March 23, 2012

Lapbooking: Part 2 Minibooks

I am frequently asked questions about how we homeschool.
Since I can't invite you all over to my house to show you how we do it, I thought that 
on Fridays, I'd try and share different creative ideas that we use to homeschool.


Last week Jimmie from Jimmie's Collage introduced us to lapbooking and shared
with us some of her Flickr Photos of lapbooks that she has created.


This week she is going to be sharing how minibooks create a physical scaffold 
for the information that goes into our lapbooks.


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When you select a minibook that matches the type or amount of 
information, you have created a physical scaffold for the information.


This learning scaffold makes the ideas easier to understand and to remember. Young
children are not abstract thinkers. Anything a homeschool mom can do to make that
understanding tangible will help the children to learn. 


Minibooks can make ideas more concrete.

eclipse lapbook diagram

Take this solar eclipse minibook as an example. This simple accordion fold book
divides the information visually into four parts: the earth, the moon, the sun, and a
panel for explanation. The folds of the book itself contribute to the 
significance of the science facts in the book. 


Without the earth, moon,and sun lined up correctly, there is no solar eclipse. 


Yes, the same idea could be represented on a plain sheet of paper, but the folds help 
to outline the facts in a very visual way.


periodic table of elements lapbook 
(6) periodic 
table of elements lapbook (7)

Another example is from a Chemistry lapbook
This minibook features the five elements in the Nitrogen family. 


Each element gets its own matchbook within the larger folder. So the physical minibook
reflects the reality that these elements are all 
different (separate matchbooks) but related (placed in a single minibook).

There are myriad ways to organize information, so don’t worry about getting it
wrong. But do be deliberate to match the minibook’s layout and its folds with the contents. 


If your material is three steps, have a three flap layered book (or four flaps if you leave one 
for the title page). If your content is a list of equally important information, a wheel book may 
work well. Don’t be obsessive over making the content match the form, but do keep it in mind.



What is so important about organizing information? 
The answer is writing. 


The same mental process involved in 

dividing information into a minibook is used in composition.


In fact, you can look at most minibooks as paragraphs. The title page is the
topic sentence, and the pages or flaps are the main ideas in the paragraph. There is a
direct application from minibooks to organizing paragraphs and even essays. That makes
minibooks tiny, movable graphic organizers.

If you have questions about how to use lapbooking, please feel free to leave
them in a comment below. I’ll check back and provide my answers. And, readers, please
feel free to answer each other’s questions. We all have something to offer.

 
Jimmie Lanley is the mother of one creative twelve year old daughter. 

Jimmie's Collage is where she blogs about her Charlotte Mason styled homeschool.
 The Notebooking Fairy features free notebooking printables and how-tos plus the affordable eBook guide Notebooking Success.
Read more ...

March 21, 2012

Thrifty Thursday #52

Happy Birthday to  Thrifty Thursdays!  She turns ONE today!


It is very hard for me to believe that it has been one whole YEAR of meeting
all of you here on Thursdays!  I have enjoyed getting to know many of
you over the past year and to say THANK YOU for your continuous links, 


I have a little surprise for YOU.....
a $25 gift card to Target!!!


If you link up to the party, then you are entered to win!!  I'll announce
the winner on Sunday evening because I am headed to Washington, DC for
some momma/daughter time with my baby girl!


Now, here are this week's features.....


The Stories of A to Z and Little B upcycled these earrings with a little bit of spraypaint....how fun!



Eat Cake for Dinner made this Honey Sesame Chicken in a slow cooker!  




Semi Homemade Mom shared these amazing-looking Strawberry Cheese Danish...YUM!



Crafty Cousins shared these Dry Erase Quiet Boards which would
be a great idea to pin for summer travel!



Small Home Love designed this Sunburst Mirror using wooden skewers!  
As a child of the 70's I remember one of these in our living room!




4 the Love of Wood painted and distressed this dresser and added the image using sharpies!!





If you were featured this week, feel free to grab one of my buttons!





Here are some very simple suggestions for the party:
1. Please become a follower of Thrifty Decorating.
2. Be sure to link to your POST and not your blog.
3. Please copy and paste my link button somewhere in 
your post or blog so that others can link back.






You can also party with Johnnie 



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March 20, 2012

Oobleck



I am completely embarrassed to say that despite the fact that I've 
been a science teacher and homeschooled my kids...

....I've NEVER made Oobleck until recently!

Wow...what have I been missing!

This is a super easy experiment and you probably already 
have all the ingredients on hand right now!




Ingredients:
cornstarch
water


You want to mix the cornstarch and water until you get a mixture that is not a 
paste and not watery.  It will be about 3/4 cup of cornstarch to 1/2 cup of 
water.  You do not need to be exact.


What is so amazing is that this is a Non-Newtonian fluid.....when compressed
it turns into a solid.  When the pressure is released, it turns right back into a liquid!




Translation....beaucoup fun!!




I must warn you though...it will get messy!


 




Read more ...

March 19, 2012

Easter Decorating: Tiered Rack

 

Here's my second "installment" of inexpensive Easter table decor.

I went to my local Goodwill and grabbed an assortment of dishes.  These
may have cost me a grand total of $3.00.


The poor man at my local True Value as I tried decided on a paint color....I
went back and forth on the color until I drove him crazy and picked
this color by Rustoleum....Strawflower.



I gave my dishes several light coats.  I didn't want it to bubble or run.




I already had glass candlesticks from The Dollar Tree, so I 
glued everything together with Gorilla Glue...love that stuff!


I wanted to grow wheat grass, but my local True Value didn't have the type that I've seen referenced elsewhere, so I had to grab this...


......FIVE pounds of spring oats.  Here's a snippet of the conversation 
that ensued on the car ride home.


Son #2:  Hey, don't we we eat "Toasted Oats" for breakfast?
(that would be the generic version of Cheerios!)

Daughter:  Yes....do you think that this is where Cheerios come from?

Son #2:  What if we would grow a whole section of this in our backyard
then we could make our own Cheerios??

Daughter:  Mom...can we grow our own Cheerios from now on?



Anyway.....grab some oats, soak them for at least a day to soften the
seed coat.  Layer them on the dirt and put a light covering of 
dirt over the seeds and  wait....



Before you know it, you will need to start trimming your wheat (oat!) grass!



You still have plenty of time to grow some wheat grass for Easter!

 


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March 18, 2012

Spring?


Who would have every thought that we'd need this in early March.....a lawnmower??


We spent the weekend cleaning out the strawberry patch...


...and the garden....



cleaning up debris leftover from the flood...



and watching the baby horse take wobbly steps through the Amish field...


My daughter actually ran through the sprinkler with all the neighbor girls!

I just love spring...even though it's still winter!

 
Read more ...

March 17, 2012

Last Minute St. Patrick's Day Ideas

Did you procrastinate because of the beautiful weather and have nothing
ready for a St. Patrick's Day meal?

Here are some quick suggestions:











What's on your menu today??

 
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March 16, 2012

Fridays with Jimmie...lapbooking

I never expected to find myself homeschooling and was suddenly thrust into this "foreign" world...

I remember a friend recommending the blog Jimmie's Collage.  Desperate for any
means of support and encouragement, I stumbled onto what was probably my very first blog.

Jimmie didn't know me, but she suddenly became a friend and support through her
wealth of information and creative ideas.

I found myself scouring her site and studying her lapbooks.....what an amazing 
way to teach my kids.  I remember thinking...why don't they do this in schools??

I recently contacted Jimmie and was totally humbled and honored when she agreed to
write a series of guest posts here.

You will find her down-to-earth...incredibly talented....and a wealth of information
to aid in your homeschooling journey!

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Lapbooks are a collection of folding minibooks all centered on a unifying topic and affixed 
to a file folder. Here are some photos to give you an idea of what they are. 
You can find many more photos at my Lapbooks Flickr collection.


magnets lapbook inside Inside view sound lapbook cover sound lapbook fully open middle ages crown book feudalism middle ages 
crown book feudalism out


Some homeschool moms have their children make a lapbook for everything they
study. Others use lapbooks only for history or only for literature. There are special
lapbooking kits you can purchase, or you may choose the DIY route and start from scratch.


Whatever your approach to lapbooking, there are real educational benefits to
this educational method. Lapbooking is far more than just a cute papercraft.

I have narrowed down the benefits of lapbooking into four main areas. For this
post, I will discuss only one – the most valuable one



Lapbooking Benefit #1: Concrete Ways to Organize Information

The primary benefit of lapbooking is that it teaches children how to organize
information in very concrete ways that they can see and touch. 
Consider this lapbook on opera.

opera lapbook cover opera 
lapbook inside

Inside it are minibooks dealing with different aspects of opera that my daughter studied:

-the first opera
-composer verses librettist
-performers in an opera
-famous opera composers
-operas versus musicals
-famous operas
-parts of an opera


    Each chunk of information is neatly divided into its own minibook. Inside each  minibook that 
    information is further divided, often with physical representations of pages, special folds, or moving parts.


     In my next post, I will show you how minibooks make ideas easier to understand and remember!


    ----------------------------------------

    Next Friday Jimmie is going to show us how she uses mini-books to create a 
    physical scaffold for the information in her lapbooks!  


     


     


    Jimmie Lanley is the mother of one creative twelve year old daughter. Jimmie's Collage is where she blogs about her Charlotte Mason styled homeschool. The Notebooking Fairy features free 
    notebooking printables and how-tos plus the affordable eBook guide Notebooking Success.

    Read more ...
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