Monday, September 30, 2013

All About Me for Kindergarteners

Last week was all about Adrian! Well, in a way! :) That was his theme for the week and granted his weeks with me are not very long (he attends a German Kindergarten full-time this year), we try to make the most of them! When I first developed the thematic, my goal was to get him to discover more about himself. We had the same theme last year and the focus was mostly on body parts and the physical aspect. This year, although we still talked about the body, we focused more on likes and dislikes, emotions and Mr. Adrian's place in the world. Below is a sample of what Adrian did.

Me Map Booklet
Geography: Me on the Map Booklet
Me Map PlanetMe Map Country
View of the inside

Well this idea has been around quite a bit (I personally saw it first on Counting Coconuts) and I was very excited to finally put it together for Adrian. He loves geography and at five years old, he is grasping quite well that his house is on a certain street and that this street is in a town which is in a certain state and so on. Overall, we looked through the layers of this "booklet" and discussed how Adrian's house was on that street and so on. After all seemed clear, Adrian proceeded to color Planet Earth and Europe. And now, Adrian knows his place in the World! :) P.S. If Adrian were at home more, I would have had HIM help choosing elements for the layers instead of simply coloring two of them by the way but he truly is home schooled very little this year. :( He seemed pretty happy with my choices in images though (for our street for example, I picked a picture of him bicycling on the street with his daddy, added small pictures of his favorite neighbors as well as a picture of a cat who visits us often and lives a few doors down).

Likes Dislikes Images
Fine Motor / Art : Likes & Dislikes : Cut & Paste

Getting to know yourself is important. At five years old, I sometimes feel Adrian should know himself better. This exercise was designed to get him to decide whether he liked or disliked something. I simply gathered pictures of items I knew he'd like and dislike, and printed them. The two sheets were then presented with a pair of scissors, a glue stick and two extra sheets stating "I like" and "I don't like". First step: cutting the images. Second step, sorting the images. Third step: placement of the images on the sheet and finally: gluing of these images. Adrian really liked my picks for his "likes" (dominos, trains, dinosaur documentary DVD, flag book, and the solar system) by the way. Possibly because they are borderline "obsessions" in certain cases! :) P.S. Adrian does like cats...but not when they mistake the sandbox for a litter box! :)

Poem on Adrian
Language: A Rhyming Poem About Me!

Apparently, we need to read more poetry. Adrian could not find the rhymes in the poem and couldn't give me examples of rhymes he knew either. Pfff. On another note...he really enjoyed the poem I wrote about him...I erased the titled of the poem (his real name) and his entire name on line two but I'm sure you get an idea that it rhymed with line number one... :)

DSC_0758
Language: Word Building with the Moveable Alphabet

Surprise! Apparently during his "time off" this summer (aka one month), Adrian forgot almost all the letter sounds...or maybe he was just very tired when he came home from regular German school this week. Either way, this moveable alphabet activity did not go well and it was meant to be revision before moving forward! Ha! The irony of it all. The idea was for me to call a few 3 letter (C-V-C) words for him to spell with the moveable alphabet. We've done this before and he was always very excited and did well but somehow this time, it was very difficult. Needless to say I was speechless and intend to revise the letter sounds before trying again and may be asking for a school derogation soon! :) Here's the words we worked on this week:
leg
hip
bum
lip
gum

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Fine Motor  / Language: Tracing my Silhouette

Tracing is one of these activities done in preparation for writing. At 5 years old, Adrian should already be writing of course but he isn't due to his very poor pencil grip. As such, we are still in-pre-writing mode, with tracing instead. For this activity, Adrian laid down on a piece of large paper and I traced his silhouette with a pencil. I then invited him to trace over with a marker and to trace over his name and age at the bottom (I had already written those down). Adrian also measured his height using his silhouette and a measuring tape.

Notice a lot of language activities this week? You always will. Adrian is not exactly where I expected him to be in terms of writing and reading so I'll be presenting him with a lot more language activities this year. We'll also be doing quite a bit of math and geography but that is only because of his love of the subjects! :)


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Saturday, September 28, 2013

On the Menu this October

So how did it all go last month? Who followed my menu? Who grabbed a few ideas? Anyone interested in what's for lunch/dinner THIS upcoming month? It's almost October so you'll finally find some "comfort food" on the menu. We're talking roasts, stews, and of course fall vegetables such as pumpkin, parsnips and sweet potatoes...

DSC_0745
October Menu: inclusive of lots of comfort food! :)

If you need scanned copies of October's menu, I can be reached at sortingsprinkles at gmail dot com. Otherwise, clicking on the pictures below and you will get a bigger, clearer image of the menu. :)
EPSON013
EPSON012
EPSON011

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Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Stamp Sorting : Geography and History in a box!

School interruptions...Nobody likes them. For this reason, I decided to delay the beginning of our school year instead of starting and stopping, starting and stopping and so on. I know a lot of you have been patiently waiting for me to resume my regular-content posts (thank you for your patience by the way!:) ) but I felt we wouldn't be off to a great start if we had one school day only to stop and resume later in the month. As such, school will really only be starting after our visitors have left (September 23) and posts about that week should begin to be published the week after. Until then, I'm afraid my publications will probably be only occasional. Please bear with me and preview in the meantime another material I've prepared for Adrian's use during his school time: the continent sorting stamp box; a geography teaching tool. 

Stamp Sorting Box Continent
Stamp Sorting Box; a compartment for each continent except Antarctica
(can't find stamps yet!)

This activity idea came upon me after I realized I wanted to do more "continental" activity than just present a traditional Montessori continent box. As we will be spending one week per continent, simply having Adrian explore a box as he wished seemed a bit lacking. I felt there should be some activities and some trays presented instead of just one giant treasure box to rummage through. For now, I am not completely putting aside the idea of making continent boxes as objects coming from the continents themselves will always be interesting to explore but I also want Adrian to enjoy what would normally be found inside a continent box more thoroughly. For example, while it is very neat to find stamps from many countries in a Europe box, what's a child to do with them? I pictured Adrian possibly sifting through them, maybe stopping at one if featured a train on it or something of the sort. I can't picture him doing much more with the stamps at this point if they're simply in a box...yet if I take the time to find stamps/money to buy stamps, I want Adrian to see their potential. I definitely wouldn't want to chance him dismissing them completely. As such, I went ahead and created a continent stamp sorting box per an idea found on The Hands On Homeschooler. From there, the stamps will be sorted according to their continent for the rest of the school year. After their initial sorting (quite elementary for a Kindergartner of course) more activities will be created for the stamps pertaining to each continent! :) What kind? You must stay tuned to find out. (Adrian will be studying Europe in just a few weeks) but for now, let me show you the Continent Stamp Sorting Box:

I started by covering one of Adrian's old sturdy shoebox with a neutral paper. I won't lie: I'd rather have a wooden box but they seem to be hard to come by. If I find a suitable one with six compartments and a lid, I'll get it but for now, this shoe box will do. Once the box and its lid were lined, I glued a color coded Montessori continent map on the lid for reference (The Homeschool Den) and then I cut six squares of construction paper: a red, a yellow, a green, an orange, a brown and a pink. These are of course, the colors representing the continents according to the Montessori map I had just printed and glued to the lid of the shoebox. The bottom of the box could also simply have been painted but I thought I'd use the same paper as I was planning on using on our stamps. :) To finish up the box, I used thick cardboard from used packaging boxes and cut the lengths needed to separate the shoebox into six and simply slid them snuggly into the box. Of course it is not the prettiest Montessori material ever built. That's why I said if I find a wooden box I'll get it but for now, it should do the job. :)

Color Coded Stamps Montessori
Stamps mounted on their Montessori continent color: ready for sorting

Once the box is finished, you need to start gathering stamps from all around the world. That is when I truly felt very, VERY, sad indeed. You see, I used to collect stamps when I was a young girl. I bought bags of stamps and carefully peeled them off the envelopes by soaking them, and would sort them by countries or theme, to finally lovingly adhere them to philatelic albums. And now, well, I'm not sure where my collection is. I think I might simply have tossed it when I got a bit older. Pff. Oh well. Thankfully, a lot of people are still collecting...and selling theirs so I bought a lot of 100 stamps on Ebay. It guaranteed me stamps from 90 countries for quite cheap (we're talking less than USD$5 here). Overall, it was a good deal (a few damaged, a few from the same countries). I'll start with these stamps of course but will eventually get more because I know children like lively colors, bigger stamps, animals, flowers, and other things they can recognize (I know I did!). When the stamps arrived, I sorted them by continent myself and proceeded to look at what country issued them. I liked how The Hands On Homeschooler added an extra layer of color for countries that no longer existed so I decided to do the same. All stamps coming from a country that had changed name or boundaries, or something alike was first put on a black construction piece of paper and then on its continent color. For all others, I simply put the stamps of European countries on red construction paper, the stamps coming from South American countries on pink construction paper and so on. For now, I did not laminate any of  the stamps after mounting them on colored paper. Adrian is a very careful little man so I do not think they will need any covering at this point. (I am also hoping he may want to start his own stamp collection like I did after manipulating these stamps so laminating the stamps would horrify him in the future! :))

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Stamps from former countries are easily identifiable with a black mat
and a history lesson on the back

When school starts, this box will be presented, along with a basket filled with the stamps for Adrian to sort by continent. Later in the year, we'll do activities with the stamps from the continent we are actually studying. As you've noticed, I have not made a compartment for Antarctica. At this point, I do not have any stamps from there and I am sure they are hard to come by (though they do exist apparently) but if I do get my hands on one, I'll add a white envelope on the inner lid of our box! :)



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Thursday, September 5, 2013

Flag Peg People Around the World

School doesn't officially start until September 6 for us over here in Germany but that doesn't mean we are not anxious to! :) Until I get back to my regular posting about what we've been up to on that matter, I thought I'd let you know how we've been preparing for it. For example, this year, Adrian will be presented with a lot of geography activities. We've never really done much in that matter because until recently, his interests didn't push him in that direction that much and also, we didn't have access to as many materials as we do now. Overall, Adrian should "visit" every continent this school year, starting with Europe as we happen to live here. Most Montessori schools usually provide a "continent box"/'treasure box" for their students to sift through when it comes to "continental discovery" but as we'll be spending an entire week per continent, I couldn't possibly just put together a box filled with European objects and hope Adrian would have a nice learning week. As such, I'm preparing "trays" filled with actual learning activities that will fit the continent we are learning about. Most activities will include items that could have been found in the continent box (stamps, coins, postcards, etc.), only I will present them instead of simply leaving them in a box. 

Flag Peg People Map Close Up
Europe "Flag Peg People" on Labelled Map
Amongst the activities you would not have found in a continent box is one involving flags. Adrian has been "obsessed" with flags for the last two months or so. With this in mind, I set to prepare more flag activities than less to feed this curiosity. Yes we'll have the "regular" pin-the-flag-on-the-country map activities this year but I also wanted to add some fun. In comes the peg people covered with their national flag! I won't lie, these will only be used as a "revision" activity once Adrian is already familiar with the flags and countries... Also, there will be peg people for all the continent but at this point, I've only painted the European dolls you see...

Flag Peg People Map Montessori
Nine European dolls are currently part of our collection
I initially ordered a bag of 25 wooden and unpainted peg dolls (USD$8.25 not including shipping from a seller on Etsy). I won't lie. Painting all of these dolls is time consuming but it is relaxing as well as I like crafting. I will also say that the children were very excited to see these the next morning so it was rewarding in a way. I had to keep telling them it would be for school and that we wouldn't just play with them on a daily basis. Adrian loved that they had flags on them and already could tell a few by memory. I did not venture to tell him how they would be used but as you can see, they'll have to be matched with their countries! :)

Bottom Peg people
Control of error: Bottom of peg doll has country symbol
As I plan on using these for a few years (get my money out of the investment), I took the time to write under each doll the abbreviation for each country with a pencil. Eventually, I think Adrian will learn these and that it will be a great way for control of error, especially when all continents are put together, but for now, all dolls will be kept in their separate "continent bag" and that we may have to rely on our book of flags for control of error. 

Flag Peg People Close Up
Close-up of the wooden dolls; happy European citizens!
All these peg people were initially unpainted. To give them their national colors, I used acrylic paints (one coat worked well) and lacquered all the dolls with two coats of clear shiny sealant once they were dry to prevent the paints from future damage.  So far, the only complaint I have received from the initial dolls being seen is that the "Danish" doll was "missing". I was expecting that actually and it is my mistake. I originally had intended on making one as my son was born in Denmark and identifies with the country but as I had already painted a Swiss doll, I felt the Danneborg might be too similar and decided to go with the Swedish flag instead. Hmm. We'll see if I'm forgiven in a few weeks when I present these during Europe Week! :)

P.S. Don't have time to make your own flag peg dolls? Check out LaLutine's store on Etsy! She sells very similar flag peg dolls that are also eco-friendly. I love crafting so I decided to make my own version of my dolls but that is where I found the original idea for them! :)



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