Are anybody else's kids as rabidly into the Rainbow Magic series as my kids are? Willow's been reading them since back when she first began to read, which means that my Sydney may very well have been weaned on them, and is now just as obsessed as Willow ever was.
The Rainbow Magic books are notorious between the adults in our family for putting the both of us straight to sleep when we read from them. Syd, who can't yet read, of course, checks out piles of them every time we're at the library, and since there are no audiobook versions of the Rainbow Magic series yet (GRRR!!!), Matt and I find ourselves reading them out loud to her. Every day. For hours. It was our little joke that in the summertime, I'd always read to Sydney out in the backyard in the hammock, with a nice pillow and a summer-weight blanket, and when I'd finished the book, Syd would climb out of the hammock, give it a little push, and send me off on a nice afternoon nap.
Everything is rainbow around here again these days--the fairies, Syd's design for this year's Trashion/Refashion show (more on that later), the play dough that we're making today, the Kool-aid-flavored bubble gum that we're also making today, and all our candles. As I was out in the yard last week in the suspiciously mild weather, taking photos of some new etsy listings, I took a second to update my rolled beeswax rainbow fairy candles listing:
For no other reason than that taking yet another photo of these little fairy candles is one more excuse to bask in their yummy, tiny rainbow-ness.
Monday, February 6, 2012
Sunday, February 5, 2012
Rainbow Rolled Beeswax Waldorf Ring Candles
Completing a custom order a couple of weeks ago, I was called upon to research the diameter of candles used in traditional Waldorf birthday rings.
Having FINALLY discovered the right number, I whipped up a set of rainbow rolled beeswax candles the perfect size for a Waldorf ring:
These Waldorf ring candles are twice as thick as my birthday candles, and twice as long as my fairy candles. I'm hearting them so much that I'm starting to think thatI my girls REALLY need a Waldorf ring to put them in.
Having FINALLY discovered the right number, I whipped up a set of rainbow rolled beeswax candles the perfect size for a Waldorf ring:
These Waldorf ring candles are twice as thick as my birthday candles, and twice as long as my fairy candles. I'm hearting them so much that I'm starting to think that
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Rolled Beeswax Rainbow Birthday Candles
I've had it in my head to make a simple set of birthday candles in rainbow colors for quite a while, and I do believe that I've had them made for nearly that long, but winters are so grey in Indiana that it can seem a long time between those sunny days that I love so much for product photography.
And although these unseasonably mild, warm, sunny days that we've had lately have given me nightmares of a post-apocalyptic global warming collapse in which we're all forced to migrate south on foot, pushing shopping carts full of canned goods in front of us, these entire days that the girls have spent playing with toy ponies and Duplos outside, or kicking a soccer ball around with me at the park, or having the kind of mid-morning playground playdates that we've haven't done since summer sure are making me very, very happy, as is the opportunity to get plenty of product shots done.
And that's why I've done something nearly unheard of this Fabruary: I put a brand-new listing up on etsy!
And although these unseasonably mild, warm, sunny days that we've had lately have given me nightmares of a post-apocalyptic global warming collapse in which we're all forced to migrate south on foot, pushing shopping carts full of canned goods in front of us, these entire days that the girls have spent playing with toy ponies and Duplos outside, or kicking a soccer ball around with me at the park, or having the kind of mid-morning playground playdates that we've haven't done since summer sure are making me very, very happy, as is the opportunity to get plenty of product shots done.
And that's why I've done something nearly unheard of this Fabruary: I put a brand-new listing up on etsy!
At least Global Warming is productive!
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Super Bowl Village People
Matt loves football, I'm generally fairly down with being a tourist (even though I DON'T love football), and the girls just get dragged wherever we go, so off we went to hang out at the 2012 Super Bowl Village, just up the road in Indianapolis, one day recently.
You get a welcome right up front--
--and ample driving directions downtown--
--which is a good thing, because just in case you were relying on turn-by-turn driving directions from Mapquest, you should know that some of the streets have been, um, festified:
There are a lot of activities downtown that cost money, but are also pretty cool--even I would have liked to go to the Super Bowl Experience to see the championship ring collection, and I DEFINITELY would have done the zip line--but it being Matt's day, and being that Matt's favorite thing to do in the world, other than watch football, is not spend money, we stuck entirely to the many free activities (okay, I would have bought a zip line ticket anyway, but they were all sold out for the day by the time we walked over there).
We posed:
We watched the ice sculptures being made:
We watched participants struggle through the Hundred-Yard Hamster Wheel, cheering them on with the cry, "Be the hamster! Be the hamster!":
And we goofed around on the football field set up just outside the stadium, just under the zip line with people passing hollering overhead every minute or so:
We didn't do everything, no, but we did pretty much all the free stuff, our Matt had a good time on his idea of the perfect budget, and we got away with plenty of time to hit the Children's Museum of Indianapolis and Trader Joe's.
Super Bowl Village, done and done!
You get a welcome right up front--
--and ample driving directions downtown--
--which is a good thing, because just in case you were relying on turn-by-turn driving directions from Mapquest, you should know that some of the streets have been, um, festified:
There are a lot of activities downtown that cost money, but are also pretty cool--even I would have liked to go to the Super Bowl Experience to see the championship ring collection, and I DEFINITELY would have done the zip line--but it being Matt's day, and being that Matt's favorite thing to do in the world, other than watch football, is not spend money, we stuck entirely to the many free activities (okay, I would have bought a zip line ticket anyway, but they were all sold out for the day by the time we walked over there).
We posed:
We watched the ice sculptures being made:
We watched participants struggle through the Hundred-Yard Hamster Wheel, cheering them on with the cry, "Be the hamster! Be the hamster!":
And we goofed around on the football field set up just outside the stadium, just under the zip line with people passing hollering overhead every minute or so:
We didn't do everything, no, but we did pretty much all the free stuff, our Matt had a good time on his idea of the perfect budget, and we got away with plenty of time to hit the Children's Museum of Indianapolis and Trader Joe's.
Super Bowl Village, done and done!
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Coloring Pages and Fine Motor Skills
We've been doing some "formal" handwriting study these past few weeks. It's true that this particular area of study is not so much child-led, since it comes from me noticing Willow struggle through writing something, only to end up frustrated that it took SO much work and was absolutely illegible, and taking the lead to insist that it's time. As a seven-year-old who's been reading since she was five, it's obviously been clear for years that her handwriting needs work, but she's never wanted to, and I've never pushed--until now. I'm feeling that now is finally the appropriate time, however, because when I did insist, Will did not argue.
My Will. Did not argue. The child who will throw a huge tantrum when I insist that she wear pants to the grocery store, or stop reading so that we can get ready to go to the ice cream shop, did not throw a tantrum about weeks and weeks of daily handwriting practice. Amazing and illuminating to behold, that is.
It's quite possible that Will simply didn't possess the level of fine motor skills necessary to pursue neat handwriting until recently, and pushing her would have been much more frustrating (for everyone!) and taken much longer to accomplish than it will now, when she's clearly mentally and physically ready. If she had been in public school, imagine how unhappy she and her kindergarten and first grade teachers would have been with each other!
I'll save the actual handwriting for another day (although if you're curious, I'm doing it myself and using Startwrite 6.0 to create custom copywork). What I wanted to tell you is that in addition to the copywork, I'm sneaking into the girls' days lots and lots of drawing--
--and lots and lots of coloring pages:
The kids are both thrilled about it because every day, they can tell me what kind of coloring pages they want--horses, dangerous mythical beasts, cats and dogs and unicorns!--and I'll find them online and print them out. For whatever reason, the kids haven't asked for and I haven't strewn coloring pages in a while, so they're novel again, and apparently hugely enjoyable, because the kiddos whip out pages and pages and pages each day.
Coloring pages? They're fine motor practice. My Syd, who's been scribbling with a perfect tripod grip since she could hold a chubby crayon, and has had neater handwriting than Willow for years now, colors in each little section with precision, but I've long noticed that Will prefers to paint great swaths of colors across the page, nearly regardless of borders and guiding lines. I've never pointed it out to her, but I've gradually noticed over the past few weeks, as we've been doing both handwriting copywork, drawing lessons with Daddy (more on that later, too), lots and lots of coloring pages, and also lots of these that I purchased back when Sydney was a toddler who didn't know her numbers up to ten (vastly easy for the children now, and yet they still come back into favor every now and then), that her coloring in has become more precise. Her work isn't yet what you would call "inside the lines," but it's approximately so, these days, and her crayon movements are shorter, closer together, and more conscious of detail.
Mentally and physically ready for detail, my kid. We're also starting book reports this week, because when you're ready for detail, you're ready to perform critical analysis, mwaa-ha-ha!
My Will. Did not argue. The child who will throw a huge tantrum when I insist that she wear pants to the grocery store, or stop reading so that we can get ready to go to the ice cream shop, did not throw a tantrum about weeks and weeks of daily handwriting practice. Amazing and illuminating to behold, that is.
It's quite possible that Will simply didn't possess the level of fine motor skills necessary to pursue neat handwriting until recently, and pushing her would have been much more frustrating (for everyone!) and taken much longer to accomplish than it will now, when she's clearly mentally and physically ready. If she had been in public school, imagine how unhappy she and her kindergarten and first grade teachers would have been with each other!
I'll save the actual handwriting for another day (although if you're curious, I'm doing it myself and using Startwrite 6.0 to create custom copywork). What I wanted to tell you is that in addition to the copywork, I'm sneaking into the girls' days lots and lots of drawing--
--and lots and lots of coloring pages:
The kids are both thrilled about it because every day, they can tell me what kind of coloring pages they want--horses, dangerous mythical beasts, cats and dogs and unicorns!--and I'll find them online and print them out. For whatever reason, the kids haven't asked for and I haven't strewn coloring pages in a while, so they're novel again, and apparently hugely enjoyable, because the kiddos whip out pages and pages and pages each day.
Coloring pages? They're fine motor practice. My Syd, who's been scribbling with a perfect tripod grip since she could hold a chubby crayon, and has had neater handwriting than Willow for years now, colors in each little section with precision, but I've long noticed that Will prefers to paint great swaths of colors across the page, nearly regardless of borders and guiding lines. I've never pointed it out to her, but I've gradually noticed over the past few weeks, as we've been doing both handwriting copywork, drawing lessons with Daddy (more on that later, too), lots and lots of coloring pages, and also lots of these that I purchased back when Sydney was a toddler who didn't know her numbers up to ten (vastly easy for the children now, and yet they still come back into favor every now and then), that her coloring in has become more precise. Her work isn't yet what you would call "inside the lines," but it's approximately so, these days, and her crayon movements are shorter, closer together, and more conscious of detail.
Mentally and physically ready for detail, my kid. We're also starting book reports this week, because when you're ready for detail, you're ready to perform critical analysis, mwaa-ha-ha!
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Dragon Dance the Rest of the Day
What started out on Chinese New Year as simply the perfect opportunity to get out the dragon puppet kits that I purchased on clearance from some big-box arts-and-crafts store long ago, so that the girls could make them, along with red cake, as our little celebration--
--turned into something else. It turned into this face:
And this face:
And then a lot of this dancing, to some Chinese children's folk music tuned into on Spotify:
How magical these kids are, to take a cheap-o out-of-the-package activity that I basically tossed at them just to clean off my shelves, the most half-assed New Year's celebration ever, and to make it into magic, too.
For the rest of the day, those two dragon puppets were The Greatest Things EVER in my daughters' eyes. They flew, they danced, they roamed upstairs and down, they played out elaborate roles in their pretend sagas:
Needless to say, math and handwriting and geography waited just fine until the next day.
P.S. I haven't seen the dragon puppets since. No doubt they were tossed down at the children's feet the moment that I called for dinner or bedtime, and, like the Velveteen Rabbit on Christmas Day, utterly forgotten. Children's magic...so wild, so fickle, so fey.
--turned into something else. It turned into this face:
And this face:
And then a lot of this dancing, to some Chinese children's folk music tuned into on Spotify:
How magical these kids are, to take a cheap-o out-of-the-package activity that I basically tossed at them just to clean off my shelves, the most half-assed New Year's celebration ever, and to make it into magic, too.
For the rest of the day, those two dragon puppets were The Greatest Things EVER in my daughters' eyes. They flew, they danced, they roamed upstairs and down, they played out elaborate roles in their pretend sagas:
Needless to say, math and handwriting and geography waited just fine until the next day.
P.S. I haven't seen the dragon puppets since. No doubt they were tossed down at the children's feet the moment that I called for dinner or bedtime, and, like the Velveteen Rabbit on Christmas Day, utterly forgotten. Children's magic...so wild, so fickle, so fey.
Friday, January 27, 2012
Montessori Math: Building Big Numbers with Base Ten Blocks
As we've casually, slowly, and happily meandered through our first couple of homeschool years, we've gradually evolved into ways that keep us happy, engaged, and productive. We're no longer the unschoolers that we were for over a year, and yet we still do not follow a curriculum, and, believing that play is still the most important work of my so-big seven-year-old and five-year-old, I still strictly limit the amount of formal, structured work that I ask my girls to perform each day.
In other words, no matter what you're doing with your own kids, you can feel free to agree that I'm doing it all wrong.
The girls' schoolwork is almost entirely guided by their interests--Ancient Egypt, werewolves, the desire to be in the next community fashion show, the desire to earn exactly enough money to buy herself a certain ipad app. I see my role as to surround the girls with all the resources at my disposal involving their interests, to guide them through formal study of their interests to deepen their knowledge (and thus appreciation) of these areas, and to set up and moderate as many hands-on, context-deepening, multiple-intelligence activities as is desired. We do this until their knowledge is, for the time being, sated, adding other areas of interest and focusing and re-focusing and coming back to former loves as the little ones wish.
Our number-building study came about when, for some reason, it kept coming about that Willow needed to add multi-digit numbers. She needed to add the tax to the list price of an ipad app to calculate how much money was going to come out of her piggy bank for it, then she had a lot of change to add up to see if she had enough, and when I did the math in front of her, talking her through the carrying the ten and such, it was mysterious and fascinating and something that must be learned!
We watched the Khan Academy video on addition with carrying for background, but obviously when it comes to actually mastering the skill, you've got to back that train on up. Here's the progression:
She didn't do all of these prompts, but Sydney, when she finishes the patterning math stuff that's currently fascinating her and starts on number building, probably will.
Each day, Will reads the prompt in her math journal and gets out the appropriate supplies. To build the number 487, for instance, she first gets out our Montessori number cards. She chooses a 400 card, an 80 card, and a 7 card, and lays them out in her work area left to right. Next, she gets out her Base Ten blocks--
.jpg)
--and builds the number, with four hundred flats next to the 400 hundred card, 8 ten bars next to the 80, and 7 units next to the 7:
To finish, she stacks the number cards from biggest to smallest, and behold! The number appears:
We also own a set of Base Ten stamps, so that Willow can write the number and record how it's physically built right in her math journal:
On days when we didn't feel like dragging out all the blocks and the stamps and doing some elaborate math, Willow played with this Montessori number-building app to further reinforce her skills:
I like the step-by-step, physical building work involved in this activity because I want the concepts, and the ones that come beyond, to be something that the girls can mentally visualize. I think it helps them to actually, physically see what a thousand looks like, and to see that a big number is made up of so many thousands, and so many hundreds, and so on.
Here are the manipulatives that we're using:
In other words, no matter what you're doing with your own kids, you can feel free to agree that I'm doing it all wrong.
The girls' schoolwork is almost entirely guided by their interests--Ancient Egypt, werewolves, the desire to be in the next community fashion show, the desire to earn exactly enough money to buy herself a certain ipad app. I see my role as to surround the girls with all the resources at my disposal involving their interests, to guide them through formal study of their interests to deepen their knowledge (and thus appreciation) of these areas, and to set up and moderate as many hands-on, context-deepening, multiple-intelligence activities as is desired. We do this until their knowledge is, for the time being, sated, adding other areas of interest and focusing and re-focusing and coming back to former loves as the little ones wish.
Our number-building study came about when, for some reason, it kept coming about that Willow needed to add multi-digit numbers. She needed to add the tax to the list price of an ipad app to calculate how much money was going to come out of her piggy bank for it, then she had a lot of change to add up to see if she had enough, and when I did the math in front of her, talking her through the carrying the ten and such, it was mysterious and fascinating and something that must be learned!
We watched the Khan Academy video on addition with carrying for background, but obviously when it comes to actually mastering the skill, you've got to back that train on up. Here's the progression:
- Before she learns the shortcut, Will needs to understand the concept of carrying tens and hundreds to the next place value.
- Before she understands the concept of carrying tens and hundreds to the next place value, she needs to understand how numbers are built from hundreds and tens and units.
We've played with that second concept plenty, so that it was a comfy review for Willow before we moved onto the first concept (where we'll be for a while), but such regular review is very important, because not only does it continue to cement the concept, but it also aids contextualization--Will sees that multi-digit addition with carrying is built upon the concept that numbers have place value, and when we go back to this review again before we start subtraction with regrouping, she'll see it again.
To build numbers in a way that highlights their place value, in a way that internalizes the basic fact of each number, in a multi-sensory, hands-on way, you need two things: Montessori-style number cards, and a BIG set of Base Ten blocks. Base Ten blocks consist of one-centimeter-square unit blocks, ten-bar blocks that are ten centimeters long by one centimeter wide and represent "ten", hundred flats that are ten centimeters long by ten centimeters wide and represent "one hundred", and a thousand cube that's the size of a stack of ten hundred flats and represents "one thousand." We're happy with one regular set of Base Ten blocks, and an extra purchase of eight more thousand cubes, on account of I wanted nine of them total.
To start the number-building unit, Will cut out a few of the following math journal prompts, and glued them, one to a day, in her math journal:
Building Numbers With Base 10 Blocks Math Journal PromptsShe didn't do all of these prompts, but Sydney, when she finishes the patterning math stuff that's currently fascinating her and starts on number building, probably will.
Each day, Will reads the prompt in her math journal and gets out the appropriate supplies. To build the number 487, for instance, she first gets out our Montessori number cards. She chooses a 400 card, an 80 card, and a 7 card, and lays them out in her work area left to right. Next, she gets out her Base Ten blocks--
.jpg)
--and builds the number, with four hundred flats next to the 400 hundred card, 8 ten bars next to the 80, and 7 units next to the 7:
.jpg)
To finish, she stacks the number cards from biggest to smallest, and behold! The number appears:
We also own a set of Base Ten stamps, so that Willow can write the number and record how it's physically built right in her math journal:
.jpg)
On days when we didn't feel like dragging out all the blocks and the stamps and doing some elaborate math, Willow played with this Montessori number-building app to further reinforce her skills:
I like the step-by-step, physical building work involved in this activity because I want the concepts, and the ones that come beyond, to be something that the girls can mentally visualize. I think it helps them to actually, physically see what a thousand looks like, and to see that a big number is made up of so many thousands, and so many hundreds, and so on.
Here are the manipulatives that we're using:
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