Showing posts with label Montessori. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Montessori. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Black and white mobile

(Goblin is 4 years old)
Recently Goblin has acquired two new cousins. When we went to visit I wanted him to be able to give them something that he had made himself. We decided to make a simple black and white mobile. Really little babies see contrasting colours better so black and white is the easiest option for babies to focus on. 
 We used air dry clay to make spheres that we then flattened and I put a hole in. When I say we I really mean, Goblin did one and I did the rest. I wanted him to do them all and I'd even got out his rolling pin and shape cutters thinking he could make a bunch of different shapes. But he wasn't interested, so I did this bit myself.
 Once the discs were dry (24 hours later) he painted them white and the following day I gave him a squirt bottle with black paint and he went to town.
Finally I strung the discs up with fishing line. I attached them to a colander, the reflection on the inside of the colander will provide some added interest for baby, however if you want to make yours look a little more attractive you can use an embroidery rind and cover the wood in a ribbon.



Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Counting past ten


When Goblin was just a bit over 2 years old he learnt to count to 12. We'd been trying to teach him to count to ten and one day he lay on the changing mat and spontaneously counted to 12. "Whoop Whoop" we thought. Fast forward two years and Goblin can now count to .... wait for it .... 13! Yup, in two years he has learnt one more number. That's not entirely true. He knows the other numbers that come after it but always mixes up 14 and jumps to 16 and then just randomly dots around in the teens until we help him out.
So I wanted to provide more opportunities for Goblin to practice counting those big numbers. But he won't do anything unless he's interested. I can't just suggest we count pasta - his response would be "Er, no thanks!" So I needed to make up a game that would grab his interest.
His current obsession is Octonauts and the idea of helping them out would definitely capture his imagination. So I made up a sheet to encourage a bit of reading. It named a character and the sea creatures that character was counting. I asked Goblin to help his favourite character Peso to identify what each of the four characters were collecting, help the character collect them on their sticky back plastic "collection tank" and count them, and finally help Peso to write the correct number in the box.
The game provided opportunities for

  • letter identification/reading 
  • number writing practice
  • fine motor pincer grip (picking up the objects)
  • sorting
  • counting beyond 10

I used simple objects we already had: plastic sharks; sea shells; pompom sea urchins; and manta rays that I found on google images and printed off. Goblin stuck them to the plastic sheets provided and I helped him count them up.
When he'd arrived at the right number I wrote it down and he copied the number. We counted three of the four sets of objects and he wrote down two of them. That was pretty good going for us. We stopped because he got distracted when he discovered he could colour the inside of the sea shells with a felt tip pen!

Tuesday, 14 January 2014

Make your own matching cards

(Goblin is 4 years old)
WARNING: This post contains Amazon affiliate links. If you click through to Amazon and buy the product I get a teeny bit of finanical reward
There are lots of wonderful blogs that offer printables to help your child with learning. Goblin and I like doing matching and I have scoured the internet looking for good printables over the last 4 years. However I have come to the conclusion that finding a good printable that fits your child's interests and ability is probably about as time consuming as making your own.
Matching cards really aren't that hard to make.

Step 1: choose a subject
Step 2: Use google images to find decent pictures and save to your computer.
Step 3: Use Picmonkey (or Picasa) to upload inmages and make a collage
Step 4: If you used Picmonkey collage you need to save the collage and reopen in edit picture to add text
Step 5: print out 2 sets (laminate if you have a laminator - they last longer) and cut one of them into single images

When Goblin was younger we did colour matching with tractors and counting with rescue vehicles. His latest interest is marine animals so we made matching cards for sharks. I ordered a selection of plastic shark from Amazon, then looked them up on wikipedia. I used a selection of images saved from Google images and Wikipedia to make the cards. Because the images are someone else's property I can't share the matching cards as printables for others, but making them for my own child is perfectly within acceptable use for other people's photos.

Happy making!






Saturday, 17 August 2013

Morning routine charts

(Goblin is nearly 4)
Our family don't really do routines. We have a rhythm to our week but things like routines for getting out of the house are a bit haphazard and tend to depend who is going to work and who is at home with Goblin, as well as what we are doing that day. As a result sometimes I forget to do crucial things. I forget to wash Goblin's face and don't realise until we get to nursery and I spot toothpaste all over it, or I forget to brush his teeth for an entire week.
To help me remember all the basic things (that a more organised parent would never forget) I made a chart. And while I was at it I made a dressing chart too. I thought these would help both me and Goblin to remember all the things that we needed to do in the morning, and I thought the incentive of adding a tick once we'd done something might encourage Goblin to do more of them himself. I stuck velcro circles below each word and on the back of all the ticks so that he can add a tick as we go, and we can reuse it each day.
I'm not using these as reward charts, they are simply reminder charts. Obviously they can be used as reward charts, but I'm not a huge fan of rewarding behaviour that is just something that needs to be done.
To make these charts I used picmonkey and google images. But as a result I don't have the rights to the pictures so can't offer them to others. So I have made some new ones using different pictures.  If you'd like a copy click the title link below. These are, as you can see, British charts, using words like trousers. If that doesn't work for your family you are welcome to use the images here to make your own with picmonkey. I laminated mine and used velcro but a non laminated version with bluetac to add the ticks would work just as well.



I'm sharing this at 
I Can Teach My Child PhotobucketMontessori Monday 

Monday, 15 July 2013

Learning by Living in History

(Goblin is 44 months)
So we've been MIA for a while. That's because we were on holiday, being Tudors at a historical re-enactment at Kentwell hall. Instead of telling you about the manor I'm going to tell you what our three and a half year old got out of living in the 16th century for a week. 
Going to Kentwell was a working holiday for us all. We were Sotlers and along with some other lovely folk we had to cook pottage for 150 people (the other re-enactors on the manor) every day. Unlike some stations that don't need to be active until the public and school parties arrive, Sotling requires an earlier start because the fire has to be lit. Fortunately Goblin was our alarm clock, not sleeping beyond 7am despite the late nights. So Hublet, Goblin and I were usually first on station and lit the fire. Goblin learnt that you need kindling to light fires, and that if you are doing it 21st Century stylee you use fire lighters which "small people can't touch because they are poisonous".
Our next job each morning was to fetch the vegetables and legumes that we'd be using in the pottage. We only used things that would have been available and in season (ish) in 16th Century England, so no potatoes or tomatoes. Goblin helped carry turnips, carrots, broad beans, cabbage and various dried pulses and beans. He learnt that carrots were called roots and the generic term for cabbage and other brassica was 'worts'. He also learnt how to shell broad beans and most days he helped to get them ready for cooking, sometimes accompanied by a friend or two. 
As well as vegetables Goblin learnt about herbs that we picked from the garden. He helped to pick mint, savoury, sage, lovage, thyme, good king henry, rosemary and chives. These were added to the pottage in great quantities to add flavour, and Goblin helped to cut them up using his own knife. All the re-enactors at Kentwell carry a knife, mostly hanging from their belts. Goblin learnt that you never try to grab someones knife. And you don't play with blades that have been left on the table. You never know how sharp they are - and after we had all the knives sharpened on the manor this was an essential thing for him to remember. He was very good and only used his own knife (under supervision). 
Goblin already knew some basic fire safety but at Kentwell he learnt extra things like never run towards a fire (incase you trip). And even if a fire pit looks like its not in use you need to check because logs can stay warm and smoldering a long time after the flames have gone. One morning he helped me dowse a fire that had been set in the middle of the sward and we watched the water boil as we poured it on the ash.
Goblin was given an authentic Tudor name. We called him Creature. When a labor wasn't going well and the midwife thought the baby might not live they would grab what ever part of the child they could (often a foot or hand) and not knowing the sex of the baby they would Christen it with a generic name so it would be able to go to heaven. Common names used by 16th century midwives included Creature of Christ or Vitalis, meaning life. Goblin took to his new Kentwell name and told anyone who asked that his name was Creature. 
He also wore a dress. Boys were not breached until the age of 5 or 6, so both girls and boys wore a shift and pinafore (and a coat but Goblin never took to the coat and with the weather being so hot we didn't push it).  He also wore a hat, and coif. I was expecting this to be an issue as he doesn't often wear hats in the 21st century. But when we explained that everyone kept their head covered, he accepted this and wore his hat and coif every day. 
School parties visited the different stations on a route around the manor. Goblin would run to greet each new band and would happily explain to a group of thirty 12 year olds what was in each of the pots, checking with one of the Sotlers if he couldn't remember. One day I found him playing in a great cart surrounded by school children. I listened as he told them "We don't have TV and we don't have cars". Not very authentic but very accurate for a Tudor child, he really had picked up some of the differences between 16th century life and our own.
When Goblin wasn't talking to the public or cooking pottage he found many other ways to amuse himself. These included playing skittles, making pretend pottage, watching the older children play chess, climbing on the great cart, stirring the ash in the cold fire pits, feeding bread to the fish in the moat, picking wild ox eye daisies (and being careful not to pick the orchids - or pink daisies as he called them), and playing with the other children on the manor. He made friends with children ranging from 2 to 12. In the evenings he ran around the front sward of the manor with a group of 8, 9 and 10 year olds. The great thing about Kentwell is how age blind the re-enactor children are. Unlike school where children tend to stick to age bands, at Kentwell all the kids play together and look out for each other.
Believe it or not some re-enactor parents find it difficult to convince their children's schools to release them so they can take part in the main Tudor reenactment that happens during term time. I find this a little baffling as any good educational establishment could see from a glimpse that this experience is oozing with social and educational benefits. As well as the obvious historical education, just a short list of the skills that Goblin picked up or honed at Kentwell would include Public Speaking; Cooking; Herb identification; Animal husbandry; Acting; Fire Safety; and Social skills. I hope that for Goblin this will be the first of many opportunities to learn by doing, the true Montessori way.

sharing with
 Country Kids from Coombe Mill Family Farm Holidays Cornwall


Thursday, 27 June 2013

Kids Coop - Citrus Sensory activities

The Weekly Kids Co-Op

Its Kids Coop time, please link up your kids activity posts and check out what others have been up to. This week I am linking the following:
*****
(Goblin is 44 months)
Last week we had a citrus day. I bought some lemons, limes and oranges and made a series of activities. Like at his Montessori nursery I left them out around the room so Goblin could choose which he engaged with. 
My activities included a letter learning and mark making activity; a scissor practice and letter learning activity; and a fine motor grating activity. 
Goblin wasn't interested in the two letter activities and spent only a short time on the grating. What he really enjoyed was the hands on smell, touch, taste and sight activity. 
This is such a simple activity. I simply cut up some fruit and squeezed some juice from each into a shot glass. Then I let Goblin taste the juices, and encouraged him to smell and touch the fruit. And then we ate some. He drank the orange juice first and enjoyed it. But he screwed up him face when he tried the lemon and wasn't daft enough to get stung a second time by trying the lime juice, but he did smell it. 
He wanted more of the orange juice and asked me to squeeze some more. He really enjoyed watching me squeeze the juice and talked about it a lot later in the day. I realised that another learning aspect to this is the child gets to see where fruit juice comes from. 
The final activity I'd laid out was sensory play with tapioca gloop. It is literally tapioca boiled in water for 30 minutes with food colouring. It is seriously gloopy and Goblin was not impressed. 
However not to be defeated I moved the bowl to the bathroom and had a play myself. As I was squishing it through my hands Goblin came and joined me and asked if he could add some water. This was a really good idea because it made it less slimey. When I scooped some out they looked like mini water beads. It reminded me of BlogMeMom's post on edible water beads which uses giant tapioca pearls.
I dashed down stairs and brought up a sieve and some big spoons (and a whisk at Goblin's request). And we had a good old splash about with the tapioca and ended up stripping off and throwing at each other while in the bath. 
Today was definitely a sensory play day rather than a letter learning and mark making day. I'm glad I prepared a selection of activities so Goblin could gravitate towards those that appeal to his current needs. 

And now to the linky 


Thursday, 2 May 2013

Kids Coop - numbers

 
Its Kids Coop time again, please link up your kids orientated posts and check out what others have been up to. This week I'm linking the following:
*****
(Goblin is 43 months)
Goblin can count but he doesn't know his number symbols. He is also not particularly interesting in learning them. I know a lot of children do know them by now but I don't think he will be damaged by getting there later than some. But I am trying to ensure that he is exposed to them regularly through play. 
And the other day I found a perfect opportunity. I laid out some handkerchiefs that I'd stuck sticky black felt numbers and corresponding dots to. Goblin was playing with his truck and I asked him if he could make some deliveries.
I told him each person was at a garage and they needed the right number of flat marbles delivered to their unit. He happily took the challenge and drove his truck round. I voiced the little people giving him instructions to leave the marbles and helping him count out the right number.
He did a great job with the low numbers, but by the time he reached the bigger ones he realised he could just leave a pile of marbles and get the little people to take as many as they needed. I tried insisting that the delivery driver needed to take back the extra ones, but he wasn't falling for it. Bt it wasn't a total bust because we still got to talk about the numbers.
And now to the linky.

I'm sharing this with
  A Mom With a Lesson PlanFor the Kids Fridays at SunScholars.com TGIF Linky Party hosted by 123Homeschool4MeMontessori Monday
Teach Beside Me PhotobucketI Can Teach My ChildSerenity you


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