Logic of English, Rhythm of Handwriting Review

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Logic of English publishes great language arts curriculum sets for homeschools, as well as for classroom settings. I recently had the privilege of reviewing Rhythm of Handwriting Complete Set for cursive.

Handwriting is a big topic. Let me just briefly mention that I believe in teaching cursive first and only cursive. Here is a great article about the advantages of cursive first and only.

As I was waiting for my son to mature his fine-motor skills, Rhythm of Handwriting became available to me through the Review Crew. I decided to try it. Perfect timing, as my son seemed to have developed enough to begin and lay the foundation for future copywork.

Logic of English, Rhythm of Handwriting, Cursive Curriculum Set

Logic of English, Rhythm of Handwriting, Cursive Curriculum Set

The complete handwriting set costs $65 and contains a student book, a quick reference guide, a set of tactile cards and a small student whiteboard. This curriculum is recommended for ages 4-adult, but, as your child’s teacher, you know if the fine motor skills are in place or not.

The student starts by using large motor skills to form the letters – the tactile cards have sandpaper shapes of each letter and even one card for each individual stroke utilized throughout the curriculum. Then, the student moves to writing on the whiteboard with a dry erase marker. That way, all the mistakes can be easily erased and the process can start all over again on a clean slate.

Boy learning cursive on a small white board

My son writing on the small white board before moving to paper

The whiteboard has two sides, one with a very large area containing the baseline, the midline and the topline for writing. The backside contains several rows of smaller widths, which also facilitate the transition to paper.

If need be, they also recommend the student practice in a sand box or any box with cornmeal or rice.

Finally, when you, as the teacher, decide he is ready, he can start using the paper pages in his student book to practice handwriting with fine motor skills.

Cursive r boy on a small white board

My son had fun drawing himself as an R boy.

The paper worksheets contain varying widths and the student can choose whichever they feel best about. My son always preferred the largest (or widest) lines, which are the last two rows on the worksheets.

To recap, here are the steps to get your young student to start penmanship:

1. Sand paper (tactile) cards – as you rehearse the instructions (curve up to the midline etc.)

2. Make the letters in sand, cornmeal, or rice.

3. Write with a dry erase marker on the large side of the whiteboard.

4. Write on the smaller side of the whiteboard.

5. Move to paper and let your student decide which height he likes the best in the provided worksheets.

6. Work your way through the list of letters.

7. Practice, practice, practice.

The first week for us was easy. It was something new and exciting. The second week was tough. The newness had worn off. His hand would do the required motions in the sand box or on the board, but not on paper. He was frustrated with his own lack of skills. I was wondering if he just was not ready for fine motor skills.

The breakthrough came when I showed him that he was almost done with the “Swing Letters” in ROH. That it’s a category and then we can move on to the next group of letters. He looked at the chart and noticed all the categories. He got excited. Now that he had an idea of what to expect, he seemed motivated to press on. And motivation took care of the skills needed to transition to paper.

What also helped was the weekend – not doing any writing for two days. After the weekend, when we picked it back up, his skills had improved dramatically. It’s as if his brain had needed some time to process. He was not ready to do a whole Practice Sheet in one sitting yet, but he could do four lines without even questioning it. Progress.

The following week, he asked to see the rest of the letters in this first category. I showed him that we would start on Curve Letters that particular week if we kept at it. He was excited at the prospect.

Cursive p on a small white board

Divide and conquer. My son made his own dots to connect before writing his “p”.

And so, one day later that week, we started Curve Letters. Once he got “a” down, I showed him how “d” is just like an “a” but with a longer “tail.” He got it after a few tries. I was trying to see if we can do two letters a day. Apparently, we could.

That’s when he asked me about writing whole words. Hmm… Really???

I showed him in the book that, at the end of the chapter on Curve Letters, we have practice pages with words. Well, he saw “dad” – the letters he learned today!

He wrote it down once and I was congratulating him so heartily, he took off running. He likes being chased around the house, so I played along. My daughter wanted to be part of the action, so, with her in my arms, I chased my son around the house, running from room to room and laughing all the while.

He loved it. He would sit down to write another “dad” and then he would say, “Now you start chasing me.” I would run and we all laughed and squealed. Whenever I got to him, I showered him with hugs and kisses. He was covering his face, laughing.

This was one of the most fun days in homeschooling my little boy. Breakthroughs are always exciting. And any time we can laugh during school, I’m happy.

The fact remains, after two weeks of cursive instruction, my son wrote his first cursive word.

For the next four weeks, we kept on practicing and almost got to loop letters. I am so glad this curriculum has worked out for us and look forward to using it through the summer, as we don’t want to lose our hard-earned skills.

Here are the social media links for Logic of English:

httpss://www.facebook.com/TheLogicOfEnglish

httpss://www.pinterest.com/logicofenglish/

httpss://www.youtube.com/logicofenglish/

httpss://twitter.com/LogicofEnglish

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Wonderful Wednesday – Cat Nature Study

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We have a cat and we study it almost every day by virtue of sharing our lives with him. The kids have learned how to feed him. They are not coordinated enough to pour water in his bowl. Or, at least, my fear of spills will not allow me to allow them that chore yet. The kids also open the door for the cat to go in and out of the house.

Large male tabby cat

Our 18-lb, 10-year-old male cat, Izzy

Our cat lost its mommy in a storm and stumbled upon somebody’s porch. That somebody knew somebody who knew my husband was a cat lover. My husband took the kitten in and called him Izzy.

One year later, I came along. I am not particularly fond of cats. In fact, I am allergic to cat dander.

My first thought when I saw Izzy was, “I need to tolerate this one.” But I did more than tolerate him. One afternoon, as I was sitting on the couch in the living room, Izzy walked over to me and got into my lap. He started purring and suckling on my pant leg. He thought I was his mommy. He left a wet spot on my pant leg and won me over.

I have written two books about him, but never edited them properly. I had children instead.

We took some magnifying glasses to Izzy’s fur for this particular cat nature study. My son noticed a dried leaf shaped as letter “P” caught in Izzy’s fur. He did not need a magnifying glass for that. With all the catkins outside, our cat is bound to pick up some.

Children observing cat with magnifying glasses

My children observing our cat, Izzy

We made two notebooking pages about Izzy. I gave my daughter a simple blank piece of paper and we glued the cat study topper from the Outdoor Hour Challenge May newsletter. For my son, I printed out the mammal notebooking page from the same blog. I filled both of them out as we talked about cats. My children are still too young to write themselves.

As I read the Handbook of Nature Study to prepare for this lesson, I was surprised to read the recommendation that we train cats not to hunt for birds. I would have thought that a naturalist would want a cat to follow its natural instincts no matter what those may be.

We have seen our cat hunt for mice. We have observed his fear the day after a black bear visited our yard. We have had to deal with putting away dead mice, moles and birds – always daddy’s job. We have had to brush his fur or put up with cat hair on our sofas. Sometimes, both.

I have sneezed many times not realizing I had just sat in our cat’s latest favorite spot.

When the vet diagnosed our cat as a diabetic last year, we could not put him to sleep. Instead, we chose to give him shots.

I do not know how I got the courage to give him his shots, but I did. The kids watched me and daddy as we administered the cat’s shots and were amazed by how passive the cat was. We were, too.

We also fed him less and let him go outside more. Exercise, a leaner diet, plus the insulin shots did the trick.

His blood sugar levels went back down and he did not act as sluggishly as before. He actually got better. The vet declared him healed.

All this to say, we love our cat and study him daily in our homeschool.

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Maestro Classics Review

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An integral part of our homeschool, car schooling includes listening to music, stories, audio books or audio drama in the car, on the way to appointments and classes outside the home. Recent additions to our car school curriculum, My Name is Handel: The Story of Water Music and Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel are produced by Maestro Classics.

The conductor, his wife and one of their sons all worked on producing this story CD, alongside famous musicians and narrators. When it comes to CDs for children, I am rather picky. So many of them feature rhythms that make the kids want to shake their behinds.

If you, like me, would like to train your children’s musical taste buds to appreciate classical music, you will want to check out this series. The stories keep their attention while the classical music is woven throughout the CD. The CDs expose their minds to vocabulary, concepts and stories beyond just classical music.

Maestro Classics Review
I read Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel to my children about a year ago. When I brought out the CD out, they did not know what to think. Was it a movie? No. Where can they see pictures? No pictures. We just listen to the story. But why is there music? The music threw them off.

I persevered.

After a few paragraphs, they got into it. So much so, that they asked to hear it over and over again. They like to dig like Mary Ann, faster and faster, as the story progresses and the music picks up.

Children watching a documentary about steam shovels

My children watching a short documentary about steam shovels

After listening to it four times, over a few days, my son started saying things like, “I really like the music, mama.” Bull’s-eye!

The CD booklet has several activities which enhance the learning process: a puzzle, a maze, a mirror word game, etc. My son loved finding out the words. It’s the first time he solved a cross-word puzzle, so this is one for the books.

My Name is Handel: The Story of Water Music was a bit harder to introduce to my children. I was surprised, because they like listening to Handel’s Messiah. I was expecting them to perk up at the mention of Handel’s name. But, again, I worked with their reluctance and gently asked them to listen to it.

Maestro Classics Review
My daughter is four and loves princesses, so when she heard them mention a king, she started paying attention. Isn’t that always the case? We must link new information to their existing database of knowledge. Then, when they see a connection, they are more willing to work with the new concept.

I think the story is really cute, how Handel, ever the showman, managed to weasel himself back into the king’s heart with Water Music. The more modern story about Handel’s living in England (I won’t give it away, you will have to get the CD and enjoy it firsthand) is even more intriguing. I never knew about that other theory.

Children watching animated explanations about the Panama Canal operations

Watching animated explanations about the Panama Canal operations

All this to say I, too, learned a lot from listening to it, besides enjoying the music.

Their website also produces free curriculum guides as companions for their CD series. Definitely worth looking into. You might have to adapt some of the activities based on your children’s ages and philosophy of education, of course. But you have a whole FREE unit study for each CD, with history, art, music, geography, science, language arts, and math.

The CDs cost $16.98 for the CD (plus shipping) and $9.98 for the MP3 download. Considering their quality and how much learning you get out of them, I think they are reasonably priced. I have always said that our children’s education is worth every penny.

The ideal age range for Mike Mulligan is 4+, while the ideal range for Handel is 5+. I can see how my four-year-old lags behind in appreciating them. My six-year-old got into Mike Mulligan after some coaxing, but now he loves it.

In order to stir more interest into My Name is Handel and Water Music, I did some of the activities suggested and the kids enjoyed playing with water and boats, guessing what will sink and what will float, and looking at pictures of royalty. We learned about the Panama Canal, the Industrial Revolution and the steam engine. My son, a budding engineer, loved every moment of it. We colored pictures of a steam shovel.

If you are looking for classical music for children, look no further. This CD series will help your kids appreciate classical music and learn so much more besides.

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Mom Monday Week 18 – Ask and Ye Shall Receive

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God is in the business of answering our prayers – even those we don’t have enough faith to pray. As I hosted the latest Raising Multilingual Children blog carnival, I felt pricked in my heart about French like never before. In our homeschool, I do read to my children in French and talk to them in French now and then, but it’s not enough.

They need conversation, preferably with small people like them. Immersion. I started dreaming about a French play group. If only there were francophone children in East Tennessee…

Wait a minute! What if? What if I could bring together a small group of homeschoolers and I taught them French as they played?

I went from “if only…” to “what if?” in a matter of days.

“If this is from You, Lord, please lead me to start a French play group. I don’t know how, where, when or with whom. I feel this calling. I will take it one step at a time and watch for Your guidance.”

I did not exactly say those words, but that was the spirit of my unspoken request.

I felt called and I took the first step. I made an announcement on our homeschool support group’s page on Facebook, asking if there was any interest in a French play group.

The first reply came from a French lady who lived 30 minutes away and had a son about my son’s age… We even had five mutual Facebook friends and had lived in this area for about the same time (nine years). What are the odds?

She was thrilled to have a French play group getting started. I was thrilled to find her.

ask and ye shall receive

Had I not asked, I would have never known. As I told my husband, he said, “Ask and ye shall receive…”  Continue reading »


Animals in Our Backyard

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Less telling, more showing.

Three animals we have spotted in our yard: a groundhog, a rabbit, and a black bear. Enjoy!

 

Kids watching a hare in our backyard

Watching Peter Rabbit

 

Rabbit in backyard

He heard me

 

Groundhog standing in front yard

Groundhog standing

 

Groundhog running

Look at it go!

 

Man challenges black bear

My husband challenged the bear with our children’s sled before he got out the firecrackers

 

This bear has been coming by every evening. He is cute but he is not really scared of loud noises unless he is at eye level with you. When he was looking at my husband from the hill, he just watched and did not make a move. The firecrackers finally got him moving, but very, very slowly. That’s why I cannot leave the kids outside by themselves. Ever.


Wonderful Wednesday – Apple Tree Study

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Inspired by the Handbook of Nature Study blog, we observe and study nature by following their weekly challenges. For the apple tree, we went a few streets over in our neighborhood to look more closely at a crab apple tree. I go by it every morning on my walks.

Then, we went to an apple orchard. We spent about 15 minutes observing the tree, its bark, leaves, dried up flowers, baby apples, areas where large branches had been cut, and overall looks. We noticed the bored holes, which could be the work of either a beetle or a wookpecker.

We also observed the surroundings: a bee gathering pollen from the carpet of yellow flowers under the apple tree, a small “area rug” of lavender flowers, the taller trees from across the street (not apple trees), the younger apple trees in another part of the orchard, the sky. We also made note of the weather: it was sunny, hot, and windy.

On the way back home, we ran an errand at the bank. My daughter asked me to get some hot chocolate, which our bank offers to their clients for free. Next to the hot chocolate machine was a large bowl of red apples. I got them an apple instead of hot chocolate. I could not have planned this better.

In the car, we listened to Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 1 – my daughter’s request. It has long been a favorite of mine and I play it often. She calls it “that other music, not Handel.”

When we got home, I glued the apple tree topper from the HNS April newsletter on a blank piece of paper, made some notes and had my daughter draw the apple tree. Such a peaceful homeschooling day. Nature soothes.


Mom Monday Week 17 – Rocking OPCs

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First, an explanation: OPCs = Other People’s Children. Before deciding to homeschool, I thought I would go teach other people’s children for a living while my own are in their respective classrooms. I never followed through with that plan because I felt short-changed.

How could I be away from my children for seven hours a day? How could I step aside and allow another person to see the sparkle of “now I get it” in their eyes? Homeschooling became the only solution my heart could accept.

It’s one thing to leave your school-age children behind for the day. It’s another thing altogether to leave your baby behind. Thankfully, I did not have to do either.

mom monday series on homeschool ways blog

Now, let’s take it to another level. If you have five minutes, grab a box of tissues and watch this clip from Paris je t’aime.

You don’t need to speak French to understand what is going on. There’s not much dialogue.  Continue reading »


Raising Multilingual Children Blog Carnival – Teaching Reading

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I homeschool my children mostly in English, but I have raised them to be bilingual (Romanian and English), with lots of exposure to French and Spanish. Today, I am excited to bring to you all a series of blog posts on Teaching Reading to Multilingual Children. It’s a blog carnival called “Raising Multilingual Children” and several great bloggers are participating.

By teaching their children several languages, these parents are homeschooling them on some level – and what a great advantage they are giving their children by helping them become multilingual.

 

Galina of Raising a Trilingual Child shares 7 Principles to Keep in Mind while Teaching Your Child to Read. While you may not agree with her strategy of teaching phonics to toddlers, keep reading her post. She does mention that the lessons are short, five minutes at first, and done only if the child shows interest.

 

Eugenia of The Loras English Network shares Once Upon A Time, There Were Treasures on Shelves! Her post talks about the importance of putting books in your children’s lives the way you would a ball, a doll or any other toy. Even if you think they may not be interested, try it and, over time, they will warm up to it. (Also, I would add, turn off or limit media!)

 

Lynn of Open Hearts, Open Minds shares Getting Ready for Reading (in two languages!). As a non-native speaker of Spanish, Lynn is trying to raise a bilingual child (English and Spanish). I can relate to the experience because I, too, am trying to teach my children languages which are not my mother tongue (French and Spanish in my case). Her four suggestions work.

I know because I have tried them. I like the fact that her son is four and she is not attempting to teach him to read. Nor is she worried about it. Too many parents rush their children into reading early on, when, in fact, research shows that school is better done late than early.

 

Nina of Bringing Up 8 Bilingual Babies shares Homeschooling Thoughts?? Me??. Of course, this subject is dear to my heart, as I am a homeschooling mom. The two reasons she mentions for toying with the idea of homeschooling are exactly what made me homeschool my children. American children spend way too much time at school (7-9 hours including bus commute and lunch) compared to German or Romanian kids (four hours, no lunch, no bus commute).

Then, she wants to homeschool them in German, which includes teaching them how to read, of course. Based on her experience with her older, graduated children, who speak German but did not learn much German writing or reading because they attended American public school, she feels homeschooling the younger ones in German would be the best use of her German teaching degrees. I say, go for it, Nina!

 

Annika of Be Bilingual shares Putting the Why Before the How in Reading – in One or More Languages. This post had me crying tears of joy – the story of an eight-year-old who falls in love with reading has that effect on me. Annika writes well and you will enjoy reading her submission. Her main idea? The mechanics will kick in once the child is motivated. Give the children books they enjoy. What exactly do they like? I like how intentional she became as a mom trying to help her child. And it worked!

 

Frances of Discovering the World through My Son’s Eyes shares Raising a Biliterate Child. Here, Frances shares several of her other posts on the subject, which give you a more complete idea of how she tackles teaching reading. Her Spanish text-rich home looks more and more like a school every day. It seems oh so normal to me, but I can see how some people would make comments to her about it – which they did. She also included a short video of her little one working on syllables. Cute!

 

Jeanne of SoulTravelers3 shares Reading in 3 Languages. Get ready for some intense stretching of your mind when you read her blog. Jeanne and her husband are digital nomads raising their daughter all over the world, in three languages. She says it can be done for $23 a day. Intrigued? I was. She shares great linguistic principles, like this one: teach your multilingual child to read and write in his strongest language first. The other languages will follow.

 

Michelle of Intentional Mama shares Teaching Reading in French: Our Homeschooling Plan. If you are looking for reasons, methods and resources to homeschool in French, – and who isn’t? – Michelle’s blog is a one-time stop and shop. She has put together a wonderful and compelling post on why even doing it. I have written down quite a few resources for my homeschool. Merci, Michelle!

 

Sarah of Bringing Up Baby Bilingual shares Homework from His Spanish Teacher: Practice Writing in French! What an inspirational post and so right on when it comes to methods. Keep it fun, keep it light, allow the child to develop skills before requiring perfection, and thank God for this child’s teacher. Even though she is his Spanish teacher, she gave him homework in French. You will have to read the post to understand why.

 

Well, that’s it for this month’s multilingual carnival. I hope you were deeply enriched and inspired by all these amazing parents. We hope to have you join us again next month, over at Multilingual Parenting.

 

So long, farewell, au revoir, Auf Wiedersehen…

 

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Brinkman Adventures Review

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As a homeschooling mom, I maximize every learning opportunity. Once a week, for two hours, I have a captive audience as we drive to classes my children take outside the home. Car schooling? We got it.

Recently, I found the perfect combination of fun and learning: a family audio drama series called The Brinkman Adventures Season 2, Episodes 13-24, produced by The Brinkman Adventures.

Brinkman Adventures Review
The first time we listened to it in the car, the kids were not paying attention that much. Too much going on. They did not know what to do with these sounds coming at them. How can you have a story without pictures? It was a bit of an adjustment. All the more reasons to press on and try again.

The second time around, I started playing it on my laptop on a Friday night, at home. We were all winding down from a busy week. My daughter climbed onto my lap at the table, but then she said, “I want to listen to it at the carpet.” She meant on the couch, which is where we have a large carpet over the hardwood floor.

I brought the laptop to the couch area. My son built a LEGO project on the carpet in front of the couch and my daughter climbed onto my lap again. They loved listening to it. As they got to know the characters, they started reacting to things they said. For instance, they really like they youngest Brinkman child’s voice. They can tell she is the smallest and they think she sounds cute. They imitate her and repeat her words.

Even so, it took another week for them to get the concept of audio drama. They asked me to turn it on so we can watch it. My son, who is six, finally understood and left it alone. My daughter, who just turned four, kept asking me to let her watch the people. I told her for the fifth time that it’s only for our ears. No pictures. She finally said, “It’s a hearing movie.” I said, “Yes.”

Another day we listened to it, when the youngest Brinkman character was looking for her flip-flop in Blue Hat and T-Shirt Bible, my daughter asked, “What’s a flip-flop?” This was just the first of many times during the Brinkman Adventures that we had to stop and explain new vocabulary. Great learning was had by all.

When we listened to it at home, we trimmed nails and blew noses (spring allergies are in full swing) while listening. I did some sewing while my son built with LEGO bricks and my daughter played with her dollies. It was such a peaceful family time.

The experience took me back to my childhood. We were glued to the radio on certain nights either for audio drama or concerts, while my mom ironed nearby or trimmed our nails and blew our noses.

The story of the Chinese Christian woman who longed for a Bible touched me very much. She did not ask for money or clothes. I do read my Bible every day and I treasure it, but this woman’s devotion to the Word of God took me back to my initial love for it.

I also appreciate the quality of family interaction, especially because the Brinkmans have – gasp! – eight children. The children obey immediately with a “yes, sir.” In several episodes, we hear how the parents teach their children gently on different issues. Also, we get to hear Kate’s song for her unborn sibling – what a great voice and what a touching song she wrote! She tells the baby she cannot wait to beep his nose and tickle his toes. How cute is that!

Episode 5, the one with the trip through Mexico, was a big hit with my son. He listened to the chase scene four times. I have always wondered why thrillers have chase scenes. Now I know. My six-year-old son gave me an answer without even knowing he did so, as he started that scene over and over and over again. He said, “I love the sound of the engine heating up…” Of course, it was the suspense, too, that got his attention.

We listened to the bulk of these CDs in the car on the way to appointments. The stories take you all over the world: China, Mexico, Belize, Texas, Northern Africa, and France. When we got home, I pulled out a map and showed the kids where the stories took place.

I like how they define so many diverse concepts throughout the stories: epipens, Jean-Paul Sartre, Bach, what to do when chased by bandits in Mexico, what the missionary life is like, how to deal with grief and loss, how to like annoying people, how to rejoice with those who rejoice even when they got what you still don’t have and many others. This audio drama certainly has broadened their horizons.

For $25, you can get all 12 episodes of the second season on four CDs. If you prefer the MP3 album, it is only $17.

I would like to know how Susan Brinkman keeps her voice calm, cheerful and gentle while pregnant, grieving the loss of her stillborn twins, taking care of eight children, AND traveling overseas. I only have two children and a one-hour trip is a major stressor.

The stories are intended for all ages, but several episodes get a bit intense for younger listeners. Jack Brinkman comes on to give you that warning in the beginning of those particular episodes. He says that, if the kids are under 10, they should make sure they have a parent listening with them. I can see why. After listening to the two episodes on Sapphire Slaves, my son told me he was a bit afraid and sad for the boys in the mine. He even had a bad dream about it.

If you wanted to learn more about the stories and the people in the stories, their website contains pictures, videos and more information about each episode. They encourage the children to open their Bible, find their favorite verse, and share it with them on their site.

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3 Activities for Earth Day 2014

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In our homeschool, we celebrated Earth Day this year with three activities:

1. Trash pick-up around our neighborhood.

It rained on April 22, so we could not pick up trash in our neighborhood. We did it today, two days later, after the ditches dried up. The kids love to get into the ditches to pick up trash and I would prefer not to have to clean up muddy boots. Boy and girl pick up trash in a ditch

We filled up five shopping bags or 13 gallons worth of bottles, cans, plastic pieces, Styrofoam cups, Subway sandwich wrappers, candy bags and bits of papers. Some paper was pink, which delighted my daughter, who loves all things pink. Pink trash!

Boy and girl with 13 gallons of trash they picked up for Earth Day

One would think we live in a trashy neighborhood, but we don’t. Most trash was around overnight rentals, which are about six homes down from our house.

2. Coloring a Crayola page with an Earth Day theme.

We talked about the Earth being a gift from God, its Creator. I gave them envelops with their names on them, which contained a picture of the Earth. I told them God gave the Earth to them and all of us as a gift, so we can enjoy the plants and animals and air and mountains and seas. As such, we should take good care of it. It’s called stewardship.

The envelop idea came from Horizons Preschool, a curriculum I am loosely working through with my daughter. The whole thing went along nicely with our Apologia worldview curriculum called “What On Earth Can I Do?” – review coming up in May, by the way.

3. Planting an AeroGarden.

Somebody gave us this amazing contraption about a year ago. I kept it in the garage, thinking I would start this indoor water garden during the long winter months. Well, I never got around to it. I almost gave it away at one point.

We finally put it together and it’s looking good. Some of the seeds are already germinating. We can see them through the domes. It turns itself on for 16 hours and it shuts off for eight hours. A light comes on when I need to add water. Another light comes on when I need to add nutrients. For city girls like me, this is the perfect garden.

Speaking of gardens, we need to re-plant our small veggie patch. Two days after we planted our tomatoes and peppers, we got hail and snow. Even though I covered them, they shriveled up and died. If that’s not a metaphor for putting children out of their homes at an early age, when they are not yet prepared to face cold shoulders, teasing, competition, bullies and all the other harsh realities of a school setting.

Pepper plant shriveled up because of snow

Yes, everything brings me back to homeschooling.

By the way, my kids loved picking up trash and my son said he would like to do it every day. That’s probably because I told them that every day is Earth Day. Every day is our birthday. Being alive is a privilege worth celebrating. I told him we could plan on a weekly trash pick up around our neighborhood.

Isn’t homeschooling wonderful? We get to change events based on the weather without having to fill out paper work.