The other four days of the week Will attends 4K preschool at a local church (EA also attended 3K & 4kK preschool). EA and I delve into her subjects after dropping Will off and are often continuing them after lunch from about 1 to 2. Here are her subjects this year.
Bible: We are still reading through (3rd year now) The Child's Story Bible by Catherine Vos. Emily Anne and I have learned so much by going through the Bible from beginning to end. We are in the New Testament now and will be finishing this study soon. I plan to then go on to a Biblical Character study using Doorpost's For Instruction in Righteousness. I'd like to see an emphasis on application in our daily lives and also some practice in looking up Bible verses. Emily Anne is also participating in Joy4U choir at church and has a Bible verse to memorize each week for that program.
Earth Science/Astronomy: Emily Anne is taking an Earth Science course at Co-op, and we are supplementing those classroom activities with additional reading from the library and The First Encyclopedia of Our World. We just finished studying the earth's interior (core, mantle, crust), and her dad helped her complete her homework assignment of creating an edible model of the earth! They used a red, chewy Dots candy for the core and positioned it inside a marshmallow mantle. The whole thing was dipped in melted chocolate chips and cooled for the earth's crust. We are currently studying rocks and minerals and are reading the Magic School Bus chapter book Rocky Road Trip.
Handwriting: We are attempting cursive writing this school year and are using Zaner-Bloser's Handwriting 2C. So far this program has been reviewing proper formation of manuscript letters, and I've been pleased with how conscientious she has been about making sure that she is forming the letters correctly.
History: History is Emily Anne's favorite subject, and we are continuing to use Susan Wise Bauer's wonderful The Story of the World. After studying Vol. I, The Ancient World last year, we are studying Vol. II, The Medieval Ages. We have covered a review of the fall of the Roman Empire, The Early Days of Britain, Christianity Comes to Britain, and The Byzantine Empire. For each section of each chapter, I read aloud the information from the text, and then Emily Anne orally answers some questions and then tells the information back to me (narration). We alternate her writing the narration and my writing the narration. I am determined to add more of the great hands-on projects this year. During the chapter on The Early Days of Britain, we made Celtic battle-axes and a dragon brooch for Emily Anne's cloak. I couldn't find the blue face-paint (left over from old Halloween costumes) so that they could draw the blue spirals that Celtic warriors drew on their faces to terrify their enemies. The red hair was pretty authentic, though.
Their battle faces are scary, arent' they?
This week we studied the Byzantine Empire. Along with the text chapters on Constantinople, The Just Empreror Justinian, the Empress Theodora, and the Eastern Church, Emily Anne has been reading aloud to me a biography on Theodora, Who in the World was the Acrobatic Empress? She has loved this book, and I wish there were more than four books in the series.
This picture shows Emily Anne coloring in the borders of the Byzantine Empire on her map for this chapter.
Will is showing off his Justinian and Theodora paper dolls modeling the soldier's uniform and wool spinner's clothing before they became Emperor & Empress of the Byzantine Empire. Will loves any kind of hands-on project that has to do with soldiers!
Emily Anne's version of Justinian & Theodora shows off their royal clothing.
Well, now that this week is over, it's time to start planning next week. When is my planning period?
While waiting for Emily Anne to finish coloring her dolls, Will built this Byzantine palace. Do you see the red and blue thrones in the top of the palace?
Justinian and Theodora are ensconced on their thrones after their coronation!
I am continuing to read Augustine Came to Kent, which we began in the chapter on Christianity Comes to Britain.
Language Arts: We are continuing are work in the second half of First Language Lessons. Most of these lessons are oral, and it is a great fit for Emily Anne, who is really great at memorization. She can rattle off the definition of a noun, the definition of a verb, and chant the list of being verbs and helping verbs. We are currently working on commas in a series and abbreviations for titles of respect. In addition to these lessons, we are continuing to memorize poetry. Her Beginning IEW class has a list of poems for memorization. We have memorized so far: "Ooey Gooey," "The Owl & the Pussycat," "The Swing," and "Persevere." Some of the poems on the list we learned last year, so I may be supplementing some poetry (I'd love her to learn "The Duel" about the gingham dog and the calico cat!).
Literature: I am trying to provide a variety of literature for Emily Anne. I have tied some of our literature to History. As I mentioned before, I have been reading aloud Augustine Came to Kent, which would be way above her reading level, but supplies some detail to augment our study of history, as well as introduces her to vocabulary and sentence structure. I am trying to find biographies and nonfiction for her to read aloud (so that I can help with unfamiliar names and places and to help with her reading fluency) that tie into our history, too. In addition, she is reading chapters in the Boxcar Children books on her own. She has had a vocabulary test in her co-op class and will have a comprehension test in the next co-op class. She will also have a creative project due the next class. We'll be deciding on a project and completing it next week. Before bedtime we have read aloud a biography of Betsy Ross and are currently reading Ginger Pye by Eleanor Estes.
Math: We are using Saxon Math 3 this year. We are still in the section that reviews concepts from last year, so Emily Anne is doing great. She still panics when I pull out the timer for the drill worksheets, so lately I have been just timing her without her knowing it. She does great and finishes within the time frame as long as she doesn't feel pressured by the timer running down.
Spelling: This subject Emily Anne does pretty much on her own. She has such a good memory that she doesn't have much trouble with spelling. We are using Spelling Workout B, though, to solidify those phonics rules into spelling rules. This week she studied spellings for words with long-i sounds.
Writing: We are using Writing with Ease 2 by Susan Wise Bauer this year to help with narration, summarizing, copywork, and dictation. I love how it provides excerpts from classic literature to use with narration. In addition, Emily Anne is taking Beginning IEW at co-op. She is practicing outlining short passages in this class. Emily Anne loves writing and often writes stories on her own time. Emily Anne has also been writing three thank-you notes each day this week for presents she received at her Tea Party that you can read about here.
Well, now that this week is over, it's time to start planning next week. When is my planning period?
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