Mini Engineering Challenges

steam activities header

Here we are, once again, on the 2nd Thursday of the month!  I’m not quite sure where March went, to be perfectly honest with you!  But, we did some awesomely fun mini engineering challenges in March… so here are some new ideas for you to try with your little engineers!

apr 9 building w bristle buildersWe love our Bristle Blocks!  If you don’t have a set of these, you can definitely purchase them on Amazon here (Battat Bristle Blocks Basic 112 Piece Set Building Kit – affiliate link, thank you!).  Bristle blocks are fabulous for so many reasons, but Becca really enjoys the way they feel – as a sensory seeker, she will sit and rub these blocks while she’s thinking about where to put them.  They just feel really neat in her hands.  Many times, I just let her build whatever, but sometimes I’ll say “see if you can build a ______” and give her an idea.  It is fabulous to let your little engineer free play with blocks and building materials, but it’s also a wonderful idea to give her a specific task to focus on – it puts her brain into the mode of needing to solve a problem, and figure out how to best complete the task at hand.  So next time you get out the bristle blocks, try some of these fun things as building challenges:

  • boat
  • car
  • house
  • rocket
  • dinosaur
  • school

apr 9 construct a city

Becca loves to build cities.  Who knows, maybe someday she’ll be a civil engineer and work for some large city, or be an architect who designs skyscrapers.  I love that the sky is the limit for her.  And all of the activities we do encourage her to grow and play in new and different ways.  She loves the wooden blocks that my dad made for me when I was a kid, and she plays with them frequently.  (If you see the apples on some of them and wonder about that, check out this post from last fall about our Ten Apples Up on Top activity – she still enjoys doing that, and anytime I mention taking the apples off, she gets very defensive of the apples!  HA!)  But anyway, if your kids don’t have a wonderful set of wooden blocks, there are some fabulous ones available on Amazon – try this set: Melissa & Doug 60-Piece Standard Unit Blocks. (aff link, thank you!)

So when your kiddos are building with their wooden blocks, free, imaginative play is awesome, but you can also take it to a different level by creating a challenge for them – see if they can create a variety of structures.  Becca loves to build towers with her blocks, so I asked her one day, “well, how about if you build a city this time?”  (She typically builds cities only with her Duplos.)  She had so much fun creating roads and buildings and even decided where each person in our family would live and work, where the park and school and church were located… she really got detailed with it!  I would definitely encourage you to play blocks with your kids and challenge them to build a city!  See what fabulous ideas they come up with!

apr 9 creative play with straws

Becca loves straws.  She’s fascinated with them – not only in their function, but also in the various ways she can play with them.  The other day, she decided on her own that we could “probly” make a rainbow with them, but informed me “I’m gonna need some major help.”  So I obliged, gladly!  She knew the rainbow started with red on top, so we found all the red straws and laid them out, then we talked about each color and figured out how to place them inside of each other.  When she was done, she declared “George is the treasure under the rainbow!” and proudly placed him underneath.  That made me smile so big.  This girl has a heart of gold.  And she really does cherish her little friend.

Encourage your little engineer to play with straws.  Remember that building doesn’t always involve making a 3d structure – but also can be a fabulous 2d construction as well.  We’ve made several other straw pictures since then – we’ve built a house, a pirate ship, a dinosaur, some clouds, and an airplane.  I love how so many of the STEAM subject matters overlap each other!  This project is clearly engineering AND art… as is our next idea!

apr 9 mini create a firetruck

 

I’ve mentioned previously how much Becca LOVES the Amazon show, Creative Galaxy.  She watches it on her Kindle regularly.  She has seen each of the 9 episodes at least 9 times, if not 20.  In one of the shows between the shows (where real kids make art), they use recycled materials to build items.  One of the ideas they mention but don’t build is a fire truck.  So, Becca got it in her head that she wanted to build a fire truck!  She told me the materials she wanted to use to make it, and I obliged.  I held the hot glue gun, but she placed each item where she wanted it, and did the art work to draw the windows and headlights.  She even determined she wanted the ladder to stick up like it was going up to a house to help someone.  So, we figured out how to do the glue so that it would dry sticking up into the air.

I loved so much that she came up with this project on her own, and that I took the time to make it possible for her.  So many times it’s easy for us to hear an idea that our kids have and say there isn’t time, or we don’t have the supplies.  But this was a project that really benefited us both – I was amazed to see what she is capable of and how her brain works, and she was given a confidence boost because Mommy believed in her idea and helped her make it a reality!

What we used: an old puffs container, fruit pouch lids, straws, hot glue, Sharpee marker, scissors (she cut the straws into pieces – fabulous fine motor practice!)

I’d love to see your kids make items from recycled materials!  Please share your finished engineering feats on my Facebook page anytime and label them #engineeringrocks!

Looking for more engineering ideas for your kids?  Each month on the 2nd Thursday I post Mini Engineering Challenges!  Check out my Engineering page for links to my previous months, and visit next month for more new ideas including a Lego game your family is gonna love!

Creating an Obstacle Course for Baby

baby bees header

 

Grayson is crawling.  EVERYWHERE.  He is into EVERYTHING.  There’s really not a whole lot I can do to slow him down except put up a couple of gates!  HA!  But, since my Big Butterfly seeks a lot of sensory input, I’m always trying to think of new ways to engage BOTH kids.  (Which really isn’t a bad thing!)  They have both really enjoyed using our bean bag, blankets, chair and couch cushions, and pillows to create a crawling obstacle course!  (And the bean bag really slows Grayson down!  He has to work hard to get off of it!)

apr 6 obstacle course

 

It’s also a great activity for feeling different textures (thus my boy is shirtless).  I noticed when Becca went across the “osticle” course the first couple of times, she was continually rubbing her hands on the different textures.  She absolutely LOVES our couch and chair – they do have a really cool texture – I agree!  So this is a fabulous activity for ANY child with proprioceptive sensory needs!

But it also presents my Baby Bee with a challenge to climb down and up – all in a relatively safe environment where he isn’t going to fall directly onto the hardwood floor.  It took him a good five minutes to get up and down across the whole course.  And then he was off to his next task – he found his Sister’s purse and started chewing on it!  HA!

Setting up an obstacle course like this is a fabulous way to work on those gross motor climbing and crawling skills that are so important to develop in your Baby Bee.  Ironically, I had already planned this post when Jamie from over at Hands On As We Grow shared one of her posts from a while back when she made a couch cushion obstacle course for her Baby Bee.  You’ll want to check out her post – it gives some great ideas for once your crawler has conquered the “basic” obstacle course like I made.  I love her idea of stacking the cushions up to make “stairs” and also adding some balls into the course to chase around and encourage movement and participation!  We’ll be using those ideas in the future as Grayson gets better at climbing, for sure!

Deep in the Heart of Texas…

I’ve really enjoyed having a couple of friends guest post on the past couple of Wednesdays, and I’m hoping to share more guest posts with you soon!  Today, though, I’m just gonna take a couple of minutes to share a piece of MY heart… 

My sweet little girl is growing up so so fast.  Some days she struggles, and that tends to be what I focus on.  But the past week and a half to two weeks has been absolutely wonderful.  She is kind, and thoughtful.  She is helpful and attentive to the needs of those around her.  She is… she is… she is amazing.  I love this little girl with everything in my being, and I’m so very proud to be her Mommy. 

Yesterday as we strolled through Hobby Lobby looking at various craft supply items, and planning and giggling about her birthday party (in June), I just had this moment where time stood still.  She had gotten a little too loud and a little too excited, and I had taken the cupcake sprinkles out of her hand to put them in the basket (she was shaking them and banging them on the cart).  I didn’t tell her what I was doing – I just yanked them from her hand, and threw them in the back in my sudden shift from funny, silly, goofy gal to seriously frustrated Mommy.  And she didn’t know what she did wrong.  I realized as soon as I did it that I didn’t offer any correction or explain, I just did to her exactly what I’ve spent the last almost ten months of her life telling her not to do to her brother.  She immediately started crying.  I pulled into a side aisle, and hugged her close and whispered in her ear.  I told her that she needed to calm down, that Mommy was getting frustrated because she was being so loud banging the sprinkles on the cart.  I told her I was sorry that I had acted so quickly, but I was just frustrated and that I needed her to calm down or we were going to have to leave the store.  (Fully realizing I had allowed her to ramp up and even encouraged the silliness.)  Her bottom lip quivered as we took a deep breath together, and then she told me, “I’m sorry I got you frustrated.  I’ll be sweet now and not so loud ok?  I don’t want to leave yet.  I want to get tie dye.  Pleeeeease??”  

And in that moment, as time stood still, I realized what a gift God has given me.  A child who wants to please.  A child who knows how to work for a reward.  A child who seriously loves art and recognized my willingness to step out of my normal comfort zone to do an activity with her… and hold my feet to the fire that we’d really get the supplies and do it.  A child who is rapidly learning how to use her vocabulary to communicate her needs and wants.  A child who understands common manners and how to use them appropriately.  

My child.  My offspring.  Who just a few days ago was an infant, learning to crawl.  Who just a few days later was learning to walk, to run, to climb.  Who seemingly just yesterday was a brand new big sister holding her tiny infant brother.  Her tiny infant brother, who will be ten months old tomorrow.  Where does the time go?  It flies. 

 I know that I’m not the perfect parent.  No, I’m far from it.  But I thank God for little moments like that when He turns my inappropriate response into a moment of realization.  When I can stop and see the blessings around me.  

When we got home, we went out into the bluebonnets and took these beautiful pictures.  His beauty and blessings are all around me, but often I get so very bogged down in the household chores, the work tasks, the sick husband and baby, the preschooler who constantly wants me… So bogged down that I begin to miss the fact that I have a beautiful home to clean, a job that pays well, a handsome husband and adorable baby boy, and a sweet little girl who is going through a clingy phase and now (finally) wants Mommy more than anything or anyone else. 

Yes, we live in God’s country.  And there’s nowhere else I’d rather be than here, Deep in the Heart of Texas, surrounded by His beautiful handiwork, with my wonderful little family.  We are so blessed.

collage

A Visit To Our “UnSchool”

I typically don’t make posts on the weekends, but this one has been brewing in my mind for a while, and has been sitting in my drafts folder for several weeks.  So here it is, finally!visit to our unschool

Welcome to our UnSchool – a place where Becca learns what she is ready to learn – which usually revolves (or should I say “orbits”) around the Solar System… with her latest math interest being in fractions.  Later this month I’ll be sharing the fraction game that is shown here, including the free printable to make your own! 🙂

As you know from reading my “About Me” page, I have a background in public education.  I swear by public education.  But I also swear AT public education.  It’s definitely a love-hate relationship.  I think it’s so important for kids to have experiences that challenge them to the root of their existence.  I think it’s important for them to debate their religion, and to stand up for what they believe in.  I think it’s important to have a teacher who gives you a hard time about, well, anything.  It’s important to have peers who befriend you and peers who make fun of you.  It builds character.  I certainly turned out just great by going through 3 years of private and 15 1/2 years of public education that culminated in a Master’s degree.  As a student, I was always a high achiever who pushed myself to be my best, and stood firm in who I was as a person – both in my theology and my politics.  And as a public school teacher, I know that I helped LOTS of kids deal with social pressures and saw lots of light bulbs come on as I taught them how to read, how to add, how to subtract, how to explore and question.  As a teacher, I was a huge proponent of public education.  I was perhaps even brainwashed into believing that public education was THE BEST and ONLY way to TRULY educate.  (Despite all my frustrations over standardized testing and the lack of differentiation for the kids in my class who didn’t conform to any set “norm” due to whatever reason…which was most of them…)

So I want you to know that had anyone told me ten years ago as that soon-to-graduate, ready-to-conquer-the-world and teach every kid, idealistic college student that I would sit down today and write a post titled “A Visit to our UnSchool”, I would have said, “WHO ME?  HELL NO.  I’ll NEVER HOMESCHOOL MY KIDS!”  And honestly, I can say that I have no idea where I’ll be this time next year, much less ten years from now.  And I have no idea where or what my kids will be learning this time next year, much less ten years from now.  They might be in a public school.  They might be in a private school.  Or, {gasp!} they might be right here in our current UnSchool.  (I predict, however, that if they are both here in our UnSchool in ten years, I probably will be bald or entirely white-headed…I am NOT a patient person, nor do I foolishly believe that I will always be the right person to teach them…)

But, I also would never have believed it ten years ago if you would have told me I’d have a child like Becca.  Being a mom pushes you to the limits of your existence.  And EACH parent has to do what is right for THEIR CHILD at that time.  (I will take the opportunity to insert right here the fact that YES, there are people who simply say they are homeschooling and let their kids run willy nilly and never teach them a thing and let them sit in front of the tv all day.  And YES, there are people who could be considered “religious fanatics” who keep their kids home because they believe the public school is literally “evil” and will ruin their children.  And YES, there are moms who just can’t let their little babies away from their nest because they have to shelter them and monitor their every move.  Yup.  Wouldn’t be stereotypes if there weren’t people who did it.  Just being honest, those people drive me nuts and I have zero understanding for where they are coming from, but to each their own.)  However, there are many many moms that I’m finding who are faced with the same situation we are in… they’ve got a kid who just doesn’t “fit” with the “normal” public school mold, and as a parent, they are doing whatever it takes to help their child.

For example, let’s look at Becca.  I don’t know of a single 2 1/2 year old who is ALLOWED in a regular school classroom.  If I walked into any public school in this great country of ours today and tried to enroll her in first grade, I would be looked at like I have two heads.  Seriously.  And, if they only observed her socially or physically, where she is right on track with her age, they’d never agree to even letting her sit in on one class.  She also probably wouldn’t perform very well on a standardized test because, let’s face it – she can’t even write her own name.  She can’t draw any shapes other than a circle (which really comes out more like a swirl because she doesn’t stop with one time around).  She can barely put on her own shoes.  She’s not even potty trained, for goodness sake!  And then there’s that little problem of the meltdowns at sudden loud noises.  I shudder to think what a pencil sharpener would do to her psyche at this age when she hasn’t fully learned how to cope with her unique set of sensory needs.  So what am I to do?  Yes, I have worked with her over time, but the VAST majority of what she knew in that amazing brain of hers by age two was learned through osmosis – picked up in little books we’d read, or in videos she’d watched on tv, or in games she’d played on our phones.  Because that’s how her particular brain is wired.

You see, Kindergarten curriculum has been accomplished.  She knows how to spell her name.  She knows what city, state, and country she lives in, and can identify the flags.  She knows all of her shapes, all of her colors, knows her letters and their sounds, knows some basic sight words and is learning more by the day, knows… knows… knows…

So what am I to do today?  I could simply let her be 2 1/2.  Or I could get her a curriculum and start teaching her how to fill in all the blanks.

This time last year, I was at a loss.  I was faced with an almost two year old who didn’t want to quit learning.  And I had no clue what to do.  She would not allow me to just let her play by herself and have fun.  Because her type of “play” and “have fun” involved file folder games and math games and reading games and… and… and… she never wanted to stop.  Constantly needed to soak up more and more information.  An insatiable thirst for learning (that hasn’t stopped!).  I already knew then that because of the way state laws currently exist, when she reaches age 4, we will not qualify for pre-k based on our level of income (public pre-k in Texas is only allowed if you fall below a certain income level).  So I knew that I would be homeschooling her for pre-k.  But at that point, I still was very resistant to ever considering myself a “homeschooler.”

I didn’t want to buy a curriculum.  I didn’t want to set up a school in my house (although, really, I already had done a lot of stuff simply because being a teacher is in my blood…).  I just really did not want to be a “homeschooler.”

And then I read an article about UnSchooling.  And I was appalled.  I can’t find that original article, but I was just sickened by the thought of this woman, who basically let her kids live like Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer, and she was proud of it.  They never did anything they didn’t want to do, and they ran all over the country side and as long as they came home for dinner, she was happy with them.  I certainly never wanted to be associated with a theory of schooling like that – raising hoodlums.  But something in me kept saying, there has to be more to the story.  This can’t be right.  Are there seriously people that think that it’s ok to let their kids grow up as cave people and never formally teach them anything?  And I began to question.  And I began to research.  And what I found was simply amazing.

This woman was the far extreme (there are ALWAYS extremes, folks.  ALWAYS).  But the general concept behind UnSchooling is a really fabulous one – think about totally molding your child’s education to fit THEIR INTERESTS!   I think whoever named it UnSchooling was looking for attention… and probably negative attention, because really, it is honestly a horrible term for a wonderful thing.

Interest-based education.  Thematic Units.  I learned how to do this in college!  The ideal is that every single item to be learned gets wrapped up into a theme or a unit that is based on what the child is interested most in!  Got a history buff who is addicted to the Civil War?  Travel to those locations, read books about it, learn about the people involved, and extend it by doing math story problems related to it, and even science exploration such as geology and geography while in those locations to understand why the battles went the way they did.  Oh wait.  That’s exactly what my mom did with me to extend my learning beyond the regular public school classroom!!!  I CAN DO THIS!!!!!

And honestly, it has been the very best thing I could ever imagine doing for Becca.  She does enjoy a some-what normalized schedule for her day, so we try to maintain that schedule.  But everything she learns is based on what she is interested in at the time.  If she’s on a dinosaur day, and wants to add, then we do dinosaur math.  I didn’t have to buy a specific curriculum (but then with a Master’s degree in curriculum development, that would sort of be a waste of money anyway…), and she is HAPPY.  She is OBSESSED with the Solar System.  Thoroughly obsessed.  She’s discovered that books at the library have lots of information about outer space, and she wants to check them out and re-read them over and over until she has them memorized.  She is interested in Copernicus (I think maybe I have a science teacher in my past who would be appalled to hear me say this, but I seriously never remember hearing or knowing about the man until yes, I read about him in this library book with Becca… and she’s now super interested in “that Cap guy”).  She’s interested in the Apollo missions.  She’s interested in Orion, and  swears she’s going to Mars.  She’s recently stated that she is also going to the moon, and is going to put a Texas flag on the moon.  “Because the moon needs a Texas flag on it.”  (Preach it, sister!)

solar system fact folders

Later this month, I’ll be sharing more information about our Fact Folders, including how to set up your own and a free printable.  She has really enjoyed working in these folders, and has even started gaining some confidence in her abilities to draw, and really impressed me by writing “sun” on her own.  She’s also become more willing to let me hold her hand to help her write, since she gets very frustrated that she can’t make her hand do what she wants it to do.

In our UnSchool, there is no need to force her to read, or to force her to count beyond 20.  Instead, I can encourage her by playing little word/picture matching games, and going on number hunts with the number grid where together we find 53 and 89 and 67 (she LOVES number hunts!).  When she wants to learn the time on the clock, I can sing-count by 5’s to “o’clock” and eventually, she’ll get it.  But there is zero pressure.  She is, after all, 2 1/2.

learning through guided play

She loves to sit at her little “school table” and play word/picture matching games, sort letters, work puzzles, do art projects, pretend, imagine, and learn- through guided play.
(She gets plenty of un-directed independent play, as well.)

Do I think that UnSchooling is right for everyone?  NO.  Do I think that saying you are UnSchooling is a reason to let your children live like Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn?  NO.  Do I think that we’ll forever UnSchool?  Most likely not.  Because I think the thing every UnSchooler, HomeSchooler, PrivateSchooler, or PublicSchooler has to keep in mind is simply this – THE NEEDS OF CHILDREN CHANGE.  I think the hardest part of being a parent is knowing that I might make a mistake that adversely affects the future of my children.  So every year, we’re gonna have to make decisions for our kids based on where they are at that time.  And the crazy thing is – they may not both need the same type of education the same year.  That could end up being very challenging.  But, that’s part of being the very best parent to every single, individual child you have – be that one, or twelve.  And just like that decision is not easy, being an “UnSchooler” isn’t easy, either.  It’s probably the most challenging thing I have ever done to meet her where she is and transform everything she wants to learn about math and science and reading into her chosen theme-mold of the Solar System (seriously, ya’ll, I do a lot of Googling after we watch “This Week at NASA” because I know the questions are coming… I love science, but wow.  This is stretching me in amazing ways, and I feel sure one day soon she will surpass me in knowledge…)  But, if she wants to figure out how many more or less days it takes than Earth for a planet to go around the sun, ok, we’ll do that.  And I’ll find a way to teach multi-digit subtraction to the child who refuses to count out loud beyond 20 (“is nothing needs to be counted beyond 20” truly came out of her mouth last fall, and she still holds firm to that belief, though I’m slowly seeing her start to come around).  Because right now, meeting her needs means working to her theme, and letting her brain create the challenges for both of us.

I’m learning more than I ever thought possible in our “UnSchool”… so perhaps a better term would be ThemeSchool or ChallengeSchool or Mommy’sBrainIsGonnaExplodeSchool.  But, no matter what you call it, thanks for taking a little time to visit our “UnSchool,” and learn why we do right now what we do right now.  I’m interested to see where we are 2, 4, 6, and 8 years from now.  I’ve learned to never say never, and to quit trying to predict.  Because if her brain grows as much in the next year as it has in the last year…

IMG_4652 3Please take this away from your little tour of our UnSchool: throw your stereotypes out the windows, folks.  EVERY CHILD is unique.  And EVERY CHILD needs to be met on their level.  It’s up to us as parents to meet that need – no matter what kind of school that ends up happening in.  (And ya know what, I’m totally preaching that to myself, too.)

Coffee Art

art

I recently learned from a friend the benefits of adding used coffee grounds to the soil in my flower beds – the nitrogen really helps enrich the soil.  And, I had a bunch of old coffee that I had found in the back of my fridge that I had just stuck in the pantry thinking I’d do something with it someday.  So, rather than take the time and put the wear on my coffee maker to make up like 10 pots of coffee, I just dumped the grounds into a tin carton and added some hot water.  Then I got to thinking – I bet this would make some really cool coffee “stains” on white paper.  So, I strained a little of the water off, and Becca and I used Pipettes (aff link – thank you!) at the easel to drip the coffee down onto the paper.  And the result was really cool.  We had a blast.  And as a bonus, it smelled good!

mar13 coffee art

I think we’ll probably use one of these sheets for our September or maybe November page background in our 2016 Calendar, and they’ll also work neat for little pieces of our collages throughout the calendar as well.  Are you working on art for your calendar?  I’d love to see pictures of what you are coming up with!  Please share – and you might get featured on our Wednesday guest posts!