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My Buttons Jar

April 19, 2008 By Laura 2 Comments

jarofbuttons
(My Button Jar)

Like many women, I am sure, I feel that a home is a place in which you should be surrounded by the things that make you happy. Things that touch your soul, lift you up, comfort you. Aside from one’s family, I think that these are the things that make the house, a home. They could be meaningful pieces, that perhaps have a family history, or were passed down to you. Maybe it’s something that brings back cherished memories. Perhaps it’s something created just for you, or given to you by a very special person in your life. Or maybe it’s just ‘things’ you collect, because they speak to you, for reasons you aren’t even sure of. (And don’t really feel the need to figure out.) You just like seeing them there. Whatever those things may be for you, they matter, and should be part of your ‘sacred environment’.

My button jar is one of those things in my home. I simply just started getting and collecting buttons in this jar, because I liked the idea of it. I love buttons, and I knew seeing a bunch of them, in all of their colors, in a clear jar, would just give me one of those quiet inner-smiles. And they do.  But for even more reasons than the visual appreciation I have for it, now.

It started with my husband’s comment in the store on that late summer day, as my oldest daughter and I excitedly spun the button rack, plucking off little packs we loved. He asked “What are all these buttons for, again, Honey?”. It was the way he said it. So gently. He knows better than anyone, how I get when I get an idea. I go on an urgent mission. He doesn’t always understand it. But he is always so understanding of ‘me’ and my simple needs, and you can just hear the love in his voice, when he asks these questions, trying hard to understand the purpose behind the urgency of my latest mission.
So he asked, in that sweet way he does.

By the grace of God, an answer came to me, that didn’t sound quite so crazy, as the truth it initially was. I said “Well, I’m going to keep these in the school room, and they’ll be great manipulatives to have on hand for the kids, in helping them understand math concepts and stuff, for kindergarten.” I surprised myself, and thankfully, the answer seemed to suit him just fine. So then I honestly added, “And also, I just want a button jar.” Which made him laugh, in a way that I knew, he knew, that was the bigger of the truths.

Turns out, those buttons have been used a whole lot! They don’t ‘just’ sit there, looking pretty.  At the beginning of the kids schooling, they used the buttons for the building of math skills, on their number charts. I would call out a number, and they would see how fast they could find that number on their chart, and mark it with a button. Or we would teach them about numbers that come before, after, or in between, other given numbers.

buttons-math-chart-homeschooling

kids-homeschooling

As the beginning of the year wore on, we also used them for lessons on counting higher, comparison, direction and position (right, left, up down, next, last, over, after, before, etc.) They also came in handy for number theories (ordinal numbers, even, odd) , and sequences such as first, 2nd, 3rd, last. etc. At this point in the year, we mostly use them to show them the visual concept of addition and subtraction.

I’m not the only one that has truly enjoyed having this jar of buttons in our home! The younger kids ask all of the time “Mama, can I play with your buttons?“, and the ‘your‘ part always makes me chuckle. (But I don’t feel the need to correct them 😉  Of course, I always say “Yes“. They ‘play’ with them, making up their own games that incidentally, re-enforce every mathematical concept we have taught them. Everything they learned with those buttons, was FUN to them, and so they just want to do it more. And I think ‘Keep playing.’

When I first got that jar of buttons together, and sat it on my school cabinet, the sight of it, as I said, just gave me a quiet inner-smile. Maybe they represent my surpressed urge to start sewing. (For all of the beautiful sewn things I just totally make up in my head, and then so surprisingly, cannot find in the stores!)

But more than anything now, seeing that jar already brings me warm memories: Of the thoughtfully put question my husband asked me in the store that day, or the fun the kids have had with them during school time, and the value in the various lessons they’ve learned while using them. Or the many times I watched any one of the children at the table, buttons scattered about, ‘playing‘. Suddenly, the vision-turned-reality of my button jar just sitting there, holds true purpose, life-long lessons, family value, and cherished memories. It’s times like these I am really glad I had such a crazy idea.
And as it sometimes turns out, so is everyone else in our family.

Save

Filed Under: Elementary Homeschooling, Elementary Homeschooling MATH, Homeschooling Tagged With: button jar, buttons, elementary-homeschooling, elementary-math, homeschooling, math-manipulatives

Bullfrog Tadpole Hunting…by Alexis Grace (10)

April 17, 2008 By A 2 Comments

bullfrog-tadpole-hunting (3)

You may have seen the plans I drew up earlier, for a bullfrog tadpole breeder. Yes, we did thengo bullfrog tadpole hunting! Some good old homeschooling, nature study, field trip, FUN! We could see into the water well, because of the bright sun.  So we started scoopin’ some out right away.

bullfrog-tadpole-hunting (2)

Got another one!

bullfrog-tadpole-hunting (5)

As we caught some, I would put my hand in the net gently, and scoop them out, and put them into the water jar.  Our hands were covered in mud!  Three of the bullfrog tadpoles looked probably almost a year old, and the rest were kind of small, like they were newer.

  bullfrog-tadpole-hunting (4)

bullfrog-tadpole-hunting

My little brothers and sister helped me spot the biggest ones, and said that the smaller ones were ‘fish’.

Here’s a look at one of the bigger bullfrog tadpoles we caught.

bullfrog-tadpole
And in case you’d like a bit closer of a look!…..

Here’s a couple jar shots with a some of the bullfrog tadpoles all in there.  Isn’t the little one cute? Notice how he has a pink belly.

  bullfrog-tadpoles-in-jar

bullfrog-tadpoles

Dad and I made a habitat for them, but Mama didn’t get photos of that.  It looks like my plan I had on paper, with pond water, rocks, gravel, dirt and mud, and pond weeds to oxygenate the water. It is all set up in an open below ground level window well we have, which conveniently has a nice observation window for me and the triplets on the inside as well!  Over the years, I have raised 3 snakes, 4 toads (‘Ugly’, ‘Stinky’, ‘Yucky’ and ‘Gross’), and one bullfrog named Goliath, in that window well.  It’s a nice natural habitat for all kinds of creatures.

I have researched a lot on how to best raise and care for these little aquatic sea-monkeys. : )  I hope to have a wonderful learning experience by being able to observe them daily, and watch them develop into bullfrogs.  But if at any point they seem to not be doing well, I am going to release them back to their original home.

I’ll keep you posted!

 

Filed Under: Elementary Homeschooling, Field Trips, Homeschooling, Nature Study, Science Tagged With: bullfrog-tadpole-hunting, bullfrog-tadpoles, bullfrogs, homeschooling, homeschooling-field-trips, homeschooling-science, nature-study, tadpole, tadpole_hunting, tadpoles

Well, Alexis Grace (10) Drew Up a Plan for a Tadpole Breeder

April 15, 2008 By Laura Leave a Comment

tadpole breeder plan

The mud bucket and net is ready to go.  The big bin is ready. The empty milk jugs are lined up along the stairwell, just waiting to be filled with the pond water. And she’s got her tadpole breeder all planned out.

Looks like we’re going bullfrog tadpole hunting today! << Click that link to see our field trip hunt!

Filed Under: Elementary Homeschooling, Field Trips, Homeschooling, Science Tagged With: elementary-homeschooling, elementary-homeschooling-field-trips, plans, sketches, tadpole_hunting, tadpole-breeder, tadpole-breeder-plan, tadpoles

6 Tiny Potted Plants

April 15, 2008 By Laura Leave a Comment

tiny potted plants

How cute are these tiny potted plants sitting on the window sill?  Something about little sights like this just stir me somewhere inside, and make me smile.

We got the kids this little kit, to plant some flowers in these little starter potted plants, which we will later transplant into our flower beds outdoors. (They just LOVE stuff like this. All projects, really.)

The first thing they needed to do was put the peat pellets in a bowl, and add one cup of water.  Then they had to wait FIVE MINUTES.  You know…..eternity, for a kid.  This photo below totally cracks me up, because of their expressions of waiting….and waiting….they look thrilled, don’t they?

waiting-for-soaking

Just staring at this bowl…..for FIVE MINUTES…..as they soil soaked up the water and expanded.  After about 2 minutes,  {S} couldn’t take it anymore, and went into the kitchen to stare at the set timer instead. : )  At least with the numbers counting down, he could see the end in sight.

tiny potted plants

FINALLY the timer went off, and it was time to mix it up good.  They all took turns getting the job done well.

kids potting plants

Then Daddy filled up the little pots to the top, while the kids chose the flower seeds of their choice, and counted out 10 seeds each.  {A} and {S} chose Delphinium (Pacific Giant), {O} and I chose Rudbeckia (Gloriosa Daisy), and { J } and Daddy chose Hollyhock (Alcea Rosea).  Then their little hands got to work, planting each seed about 1/4″ into the soil.

little hands potting plants

They were pretty happy with their little potted plants, and very excited to watch them grow.  We put our initials on them to know whose is whose, and of course, to see whose is growing the best.  Will some of us have a more skilled green thumb than others?  Or do some species grow faster or slower than others?  We’ll see!  And I’m sure we’ll keep you posted.

tiny potted plants

Unfortunately, they have to be kept in this little ‘greenhouse’ to grow.  So much for my happy little vision of them lined up on the window sill.  But I’m gettin’ over it.

tiny potted plants

Let the growing begin!

Filed Under: Elementary Homeschooling, Elementary Homeschooling SCIENCE, Homeschooling, Nature Study, Science Tagged With: dirt, elementary-homeschooling-science, flowers, kids-gardening, kids-growing-plants, kids-potting-plants, plants, seeds, soil, tiny-potted-plants

Training and Hand Taming Chipmunks – Meet Flash I and Flash II – by Alexis Grace

April 11, 2008 By A 1 Comment

little girl hand-training chipmunk
This is the story of how I started training and hand taming chipmunks, and made friends with my first chipmunk, Flash.

chipmunk eating from hand

chipmunk eating from hand

The pictures above are of me and my little chipmunk friend, Flash, from last June.

My Dad had told me about his Nana and her chipmunk, Chippy, at one time. So one day I was watching the birds at the bird-feeder, when I saw this little critter. I thought it would be a good opportunity to try training and hand taming chipmunks. I began to make trails of sunflower seeds on the wall of our yard. She got used to me watching her from the window, and slowly I moved the trail to the deck. With my Dad’s tips, and my own reasoning, I eventually brought the trail to our back door off of our deck. Once she got used to me watching her from the door, I started to sit on the deck. With a lot of time and patience, she came closer to me each day. It even got to the point where I could call her and she would come to me!! Every day I fed her and we became good friends. She found a ” Mister”, and when winter came she disappeared.

This is one of the reasons why I love being homeschooled.  I can take breaks from my schoolwork anytime, or even do my schoolwork outdoors, while I keep and eye and an ear out, for birds and little critters to come near. I love to observe them, and have the opportunity for training and hand taming chipmunks, and other little animals.

This spring I started training and hand-taming a new chipmunk, Flash II. You can see pictures of him below. I am sure he is the son of the original Flash I because they are from the same borrow, which is our big brush pile up in our “woods”. He is getting used to my voice, and coming close, but he seems to be a little more timid than Flash I (the first). I can not wait until the day God lets him trust me completely!!! I’ll keep you posted!

chipmunk on tree stumps

chipmunk

Filed Under: Homeschooling, Nature Study, The Big Picture Tagged With: chipmunks, hand-taming-chipminks, how-to-hand-tame-chipmunks, training-and-hand-taming-chipmunks, training-chipmunks

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