Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Dinosaur Unit Study

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May 27, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

This month’s theme is dinosaurs!

We’ve had lots of fun playing and learning about dinosaurs this month.

Alex’s Dinosaur work

D is for Dinosaur and preK Letter D

Alex (and Dad and the girls) loved this little dino book made like Brown Bear What Do You See?

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Dino letter and number assessments from Making Learning Fun.

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Matching dinos with cards and facts. Get these great dino cards at Montessori Print Shop!

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Alex (and Dad) had fun with this printable dinosaur coloring book. And look at the cool crayons I found!

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Discussing and coloring with Dad!

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~Our dinosaur sensory bins~

The kids had fun brushing away the moon sand for these dino skulls. Kate was in charge of the card.

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We gathered all our dinosaur toys and some pinto beans and moss pieces to play. Rawr

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Tori and Kate’s Dinosaur activities:

We read and discussed dinosaur articles.

We read and notebooked out way through the wonderful chapter about dinosaurs in our science book: Land Animals of the Sixth Day by Apologia.

Our awesome field trip: Ogden Dinosaur Park! And we got a discount for being homeschoolers. They counted us as a school field trip. I love it.

We met a T-Rex (and info plaque) at the trailhead.

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I love this dinosaur.

PARASAUROLOPHUS
“Beside Saurolophus (Crested Lizard)”

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babies!
 
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We got a live one here! This little snake darted across our path. cool.
 
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mammals
 
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Trikey
 
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We ain’t skeered.
 
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I love how real this picture looks.
 
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foot print plaques
 
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going into the “tomb”…
 
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a fossilized allosaur
 
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BIG dinosaur
 
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a big sandbox fossil dig area
 
Liz being goofy. I hope she didn’t steal those brushes from a baby.
 
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watching real paleontologists at work!
 
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a wooly rhino!
 
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A fun new corner made to look like Jurassic Park the movie.
 
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Check out this interesting article about dinosaur skin!      

And of course, the Dinosaur on a Spaceship Doctor Who episode!

Liz is reading Jurassic Park for fun and we watched the movie.

We enjoyed many books from our shelves and the library.

  • Dinosaur Dance! 
  • Dragons Love Tacos
  • How Do Dinosaurs Say I Love You?
  • How Do Dinosaurs Say Goodnight?

We had an amazing month studying dinosaurs!

Dinosaurs Notebooking Pages

Linking up: Kids Activities Blog

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Wizard of Oz Unit

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April 29, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

We really enjoyed our Wizard of Oz Unit Study.

When I think of Wizards, I immediately think of the Great Oz. The kids and I love that horse in the movie. Check out the meaning of the phrase.

Weren’t there lots of unexpected turns in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz? {You can get all the books on Kindle for almost free!} Kate is already reading the 2nd one!

Of course, the girls and I saw the new Oz the Great and Powerful movie. Opening weekend!

I had loads of fun planning our Oz sensory bin.

Rainbow rice and pasta. Emerald beads in a bucket and bowtie. A wooden rainbow. Oz characters from Grandma and a lion finger puppet.

Oz sensory bin

Oz preschool pack printables.

I downloaded them for Alex. The girls loved it too.

Oz Preschool Pack

3 part matching cards. Alex is telling me they lost the match to the Cowardly Lion. sigh

Oz Montessori matching cards

We used the puppets to retell the plot and practiced the reading pages.

The kids are all coloring pages for their lapbooks!

Oz coloring pages

least and most favorite characters pages.

Oz characters pages

Kate and Tori both loved Dorothy and Tori disliked the Wicked Witch. Kate said the Cowardly Lion was annoying and talked too much. ha!

Oz characters notebooking

map work: coloring in the state of Kansas and color coding the regions of Oz.

Oz mapwork

I really love this one!

Paying it forward. Did you know that last Thursday was The Day?

We discussed how Dorothy was so kind and generous. She could have returned home to Kansas at any time had she known how. She wasn’t resentful at all but truly pleased that she helped her friends.

Tori and Kate wrote some ways she could be kind to others. I love this Pay It Forward printable! I also love it that it has a hot air balloon!

Kate said she could give flowers, food, and toys to friends. She could help with cooking.

pay it forward worksheet

Tori wrote that she could bake cakes and pick flowers for neighbors and friends, help Dad in the garden, clean up, help with Alex, and doing chores without being asked.

pay it forward notebooking page

Liz does research on Oz Wikia to compare movies to the book.

Oz-wiki.jpg

I found these awesome stickers of original illustrations! Love Dover!

Dover Oz Stickers

I’d gotten these fun glasses around Easter. Perfect for Oz play. Emerald goggles!

green shades

The girls finish up their lapbooks and notebooking:

Oz lapbooking

Tori is a “cowardly” reader. I gave her “liquid courage” to help. It’s just mango juice with some sweet and sour. I would’ve added some 7Up {‘cause fizzies always help!}, but we’re all out.

liquid courage juice

Resources:

  • Oz website
  • Oz Preschool Pack
  • Lapbook Printables
  • For fun: Movie bloopers
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Royalty Unit Study

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March 24, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

Welcome to the Poppins Book Nook Reading Club! Here’s my intro post a few weeks ago that explains it all. Each month we have a fun theme and read books and do crafts and stuff.

This month I used the royal theme with each of my children…

So we have a middle school unit, an elementary unit, and a preschool unit! I can’t guarantee I’ll do this much each month! (We did focus more on the elementary unit.)

PRESCHOOL

My main book for Alex (whom we call Bubba!) is Bubba, The Cowboy Prince. It’s a “Cinderella tale” and it’s cute and funny, with all sorts of cowboys twists to the story. We compared it to other Cinderella tales from around the world. We also read The Prince Won’t Go to Bed! Hilarious! And gave me lots of reasons to kiss on my boy.

And just look at my little knight, ready and willing to go slay anything that threatens my honor! I just love him.

My knight in shining armor
pledging his devotion

ELEMENTARY

We focused on Native Americans.

Our book selection for Tori and Kate was this The True Story of Pocahontas (Step-Into-Reading, Step 3).

We also read Pocahontas by d’Aulaire, but we realize it is inaccurate.

And we really got into this unit!

The girls drew and wrote and learned about Native Americans with Book 3: Native Americans, North America, Pilgrims (Draw-Write-Now) .

Draw Write Now Canoe

Here’s our library haul!

Kate especially loved the Indian Signals and Sign Language and I wish I’d gotten a picture of her practicing!

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Tori and Kate colored pictures I printed from online.

Here’s a fun anonymous poem I found and put on a pretty background. Feel free to download it and print it!

Did you know Pocahontas’ real name was Matoax or Matoaca/Matoaka – meaning Little Snow Feather?

And then she was known as Lady Rebecca when she traveled to England with her white husband, John Rolfe, and their son, Thomas.

We had this macrame belt kit from Grandma and I figured it out. It’s too difficult for the girls to complete right now. But it’s cute if I ever finish it.

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So we dyed noodles and made bead necklaces instead. This was a big hit with everyone!

bead craft

and made a cradle board or papoose for a doll with hot glue, a shoebox, flannel, and a belt.

baby papoose
papoose craft

And the girls LOVED playing with the Powhatan Indians Toob and Jamestown Settlers Toob and acting out all the stories we read in history!

And how perfect that the library storytime last week was all about royalty?

and the teacher even had this fun crown craft for the kids! I love her!

MIDDLE SCHOOL

The Young Royals collection from author Carolyn Meyer for Elizabeth. Liz loves this time period and all the Tudor royals are fascinating in these historical fiction biography diaries.

Elizabeth is cross-stitching a bracelet from a kit since needlework was popular during the Renaissance.

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Here are some books we already have and some from the library that fit with Liz’s theme.

She loves Shakespeare! We recently read Hamlet together.

Liz completed notebooking pages through our classical history curriculum, Tapestry of Grace, and printables from the Productive Homeschooling.

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This was a fun and versatile unit!

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Celebrating Purim

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February 21, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 13 Comments

I am pleased to offer a unit study on the holiday celebrating Esther and Purim.

My girls and I love to read about Esther. We love the story of a real-life princess who did wonderful things for her people and for God.

A list of Books, Videos, Music, Activities, and Crafts to go along with an Esther and Beauty Bible study.

My kids love to celebrate Purim and retell the story of Esther, complete with costumes and props and much noise.

We still love dressing up and reading the story of Esther in the Bible. We have noise makers and hiss whenever the name of Haman is said.

We listen to the Maccabeats and watch the video on YouTube.

We read the Bible story and recite the blessings and prayers in English and Hebrew. The holiday is usually in early March. And we eat.

Resources:

  • Purim How-To Guide
  • Purim at Home
  • Purim by Tori Avey
  • Purim with Kids
  • Awesome Purim Crafts
  • Grapevine Bible Studies Esther Review
  • Beauty in the Heart Bible Study
  • My Little Trees Esther Unit
  • Esther Bible Study from The Time Warp Wife
  • Esther Thru the Bible
  • 5 Things Kids Can Learn from Esther
  • Queen Esther Crafts
  • Hadassah: The Girl Who Became Queen Esther by Tommy Tenney
  • The Star of Persia by SP Townsend
  • Star of Persia: A Story Adapted from the Book of Esther by Marion Dawson Gunderson
  • Persia’s Brightest Star: The Diary of Queen Esther’s Attendant  by Anne Tyra Adams
  • Queen Esther the Morning Star by Mordicai Gerstein
  • Queen Esther by Tomie DePaola
  • The Story of Queen Esther by Jenny Koralek
  • Esther and the Very Brave Plan  by Tim Thornborough
  • Queen Esther’s Big Secret: A Purim Story  by Sarah Mazor
  • The Queen Who Saved Her People by Tilda Balsley
  • Esther’s Story by Diane Wolkstein
  • The Purim Story Told By Esther

Sign up by email to receive my FREE Esther Unit Study:

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Aint No Party Like a Time Lord Party

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January 15, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 17 Comments

Cuz a Time Lord party is not bound by typical temporal parameters and thus cannot stop.

The kids and I are quite the Whovians, much to the chagrin of my husband.

I have the T.A.R.D.I.S. text tone and 10th Doctor theme ringtone on my T.A.R.D.I.S. blue iPhone. My minivan is T.A.R.D.I.S. blue and really needs some stickers and a cool license plate cover (hint,hint). I have T shirts and other geek paraphernalia on my Pinterest and Amazon wish lists. Hoping I get some for my birthday or something, ya know? (That’s in March…)

So, after seeing a post on Star Trek and homeschooling, I thought I better add my sonic screwdriver bit to the Interwebz.

Homeschooling with Doctor Who

I think Doctor Who is a cross-curricular mega lesson, folks. It’s got a little bit of everything, and with a sexy British accent, too! It just doesn’t get much better than that!

So, let’s break it down for how we can teach the little ones using the new Doctor Who episodes. (Because, to be honest, I need to ramp up my efforts on watching the old episodes myself.) Now, some episodes are wee bit scary. Use caution. Always watch episodes before letting your kids loose in a dark basement to watch Daleks and Cybermen and other monsters wreak havoc in the universe. And always converse with your children about the show. We love discussing the what if moments.

So here are my ideas for a Doctor Who unit study.

I break it down by subject.

History:

Pompeii episode, one of our favorite episode series is during the London Blitzkrieg and Part II, another episode of WWII with his buddy Winston Churchill – “Victory of the Daleks,” killing Hitler (or putting him in the cupboard), The Great Depression (an American episode!), kissing Madame Pompadour in The Girl in the Fireplace.

The Doctor is called “Caesar” in the episode “The Pandorica Opens.” makes sense, no?

The fictional history of Gallifrey. a list of historical instances (fact and fiction) in Doctor Who episodes

Math and Science:

lots of technology and physics, relativity and time travel, astronomy, science…yet he struggles to simply count to 4…listing of science topics mentioned in Doctor Who episodes

Religion/Philosophy:

alien life, the devil, aliens with god complexes, Lazarus scientists, The Ood, angel statues, The Silence…it all sparks conversation no matter what your belief system. We like to talk ‘round here and I am not afraid to introduce philosophy and discuss what other people believe and why. Apologetics at its finest!

The Time Lord Victorious as a god?

(Source: ThetaKoshei)

Here are two interesting articles here and here discussing this inner turmoil and the ramifications for the universe. I don’t necessarily agree with everything here, but it’s interesting nonetheless.

(Source: mockingheartbeat, via devianta)

The Doctor’s nickname is Theta Sigma, used in the New Testament Greek as an abbreviation for God.

(source: Pearsecom)

The Master vs. The Doctor. ‘nuff said.

The Doctor as a Messiah figure? Read this article.

He regenerates and wakes from his coma just in time to save the day in the “Christmas Invasion.”

And look at this scene from “Voyage of the Damned.”

(Source: fiftyshadesoftennant, via mcelise)

“The Impossible Astronaut” (2011) kicks off series 6 with a pretty big and obvious allegory: the last supper.

  • Doctor Who invites all his most trusted “disciples” to a last evening meal
  • prominently featuring wine
  • and then insists that they do not intervene in what follows
  • His death is even attended by two women and a centurion!
  • And a mysterious stranger even shows up to help with the disposal of the body
  • The stigmata
  • The crucifixion position, which I think has been a feature of regeneration since 2005

Here’s a short list of religion in Doctor Who episodes…he’s playing the psychologist in our Christmas special “The Snowmen.”

He was being kind. All the power that The Doctor possesses and doesn’t utilize. Think about this for a moment. He can travel through space and time. All the changes he could make, but he maintains rules that he shouldn’t interfere. He does save people. Ordinary people who won’t disrupt the status of the universe. In The Waters of Mars, The Doctor realizes his potential and it is his downfall.

(Source: queencersei, via tennantsbluebox)

The idea of family.

The Doctor needs companions. He’s lonely and they keep him in check. loving Rose. strong and smart Martha. important yet forgetting Donna. ordinary and expectant Amy and powerful romantic Rory. enigmatic Clara. His adventurous “wife” River. His lost “daughter” Jenny. He lives with the guilt of failing. But he must carry on and love the people of Earth.

Humor: great opportunities to teach about sarcasm and lofty British humor. I usually have to explain the jokes to my kids. Perhaps this is why my husband doesn’t like it. He can’t understand their speech or their humor. Oh well.

Life lessons from Doctor Who article

Literature:

“The Shakespeare Code,” Agatha Christie episode: “The Unicorn and the Wasp;” allegories to great sci-fi lit and shows: such as in episode “The Empty Child.”

He explains he’s like Gandalf in episode “Meanwhile in the TARDIS.”

List of literary characters mentioned in Doctor Who episodes. Mention of real books in Doctor Who episodes. Study the science fiction genre!

Writing:

fan writing competition lessons (scripts)  

Art:

van Gogh episode. Brilliant. “Vincent and The Doctor.” And they didn’t really change a thing. or did they?

image

(Source: The Ultimate Ginger via Velaroye)

a not very good list of art mentioned in Doctor Who.

Here are some printable Doctor Who foldables and coloring pages here. All sorts of flashcards at Quizlet. made by all kinds of people, so I dunno.

River and The Doctor

Set your sonic screwdriver on these resources:

  • article historical figures in Doctor Who
  • definitive list of Doctor Who serial episodes on Wikipedia. or the official BBC episode list here.
  • Fun and Games from BBC

Tell me in the comments how you incorporate your favorite shows in your homeschool!

TARDIS
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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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Apple Tasting

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September 28, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

We had an apple tasting!

Kind of like a wine tasting, but with kids and no cheese or olives or fancy crackers. We did have water cups to cleanse our palates.

The kids had so much fun!

My favorite growing up was a Rome apple.

We bought every kind of apple we could find. There are so many apple varieties!

We ended up with 10 plus one from the neighbor’s apple tree. So, 11 apples to taste and compare and graph our findings.

Alex was excited to get started.

apple comparison

Liz helped Alex. He tried most of the apples. I didn’t make him graph anything. He just told us if he liked it or not. And he liked to tell me the colors.

big sister helping

Here is Tori’s completed graph. I see that she didn’t name her favorite or least favorite. She did circle two favorites and X the one she did NOT like.


apple tasting chart

I sliced the apples into fifths and we discussed fractions. We just read Fraction Apples, so it went well.

We counted seeds.

We discussed color, texture, and taste.

apple graphing

I helped the girls with their graphs by letting them copy mine after we discussed everything.

apple discussion

Alex ate half the Honeycrisp. Overall, that was everyone’s favorite. And the most expensive. He kept staring at it and saying, “I like it!” and biting it. So cute.

toddler tested

We love apples!

You might also like:

  • Canning Applesauce
  • Apple Mummies
  • Preschool Letter A
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Pumpkin Unit Study

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September 28, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Pumpkins mean autumn!

We love seeing the pumpkin patches and pumpkin decorations in September and October.

We’re cleaning out the garden. Most of the pumpkins are ripe and ready.

Aaron cut them and the kids carried them to the deck.

Little Pumpkins

Alex is telling me: “It’s HEAVY!”

Heavy Little Pumpkin

Katie is super excited it’s fall and October is next week!

Crazy Pumpkin

Tori always does the most work in the garden.

She’s already picked all the tomatoes and brought a few pumpkins to the deck.

She’s getting tired.

Tired Pumpkin

These are only few of our pumpkins. Not sure what to do with them all. They’re not eating pumpkins, but jack o’lanterns. They’re pretty for decorating though!

Pumpkins from the Garden

Pumpkin Unit Resources:

  • Here’s my autumn Pinterest board with lots of fall fun!
  • We made some yummy pumpkin streusel muffins
  • We love these pumpkin scones!
  • It’s always fun to head to the pumpkin patch and play!
  • Pumpkin math activities
  • Pumpkin unit from The Homeschool Scientist
  • Meet Penny Pumpkin Unit
  • Living Montessori Now Pumpkin Unit
  • Pumpkin Study from Enchanted Homeschooling Mom
  • The Biggest Pumpkin Ever Unit from The Proverbial Homemaker
  • In All You Pumpkin Printables
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Hummingbird Nature Study

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July 29, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Hummingbirds are probably one of my favorite animals. I feel so delighted watching them. They have such personality!

So, we have Mr. King Hummer who sits in our maple tree and guards the feeder. He chases away all other hummers and twitters at them. Sometimes, he’s so feisty he sounds like a hissing cat when he chases those others away!

Rufous Hummingbird
Hummer at Feeder

I like to sit on the deck with my morning coffee and watch him chase the lesser hummers. He often comes to eat and I was so pleased to get a few good shots of him at the feeder!

And we have this lovely trumpet vine that attracts hummers and bees. Do you see her? I think she’s a broad tailed or black chinned.

hummer

The girls are more difficult to identify. The rufous chases her and all others away from the feeder, but he leaves them alone at the vine.

Hummingbird Flying to Feeder
Hummingbird Drinking at Feeder
Hummingbird

I like to sit on the deck most mornings, drinking my coffee and watch the hummingbirds. They come to my feeder that is no more than a couple feet away from me.

They twitter at me and frolic and chase each other. I love it.

My husband captured these shots. They sure are fast!

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I got these with my iPhone.

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I’m pretty sure these are black chinned hummingbirds.

Check out this Outdoor Hour Challenge at Handbook of Nature Study blog

I only had ruby throated hummers in Georgia and Texas. I missed hummers in Hawaii (they’re not allowed there due to ruining the pineapple crops) and we have thoroughly enjoyed all the varieties the last couple summers here in Utah.

The kids are as excited as I am about hummers.

We completed hummingbird notebooking pages.

Hummingbird Notebooking

I printed some pics from the Internet and they wrote out their names.

Hummingbird Pictures

Tori likes to draw.

Drawing Hummingbirds
Alex likes sitting with me and watching the “baby birds.” They sound like they’re laughing when they chase each other.

Resources:

  • Hummingbird Printable Pages
  • Hummingbird Lapbook
  • Hummingbird Mini Unit
  • Make a hummingbird feeder
  • Hummingbird projects and activities
Birds Notebooking Pages
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Fourth of July Unit Study

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July 8, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Independence Day is a fun holiday, but most of the festivities are late at night for young kids.

We often have a fun meal with our little family, maybe some friends.

I’ll get sparklers and popits for the kids to play in the driveway.

As the kids get older, I want them to understand history and not just think of US holidays as fun days for BBQ and parties.

I want the kids to learn the history of the USA and our flag, the Constitution, and Star Spangled Banner.

I want my kids to realize their privileges and understand their rights.

A privilege is a certain entitlement to immunity granted by the state or another authority to a restricted group, either by birth or on a conditional basis. By contrast, a right is an inherent, irrevocable entitlement held by all citizens or all human beings from the moment of birth.

I want my kids to know what independence, liberty, and freedom means.

“Freedom” is predominantly an internal construct. Viktor Frankl, the legendary Holocaust survivor who wrote Man’s Search For Meaning, said it well: “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms – to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way (in how he approaches his circumstances).”

On the other hand, “liberty” is predominantly an external construct. It’s the state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one’s way of life, behavior, or political views. The ancient Stoics knew this and so did our Founding Fathers, who wisely noted the distinction between negative and positive liberties, and codified that difference in the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights.

The distinction between negative and positive liberties is particularly important, because an understanding of each helps us understand these seminal American documents (plus it explains why so many other countries have copied them). The Bill of Rights is a charter of negative liberties – it says what the state cannot do to you. However, it does not say what the state must do on your behalf. This would be a positive liberty, an obligation imposed upon you by the state.

We study world history and US history throughout our homeschool cycles, especially the hard moments and events that are most eye opening. They ask great questions and I often don’t have any answers.

When we moved to Germany, obviously no one celebrated American Independence Day. It became a day that came and went like any other. The base didn’t even really do much due to budget cuts. Now that we’re living back in the States, in Ohio, we still don’t do much even though it’s often a 3 or even 4-day holiday. We catch up on household chores and grill food and play in the yard. We avoid the crowds at local lakes, pools, parks.

I loved celebrating holidays with themes when my kids were young!

I made a Fourth of July sensory bin and the kids loved it!

July Fourth Sensory Bin

A flag bucket, star ice cube trays, some red bowls, sparkly pom poms, jewels, an eagle beanie baby, some ribbons and bows made for lots of happy independent sensory play time.

Fourth of July Sensory Bin

Alex loved putting the pom poms on the spots

Pom Pom Play

Alex loved the most: covering up the Ff’s for fireworks.

I was so impressed he knew both the capital and lowercase F’s!

ABC Pom Poms

Fireworks displays don’t begin until 10 or 10:30 PM so we didn’t go for years because the kids were so young.

The girls saw fireworks over Pearl Harbor one year when they were very little. We could walk to the water from our house so it’s wasn’t too bad with a wagon.

We could watch fireworks from our driveway when we lived in Utah.

Alex didn’t see fireworks until he was 5, because he would always fall asleep between 7-9 PM.

We went to our friends’ house to celebrate Rhine in Flammen in 2015:

My kids are older now. The girls are all teens! We play with sparklers and popits and watch fireworks from our yard or local parks.

Now that my kids are older, we learn about colonialism, American Independence Day, the Revolutionary War, and all the differing stances of that time period. Most history books and shows really dumb it down.

We still go watch fireworks in our town, usually from a local park so we can make it back home sooner.

Fourth of July Resources:

  • History Timeline
  • Constitution Facts
  • A Nation’s Story: “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?”
  • Video “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?
  • As A Black American, I Don’t Celebrate The Fourth Of July
  • Revolutionary War Unit
  • Homeschool Mom
  • iHomeschool Network
  • The Homeschool Scientist
  • Time 4 Learning
  • Homeschool Creations
  • In All You Do
  • Year Round Homeschooling
  • Crafty Classroom
  • Real Life at Home
  • Only Passionate Curiosity
  • Gift of Curiosity
  • Forging Iron Hearts
  • Teach Beside Me
  • 3 Dinosaurs
  • 1+1+1=1

Books

  • The Sign on Rosie’s Door by Maurice Sendak
  • Blue Sky White Stars by Sarvinder Naberhaus
  • The Fourth of July Story by Alice Dalgliesh
  • Story Of America’s Birthday by Patricia A. Pingry
  • Give Me Liberty!: The Story of the Declaration of Independence by Russell Freedman
  • Happy Birthday, America by Mary Pope Osborne
  • Fourth of July Mice! by Bethany Roberts
  • Apple Pie Fourth of July by Janet S. Wong
  • Pie Is for Sharing by Stephanie Parsley Ledyard
  • George Washington’s Teeth by Deborah Chandra and Madeleine Comora
  • This Land Is Your Land by Woody Guthrie
  • America the Beautiful by Wendell Minor
  • Mr. Pipes Book Series
  • Independence Cake: A Revolutionary Confection Inspired by Amelia Simmons, Whose True History Is Unfortunately Unknown by Deborah Hopkinson
  • Founding Mothers: Remembering the Ladies by Cokie Roberts
  • Sybil Ludington’s Midnight Ride by Marsha Amstel
  • They Called Her Molly Pitcher by Anne Rockwell
  • What Does It Mean to Be American? by Rana DiOrio and Elad Yoran

Movies

  • Independence Day
  • Independence Day: Resurgence
  • Jaws
  • National Treasure
  • The Sandlot
  • Captain America: The First Avenger
  • A League of Their Own
  • The American President
  • Air Force One
  • Mr. Smith Goes To Washington
  • Glory
  • Forrest Gump
  • Born on the Fourth of July

How do you spend the Fourth of July?

Independence Day Notebooking Pages (FREE)
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: history, July, sensory bin, summer, unit study

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