Thursday, February 10, 2011

Fine Print



TODAY'S ACTIVITIES:
  • Sorting
  • Making Patterns
  • The Phonetic Alphabet
  • Lauri Puzzles
  • Bead Stringing

Hi, my name is Megan, and I am addicted to my new (!) printer. My poor husband has no clue that I have fallen passionately in love with the gorgeous, sleek, black machine that came home with me last Monday and now sits upstairs, spurring to action at my command, spewing out perfect page after perfect page. I shudder to think that this affair may one day end in hair-pulling, handwringing frustration--it is an HP printer, after all--I mean, I'd really hate to go all Office Space on such an aesthetically pleasing piece of equipment. Thankfully, as of now my printer and I are still happy honeymooners, madly in love and printing with wild abandon.


Now that I can print anything anytime, I'm realizing just how much the internet has to offer homeschooling moms like me. It's fantastic, but it's also a little overwhelming. Surfing the web, perusing all the wonderful websites supplying educational resources, I'm reminded of how I feel whenever I go shopping at thrift stores: I know there are gems to be found but I don't know whether I have the energy to search through rack after endless rack to find them. Luckily, I don't have to actually leave the house and wander through some old musty-smelling store to search for good, appropriate educational materials and activity ideas. The internet is literally on my lap, at my fingertips, so I can sit back at night with the TV on and browse around while sort of paying attention to Mythbusters or The Daily Show or Top Chef or whatever.


This morning, I put a couple new activities on our school shelves--one sorting, one patterning--the materials for which I found on www.montessoriforeveryone.com (in the "Free Downloads" section). Parker chose the sorting activity first, probably because its big red Xs appealed to him. (He's loving X-ing things out.) It's basically "One of These Things Is Not Like the Other," like those old Sesame Street segments. I at first thought he didn't understand the point of the activity, because he kept X-ing out the black bird in the first four-set (a set three birds and a stack of plates and cups). I finally realized (over an hour later, of course) that he'd singled out the black bird as not belonging because it was the only thing that wasn't colorful (the other two birds were multicolored, as well as the plastic tableware).


X-ing out the black bird.

The nest doesn't belong in this one!

Parker found the pattern activity a little more challenging. We've been creating simple two-item patterns (e.g., rock-leaf-rock-leaf) together for a while now, mostly just for fun while we're at the beach or coloring or bead stringing. (Or even eating and drinking. Parker will alternate bites/sips, then exuberantly declare, "There's a pattern in my tummy, Mommy!") In the activity I downloaded, the aim is to complete various patterns, which consist of three items rather than two (like apple-orange-fruit basket, as in the picture below). We'll definitely have to keep working on these more complex sequences.

The pattern strip needed to pretend to be an inch worm before we could proceed with the pattern work.

We repeated the phonetic alphabet practice we'd done on Monday. I didn't add any new letters or supplement the activity in any way. I want to be very careful not to overwhelm or pressure Parker as he learns to read and write. It's a long, elaborate undertaking, and there's nothing to be gained by hurrying him through it. That being said, he did remember all that we'd practiced on Monday--the sounds of a and t, and how to trace them, then write them in the salt--which surprised me. I thought I'd have to remind him, but apparently not.

I recently moved Parker's Lauri puzzles to his school shelves. In terms of the pacing of our school sessions, it occurred to me that he could benefit from taking a break from "desk work." Sure enough, after he'd been sitting at his table for a while, sorting and completing patterns and learning letters, Parker reached for his stack of puzzles, sat down on the floor and completed four of them. The Lauri puzzles are pretty difficult--they consist of just a bunch of different-sized shapes that you have to assemble within an empty frame--completing them helps Parker acquire an understanding of how two-dimensional shapes can fit together to form a picture.

Getting started on the helicopter puzzle.

Finishing the airplane puzzle.

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