Category Archives: Homeschool

Learning at home with a second-grader and a fifth-grader.

The week in learning: Dance, fractions & communications

History

This week in “Story of the World,” we talked about the Diaspora, or the scattering of the Jewish people after the Romans kicked them out of Judea. Our project was to do our own responsa, which SOTW tells us is how the rabbis communicated their beliefs and ideas via letters to the scattered people. Poppy and I tried to communicate only through the written word for an hour, but we only lasted about half an hour. She said the hardest part about it for her was not being able to say “I love you” to me (melt), and I found it difficult because by the time I’d finished writing something to her she was already thinking about something entirely different. It was an interesting experiment.

Reading

Pete is gaining confidence in his reading. He’s a few books into the third set of Bob Books, and every now and then he does a little spontaneous reading while we’re out and about. I don’t think it’s entirely dawned on him that the can read, if that makes sense, but he’s nearly there.

Poppy, meanwhile, is reading everything in her path as long as it isn’t something suggested by her mother.

In read-aloud news: Rockford is very slowly making his way through “The Hobbit” with the kids, and I’m reading “Gone-Away Lake” by Elizabeth Enright with them.

Math

The kids have both been working on new concepts recently. Poppy’s McRuffy Math introduced fractions a few weeks ago, and Pete is starting to learn to tell time and use coins. Big doings ’round here.

Science

We finally finished the first section of Nancy Larson Science 1 this week. It was all about human development and life stages, and I have to say it was less engaging than I’d hoped the curriculum would be. We’re going to skip around a little and do the insect section next. I’m hoping there will be more hands-on activities involved.

Extracurricular

Our homeschool co-op had a talent show this week, and both of the kids participated. Poppy recited the Preamble to the Constitution, “Toasting Marshmallows” by Kristen O’Connell George and “Sunflakes” by Frank Asch, and Pete did some freestyle dancing to the “Ghostbusters” theme song. They were both fearless and awesome. Some of the other kids played piano, sang, did tae kwon do and played guitar (not all at once), and one girl did a crazy-impressive routine with hula hoops. Pete was astonished by that one. I heard him whisper “But you can’t do that” to himself when she added the third hoop.

The kids have been taking an art class at a local art studio for the last few months. Poppy loves it, but I’m afraid Pete is going to get kicked out. There was an incident this week with the sprayer and a ruined screen print.

Wanna read more about homeschooling? Check out the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers weekly linky thing!

Educational apps for the 7-year-old girl’s iPod

Lots of weeks ago my friend Elizabeth asked if I could share some of the math apps that Poppy’s been using on her iPod. And then I got distracted and wrote about brisket, beans and pickles instead. And then last night I remembered that I never answered Elizabeth.

Instead of focusing just on the math apps, though, I thought I’d just go ahead and tell you about all of the edu-apps on Poppy’s iPod. And so here we are, and here they are.

Educational apps for a 7-year-old girl

GeoDash: Wild Animal Adventure is from National Geographic, so it has to be good. It’s free, but (as Poppy notes below) additional “chapters” cost extra.

“You get a little animal called Geo (he’s a robot), and he’s trying to go through a portal,” Poppy says. “You need a key. There are special powers like the Cheetah Power that makes you go two times faster. I think it’s a great game for someone who really likes National Geographic, except you have to pay for the chapters in the Amazon rain forest. You get facts and cards to help you learn about the animals.”


Playing Go Car Go makes me laugh out loud. I like to build cars that do ridiculous flips and smashups, though, so I don’t think I’m playing it as it’s meant to be played. It’s 99 cents.

“It’s a game sort of like Bad Piggies, except you don’t have a pig,” which doesn’t clear up a thing for me, but that’s how Poppy describes it. “You’re trying to build a car that can get to the finish line without stopping. If you stop for a certain amount of time, an octopus comes and takes your car apart. I think it’s a very good game for someone who likes to build things.”


Motion Math: Wings is the only math app Poppy has continued playing. It’s $7 for every level.

“Motion Math: Wings is the same company who made Hungry Fish (we have it on my Daddy’s iPad). It’s a very fun game for learning math,” says the girl. “You tilt the device to steer the bird. I like that you get to collect feathers and twigs and bird blasts.”


I think Poppy has learned more from Presidents vs. Aliens than from any other app on her iPod. She knows all of the presidents by sight now, which is more than I can say for myself. (And also you get to fling presidents at aliens.) It’s 99 cents.

“This is a very good game for learning about the presidents, but here’s a part I don’t really understand: When you answer a question right, you get a president head that you shoot at aliens. That’s very weird,” says Poppy. “I would recommend it for someone who’s trying to learn about the presidents and especially for someone who doesn’t know much about them but would like to learn more. I found some presidents I didn’t even know had been president, like William Henry Harrison and Harry S Truman.”


Poppy has gleaned a lot of info from Stack the States, too. It’s worth the 99 cents.

Poppy says: “Stack the States is from the same company as Presidents vs. Aliens and Mathamateer and Stack the Countries. (We’ll talk to you about that later.) Stack the States is a game where you answer questions about the states. Every time you get a question right you earn a state, and you have to make a stack of states to reach a goal. I think it’s good for someone who wants to learn about the states.”


Stack the Countries is a relatively new addition to the iPod, so I can’t vouch for its efficacy just yet. Poppy seems to like it, though. It’s $1.99.

“This is like a huger version of Stack the States,” she says. “It’s kind of like you get huger states, only this time they’re countries. This would be good for someone who’s learning about the world.”

Maybe we should’ve watched “Thor”

Homeschool at ButterscotchSundae.comThis was one of those weeks where I would’ve like to have stayed home every day. (And by “one of those weeks,” I mean it was a regular week. I have hermit-istic tendencies.) Alas, the children have activities every day but today. I think all the running around on the other days makes today all the sweeter, though, especially since it’s 20-something degrees and icy outside and I don’t have to leave the house at all.

History

This is the best Viking ship I’ve ever had a hand in building.

I found the Vikings fascinating when I was a kid (still do), but they didn’t seem to capture Poppy’s imagination all that much. The only thing she was really enthusiastic about in history this week was building our Viking longboat, which we did this afternoon following the instructions from LooLeDo.com. They also have a nice video about the process:

You can read Poppy’s take on Vikings on her blog, which we remember to update periodically.

Handwriting

Pete has been asking for awhile now if I’d order a handwriting curriculum for him, so I finally got McRuffy’s Kindergarten Handwriting. And he hated it almost immediately. I’m not sure what he was expecting, but I’m pretty sure he didn’t think I’d make him redo his work if he rushed through it.

Reading

It’s looking like Poppy might not get to her 1,000-page goal for the BookIt program this month, even though she finished two Magic Tree House books this week. She didn’t want to read anything that wasn’t one of the MTH books she had on hold at the library, and she had to wait about a week for them. So she’s fallen behind quite a bit. Maybe next time she’ll just read something else in the meantime!

Pete hasn’t quite mastered this week’s Bob book, so we’ll keep at it next week. He’s picking out words here and there on signs, etc. We’re making progress.

Extracurricular

Pete practiced dribbling in the garage earlier this week, and Rockford reports that he had a very good basketball practice. His first game, last weekend, went well. He passed the ball both times it was in his possession, and his team did pretty well. They don’t keep score at this level, so I can’t tell you for certain whether or not they won.

The heat at the ballet studio went out moments before Poppy’s ballet class this week, so she had a very chilly 45 minutes. Picture eight little parka-clad girls leaping around the studio.

Poppy completed the requirements for her first American Heritage Girls badge this week. It was the “Internet Adventurer” badge, and it took her about half an hour to complete. She read most of the handbook this week and has decided that she wants to earn almost every badge.

Math

Math was studied.

Wanna read more about homeschooling? Check out the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers weekly linky thing!