Friday, February 28, 2014

Masking Tape Paper Doll Mansion

 The older girls were busy tonight, hosting a farewell slumber party for a friend who is moving next week, leaving their younger sisters (and brother) at loose ends.  To keep them occupied, and out of their big sisters' hair, I suggested they draw, and cut out a few paper dolls.

While they were busy with that, I pulled out some inexpensive, meaning not too sticky, rolls of masking tape (left over from our masking tape roads), and traced out the outline of a large house on our living room floor...


...for them to fill in themselves with rooms, and stairs, and furniture...


 ...for their homemade dolls.  D even jumped into the fun crafting his own paper doll (a tiny Minecraft creeper)...


...and adding a weight room to the mansion.  All in all, a very good evening's worth of play.


With a blizzard warning in effect this weekend (stinking lying little groundhog), I've downloaded an audio copy of The Borrowers from the library for tomorrow, in hopes of sparking some additional ideas for stretching out the fun.


It's great to be a homeschooler.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

What's in the Bible Volume 13 Review - Revelation with Puppets



Phil Vischer has done it.  He's made it to the end of the Bible.  Or rather, he's completed the 13th and final volume of the What's in the Bible series - a child-friendly, puppet filled overview of the Bible, summarizing and explaining themes of the books from Genesis to Revelation, "sticky-bits" and all.

You might be able to tell from the above, that I am a fan of the series.  But really, where else are you going get to listen to a puppet pirate singing along with a Saturday Night Live-ish Sunday school lady about the symbols in Revelation - or see a grown man holding a stick puppet "dragon and the woman" set?  Only on Amazon-Instant-View right now, apparently, as the actual DVD is not set to release until March 4th , or in short clips pulled off of YouTube, like the one below, but you get the idea.




In dealing with Revelation, the volume side-steps questions of the rapture and the millennium, and leans heavily enough on a symbolic interpretation of Revelation to catch the attention even casual dispensationalists.  But, that being said, it presents one of the most clear, concise and complete overviews of the book I've ever seen, encouraging children (and their parents) to look at the larger themes of the prophecy (the forest), rather than obsessing over each individual symbol (the trees), so as not to "lose the forest for the trees."

The volume contains more than an overview of Revelation, though.  The first half is a quick, running summary of the books of the general epistles, Hebrews through Jude, with a few songs thrown in to punctuate the major points.  And, the entire thing wraps up with a review summary of the Bible as a whole.



All in all, a very satisfying ending to a very satisfying series.

It's great to be a homeschooler.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Half Square Triangle Quilt Puzzle - Math Meets Art



Piecing together the isosceles triangles for our Valentine cookie with the children, I was surprised at how tricky it was to create the pattern, even with a picture of the design we were working toward right in front of us.


I really love geometric puzzles. Naturally, after the cookies were all eaten, I decided we needed to have to have a more permanent set of half square triangles to use for exploring the multitude of designs, that can be created with them.  So, it was back to cutting out and dividing squares, but this time out of card stock instead of cookie dough...


...or rather out of folding notebooks, which turned out to be a lot less expensive than colored card stock (cereal boxes would do in a pinch too, and might even turn out to be more quilt-like in the end).


Before I cut the squares apart, I used them to trace out the base of a cardboard frame (also a good use for an empty cereal box)...


...which I completed by gluing thin, "mitered" strips around the edges.


The frame isn't really necessary, as the triangles can be pieced together right on the table, but it helps the younger children visualize the 4 x 4 unit square.

All that was left then, once the triangles were all cut apart, and the glue on the frame was dry, was to print out, and "laminate" with contact paper,  a sheet of half square triangle, quilt block patterns from one of the many quilting websites out there (this one is really good) to get us started...


...puzzling out and coloring in the designs for ourselves.


It's a lot like working on a Tangram puzzle...


...but with a slightly more artistic flair that quilters, mathematicians, and puzzle fanatics alike are sure to enjoy.


It's great to be a homeschooler.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Valentine's Day Math Cookie Patchwork Heart


1/2 of a batch of sugar cookie dough...


One half - either of two equal or corresponding parts into which something is divided.


...rolled out and cut into an eight inch square...

Squarea two dimensional figure with four equal, straight sides, and four right angles.



...divided into sixteen, two inch squares...

Divided - separated into equal parts.


...cut in half diagonally to form thirty-two triangles...

Diagonally - moving in a straight line connecting two opposite corners of a polygon.
Polygon - a two dimensional figure with at least three straight sides.
Triangle - A three sided polygon.


...transferred to a greased baking sheet, and baked for thirteen minutes at 350° F...

350 degrees Fahrenheit - the unit of temperature used in the United States of America, equalling approximately 177 degrees Celsius.


...allowed to cool, and iced so that...


...3/8 of the triangles were glazed with white icing (no food coloring added), 5/16 with light pink (one drop of food coloring and one drop of strawberry extract added), and 5/16 with dark pink (two additional drops of red food coloring added)...

3/8 * 32 = 3/8 * 32/1 = (3 * 32)/(8 * 1) = 96/8 = 12 triangles
5/16 * 32 = 160/16 = 10 triangles


...arranged back into a 4 x 4 square, forming a heart shaped geometric pattern with the colored triangles...

Geometric - utilizing a pattern of simple shapes.


...and equalling a Happy Valentine's Day wish from Almost Unschoolers.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Children's Snow Day Snacktivity - White Chocolate Covered Pretzel Snowflake Station



I thought I'd be a really cool mom, and make up a batch of A Southern Fairytale inspired chocolate covered snowflakes for the children to have with their "we just came in from outside" mugs of hot chocolate.

The snowflakes however, while not difficult to make, proved to be more time consuming than I cared for. So I modified my plan, and set up a make your own snowflake station on the counter instead, leaving out a tinfoil covered cookie sheet with pretzel sticks, candy sprinkles, sparkly sugar, and a bowl of melted white chocolate chips...


...for the children to discover, one by one, as they came in from outside.   I hovered nearby to give some initial instructions, and remelt the chocolate chips in the microwave (in 30 second intervals) when necessary. But, for the most part the children worked on their own...


...designing...


...dipping...


...decorating, and basically turning a tedious chore into a messy, but fun snow day snacktivity.


White chocolate hardens quickly at room temperature, making it a bit of a race for the children to get all their pretzel pieces dipped before the chocolate needed to be remelted, but also making for solidified completed projects ready to be transferred to plates in just about the same time it took to mix the hot chocolate.


It's great to be a homeschooler.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Cold Weather Classics - Snowy Day Science, Snacks and Literary Tie-ins for Children


If you're in a part of the country where the temperatures are plummeting this week, don't miss out on these winter weather must-dos (thanks to Annette from The Simple Home for inspiration - we're glad to finally have some winter weather to play in, too).

Watching soap bubbles freeze.


For best results wait for a windless moment.  Blow into the bubble wand with your mouth a little away from the soap, so the bubble won't fill with hot air, and rise too quickly away from you.  It's easiest to view the bubbles freezing if you catch them on the wand...


...or view them on the ground.  But, it's fun to watch them pop in the air too, because they fly apart like little sheets of plastic.


Let the heat from your hand melt an icicle so you can watch it drip.


It's not very scientific, but children find it fascinating.  You can't really save icicles (or snowballs) in a frost-free type freezer, though - the process that eliminates frost, will also do in your frozen treasures.


Collect pans full of clean snow for making molasses snow candy (recipe here) like the Ingalls in Little House in the Big Woods.



It's a lot of fun to make...


...and a good chance to brush up on thermometer skills...


...while you discuss the meaning of the idiom "slow as molasses"...


...but honestly, it doesn't taste very good.  You can try to suspend reality, and imagine you've been living in the "olden days", out in the woods, and haven't had any real candy...but even then, it's a stretch.


Or, you can save your pans of clean snow and make yummy snow ice cream (recipe here), or lemon snow ice (find our post on that, here) like in...


...Andrea Cheng's The Lemon Sisters (have a box of tissues handy, if you decide to read the picture book to your children).



And of course, if the thermometer is dipping down well below zero, you don't want to miss turning boiling water into instant snow (though you might want to check out our tip for that one first).



It's great to be a homeschooler.

Cold Weather Kid Science - Tip #1 - Turning Boiling Water Into Snow

So apparently, when you step out into the sub-zero weather, preparing to turn a mug of boiling water into snow, it is important, as you carefully hand it off to your child, not only to warn them about the dangers of boiling water, but also to specify that...


...they are to toss the water from the mug, not with the mug.  The experiment, however, works either way.



It's great to be a homeschooler.

Monday, February 3, 2014

Gingerbread Geometry



Our groundhog might have predicted an early spring just yesterday, but we had more snow on the ground today, than we've had all winter so far.

Normally, we make gingerbread men to celebrate the first "real" snow of the season.  We gave up this year before Christmas, and made them with only a skiff of snow of on ground.  Even so, with the children out playing, and the snowflakes falling, I couldn't resist rolling out one more small batch of gingerbread.

Since I hated to lose the entire school day to a February snow, and since we (or at least I) have been in a mathy mood this month, I cut out 2''x2'' squares instead of men...


...scoring them into quarter inch squares (more or less) before baking...


...for a frosting covered, gingerbread geometry lesson to go along with the obligatory mugs of hot chocolate, when the children finally came shivering back inside.


I gave them each a baggie of frosting, and let them pipe along the scored lines while we talked about perimeter and area of the squares.


We frosted a few of the extra squares together to investigate the surface area of a six sided cube...


...and piled up a batch of Pfeffernüssen-ish gingerbread cubes (made with the left-over dough)...


...for a quick lesson on volume, as well.


It's great to be a homeschooler on a snowy day.