Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Geranium Nature Study

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July 8, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

When I take Tori to the store, I never know what she’ll ask for. Usually it’s something I just can’t refuse. The girl asks for purple cabbage most of the time!

So, when they had all these lovely geraniums on the front sidewalk, she fell in love and asked for two in each color.

They were a great price and so healthy-looking, so I said ok.

Dad found these great barrel planters and we lined those with plastic and potting soil.

ready to plant geraniums

The girls went to work! Love the cooperation.

planting geraniums

Proud sweet little gardening sisters.

geraniums planted

I love having these gorgeous pots on either side of my front door!

geraniums

And of course, we have to extend the lesson by learning about geraniums.

We love the challenges on Handbook of Nature Study Blog.

Our favorite notebooking resource (where the geranium page and lots more are):

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: garden, nature study

Learning About Life Cycles

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June 27, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Moving Beyond the Page

We reviewed the Moving Beyond the Page science and literature units Lifecycles  Age 7-9: Concept 3 – Cycles: Unit 1 and Charlotte’s Web Age 7-9: Concept 3 – Cycles: Unit 2.

I love that everything I need is included. I was surprised when a big box came with all this:

  • ages 7-9 – unit 3_1 – Science Unit – Lifecycles by Kim A. Howe, M.S.
  • What Is a Life Cycle? by Bobby Kalman
  • Who Eats What? by Patricia Lauber, ill. Holly Keller
  • Green Earth Butterfly Kit
  • ages 7-9 – unit 3_2 – LA – Charlotte’s Web (/Online) by Kim A. Howe, M.S.
  • Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White, ill. Garth Williams

We were already underway with caterpillars in our butterfly habitat and we already had big sister’s copy of Charlotte’s Web. The girls were thrilled to each have their own copies to read together. I loved it.

We learned plot with this flow chart.

Charlotte's Web Plot Chart
Charlotte's Web Plot Notebooking

I was impressed with the girls doing so much writing so well!

The girls worked on spelling words. I think vocabulary words would have been more helpful. I made my own list after this wasn’t super successful.

Charlotte's Web spelling words

Kate did not really like the spelling sheets.

writing spelling words

Tori really loathed the spelling assignments.

spelling worksheet

They loved this graphic organizer in the spider shape!

IMG_8178.jpg

They wrote what we learned in our reading on the “legs.”

spider notebooking

Tori enjoyed this writing assignment.

Spider Research notebooking

Here are the extra reading books we chose at the library. Kate loved this unit. She is an animal lover!

Life Cycles Books

Kate loved reading the books for the unit.

Who Eats What Book

We found three lovely and very different spiders in our front hedge. None like Charlotte though!

Look at this guy’s stripes!

spider in web

I think this one is the same species as the one above, but a lighter color.

spider

This is a wolf spider because of his eyes.

wolf spider

We even got a fun new pet that we love to watch every day: a leopard frog tadpole! His name is Sméagol. He’s just beginning to grow back legs.

IMG_1670.jpg

Here are our five chrysalids with one starting to jiggle.

first butterfly

Our first butterfly!

chrysalis

Butterflies produce meconium that looks like blood after they come out of the chrysalids.

butterflies coming out of chrysalis

They like oranges!

butterfly on fruit

Proud butterfly mama Kate!

holding drinking butterfly

This one acted almost drunk on the sugar water nectar! He didn’t want to fly away!

butterfly drinking

Final shot before the 5th butterfly took off.

butterfly

In the Life Cycles lesson book, there are 9 lessons and a final project. The first page is a How to Use for Parents with a suggested schedule.

Love the vocabulary list and projects! We discussed living things and life cycles. We compared different animals and insects. And there was even a lesson on plants life cycles.

I had these fun magnets that we used for plants. We had done a garden study and we have a vegetable garden, so we’ve been working on that as a family and it was great hands-on learning! (There are some great notebooking pages in the lesson book though!)

plant life cycle magnets

Alex really loved Jack’s Garden. Dad read it to him. I read it to him. The girls read it to him. A favorite!

reading about bugs with Dad

We’re studying animals in our regular science program and this just ties right in. I love that. We got to create a new species as a project too! It offered conditions, questions, and info on life cycle and food chains to help us with our creations. A rubric is included for parents to evaluate the project. A quiz is also available to assess the unit.

The girls completed a butterfly book about all they learned.

notebooking life cycles

They drew the life cycle of butterflies.

life cycles notebooking

Kate read me the book about butterflies. She loves reading!

butterfly book

I made this bulletin board for our unit

life cycles vocabulary

vocabulary page in the Life cycles unit

Charlotte's Web vocabulary

we discussed senses in a barn

IMG_8545.jpg

Kate reads her instructions to write about barn sensory experiences. When I asked how they would feel in a barn, Kate said “nervous” and Tori said “happy.” So funny!

senses Charlotte's Web

The girls write down our discussion and draws the barn from Charlotte’s Web

I love the online component for Charlotte’s Web. I can print the pages needed for our assignments. They offer written and drawing pages and I let the girls choose (was surprised by their choices!). If members have great lesson ideas, we can submit those to the IdeaShare forum!

The headings at the top are Intro, Activities, and Conclusion. It’s a well-organized lesson plan. There are four activities with multiple printable choices depending on the child’s writing abilities. You can click on Table of Contents to download or save printables. There are seven lessons and a final project. Suggested times are included.

We’ve never really used unit studies because I find it difficult to work into our regular schedule, but these are so well-written and fun, I definitely want to make room to do more! Summer is perfect for units!

The Charlotte’s Web online package is $20.92, with novel included. The unit lesson book alone is $12.93.

The Life Cycles package $45.92, including all materials needed. The unit lesson book alone is $16.99.

Click the images below to check out samples in literature, science, and social studies!

literature sample
science sample
social studies sample
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Filed Under: Schoolhouse Review Crew Tagged With: garden, nature study, review, spring

Utah Wildflowers

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June 26, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 7 Comments

We went camping and got these lovely Utah wildflower pictures!

desert-nature-study.jpg

Alex wanted to climb the hill.

hiking in the desert

Look at this beauty on the beach!

orange desert flowers

yucca

yucca.jpg

blooming in the rocks

rocky bloom.jpg

fuzzy buds

fuzzy blooms.jpg

yellow wonder

yellow desert flower.jpg

windblown tree

windblown tree.jpg

prickly pear cactus with buds

cactus.jpg

a kind of moss

moss.jpg

a lovely succulent flowering

flowering succulent.jpg

deer prints. big ones.

deer prints

I think the deer slept here

deer bed.jpg

precious little desert daisy

desert daisy.jpg

love yellow!

pretty yellow flower.jpg

almost ready to burst

prickly cactus.jpg

and here’s one who couldn’t hold it in any longer

purple cactus flower.jpg

lovely lichen on rocks

orange lichen.jpg

yellow daisy-like flowers

yellow daisies.jpg

Here’s the view from the top of the hill. Lovely! That’s our campsite with friends. We have the white truck.

campers

Do your own wildflower study!
We love notebooking about nature!

Flowers and Weeds Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Utah Tagged With: botany, camping, desert, flowers, hiking, nature study, Utah

Park Day

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June 18, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We love finding new parks. This one has a huge field and playground, but tucked down a path is a lovely pond and trails and loads of wildlife. My kinda park.

park-nature

I plan to do notebooking pages on some of these wonderful animals when certain girls get finished with their nature camps this month!

Wood ducks are so fun and colorful.

baby ducks

Tori loved the turtles. They have red bellies, hence their names. {also called cooters}

turtles

These ducks are a puzzle. They have the coloring of a mallard, but their heads aren’t shaped right. I think maybe they crossed with a widgeon.

ducks

Pelicans and great blue herons

herons

a cute little squirrel checking us out, probably a red squirrel

squirrel

cute kids on rocks

kids on rocks

a mourning cloak butterfly

mourning cloak butterfly

cute kids in a tree

kids on log

I think this is a crabapple tree. I love the blossoms about to burst open!

crabapple blossoms

We all had lots of fun looking at the birds and bugs and flowers.

We will definitely go back to this park to see the ducks grow up and the changes with the seasons.

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Nature Center Day

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May 16, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Mother’s Day weekend is seldom a holiday. For me, it’s race weekend and Kate’s birthday.

On Saturday, we all piled in the van to go up to Ogden Nature Center. Way too early.

Tori ran a 5K with her dad. She’s our athlete.

runners.jpg

It’s a statue. Honestly, I stared at it waiting for it to move. sigh.

heron statue.jpg

There’s a great bird sanctuary at the center.

These lovely ladies were cheering on the runners.

bald eagle.jpg
hawk.jpg

My big boy!

big boy.jpg

Kate turned 6 years old!

6th birthday.jpg

Liz’s attitude has improved tremendously lately. Prayer really works. And we just don’t fall for that whole western tween/teen mentality at all. More on that later.

big sister.jpg

Tori was hurting and didn’t want to finish the second lap.

tired runner.jpg

Perseverance paid off. She was the youngest female in the 5K and got 3rd place for her age group of 1-12 {after two 10 year olds}!

youngest participant 5K medal.jpg

And she got the coolest raffle prize – this little binocular, magnifier, compass thing. I was in the gift shop looking at these to buy one for her when I heard her name called for the raffle. God cares even about the little things.

bino set prize.jpg

In the nature center, they have a new teaching beehive. Super cool. Scroll really quick if you don’t want to see them up close.

beehive.jpg

Pretty shiny golden darlings. Making yummy honey.

honeybees.jpg

The coolest nature sensory evarrrr! I want it. I want Aaron to make me one. Imbedded with mirrors and magnifiers.

sensory table.jpg
Alex thought the snake skins were cool.

snake skins.jpg

It was a lovely day.

and we grabbed a nature camp brochure. Alex is in from when he went last year. aw

ONC brochure
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: 5K, nature study, outdoors, race, running

Garden Unit Study

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May 10, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

We had fun in the sun this month!

My son came running inside to tell me: “I found a holy poly. Come take a picture!”

But he wouldn’t touch it. Nope.

looking at bugs

Our home garden is growing.

We’re a military family who has always rented and we are so fortunate to be able to play in this yard and have some freedom to do what we want.

We have a small garden patch for vegetables.

I have herbs in our little front courtyard.

I love flowers and have various bulbs, perennials, and annuals in the yard.

I’m excited to see strawberries soon!

strawberry flower

I saw a Pinterest thing about using rotisserie containers as greenhouses. Voilà.

seeds in little greenhouses
seeds in greenhouses

We shall have colorful flowers soon! Dad likes to garden. I like to enjoy the fruits of his labor.

Fluffy little flower seeds.

seeds

Showing Alex the tiny seeds that will grow into pretty flowers.

looking at seeds

Liz being silly planting my new rosemary plant.

herb garden

She stole my garden clogs. And who gave her permission to grow so tall all of a sudden?!

planting rosemary

Alex helped Dad plant the tomatoes and peppers

digging in the garden

Planting radishes. I think one grew and the other seeds were duds.

radish seeds

lots o’ peppers: jalapeño, habanero, Serrano, and several colors of bell. They like the warmth of the cinder blocks and box planter.

planting peppers

Tulips! I love tulips. I think those purple pointed ones are favorites.

tulips

And some red tulips on the other side of the yard…

red tulip

Little brother pulling his big sisters around the awesome nursery when we bought the garden plants.

at the garden center

Tori was impressed with all the varieties of thyme and lavender. She also loves the essential oils we use.

herbs

Tori and Kate argued that it’s more cost-effective to just purchase this Honeycrisp apple tree than to continue to pay almost $4/lb for the apples at the store. Yes, if we could stay put and not rent.

apple tree

This killdeer limped, displayed his feathers, and squawked at us to get away from his nest!

killdeer

Garden Resources:

  • Grow herbs on a sunny windowsill
  • Visit a community garden
  • Visit a botanical garden
  • Visit a nature center
  • Go hiking and observe the plants you see
  • Learn about different seasons and what grows when
  • My Gardening Pinterest board
  • Learn about Seeds
  • Container Gardening
  • Learn about Canning and Preserving Garden Foods
  • Garden Preschool Pack from Homeschool Creations
  • Garden Planner Pages from Hip Homeschool Moms
  • These fun printables to focus on gardening
  • 123 Homeschool 4Me
  • Homeschooling Hearts and Minds
  • In All You Do
  • Living Montessori Now
  • The Natural Homeschool
  • My Humble Kitchen
  • The Happy Housewife
  • Starts at Eight
  • Homeschool Share
  • Homeschool Den
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Charlotte Mason, garden, nature study, spring

Spring Nature Study

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April 26, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Y’all know I love notebooking. And nature. And trees.

IT’S SPRING!

How good can it get?

The warm and sunny weather has found us longing to get outside and soak it all up.

I have stacks of printed notebooking pages on spring but we’ll have to wait for a rainy day to sit at the table and do those! Time for a spring nature study!

I love tulips! We have cheerful red and yellow tulips popping up in the flower beds.

yellow tulip

Happy boy to be out barefoot in the sunshine!

swing in backyard

Alex helped his daddy build the trellis frame for peas. We have little tiny pea plants shooting up green through the soil.

garden trellis

Peach blossoms in our yard.

peach blossoms

 We love Notebooking Pages.

Nature Study Journal Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Charlotte Mason, nature study, spring

Measuring Snow

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January 29, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

It’s been rather cold and snowy here for {too long} about 3 weeks. The kids loved it at first.

We’ve never seen deep snow before! It was light and fluffy and they sank into it. Now, it’s icy and crunchy and not so fun anymore.

snow babies

Alex begs to be bundled up so he can go play in the snow for about 5 minutes, then he’s crying to come inside. I don’t blame him!

snow boy

Tori loves the snow. She loves playing outside in all weather.

snow baby

Measuring the snow and studying shadows like a sundial.

yard stick snow

Pretending the snow is like quicksand. I sure wasn’t coming out to save them!

waist deep snow

My husband loves me enough to bring the bird feeders to the back door for me to fill them without having to actually go outside.

Snow is for the birds.

IMG_6482.jpg

Read about our winter nature walk that I’m glad we worked on before the snow storms! We have some fun scientific snow studies to work out later this week. We also looked really hard and studied winter colors through the window. We completed notebooking pages.

Check out my winter Pinterest board!

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: nature study, snow, Utah, winter

Snow Unit Study

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January 6, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We’re having fun with winter art and nature study! We plan to learn about snow and winter themes all month long!

We had fun with art and science, learning about snow.

I used painter’s tape to make snowflake shapes and the kids finger-painted the poster.

resistance snowflake art
snowflakes with tape

After the paint dried, I pulled off the tape, and voila! lovely wintry decoration!

finished snowflake art

The kids loved coloring in their winter colors grid. 

winter notebooking

Alex saw orange and purple among all the gray and white. He looked really hard out that window!

bubba.jpg

a fun snowflake magnifying and matching activity with Snowflake Bentley’s snowflake pictures. We will read that book later this week! It’s on hold at the library. also from the winter nature study eBooks.

snowflake magnifying activity

our winter sensory bin table.

When Alex tells you that he’s “making dinner” and then you hear water running, please know that the sensory bin will be soon destroyed. I had originally put packing peanuts in the bin for “snow.” Yeah, those were disintegrated.

snow sensory bin

a fun craft on clearance. little snow fuzzies

snow buddies

our January poem on our monthly theme board

January poem

our January calendar about the Arctic and Antarctica

January calendar board
The Snowman magnets
icicles
snowflake clings
snowman blends
snow playdough
snowflake graphing
making Danish wedding or “snowball” cookies

Our Snowy Activities

  • First Snow Ever
  • Painting Snow
  • Measuring Snow
  • Frozen Bubbles
  • Sledding
  • Snow Fort
  • Winter Tot School
  • Winter Nature Walk
  • Winter Nature Hike
  • Winter Bird Study
  • Winter Unit Study
  • Winter Book List
  • Antarctica Unit

Check out my winter Pinterest board with all the fun ideas I hope to make use of this month!

Snow Resources:

  • Heart and Soul Homeschooling
  • A Homeschool Mom
  • The Homeschool Mom
  • Home Schoolroom
  • Year Round Homeschooling
  • Look We Are Learning
  • Nature Glo eScience
  • Homeschool Scientist
  • Healthy Slice of Life
  • Frugal Homeschooling Mom
  • Homeschool Share
  • Real Life at Home
  • Life Over C’s
  • Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus
  • His Mercy is New
  • As We Walk Along the Road
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Filed Under: Homeschool, Poppins Book Nook Tagged With: art, nature study, sensory bin, snow, unit study, winter

Autumn Leaves

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October 25, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

Not many of the leaves have changed completely in the valley yet.

I picked a few for the kids to do leaf rubbings.

Fall Leaves Craft

I found these fun leaf books and they rubbed different leaves in different colors.

The girls did really well and didn’t need any help!

Leaf Rubbings
Tori studied the leaves with a magnifying glass. She loved seeing all the veins and colors up close.
Leaves under the Microscope
Liz raked a pitiful pile of leaves and jumped on it!
Leaf Raking
Leaf Pile
It was more Alex’s size of a leaf pile.
Raking Leaves
Jumping in a Leaf Pile

Follow Jennifer’s board Autumn on Pinterest.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: fall, leaves, nature study

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