Thursday, June 22, 2006

Some geography and history ideas.


Or - Society and Environment ,as these combined subjects are called in Australian curriculum documents.

We attend a once a week group with other homeschoolers. We call it Group Learning but it most probably is similar to many of the homeschool co-ops mentioned in the US.

We have a theme each term and mums take turns planning and teaching on the theme. There are three age groupings - preschoolers, primary school and secondary school. Although last year we broke the primary school group into older and younger readers.

This term our group has been studying India, Kenya and children living in poverty. How we can make a difference. The group has been using the free lesson plans from the Kids4Kids site - and we have made leaky tins for water dispensers, produced our own elastic band balls, made lapbooks, tried an African stew - and many other things. Fun lesson plans, especially with the addition of library books and the use of our DK Encyclopedia of World Geography.

www.kids4kids.org.au

At home, in addition to any follow ups from our Group Learning theme, we have been into a Middle Ages rabbit trail. It started with Anthony and perhaps his interest was piqued by a documentary on Foxtel. Or perhaps it was piqued by his rpgs set in medieval times.

Regardless, the Middle Ages has been our trail.

We found many books on our shelves on this topic. We read a bit from the DK Encyclopedia of World History. I am looking for some Middle Ages related movies - we love watching DVDs together - and talking non stop!

Thomas and Anthony are making a castle out of balsa wood, using plans from the site Build Model Castles.

http://www.buildmodelcastles.com/index.html

And we wrote a Middle Ages timeline.Here is page one from Anthony's notebook. The scan is not very clear but at least you can see some of the colour in the time bands!

I am reading aloud "The Writing on the Hearth" by Cynthia Hartnett, as our "Middle Ages read aloud." I read this to the older boys when Jonathon was about eight. A good book.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

That sounds really nice! I picked up some more book suggestions :-)