Sunday, January 25, 2009

passing around a little blog love

Jo at a bit of this and a bit of that gave me this award a few weeks ago, and it's high time that I pass it on! I just want to add that the blog world has changed my life! :) Honestly, at this time last year I was totally in the dark about all the incredible ideas and inspiration being shared online among teachers, mamas, and other fab individuals! Yay! I'm so happy to be here!
Here are the details of the award:
This award is given to a blog that invests and believes in PROXIMITY - nearness in space, time and relationships! These blogs are exceedingly charming. These kind of bloggers aim to find and be friends. They are not interested in prizes or self-aggrandizement. Our hope is that when the ribbons of these prizes are cut, even more friendships are propagated. Please give more attention to these writers!

So, in no particular order, the 8 blogs I'm passing the award to are...

Organizing the Jellybeans
The Wonder Years
Making of a Montessori Mum
A Day of Wonders
My Child's Diary
Live,Laugh, Love, be Happy
Adventures of a Rainbow Mama
Modern 50's Housewife

Enjoy!

Friday, January 23, 2009

ask annie, aka Mrs. L, aka itty bitty love

I recently received an e-mail from a homeschooling mama who's setting up some Montessori inspired activities for her 2-year-old daughter. She asked me about cylinder blocks and geometric solids - which was easy enough to answer. And then, she asked me this: "Are there any other Montessori materials that would be beneficial if purchased for home use?" Yikes! I ended up writing her a whole book! :) Once I get going on Montessori, it's a little hard for me to stop... Anyway, I decided to post my response on here, in case any of you are interested. I would love to hear your thoughts on the matter, too!

1. Coordination and Control of Movement (Practical Life)

Most practical life activities can be put together with things you probably already have in your house and treasures you can find at thrift stores and garage sales. Since your daughter is 2, I would probably suggest activities like these:

-scooping rice from one dish to another
-squeezing water with a sponge between two bowls
-find a container (coffee can, yogurt, etc), cut a hole in the lid, and put together some objects that can be pushed through it
-stick a chopstick to a tray with a ball of clay, and have your daughter *string* the chopstick with chunky beads

The possibilities for practical life activities are endless! Usually you can just follow your child's natural interests, but do keep in mind that the purpose of these exercises is to strengthen motor control and develop a sense of order and independence.

2. Sensorial

The Sensorial activities are quite a bit harder to put together without buying a lot of materials. Their purpose is to help your child refine her senses by isolating one particular quality at a time. For example, the knobbed cylinders are all made of the same kind of wood and all have the same knobs on top; they only differ in height and diameter. If I were you, I would go for the mini knobbed cylinders - I've never used them, but they're significantly cheaper and they look like they achieve the same purpose. As for the for the geometric solids, that's great if you can put your own set together. In my classroom, we usually work with a set of 6 - cylinder, cone, cube, sphere, rectangular prism, and ovoid. These work the best for us because they're all fairly easy to find in the environment. I'll be honest, though, they are not especially popular with the children. We have a set of cards that have pictures of things like balls, blocks, cans, and eggs, and the children will match them to the geometric solids sometimes. Otherwise, they rarely get used unless a teacher is directing the activity.

These sensorial activities tend to get used the most:
-the pink tower
-the broad stair
-the knobbed cylinders

Mystery bags and fabric matching are also popular, and you can put them together yourself. -Mystery bags are cloth bags that contain objects you can identify or match by "seeing with your hands."
-Fabric matching involves matching pairs of fabrics that vary in texture by touch alone.

Basically, just keep in mind that your purpose is to refine the senses. There are a lot of activities out there that accomplish this without involving "official" Montessori materials. For example:
-make different sounds and have your daughter guess what they are (example: ring a bell, whistle, clap,laugh, unzip something, etc).
-taste test salty, sweet, and sour by filling eyedroppers with sugar water, salt water, and lemon water
-match smells like citrus, peppermint, and cinnamon by putting drops of essential oils on cotton balls in jars

Oh, one more thing! This is what I was taught about the sensorial materials: the child should have the experience first - without language. Later on you can give her the names (for example, loud and soft). I find that this varies with each child - many already know the names, and sometimes it just feels natural to add them into the conversation. Next comes matching, then grading, and finally, the language that goes along with grading (big, bigger,biggest).

As for math and langauge (can you tell I'm running out of steam?), they're pretty straightforward for little ones. 3-year-olds are the youngest children in my classroom, and the majority of them spend most of their time in the practical life and sensorial areas of the classroom. What I would suggest for a 2-year-old is simple (please correct me here if I'm wrong!) - be conscious that you're speaking in a clear voice with real words, play "I spy" and games that involve matching, and model making a 1-1 correspondence between numbers and objects when you count things out.

The end!
x.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

my view from the couch

This is where I spent my day today.
Not at school, but on the couch. I haven't been able to move my head since Tuesday, so I decided it was high time to stop feeling like a robot and get some rest..Those of you who know me know that I do not like to take sick days, only powder days.

Anyway, I spent my whole day in this room.
It's our new media room. Sorry, I'm not trying to have a pity party! I just thought you might be curious to know that I have a giant car painting in my house. To make it even more interesting, my mother-in-law is the artist who painted it. Pretty wild, huh?

You're probably wondering where the media room gets its name.
Hmmm... should I tell you? Okay, I'll be honest, there's a large, flat screen tv hanging on one of the walls. My brother-in-law gave it to us last month as a wedding/Christmas present.

I've always been proud to live in a tv-free house,
and suddenly I've become the partial owner of a much larger than I would have chosen television.

Of course, hubs is 100% in love with it,
and of course, I had to stomp my feet so that it wouldn't get hung above the fireplace!

As a compromise, we decided to turn the back bedroom of our house into a media room.
We only get one scratchy PBS channel, so we haven't totally lost our souls to television yet. And, for those of you who were wondering, I'm still cellphone and microwave-free! I'm not quite plastic-free, but I'm working on it.

My heart goes out to all of you that suffer from back and neck problems on a regular basis -
I now know your pain! As much fun as I've had staring at this giant car all day, I definitely would have rather been at school!

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

my new favorite game (the children dig it, too)

Here's the gist of it:

You have a child who's at a practicing point in his educational experience. For example, he's got a pretty good understanding of the symbols 1-9 and their quantities, but he doesn't have them quite mastered yet. Or, she knows her letter sounds, and she's really into identifying letter symbols. Maybe, he can match and name colors, but he's not exactly ready to grade them from darkest to lightest. Oh! The possibilities for this game are endless!

Ooops! Back to the gist of it:


Basically, this game is a variation of lessons the child has already done. It's like extreme matching...


Here, the child has set out the numerals from "numerals and counters" on a rug. The counters in this particular lesson are pigs, and we have placed them in a tin on a table across the room. Because I know she knows her number symbols, I point to the 8 and say, "Please bring me this many pigs." If I wasn't sure she was sure of the symbol, I might say, "Please bring me 8 pigs."

It's a fun challenge for the child to be able to go across the room and count out the right quantity of pigs to bring back to the rug.

Here's another variation of the game. A few children and I have placed letter cards on the blue line. The cards are like little books - the letter is on the cover, and inside is a picture of something that begins with that letter. Anyway, I sit across the room, far away from the blue line. I ask each child I'm playing with to bring me a letter (by sound not by name). For example, "Please bring me e." This game would work well at home, too - you could set the cards up in the living room, and then, as you cooked dinner or something, you could ask your child to bring you back certain letters.

This game can be played with all kinds of materials...
color tablets, rhyming objects, matching fabric, sound cylinders...seriously, aren't the possibilities endless?!

Doesn't it sound fun? It is! And, I forgot to say this earlier, it's perfect for the child who just needs to move!

Tuesday, January 20, 2009


"For as much as government can do and must do, it is ultimately the faith and determination of the American people upon which this nation relies...
{it is} a parent's willingness to nurture a child, that finally decides our fate." President Obama

President Obama is a man after my little ol' Montessori heart. That was my favorite part of his whole inaugural speech. Believe me, the entire thing brought tears to my eyes, but YES! Thank you! Finally, a leader who makes reference to the importance of nurturing little children. I turned to hubs and said, "Can you imagine what the world would be like if all children were treated with respect, dignity, and fairness by the adults in their lives?"

What if every little child learned how to be tolerant of those different from himself? Would we be in this mess at all?
Hmmm... NO!
If only they could all just go to Montessori school...
Maria Montessori's philosophy of education is so powerful to our culture because, academics aside, peace has and always will be at its heart.
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