Friday, December 2, 2016

Homeschool Book Review: Three-Dimensional Art Adventures

You might have noticed that I don't often have art as a subject in our weekly lesson plans. Primarily, that's because Matt has an art degree and he gives the children an art lesson every weekend. I consider them to be private art lessons, thriftily outsourced!

I do like to do art with the kids, but I don't consider myself skilled enough to prepare my own lessons, so I really appreciate packaged lessons that include study of an artwork and a hands-on extension. I have several of those kinds of resources in my Homeschool: The Arts pinboard, my favorite of which is this site with leveled art history studies. I especially like to incorporate those lessons into our other studies--we used the lesson on Daniel French, for instance, in our study of the Lincoln Memorial.

The other way that I like to use art lessons, if I don't have an academic context to put them in, is as a fun weekend activity to do with the kids. We spend a ton of time together during the school week doing projects, so you'd think that the last thing that we'd want to do on a weekend is sit down for another project, but it seems new and different, somehow, when it's not also a task to be checked off of a work plan.

That *kind of* explains why I received Three-Dimensional Art Adventures for free from a publicist back in July, and I'm only just now ready to write about it. I made note of the most promising activities, then put the book in with my other resources, and when the time was right for a particular activity, there it was, ready and waiting for us!

I think the kids' favorite of the activities that we tried is the "trick hand." The lesson began with a study of From the Knees of My Nose to the Belly of My Toes, which the kids found fascinating, then guided us through the creation of our own "tricky" piece:

I can't tell which one, but underneath Will's drawing is for sure one of those LEGO books I was telling you about yesterday!

Does it annoy you to try to draw or write on a picnic table? We do it all summer, and it bugs the crap out of me! Painting boards are on my long-term to-do list.

This is when the magic happens!





Everyone's turned out really well, although we all figured out ways to make the effect even better next time (use a ruler to draw the straight lines, elaborate the curve on the curvy lines, make the lines as close together as we can, etc.), so it's still an activity that's repeatable.

Another week, during our shark unit, the kids became fascinated with the clean, streamlined silhouette of the shark, and so I took that opportunity to introduce the "Capturing Simplicity" lesson. It began with a study of a sculpture from Ancient Greece (and now I'm putting that down in my Greek mythology lesson plans to look at again when we study Hermes!), and continued with our own simple, sculpted silhouettes:
I don't know why I didn't photograph Will's, but she did her first initial. It looks really cool!



The tutorial calls for air-dry clay and paint, but we used Sculpey, and it worked perfectly.

I've often wanted to create some sort of cataloging and indexing system for myself, to use with my homeschooling resources. I have tons of print and digital resources, and when I create unit studies, I'm always flipping through every single thing, adding a reading from here and an activity from there. I mean, just in this book alone, the artwork studied ranges from Ancient Greece to modern, geographically circles the world, covers a huge variety of themes, and uses materials from nuts and bolts to pen and paper to fabric to floral wire.

Next on my to-do list from the book: the collage lesson, just because it's been ages since the kids and I have done collages together (and I have a bunch of random materials that I've been saving up and would love to get used up!), and the lesson on sculpting movement using floral wire as the medium.

Because Hermes!

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Our Favorite Kids' Books of 2016


As a family, we have read thousands of books this year. To be fair, the older kid, who reads several multi-chapter books every single day, has pulled most of the weight in getting us to this number, but the rest of us are no book-reading slouches, either!

That being said, I actually feel a lot more confident in giving out our favorite book recommendations for 2016. I mean, we played with a few toys in 2016, but we read a LOT of books.
We came to this late in the year--I'd read Wonder before, but the kids just read it last month for a library book club meeting. It was, however, a revelation for them, one of those instances when someone reads the perfect book at the perfect time. The older kid, who normally prefers books that take place in imaginary realms or at least star talking animals, even loved the book, and the younger kid listened to it once, read it once, listened to the Playaway of the Wonder stories SEVEN times, read pretty much all of Mr. Brown's Book of Precepts out loud, and recently requested the Wonder Playaway again so that she could listen to it some more. It's a beautiful book about a kid dealing with a really big difference, and all the other kids in his life who have to learn how to accept really big differences.

And if you read it, you MUST read the Wonder stories next. Julian's chapter touched me more than the entire first book.
Percy Jackson has been another absolute phenomenon this year, at least in the younger kid's world. The older kid and I have read them all, but the younger kid? Oh, my gosh, she LIVED in them. For months. Still does. She talks about Percy and Annabeth like they are friends who live in the next town over, and knows just as much about their god and goddess parents. This obsession was the inspiration for our current Greek mythology unit study, which has been just as big of a hit with both kids.

The younger kid likes Riordan's other series, as well, but that's nothing in comparison to how deeply she feels for Percy.
Normally, the older kid has a "love 'em and leave 'em" attitude towards the dozens of books that she blows through every week, but Skulduggery Pleasant has stuck with her. The books are witty, gothic but not spooky, and full of adventure and intrigue, She is smitten by the idea of "taken names," and is desperately into the intricate plot of the series of books.
We all really like these books of famous events and stories retold in LEGO, but the older kid especially loves them, and has discovered new genres of literature and new events in history. The assassinations book isn't completely kid-friendly (although... why would you assume a book about assassinations would be?), as one of the highlights of the story of Boston Corbett (the guy who killed John Wilkes Booth), is that he was a religious fanatic who castrated himself before dinner one evening because he was upset at having been tempted by some prostitutes during his walk home.

And yeah, there's a LEGO illustration for that. Anyway, the older kid was totally titillated by this tale, so much so that we conducted more research on Corbett, and even found some photos of the hole that he spent the latter part of his life in---yes, a hole. The older kid REALLY wants to make a pilgrimage there one day.
We read a LOT of comics and graphic novels in our family, but many of them aren't kid-friendly. The older kid can read whatever she wants, but the younger kid is my baby, so it's nice to have graphic novels that everyone can enjoy, but that she, especially really likes. Phoebe and Her Unicorn is super kid-friendly, but it's not baby-ish--the unicorn has an attitude, and the banter between the two is witty and engaging. Phoebe and Her Unicorn is actually a comic strip, and it's my dream that one day it will run in our newspaper, perhaps instead of For Better or For Worse, which I abhor.
 And speaking of graphic novels that the younger kid loves... she has spent the entire year worshiping Raina Telgemeier. First, she fell in love with her Babysitter's Club adaptations--and I even tried to give her the novels, but she didn't like them, just Telgemeier's graphic novels of them--then she discovered her original works, and has eagerly read all of them several times. I also really like her work, which has the kind of drama that many tweens like, but isn't schlocky. Her newest novel, Ghosts, has only been out for a couple of months, so it's still possible that you could happily surprise a kid who hasn't read it yet.

I've mentioned a few times before that we have a Family Read-Aloud. Now that the kids are older and their evening extracurriculars run later, we don't do this as often as we used to, but at least two or three nights a week, we come together as a family and my partner reads us the next chapter of our current book. The kids and I braid each other's hair, or color in our Tolkien coloring book, or just sit under a blanket and listen. For over a year now, it's been Tolkien, first The Hobbit, and now we're well into The Lord of the Rings--it'll probably take us another year, at least, to finish! I am very adamant that the kids do not see film adaptations of books until they've read the books, so although we've watched the Hobbit films as a family (with MUCH criticism), we're saving the wonderful Lord of the Rings movies until after we've finished the entire book. It's even better that way, as our world-building can take place entirely in our heads. We talk about it a lot, reference it to each other, the kids and I have been known to invent Lord of the Rings fanfiction, and basically it's just given us a very large common reference point in interests and conversation. I highly recommend it as a family read-aloud.
The younger kid recently re-introduced us to David Wiesner, when she brought home Mr. Wuffles and my partner and I basically snatched it out of her hands so that we could read it, too. If you have kids, you probably read him a lot when your kids were little, but then forgot about him when you stopped browsing the picture book aisles at every library visit. Well, he's still awesome, and still fun even for older kids and adults (I'd argue that he's even MORE fun for older kids and adults, because we get his sense of humor better).
Probably every kid in America has read the Warrior Cats series, which is fine, because they're awesome. They're another of the few books that the older kid still re-reads and still talks about after she's read them, so out of the thousands of books that she's read this year, you know they must be very, VERY good! This is also a good series if you've got a voracious reader, as not only are there a billion books in the series, but there are also manga and field guides, etc.

I could seriously give you dozens upon dozens more recommendations of books that we've read and enjoyed--I didn't even tell you about the Al Capone series that we love, or the Dark is Rising series that we're currently listening to in the car, or the more mature graphic novels that we let the older read with us--so feel free to comment if you want even more recommendations or something more specific. And also feel free to comment with your own and your kids' own favorites of the year, because we can ALWAYS use something new to read!

P.S. Want to follow along with my craft projects, books I'm reading, road trips to weird old cemeteries, looming mid-life crisis, and other various adventures on the daily? Find me on my Craft Knife Facebook page!

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Our Favorite Kids' Gifts of 2016

We're still playing with all of the things from my 2015 favorite kid gifts list (heck, we're still playing with a lot of the stuff that I could have put on a 2010 favorite gifts list, if I'd thought to make one back then!), but there have been a few new things that have come into our lives and stayed. Here are our 2016 favorites:



Solitary games have loomed large in Syd's life this year. After she pretty much took over Rush Hour at the local hands-on museum on every occasion that we've gone, I've kept my eye out for other Think Fun games, and we like them all. The best solitary games come with an entire deck full of different puzzles to solve, and for bonus points, you should be able to buy expansion decks.



Syd has long loved to bake and decorate treats, so this year I made a conscious decision to give her more tools to do it with. I started with her own hand mixer, measuring cups, and spatulas (all turquoise, because of course), and let her know that she has a budget, all for her, just to be used to buy the ingredients and decorations that she wants. She's abused this a couple of times, telling me that she needs to buy a certain candy for a project but actually just eating it, but for the most part she's on the up-and-up, and she has created some really cool treats this year. Candy sushi, anyone?

I recommend not just the basic baking and decorating supplies, but also a small number of well-curated "novelty" items. For instance, you'd think that the miniature cupcake maker would be a waste of counter space, but Syd uses that thing all. The. TIME. She also uses the waffle maker a lot, and I am continually contemplating buying her a special toaster that also cooks an egg and warms a piece of lunch meat, all to make you a lovely breakfast sandwich. So the novelty stuff can be well worth it, if it's something that the kid would be really into.



It's just about impossible to pry Will away from her books, but she and Syd both love both Perler beads and Sculpey. The fine-motor skills required to use these craft supplies make them very un-baby-ish, something highly prized with the tween set, and yet you can still make some simple things with them, as well as some really cool, really complicated stuff. Both kids will spend hours crafting with Perler beads or Sculpey, and Syd will sometimes spend days at it. They both enjoy Googling for Perler bead patterns, most of which are created by other random people, and they search YouTube for Sculpey video tutorials. We have all made some unbelievably nice stuff thanks to those videos! I have a super awesome tentacle pendant that I made myself, and I did have the best ever white Sculpey unicorn with a braided grey mane and tail, until Spots knocked her off of my card catalog. Sigh...



Syd first discovered this stuff on her California vacation, and she came home with a can that didn't leave her hands for weeks, I feel like. I'm not sure how additional colors have migrated to her domain, but she now also has the glow-in-the-dark putty and one of the hyper color ones. We're at the point now where I need to take an actual Thinking Putty inventory if I want to add to her collection for Christmas. She does leave them lying around sometimes, but the putties thankfully don't seem to dry out or stain our stuff, so yay.



So many great things happen as the kids grow. They can put on their own snowsuits, make themselves breakfast, and we can play games together that don't bore me to death! We've got plenty of four-player games, but I also really like two-player games that let me spend time with just one kid. It works especially well, because each kid has her own preferences: Will prefers Othello, Syd really loves SET. They both really love Laser Khet, although the first time they played it, they told me they didn't like it and there it sat on a shelf for a couple of months. But once I got it out, read the rules, and taught them how to play? They LOVE it. It is surprisingly like chess in the strategies that it requires, and predicting where that laser is going to bounce is a good way to internalize geometry. I'm secretly very competitive, though, so when Matt beats me, I get kind of pissed. He is too good at strategy games! It's not fair!



I can't believe that I haven't put Geomags on one of my gift lists before, because we are OBSESSED with them. They're quite pricey, but they're a toy that adults can play with just as happily as kids do, and you can create some really complicated structures with them, including entire perpetual motion machines that rely on the toys' magnetism. Seriously. Search YouTube. I don't add to the kids' collection every single holiday, but if I come across a ragingly good deal on a special set, I'll snap it up and save it for the next gift-giving occasion. Syd was super stoked to get the glittery pink set one birthday, and don't tell the kids, but they *may* find the pretty new Mechanics set under the tree this year...



So the adult coloring book craze is apparently for adults AND tweens! My two have always liked coloring books, but they're very much into the more detailed and sophisticated images in adult coloring books. We've become especially fond of the coloring books with literary tie-ins, perfect for coloring while listening to an audiobook. We now own coloring books for Tolkien, Harry Potter, and Sherlock, and since The Lord of the Rings is (still) our current family night-time read-aloud, that Tolkien coloring book especially gets a lot of play.

I've mostly nailed down what I'm buying the kids for Christmas this year (although I'm not posting that information, because my kids are snoopy!), but I still have a little more room in my budget to buy a couple more things for Will and Matt, my two hard-to-shop for family members. So if you have any suggestions about gifts for either a tween who only loves reading but never re-reads something so don't bother giving her a book, or a man whose only hobby is video games that I know nothing about, let me know!

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Crafty Review: Disney Art Studio (and Our Not-So-New Anymore Giant Magnetic Memo Board!)

One perennial thing about my kids (and probably any kid, as I've never known a kid who feels otherwise) is that they LOVE how-to-draw books. My kid who isn't really into art likes them, I'm guessing because the procedure-following helps her feel in control and the finished result lets her feel successful.

My kids who is really into art likes them, too, I'm guessing because they help her create more sophisticated drawings than she'd be doing on her own.

I used to be wary of how-to-draw books, thinking that they were suppressing my children's creativity, but Drawing for Children broke me of that with the author's wonderful explanations of how empowering it is for kids to be given the tools and the structure to create, with the encouragement to make their creations their own.

So now we're big fans of how-to-draw books, usually checking them out a stack at a time from the library, but a while back a publicist sent us a couple of Disney Art Studio kits, the original kit and the Palace Pets kit.

We have been drawing with these a LOT:
I don't know how she can draw with the cat in the way like that.

I was kind of surprised at how easy it is to make the perfect Mickey Mouse, if you follow the directions.

You can apparently even do it with a cat on your lap!
 Syd really likes to take the guided drawing and turn it into an entire scene. Sometimes they're enchanting--
Aurora by the Riverbank

--and sometimes they're a little more... gruesome. Poor Minnie Mouse is being beset by an entire legion of dangers!

You may remember that a long while back I was bemoaning our house's lack of suitable display space for children's artwork and fun magnets. Over the summer, I bought a GIANT sheet of metal (it was actually a big production that involved a post-Children's Museum trip to an Indianapolis metal store and consultation with the salesman and the perusal of several different kinds of sheet metal in several different sizes) and Matt and I roughly followed this tutorial to create this!

We had a harder time putting ours together than the author of the tute did, primarily because we probably shouldn't have tried the glue method--it just didn't hold well for us (humidity, perhaps?), so parts of the frame drifted, and then Matt tried to hold them on with duct tape until the glue cured, but the duct tape left residue that wouldn't take the paint, so I had to re-sand the pieces and paint them again...

Anyway, it looks awesome now, so yay!

It's a little hard to figure out the scale of it without any furniture or cats in the way, until you realize that most of the artwork displayed is done on 8.5"x11" sheets of paper. Look at all the artwork that it holds! This is now our main artwork display area; when a kid creates a new work but the memo board is completely full (as it now always is), I take something off, photograph it, recycle it or save it for crafting, and put the new piece on in its place.

I made a set of Scrabble tile magnets and a set of dyed wooden mosaic magnets to be the main types of magnets that we use on the memo board, although very special handmade magnets will also receive consideration (hence the two kid-made fused glass magnets also on display there). I already need to make more of those magnets, actually, and one of my dreams is to also make a life-sized paper Scrabble board to put up, so we can really play Scrabble with our Scrabble tile magnets!

Maybe I should hang that separately, though, as clearly all the space on that giant memo board is already being used...

I received Disney Art Studio and Disney Art Studio: Palace Pets free from a publicist, because I can't write about something unless my kids have used it to figure out how to draw Mickey Mouse with his tongue sticking out, and then draw that on every single math page so that I know they disapprove of math.

Monday, November 28, 2016

Work Plans for the Week of November 28: The Nutcracker!!!

We had a short school week last week (although not as short as the children would have liked, considering their outrage when they learned that they still had to do math even with their father home from work on a Tuesday), and it was wonderful.

The past couple of years, we've preferred to go out to eat at our favorite Indian buffet on Thanksgiving, but this year, we decided to cook on Thanksgiving and eat out on Christmas. Everybody in the family helped make our feast!

Syd made the mashed potatoes and the flower arrangements:

Will made the cranberry sauce and was my general go-to girl:


Both kids sculpted the turkey bread--



--and unpacked, sorted, and washed my Mamma's china:

This was the first time in my life that I have ever eaten off of that china, by the way. For my entire living memory with Mamma and Pappa, that china was displayed in a gorgeous wooden cabinet in our dining room. Pappa worked for Dixie Cup, so we always ate off of the free paper plates that he was given, even on holidays--my mother claims that there was one holiday in which we did eat off of the china, but when questioned further, she admitted that I was a very young child at the time and was seated at the children's table, where we most certainly did NOT eat off of the fine china.

I made the roasted brussels sprouts, the dried cherry and sausage stuffing (Matt and I LOVED this stuffing, but the kids picked out every. Single. Dang. Cherry), the creamed cheese corn, and the peanut butter icebox pie. Matt grilled the steaks (we don't care for turkey) and made a lemon chess pie and two pumpkin pies.

We ate off of that fine china until we were very, very full.

And then--and I totally don't care what you say!--we went Black Friday shopping on Thanksgiving. Will and Matt needed snow pants, which were 50% off at MC Sports, which opened at 5pm on Thanksgiving. Michael's opened at 6, and although we didn't need anything there, I wanted a giant canvas--70% off--for various school projects, and Syd wanted Christmas decorations for her dollhouse AND a 2017 planner (both 50% off, with a 30% off your total purchase coupon on top of that). Kohl's also opened at 6, and Matt needed a new winter coat (60% off) and we secretly bought the kids a drone at the doorbuster price. We're also secretly going to test it out sometime this week after the kids are asleep to see if it's any good.

The kids and I LOVE the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade, but we don't actually have TV reception, so we cheated and watched it on YouTube the next day. The Girl Scouts had a float in the parade this year, and there was a Girl Scout badge that the kids earned by completing a scavenger hunt while watching the parade, designing their own Girl Scout parade float--
This is Syd's!

--and writing an essay about their favorite float. Don't tell the kids that this was also secretly schoolwork!

In unrelated news, I think that Will is about to have yet another growth spurt, as our night owl has routinely been falling asleep at 8 or 9 pm this past week, often in the middle of a family activity. She fell asleep on my shoulder during a break in decorating the Christmas tree last night (and how I did treasure that!), and here she is loudly snoring during a VERY exciting moment in Lord of the Rings:

Our fencing club for the next two nights doesn't end until after Will's been falling asleep all last week, so we'll see how she does...

The day after Thanksgiving is the first day that it's okay to start decorating for Christmas, if you ask me. Time, then, for the tree farm!

I thought that this tree looked really cute, but now that it's up and decorated, it's actually really wonky and lopsided and way too fat for our space. Oh, well!

And yes, we cut it down ourselves.

This kid actually cut most of it down.

This kid worked for two seconds and then wandered off with the dog. She is REALLY skilled at getting out of work.
 We have another short week this week, since this is performance week for our university's production of The Nutcracker, starring the deeply talented Fourth Soldier from the Right. Not only does Syd have four hours of daily rehearsals beginning today, but extended family begins arriving tomorrow evening, starting Wednesday I'll be volunteering backstage at all of Syd's rehearsals and performances that I won't be attending, and we'll have guests straight through until next Tuesday.

In previous years, we've taken this entire week as a vacation from school, but this year, my plan is to have full school days today and tomorrow, and then very short school days that can be ditched, if needed, the rest of the week. I have learned the value of keeping up the children's routine, even their less preferred routine of schoolwork, during weeks when it would otherwise be tempting to simply toss routine out the window.

Books of the Day for our short week, then, include titles on Greek mythology and Ancient Greece. In Memory Work, we're continuing with Sonnet 116 and geometry formulas amongst our other random tidbits.

And here's the rest of our week!



MONDAY: So far this morning, Will has zipped through her Math Mammoth (integers are a piece of cake!) and her grammar (she's still making a lot of labeling errors, but is getting consistently better), and is now requesting ebooks from the library for her MENSA reading list. Syd... is drawing and listening to Auggie and Me for the sixth time. Yeah, she may not get her schoolwork done this week.

In Math Mammoth, Syd is finishing up decimals and moving into graphing, which I think that she'll like much better than decimals. I still have to keep a close eye on her to make sure that she keeps up with her math, Junior Analytical Grammar, and Wordly Wise--it must be the age, because two years ago, I remember being in just the depths of despair about Will's flat-out refusal to do her schoolwork. Syd is less antagonistic than Will, so instead of fighting me about it every day like Will did, she will happily spend the entire morning sitting at our work table and piddling, and then as soon as I get distracted by the rest of my own day, she'll wander off and spend the afternoon playing. It's a shockingly effective strategy for her.

Will loves her Wordly Wise, and doesn't mind Analytical Grammar, although she doesn't love that there's so much work to do for each day's activity--label the words, and diagram them, AND sometimes summarize the passage, as well! It's shaping up to be an excellent mastery program, however, and I'm thrilled that I finally have a grammar curriculum that I like.

Both kids enjoy working through their MENSA reading lists. There's no hurry to completing them, but I do like that the list encourages them to read some classics that they probably wouldn't otherwise choose, and they've both so far enjoyed everything that they've tried. I'll likely mention to Will, though, that as soon as she finishes the 4th-6th grade list, she can start on the middle school list, which has even more books on it that she hasn't yet read!

Will struggled a bit with her Math Mammoth geometry unit, in a way that made me think that she doesn't have good internal concepts to work with. The kids have done geometry before, of course, played with polygons and Platonic solids, built with blocks and LEGOs, poured and dumped water and played with volume, etc., but Will lives in her head and plays a LOT less than Syd, and this affects her math skills, I think. To that end, I checked out several geometry textbooks and teacher's guides from our local university library (I don't know if I've mentioned it before, but I do this a LOT, and it's invaluable to my lesson planning), and have flagged some hands-on geometry activities that we'll be trying in the next few weeks. Among these is Zome Geometry, a geometry textbook for upper middle school and above that uses Zometools, which you know we already have and love. On this day, we'll be using the Zometools to build and calculate the interior angles of regular polygons.

The kids can do their Story of Science work mostly independently, although I do have to read the chapters out loud with Syd if I want her to actually read them. This week's chapter is about ancient methods of timekeeping and calendar making, and the quest book activity for this day asks the kids, in a fairly engaging format, to provide an in-depth summary of one ancient civilization's calendar. This is one chapter in which I feel like the hands-on activities are too light, as ancient calendars and clocks are fascinating and easy to recreate, so we'll likely spend next week on this chapter, as well. I mean, we HAVE to make a sundial!!!

Greek mythology is another unit that the kids can do independently. They love the readings, and the trading cards that they're making will be good tools for review later. I have a couple of additional hands-on enrichment activities in my plans for this unit, but not many.

Syd LOVES our daily creative writing, but nevertheless, once a week or so I usually substitute letter writing instead; the kids have a couple of pen pals, and, of course, things like sympathy cards and get-well-soon cards and thank-you cards must be handmade and written with one's own real words--no platitudes allowed!

Typing (through Typing.com) and keyboard (through Hoffman Academy) are also daily activities, and also done blessedly independently, although I do have to supervise Will or she'll half-ass her way through the whole thing. Will is also going to begin the Khan Academy SAT Prep unit on this day. She did--and yes, this is a mom brag, so indulge me--amazingly well on her SAT verbal diagnostic tests, so well that even with grade-level math skills, it's definitely worth it to have her take the SAT in the spring to make her academic status as a "gifted" learner official. My plan, then, is to have Will go through Khan Academy's SAT Prep in verbal and math, which is content-based, and after that to go through a prep program that's more strategy-based. Stamina and output (that essay has to be handwritten, and you know how I feel about Will's handwriting!) may still be concerns, but as-is, she's already well ahead of the baseline for gifted programs for her age group.

Mom brag over!

And whether we get all of that done or not, it'll be too late by 4:00--Syd has Nutcracker rehearsal and Will and I have fencing!

TUESDAY: The kids don't love this Animal Behavior MOOC as much as they loved the Sharks one, but Will, at least, is still getting a lot out of it. Syd might not be, but she's got plenty of other science in our work plans this semester. I'm finding that having a new dog is helpful in this class, as I can apply a lot of the class readings to her; on this day, the kids (or at least Will) will use the day's lessons on how animals learn to make a plan to teach Luna one new trick... her first trick, sigh. I'm researching obedience schools, but it's pretty likely that we'll have a leash-pulling, non-sitting, running-away-from-us-for-fun scamp through Christmas.

The quest book activity for this day asks the kids to graph a month's worth of high tides, then use that information to predict the next five high tides. Instead of taking the printed tide chart from the book, however, I plan to have the children pick whatever location they want from this US tidal chart, graph the month of November using that chart, then predict the first high tides of December and check their work. I'll sneak some other hands-on activities and videos about the moon and tides into the rest of their week to flesh out the lesson.

Both kids are almost finished with their Girl Scout first aid badges; Syd just has to create a survey asking people what comforts them when they're sick (I'm going to teach her how to use SurveyMonkey for this), and Will is working through an online Red Cross First Aid class that will cover all the rest of the information that she needs for her Cadette badge.

We're back to a story starter on this day! Syd and I use the story starters that I wrote, and we share our writing afterwards, but it's all I can do to get Will to simply put pencil to paper for ten minutes. She refused to use the story starter, and will consent only to describe in writing the dragon that she will draw when our writing time is over. Sigh...

WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY: I don't know if we will, in reality, even attempt this school with guests in town, but Will, at least, might appreciate some down-time from socializing. I've pared the schedule down to just math and the simplest of our daily assignments, with the addition of the current events journal that the kids started last week. On the days that it's assigned, they need to look for an interesting article in that day's newspaper, answer the Who, What, When, Where, and Why questions about it, and then write a good sentence telling me why this article is important or relevant to them (this is sneaky practice in how to write a good conclusion, mwa-ha-ha!).

SATURDAY-SUNDAY: Will has Chinese. Syd has three performances of The Nutcracker, followed by the cast party--don't let me forget to bring a Sharpie for poster autographing! We'll do fun stuff with family through Tuesday, and then it's back to school.

What are YOU up to this week?