Thursday, April 23, 2026

A New Book for Our Classroom Library

My mom shared this book review with me and it definitely piqued my curiousity:

    A Kids’ Novel That Delights in Disorder
    Philip Stead’s “A Potion, a Powder, a Little Bit of Magic” gleefully ignores all the storytelling rules.

    (this is a NYT gift link, so everyone can enjoy reading it!)


Since we are doing Personal Narratives as our 4th grade Composition focus, I thought this could be a fun read aloud (we just finished Mr. Popper's Penguins) and so I checked it out from the library. YEP, it's one to buy. So I just bought it. I am really looking forward to sharing this with the children!


A Potion, a Powder, a Little Bit of Magic
Or, Like Lightning in an Umbrella Storm:
A Story Out of Order

by Philip Stead


Here is the "out of order" order of the chapters:

    In Medias Res

    13 - The Possibility of Danger

    14 - A Potion, a Powder, a Little Bit of Magic

    15 - Failing Up

    In Principio

    2 - Goatnapped

    3 - Perseverance

    Omnia Mea Culpa

    4 - Lancelot Makes a Run For It

    5 - Why Bernadette Was Always Having to Repair Her Roof

    6 - The King Loses His Balance

    7 - The Royal Bearer of Good News

    16 - A Moment of Pure Beauty

    8 - The Royal Bearer of Bad News

    9 - A Moment of Pure Despair

    Oops! Erravi!

    10 - The Tollbooth

    11 - The Tree Who Does Not Grant Wishes

    12 - Loopholes

    The End... But Not in the Usual Sense

    17 - Carelessness

    18 - Gravitas

    Fors Hoc Doleat!

    19 - The Parade

    20 - The Mountain of Regret

    What Was Left of Bernadette's Ending

    21 - Giddyup

    22 - A Potion

    23 - A Powder

    Acknowledgments

    24 - A Little Bit of Magic (and a Plain Gray Rock)

    The End

    1 - A Moment of Pure Generosity


The story also begins with a Map of the Entire Kingdom and the Cast of Characters, and ends with a place for you to write in all the Morals (which are thoughtfully punctuated by goats) that they learn along the way.


This book looks like a ton of fun! I'm sure the children will absolutely love it.

e.e. cummings broke all the stuffy rules for punctuation and capitalization... and now we have Philip Stead joyfully playing around with chapter order!


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

Local Industry - Fruit

Our fifth Local Industry for Southern Illinois!


timing:


Zac, age 3
Greer's Lost Creek Blueberries


resource list:


art ideas:

Baking Soda Paint
Since this reaction leaves a fuzzy texture, it is perfect for painting peaches! (I like to use this template. Print it, cut it out, and use that to trace a peach shape onto your watercolor paper. Then cut out the watercolor paper shape.)

Positive / Negative Art
This technique workes really well for apples or pears!


special guest:

fruit farmer


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

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!