Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Eating Insects for Earth Day

Happy Earth Day, everyone!

Today I checked one thing off my bucket list by snacking on an ant lollipop. Many thanks to the family who donated it to our classroom!

Here's the TED talk I like to use for this: Marcel Dicke: Why not eat insects?


I've been interested in eating insects ever since we began to learn about it for Earth Day back in April 2012. Insects are a very healthy, humane, and inexpensive source of protein. Eating insects for protein has been common throughout the span of human history.

I well remember my daughter Leah's poster that showed two bright red circle graphs of how many people around the world eat insects compared to the United States. Sadly I don't have a picture. Everyone else is doing it... why aren't you?


The children have been working on their Personal Narrative pieces all month alongside our Local Industry topic. Persuasive writing is quite another thing, and we don't do much with it before grade 8 (developmentally, you have to be ready to do Persuasive Essays).

But I thought they would -- like Leah -- enjoy doing a poster project.

So much more fun than "persuade your parents to give you a later bedtime." I remember being given this prompt in elementary school and hating it because it wasn't authentic. There was no way. My bedtime was set in stone!

Can you persuade your parents to eat insects?


(Not into ants? If cicadas are your thing, try ‘CICADA-LICIOUS’ COOKING.)


Monday, April 20, 2026

Local Industry - Coal

Our fourth Local Industry for Southern Illinois!


timing:

    1810 - present day


resource list:


artifacts:

lump of coal (it's a rock... but not a mineral!)
found at a student's 1930s-era house that had a coal chute

coal chute illustration in Harry the Dirty Dog by Gene Zion


special guest:

coal miner


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!

Friday, April 17, 2026

AWSNA

This blog post is for people who regularly visit my website, waldorfcurriculum.com.

AWSNA has service marked the term Waldorf® and recently reached out to me to request that I remove it from my domain name. Therefore, I have copied and moved my website to wcurriculum.com. Please visit me there!

Unfortunately, they currently do not allow homeschoolers or homeschool groups to license the term. Although I have had my website at waldorfcurriculum.com for 20 years, I am still required to move it.

I have set up a permanent (301) redirect, so if you type in the old domain you should automatically be sent to the new one without any problems.

Thank you!
Renee


P.S. Because I don't have a team and have never taken any classes in web design, some things may end up acting strangely on the new site. If you find a page with a problem, please leave me a message in the comments below.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Local Industry - Bricks

Our third Local Industry for Southern Illinois!


timing:

    Murphysboro Paving Brick Company
    1909 - 1931


resource list:


artifacts:

vintage "Egyptian" brick


follow ups:

it would be fun to

Learn About the Telegraph!

Practice Morse Code!


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Educational Game: Robbin' Eggs!

I'm adding this math game to my series of posts about Educational Games!

previous posts:


Today I'm writing about Robbin' Eggs! by Haywire Group.


Here is a video tutorial on Robbin' Eggs!

Sadly, this game is no longer being made but it is well worth tracking down. Many thanks to my co-teacher, Ms. Megan, for recommending it to me!

I use it in the classroom after introducing negative numbers with Gnoming A Round and a hands-on manipulative (we use the Mortensen math material).

When children are ready to think of subtracting as adding a negative, we play Robbin' Eggs!


In the Waldorf scope & sequence, integers are part of grade 7 Algebra. In his middle school book, Jamie York strongly recommends starting children out with the idea of a bank account instead of a number line.

When you enter deposits and withdrawals into the bank, the bank keeps track of them. Each new transaction is a line item (addition means "and"). For a withdrawal, you are adding a negative amount. If you spend more than you have, you have a negative balance! If you deposit funds into the bank, sometimes you still have a negative balance (if it wasn't enough to bring you out of the red) and sometimes you have a positive balance.


Note: After playing Robbin' Eggs!, I have children practice adding and subtracting integers with a traditional worksheet (FREE at TpT).

While talking about this worksheet with a student the other day, I realized something: subtraction is always rewritten!

    subtracting a positive number is rewritten as adding a negative

    subtracting a negative number is rewritten as adding a positive


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!

Monday, April 13, 2026

Fraction Skill-Building

After our Introduction to Fractions in March, we will work during April and May on skill-building. Children will continue to add concepts to their MLBs.

The Introduction to Fractions needs to be done very slowly and carefully to ensure there aren't enduring misunderstandings that show up later on!


I wanted to share the rest of my fractions planning for the year now since it is ready. If I make any changes to this as we go along, I will update it.

You will see that even though we went very slowly at the start, they will end up doing standard fifth grade fraction problems by the end of the ten weeks!


Themes Covered in Week 1

    Mon - K/W/L Chart

    Tue - 1/2, 1/4, 1/8

    Wed - Making Thirds & Halving Thirds

    Thu - Fractions of a Group, Equivalent Fractions (Houses on a Street)


Themes Covered in Week 2

    Mon - Fractions of a Number

    Tue - Puddle Question

    Wed - Reading a Ruler, Fractions in Lowest Terms

    Thu - Build-an-Animal


Themes Covered in Week 3

    Mon - Restaurant Simulation

    Tue - Coins as Fractions & Decimals

    Wed - Basic Operations with Fractions

    Thu - Converting Improper Fractions to Mixed Numbers


Themes Covered in Week 4

    Mon - Converting Mixed Numbers to Improper Fractions

    Tue - Elapsed Time

    Wed - Making Arrays

    Thu - Using Arrays to Simplify Fractions


week of April 6

Mon - Comparing Fractions

    recall Thursday's work with arrays

    look back at Fraction of a Group and find the equivalent fractions (2/4, 4/6) visually but also "prove it mathematically" on the board

    look back at Colorful Fraction Circles and see if you can find the equivalent fractions (4/8, 2/4, 5/10, 2/10)

    have children come up to the board to demonstrate the steps in how to convert each of these fractions to their simplest form

    what happens if you reduce 4/8 by dividing both numbers by 2? nothing, you'll just have to simplify it again by repeating the process

    so if there are multiple things you can divide the top and bottom number by, you should choose the largest one because that'll save you the most time

    notice that a unit fraction (with a 1 on top) is always in simplest form because its only factors are 1, and 1 isn't allowed in factor trees (YCCOM)

    have children work independently on Comparing Fractions worksheet
    https://www.superteacherworksheets.com/fractions/comparing-fractions-tape-diagrams_QWERT.pdf

    for the two equivalent fractions on that worksheet, we then used the chalkboard to "prove it mathematically"

    notice that for 6/8 = 3/4, we divide the top and bottom by 2

    but for 4/5 = 8/10, we multiply the top and bottom by 2

    we can make them larger by multiplying the top and bottom by the same number, and there are times in math when we want to do that!

    it's like Alice in Wonderland; you can make her bigger and smaller by nibbling and sipping, but she's still Alice while her size is changing

    why does it work? remember that the top number is how many and the bottom number is what kind. if you have a plan to eat 5 pieces of cake, but your mom cuts them in half to make twice as many (so now there are 10 and they are smaller) but you just adapt by eating twice as many, you have still had the same amount of cake!

    Arnold Schwarzenegger and the 2 ply toilet tissue fiasco!

    he switched to 1 ply at the government offices in California to save money during the budget crisis, and everyone promptly switched to using twice as much toilet tissue

    "if you're going to give half as much, I'm going to take twice as much"


    Carlyn Beccia book - which 6 of these 9 cures for Wounds worked? that's 2/3!


Tue - Add to MLB

    add the steps in making equivalent fractions to the MLB

    add new observations and new questions about fractions


Wed - Alice in Wonderland

    practice making equivalent fractions by either multiplying the top and bottom number by the same thing or dividing them

    go bigger and smaller just like Alice in Wonderland

    assignment: write three fractions that are equivalent to one another


Thu - Fact Families

    as I watched children working on yesterday's assignment, I realized that the class needed a review of Fact Families

    I had each child just choose a few multiplication facts that they were having trouble with and write out the fact families for them


week of Apr 13

Mon - +/- Fractions with Common Denominators

    have students practice addition and subtraction of fractions with common denominators by creating problems for classmates to solve (an answer key must be provided)

    a fun spin on this is "Secret Code," where the children come up with a fraction to represent each letter of the alphabet and then write a series of math problems for a friend to solve

    the answers to the problems spell out a secret message!

    this works best if improper fractions ("top-heavy fractions") are allowed and the answers do not have to be put in simplest form

    note: a very good way to see if children understand a skill is to have them create their own problems; if children understand that the denominator of a fraction is its name and does not represent an amount, they will resist the temptation to add or subtract them


Tue - Rounding Fractions

    practice Rounding Fractions to 0, 1/2, or 1

    observe, can children visualize the fractions in order to round them?
    who in the group still needs to see them, draw them, or build them?


Wed - Simplifying Fractions Mandala


Thu - "Of" Means "Times"

    explain that, in math, the word "of" means "times"

    sing the song,

      "Multiplying fractions
      Is no big problem
      Top times top over
      Bottom times bottom"

    do Fractions of a Group (a whole number has a denominator of 1)

    write an X over the word "of" to show that it actually means "times," then solve using multplication and simplify using skip counting

    do Multiplying Fractions (notice that the answers are very tiny! 1/3 of 1/4 is 1/12! cut up the Comparing Fractions worksheet to prove this)


week of Apr 20

Mon - First to 50

    play First to 50: Fractions of a Group Game with red counters

    print the 18 cards on cardstock so children can't see through them

    have the children make towers of 10 to easily count their score


Tue - Dividing IS Multiplying by the Reciprocal


Wed - Reciprocals of Mixed Numbers


Thu - Add to MLB

    add adding and subtracting fractions (with common denominators) and multiplying and dividing a fraction by a fraction to the MLB

    add new observations and new questions about fractions


week of Apr 27

Mon - Factor Trees

    read the introduction to YCCOM

    have fun by drawing factor trees and creating the artwork for them!


Tue - Finding the GCF

    do Simplifying Fractions

    how have you been solving these? have you ever found an equivalent fraction but it was still the wrong answer because it wasn't in lowest terms? how can you be absolutely sure you're dividing by the biggest possible number that goes into both, and there are no more steps?

    explain how to write factors in parentheses to find the GCF


Wed - Add to MLB


Thu - Factors for Numbers 1 to 100

    write out the factors for the numbers from 1 to 100 (in parentheses)


week of May 4

Mon - Finding the LCM

    this is it! our final fractions skill! and then you will be able to do anything you ever need to with fractions

    what would happen if we wanted to add fractions from different sections of the box together?

    what if I ate half of my birthday cake during the daytime and then I got really hungry in the middle of the night and went back and ate 1/5 more?

    yes, you could do it... but how would you express the answer?

    if you say well, 1/2 + 1/5 = 1/2 and 1/5 more, then you have basically just repeated the question

    the answer has to have only one denominator; therefore,
    you need those two fractions to share a name before you add them

    is this possible mathematically?

    absolutely! we know how to make fractions smaller by dividing both parts by the same number but we can also make them bigger by multiplying, and the fractions will still be equivalent

    here we need to figure out not what factors but what multiples two numbers have in common

    as we will still have to simplify our answer at the end of the process, it saves time to go with the smallest common multiple (if I turn 1/2 into 50/100 and 1/5 into 20/100, I will get 70/100 and then reduce... if I turn 1/2 into 5/10 and 1/5 into 2/10, I will get 7/10 right away)

    practice with Least Common Denominator task cards


Tue - Task Cards


Wed - +/- Mixed Numbers with Unlike Denominators


Thu - Add to MLB

    write in adding and subtracting fractions with different denominators to the MLB

    add new observations and new questions about fractions


week of May 11

Mon - Brain Drawings


Tue - Multiples for Numbers 1 to 100

    using another paper that goes from 1 to 100, write out as many skip counts as you want for each number


Wed - Word Problems


Thu - Quiz


week of May 18

Error Analysis



This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Local Industry - Salt

Our second Local Industry for Southern Illinois!


timing:

    Great Salt Spring is a prehistoric site first occupied around AD 800 along the Saline River in southern Illinois. Here, Native Americans extracted salt from the naturally occurring salt springs, mainly as a seasonal activity during the autumn months. (source)

    Temple and Castle owned and operated the mine from 1854 to 1873. They are said to have made five hundred bushels every twenty-four hours. About the beginning [of] 1873 they thought the brine could be transported easier than the fuel, so they started to build a larger and newer plant nearer the coal mine. The work of construction was started but hard times, caused by the panic of 1873, came on and work stopped. Salt became cheaper when the crisis passed over and they never finished the new plant. (source)


resource list:


artifacts:

examples of sea salt


follow ups:

it would be fun to

Explore the Water Cycle!
Water Cycle Mat from Waseca Biomes

Design a Science Experiment!
The Curious Kid's Science Book by Asia Citro

Asia's book is the best for Science Experiments because she has them create their own instead of just replicating an experiment design she has provided.

We have done this in the past to explore questions about evaporation (dishes of water with food coloring or sugar dissolved in them, left out covered or uncovered, left in places in the house of different temperatures).

Even though they know intellectually that the water will "go back up into the clouds," it's fun to watch it happen firsthand!

They are often interested in how quickly evaporation will happen, what else will evaporate up along with the water and what will be left behind (sugar? food coloring?), and if water can successfully get out of a closed container.


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!