Preschool
PreK Activity Book
Ellie is basically to the end of her PreK book. The book introduced opposites at the very end. It was a bit confusing to her at first, but if I pose the question as a fill-in-the-blank, she does really well with it. She was also asked to draw zig-zag lines, which is difficult for her. She needs some fine motor work, I think. I should look into getting her some Kumon tracing/cutting books... I also ordered the next level activity book.
Letter Craft
We didn't do a craft this week because we were active with other things... (Mostly she enjoyed playing and coloring in large boxes we have around the house.)
We did put up some missing letters on our coconut tree. Then Ellie points to every letter and tells me their names and sounds. This is too easy for her...and apparently Hyrum too!
Junior K
Reading
After finishing up Little Bear early, we moved on to Put Me in the Zoo. I believe Little Bear is at a higher level. (According to Scholastic's Book Wizard, Little Bear: grade level equivalency is 1.8, whereas Put Me in the Zoo: grade level 1.4.) Apparently Put Me in the Zoo was fascinating, though. Instead of reading it over a few days, we got to the appointed stopping place and Emmett said, "I want to read more!" I couldn't deny that! That is HUGE for this guy (who really doesn't care much for stories and would much rather read about ants, spiders, volcanoes, etc). So he read the whole book in one sitting!
He moved on to The Cat in the Hat, which must not be as engaging (probably because he's heard it and knows the story line). He's not in any rush to read beyond what I've planned, and that's fine.
At this point, Abby was reading many simple readers on her own volition. Emmett is not. I have a feeling that he will need explicit instruction and reading help longer, but I don't think that's necessarily bad. She was willing to practice more because it allowed her to stay up late at night. On the other hand, Emmett doesn't care about staying up later to read. He gets in bed, may thumb through a book, but is typically sawing logs within ten minutes of laying down. It's also difficult to for him to read books he's interested in when he's really interested in non-fiction science books. It's hard to design phonics-controlled readers for a beginning reader who wants to read about bugs and spiders and volcanoes and what's inside the earth, you know?
Spelling
Emmett spelled words with the short u sound this week. He breezed through those words. If I were in any rush, I'd have pushed him through most of these short-vowel words within a week or two. Instead, I don't feel the need to rush. It's easy for him and I don't have to be super intensive with it. He's still young. :)
Math
I did start Emmett in Singapore Math year 1, though. We had the books and I really do wonder if doing some math would really strike his fancy. Like I've said previously, he can count well beyond 100, knows addition facts of his doubles and +1s. If I phrase a question in certain ways, he can figure other sums in his head easily. ("What's two bigger than six?" rather than "Two plus six is what?") He breezed through the beginning section on counting (of course) and began work with number bonds. Again, I'm not planning on breezing through the number bond section because I really would like him to remember a fair amount of bonds when we finish this section. He does already know his bonds to ten... I just want him to be a bit stronger or more sure about his bonds for sex, seven, eight and nine. That just means some game play next week...which he'll love.
First Grade
Language
Grammar
We began First Language Lessons 2! We only did two lessons this week, one that focused a bit on nouns and then the next one re-introduced the poem "The Goops." She's working on memorizing that one now.
Writing
Abby's selections this week came from The Tale of Benjamin Bunny. Abby loved Peter Rabbit last year and I don't think she's realized there are other stories by the same author. Time to pull down the compilation, I think!
Reading
Abby took the Book Adventure quiz for Poppy. Every once in a while I wonder what she really pulls from a book so far advanced (Poppy is at a late 5th grade reading level), but when she takes the quiz and completely aces it and can tell me the gist of the story and her favorite parts, I stop wondering. It still boggles my mind at times, though. The points from her Poppy quiz pushed her over 1,000 points. Come Saturday, she will be the proud owner of a library card. She is ecstatic about that.
For lack of anything better to read at the first of the week, Abby took all of an hour to read a Magic Tree House book (Hour of the Olympics). Later in the week, we took the kids to the book store to pick some new reading books. When presented with a few choices, she immediately chose The Trumpet of the Swan, knowing it was by the same author who did Stuart Little and Charlotte's Web. She's already into chapter four and enjoying it.
Spelling
No new words were introduced in this last step of spelling. She did a lot of dictation and sorting words with the long a sound.
Handwriting
We focused on the letter s this week. She's nearing the end of her alphabet...I imagine when she finishes the book, we'll do some small sentences copied in cursive for a while to cement formation before I start having her write other school-y things in cursive as well...
Math
Abby worked through some pages in Challenging Word Problems 2 as well as finishing up the section on multiplication and division. The next section is division with a remainder. At the end of 2A she seemed to be sort of frustrated with word problems and whether the problem was asking her to add, multiply, subtract, or divide. We worked on that a bit, but apparently letting it percolate in her brain was right because lately she's not struggled with that at all. In fact, her biggest complain about doing word problems this afternoon was that I would just not let her blurt the answer. She had to write the math sentence or number bond or show me with rods or a bar diagram how she arrived there.
All Together
We have put RSO: Life on definite hold for the next few weeks. We worked through some more Evan-Moor's Giant Science Resource Book, but it is definitely pretty light compared to what we were doing. On top of that, there aren't many kids' books at our library on how flowers reproduce. There's a smattering of books on how plants get their energy, but nothing that goes into terms such as chloroplast and photosynthesis, etc. We've been watching a lot of YouTube and some Magic School Bus too...
History
We finished up a long chapter on Rome. We have more learning about Rome to do, but this week we learned about Roman gladiators. That really caught Emmett's attention. And, of course, the kids loved the book You Wouldn't Want to Be a Roman Gladiator. (They love all of the books in that series!)
Chess
We actually worked some on this this week! I was surprised when Ellie remembered all of the names of the pieces except pawn. And, of course queen and king, which I didn't teach her. Abby has definitely mastered the concept of "attacking" the rook with a bishop from two different directions. Emmett struggled with it a bit more. I bet he'll get it by next week, though...
I just signed up with Book Adventure. My 5 year old daughter just finished Trumpet of the Swan and loved it. I also sometimes wonder how much she gets out of an "advanced" book. I took a look at the Trumpet of the Swan quiz, but it shows the answers. Did I do something wrong? Do I need to log in as her to see the quiz without answers? Thanks for your help!
ReplyDeleteNever mind. I figured it out! Thanks though, for mentioned that site. I had never heard of Book Adventures. This will make life easier!
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