location of road name signs in the city

Practical Life/Cooking

  • Helped make pancakes
  • Made chocolate and pastry snails over at a friend’s house

Arts/Crafts

  • Made herself a photo tour of the house, very sweet, it contains individual portraits of each of her toys, items of interest to her…
  • Made several figurines and some jewellery with the sculpey clay her American relatives sent her.
  • Made Mike a Valentine’s Day card
  • Made drawings to illustrate the difference between raiding (stealing) and trading (exchanging)
  • Made a drawing of a witch (green with hairy legs!)


Music

  • She figured out the melody from the 2nd movement of Eine Kleine Nachtmusik on the piano
  • She did a lot of improvising and got a bit upset because she couldn’t really record her improvisations long term, so we’re on a search for a solution
  • Watched The Magic Flute (again)

Sports/Activities

  • Dance class
  • Swimming class
  • Ice skating

Games

  • M and A have been playing the new pirate game he brought in the US. I gather he is looking for ways to make it harder, even though he has lost every time so far!
  • Also Solitaire and Quoridor

Out and about

  • Trip to the airport (again), to pick up Mike
  • Two play afternoons this week and one sleepover
  • One trip to the children’s playground and ice cream shop
  • Shopping for Valentines Day flowers and chocolates and also for books

Special mention

  • The adults have been testing out the new microscope – a hair and moss spore capsules. We decided to get the hang of it ourselves before letting Antonia loose on it.

Homeschool record 4-10 February


It was a very intensive week for us – they are not all like this by any means.

Lessons

We had finished the maths program up to the beginning of March last week, and planned to concentrate on language stuff, French especially. I wanted to make time for narration and recitation which have tended to get squeezed out due to lack of time. I decided not to include any other subjects for a week or two, and just keep things short and simple. One of our goals has been to help her make a bigger voice through recitation especially – her dance teacher mentioned that her contributions can’t be heard well, in a group of six kids. I think we are making progress in this direction.

  • Reading: re-reading through Leo and Lea to iron out a few difficulties and gain confidence upto section. The current problem is that she tends to read the same mistakes she makes as she is speaking, instead of being guided by the phonetics. Lessons 1 – 38.
  • Recitation: learned Le Ver, by Pierre Coran and La Biquette from 101 poesies et comptines. She initially tried to learn Le Secret, by Rene de Obaldia, which she loved, but it proved too long and complex for her.
  • Narration: we have started the Feuilleton d’Hermes again. In which I learn the value of doing French narration first thing in the morning. She does it well when she can summon her confidence, badly when she gets all tied up with the idea that she doesn’t know how to express something (she does!). Episodes 1-5.
  • Writing: we started off with our regular dictations, but have switched to a rapid review of the more complex French spelling sounds and some basic grammar in view of the upcoming inspection.

The Unschooled Stuff

Language Arts

  • Dictated two poems for her blog, marking a turn away from her previous nature and prettiness orientation towards humour and funny characters.
  • Wrote a postcard to a friend, addressed and posted it.

Reading

  • She likes to read aloud with me, each of us taking a turn to read one page. We’ve read The Enchanted Tree House 2, started 3, also Horton Hatches the Egg (again!), and one French book where she played the relatively minor role of Josette.
  • I know she has done some reading on her own in French and English, but I have only a vague idea of what.
  • I’ve been keen to emphasise French, so I’ve read loads of French picture books, + our usual dose of Horrid Henry.

Maths and logic

  • Worked through some puzzles from her puzzle book.
  • Telling time for real and some practice from Lapin Malin CE1- she’s got the hang of the 24 hour clock, but it takes her a while to figure out the time. Some opportunities to figure out durations, time till some future event, etc…
  • She’s playing around with the multiplication concept in various ways
  • Money: she’s buying little things with her pocket money, we’re keeping her pocket money accounts weekly, and she’s getting some additional practice from Lapin Malin,
  • Addition and substraction practice also courtesy of Lapin Malin
  • She’s weighing out her ingredients for recipes unaided.
  • Invented a game called beehive with quite complicated, but workable and consistent rules.

Science / Nature

  • Out at night examining hailstones and building with them.
  • Two other shortish outdoor walks at night to look at constellations, the new moon, and to convince herself that she is very brave!
  • Long nature walk to favourite stream: especially noticed male and female hazelnut flowers, toadstools and lichens, mosses and the variety of their spores. Investigated some new spots in the area, now that there is little undergrowth.
  • Interest in clouds sparked by dance class, discussed cloud types and looked at cloudspotters gallery
  • We watched some of the David Attenborough documentaries: Life on Earth, reptiles, birds and mammals

History/Social Studies

  • Finished reading the comic strip history of the Isere vol1 – prehistory to 1000 AD
  • City walk: we’re working on general observation and awareness in the urban environment and orientation skills, but I also asked her to pick and photograph a fountain. We might start a little collection, though they have no water at this time of year.
  • Sent postcard, so we ended up discussing workings of the post, which box to post the letter in, pick up times, etc…

Practical Life / Cooking

  • She made two batches of sable cookies pretty much following the recipe by herself.

Arts / Crafts

  • She finished her big unicorn coat sewing project, and has toyed with a few smaller sewing things.
  • She made a drawing of Mr Clever with speech bubble. Her drawings suddenly have a more polished, rounded look.
  • Made a very nice Kapla jug
  • She made numerous paper masks this week, and a small abstract paper artwork in an envelope.

Languages

  • We have spoken vastly more French than English all week, and I really think I can feel the difference. Some stubborn grammar errors are starting to fade away, or at least, she’s developed the ability to recognise and correct them.
  • Watched two episodes in German of Pippi Langstrumpf
  • Listened to video of kids songs in Hindi

Music

  • After much work on the Cuckoo, Suzuki 1, piece 3, she has declared it ‘finished’. She has already taught herself the right hand of piece 4.
  • Has done a great deal of piano improvising and managed to pick out a couple of tunes she knows.

Sports/Activities

  • Dance class – I think they are spending all term on sky things, she is really in her element there.
  • Swimming class – went brilliantly for her
  • We spent some time playing throwing and catching games with balls, balloons, stuffed animals…

Out and about

  • Trip to the library.
  • Three park/children’s playground trips.
  • Wild play afternoon and dinner with friends
  • Nice shopping trip to choose things for her
  • Hung out at the local pizza joint for a while

Special mention

  • For autonomy and consideration in getting her own breakfast and entertaining herself all morning while her sick mother recovered a bit.