Snow! The flakes are there, I promise, and the girls are desperately trying to catch them. (FYI, the purses have car activities for the outing we were embarking on when the snow started falling.) |
Two things were immediately most puzzling to the girls: how they were going to sleep (the house has 3 bedrooms with a queen bed in each, but the girls are used to sleeping in bunk beds in one room) and how we were going to function without a study (actually they were baffled as to how anyone functioned without a study or even any bookshelves. I think it was their first inkling that we're not normal.)
After a temporary stint with Bug in a separate room (self-imposed nightly quarantine because of a nasty cold), the girls decided they really did need to be all together again, so we made a Saturday day trip to visit IKEA and found a mini twin mattress that fits perfectly between the bed and the dresser. We also repurposed a large decorative basket from the living room to hold an overflowing pile of books in their bedroom (the fake flowers have been relegated to the basement. I may or may not remember how to redecorate this place 6 months from now.)
Can't you just picture me there--peacefully sipping tea and making lesson plans? That never actually happens, of course, but it's a nice idea, isn't it? |
Of course, the house was also lacking an obvious playroom, but what it does have is a semi-finished basement that the girls commandeered our very first day in the house. It was basically a large concrete-floored empty space with a washer and dryer on one side and random things stored around the edges. So . . . the girls and I got to work. We brought down the rug that was under the dining room table (a disaster waiting to happen), an Adirondack chair and a couple of beach chairs from the garage, an empty cabinet and old telephone table from among the stored heaps (which their collapsible toy bins fit perfectly under). We also bought some flowery masking tape and put down a hopscotch game.
Voila! Mission accomplished.
More with Less at Playtime
Our serious downsizing of their toys when we moved has certainly inspired creativity! Even with only the very basics in craft supplies, they've created all kinds of fun. They've used pipe cleaners and fabric scraps to create little dolls and jewelry, and they've used construction paper and tape to create doll beds, boxes, dress-up armor, more jewelry, and interlocking building toys. Of course, the Legos have gotten lots of play as well; their biggest project was creating a series of mech suits for the Lego mini figures. We also bought a couple of cheap unframed white boards from Home Depot that the girls have been drawing on and creating whole story lines (my personal favorite was the dragon battle. As a project, and to help them acclimate to the new place/climate, we decided to make no-sew fleece blankets. I let the girls pick out their own fabric: Bug went with her classic purple and zebra stripes, Goose went with typical cute flowers and orange, and Monkey decided to pair an Avengers print with red. Good times.
Library Days!
We haven't actually established a weekly routine of outings yet, but we did make it to the library--a location we are very excited about. The children's section is awesome, featuring easy to flip through racks for picture books; kid-sized tables, chairs, and couches; and a large collection of puzzles, building toys, puppets, etc. The librarians were very friendly and could even assure us there were lots of homeschoolers frequenting the library that they'd try to connect us with. Of course, we couldn't visit the library without coming home with a stack of new books.
A couple of fun Christmas stories:
The Drummer Boy
The Donkey's Dream
A new book for our history studies:
The Rhode Island Colony
Never-read-by-us books by familiar authors:
Ladybug Girl and the Big Snow
Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse
Mr. Seahorse
Big Anthony and the Magic Ring
Mouse Tales
Bravo Amelia Bedelia
Berenstein Bears Learn to Share
I'm a Frog!
And of course some entirely new books that just jumped out and had to be read:
Pinkalicious
Little Bear Sleeping
Mother, You're the Best (But Sister, You're a Pest!)
We came back the next week to try out their story time, and it's exactly what we're looking for! Story time takes place out in the middle of the children's section, which allowed Monkey the freedom to listen in from the tables while she worked on puzzles and set up a castle. Bug and Goose decided they wanted to go in for a closer listen. The librarian Miss C is lovely and very approachable--even to my little introverts. Bug noted that, unlike our last librarian, "this one actually likes books!" Four or five good books were clearly the focus of the event. In fact, the "theme" was simply Miss C's favorite picks out of the brand new box of books she received that morning. The storytime crowd only involved about 10 kids, and the in-between-books activities were just quiet counting/colors/rhyming games for a change of pace (not the noisy, boisterous interruptions that so put off my girls at our last library). Bug and Goose both actively participated, answering questions and putting pieces up on the flannel board.
The Three R's
Yes, these are still happening in the midst of everything else! Obviously, we've had days off from formal lessons for travel days and Thanksgiving, but the girls are still hard at work. In fact, since we've been in our new house, Goose has also been joining in and picking out one or two worksheets or a Bob book to go through each day while her sisters are doing their lessons. She's been doing a lot of tracing letters and numbers, and she's really improving her pencil control.
For math, we did a lot of manipulatives work and flash cards when we first arrived. The girls really had fun with the fraction bars--seeing what different fractions they could combine to add up to 1, 1/2, or 1/4. The other math thing they've enjoyed is going through the math questions in the Brain Quest cards. It was a fun switch that hit on lots of different topics. Of course, once we got the printer finally set up, we they did some worksheets touching on the usual topics--addition, subtraction, time, money, skip counting, and graphs.
They are reading tons, and I've been terrible about keeping track of every book--even just for the formal reading lessons. Little Bear stories continue to be a favorite pick, and the both girls have gained enough confidence to tackle "regular" picture books like Ferdinand, Blueberries for Sal, and Snow Day. They've also been much better about doing incidental reading like the story problems in their math work.
For writing, they've both dictated journal entries, we completed a couple units of spelling words, and they each did a story prompt. We also reviewed nouns, verbs, and adjectives (by finding and labeling words in photocopies of a Little Bear story), capitalization, and contractions (I found cards for a matching/memory game to print up).
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