The Mission

One moms journey to
attempt to do it all. Homeschool happy, healthy kids, have a loving blissful marriage, and run a successful business.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Taking it to the street.

Emma has been struggling to memorize her multiplication facts.  She can work them out in her head, but has not been able to recall them from memory.
So we took our math to the street yesterday.  It was a beautiful morning, and the kids had a blast playing multiplication hopscotch, and other variety of games and memory work.

Jack was able to work on skip counting and jumping, while the girls worked on the 3's.










I think that this worked.  Before bed I reviewed the facts with Emma, and she knew them all without hesitation.  

We have tried all kinds of rote memory work for Emma and it just hasn't stuck.  My theory is that when she is asked to do something physically challenging (jumping from square to square- don't land on the lines, etc) it frees up the portion of her brain that was anxious about the math.  She was so worried about trying to remember that it blocked it.  Being physically active distracted her and allowed it to really sink in. 
I'm going to look and see if I can find any literature to confirm this. :)

Moving on to the 4's today!

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

sound project- string telephones by, Abby & Emma

                               SOUND EXPERIMENT 



When you make string telephones you tie a string to two plastic cups and add paper clips, then you talk to the person on the other side and you can have a conversation. A three way call is possible you just add a third cup, more string and a third paper clip. To hear the people talking you half to pull the string tight to here the sound, If you don't the vibration will stop and the sound won't make it through. ~ Emma


     Today we did a sound experiment.  We made a phone out of string and plastic cups. It worked really well!  The way the phone works is when the string vibrates, the sound waves move across the string from one cup to another.  We also made a three way call by adding one string and cup to the middle.  That also worked very well.  We had a lot of fun doing this! ~ Abby






The "3 Way" call.





Mom's Note:  This experiment was really cool, I had no idea that it would work as well as it did. 



We used just a regular plastic cup, some twine, and paperclips.  


Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Matchbox Ordinals ~ Math Exploration

Jack's cars raced and we used the finish line results to discuss ordinals!
More math with toys!





Thursday, May 2, 2013

"Transformer" Math ~ Graphing Exploration

Jack's first "work' of the day was to bring down ALL of his transformers.  Pretty cool way to start the school day :).  Then he sorted them into different categories,

1.Autobots
2.Deceptacons
3. Bot-shots
4. Launchers
5. Easy to transform
6.  Hard to transform
7.  Weapons



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Then he graphed the results... with some playing and sound effects along the way.



He choose a different color for each bar to depict what he was representing in the graph.




His conclusions when all were graphed was, "Wow, I have a lot more Autobots than anything else!"
Mission Accomplished.


I have found that is it very easy to engage Jack in his work, when we incorporate the things that he loves or is currently interested in.  Making him move around the house, gets the "ants" out of his pants, so he will actually be able to focus on his "work".


Additional Reading



Wednesday, May 1, 2013

The Netherlands Project ~ By Emma

           We made the Netherlands  so we would know what it was like for the people that lived there when the dikes broke. We used air-dry-clay to build the dikes ,people and land . We also used blue water to put in the bin on the other side of the dike to see if the water would hold on the side the water is suposed to be on. 
          I think this was a fun project in history, It was fun to play in the clay and watch the water brake into the the Netherlands, Then we broke the dikes.
        This is just like what happened to New Orleans in hurricane Katrina.


                    
          







Queen Beatrix gives her thrown to her son Willem-Alexander. ~ Abby

    Philip    William


©Jeroen Van Der Meyde/Dutch Royal House               

Today we got some news, the queen of the Netherlands,  stepped down from her thrown! Queen Beatrix gave her thrown to her son Willem-Alexander.  

                   I'll tell you a little about the history of the Netherlands.  Philip inherited Italy, Spain, and the Netherlands.  Philip was a catholic.  William was a nobleman in the Netherlands.  He was a protestant.  William didn't like the way Philip ruled the Netherlands, because he made laws without asking the people.  Philip wanted William killed.  So William went back to Germany, he made an army and knocked down the dikes that were holding the water back turning the land war into a sea war.  William won the war and his Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great, Great Granddaughter, Beatrix ruled for 33 years.

Mom's Note: This was of interest to us, since we have been studying the history of how "William The Silent" came to rule the Netherlands.  Love it, when we can apply what we have learned to real life current events :)