The evolution of kindergarten

home/schoolOur school curriculum has changed quite a bit since we started the year. We finished with “Five in a Row” and the Zaner-Bloser handwriting book last month, and we never started Girl Scouts. We also added a few things after our Christmas break, thanks mostly to that gift card from Dad.

Spanish
Poppy finished the first unit of Rosetta Stone Spanish on the last day before Christmas break, which was a totally serendipitous thing. She’s had a hard time this week with jumping up to the next level, but I’m sure she’ll figure it out.

Health
We’re still working with the same health book. It doesn’t have as many accompanying activities as Poppy would like, but I’ve been pleased with it as an introductory program. We started the unit on nutrition and exercise this week.

Bible study
We didn’t finish very strong with “Character Building for Families” before our break. And then we moved the big bookshelf in the living room right before we started up again, and my Bible went temporarily missing. I found it today, though, so we got started on the “Gentleness” section.

Art
In theory we’re still using Mary Ann Kohl’s “Great Artists” books. In practice, I have a hard time making myself pull out the mess at the end of the week. Maybe I ought to move art day to Monday.

Physical education
Poppy had a blast doing “The Nutcracker,” and she’s signed up for the next soccer season.

Reading
Poppy’s taken on a couple of reading challenges, one of which requires her to read 20 minutes a day. I’m letting her choose whatever she’d like for her free reading. We’re reading longer chapter books aloud, a chapter a day over lunch. We started “A Little Princess” this week. Poppy asks me the meaning of every word she doesn’t know, and there are a lot of big words in this one. I’ve been reading it with a children’s dictionary by my side.

Geography
I downloaded Trail Guide to U.S. Geography from CurrClick, and I ordered a CD-ROM of maps and a children’s atlas, neither of which has arrived yet. So we haven’t actually started our geography lessons yet, but I’m looking forward to it. Even though one of the suggested activities for every state is making a salt dough map, which sounds suspiciously like a rather messy art project.

Science
The 1st Step Elementary Science I curriculum was also a CurrClick download, and it was so deeply discounted that I thought I’d give it a try. The theme is “measurements and tools,” and the kids were thrilled to get to run around with the tape measure yesterday. So I give it an A+ so far.

Math
I went ’round and ’round over the math curriculum. I was pretty well convinced* that I wanted to use Right Start math, but in the end it was just too much money. Instead, I bought Math Mammoth. It seems to work on more or less the same ideas as Right Start, but it doesn’t come with all of the geegaws and manipulatives. I did order an abacus, and it’s wherever that children’s atlas is. But we started it anyway, and it’s going well.

*In that post, I was also thinking about ordering the Nancy Larson science curriculum. I do still want to use it, but I’m going to wait a few years so Poppy and Pete can use it at the same time.