Friday, December 30, 2011

Bits of Goodness Advent Swap

The Advent swap was generally smaller items, both in effort and physical size. We were also allowed to have up to four slots. Please excuse the terrible image quality. Our camera was recently run over by the car, and until I save up I'm working with just my iPad.

Quilled snowflakes
- Paper



Mini I-Spy Vials (glued shut)
- Glass Beads
- Glass vials with real corks
- Glass bead or quilled paper hidden Christmas tree



Here's one of the trees:



Sun catchers
- Metal
- Crystal beads

I'm bummed the photo is so terrible, these were very pretty. ~2in long



Jingle Bell Wreaths (~ 2 in diameter)
- Metal bells
- Metal glitter pipe cleaners



Walnut Babies
- Wool
- Walnut shells






The set of trinkets we got in exchange was full of such cute things! We do more of an Advent(ure) style calendar (things to do rather than have), but it was awesome to pull out on the plane.

Other Bits of Goodness Swaps

These are the rest of the swaps I've done: Hedgehogs, Gnomes, and Mushrooms - Embroidered Cloth Covered Buttons - Metal button - Cotton muslin - Cotton embroidery thread These scenes are all from Jan Brett's book Hedgie's Surprise, and I included a small coloring book printed from her website for extra hedgehog fun.


Summer Nature Table - Needle Felted Hermit Crabs and Shell Babies - Wool - Shell - Drift wood from Alki Beach Rainbows - Mini Mobile - Glass beads - Metal (can't remember exactly what) I made two versions of this, pastel and bright. Sadly, none of the photos of the brights turned out even this well. Just For Moms - Necklaces (using a wire jig) - Silk ribbon - Metal (again unknown) - Glass bead Autumn Nature Table - Dreamcatchers - Metal ring - Leather - Glass beads - Cotton thread Bath - Felted Soap - Wool - Trader Joe's Bar Soap I will never do this again. I pretty much hated every moment of it, even once I got it working (I actually called Weaving Works part way through to make sure I hadn't accidentally purchased machine washable roving). I have wet felted before and enjoyed it, and have done a lot of needle felting and like it. I did not like wet felting or needle felting on soap. And the red/orange/yellow squashed octopus? That was supposed to be my amazing fiery sun.

Bits of Goodness Garden Swap Quilling

While I'm at it, I've been meaning to post the past swap objects I've made. These are my first willing work and my first Bits of Goodness swap. The theme was "Garden", and I made sets of these cards:
























It turned out that this was a fun work for Kinde too. She made these below, and actually received her own quilling supplies in her stocking a few days ago.




And I made this when Kinde requested a house. Quilling is really fun!


Bits of Goodness Winter Nature Table Swap

Here are my latest crafted items: little winter berry gnomes of wood, wool felt, and cotton embroidery thread.





They've been sent off to the hostess to be divvied up and exchanged for other natural material, handcrafted goodies. I've been surprised how much I have enjoyed giving much of my extremely limited crafting time to this group. Partially it gives me a deadline to actually do many of the cute ideas I see floating around the internet but might not ever really get to. This, for example, is not at all my idea, but something I saw somewhere. (If you know where I found this, please drop me a line so I can link to it and cite the design properly; it was before I was on Pinterest, so I just saved the photo from who knows where.)

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Applesauce Sauce

We try to eat our fruit in its original form (grinding, drying, etc tends to trick you into eating way too much), but we just can't resist a batch or two of homemade applesauce a year. This batch was a mix of heirloom apples from a stand at the Farmers' Market. I wish I had taken note of exactly what they were, but really every batch we've ever made has been good so duplication is really not that important. Applesauce is so easy:


We don't peel or core or anything, just cut in quarters. I'll claim it's so that we get the nutrients from the skin during cooking, but it's not bad that it cuts down on the work too. I just toss the quarters in a pot with a few cups of water and simmer, stirring occasionally, until totally squishy (adding more water if necessary). When it's all soft we put it through the food mill. I found this at Goodwill for $5, which was quite a steal, but I sure wish it was one of the big ones. Pre had a great time trying, but it was tricky for her to know when to reverse for a while to pull up the peel and such.


We ate a pint immediately, and canned the rest. This stuff is sooooo good. I can't believe people add sugar (or Heaven forbid high fructose corn syrup) to applesauce!

Saturday, November 12, 2011

I Guess She's Ready for The Cards

Pre has been working on the geometric cabinet a lot lately. The first time I gave her a lesson on how to use a drawer as a puzzle she proceeded to do every drawer in one sitting. She's not great at tracing around yet, and I need to represent that though her motor skills may not yet be quite there. With the cabinet, to help move to abstraction, the shapes are first matched to their wood frames, then placed on cards with solid shapes, thick outlined shapes, and finally thin outlined shapes. Kinde was beyond the cards that go with it when she came back home, so I haven't had practice figuring out when to present them and haven't brought them out yet. Then today at the zoo Pre was playing with a shape sorter with little difficulty when she noticed the sunspots below the holes. She started skipping the holes and did this





Unfortunately I didn't get a picture until it had been bumped, but they were all perfectly matched and lined up. I guess at least the filled in cards are no trouble! I'm debating which to bring out; should I still start with the solid shapes, or skip right to the thick line? She seems happy enough to do the solid work, so I may still start there. It may also be trickier if the shapes are more similar, as they are in the cabinet.

Monday, November 7, 2011

They really do this stuff




We had an amazing afternoon playing under a glorious autumnal tree in front of the Bellevue Library today. The girls frolicked (well, one girl, one owl), we chased each other, leaves were tossed, there was dancing, actual Spanish spoken, and both girls spontaneously started sorting their leaf collections by color. It's nice to see that small children really do choose activities like sorting of their own volition, even in a completely unprepared environment. I guess Maria Montessori really did make accurate observations :)

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Happy Halloween!

Woodland Park Zoo Pumpkin Bash - amazing views of the animals playing with their "gift" jack-o-lanterns (filled with meat if needed to interest said animal)


I am so pleased with how my owl costumes turned out against all odds. Both my and a back-up sewing machine broke, requiring me to sew two inches at a time and then deal with a massive thread jam. Slooow going. The girls loved them just as much as I hoped, though!








Cut-out crackers to have Halloween fun without even more sugar.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Kinde's First Story

Kinde has enjoyed making words and occasionally witing someone a note with the moveable alphabet. Today she announced she would write a story, and she worked out all the letters on her own. Occasionally she would start to ask me, and then would figure it out and move on. Here's the result:

Friday, October 21, 2011

Same Work, Different Skills


Kinde has finally been rediscovering the sensorial works after basically a year hiatus in our transition from school to homeschool. She asked for a reminder on how to build the house out of red rods. I'm not sure if that's as common as the maze, but one her teacher had in a batch of photos they could try to duplicate. I showed her, she recreated it, and then used the pink cubes and brown rectangular prisms to "furnish" it. I can't remember what she said all the pieces were, but the one in the middle is the bed.

Pre then decided to get in on the action. She brought over some pasta we have in nice autumnal colors for pouring, and proceeded to carefully place one pasta piece on each sensorial piece. When she had leftovers she poured them in the "attic swimming pool". It was fun to see her find a developmentally appropriate aspect (one-to-one correspondence) to a work that is otherwise way beyond her.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Following the Child All Over Seattle



Lately there have been lots and lots of things we've had to do, places we've had to go, and people we've had to see, and it has been wearing on Kinde. She's generally pretty flexible, but more and more when she realizes she has no choice about doing X she's asked if there could be a day where she gets to decide everything. I had been thinking that could be a good birthday tradition (and it still could be), but we decided to act a little more promptly.

Sunday morning Mark and I realized that Kinde had chosen breakfast, suggested our going to the park where we were, and we had been there much longer than usual to her delight. It *had* so far been her day and we had no other commitments (assuming we were willing to continue living in squalor). We asked her if she had noticed what a special day it was yet, and exclaimed that it was her day! She had a ton of ideas of course, and we pointed out that we only had one day, and certain technical challenges. For example, she really wants to go in the stadiums and we pointed out there were no games. Overall, though, she was really reasonable. She filled her hiking backpack with lunch and snacks for all of us, and we hopped on the bus (her first two requests).

First stop was the Pike's Place Market. We smelled the flowers, sampled the produce, saw a fish tossed, listened to street performers, saw one play a violin like a bass and another act like a gold robot, and tasted Market Spice's phenomenal cider. Then we caught the bus to Seattle Center.


Though we intended to be mostly exploring outside, it was just chilly enough that we headed to the Center House to eat after gazing up at the Space Needle. There we found ourselves accidentally attending TurkFest for the third year running. Apparently we have some cosmic Turkish connection, as we don't go to Seattle Center very often, and have never tried to attend TurkFest and it just keeps happening. We ate lunch and watched folk dancers and a fashion show. We were there for a while as Kinde *loves* to watch dance. We have logged something like 20 hours over 5 festivals watching folk dancers of various cultures. We worked our way upstairs to the kid activities where both children got their faces painted and made Turkish flags.



We walked to dinner by way of the Olympic Sculpture Park. We didn't make it down to my favorite piece, Wake by Richard Serra, but headed straight over to Kinde's; Eagle by Alexander Calder. She really wanted to create her own art by dragging the chairs at Eagle's base around in the gravel as she has done before, but Pre was losing it and needed pasta stat. We pressed on across the street to the Old Spaghetti Factory, where we secured a table in the coveted trolley. Good food was had by all and we enjoyed a leisurely stroll down the waterfront at sunset to our bus stop.

Amazingly (and luckily) Kinde made it all the way home awake. We actually ran into someone on the bus who had been at the park that morning and overheard all her big plans. She was too tired to regale him with every detail as is her wont, and just confirmed that we had managed to do it all. She seemed quite content with "her day". I hope it does refuel her for following the family's needs again for a while.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Sound Object Collection

Kinde spent a year in a toddler room and then a year in primary at a Montessori school. As such, we're always working with a weird mix of things she's already done, things she might have done, and things I present. Our language path has been no different. She knew many of the sounds before she switched back home, but I never knew quite which. We used sound buckets... sort of. I had them all out since she had seen them all already. Then I tried having one at a time out. Then I pretty much gave up, as she rarely chose the work, only used it for pretend play (a BIG issue with everything when we started), and seemed to have good phonemic awareness. I do plan to use them with Pre, and will probably start playing I Spy with her very soon as her vocabulary seems to be getting big enough to think about anything other than its expansion.

We've been clearing out and packing in preparation for our move. I had been storing our sound object collection in the buckets, but that didn't seem likely to go well in moving. I have many other miniatures we use for various things, and it seemed useful to have a record of what was actually in the buckets. Even though it could easily change just from what I already have elsewhere for our next go-round with Pre, here's what we have at the moment:

a: anteater, astronaut, ant, aligator
b: bird, bell, bucket, butterfly
c: car, camel, cockroach, cat
d: dog, die, donkey, drum, duck
e: elephant, egg
f: feather, flag, frog
g: grape, gorilla, golf club, goat
h: heart, hat, helmet, horse, hippo
i: igloo, insect
j: jack-in-the-box, jar, jet
k: kangaroo, kettle, key
l: lion, lioness, lizard, lantern, ladybug
m: mirror, mushroom, mitten, milk, mug, mouse, marble
n: nickle, notebook, nut
o: octagon, otter, octopus
p: panther, pumpkin, pan, polar bear, pig
q: quarter, quartz
r: rainbow, ring, rug, racket, rhino, rug
s: salt, snake, squid, sled, spider, scorpion
t: truck, turtle, tree
u: umbrella
v: volcano, violin, vase, vacuum, valentine, vulture
w: wagon, wheel, wood, watermelon, wolf
x: box, six, fox, x-ray, ax, onyx
y: yo-yo, yield, yarn
z: zebra, zero, zig-zag

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Long Term Geography Goals and Planning



In order to make our study meaningful, I tried to determine what my goals were in teaching geography, especially this young. Here's what I came up with for Kinde, in approximate order of importance:

1. To create a sense of place, both in where we live and in general of other places to understand when she hears about them

2. To understand how all political regions depend on each other, and specifically how it matters to our lives what happens far away (primarily what food/resources come from where)

3. To recognize and celebrate the differences in surroundings, lifestyle, and culture between us and other places, while maintaining the basic sameness of humanity and without viewing foreign as fundamentally "other"

4. To understand which and in what way cultural features are determined by the physical geography

5. To be able to label a map and know what political regions border each other

6. To lay the groundwork for a study of history

Some of this will be largely irrelevant this year as we will be focusing on the states of our own country, but I am leaving out some other geography works and books that may provoke conversations in which I will want to bear these goals in mind. Once we have moved beyond creating an immediate sense of place (our neighborhood, our city, our state, our country, our continent) I do want to focus more on places farther in distance and/or culture. My US-raised children are unlikely to be totally uninformed about, or have major prejudices against, Europe or Australia, for example. Africa and Asia are going to be of higher priority to cover and reflect the internal diversity of for us.

I will post details as we pursue our study of the states. My general geography plan for the long term, however, is this (and I retain my right to completely toss this and start over):

US states, approx 1 state/week
North America ~ 6 weeks
South America ~ 6 weeks
Africa ~10 weeks
Asia ~ 10 weeks
Middle East ~ 2 weeks
Europe ~ 8 weeks
Australia and Oceana ~ 3 weeks

Then we will start over with the states as Pre will be ready to participate fully and Kinde will be ready to delve deeper, do her own research on topics of interest and comparison, and remember more. None of this study will include history.

I should mention that in my fantasy world we will also be spending a year on the road in the middle school years traveling to all 48 continental states and then one or two years abroad experiencing the world. This is far enough away I can still completely convince myself it is not only possible but reasonable.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Montessori Geography or Not


In general, the Montessori approach to anything is to start with the whole, and then delve into the parts. In general, I think this is great. Learn about trees as a whole, then about leaves, etc. In many topics, this really helps the transition between concrete and abstract; a child can see a big tree easily. They can break it down into leaves, branches, trunk, and roots as they look more closely. If they look really closely, they can see that the leaf has parts. Then it's not so hard to think that maybe those parts are made of parts too. If they get out their microscope, they can see the cells, and understand better than before working through this process that they are parts of the leaf. And if they are ready, it won't be too much of a leap to think that cells have parts, and that those parts may *do* something, and learn about photosynthesis. As I get deeper into the reality of implementing the Montessori method, however, I am realizing that there is one really big topic that is not served well by this process; geography.

In my experience (and I am not trained, nor have I by any means seen them all) Montessori political geography albums begin with the globe. Even with some expanding map work, this seems like an enormous, insane leap to thrust upon a preschooler. A child who in all other areas is understood to be incapable of abstraction is supposed to imagine that we are all on a big ball in the middle of vast nothing? The maps are presented beginning with all the continents of the world, then the individual continents, and finally countries with a breakdown of the specific states/provinces of the child's country. This seems totally opposite to the idea of moving gently to abstraction that really is the heart of the "whole-to-parts" method. I think there is some desire also to start with something conceptually huge and inspiring that makes the kids want to delve deeper into understanding. That doesn’t really work for me either, however, as with a history in astrophysics specializing in the collisions of galaxies, I have trouble summoning the same sense of wonder Kinde’s teacher did holding a globe and exclaiming with wide eyes “This is our whole world!” And ultimately I just feel that the understanding derived from beginning with things the student comprehends and expanding outward in distance and abstraction is more important. Despite Kinde's original introduction to geography in her year of Montessori preschool, and our conventional efforts last year, I am shifting gears this year (and in the future for Pre). We are moving to a system starting with what is close and relevant to the child and moving out from there. Generally this looks like a progression:

Basic mapping and developing our sense of place in our own local
Neighborhood
City
County
State (presented by region)
Country
Continent
Other continents

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Last Year's Approach to Geography - Africa

I actually started this post to discuss my larger problems with the traditional Montessori approach to geography, and realized that I had written a full post on what we did last year before I even got to most of that, so this is part one on the geography theme.

The "continent" boxes are a quintessential Montessori work that I immediately struggled with when I started to plan our geography shelves. My brain immediately rebelled against summarizing an entire continent. I realize that the bits are intended to show diversity and be sorted (the moose goes mostly in Canada, the sombrero is for Mexico, and the hamburger is for the USA), and that more sophisticated examples can be chosen than I have listed, but the whole box system seems to be really fraught with peril for massive generalization, stereotyping, and ultimately even racism. Consider especially Africa; how many people outside Africa believe that all Africans, or at least some in all areas, dress and live like the Masai, speak Swahili, and see gorillas *and* lions regularly? I was pretty sure that giving them a box full of fun animals was only going to cement that no matter how much I said they were from different areas (and how easy is it to get animals that aren't the "classic" examples anyway?). I really want my girls to be as comfortable with African geography and a general sense that fundamentally the same people with cool cultural differences (from us and each other) live there as they likely will be with Europe, if that makes sense. My African geography education was total crap, as evidenced by the fact that (and I can't believe I'm admitting this publically) before we did this I thought Kenya was on the western coast. And I had a very good friend living there at the time.

Last year my attempt at  this was to make Africa our first continent of study and spend a very long time doing it. Realistically, unless you are going to do a doctoral dissertation on Africa you are going to be sampling as even within countries there are hundreds of ethnic groups and languages. My goal was to be obvious to the kids that we were *sampling* culturally, as my girls (well, really only one as Pre at that point was PreVerbal) learned about the true differences in the land and animals. I broke our study into regions and had a Five in a Row - style study of based on a picture book about somewhere in it:

West: 
FIAR-approach books (one week each): Bintou's Braids and I Lost My Tooth In Africa
Books on the shelf: Ikenna Goes to Nigeria, Here Comes our Bride
One Big Family: Sharing Life in an African Village, Welcome Dede!, Head, Body, Legs
Books I made a point to read through: Meet Our New Student from Mali
Non-Fiction Video: West Africa for Kids
Reading Rainbow: I Lost My Tooth in Africa
Traditional crafts: Batik (glue resist on fabric), Adinkra block printing, and Kente strip weaving from African Crafts: Fun Things to Make and Do from West Africa
Sensory bin: Savannah (wood chips, raffia, small blue play silk watering hole, Plan Toys balancing tree), pygmy hippopotamus, Colobus monkey, dwarf crocodile, duiker

North:
FIAR-approach books (one week each):  My Father's Shop and The Day of Ahmed's Secret
Books on the shelf: The Butter Man, The Giraffe That Walked to Paris, We're Sailing Down the Nile
Traditional crafts: Rug weaving, pottery jug (make and paint)
Sensory bin: Desert (sand, small blue play silk and mini trees oasis), camel, gazelle, Fennec fox, hyena, ostrich

Central:
FIAR-approach books (one week each): The Village of Round and Square Houses
Books on the shelf: Rain School
Traditional craft: tapestry crochet
Sensory Bin: Tropical Rain Forest (green leaves, big trees made out of construction paper and paper towel tubes with "vines"), chimpanzee, gorilla, leopard, forest elephant

East:
FIAR-approach books (one week each): Wangari's Trees of Peace and My Rows and Piles of Coins
Books on the shelf: Elizabeti's Doll, Mama Elizabeti, Sosu's Call, Mama Panya's Pancakes, Masai and I, Faraway Home
Book I made a point to read through: Meet Our New Student from Tanzania
Non-Fiction Video: East Africa for Kids
Reading Rainbow: Mufaru's Beautiful Daughters and Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain
Traditional crafts: basket weaving, Masai necklace beading
Sensory bin: Savannah (wood chips, raffia, Plan Toys balancing tree), rhino, elephant, lion, giraffe, cheetah, zebra, wild dog

Southern:
FIAR-approach books (one week each): At the Crossroads and Jamela's Dress
Books on the shelf: The Gift of the Sun, A South African Night, Bongani's Day, A Child's Day in a South African City
Book I made a point to read through: Meet Our New Student from Zambia
Traditional craft: Mapula embroidery
Sensory bin: Savannah (wood chips, raffia, Plan Toys balancing tree), pangolin, bushbaby, meerkat, warthog, wildebeest, baboon, oryx, rhino, elephant

Works done throughout:
Puzzle map
Little flags to place on the puzzle (this might only have actually happened once)
Looked at pictures of landmarks, cities, and landscapes
Practiced recognizing and naming the countries
Cooked a meal out of Madhar Jaffrey's World Vegetarian or the Easy Menu Ethnic Cookbook for each region
Contacted someone we know who had lived or traveled in each region and asked questions mostly of Kinde's inspiration about what it was like there. We would have had cool trinkets from Egypt and live Skyping except my brother was evacuated...

We read the sections appropriate to our current region in:
Ashanti to Zulu 
Children Just Like Me
A Life Like Mine
African Atlas
"A Question and Answer Book" series of many countries (That format worked so well for us I read some of our other non-fiction books about the countries as though they were question and answer too. It really piqued her curiosity.)
Africa is Not a Country was always on the shelf

As a side note, I was extremely disappointed in the [Country] in Pictures: Visual Geography series. I had such high hopes from the title. They may very well be excellent for older children, but they were *very* heavy on text and actually had far fewer pictures than almost any other series, regardless of intended age. Very much a misnomer.

Overall, this was a pretty cool unit, and one that I definitely intend to repeat when Pre is ready to grasp any of it and Kinde is ready to delve deeper and retain more. At some point I may have a chance to post the details of our "FIAR" studies, but we'll see. As we worked through this, though, I realized that it still felt like the wrong way to start with geography. More on that soon...

Friday, July 29, 2011

How Much is Enough? Too Much?

I'm doing lots of planning for the upcoming year, as are most homeschoolers I'm sure. The thing that's driving me insane right now is determining our general schedule. I'm massively conflicted about it. Actually, our *general* schedule is lovely, it's the reality of the scheduling *specifics* that are tricky. Generally I want us to have a three hour uninterrupted work period in the morning after breakfast, then a couple of hours free play and lunch, then Pre naps while Kinde and I do a more directed or involved project like science experiments, then more playing until dinner. See? Lovely. Ideally, free play period would be three uninterrupted hours as well. The trouble starts when you add in our classes. Here they are, along with their justifications:
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Swimming - feels like a non-negotiable safety issue until both girls are competent

Guitar - the extent of our music education (and all that I plan for the future beyond CM style appreciation and singing a few folk songs at home)

Creative Dance - excellent class that Pre can take too!

Hike - not a class, but a family priority, especially as we are more likely to otherwise stay inside in the winter and I feel like hiking is a great way to grow strong, confident girls

Irish Step Dancing - Kinde has been doing this for a year now and both loves it and is quite good, I love that it is a style of dance with a reasonable culture around it (don't destroy my girl!), it's a social style of dance, and it can be a lifelong physically active hobby (unlike my gymnastics history).

Drawing with Children co-op - Great opportunity for progressive art education with a friend and respite for both from little siblings, as well as for littles to actually have an activity planned around their interests and abilities. Will shift to Atilier once drawing lessons are completed.

General Co-op - an important place for us to make strong connections with a few families, and my kids benefit so much from exposure to the other main mom.

Spanish Preschool - an unusually good fit for our kids who understand lots of Spanish but don't speak much, right in our neighborhood. Second language a big priority.
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What this leaves us with is just three mornings a week for a good Montessori work period. Is that enough? I'm not worried about covering enough material, I'm certain they'll learn plenty for their ages between that, their classes, and the additional one-on-one time for Kinde. I'm worried about if they have enough time to explore the materials and learn the far more important lessons of self-directed and self-motivated learning. Speaking of enough, is there enough time for totally free play? I'm feeling like it's all a lot, but can't talk myself out of any of it. Also, we are in the car Every. Single. Day. Ugh. (Though we are investigating a move that would knock out two of those.)


Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
8 am Montessori Montessori Montessori


9 Spanish (Kinde) Co-op
10 Irish Step Dancing (Kinde)

Spanish (Pre)
11
12
1
2



Rosetta Stone Rosetta Stone
 3 Drawing with Children / Preschool Art Co-op Creative Dance Hike
5 Swimming (Kinde)
6 Library Time Guitar
7 Swimming (Pre)
8 Bedtime Bedtime Bedtime Bedtime Bedtime Bedtime Bedtime
Athletics





Pre naps 1-3





Co-op





Montessori





Spanish





Sunday, July 3, 2011

Just dodging in

I'll have a more complete introductory post, and start blogging more regularly in a bit. In the meantime, I've had a lot of requests on the playschool6 to see my make-shift puzzle map "cabinet" and our home classroom (expect a post on why we decided to have a dedicated classroom). Here they are , and check back soon for more!

The puzzle rack is just a super-cheap shoe rack (it is much more stable this way than used as intended) turned on its side. Someday I may trim the legs and enclose it, but for now it's working quite well. I bought it at Fred Meyer for under $10. Savings: at least $80 from discount suppliers.


These pictures are from December, so quite a few of the works are different, but you get the general idea.


Science and Engineering Shelves

Dangling octopus with continent swap postcards.

Top shelf: My albums, circle time bell and song basket

Second shelf down: meteorology tray, random box added by dd I don't remember what's in, measuring work

Third shelf down: ecology tray, geology tray

Bottom shelf: What material is it made of?, flashlight assembly

 

Tables

Small tables for eating and working, though much work is done on the floor. Renoir was our Charlotte Mason art study focus, and the Renoir book is open to the pictures of the day (his self-portrait is hanging to the right). The black table has our "Living Things Tray" with an African violet and a mirror.


Science and Geography Shelves

Phases of Moon Poster

Draped across: Calendar, each page a month

Top Shelf: Continent and Land and Water Globes, very basic Children's Atlas focused on continents, Compass

Middle Shelf: Phases of Moon Cards, Zoology control tray

Bottom Shelf: Vertebrate/Invertebrate Sorting, North America box

Cabinet: Continent Map on top, my supplies in drawer, sheets and blankets in cupboard (ah, homeschooling)

Child armchair, basket of woolly socks and slippers (it's cold up here in the winter!)


Language and Toddler Shelves

Top shelf: Dump truck for initial sound sorting game

Second Shelf Down: Sound buckets, Rol 'n Write, and sandpaper letters of former letters of the week

Third Shelf Down - Letter of the Week: Sound bucket, paint bag for writing, sandpaper letter, Sound Box book, Sand tray, Do-a-Dot letters, dot-to-dot letters, letter find worksheets

Fourth Shelf Down - Toddler Works: 3-piece puzzle with knobs, 3-piece foam puzzle, Shape sorter (only the shapes for the top currently out), geometric solids, lacing frame hanging

Bottom Shelf - Jane Belk Moncure Sound Box books, Moveable alphabet


Math Shelves

Top Shelf: Teen bead hanger, counters with marked places beneath numbers

Second Shelf Down: Decimal introduction tray, binomial cube box

Bottom Shelf: 1-9 bead hanger, large wood shapes with rods that fit the appropriate number (toddler)

Underneath: Instalearn Hundred board, sandpaper numerals

Leaning: Magnetic teen board

Number Rods

Calendar with month's poem and day's weather card

Work Rug Basket


History, Language, Writing Prep Shelves

Top Shelf - history: In progress dd-made December calendar, tray of calendars and timepieces, clock, First Discovery Time book
Second Shelf Down - Language: Sequencing cards for storytelling, tow truck initial sound sorting, syllable counting
Third Shelf Down: Metal insets
Bottom Shelf: Latch board, parallel lines drawing
Leaning: Alphabet train animal sorting pockets


Sensorial Shelf

Bottom Shelf: Sock pairing and bundling, rough gradation board, brown stair

Second Shelf Up: Beads on horizontal bar (toddler), knobbed cylinder block and blindfold, sound cylindars

Third Shelf Up: Pink tower, constructive triangles, Pythagoras "board" (DIY of felt, no actual board)

Fourth Shelf up: Temperature tablets, tactile matching (sandpaper) tablets and blindfold, baric tablets

Right: Red rods


Practical Life

Top Shelf: Dustin mitt, water pitcher, glasses, and tray

Second Shelf Down: Nut and screw matching, double hole punch, origami tray, stereognostic bag, nesting tins, "beadlings" (those little beads you put on a small shape with pegs and iron), box of scissors and cutting work, marbles for picking up with toes (we needed a foot-permissible work)

Third Shelf Down: Soap grating, tonging into icecube tray, egg shell grinding, pompom color/size sorting, Mastermind game (toddler for placing pegs, preschool for matching patterns), water pouring (toddler)

Fourth Shelf Down: Clothes pins to put around bowl edge, rice pouring, spooning, water baster transfer, toothpicks in small hole (toddler), water pouring with funnel, noodle pouring (toddler), zipper and buttoning frame hanging

Bottom Shelf: Safety pin frame behind, geometric demonstration tray and cabinet, shapes in the world for matching cards, dust pan and whisk broom practice tray, Un Elephante song basket