Showing posts with label montessori home school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label montessori home school. Show all posts

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Get Busy!

Steady as a clock, busy as a bee, and cheerful as a cricket.  Martha Washington

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Teachers, students and parents all hope for a positive and productive start when it is time to head back to school; and there is no question that getting off on the right foot can help the flow of the whole year. Whether it is through classroom and community preparations, early academic reviews, or fun and easy projects to build enthusiasm, the activities of first few weeks are very important.

We hope that the following ideas from the “three R’s” to practical life exercises will give you some inspiration. 

Classroom environment sets the tone. 

Keep things cool and calm with Georgette from Cantemos’ Classroom Relaxation Exercise. http://www.amonco.org/creative01/montessori_fall1.pdf
 
Practice social skills, build community, and appreciate individual differences with Dale from North American Montessori Center’s Getting to Know Each Other and The Friendship Tree exercises. http://www.amonco.org/creative3/montessori_fall3.pdf

You will find other interesting and inspiring ideas in this article, Creating a Warm and Inclusive Classroom Environment: Planning for All Children to Feel Welcome by Jessica L. Bucholz of University of West Georgia and Julie L. Sheffler of Florida Atlantic University. http://www.cehs.wright.edu/~prenick/Spring_Summer09_Edition/htm/bucholz.htm

For another interesting perspective on classroom environment read this piece by Julie McLaughlin, describing her goals and lessons in classroom management in her first year as a student teacher. http://sitemaker.umich.edu/mclaughlin_portfolio/creating_a_positive_classroom_environment
 
Tune up on basic academics.

For spelling and vocabulary drills, check out Stillsonworks.com’s Middle School Word Puzzles http://www.amonco.org/creative/montessori_fall4.pdf and http://www.amonco.org/creative6/montessori_fall6.pdf

Dr. Borenson and Associates offer Fall Fun with Hands-On Equations. http://www.amonco.org/creative3/montessori_fall3.pdf and http://www.amonco.org/creative6/montessori_fall6.pdf
For a more in-depth math activity, look over Dianne Knesek’s Fraction Circle Labels & 

You can put a whole range of subjects into play with the Apples and Oranges Unit studyhttp://www.amonco.org/montessoriapplesandoranges.html  You will find lots of good introductory exercises and projects perfect for the first weeks of school

Reintroduce the arts and sciences.
 
Get the creative juices flowing with a fun craft activity to go along with the story The Mitten by Jan Brett, from Elaine at Kimbo. http://www.amonco.org/creative5/montessori_fall5.pdf
 
Begin your explorations of hue, tone, shade, color mixing and more with Rae from The Creative Process’ color wheel lesson. http://www.amonco.org/creative01/montessori_fall1.pdf

Explore color and shape with an easy seasonal art project that uses simple materials and minimal “traditional” artistic talent. Start your students off with Sara L. Ambarian’s Autumn Colors Tissue Paper Art Projecthttp://www.amonco.org/creative5/montessori_fall5.pdf The finished pieces make great classroom decorations, too. 

Switching to science, get your students ready for discovery by warming up with scientific equipment and concepts. 

Don and Diana from Nature’s Workshop Plus! share microscope pointers in Delighting in Little Things—Children and Microscopes. http://www.amonco.org/creative/montessori_fall4.pdf

The Human Cardiovascular System Unit Study includes anatomy, vocabulary, diagrams, function, nutrition, exercise and more. http://www.amonco.org/creative08/montessori_fall8.pdf

Start with some easy kitchen projects.

The late Kathy O’Reilly’s Applesauce Parfait from Cooking with Children Can Be Easy is a great starter recipe to introduce young students to the basics of food preparation. http://www.amonco.org/creative/montessori_fall2.pdf

For more introductory exercises, check out the easy Filipino dessert recipes from Cherry Mae Miro. http://www.amonco.org/creative08/montessori_fall8.pdf

Millie from Insta-Learn shares a super-simple alternative to boxed macaroni and cheese, which might be a good way to get kids thinking about the benefits of “scratch” cooking. It only takes two ingredients and some water. You can’t get simpler than that. http://www.amonco.org/creative08/montessori_fall8.pdf

For students old enough for baking and ready to tackle a recipe with a few more steps, try Music for Little Folks’ Hot Fudge Pudding Cakehttp://www.amonco.org/creative/montessori_fall4.pdf

This interesting article from Disney’s Family Fun gives a good overview of the levels of skill and competence the average child goes through as they’re getting comfortable and learning to be safe in the kitchen. (Use the menu above the article to access each section.) http://familyfun.go.com/recipes/teaching-kids-to-cook-714658
 
Limiting the number of ingredients in the recipes you make is one way of keeping things simple in the kitchen for novice cooks.  Here are a variety of recipes with five ingredients or less. http://www.food.com/recipes/5-ingredients-or-less/quickandeasy

Have a short-attention-span cook in your class or family? Look through these 15-minute recipes. (Click the “view recipes” tab to see the whole collection.) http://allrecipes.com/recipes/everyday-cooking/quick-and-easy/15-minute-meals/Main.aspx
 
Another way to simplify an introduction to cooking is by removing the “cooking” part, and focusing on no-cook recipes. A lot of the recipes linked below are quite “grown-up”, and there IS knife work involved in many of them. However, they use fresh foods, are often very bright and attractive, and they illustrate the wide variety of types of food you can make without using a stove or oven. http://cheaphealthygood.blogspot.com/2010/07/68-cheap-healthy-no-cook-recipes.html

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Far and away the best prize that life has to offer is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.  Theodore Roosevelt


Friday, June 22, 2012

Special Summer Lesson Planning Links - Part II

When it's too hot outside, why not create some fun indoors. Let’s take a second look at some specific links worth repeating.

Create Your Own Reading Books - Part I

Create Your Own Reading Books Part II!

Floating Needles

Leaf Print T-Shirt

Indoor Activities Get You Out of the Sun

Enjoy!

Heidi Anne Spietz

American Montessori Consulting
amonco.org
Celebrating 24 Years of Serving School and Home Educators
Montessori for the 21st Century

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Children's Books for Summer Reading - Part I

 Sara L. Ambarian
Copyright 2012
All Rights Reserved

Children’s Books for Summer Reading:
Part 1--Resource Partner Picks
Article by Sara L. Ambarian

As parents and educators we all understand both the importance of reading and the potential for engagement which can be found in the pursuit. This potential is even more impressive when students have choices about what books they will read.  

Many of us remember the excitement of “library days” in school, with the whole collection available to us, and the decision of what to read next all ours to make.  Many of us have retained that excitement into adulthood; so a trip to the library, book store, on-line vendor, or even our own home book collections feels like the beginning of an adventure for which we are completely in the driver’s seat. 

If we can help the children in our lives develop that same enthusiasm and curiosity, we have given them a priceless, life-long gift. 

In addition, Maria Montessori said, “The first essential for the child's development is concentration.  The child who concentrates is immensely happy.” 

Both listening as someone else reads aloud and spending independent time reading can be very effective activities for allowing children to develop concentration.  In our modern, fast-paced, over-stimulated world, it is harder—and more important—than ever to help children learn this skill.  Reading time (whether in a group or solo) can put the brakes on a busy world, as well as opening up many new horizons for our children and students. 

With summer reading season coming up, we asked the American Montessori Consulting Primary Recommended Resource Center partners http://www.amonco.org/resource_topic.html to share with us some of their favorite children’s books. Here are the recommendations and some comments of the business people who responded.


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Gari from Music for Little People, http://store.musicforlittlepeople.com/info.html , likes the following books, which unsurprisingly involve singing and movement.  She recommends: 

A, You're Adorable by Martha Alexander—“Once the adult and child know this song well, the child can sing the letter and the adult answer, and vice versa.

[If you’re not familiar with the song by Sam Lipmann, Buddy Kaye, and Fred Wise that inspired this board book, you can hear it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TyQlIatSJ8&feature=related  ]

This Little Chick-by John Lawrence—“This can be sung to the tune of ‘Mulberry Bush’.”

Runaway Bunny by Margaret Wise Brown—“This book suggests lots of movement. Have the children do the different movements and the control is, ‘now run back to me’, etc.”


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Larry and Karen at the Farm Country General Store, http://www.homeschoolfcgs.com , suggested several well-loved series which could provide many hours of happy reading over the coming summer.  

Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis

The Henry and Ramona series by Beverly Cleary


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Ligia from Childsake said it was not easy to decide on just a few favorite children’s books.  The ones that came to mind, however, were these:

Farewell to Shady Glade by Bill Peet

Flute's Journey by Lynne Cherry

Tree of Life by Barbara Bash, which tied in her estimation with

Alejandro's Gift by Richard E. Albert

To find more of Ligia’s recommendations of books about nature and the environment, visit her website, which includes about 400 more titles. http://www.childsake.com 


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Kathie from INSTA-LEARN, http://www.insta-learn.com , like many of us, remembers many happy times reading – and re-reading—favorite books to her own children. These were her family’s most memorable:

Peeping Beauty by Mary Jane Auch

The Easter Egg Farm by Mary Jane Auch

Jillian Jiggs by Phoebe Gilman

Dumbstruck by Sara Pennypacker and Mary Jane Auch


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Stephanie from Professor Toto, http://www.professortoto.com , remembers reading and enjoying these books during her own childhood. 

The Madeline Series by Ludwig Bemelmans

The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett

Choose Your Own Adventure books (Various Authors)

Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak

The Dark Crystal by A. C. H. Smith

The Berenstain Bears Series by Stan and Jan Berenstain

The Babysitter's Club by Ann M. Martin

Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark by Alvin Schwartz

Fear Street & Goosebumps by R.L. Stine


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Diana from Nature’s Workshop Plus, http://www.workshopplus.com ,  recommends the following classic stories, especially as read-aloud books. 

Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates: A Story of Life in Holland by Mary Mapes Dodge

Robinson Crusoe by Daniel DeFoe

The Black Stallion by Walter Farley

The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame

The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling

Rascal by Sterling North

The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings

The Sign of the Beaver by Elizabeth George Speare

Heidi by Johanna Spyri

The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain

Charlotte’s Web by E. B. White

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Rita from Literature Resources Online, LLC, https://www.literatureplace.com ,has shared a 65-book list of award-winning fiction books which she calls “Today’s Classics”. Find that list here: http://www.amonco.org/summer6/montessori_summer6.pdf
 

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Georgette of Cantemos Bilingual Books and Music, http://www.simplespanishsongs , recommends the following stories:

As the grandmother of four children under the age of 6, I love to read to them the book, Everybody Poops, by Taro Gomi. It results in giggles, but also in engrossed listeners. This book is used in Japanese schools; and it informs children that creatures that eat, poop. Some do it in the water, while on the move, in diapers or in the toilet. It is educational not only because it makes a body function a normal topic of conversation, but it includes drawings of wild animals and their names. My grandchildren, clamor for it, sit close, laugh and learn. Ah, if every learning experience were that fun! This book can be used for kindergarten through 6th grade.

Lucas and His Loco Beans, by Ramona Winner, is a story about a boy whose grandfather shows and explains about Mexican Jumping Beans. This educational story is written in rhyme and introduces Spanish words. It also gives a complete explanation of how a moth lays her eggs in a flower, and the larva end up in the seeds. The feeding of the larva is what causes the motion of the bean. This book is good for kindergarten through 6th grade.

You can also check out Georgette’s own chapter book, Andy and the Gold Mine. Here is a description of the book in Georgette’s own words, and an activity she has provided for your students. 

Andy and the Gold Mine introduces California gold mining in a true story adventure. Ten year old Andy spends summers in Randsburg, CA. One year, after a harrowing encounter with a rattlesnake in an abandoned mine, Andy finds the Butte Mine. Jake, an experienced miner shows Andy how to crush rock and rinse the powdered stone to find the specks of gold. Students can be shown where Randsburg, CA is, and learn about a town that had one of the most abundant gold mines of the time. 

The story ends with young Andy, taking his gold dust to the General Store. The store manager pockets the gold vial and puts a few coins in the register. A complete discussion about honesty can be started or students can speculate about what really took place.  Ages 8-11

ACTIVITY- students could each bring in a rock about the size of their fist, sit out in the playground, crush the rocks with rubber mallets (while wearing protective glasses), put the powder in Styrofoam bowls with water, swirl it around, allowing the large sediment to settle to the bottom and experience the type of work done by young Andy who in the end (with much trial and error) did find some gold dust.

Read the second part of this two part article by pointing your browser to 


About Sara L. Ambarian

Copyright 2012

All Rights Reserved.

Sara L. Ambarian is an author, designer, illustrator, wife and mother with professional and personal experience in a wide range of subjects, including: arts and crafts, fashion, weddings, homeschooling, cooking, nature, and travel.