Saturday, February 26, 2011

Spelling City

Have you heard of the award-winning site, Spelling City?

If not, here are a few details:

- It's free.  For a few more perks, you can join for a modest fee, but it isn't necessary, trust me.

- You type in your child's list of spelling words, and the site uses those words to generate these options:

Spelling Test 
Vocab Test
Teach Me
Play a Game 
Printable handwriting worksheet using the words 
Write a sentence or paragraph using the words

- This site is incredible!  You will be both thrilled and amazed at the convenience and the technology.  It is multi-sensory, so all learners benefit!

- For public- or private-schooling families:  You can use the weekly spelling lists given by your child's teacher with this website.  You simply type in the weekly words, and the site teaches the words individually, generates multi-sensory practice games, gives meanings, and tests your child--keeping track of scores and previous lists.

- For homeschooling families:  You can use an individualized spelling program offered by the site, or your own word lists.  There are many types of lists available, including:

Compound Words
Contractions
Dolch - Sight Words
Geography Lists
Homophones and Homonyms
Literature Based Word Lists
Monthly Holiday Lists
Phonics & Sight Word Curriculum
Popular Word Lists
Possessive Nouns
Sample Lists

Sound Alike Words
Word Abbreviations
SAT words, list 1 & 2


This post probably seems like an ad for the site, but really, it isn't.  I came across a reader comment on the Pioneer Woman's Homeschooling site that mentioned Spelling City, so I took the time tonight to peruse the site. So glad I did!

There are many aspects of education that simply cannot be automated, and thank goodness for that!  But if spelling and math automation truly helps students excel, I'm all for it.  There are still plenty of subjects left that require discussion and cooperative interaction.

jackpot on math, garden beds

Have you heard of the Teaching Textbooks math curriculum?  It's ideal for auditory learners, who happen to do very well with lecture.  Visual learners benefit as well!  I am switching Peter to this!  Just what we've needed! Ree Drummond, from The Pioneer Woman, does an excellent review of the program here, with photos.

Also, here is a picture tutorial for a raised garden bed, also from her site.

Friday, February 25, 2011

birds, squirrels, snow, gratitude

We're back to snow on the ground, which makes this Momma glad.  


For three days last week, the ground was clear.......and muddy.  Each romp outside led to two loads of laundry.  Forgive me for thinking of the weather in terms of how many loads of wash it entails, and how many vacuumings.

The fluffy white stuff fell for two days, pretty steadily.  This squirrel found a cookie sheet of seed buried under the snow on the kids' picnic table.


He was so happy, having hit the jackpot!  He ate and stuffed his cheeks for a half hour!


He took a break, once, for a drink from our pond.  Oh....I mean our sandbox. The kids forgot to put the lid back on.  They're quite thrilled to see it become a bird and squirrel watering area.  Whatever we can do to help our friends is okay with me.

Who knew I'd suddenly become so enamoured of squirrels, that I'd stand at my window and take an insane number of pictures of their antics?  I just can't get over this guy digging in the snow like a dog, looking for the seed he completely ignored for a week, when it wasn't covered with snow.


So, with a snow-covered yard again, we're back to indoor fun, most days.  Like oatmeal cookie making.  And dough eating, despite my egg warnings.



Forgive me for the sight of our cookie sheets!  I finally replaced these old things, just yesterday.


The Lincoln Logs have been a hit this week.  The cowboys, pictured here, have metal cars, in addition to their horses.


When snow covers the ground, and some days are too cold to venture out, they run around the circle created by the dining room, entry way, living room and kitchen.  Thank goodness for that circle!


Since I last wrote about birds, we've put up a suet feeder.  Here is a friendly nuthatch, come to visit.  Beautiful!  A downy woodpecker was also spotted in this tree, but he didn't come to the suet.  You can put bacon grease in a used yogurt container and nail it to your tree for a suet feeder.  Add seed to the grease, or not.  The birds really need the fat this time of year.


We also added a peanut butter-and-seed-covered paper towel roll, which is holding up well considering the weather. It's a week old here.  The peanut butter is holding it together.


Here we have some cowbirds (or is that a starling beak?), come to fatten up.  At one point, five of them were eating at a time.


Mommy just couldn't get over that squirrel!


Here they are, last week, enjoying their bikes.  I really need to get my littlest sweetie a tricycle.  She is a tiny thing, but in the 75% for height, so maybe her feet will reach the pedals of something.




Quote of the week:  Momma:  "Make your beds quickly!  The plumber is coming in twenty minutes."

Mary:  "Can I show the plumber how nicely I made my bed when he comes?"

Friday Gratitude

- For helpers doing more and more around the house, so Momma has time for stories during the day, and board games, and cookies.

- For Paul, saying the past two mornings, "This has been a great morning!"  He loves the feeling of us all working together to make the house neat and tidy.

- For Barney's Farm, one of the best videos ever made for children.  It contains a myriad of songs my two year old loves!  She previously never watched a stitch of anything.  When she does the motions for When Your Ears Hang Low, I'm so tickled.  And every time the square dances come on, she comes to get Momma for a lively time, kicking up our heels together.  Yeehaw!  I think my favorite lines, and hers too, are  "Who knows how to waddle all around the farm?  Quack, quack, quack!  The duckies do!"  She puts her hands under her armpits, flaps them, gets down low, and waddles!  Oh, how I love two year olds!

- My perm, to disguise my limp hair, happens in a week.  I'm so thrilled!  Just resting for two hours and being taken care of, will be a blessing.  I plan to bring Ann's book.

- My Mary is learning her letters in a most unusual way.  Paul loves to spell words with the foam bath letters.   Lately, he's taken to asking Mary for the letters he needs, as though she were Vanna White, his lovely assistant.  (My Mary is lovely, IMHO)  He does it on purpose, to help Mary learn.  In the past two weeks Mary has learned five more letters!  As she gives him a letter, she'll ask me, "What things are for G?"  I then name as many G words as I can.  This is great fun at bathtime!  Beth loves to get in on it, holding up letters for me to name.  Whatever big sister does, Beth does!  Mary is her heroine.

- When the children list their prayers, it gives me insight into their thoughts and worries.  Both Paul and Mary have prayed about Peter's behavior, which can be erratic.  I needed the reminder to pray for them, as they learn how to live and play with a special-needs brother.  Life is more complicated for them as siblings, then it otherwise would be, though they both love their Peter and enjoy his imagination.

- For the privilege of mothering.

- For the way God provided for me, a desperate mother, twenty-six months ago, when I was having so much trouble nursing my newborn, Beth.  How I've loved our nursing relationship over these past two years.  How Beth has loved it, and still does.  I hope someday to help mothers look into the future, those first newborn weeks.  Yes, this seems impossibly hard now, but the memories you'll make, the good you'll do, are worth the tears.  Some women want to so badly, but just need loving encouragement and someone to be strong with them, for them.  It's so hard to walk the nursing road alone, if family and husband don't support. It most certainly does not happen naturally, most of the time--although hospital birth experiences may hinder what God intended, those first hours.  I've often thought about what God was thinking, when he made the beginning nursing relationship so hard.  I know it's part of the childbearing-pain curse--from Eve--but what else was on His mind?  

- For God allowing me this writing time, to chronicle motherhood, and spiritual awakenings and whispers.  

- For the nice plumber, who didn't mind three of my kids watching him, fascinated, use his loud snake thingy, which for $130 solved all our drain woes.  Oh, a working tub drain again!  I'm thrilled! 

- For Peter saying this morning, "Wow, between you and Paul and me, we're going to have this place so clean, we won't even have to prepare for Lorrie's visits!"  He remembers that each time an overnight guest comes, Momma does hours and hours of cleaning, which stresses the family.  They like the money they're earning for extra chores, yes, but the sense of accomplishment and team-work feel?  That is thrilling them more.  I'm so grateful.....I didn't want to turn them into mercenaries!


Thursday, February 24, 2011

Family Prayer Time

I'm experimenting with writing in bulk more, and pre-scheduling posts to publish at 8:00 AM in the mornings, so that I take a computer break on the same day the children do--leaving the computer off completely on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Sundays.  I'm not sure the post-scheduling Blogger feature is working properly this week though.  Hopefully, this entry will post Thursday at 8:00 AM.
____________________________

I pray with my children....

...before each meal.
...before a special event.
...when someone expresses a fear.
...when someone complains of a physical ache.
...when our day is going poorly--as in, I'm pulling my hair out!
...when I tuck each child in at night.

Different times in our parenting years, we've tried structured family prayer time.  It works quite well when just Mommy, Daddy, and the two boys are present.  During those times we used the ACTS acronym, with Daddy opening the prayer, followed by each person contributing something as we go through each part separately (Adoration, Confession, Thanksgiving, Supplication).

Put the girls in the mix and things always fell apart--very little actual praying, much irritation, some tears.

Now that Beth is two and Mary is four, both girls will color, draw, or paint at a table long enough for us to have reasonably-structured corporate prayer. Mommy and Daddy are still a bit frazzled, but God is honored and everyone participates. Afterwards, we all feel great.  Rejuvenated.  Confident.

The only problem is, Daddy is absent from our home most of the time.  That leaves me filling in the gap, seventy percent of the time.

Recently, I came up with a plan--or rather, God put a plan in my head.  And it's working!  Let me first say, I do believe God loves any family attempt at corporate prayer.  And shame on us for not doing it consistently!

But this Momma needed some way to make it saner, so this is what we've been doing:

The kids and I all have notebooks in front of us at the dining room table--yes, including the two girls.  We make three columns on our page--one for thanks, one for people, one for things.

The boys and I make at least two entries under each column.  Mary, age four, dictates her prayer requests to me, and I write them in her columns. She then colors, draws or paints on another piece of paper, until it's her turn to pray.  I just verbally remind her of her requests, when her turn comes.

Beth, age two, just scribbles on her notebook page.  When it's her turn to pray, she bows, folds her hands, and says whatever, and we understand a portion of it.  God gets every word, though, and that's all that matters!  :) She's happy to do it.  If she's too wiggly or screams to get out of her booster before we're done, I give her some coveted food to munch on, like cheese.  (Yes, I'm shameful that way.)

Peter, who sound spells and cares about ideas, writes a lot.  Paul, a perfectionist, spends way too much time making his list--worrying about the spelling, penmanship, and grammar, despite my insisting that these are lists, not sentences.  I've learned that Paul needs to start his "lists" before the two year old is called to the table.  She doesn't have the patience for long writing sessions.

Once everyone has at least two entries in each column, I open the prayer and we go around the table, taking turns talking to Jesus about the two or more things on our page, from the column we're on.  Because there are three columns, we go around the table three times.  Then, Momma or a volunteer closes the prayer.

I love it!  And in the future, I look forward to adding more columns, starting with one for confession.

We date our entries and draw a line under them, so that the same page can be used the next day, if there's room.  When a prayer has been answered, we'll circle it on our page.  Later, when we have some things circled, we'll do a brief "praises" component, in which we tell everyone how God answered yes.

On the days Daddy can participate, he both opens and closes the prayer. And as our spiritual leader, my husband also reads from the Bible after the breakfasts he's here for.  Also, two nights a week, he arrives home just after the boys' tuck-in time, and prays with them (around 9:15 p.m.).

Studies show that children will take these spiritual practices with them, through life, if the man of the home leads them.  The same goes for church attendance.  Husband and I are cognizant that my solo contribution doesn't yield as much fruit, but my leading seventy percent of the time, and husband leading thirty percent of the time, seems better than the children only participating in these spiritual practices a couple days per week, when husband is available for leadership.

The best spiritual yield for children, studies suggest, is when both Mom and Dad are present for church services, and for home spiritual practices. This article helps illustrate the importance of Dad's spiritual leadership.

Here are some prayer entries from my nine year old, from earlier today:
Thanks column:  for pretty snow, sledding, trees
People column:  for salvation for Richard and Elizabeth, Grandma and Grandpa, Elena's family
Things column:  for a hermit crab, for caterpillars this year, for bullfrogs

My seven year old prayed....
Thanks column:  for my high score in multiplication, that Peter played a board game with me
People column:  for Peter to read without OCD problem, to heal Mommy's headaches
Things column:  for warmer weather, for pretty birds

My four year old prayed...
Thanks column:  for Aunt Lorrie, sailboats, water, Mommy, Peter
People column:   for Beth to be good, for Peter to be good
Things column:  for a new soccer ball, for a clothesline

After the lists are made, the prayer part only takes about 10 minutes.


Matthew 18:20 


For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

learning styles

I wanted to include some quick notes about learning styles, as a post script to my Leapfrog Twist and Shout Multiplication post.

Three learning styles have been identified:  visual (seeing), auditory (hearing), and tactile-kinesthetic (doing)

If you are unsure of your style, or of your child's style, check out this learning styles quiz.

- Unless a learning disability is present, all of us can learn through any style.  However, it's far easier to learn when information is presented in our dominant style.

- We are born with a dominant style, which emerges after the preschool years.

- There is frequent overlap in learning styles (for some people more than others).

- As young children, we are all tactile-kinesthetic learners, which is why preschool should be unstructured and hands-on.

- Visual learners make up 65% of the population.

- Auditory learners make up 30% of the population.

- Tactile-kinesthetic learners make up 5% of the population.