Saturday, 31 August 2013

Bee Crafty Kids {Crystal Snow Flakes}

Today I am guest posting over at To The Moon and Back where I am sharing a tutorial on making Crystal Snow Flakes. This post has been deleted so I've shared it on my blog you can find the full tutorial here: Crystal Snow Flake {Tutorial}


A couple of years ago Sir N and I tried our hand at growing crystals from a kit set.  While this was fun to do it took a L.O.N.G. time.

On my many Pinterest travels I discovered a wonderful pin on Pinterest on making Borax Snow Flakes.

Pop on over to see a tutorial on how easy it is to grow crystals in 24 hours at home.

For those of you who love Snow Flakes the Twisted Sifter has the most amazing macro photographs of snowflakes to look over.


Blessings
Chareen

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Wednesday, 28 August 2013

A Day out with Dad

As some of you may know my husband has started a blog: Bush Tales by Paul.  One of Paul's passions is bird watching.  On Monday Sir N decided that he would like to go along with Paul on a bird watching expedition.  The two of them packed up an afternoon tea picnic and off they went.


Sir N came and asked if he could please borrow my point and shoot camera.


 Sir N's Photographs
 Here are some of the photographs he took on his day out with Dad.

Just to make sure the camera is working Mom
A Selfie on the way to the bird watching site.
Okay we are here and I am ready to capture some birds
Hey look this is what it looks like inside my binoculars
This is Daddy behind the lens
Lots of yellow flowers in the fields
Looking for birds from the hide
Pelican footprints along the beach
Look at all those tentacles on that Jelly Fish
 I really enjoyed looking at the world through Sir N's eyes.  We recently opened an Instagram account for him and he is enjoying taking photographs.  The best part of this is seeing how he views the world around him. 

As much as I enjoy seeing the world from his perspective the hardest part is actually not inter-fearing and acting director the whole time.  Do any of you struggle with stepping back and letting them be ?

Blessings
Chareen

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

How do you teach poetry ?

The idea of "teaching" poetry always leaves me filled with panic!  I love words and the clever use of words can be a real pleasure to enjoy in poetry. For me however, when I think of teaching poetry my mind drifts to school days. At school we had to dissect poems and try to work out what the teacher thought of it.  We had to analyse it, search for symbolism and hidden meanings, look for and explain the rhythms and or patterns, categorise the different parts of speech and then the dreaded composing of poems ... 

I'm sorry this post will not contain a detailed how to on teaching poetry as this is a new season of home education for me. One of the methods I am keen to incorporate in my homeschool is a Charlotte Mason approach.  Charlotte says of poetry
"Children should practice reading aloud every day, and their readings "should include a good deal of poetry, to accustom him to the delicate rendering of shades of meaning, and especially to make him aware that words are beautiful in themselves, that they are a source of pleasure, and are worthy of our honour; and that a beautiful word deserves to be beautifully said, with a certain roundness of tone and precision of utterance. Quite young children are open to this sort of teaching, conveyed, not in a lesson, but by a word now and then." from volume 1 pg 227 Older (age 9?)

I'm always amazed at how life unfolds.  On Monday we had a home school mothers meeting and the theme for the meeting was Poetry. The guide for this conversation was taken from The Charlotte Mason Companion Chapter 29 Approach to Poetry.

Karen shared some of her view on teaching poetry online over at Homeschool World in her article The Charlote Mason Approach to Poetry.

My gleanings from Karen
  • Through carefully chosen poetry, mothers can teach their children to recognise sin, be inspired, and be filled with admiration of God's gifts to man.
  • Poetry is not just a means to moral instruction. It is part of the humanities.
  • It's a deep expression of thought and feeling.
  • It should be permissible to have a different taste for poetry than that of the teacher. Making a connection with poetry 
  • If you do not like poetry, there is an obvious remedy: introduce the child and the poem and leave them to make friends for themselves.
  • Poetry is strewn with ideas. Saturate yourself in the words - they can have an intoxicating effect on the intellect.
  • After years of a relationship with poetry, built on shorter poems, children will be capable of enjoying and comprehending longer and more abstract works.
Ways to incorporate Poetry
  • Read out loud daily (no twaddle allowed)
  • Mark the seasons 
  • Use poems in nature journals
  • One Poet a week.  If you have an anthology choose one poet and immerse yourselves in their poems for a week or two.
  • Use a child's favourite poems in copy work.  If it's a long poem choose a stanza a week.
  • Memorise poetry and present it at a special tea or a homeschool co-op
Poetry Books

On the WWW
Charlotte explained that “the magic of poetry makes knowledge vital, and children and grown-ups quote a verse which shall add blackness to the ashbud, tender wonder to that ‘flower in the crannied wall,’ a thrill to the song of the lark(Vol. 6, p. 328)
I would love to know your thoughts and favourite books in this area of your home school
Blessings

Chareen

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