Yes we are still on that topic

There are a few questions that I have come to dread. One of them is “what did you do in school today?” – hmmm. Well my daughter will often answer with “Nothing”. There are two reasons she often says this. Firstly she gets a bit irritated that people, who she talks to on a weekly basis still ask her, after 7 years what she does in school, because she is not is school and as she points out how can they keep forgetting she does not attend school but expect her to remember times tables. (Totally agree with her and by the way she knows her times table she just hates people thinking they need to quiz her on them.) And the second point she makes is she often says “Nothing£ because she has not been doing school work. What she means by this is she does not consider writing a story that she enjoys, reading one of her History books or working on a timeline school work. Those are things that she enjoys, that she chooses to do with her time and she will not classify that as school work like her school-going friends classify subjects that they do not enjoy. (Again I have no problem with her logic).

But as I am sure you can imagine this does cause concern amongst some people.

The other answer that this line of questioning may get is again a very truthful answer “oh I am still working on my Anglo-Saxon history”, or my son might say “we have been looking at Insects”. The problem with this arises when they keep giving the same answer over a few weeks or even longer. The questioner then sometimes follows up with “Are you still on that topic? Isn’t it time you learnt someone new?”. And then I get FRUSTRATED.

PLEASE DO NOT RUSH MY KIDS WHEN THEY ARE LOVING A TOPIC!

Just step back, keep you “wise” words to yourself.

I have a BIG issue with this.

We have now been home educating our kids for 7 years. And I will admit in the first year possibly second year or so I had a similar attitude. I wanted to do a new topic very month. So we could cover everything and not have those dreaded gaps that you always hear about. But I no longer worry about that.

What I do care about is seeing two kids who are engaged. And I mean REALLY engaged in topics they are learning about. They are constantly seeking out new resources and learning details that blow my mind. When I was their age I would never have been able to discuss these topics like they can. Never. And what people underestimate is when the kids are engaged in a topic the learning that happens is not just in the areas that you may think. Yes both of mine are constantly reading up about areas they are interested in (so reading is covered). They both are writing stories about their topics (creative writing huge big tick here if you saw the number of pages of writing), pictures are often drawn (art), timelines created, family trees (maths needed here), hybrids created (a lot of science involved in this), habitats discussed, creature adaptations discussed – I could go on and on but I hope you get the point. And the beauty of this is I am not driving any of this learning. They are. I never ask them to write a story about the topics, they choose too, the drawings, they do that themselves, they sit and work on their projects without anyone asking because they are interested. So NO I am not rushing them onto something new.

The old me understands this need to finish a topic and move on. But the home educator me, the one who gets to see the results knows not to give in.

Last year we spent a huge amount of time lost in a Viking world of Fictional stories and Non-fiction reading. Huge amount of time. LOTS. But the amazing thing about all that was watching how the kids developed as a result. My then 7-year old’s reading ability and reading confidence rocketed. I have seen how this year he is confidently picking up books, complex books and losing himself in them without needing anyone’s assistance. And I know that is largely down to the amount of Viking reading we did last year. So all of that time of the Vikings was NOT a waste.

The Viking topic is also what started my daughter’s love for History. It sparked the interest in creating timelines, in seeing who took the power from who and were they related or was it a case of defeat. The Viking topic unlocked her biggest area of interest – History.

My son is fascinated with Reptiles, Insects (using Insects in a broad term which he would not be happy about) and Amphibians.  Totally fascinated.  But learning about these creatures has lead him into a massive Geography area.  He has been reading up about how they adapt for different terrains and then researching those terrains – learning about mountains, rivers, areas like desert and even plotting them onto maps.  From learning about these creatures we learnt about some mountains and ended up learning how the local Nepalese people’s bodies have adapted to high altitudes.  Total tangent.  But when you leave the kids to totally loose themselves in the topics they want to they end up on these tangents by themselves and they find it equally interesting.

When the kids find a topic they are truly interested in and they learn about it their confidence soars.  Both of mine no longer just read a book and accept what the author has written about the topic nor do they accept that an adult knows more about a topic than them. In some instances they will disagree and be able to construct their argument as to why they disagree.  My son recently found an error in a publication and was so confident he was correct he asked me to email the publishers.  I did.  And they replied agreeing with my son and informed us they will correct the publication going forward.  That right there not accepting that everything you read is correct, being able to apply your knowledge and explain why you disagree.  That is worth letting the kids spend ages on topics they choose.

So if you are worried we are too History or Animal Science orientated.  Please don’t.  We are covering a lot more than you may realise, we just cover it from angles that the kids find interesting.  And along the way the kids are learning valuable lessons about driving their own learning, creating their own projects, managing time, arguing a case, being independent in their thinking.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

To Clarify – for any new readers – we follow a semi-structured approach.  We do Maths every day in a fairly structured manner, some English as well and then a lot of Topic work/ themed projects for “other subjects”.

Posted in Homeschooling | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Warrior Monkeys – a fun read

Last week we received some books from Oxford University Press and included in our little parcel was Warrior Monkeys and the Volcano Adventure. My son picked it up and read it cover to cover. For me that is the magic sign that he likes a book – when he just sits and reads until it is finished. And when he was finished he went and looked in the box to see if there was another one (they are publishing a follow up towards the end of the year).

Reading Warrior Monkeys and the Volcano Adventure

I was very interested so I asked what it was about the book that he liked. His response “Well, there are monkeys and armoured bears that do Kung-Fu, oh and the good guys win and they stop a volcano from exploding. Mom are you sure the next book is not out yet. Have you searched on Amazon, did you type in Warrior Monkeys?”  Yip that is my son talk for – this book was a HIT.

It is a sweet adventure story of two friends – Suki and Bekko who are trainee warrior monkeys. They basically go on an adventure and save the island from being blown up. But what I really liked about this book was how the author effortlessly wove a few interesting concepts into the adventure plot. Ideas like friends are people who think about how their actions affect you. Really a powerful concept for kids to think about it. And how being brave is actually when you are scared to do something but you still try. Also not to give up when something does not go right the first time, perseverance, when you get scared try and calm yourself down oh and a number of other great life-lessons / life-concepts.

I like books like this. Interesting characters that engage my son but also stories that teach positive lessons.  Because let’s be honest learning some important concepts from cool warrior monkeys is just fun.

Oh a practical note – the author has written it in a style that makes for easy reading but she has also managed to include some good challenging words.

Warrior Monkeys and the volcano adventure includes some good vocab for young readers

And they have printed it in clear, easy to read font (my son recently got frustrated with a different book where the font was just too arty and really not easy to read). The illustrations included are also excellent – we loved the armoured bears (kind of reminded up of the armoured rhinos in Kung-Fu Panda).

Warrior Monkey and the Volcano Adventure. A cool story about some sweet kung-fu monkeys and other characters

My son and I think this is a fun read for ages 7+. There is nothing scary and the characters are sweet and entertaining. We recommend this book.

Warrior Monkeys and the Volcano Adventure. A fun adventure story about monkeys and bears that do martial arts

We were given our copy of the book.  But you can also buy it online here Warrior Monkeys and the Volcano Adventure

I do include Affiliate links. If you follow an affiliate link and go on to purchase that product, I will be paid a very small commission, however your cost will remain the same. I only include affiliate links for products that we use and love.

Warrior Monkeys and the Volcano Adventure. A fun adventure story about monkeys who are learning martial arts

 

Posted in Book Ideas | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Story of the Second World War for Children. Book Review

I must admit I have been avoiding the World Wars with the kids purely because I think they are complex, scary topics and I want to do them justice but I also don’t want to cause nightmares. Recently my daughter started asking question about the start of the First World War – she is fascinated by Queen Victoria and found the fact that three of her grandsons were on opposing sides intriguing. So we started to look at the build up to the First World War. And then this book arrived in the post and I stashed it away. I wanted to rather focus on the First World War before we start reading about the Second. But I happen to know someone who is looking at the Second World War and I think this book is an excellent resource which has been specially written for kids around 9+years so I thought it would be good to write a review, share pictures and thoughts on it, even though we are not actually using it YET.

The Story of the Second World War for Children. Informative without any gorry details

Let me start by saying this book is TRUELY written for children (they say 10+ to read but realistically my 8 year old would manage fine). So it is aimed at that market. Which means they have hidden the more horrific side. They are NO disturbing pictures – what I mean by that – no pictures of dead bodies, of people being shot at point blank range and even the holocaust pictures are some of the most child-appropriate that I have seen.  There are a number of pictures showing battle scenes and the result of battles – the destruction, but no dead bodies. So if you have sensitive kids I think this book really would be okay.

The Story of the Second World War for children. Images of destruction

It really is written for the kids but they have not ignored important facts or dumbed it down in any way.  They have stuck to the facts, included all significant events yet written it in a manner that keeps the gory, nightmare-inducing aspects out.  I have really been impressed with this.

The layout is designed to make it easy for kids to digest. Double pages with lots of black and white photographs, maps and diagrams.  And the paragraphs are short and concise.  Really easy to read.

The Story of the Second World war for children. An example of a double page spread

This book is an introduction to a vast and complex topic.  They manage to cover a LOT of points from the build-up, to different stages of the war, how the war affected people (like the home front, the resistance and the Holocaust) and the the end of the war and new technologies that arose as a result of the war.  There really is a LOT covered but it is all written in the kid-friendly style, of easy to digest paragraphs.  

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

I really liked the way the broke the war done into the significant battles/ stages and how the used multiple maps to show the different stages. Really liked this aspect.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

I thought it was very easy to read and understand, they cover a lot but don’t do gory details. I have really been impressed with this book- really Impressed (oh and in case anyone is wondering it was written in partnership with the Imperial War Museum – so you can be assured the facts are correct).

We were given our copy of this stunning book by the publishers.

I have seen it in a few bookstores or you can buy it online from Amazon The Story of the Second World War for Children

I do include Affiliate links. If you follow an affiliate link and go on to purchase that product, I will be paid a very small commission, however your cost will remain the same. I only include affiliate links for products that we love

 

Posted in History | Tagged , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

50m Swim Challenge

Today something amazing happened. Both my kids swan 50 metres non-stop. Wow!

Now I realize for some of you that probably sounds normal, not something to get over-excited about. But as a mom of two sensory kids this has been a LONG journey for us, filled with lots of tears (both the kids and myself) and frustration. But if there is one thing sensory processing disorder has taught me is that you need to celebrate all the wins, even the wins that most people would not consider that important. Every one counts ! And  importantly it gives you and your kids the encouragement to keep trying, keep trying those things that come natural to most kids but may be a struggle for those dealing with sensory issues.

50 m swim distance

One of the amazing things about our swimming journey that we are on has been watching their swim teacher. She is the third teacher that we have tried but she has really taken the time to understand the kids. The very first time I met her at the pool she climbed in with us and started talking to the kids and listened to them explain what they found difficult, immediately both kids were relaxed with her because she was listening. She never tried to tell my daughter that water is not sore, she never told her that the way she feels was wrong or does not matter – and believe me that is important because it builds trust. Telling a child that what they feel is not valid, is just plain wrong, it DOES NOT build trust.

I am not going to sugar-coat it and say getting the kids to this stage has been easy. It has not. They both really struggled in swimming pools for AGES. We had a number of set-backs, there were lots of time when they did not want to go to the pool or when they wanted to get out after just a few minutes. It often felt like 1 steps forwards 5 steps backwards. I got frustrated MANY times, I cried over this a number of times. It has NOT been easy. It has taken us a lot of trips to the pool where we just played and they have had a lot of lessons to get us to this point. It has been slow. Yip no sugar-coating here.

But all of that said, it has been worthwhile. All of the trips to the pool, all of the lessons (we are still having lessons so they can improve their swimming technique and learn other things – they honestly just enjoy their swimming lessons now), the tears and frustration – all of that has been worth it. Why? Well the obvious reason they can now swim by themselves (really good life skill). But more than that. They have both proved to themselves that if they work at something, something that they initially found challenging, they can succeed. They have learnt not all things happen quickly, sometimes it takes a lot longer than expected but the important thing is not to give up.

I am incredibly proud of my two kids. I am proud that they worked hard at something they found difficult and kept trying.

And I think it is a good reminder – never underestimate a determined kid!

Posted in SPD | Tagged , , , , , | 5 Comments

Fraction of a Number Domino Sets

I recently made my kids some new Fraction dominoes this time so they could practice calculating a fraction of a number (e.g. 2/5 of 150 – so the kids divide by the denominator (150 ÷ 5) and then multiple the answer by the numerator (30 x 2)).

I made three different sets. To begin with there is a really easy set which is how my son started practicing this.  This set is mainly halves, quarters, thirds with a few one-fifths and one-tenths added.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Then the second set is a bit harder – the fractions get a bit more interesting and it would be good if the kids already knew their times tables.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

And finally the third set where the idea is the kids should first simplify the fractions before they work out what the fraction of the number is. (e.g.  9/12 of 40 – first simplify the 9/12 to 3/4 and then work out what 3/4 of 40 is – remember when the kids simplify fractions they must always divide both numerator and denominator by the same number).

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

I am attaching all three sets below for anyone who wants to use them. They are free to download but please be considerate and don’t upload them onto other sites and claim you made them.

Fraction of a number – easy set

Fractions of a number easy version

Fraction of a number the 2nd set

Fractions of a number

Fractions of a number 3rd set – where you need to simplify the fraction first

Fractions of a number need to simplify fractions first

 

Admin Bit – these domino sets where created by me for my kids to use. They are free for others to download and use but they do belong to ofamily learning together. You may not store them directly on your own personal website and claim them as your own. You also may not distribute them or try and sell them to others.

3 Free to download Maths Domino sets to use when calculating what the fraction of a number is. Maths activity

Posted in Home education resources | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments