Showing posts with label Notebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Notebook. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 January 2019

All about physics....Part II

Here is the rest of our unit......

Part II
Magnets
Electricity

To see Part I follow the link below....
Big Bang
Forces and Motion
Light
Sound
We used Usborne's book What's Physics All About? as a spine...


I love this book also from Usborne, 365 Science Activities many an experiment was taken directly from this book!


We also used Brainpop Junior and Brainpop videos/activities/quizzes.  *Note* Brainpop is a subscription based website.. several DL schools will have a subscription you can access... if not I highly recommend adding it to your homeschooling budget, it is worth every penny!!

I also used a number of printables from TeachersPayTeachers....
Sweet Pea wanted some notebooking elements that I was too lazy to make!

Magnets

We read the corresponding chapter on magnets in What's Physics all About?





Great videos...
Brainpop Jr - Magnets 
Brainpop- Magnetism

We also read this book together.. love the Magic School Bus chapter books;
Amazing Magnetism


Here you can find a lapbook based on this book... we used some of the printables.

More great videos....
Bill Nye the Science Guy- Magnetism
Scishow- Animal Magnetism

This is a fabulous science kit.. lots of great ideas and an easy to follow format for experiments... Magnetic Science.


 There are a billion great magnet projects out there...
 do a quick search and do whatever catches your eye!

Here are a few we enjoyed....
 Playing with our compasses and hiding things in the backyard to create a scavenger hunt...
The kidlets spent entirely too much time playing with the magnets in their science kit....
Find the magnetic iron in your breakfast cereal....


Electricity
We read the corresponding chapter on electricity in What's Physics all About?


 We made a potato battery!
 So fun... we didn't have a led light so we used our fancy volt meter instead :)

Here are some great videos...

Brainpop- Electricity
Electric Circuits
Bill Nye the Science Guy- Electricity
Magic School Bus- Gets Charged
 

Magic School Bus and the Electric Field Trip

 Our scientist study was two fold.... Nikola Tesla and Thomas Edison.


 The kids also love working on projects with Snap Circuits!

 


Hope you enjoyed our foray into physics... sorry it took me so long to post Part II :)











 

Monday, 4 June 2018

More explorers and the fur trade...

On to explorers as we take a trip through Canadian history! 
There are so many great books and resources..

Here's what we did:
1. Read some books together.
2. Watched some short videos.
4. Some fun activities.
5. Sweet Pea included notebooking pages in her Canadian History notebook, Goober did some mini books for the explorers lapbook he is putting together.

The book I'm using as a spine is The Story of Canada.

 



We read these books together;



From the cover:
The Red Sash is the story of a young Metis boy who lives near the fur trading post of Fort William, on Lake Superior, nearly 200 years ago.



From the cover:
In 1800, 13-year-old Pierre La Page never imagined he'd be leaving Montreal to paddle 2,400 miles. It was something older men, like his father, did. But when Pierre's father has an accident, Pierre quits school to become a voyageur for the North West Company, so his family can survive the winter. It's hard for Pierre as the youngest in the brigade. From the treacherous waters and cruel teasing to his aching and bloodied hands, Pierre is miserable. Still he has no choice but to endure the trip to Grand Portage and back. 

There are lots of great youtube videos and Canadian Heritage Minutes for the individual explorers, so I won't list them all here ;)

Each kidlet also did a project on the beaver.

He thinks his beaver drawing looks like a business man with a mustache...hahahaha!


Sweet pea wrote a beaver report, typed it up and presented it!

We watched a couple documentaries:




Life of Mammals- BBC- Episode- Chisellers 

There is lots to learn here... we read through the Story of Canada (#1 The beginning), and I answered questions or clarified where necessary.  

We mostly read about New France and the various battles up to and including the War of 1812 without too many extra activities.  

The kidlets are anxious to learn about pioneers, so being true to child-led learning that's where we will be heading next :)









Tuesday, 14 November 2017

Vikings

On to explorers as we take a trip through Canadian history!  First up Vikings!
There are so many great books and resources..

Here's what we did:
1. Read some books together.
2. Watched some short videos.
3. Each kidlet had a historical fiction book to read on their own.
4. Some fun activities.
5. Sweet Pea included a notebooking page in her Canadian History notebook, Goober did some mini books for the explorers lapbook he is putting together.
6. Watched a fun completely non historical movie with popcorn!  

The book I'm using as a spine is The Story of Canada.

 



 We read these books together.

From the cover:
" Leif is a sturdy, blond-haired Viking boy who crosses uncharted seas to an unknown land with his father. Written in the spirit of the ancient sagas and rich in color and detail, Leif the Lucky is a fascinating biography of the young Viking explorer."

From the cover:
"Craig Moodie's finely crafted adventure novel tells the story of twelve-year-old Finn, who stows away to search for his lost father and brothers. It's a journey that brings storms, shipwreck, tense encounters with the inhabitants of an unexplored continent -- and a coming of age for Finn, who will in the end, face his father as a young man and a Viking."

There are some great Viking videos.. 
as always we love anything Crash course... 

  


And an oldie from the National Film Board- The Vinland Mystery

Goober (age 8) had these books on his list.......
 

From the cover:
"Since discovering the Canadian Flyer, a magical time-traveling sled, in Emily’s attic, Matt and Emily have met fearsome pirates in Frobisher Bay, outrun dinosaurs in the Alberta badlands, and panned for gold in the Yukon. In Yikes! Vikings!, Emily and Matt have the incredible experience of joining Eriksson and his crew on their historic journey to Vinland in the year 1001. Almost 500 years before Columbus, Viking Leif Eriksson was the first European to set foot on North American soil. But will the kids’ ingenuity save the day when a crew member gets lost in the new land?"

 
From the cover:
"When Jack and Annie came back from their adventure in Magic Tree House #15: Viking Ships at Sunrise, they had lots of questions. Why did Vikings go on raids? Did they really wear horned helmets? What were Viking ships like? Find out the answers to these questions and more as Jack and Annie track the facts about Vikings." 

Sweet Pea's (age 11) list included...

From the cover:
"Keira, kidnapped from Ireland by Vikings, is a slave living in legendary Vinland. Two native bands, the Beothuck and the Thule, are also fighting over the land, thrusting the Norsemen into war. While the Vikings search for a new home, an accident at sea leaves Keira miraculously saved by a Beothuck warrior. Keira settles into the Beothuck way of life, learning their customs and coming to care for them. But she dreams of risking everything in order to find a way home. Ultimately, she is torn between the cultures in which she has livedher homeland, the Viking world in which she was welcomed, and her new Beothuck family. This is a thrilling adventure and an exciting introduction to the history of Canada."

We found notebooking elements and mini books from a couple different places...

Tina's dynamic homeschool plus blog- She has a great Viking unit including free printable lapbook! 

rune-puzzles-1
The Last Viking Returns- I found some great Rune worksheets on this page!

Homeschool share- Great lapbook templates, we used a file folder type in this unit.

The kidlets also found Norse Mythology fascinating in this unit...
 so we added some of that in as well!

Goober loved this book...

Usborne Illustrated Norse Myths (message me if you are looking for a copy!)

Sweet Pea enjoyed this one...


and then she really got into this series....

From the cover:
"Magnus Chase has always been a troubled kid. Since his mother’s mysterious death, he’s lived alone on the streets of Boston, surviving by his wits, keeping one step ahead of the police and the truant officers. One day, he’s tracked down by an uncle he barely knows—a man his mother claimed was dangerous. Uncle Randolph tells him an impossible secret: Magnus is the son of a Norse god. The Viking myths are true. The gods of Asgard are preparing for war. Trolls, giants and worse monsters are stirring for doomsday. To prevent Ragnarok, Magnus must search the Nine Worlds for a weapon that has been lost for thousands of years.When an attack by fire giants forces him to choose between his own safety and the lives of hundreds of innocents, Magnus makes a fatal decision.
Sometimes, the only way to start a new life is to die . . ."
 
They also enjoyed this audiobook...

From the cover:
"Odd meant the tip of a blade and it was a lucky name. In a village in ancient Norway lives a boy named Odd, and he’s had some very bad luck: His father perished in a Viking expedition; a tree fell on and shattered his leg; and the endless freezing winter is making villagers dangerously grumpy.
Now Odd is forced on a stranger journey than he had imagined—a journey to save Asgard, city of the gods, from the Frost Giants who have invaded it. It’s going to take a very special kind of twelve-year-old boy to outwit the Frost Giants, restore peace to the city of the gods, and end the long winter.
Someone cheerful and infuriating and clever . . .Someone just like Odd . . ."

To finish off this unit, we curled up on the couch with some popcorn and watched How to train your dragon.... which is totally not related, except they call themselves vikings :)  

 
The kidlets had way too much fun pointing out all the inaccuracies... but a great end to our unit!

Friday, 28 July 2017

All about physics.....Part I

That was what my Sweet Pea suggested for science last year... all physics!  I have to admit this one was tricky... there are so many topics and lots to potentially cover!  Sweet pea was 10 and Goober was 7 when we did this unit.

Sweet Pea did a physics interactive notebook (our first!)... see below for pictures.  Goober did an activity here and there, mostly he listened to the books, watched the videos and did the experiments, definitely not as much writing as Sweet Pea... but he learned tons!

Here is how we broke it down....
Part I
Big Bang
Forces and Motion
Light
Sound

Part II - separate post!
Magnets
Electricity
Simple machines
Flight
Engineering

We used Usborne's book What's Physics All About? as a spine...


I love this book also from Usborne, 365 Science Activities many an experiment was taken directly from this book!


We also used Brainpop Junior and Brainpop videos/activities/quizzes.  *Note* Brainpop is a subscription based website.. several DL schools will have a subscription you can access... if not I highly recommend adding it to your homeschooling budget, it is worth every penny!!

I also used a number of printables from TeachersPayTeachers.... Sweet Pea wanted some notebooking elements that I was too lazy to make!

The Big Bang was as good a spot as any to start the study of matter and its motion and behaviour through space and time...

We read through our spine book and watched some great videos....

Brainpop- Big Bang
The Big Bang- Crash Course Astronomy

There are a few picture books about the Big Bang... I didn't delve into too much detail.. you could probably spend awhile on this topic... maybe a future unit when my kidlets are a bit older!

I do love this book however..The Magic of Reality by Richard Dawkins it has a chapter titled, When and how did everything begin?  A perfect reference for some of those tough questions!



Forces and Motion
We read the corresponding section in What's Physics all About? and then I ended up buying these notebooking pages from TeachersPayTeachers...  Force and Motion Interactive Notebook..


Great videos....
Brainpop Jr- Pushes and Pulls
Brainpop- Forces

Goober loved this book... lots of discussion about friction!


I overheard the kidlets at the park... pushing each other down the slide and talking about balanced vs unbalanced forces.... then some talk about friction!  The playground is the perfect place for physics experiments and demonstrations!

More great videos...
Bill Nye the Science Guy- Motion episode 
Brainpop- Gravity

Our scientist study was on Isaac Newton... we read this book aloud..Who was Isaac Newton?
 

Brainpop- Isaac Newton

We also did this activity on Isaac Newton...  I like that it was only $3 and had a couple difficulty levels so I could use it for both kidlets..

 
There are loads of experiments for Newton's Laws of Motion... here are a couple...

First Law- Inertia
An object at rest will stay at rest unless an unbalanced force acts on it.
Kick a ball...  push a toy car..... sit on a swing :)

Second Law- Force = Mass x Acceleration
The bigger the force the more something will accelerated.  The more mass something has the bigger the force needed to make it accelerate.
Use two books... a light one and a heavy one- try to push with one finger.
Weigh two toy cars and send them down a ramp, time how fast they go... compare the weight, speed and distance :)

Third Law- Reaction
For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
We made balloon cars... so much fun!  Similar to this one but we used cardstock to make the car....


Light
We read the corresponding sections on light in What Physics is All About?  I found this great printable on the Electromagnetic Spectrum.


 Great videos... 
Bill Nye the Science Guy- Light Optics, Bending and Bouncing

Great experiments if you have a prism... or we did some out of the Usborne 365 Science Activities.... bending straws, flipping arrows... fun!

More videos....
Brainpop- Rainbows
Brainpop- Colour
Bill Nye the Science Guy- Light and Colour 
The Magic School Bus is also a great resource for light and rainbows!

We also love this song, RoyGBiv by They Might Be Giants!
Summer is a great time to find rainbows in the sprinkler... and rainbow art is always fun!

Sound
We read the corresponding sections in What Physics is All About?


Great videos....

Bill Nye the Science Guy- Sound episode
Brainpop- Waves
Brainpop- Sound

Our scientist study was on Isaac Newton... we read this book aloud.....Who was Alexander Graham Bell?


We also did this activity on Alexander Graham Bell....  I like that it was free and had a couple difficulty levels so I could use it for both kidlets..

 

The kidlets made a string phone.... and then proceeded to tell each other jokes..... so much fun!



Make sure to watch a thunderstorm....
 nothing demonstrates the speed of sound vs light better than a good thunderstorm :)

Stay tuned for Part II!

Tuesday, 4 July 2017

First Nations People of Canada unit

We have finished up with our virtual quick geography trip across Canada 
and now we are ready to dive into Canadian history!

The book I'm using a spine is The Story of Canada.


This will be a long trip down memory lane, so I will be separating it out into smaller units 
and we will be working chronologically...
Our first unit is the First Nations People of Canada prior to European contact.
Here is how we did it.....
1. Read about a specific group and region.
2. Label the region/group on a map of Canada.
3. Pick one group for a more in depth study.
4. Do a mini book for unit lapbook or notebook.
5. Watch relevant video.
6. Add in some great reads!

 
 


Here is a website for free printable maps.


We used graduated/layer books for our lapbook/notebook elements 



but the Enchanted learning website has some great graphic organizer worksheets as well!



I also love adding in some historical fiction, picture books and legends!  

Goober (age 8) had these on his list....

 A Whale Tale (Canadian Flyer Adventure) by Frieda Wishinsky
This one is a favourite for this age group... and Canadian!
From the cover:
 "Since discovering the Canadian Flyer, a magical time-traveling sled, in Emily's attic, Matt and Emily have outrun dinosaurs in the Alberta badlands, seen the Silver Dart fly high in Nova Scotia's skies, and evaded slave catchers on the Underground Railroad. In A Whale Tale, the sled lands on Canada’s West Coast in 1778. Emily and Matt meet a Nootka chief, and his young nephew, Tuta. It’s a busy time in the Nootka village, where a whale hunt and potlatch ceremony are about to take place. What’s more, explorer Captain James Cook and his fleet of ships have arrived just offshore. Tuta wants to join the whale hunt, but the chief thinks he is too young and sends him to help his mother prepare for the potlatch. Determined to prove his bravery, Tuta sneaks off in a canoe with Emily and Matt. Out on the open water, the kids find themselves face to face with a protective mother whale and her baby. Can Emily and Matt keep their heads above water and help Tuta realize his goal?"
 

 From the cover:
"Hello, buffalo! That's what Jack and Annie say when the Magic Tree House whisks them and Teddy, the enchanted dog, back almost 200 years to the Great Plains. There they meet a Lakota boy who shows them how to hunt buffalo. But something goes wrong! Now they need to stop a thousand buffalo from stampeding!"

 
Sweet Pea's (age 11) list included.....

 Indian Captive: The Story of Mary Jemison by Lois Lenski
Sweet Pea really enjoyed this book... not Canadian or pre-European contact 
but based on a true story and well written for the age group!
From the cover:
 "In this classic frontier adventure, Lois Lenskireconstructs the real life story of Mary Jemison, who was captured in a raid as young girl and raised amongst the Seneca Indians. Meticulously researched and illustrated with many detailed drawings, this novel offers an exceptionally vivid and personal portrait of Native American life and customs."

From the cover:
 "It is 1654 in New England, native land of Algonquin tribes, among them the Pocasset, Wampanoag, and Narrangansett people. The pilgrims -- called Coat-men by the Wampanoag -- have settled here in the natives' territory at Patuxit, a place that the Pilgrims have renamed Plymouth. Weetamoo's father, Corbitant, is sachem, or chief, of the Pocassets. He is mistrustful of the colonists and imparts his beliefs about them to his daughter, who is next in line to become chief. Weetamoo must learn the fundamental values and disciplines of a true Pocasset chief."


 The Mouse Woman Trilogy by Christine Harris
I've mentioned this book before... and probably will again... a fantastic collection of Haida legends!  I also read a few aloud for Goober.... Sweet Pea loved them and read them all!
From the cover:
"In the late 1970s, celebrated children's author Christie Harris published three books known as the Mouse Woman Trilogy, fascinating retellings of legends of the Haida people of British Columbia. Raincoast re-issued each book in the trilogy and is now publishing an omnibus edition that contains all of the Mouse Woman stories, together with the striking original artwork by Douglas Tait." 

I always choose a good read aloud to share together... we really enjoyed this one, not pre-European but Canadian and well written!  There were some great discussions in this house after reading this book about small pox and the lives of the Ojibwa people.

From the cover:

 "[In this] story of a young Ojibwa girl, Omakayas, living on an island in Lake Superior around 1847, Louise Erdrich is reversing the narrative perspective used in most children's stories about nineteenth-century Native Americans. Instead of looking out at 'them' as dangers or curiosities, Erdrich, drawing on her family's history, wants to tell about 'us', from the inside."

There are also some great picture books out there...
check out this website for a great selection- Strong Nations.com

Here are a few I had lying around for the kidlets to pick up...

Mwakwa talks to the loon

A Promise is a Promise

 The Salmon Twins

There are a variety of wonderful videos to watch on youtube, everything to virtual tours of historic sites, drum dances and throat singing.  I also drew from our experiences in the north and pulled out some home videos and pictures :)

Here are a few pictures of Goober's completed lapbook......



and Sweet Pea's notebook....




A trip to Head-Smashed in Buffalo Jump in southern Alberta with a couple of homeschool families....
 
 







Perfect end to a fantastic unit!