Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Is My Knitting a Square?

I get this question all the time from new knitters!

In Waldorf schools, children learn to knit before they learn to read (it helps strengthen the brain's ability to pass information between the two hemispheres) so Waldorf teachers have tons of patterns for adorable stuffed animals. We start out with animals that are made from just squares.

The progression I use most often with children is

    kitten (square - knit stitch, how to cast off, how to sew up)

    chicken (square - how to make a slip knot, how to cast on)

    lamb (how to read a pattern, how to increase and decrease)


Then they make a second choice of animal using just the knit stitch (lion, elephant, pig -- these each introduce different skills). When they are ready to learn to purl, we make a square again all in purl stitch. This gives them enough time to get muscle memory for purling. We sew that square up into a turtle, and slip a tiny freshwater pearl into it to celebrate their new skill!

From there, they will combine knitting and purling to make a star gnome in stockinette stitch (knit a row, purl a row). It is exciting to see the V's form!


The lamb, lion, elephant, and pig patterns are all from A First Book of Knitting for Children. The kitten I learned from Nicole Nicola Rodriguez, the chicken I learned from Barbara Dewey, and the turtle I learned from Dan, a fellow student in my Handwork Teacher Training.


A First Book of Knitting for Children

by Bonnie Gosse and Jill Allerton


How do you know if your knitting is a square? When do you stop knitting?

when I explain this to kids, I tell them to "fold it like a paper airplane"

simply fold your work to make a triangle along the needle

if the folded portion completely covers itself, with nothing sticking out,
you have a square! no ruler needed!!

sometimes children will be eager to be done, so they will pull hard on their work and completely cover the lefthand needle

this won't be a square when you go to sew it up!

make sure that the knitting needle is still showing to the left of your triangle

this looks like a square, but is it?

not yet... one more row to go

NOW it's a square


~ ~ ~ ~ ~


Here are all of the blog posts in my Handwork Series:

Handwork Series - K

Handwork Series - grade 1

Handwork Series - grade 2

Handwork Series - grade 3

Handwork Series - grade 4

Handwork Series - grade 5

Handwork Series - grade 6

Handwork Series - grade 7

Handwork Series - grade 8


~ ~ ~ ~ ~


I received this question from a mom in my First Grade Immersive who is also herself a new knitter. I am happy to write blog posts or do a phone or video call to answer questions; just let me know what's on your mind!


First Grade Immersive Experience

$375.00

cohort limited to 15 people
14 spaces already taken


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

Monday, June 29, 2026

Mapping Lessons

Today I took an online workshop called, “Mapping for Your Curriculum: MapMaker, GeoInquiries, and Other Pre-Designed Lessons,” sponsored by the Illinois Geographic Alliance (IGA) and Geographic Society of Chicago (GSC). Here are some of the premade lessons I found most interesting:

Mapping U.S. Watersheds
https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/mapping-us-watersheds/

How Deep Is Challenger Deep?
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/0d389600f3464e3185a84c199f04e859

Flattening Earth
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/7d2abd9968b64b96902f72cce12ea5c5

The Dream of the West
https://www.arcgis.com/apps/instant/portfolio/index.html?appid=72b0ce818f6445a2bf39470d28bb3a35

Global Population Growth
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/ff463dc0fc83405b9c096a2464ed08c5

Mound Builders and Agriculture
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/3a597ad937b3408ba9b827b6f6db6f9b

Population and Phone Lines
https://storymaps.arcgis.com/collections/0d5ee494ffa04fdd9ca4d1b3b159a5e9?item=9

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Cooking with Kids - Recipes for a Young Family

I was talking this evening with a young mom who is just starting out and has no idea how to cook. She needs ideas of simple things she can try. I thought it would be fun to think about what I would make if I was a new mom all over again. So here goes...


Breakfasts


Snacks


Dinners


Desserts


If you have an easy recipe you'd like to recommend, please share the link!

Thursday, June 18, 2026

TVI Special Guest

One of the special guests I had hoped to line up for this school year was a TVI (Teacher for the Visually Impaired). In preparation I pulled together a lot of resources for blindness. Here's my list, in case she comes next year!

things we have in the classroom:


Six Dots: A Story of Young Louis Braille
by Jen Bryant



Art Beyond Sight: A Resource Guide to Art, Creativity, and Visual Impairment


other resources:

Sites Unseen: What Travel Is Like for Those Who Can’t See
The New York Times - Apr 7, 2026

Blind Waymo Users Revel in the Joy of Riding Alone
The New York Times - May 24, 2026


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

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Tall Tales - week 3

Here is the overview of our Tall Tales & U.S. Geography Summer Camp:

Week One

    Febold Feboldson

    Paul Bunyan

    Finn McCool

    Pecos Bill

    special guest: civil engineers


Week Two


Week Three


Notes for

Mon - Swamp Angel



Tue - Mike Fink



Wed - Davy Crockett



Thu - Sally Ann Thunder Ann Whirlwind


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

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

12 Apple Varieties

Back in October 2007, my daughter Natalie came home from Kindergarten and said that her teacher had given them slices of a new apple variety. The children were to taste it and decide what they would name it if they could. She said the class came up with "Sweet Yummy." That is a great name!


Turns out the apple in question was actually Honeycrisp. I've never forgotten that activity, and it made me think of something that we could do tomorrow! I'd love to give the children slices of 12 different apple varieties to compare.

Do all apples taste the same? Which one is your favorite?

This is a great Johnny Appleseed activity, but it also ties in with Botany!

For more on this I recommend Granny Smith Was Not an Apple: The Story of Orchardist Marie Ann Smith by Sarah Glenn Fortson.

We will also likely read the New York Times article from Mar 21, 2026:
After Cosmic Crisp, Scientists Unveil an Apple for the Climate Change Era.


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

Friday, June 5, 2026

Tall Tales - week 2

Here is the overview of our Tall Tales & U.S. Geography Summer Camp:

Week One

    Febold Feboldson

    Paul Bunyan

    Finn McCool

    Pecos Bill

    special guest: civil engineers


Week Two


Week Three


Notes for

Mon - Stormalong



Tue - Mose



Wed - John Henry



Thu - Johnny Appleseed

    snack -read "Johnny Appleseed"
    from American Tall Tales

    by Mary Pope Osborne, p.25


    activity - taste 12 apple varieties to see if they really are different

    finish our maps! find and label states in the
    Southeast Region: Southeast and the Mississippi & Ohio Valleys
    15 states (NC, SC, GA, FL, AL, MI, LA, AR, TN, KY, OH, IN, MI, WI, IL)


    lunch - read Johnny Appleseed

    by Steven Kellogg


    add to MLB


    book display - Abraham Lincoln

    by Ingri & Edgar Parin d'Aulaire (Caldecott Winner)


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