Sunday, June 7, 2009

Ratio of boys to girls being homeschooled, revisited...



Henry Cate at Why Homeschool conducted his own survey of how many boys and girls are being homeschooled among 500 of his readers - which is more homeschoolers than the government had in their survey. Here are the results of the Why Homeschool survey.

Go check out the results - it may surprise you!

Summertime Activities from Jan Brett...



Here are some activities to keep your kids busy during those rainy summer days or at other times they can't be outside from author Jan Brett!

Healthy Homeschool Lunches

I got the following idea from a post on Homeschooling-ideas. The post is about using bento boxes or laptop lunch boxes for creative lunches. I have heard of these types of boxes before, and have seen some really cute sets for sale online. You can stuff them with American food or whatever you like. If you want to use Japanese-style foods, I have found plenty of recipes online - just Google "bento lunches" or "laptop lunches."

For a creative lunch, you don't have to purchase an expensive bento set, though. Some small, inexpensive plastic containers can be bought at just about any discount store. We eat most of our lunches at home and I have several small glass bowls that are just right for serving small snacks, desserts, or side dishes in and make the food more appear more appetizing than if I just threw it in just any old bowl (for instance, those ancient margerine tubs my husband loves to use) or just plopping the food onto a paper towel.


I have seen some creative ideas using those bamboo skewers for fruit, cheese, or even sandwich squares - for little ones, I have read the suggestion that you could use straws instead of bamboo skewers.

Then there's the old classic idea of cutting sandwiches with cookie cutters. I even have a cutter especially for sandwiches that cuts off the crust and cuts out two dinosaur shapes at the same time - with little or no waste. I believe I bought it at Wal-Mart for around a dollar.

You could also let kids decorate their own lunches by providing a base lunch (say, a bowl of soup and a sandwich) with things to garnish with, such as greens, raisins, carrot curls, celery sticks - just use your imagination. Have the kids make faces or whatever they want on their lunches. I have heard the rumor that kids will eat what they make. I am here to tell you that rumor is not true in all cases. You'll just have to try it for yourself and see! ;)


For more great lunch ideas, here are some links:


FamilyFun.com


School Lunch Ideas


Bruce Van Patter Creative Lunches

For a post about the psychology of food color, visit this page at MiaZagora's Marvelous Munchies!

My Audio School


At My Audio School there are many audio files and videos about history subjects to choose from on a variety of subjects. Included are several videos on Leonardo Davinci's Inventions. No matter how much you think you know about the talented Leonardo Davinci, I'm sure there's something you didn't know in these videos. The best thing is, they're all in one place and you could base a whole lesson on the information contained in these videos.

Best of all, it's free!

Here is their stated purpose for the web site:

I built this site is to provide excellent educational audio content for my children in a format that is easy for them to use. I hope and pray that your children will also be blessed here! Every audio book on this site is from the public domain. You can stream individual chapters from the blog, or click the provided links to download books in their entirety to MP3.

Go to the My Audio School web site to find out more.

Live and Recorded Online Classes

I would venture to say that most people who homeschool (or afterschool) know about CurrClick and their relatively new offering of "live" classes online. If you don't, then check them out here. We've taken one of these classes and it was really great! They left the videos up for a couple of weeks, so you could go over them as much as you needed to. There were printable worksheets for assessment and to help with the experiments. Extremely easy to implement and interesting!

I recently found out about another web site that offers online classes called Homeschool Connections. Some of the classes are free and some are on the expensive side. I do not have an opinion on any of the classes, as I haven't had any experience with this site. I did sign up for a free class set up for later this month, so I'll let you know how that goes!
If anyone out there has experience with this site - good or bad - please leave a comment and/or a link to your review of the site.

Isn't technology great!

PS: The above photo is from the web site Mayumi-Sensei's Japanese Class, which are also given online.

Another idea for a Father's Day craft...




The people at Activity Village have put up this idea for Father's Day - embellish Dad some socks!

Author's Note: I don't know about your dad or husband, but I don't think mine would actually wear socks with little red hearts! Maybe you could leave those off or put them at the top where they would be concealed under his pants legs? ;)

The Jacques Cousteau cloud?

Photographed over Schiehallion, Perthshire, Scotland © Ken Prior. See this photo in the Cloud Gallery here.

Do you remember all the different types of clouds you had to memorize in school? Well, there's another category of clouds on the horizon. If the folks at The Cloud Appreciation Society have their way, the Altocumulus cloud (nicknamed the Jacques Cousteau cloud) would be classified as "asperatus," which is Latin for "roughened up," making it officially Altocumulus asperatus. The clouds in question are storm clouds that have a "dark, choppy" quality to them.

Read more about Asperatus here.

Kids can learn more about the different cloud types here.

Learn more about clouds and get some printouts at Enchanted Learning.

(H/T Watts Up With That?)