Sunday, August 29, 2010

Earth Summer Camp

I think every Kindergartner, in this modern day and age, has a unit on "the Planet Earth" and how to care for it. Consequently, I felt like I too should brooch this subject with my children, and perhaps try to be a little greener myself in the process. Originally, I thought I would hold this class sometime close to Earth Day; however, when I saw an Earth Summer Camp at our community center, I decided we would have this special unit sooner than later. It seemed to fit into our schedule nicely too. The kids could go to summer camp and get introduced to the planet Earth. Their class would cover the placement of Earth in the solar system, the actual layers of the planet Earth, rocks, mountains, fault lines, etc., and then briefly touch on conservation issues. Then our home school unit could expand on the conservation issues, including days on water conservation, energy conservation, garbage conservation and recycling, air pollution, and move into a discussion of taking care of our planet. This would lead very nicely into our next special unit on National Parks. After all, national parks are simply land set aside to protect and conserve. After covering national parks generally, then we'd move into specifically studying Yellowstone National Park, in anticipation of our trip there in a few weeks. At that point, my kids would already have a foundation for discussing the geothermal features in Yellowstone, and learning about the plants and wildlife would just be fun little extras! It would all flow so logically--necessary in my world of teaching! There was only one problem! Day one of summer camp put a wrench in my plan! Let me explain.

Perhaps I am naive, or I just didn't give it a lot of thought, but when my children arrived home from the first day of summer camp and told me all about how the earth was formed when a big explosion happened in outer space, shooting our planet off like a rocket into its current placement in the universe, I about died! I probably should have assumed that a Science summer camp on the Earth would teach Big Bang theory, but to be honest, when I enrolled them I was thinking more about the Earth's composition than about its origin. Needless to say; however, after day one of summer camp, origin was forefront in my mind. In fact, my two week holiday came to an abrupt halt, and the kids and I began an immediate dialogue about the earth's creation.

Now, let me pause here and say two things. First of all, I want to note, in behalf of all of you scientifically minded individuals, that I am not in direct opposition to everything supposed in the Big Bang theory. Just most of it. And secondly, let me just state that my kids have in fact been taught the true creation story. Many times in fact. Which was part of the reason it was so troubling to hear them tell this second version as fact. This ought to be a lesson to all parents. Even children who have been taught the truth, may not recognize a contraction when it is presented to them from another source. When my kids shared with me their understanding of the Big Bang theory, as it had been taught to them in summer school, they did not see any problem with it. They didn't connect it to the creation story we read in Genesis. Then, when I asked them how the world could be created by a big bang when the scriptures teach that Jesus Christ was the creator of the world, they just stared at me kind of confused. Eventually we got to the obvious conclusion, the one that many Christian scientists have come to, that Christ just caused the Big Bang, but even that was insufficient. My kids still couldn't seem to get past the mental image of some big explosion, and after talking and talking and talking, it was clear that a very accidental version of the creation was still stuck in their minds. I was upset, and angry at myself for not anticipating the topic. I was also ready to keep them out of the rest of the week of summer school, not to mention march right in and tell their teacher what I thought of her teaching Big Bang to my 4 and 5 year olds. My level headed husband; however, pointed out what a good teaching moment this was. "They need to confront some opposition." he said reasonably. And I guess that's true. It helps them to learn that not everything they will ever learn is true, and that they need to always weigh new understanding in light of their cherished gospel knowledge. It also taught me the absolute necessity of talking to children about what they see and hear in other places, and the obligation we have to teach them the truth.

So, teach them the truth we did. We countered Science summer camp with our own unit on Creationism. We read out of the Old Testament and Pearl of Great Price every night. We discussed the order and purpose of each day, the beauty of it all, and most importantly, the great Creator Himself. We testified to the truth of the scriptures, and told them to anticipate their visit to the temple as an adult where they could learn even more about God's creation of this Earth. It turned out to be a very positive experience. And although the U-Tube explosion video was very impressive, I think the true message sunk deeper into their hearts. And, as for their teacher, well, I couldn't resist having a little talk with her. Only, I made the kids do the dirty work. I helped them write her a letter about how we believe that Jesus Christ created the Earth. We then gave her a pass along card for a free Bible where she could read all about it.

Following our week studying the Creation, we then launched into our Save the Planet week. First we talked about garbage. We watched our Little Hard Hats movie on where the garbage goes. We visited the city landfill, talked to our garbage man, and made recycled paper. Through it all, we were careful to cover the Reduce, Reuse, Recycle program presented in most schools, and then tried to implement these ideas into our home. The kids went crazy with it all. They made special garbage cans in our house just for recyclable goods, they went through our current recycle bin and garbage to find things they could re-use (i.e. they used all the old baby food jars to sort their legos into), and they became quite effectively--the recycling police. We even thought we would try our hand at a compost bin; however, after actually building the thing, we determined that we weren't quite that green yet!

Once we finished our discussion on garbage, we moved straight into energy conservation. We watched our movie on Ben Franklin and the history of electricity. Then we learned all about power plants and how energy gets to our homes. Then we brainstormed ways to save energy, as well as had a unit on safety as regarding electrical power sources. By the end of these discussions our little police had duel jobs: recycling and energy-efficiency monitoring.

We couldn't end there though. We had to learn about water, where it comes from (the water cycle), how it gets to our homes, and how important it is that we have enough of it. The kids loved our field trip to the water tower, and you guessed it, they became diligent about not wasting water as well. In fact, one night during dinner, Spencer stood up and went to the sliding glass door. He then proceeded to open the door and poor his glass of water on the flowers outside. When I asked him what the heck he was doing, he informed me that he was no longer thirsty and that rather than wasting the water, he was going to water the plants with it. Pretty impressive, I know. Not too mention hilarious! I have to confess that even I started to get caught up in all of this. I told Nick that I want some of those down-spout water containers for Christmas. We already store drinking water in our food storage, but storing rainwater for outdoor use seems like a equally good idea!

Even water conservation didn't bring our unit to a close though. What true "greeny" can teach about saving the Earth without a class on the O-zone layer and global warming? Maddi was actually very affected by this discussion, particularly the part about air pollution and acid rain. She announced that we were going to start riding our bikes everywhere, and she has also decided she wants to protest airplane usage. It was amazing to see how the kids truly cared about these issues. It made me realize how truly wise it is to teach children when they are young. They internalize the beliefs, and as the adage states, when they are old, they will not depart from them.

Here is a shot of the kids holding some of their projects from our Planet Earth Unit:
Think green signs, paper mache globes, recycled paper, grass that they planted in a cup, and their own version of the planet earth cut out of construction paper. (Maddi built a Mayo Clinic right in the center of her Earth and made her Daddy very proud.)

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Continuing Revelation

After 11 crazy weeks of non-stop home schooling, the kids and I decided it was time to take our first holiday. I desperately needed a break from such a full-on schedule, and the kids wanted some time to play with their friends before their school year started. After some consideration, we decided upon a two-week vacation. The first week would be pure play. Then, during the second week, I actually enrolled the kids in an Earth Summer Camp--still a break for me, but back to school for them!

During our little vacation, I took the time to ponder and evaluate many things. Of course, the number one question on my mind was: How is home-schooling going and do I want to back out while I still have the chance? This was a hard question to answer in my state of sheer exhaustion. The 11 weeks of school we had just completed was a roller coaster of stress and excitement. I loved spending time with the kids learning and exploring and discovering. And to be honest, I think the kids loved spending the time with me. They have been better kids lately than ever before, and I think it is a direct correlation of our time spent together. In addition to loving my time with the kids, I feel like have renewed my own love for learning. I feel curious again about the world, rather than being too busy too notice. It is wonderful. On the other hand; however, I have never had so many nights that I cry myself to sleep simply because I am so tired. I feel overwhelmed all of the time; inadequate to the task at hand. Part of me wants so badly to send Maddi off to school and put Spence back in pre-school. Then I would be down to two kids a day. I could get so much done! Honestly; however, I know this is not an option. I am into this neck deep, whether the real school year has started or not. Consequently, rather than day-dreaming about sending the kids off to school like everyone else in the world, most of my time during our vacation was spent trying to figure out how I am going to survive as I keep on home schooling. In truth, I already know the answer. SIMPLIFY. Our school was only supposed to be for a few hours a day three days a week. However, it has somehow evolved into four to six hours everyday of the week. That's wonderful because we are learning so much and spending so much time together--but the time constraint is eating me for lunch. So, I have been struggling to figure out how to simplify. Gratefully, I have not been left on my own. One day, as I sat thinking about our home school, the revelation simply came. It was pure and simple, and so beautiful to me. The inspiration was this: stop doing circle time every day. The kids already grasp the calender, the days, weeks, and months. They understand the weather, seasons, etc. They simply don't need to keep doing it everyday anymore. I realized that if I just moved circle time to the first day of the week, then that would open up hours of time for me every other day. We could still do table time and other classes each day, but save ourselves at least an hour a day on circle time. It may seem like a simple solution to everyone else, but it was one I know I didn't come to on my own. It was as though Heavenly Father's arms encircled me with love. I am so thankful for continuing revelation--both for the assurance that we are on the right track, and for the needed knowledge and understanding to make it through each new day.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Indian Literature

Just as a quick side note to our states unit, since so many (if not all) of the United States have Indian history, we have tried to incorporate some "Indian Literature" into each state unit. We read about the Ute's with the state of Utah, including some of the actual documents that passed between the Indians and Brigham Young. Then for Oklahoma and Minnesota I found books about Indian legends. For Oklahoma we read the Legend of the Indian Paintbrush. The kids loved this story that describes the beautiful flower and how it came into being after a small Indian boy left his paintbrushes on the hill after painting the sunset. In fact, after we read it, they insisted on taking a night to paint the sunset themselves.



Then for the state of Minnesota, I found a book called The Legend of the Lady Slipper. The Pink Lady Slipper is the state flower of Minnesota , so this book also captured the kids attention. Hopefully we can continue to incorporate some of this Indian literature as we go throughout the rest of the year--both for our own enjoyment, and because it is part of the school curriculum!

Friday, August 20, 2010

"The Gopher State"

After two fun-filled weeks of pioneering and land-running, I was honestly ready to declare a homeschooling holiday and just stare at the wall for a few days. I decided; however, to push through with just one more week of school before our holiday. This week we moved onto state number three: Minnesota. I was going to go with the whole "where we all grew up" trend and do Missouri next, but then I decided we had better do Minnesota while it was still summer so we could site see as part of our schooling. And site see we did. After learning all about Minnesota in our states books, we took a weekend field-trip to see some of the famous sights in our own lovely state. Since we have already been to the Mall of America, the old Pillsbury flour mills, Lake City (where water-skiing was invented) and the Mayo Clinic, our first destination on this site-seeing tour was Itasca State Park,



a beautiful area about five hours north of our Rochester home. We invited some of our adventurous friends to join on us the weekend tour, and decided that camping would be the best (not to mention cheapest) way to take it all in. While we almost had to cancel the trip due to severe weather (we were literally sitting in a tornado warning while we were supposed to be loading the car!) at the last minute we just "took off", arriving at our camp site a little after midnight. The next morning we cooked a big breakfast feast,



and then headed out for the great adventures of the day. After all, Itasca State Park, though probably unknown to most everyone in the U.S., is actually quite a significant location. Within the park lies the beautiful Lake Itasca--headwaters of the mighty Mississippi River. You can hike up to the lake and take a swim,













pause to enjoy the view,





or simply wade across the great river at it's most shallow and narrow opening.





We couldn't resist doing all three. And it was actually quite an awesome experience. Afterward we paused for lunch in the back of the truck,



and then spent the better part of the day just enjoying the scenery. One aspect of the scenery the kids especially enjoyed was this giant eagle's nest we came across. Amazingly enough, just as we spotted it, two eaglets poked their heads up and then proceeded to take their first flying lesson right in our view. It was awesome! And appropriate to our Minnesota weekend since our state has such a high population of the bird.



The next day we broke camp and made a six hour loop back to our homes through a number of stops. Here we are at the Paul Bunyan and Babe Monument, (it was a blast studying a few tall tales!)





and at the Judy Garland home.





We also saw some of the old lumber and paper mills, but somehow failed to snap a picture while we were there. All in all, the weekend was a blast. And left us more than ready for a well deserved home schooling vacation! (aka. the beautiful world of simply hanging out instead of holding 4-6 hours of school each day!)

Saturday, July 31, 2010

"The Sooner State"

After studying the state of Utah, we moved directly into doing a week on the great state of Oklahoma. It worked out nicely because my parents came into town for a few days and I was able to recruit my mother to do a large part of the teaching. She spent several days teaching the kids all about Oklahoma history. Although she touched on the dust bowl and other significant events and peoples, the bulk of her lesson was on the Native Americans history. She discussed the history of the Indians, how they were moved into Oklahoma during the Trail of Tears and resided there until the great Oklahoma Land Runs. She taught them about the five civilized tribes, (the kids couldn't stop laughing over the Chick-I Saw Indians!) and about the Indians daily life (Spencer became obsessed with bow and arrows and Indian Quivers after this discussion). She also brought all sorts of props to show and give the kids i.e. the Oklahoma flag, a dream catcher to hand downstairs in their rooms, some Indian figurines, and real Indian jewelry from a friend of hers who is a true Indian Princess. Here she is at the table teaching away:



The kids loved talking all about Indian culture and lifestyles. They were saddened by the stories of the government mistreating the Indians, and shocked when they got to the part of the lesson on the Land Runs. How could the government break its promise to the Indians and give their lands away? It was a powerful teaching moment for the kids, and one that gave us an opportunity to talk about the Book of Mormon prophesies about the Indians.

Although the kids were upset by the fact that the government decided to give away the Indians' land via the Oklahoma Land Run of 1889, I knew our Oklahoma Unit wouldn't be complete without a Land Run re-enactment. Growing up in Oklahoma, our elementary schools always held a Land Run day, so I knew just how to proceed. Our first task; however, was to round up some settlers in search of free land so we wouldn't have to "run" all by ourselves. With so many wonderful friends, that didn't prove to be much of a challenge.

Our next order of business was to host a few activities to make preparations throughout the week of our land-run. First the kids came over to decorate small flags that they would attach to their stakes. Next we had them over to make stick horses to ride during the big event.



And then, finally the actual Land Run Day arrived. The kids all dressed up and brought their stakes and stick horses. (As you can see in the photo, we even saved our covered wagon for the great event.) We made them all stand outside behind a long red ribbon and wait for the cap-gun fire to set off in search of their land. Our whole back-yard was staked off and the kids were instructed to find their piece of earth and place their stake next to the large stake marking their territory. It was absolutely adorable to see these kids get so into the Run, and it brought back so many fond memories of my own childhood in Oklahoma. Here are a few pictures of the kids on the big day:









Just as the kids were lining up, several of the neighbors came outside to see what all the excitement was about. A few people walking by also stopped to watch us as all the commotion broke out. I don't know if they thought we were having a birthday party, or what, but it was quite comical to end up with an audience for our Oklahoma Land Run Day. I should have gone over and explained it all to them, but I didn't want to miss out on watching the kiddo stake out their claims.

Once everyone got some land, then it was time for some good-old Oklahoma cuisine. We prepared BBQ Brisket in honor of the Oklahoma beef, we had chips and cowboy caviar, corn and watermelon, and a delicious peanut dessert made with real Oklahoma wheat and peanuts. Here are our two little love-birds eating their dinner over on their land.



Following the land run, we all settled in for a movie night to watch, well, the famous Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical Oklahoma of course! The kids and I had been listening to the music all week and it seemed appropriate to cap off our weeks events with the classic film. After all, "We know we belong to the land. And the land we belong to is grand! And when we say Yeeow! Ayipioeeay! We're only sayin' you're doin' fine, Oklahoma! Oklahoma O.K.!"

Saturday, July 24, 2010

"The Beehive State"

After completing our Safety Kids Unit, I decided it was time to come back to Geography again and begin our Individual States Unit. Originally I wanted to go through all of the fifty states. I bought several "50 states" fact books, a 50 states coloring book, a 50 states cook book, one of those quarter collecting boards, a state sticker map, and laminated maps for the kids to mark as we traveled to various states. With all of our supplies in place, I then went about picking the order of the states we would study. Since we kicked off our states week the week of July 24th, we decided to commence by studying the wonderful state of Utah.

We began by covering the Indian and pioneer heritage that Utah has. While we spent some time on the Ute Indians, most of our history lesson centered around the Mormon pioneers. In fact, we started our discussion with Joseph Smith, the prophet of the restoration, and worked our way all the way through until the saints entered the Salt Lake Valley and Brigham Young declared: This is the right place! The kids knew most of this information already, but it was a wonderful chance to review that heritage that belongs as much to us as it does the state of Utah. As part of this history review, we again created a poster board of us at church history sites, this time in the form of a chronological time line. After living on the east coast for a year, we are lucky to have visited almost every church history site there is including: Sharon Vermont--birthplace of Joseph Smith, Palmyra, Harmony Pennsylvania--Joseph and Emma's first home and restoration of the priesthood, Fayette New York--organization of the church, Kirtland, Ohio, Liberty, Independence, and Nauvoo. Here is a shot of our poster board time line.



As you can see, it stops after showing pictures of us in Nauvoo. We didn't end the poster board there; however, since we will soon have more to add. In September our family is going to make a trip back to Nauvoo, and then follow the Mormon trail all the way into the Salt Lake Valley. We will camp our way across the country from Nauvoo, to Winter Quarters, to Martin's Cove, and on through Immigration Canyon. Someday we want to make the trek in covered wagons, but this is the best we can do for now.

In honor of the pioneer trek, we not only planned our own trek for our family vacation, but decided that we needed to have a "symbollic trek" that actually correlated with our weeks of study and with the 24th of July. So, after a few days of reading and reading and reading Mormon history, we decided to make some Mormon history of our own. Dad and the kids worked hard to construct the frame for a covered wagon, and I sewed the canvas cover.



Then we got to the near impossible task of actually loading our wagon. Our journey would only be for one night--July 23rd to July 24th, but since our wagon was somewhat smaller than those the pioneers used, I figure it was actually pretty comparable. And what a nightmare it was to try and pack it. We managed our tent, one pillow, a sheet and blanket, all of our food and cookware for dinner and breakfast the following morning, our pajamas, and our scriptures. It took quite some time to get it all sorted out, to decide what absolutely had to come and what we could leave, and to prepare to make our trek. All in all, I think I appreciated the exercise the most, and truly felt the pangs of leaving things behind. I wasn't the only one who got into it though. As I gathered our food together, the kids stood by the window and pleaded with me to hurry because "the mobs were coming". Then, when we were finally loaded, our wagon threatening to burst, I think a tear escaped Maddi's little eyes. We really felt like we were leaving our home, never to return. Here's a shot of our littlest pioneer child standing next to the loaded wagon.




With one last farewell, we began our trek around and around and around the block.





The kids were dressed in pioneer attire, and you can only imagine the looks we drew as we "walked and walked and walked." This again gave me new found appreciation for the pioneers. I only went around the blocks a few times, with the kids doing most of the work of pulling the wagon, but even with that little amount of walking I felt sore and tired from carrying the baby, and unbelievably hot! I was glad when we finally came back to our back yard and decided to camp for the night.



And camp we did, but not without making a true pioneer dinner first--or at least our idea of a pioneer dinner: fresh trout we had caught ourselves, blueberries, homemade wheat bread we had made the day before--complete with hand churned butter, (this had been part of our pioneer children chores and lifestyle lesson) and some zucchini from our garden. All of it was carefully cooked over the fire, and it was so tasty. After dinner, we settled onto the hard ground inside of our tent, and went quickly to sleep.

That night, in the middle of the night, we had another true pioneer experience. We awoke with a start to a terrible storm that blew in with a vengeance. It came from out of nowhere, and gave us all quite a fright. I hurried in with the baby, and by the time I got back outside the wind had picked up something fierce. Nick was carrying stuff up to the house, and the screaming children took a tumble as the wind rolled the tent. There was no time to rescue the kids though, the first order of business was to get the fire extinguished before we started the whole cornfield on fire. We had left the coals in the fire pit when we went off to bed (not smart!) and when the wind picked up it sent them ablaze. The flames reached well over ten feet, and would have burnt everything in sight if the rain hadn't appeared only seconds later. But appear it did, and it poured. We ran around like crazy trying to get the kids and supplies inside. I was convinced we were going to die, overcome by the elements. Actually, I was sure we were all being picked up by a massive tornado! It was so frightening! But after much fear and craziness, we all soon found ourselves safe and dry and warm inside the walls of our home--a place the pioneers never would have had the luxury of fleeing to in such a storm. It was another powerful lesson, and one we talked a lot about the next morning over our skillet cornbread and blueberries and cream. It was our own little Mormon history indeed, and we capped it off with a big Pioneer Day celebration. We invited all of the members in the neighborhood--a total of 13 families--over for a BBQ that night and requested that everyone bring either family recipes or "Traditional Utah food". As a result, we had a smattering of jellos, including green jello (no carrots though), some funeral potatoes , and other comically Mormon cuisine. We visited and ate and then roasted marshmallows and had a firework show. It was a meaningful way for us to study and commemorate the true pioneer heroes that had entered the Salt Lake Valley on that very day so many year before.

While talking about and recreating Utah history was a fabulous start to our Utah week, it was not the end of our Utah Unit. With the history in place, we were then free to discuss all sorts of things about Utah from it's nickname of "the Beehive State" (We actually paused here and spent a few days talking about bees, studying how they make honey, dissecting flowers and learning about pollination, etc. This was the perfect way to get some science overlap. And bees are more amazing than you know. Sometime you should ask Nick to demonstrate a bee waggle dance and explain it's significance. You'll be down right amazed!), to the Transcontinental railroad (we'll visit Promontory Point on our Utah trip as well), to discussing the capitol, state flower, tree, bird, etc, and to reading about how Utah residents eat twice as much candy as any other state--a fact that our states cookbook attributed to Mormons' candy-making activities within their homes every Monday night! Ha! The kids loved delving into all sorts of topics; however, I think their favorite part of these discussions was the day they received a package from their grandparents out in Utah. This package contained all sorts of Utah items including: a real piece of honeycomb, lye soap, pioneer money, a golden spike, rocks from the Rocky Mountains, glass from some Utah ghost towns, and of course, some Salt Water Taffy from the Great Salt Lake! The kids, as you can see in this photo, just loved getting the educational and exciting present!



Thanks Grandma and Grandpa Hoskins! And thanks be to God for protecting those righteous men and women who sacrificed so much to cross the plains and eventually gained religious freedom in the land of Deseret. We love our pioneer heritage and our religious and family ties to the wonderful state of Utah!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

We're the Safety Kids

After completing full Science Units on worms, frogs, and eagles, as well as our three-week Geography Unit on the United States of America, it was finally time for our first Special Unit Class. And our topic for this special unit: Safety.

In brief, our safety unit looked like this:

Day 1
Personal safety lessons. We used the Brite Music Safety Kids CD to talk about stranger danger, personal space, using the buddy system, etc. That night for family home evening we also talked about safety--spiritual safety. We made safety signs to hang all over our house and remind us to be safe.



Day 2 and 3
Personal information packets. I found an awesome web-site that allows you to make tracing sheets out of any text that you choose. Using this website, I put together tracing packets to help the kids learn to write their full names--first, middle, and last, their full address, and their phone number.

Day 4
Calling 911. After going over all of their personal information, we talked this day about when, why, and how to make emergency phone calls. When Nick got home from work we used our cell phones to practice making emergency calls. I put scenarios in a dish and the kids would pull them out, have Nick read them to him, and then call 911 on his phone. After the kids dialed Nick would clear the number and call me. Then I would pretend to be the rescue dispatcher asking what was wrong and having the kids give me their information over the phone. The kids were actually pretty nervous while we were doing this, acting like they were really in trouble of one kind of another. As a result, I think i t was a really beneficial exercise.

Day 5
Fire Safety. We talked about all the ins and outs of fire safety. We talked about playing with fire, fire hazards in our home, and went over and over and over again Stop, Drop, and Roll.

Day 6
Fire Station field trip. We were very lucky to get a private tour of the local fire station with a few of our close friends. We actually went on their equipment checking day too, so the kids got an up close and personal look at all of the firefighters trucks and tools. They loved it. That night for family home evening we again tied it into our safety unit setting our family meeting place, checking our smoke detectors, and running fire drills with mock fires in different locations in our house. One really important part of this for us was teaching the kids how to get out of their windows. It made me realize how lucky we are each and every day that we live free of a fire in our home. I wish we could have somehow found someone who had lost their home in a fire that we could have talked to and given help to. I think that would have been a nice way to cap off the unit.

Here are some of our Fire Station Field Trip Photos: