Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Bible Story ideas

For our unit studies, I just listed the name of the Bible story and
didn't say what we were going to do with them.  Here are some
things that we'll be doing.

A couple of years ago I
got something in the mail and it looked neat, so I sent away for
it.  We now have a huge collection of these Bible
cards.  I don't get them any longer, but they are really
neat.  Great
Bible Adventures
  You get 9 cards that tell a Bible
story, and then on the back is a puzzle that they put
together.  And there is a reuseable activity card with a few
pages in it, as well as a coloring sheet.  It also has some
craft and activity ideas and discussion questions.  I think
each packet is 5 or 6 bucks.   A little bit pricey,
but the kids love them and it's a fun, easy way for them to really get
to know the Bible stories.  It came in handy this summer -
I've been using them for sunday school at church.


Creation

Rice Crispie Earth Recipe 

Basically, just your basic rice crispie squares recipe with
food coloring added.


1/4 cup
margarine

40
regular marshmallows
1/2 tsp. vanilla

6 cups rice crispies
green and blue food
coloring


Melt margine and marshmallows over medium heat in a large
pot, stir in vanilla and rice
crispies.  
Divide into two bowls
Add green food coloring to one bowl and blue food coloring
to the second.

Stir
Allow the children to take a scoop from the
blue bowl and a scoop from the green bowl and mash them together in a
ball (the earth).
 
Set the balls aside until completely cool.

creation
worksheets

fish craft
- use sequins
soak seeds in water, put on a wet
paper towel and put inside a ziplock bag, tape to window...watch it
sprout!
talk about rules and why we have to obey
God.  Have them help make a list of house rules they should
obey.

Noah's Ark
coloring pages
rainbow
cookies



Abraham
Get a big piece of poster
board and make a family tree, starting with Abraham.  Add onto
it as we go through the Bible.  Another idea is to get plain
paper dolls
and decorate them as the people, and post them on
the board.

Abraham and Lot
talk about
fighting and being selfish

Abraham and the promise

talk about how Abraham recognized that one of them was
God.  Can we lie to God? 

Abraham
and Issac
make an altar out of cheerios and
frosting

ACTING ON
SCRIPTURE - WILL YOU DO IT?  GAME

Have
the children line up in a horizontal line across the back of the
room.  This game is similar to Mother-May-I.  Instead
of taking turns all the children listen to your question and respond
with, "Yes, I do".  You then issue the command and they all
may respond.  In this game everyone will be a winner when they
reach you. 

1.  Mother asks you
to turn the TV off.  Will you get up and do it without saying,
"wait"? 
2.  Teacher asks you to stop
talking in class when she's talking.  Will you stop
talking? 
3.  Big brother asks you not to
play in his room while he is at school.  Will you stay out of
his room? 
4.  Grandmother tells you
eating cookie dough is bad for you.  Will you keep your
fingers out of the mixing bowl when she's not looking? 

5.  Daddy tells you to come straight home from
school and not stop for any reason.  Will you go straight home
even though your friend calls from his house to come see his new
kittens? 

Talk about how we have to obey
even though we can't understand the reason for it. Only Jesus can help
us do that.  When someone asks you to do something and you
feel like saying, "no" say a prayer for Jesus to help
you.

Issac
Issac and
Rebekah
egg
carton camel


Jacob
Jacob and
Esau
re-enact the
story
GETTING INTO
SCRIPTURE - BIBLE STORY DRAMATIZATION

Materials
needed:
2 small pieces of fur felt
(to place on a
child's forearms like Jacob did)
4 large rubber bands (to hold
the fur in place on arms)
Sleeping bag or blanket
2
baby dolls
Small stuffed lamb or beanie baby lamb
Bow
and arrow or slingshot
Small serving
bowl

WHAT THE TEACHER DOES: (To prepare
ahead)
There are no advance preparations
necessary.

WHAT THE CHILDREN DO:
Tell the
story using the children to dramatize the
following
scenes:
1. The angel making the announcement to Rebekah
that
she was going to give birth to twins. Include
the
message that the younger of the twins would
receive
the birthright.
2. Rebekah holding her twin
babies
3. Jacob holding the lamb, Esau holding the bow
and
arrow or slingshot
4. Rebekah planning with
Jacob how to deceive Isaac
5. Jacob receiving the birthright
blessing from Isaac
6. Esau returning and finding out that
Jacob has
already been blessed with the
birthright
7. Jacob having to leave
home

Jacob's Ladder
go camping in the living
room.  Build an alter out of boxes.  Use a rock for a
pillow


Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Tagged! Homeschool resources

I was tagged by Two Kid Schoolhouse


1) One homeschooling book you have enjoyed.


Well, since we're so early into homeschooling, I haven't read a ton of resources yet.  So I'd have to say my favorite one is The Well-Trained Mind.

2) One resource you wouldn't be without.

The library and the internet.  Garage sales and used book sales are also great!


3)  One resource you wish you had never bought.

none, yet, since I haven't bought much at all.  I've bought lots of small, hands-on toys and activities. 

4) One resource you enjoyed last year.

Last year was preschool so again, didn't buy or use a whole lot.  So I'll say the internet :D 


5) One resource you will be using next year.

umm.....I'd like to buy a good world history book/s.  I will probably look into that more next year. 


6) One resource you would like to buy.

A nice set of McGuffy readers.  I'll either ask for that for christmas this year, or get a set for next year. 

7) One resource you wish existed.

I copied this one, a great answer!   Something to keep me from using time unwisely.

8) One homeschooling catalog you enjoy reading.

Learning Resources and Oriental Trading Company.

9)   One homeschooling website you use regularly.

I need to find some good ones.  Right now it's a few random yahoo groups that I use occasionally, and HSB.

10) Tag 5 people... Following the Ancient Paths   Homeschooling Grandma      In Good Company     Higher Up and Further In   Four in a Row

an excellent book

I just finished reading Left Back by Diane Ravitch.  It is very very good.  Very well written and well documented.  It is incredibly mind-blowing and angering read.  It is unfathomable to me how people could be that stupid and could do so much damage to the public schools.  Half-way through the book I told dh that my biggest fear was him dying and me having to put my kids in public school.  By the end of the book I told him that if I die, he is not to put the kids into public school.  There is no way on God's green earth that my kids are stepping foot into a public school until we are finished thoroughly educating them and they go to public high school when they are 16, as missionaries, as we've already planned.    This book was that influential.  I linked to the amazon page for this book and you can see excerpts and other reviews of it.   I have her other book The Language Police on hold at the library....that should be just as good of a read.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

games, file folder games

A lot of the file folder games I've found online are very preschool based.  Very simple skills.  Which is nice, for preschool, but now that I'm starting to move towards actual subjects, is frustrating.  So I've been searching the internet for games that I can put into a file folder game, that is science, history, geography, or bible based.  I've come across some ideas, so I'm going to be making some today.  I'll post pictures in a day or two when I'm done.  But here is a bunch of links to various ideas, and some ideas that I'm going to use.  

Printable manipulatives resources
  I'm going to use the rulers for a measuring game, I think
Blank Clock I saved this to my computer and then resized it to use in a FFG
Clock Rummy
A lot of teacher created games
Telling Time Worksheets
A LOT of math worksheets, games, ideas
free good Bible maps  I'm going to make an Egypt/Exodus game with the Exodus map
Games for Learning
tips, techniques, and ideas for making games
59 different games, different ages
game boards
educational games
file folder game links


Free Lewis and Clark cd-rom curriculum

Very cool.  I just emailed them yesterday asking for one, and they are sending me one today.  Back to School with Lewis and Clark 

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

neat cheap resource

We went to Wal-mart today to get some school supplies.  While I was browsing the normal aisle for crayons and folders (totally didn't see the temporary school supply aisle, LOL), I came across something kind of neat.   They were Learning Playground Tiles.  They were only 5 bucks.  I couldn't find them on the website to show you, but I found some at Office Depot.  I got the Letter Tiles  and also the Phonics Tiles (which OD apparantly doesn't carry).  And, at the OD  website, I see they have telling time tiles, coin and currency, numbers, and animals.  Very cool.  They are little plastic 1 inch square tiles in bright colors.  I think they'll be fun for Alysa to use to practice making words and learning the phonics aspect of words.

Monday, August 21, 2006

cleaning out my bookmark

I have a ton of links in my favorites and I need to clean them up, organize them, and probably delete some.  So I figure since I'm doing that, I will also post a lot of them here, since a lot of them are blog/school related.

Links

Preschool Bible Stories
Preschool Bible Coloring Pages
OT Bible Coloring Pages
Bible Crafts for Kids
Sunday School Resources
Lots of Old Testament Stories and ideas - my favorite Bible resource
Mom's Minivan - lots of car trip ideas
Bible Gameboards
Bible Crafts
Book Adventure

Blogs

A Second Generation
Mrs. Sam Sack
A Large Family
My Little Ones and Me
Following the Ancient Paths - I love this one
Small Town Homeschool
The Lilting House - lots of stuff here
It's an Incredible Life
Beginning Our Journey
Why Homeschool - very very good blog
B Avenue Boys School
Teaching Miss Smarty Pants


Friday, August 11, 2006

Family Choice Act

from onemillionmoms.com


Cable Choice Bill Introduced in U.S. House - Real Choice for Parents




Last week, Representative Dan Lipinski (R-IL) introduced The Family Choice Act of 2006 (H.R.5919), giving parents real control over television by choosing and paying only for the cable channels they want.

OneMillionMoms.com and OneMillionDads.com strongly supports this bill and needs you to take action to help get it passed!

Under
this bill, cable companies will be no longer be allowed to force you to
pay for indecent channels as part of your cable package.

If you are "Fed Up With FX Network" or any other filthy channel, your cable provider will have to block them from your home and deduct the cost from your cable bill.

The
entertainment industry already has their Washington lobbyists lined up
in rows, opposing this bill and beating down the doors trying to
convince legislators to let it die a slow death. I'm sure this doesn't
surprise you.

That's why we need to make every effort to let our Representatives know that voters want real cable choice with no excuses.

Action Needed!

Take a moment to personally call your representative's office and tell him/her to co-sponsor H.R. 5919, The Family Choice Act of 2006 today!


To
really make a difference, would you also call his district office with
the same message? We need thousands of phone calls flooding their
offices to make sure they understand that protecting our children is
more important than satisfying the whims of greedy cable company
executives.

Click Here to find the phone number of your representative's offices. While at their website, consider sending them an email.

Here's a recommended message:

Dear Representative ________,

I
support H.R. 5919, The Family Choice Act of 2006, and strongly
encourage you to do likewise by becoming a co-sponsor of this bill.

For too long, the cable industry has forced consumers to pay for raunchy channels we don’t want or watch.

Give
parents REAL CHOICE by co-sponsoring H.R. 5919. By doing so, you will
prove to me that families are more important than special interests.

I look forward to your positive reply to my request to co-sponsor H.R. 5919.

Sincerely,


Ancient Egypt Links

The month of October is going to be spent on Ancient Egypt.  So I'm starting to gather resources and ideas to form the individual weeks and topics, so I'm just going to post everything I come across here.  I really dislike what I'm currently doing, of just posting a lot of links to various websites....because usually, eventually, websites get taken down and you end up with dead links, along with the loss of that information.  But it seems just as silly and pointless and a waste of a lot of space, not to mention time, to copy everything down and put it here.    So I guess this will be a gathering spot for links, and then when I actually form my lesson plans, I will detail what items I've chosen to do, so at least some information will be here.


some ideas, some dead links, at this website
A ton of links
egyptian fonts
a good site with a gazillion links
maps of ancient egypt  they even have a map of the exodus here

Monday, August 7, 2006

well duh!

Matthew 6: 22"The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are good, your whole body will be full of light. 23But
if your eyes are bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then
the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness!

Study: Sexually Explicit Song Lyrics Prompt Teens to Have Sex Earlier



CHICAGO — Teens whose iPods are full of music with raunchy, sexual lyrics start having sex sooner than those who prefer other songs, a study found.







Whether
it's hip-hop, rap, pop or rock, much of popular music aimed at teens
contains sexual overtones. Its influence on their behavior appears to
depend on how the sex is portrayed, researchers found.







Songs
depicting men as "sex-driven studs," women as sex objects and with
explicit references to sex acts are more likely to trigger early sexual
behavior than those where sexual references are more veiled and
relationships appear more committed, the study found.







Teens
who said they listened to lots of music with degrading sexual messages
were almost twice as likely to start having intercourse or other sexual
activities within the following two years as were teens who listened to
little or no sexually degrading music.







Among
heavy listeners, 51 percent started having sex within two years, versus
29 percent of those who said they listened to little or no sexually
degrading music.


the rest of the article is at Fox News 


A Nation of Wimps??

I just read a really interesting Psychology Today article.  It is pretty long.  But the author makes some really good points.  Here are a few excerpts from it:

Behold the wholly sanitized childhood, without
skinned knees or the occasional C in history. "Kids need to feel badly
sometimes," says child psychologist David Elkind, professor at Tufts
University. "We learn through experience and we learn through bad
experiences. Through failure we learn how to cope."

Messing
up, however, even in the playground, is wildly out of style. Although
error and experimentation are the true mothers of success, parents are
taking pains to remove failure from the equation.

"Life
is planned out for us," says Elise Kramer, a Cornell University junior.
"But we don't know what to want." As Elkind puts it, "Parents and
schools are no longer geared toward child development, they're geared
to academic achievement."


But taking all the discomfort, disappointment and even the play out of
development, especially while increasing pressure for success, turns
out to be misguided by just about 180 degrees. With few challenges all
their own, kids are unable to forge their creative adaptations to the
normal vicissitudes of life. That not only makes them risk-averse, it
makes them psychologically fragile, riddled with anxiety. In the
process they're robbed of identity, meaning and a sense of
accomplishment, to say nothing of a shot at real happiness. Forget,
too, about perseverance, not simply a moral virtue but a necessary life
skill.


Enter: grade inflation. When he took over as president of Harvard in
July 2001, Lawrence Summers publicly ridiculed the value of honors
after discovering that 94 percent of the college's seniors were
graduating with them. Safer to lower the bar than raise the discomfort
level. Grade inflation is the institutional response to parental
anxiety about school demands on children, contends social historian
Peter Stearns of George Mason University. As such, it is a pure index
of emotional overinvestment in a child's success. And it rests on a
notion of juvenile frailty—the assumption that children are easily
bruised and need explicit uplift," Stearns argues in his book, Anxious Parenting: A History of Modern Childrearing in America. [I might have to look at this book!]


Kids are having a hard time even playing neighborhood pick-up games
because they've never done it, observes Barbara Carlson, president and
cofounder of Putting Families First. "They've been told by their
coaches where on the field to stand, told by their parents what color
socks to wear, told by the referees who's won and what's fair. Kids are
losing leadership skills."


It's bad enough that today's children are raised in a psychological
hothouse where they are overmonitored and oversheltered. But that
hothouse no longer has geographical or temporal boundaries. For that
you can thank the cell phone. Even in college—or perhaps especially at
college—students are typically in contact with their parents several
times a day, reporting every flicker of experience.


The perpetual access to parents infantilizes the young, keeping them in
a permanent state of dependency. Whenever the slightest difficulty
arises, "they're constantly referring to their parents for guidance,"
reports Kramer. They're not learning how to manage for themselves.


Some psychologists think we have yet to
recognize the full impact of the cell phone on child development,
because its use is so new. Although there are far too many variables to
establish clear causes and effects, Indiana's Carducci believes that
reliance on cell phones undermines the young by destroying the ability
to plan ahead. "The first thing students do when they walk out the door
of my classroom is flip open the cell phone. Ninety-five percent of the
conversations go like this: 'I just got out of class; I'll see you in
the library in five minutes.' Absent the phone, you'd have to make
arrangements ahead of time; you'd have to think ahead."

Herein
lies another possible pathway to depression. The ability to plan
resides in the prefrontal cortex (PFC), the executive branch of the
brain. The PFC is a critical part of the self-regulation system, and
it's deeply implicated in depression, a disorder increasingly seen as
caused or maintained by unregulated thought patterns—lack of
intellectual rigor, if you will. Cognitive therapy owes its very
effectiveness to the systematic application of critical thinking to
emotional reactions. Further, it's in the setting of goals and progress
in working toward them, however mundane they are, that positive
feelings are generated. From such everyday activity, resistance to
depression is born.

What's more, cell
phones—along with the instant availability of cash and almost any
consumer good your heart desires—promote fragility by weakening
self-regulation. "You get used to things happening right away," says
Carducci. You not only want the pizza now, you generalize that
expectation to other domains, like friendship and intimate
relationships. You become frustrated and impatient easily. You become
unwilling to work out problems. And so relationships fail—perhaps the
single most powerful experience leading to depression.


Virginia's Portmann feels the effects are even more pernicious; they
weaken the whole fabric of society. He sees young people becoming
weaker right before his eyes, more responsive to the herd, too eager to
fit in—less assertive in the classroom, unwilling to disagree with
their peers, afraid to question authority, more willing to conform to
the expectations of those on the next rung of power above them.


Using the classic benchmarks of adulthood, 65 percent of males had
reached adulthood by the age of 30 in 1960. By contrast, in 2000, only
31 percent had. Among women, 77 percent met the benchmarks of adulthood
by age 30 in 1960. By 2000, the number had fallen to 46 percent.


Thursday, August 3, 2006

Bill Gates Teams Up With UNESCO

This is a few months old, but my jaw just dropped when I read it.   I found a link to this on Spunky's blog.  You all should read this: Bill Gates Teams Up
With UNESCO

It's about the globalization of the public school curriculum.

Wednesday, August 2, 2006

awesome coloring books

I just found this site today.....fantastic coloring books for not too much $$.  I just ordered some; I can't wait to see them in person.  Dover Coloring Books   I did find that a few other resource places were selling them for slightly cheaper, but they didn't have a very wide selection, so I ended up getting all mine from Dover.

Tuesday, August 1, 2006

who is Green Helmet??

this story is being reported on a bunch of other pundit blogs.  This one has a nice rundown of all the various pictures.  It's so bizarre, it makes me laugh.

Green Helmet


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Classical Chaos

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