Sunday, December 1, 2024

Our Favorite Handwork Baskets Are On Sale!

I have switched over the years from Handwork Bags to Handwork Baskets and I was really excited to get up this morning and find that our Favorite Handwork Baskets are ON SALE for Cyber Monday (Sun Dec 1 & Mon Dec 2)!

VATIMA Hyacinth Medium Wicker Basket - 13.6" x 9.5" x 5.6"
Normally $32.75 apiece, they are now just $26.20


These baskets are beautiful, sturdy, and the absolute perfect size.

They are roomy enough for pincushions, fabric & thread, or several balls of yarn to be accessed easily. And long enough for even long knitting needles.

They are even wide enough to hold a printed pattern, which is very handy!

It's ultra-easy for the children to add a label with their names, and easy for me to remove the labels and change them out for the new school year.

And they look adorable all lined up in a row underneath the chalkboard!

VERY highly recommended. If your child loves knitting, their very own Handwork Basket to have at home would be the perfect gift!


Put some knitting into your life today!


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Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Gnome Roam at Giant City State Park

Yes, folks, it's time again for the Gnome Roam!

They did this last year and it was such a hit they are doing it again! This event will run from Dec 1, 2024 to Jan 31, 2025. Visit each of the 7 trails at Giant City State Park (there are 8 trails total, but there's no gnome on the 2-day Red Cedar Backpacking Trail) to find an image of a gnome holding an item recommended for winter hiking.

Write down the item, the trail name, and the date (they move them around throughout the 2 months) and/or take a selfie of yourself with the gnome.

Go alone or go with friends!

Find all 7 gnomes within the two month time frame, bring your proof into the Giant City Visitors Center (open daily from 8 am to 3:30 pm), and take home your super cool and FREE Giant City Gnome Roam patch! Have fun!!!


Sunday, November 24, 2024

Art History - Arshile Gorky (Vostanik Adoian)

Our Specials schedule this year is

    Mon - Art History

    Tue - Philosophy

    Wed - Structured Word Inquiry

    Thu - Letter Writing


In my Art History 2024-2025 blog post, I decided December would be Arshile Gorky. Here are some resources and my planning notes:

Arshile Gorky
(born Vostanik Adoian)
1904 - 1948

Gorky's life was a difficult one and there are not ANY children's picture books about him. Instead we will be using books about war and being a refugee:


Last weekend I attended the "Dancing in the Well: Art for Healing Trauma" conference, and I plan to use some of those activities in our exploration of Arshile Gorky and his work.

teacher background information:


also

Art History Kids - The Studio - April 2021

The Encyclopedia of Artists


Gorky's work at nearby museums:


I recommend joining Lotus Stewart's Art History Kids website (The Studio) and getting access to her past lesson plans. I like her work, and find it's really helpful to have so many ideas that I can use as a jumping off point.



week of Dec 2:

Mon

    story - Four Feet, Two Sandals by Karen Lynn Williams and Khadra Mohammed

    discuss the word < refugee >
    refuge/ + ee

    Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge

    additional evidence for the -ee suffix
    (referee, employee, attendee, mentee, trainee, trustee, grantee, honoree, nominee, awardee, auditee, attackee, captee, detainee, escapee, giftee, addressee, visitee, callee, photographee, recordee)

    painting focus - "Garden in Sochi"
    image p.7
    discussion p.26

    do Week 4 activity "Abstract Memories"
    12" x 18" ivory construction paper, chalk pastels, cotton swabs

Wed

    first read quote from Gorky about "Waterfall" on page 13 of Encyclopedia of Artists, vol. 3 and then look at the painting

    do "Intuitive Art" activity from Dancing in the Well conference


week of Dec 9:

Mon

    story - The Day War Came by Nicola Davies

    painting focus - "The Artist and His Mother"
    image p.4
    discussion p.24

    do Week 2 activity "Paint from a Photo"


Tue

    story - The Cat Man of Aleppo by Irene Latham and Karim Shamsi-Basha

    do "Collaborative Poem" activity from Dancing in the Well conference


week of Dec 16:

Mon

    story - Leah's Pony by Elizabeth Friedrich (Great Depression)

    painting focus - "Study for Mechanics of Flying"
    image p.6
    discussion p.25

    connect WPA with CCC (and Giant City State Park)


Tue


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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Mathematicians Are People, Too!

Yesterday I was updating my notes for Spy Science and I realized that I've never done a post listing all of the mathematician biographies in the "Mathematicians Are People, Too! Stories from the Lives of Great Mathematicians" series by Luetta and Wilbert Reimer. So here goes!

Mathematicians Are People, Too - vol. 1

    "Pyramids, Olives, and Donkeys" - Thales

    "The Teacher Who Paid His Student" - Pythagoras

    "The Man Who Concentrated Too Hard" - Archimedes

    "A Woman of Courage" - Hypatia

    "Magician or Mathematician" - John Napier

    "Seeing Isn't Believing" - Galileo Galilei

    "Count on Pascal" - Blaise Pascal

    "The Short Giant" - Isaac Newton

    "The Blind Man Who Could See" - Leonhard Euler

    "The Professor Who Did Not Know" - Joseph Louis Lagrange

    "Mathematics at Midnight" - Sophie Germain

    "The Teacher Who Learned a Lesson" - Carl Friedrich Gauss

    "'Don't Let My Life Be Wasted!'" - Evariste Galois

    "Life on an Obstacle Course" - Emmy Noether

    "Numbers Were His Greatest Treasure" - Srinivasa Ramunujan


Mathematicians Are People, Too - vol. 2

    "There's Only One Road" - Euclid

    "A Fortune Shared" - Omar Khayyam

    "Lean on the Blockhead" - Leonard of Pisa (Fibonacci)

    "The Conceited Hypochondriac" - Girolamo Cardano

    "The Stay-in-Bed Scholar" - René Descartes

    "An Amateur Becomes a Prince" - Pierre de Fermat

    "The Gift of Sympathy" - Maria Agnesi

    "The Shy Sky Watcher" - Benjamin Banneker

    "The Computer's Grandfather" - Charles Babbage

    "The Mystery of X and Y" - Mary Somerville

    "The Overlooked Genius" - Neils Abel

    "Conducting the Computer Symphony" - Ada Lovelace

    "The Lessons on the Wall" - Sonya Kovalevksy

    "The Compass Points the Way" - Albert Einstein

    "The Master Problem Solver" - George Pólya


Back in 2010, I did a biography project with my students called the Bio-Cube. They loved it! (See my Bio-Cube & Famous Mathematicians post.)

While we were doing the Bio-Cube project, one student asked me if there were any mathematicians still alive today! I realized that because we had been talking about mathematicians from throughout history, the children were under the impression that they only lived long ago. So we promptly invited a mathematician in as a special guest (Dr. Jessica Libertini, who is currently an Associate Professor at West Point). When she came in, they interviewed her and made a Bio-Cube about her right there on the spot!


Interestingly, one of the Bio-Cube sides is "significance." Since Jessica was still alive, there was really no way to know her greatest lifetime achievement. The children decided to leave that side of the cube blank!


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Wednesday, November 20, 2024

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Our lunchtime read aloud right now is The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum. For those who are wondering, it's a complete coincidence that we are reading this right at the same time the Wicked movie is coming out!

I'm not recommending the movie (or the musical) by sharing this book with the children.

Actually, it's because I purchased some wonderful 1992 blank notecards for our Thursday Letter Writing and thought the children would enjoy hearing the book before we cracked them open to see the artwork on the cards. They are new old stock (NOS) which means that they are brand new even though they are vintage!

I do love the Oz books and have all fourteen, if a child wants to continue reading the series after we finish the first one. I may also show them one of the silent movies at one point, because none of my students have ever seen a silent film. I think they would be astonished!

(There are actually several silent films from the world of Oz. Turns out that the Oz Film Manufacturing Company -- founded by L. Frank Baum and making silent movies he wrote and produced -- was an independent film studio from 1914 to 1915. It made only a few pictures before it was absorbed by Metro Pictures, which later evolved into Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer.)

For the silent movie links, see my previous post Silent Movies.


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Friday, November 15, 2024

Scytale, Scytalae

I have a running blog post with all of my notes from our current Science Club topic, Spy Science, but some special activities also get posts all their own! I did this with Periscopes & Prisms. Now it's time for Scytale, Scytalae.

    singular "scytale"
    /ˈskɪtəliː/
    skittle-ee

    plural "scytalae"
    /ˈskɪtəleɪ/
    skittle-ay


    background:

    Wikipedia article

    The Ancient Greek Scytale

    DIY Scytale Cipher video


    teaching notes:

    have a variety of cylinders available!

    a long wide tube is best (such as a 2 1/2 to 3 inch mailing tube); broom handles also work well; knitting needles do NOT

    you will also need wide ribbon (approx. 1 inch) and an ultra fine point Sharpie (so your writing doesn't smudge)

    use ribbon that is neither slippery (satin), nor plush (velvet), nor textured (grosgrain)

    demonstrate how to wrap, write, unwrap, rewrap, and read a message (and how it absolutely doesn't work if you use a tube with a different diameter)

    pair children up and have them send and receive messages

    have them decide if the person receiving the message would like to know which diameter cylinder was used... or not! some children like to know which tube to use and some prefer to hunt about and test

    begin to wrap the ribbon around the tube -- and make sure you are happy with the spiral -- before taping down the start of it

    before unwrapping the ribbon to give to your partner, underline the 1st letter (helps with orientation when decoding)

    this cipher is tricky and would be hard do to with a large group! we had 8 children and that worked well

one letter on each turn of the ribbon, leaving spaces between words

when you unwrap the ribbon, it just looks like a mad jumble of letters!

yikes!
you have to rewrap it carefully -- and on the same tube -- to read it

success!

Monday, November 11, 2024

Cursive Message of the Day

Children thrive on predictable rhythms, and we use a lot of them in our school year! Here are just a few examples:

Monthly Farm Visits
We had a great time today at The Log Cabin Ranch!

Weekly Letter Writing

Daily Mad Minutes


Another fun daily routine is the Cursive Message of the Day! This encourages children to work on their cursive workbooks (here is our favorite series) and it's fun!


NEW in the Cursive Message of the Day, I'm using Montessori Command Cards as the message. The children have to read the message and complete the task ("Bring me a red pencil" "Look out the window"). They love it!

It's also fun to create Command Cards for your beginning reader, if you have a 1st or 2nd grader at home. It's sooo satisfying to correctly decode the words and complete the task! Here are some simple ones I like from Etsy.


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