How to Make Homeschool Science Come Alive

December 12th, 2014

how-to-make-homeschool-science-come-aliveAre you wondering how to make homeschool science come alive? Well, you’ve come to the right place! Today you will hear a panel of homeschool parents discussing how to make science one of the most exciting subjects for your homeschool!

The reason hands-on activities are more important for science than for any other topic is that you can’t truly understand the science concepts without seeing them in action. This is why experiments are so important and why you really ought to touch what you are studying.

Why You Shouldn’t Feel Intimidated by Science

You don’t have to know anything scientific before teaching science. Since the material you are teaching is meant for a child, you can easily learn it along with your kids. If you have a delight in your eyes while you are teaching it, that delight will spark interest in your children.

Everyone makes mistakes while doing science, so don’t be afraid to fail. When making the Edible Sedimentary Rock, you will notice in the video that I poured the liquid into the pan quickly instead of slowly, and the layer was lumpy instead of smooth. My daughter screamed from being splashed accidentally with the hot liquid, which I had no idea would pop out of the pan at all. So you see, even my polished experiments contain mistakes and failures, and you can just laugh and move on.

It helps to see a video demonstration of the concepts being taught. If you are studying Earth and Space or Chemistry, feel free to watch these video demonstrations:

What Materials Do You Need for Homeschool Science?

For elementary science, you don’t need to buy very much that isn’t already in your house–vinegar, a drinking glass, a funnel, those kinds of things. Once you get to high school science, you will want to get some equipment like a microscope, a scale, beakers, etc, depending on what you are studying. You really need to do the high school experiments in the lab sciences to fully understand those concepts, so you don’t want to scrimp at that point.

Science Field Trips

When you are studying outer space, you can do star gazing, go to an observatory, or visit a space center. When studying birds, you can go bird watching, visit a bird sanctuary, or go to a chicken farm. A weather station is a perfect field trip if you are studying the weather. Just go to a place that brings your science topic to life, and you can experience that topic in a fresh way.

What About Preschool Science?

Preschool science is all about delight and exploration. We have done nature collections, put together various terrariums, played with bubbles, and explored many other science topics. Here is a fun article about preschool science: Science in Early Childhood.

Fill Your Own Ornament

December 10th, 2014

fill-your-own-ornament

Fill your own ornament, and make your Christmas tree unique! Here are some creative ideas to get you started:

#1 Confetti

ornament-one

First of all, you can simply fill a clear ornament with confetti. Easy and beautiful.

(Actually, the first thing my husband and I thought of to put into a clear ornament is water and a live fish swimming around. But the ornament would be too heavy and not have enough air for the fish to breathe…)

#2 Sand Scene

sand-ornament

Put sand and a lizard in it. You could also have sand and seashells that fit through the hole on the top.

#3 Patriotic Theme

patriotic-ornament

This is my patriotic one. It has gold star confetti on the bottom, and a spray of red and blue. It’s one of those fancy toothpick thingies, with the toothpick clipped off with a pair of big shears.

#4 Pom Poms

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My daughter decided to fill hers with small pom poms.

#5 Rock Salt Snow Scene

snow-scene-ornament

If you put rock salt into it, it looks like snow. Then add a sprig of evergreen, and it would look lovely. Or throw in random objects like my son did, almost like an I Spy scene.

How to Fill Your Own Ornaments

Here we are, throwing the confetti into the clear ornament, just free hand. That’s because my other son was using the funnel to put dirt into his ornament. Yes, dirt.

confetti-ornament

Here is the son with the dirt. Then he threw a plastic centipede into the dirt, and it looked disgusting. We decided to grab the tweezers, pull the centipede out, and dump the dirt out. We washed it with warm water and let it dry before starting over.

dirt

This is what the clear ornaments look like in the store.

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Here are the filled-up ornaments. They were easy and fun. Avert your eyes away from the one filled with dirt; it was nasty and disgusting. Oh, and of course, we cracked one. I thought they were plastic, but no. They were made of glass.

what-to-do-with-clear-ornaments

Missionary Kids and the Holidays

December 8th, 2014

missionary-kids-holidays

The holidays are a bittersweet time for missionary kids. Growing up, we didn’t see our loved ones on Thanksgiving and Christmas. Instead, we would invite another missionary family over so that there would be lots of people to eat the turkey, giving the illusion that we were surrounded by family. After all, we called all the missionaries “aunt” and “uncle.” They were our only extended family unless we were on furlough.

Christmases on furlough were completely different because you might actually see some extended family members. But you were so busy going from church to church and singing the same songs in front of everybody that furlough was just a spectacle after all. A spectacle punctuated by friendly faces of people who you were supposed to know but didn’t because you never saw them, even though you were blood related.

Christmas-traditions-for-mks

And of course, if we had Christmas in the States, we wouldn’t have tamales and fireworks at midnight, and what kind of Christmas is it without those childhood traditions? At least both places had candlelight services, and both had Christmas trees with presents under them.

So Christmas was odd in the States, but in some ways it was way better because we could see Grandma and Grandpa.

To complicate matters, being an international person caused me to move to England my senior year of college. And then I didn’t have enough money to fly home for Christmas, so I spent Christmas in England. I was 21, so the family I spent Christmas with served us white wine with Christmas dinner. It was so bitter that I excused myself from the table to spit it out in the sink. And while I was over the sink, I thought of how Christmas crackers in England reminded me of fireworks in Guatemala, and I felt homesick for a land where I never belonged.

christmas-crackers

When I moved back to the States from England, I had happy memories of my year in England, and I wanted to move back. After getting my teaching degree, back I went to teach at an American school in London. And I was happy to pull Christmas crackers and wear paper crowns.

Now that I’m married and have made my own little family in the States, I insist on tamales, fireworks, Christmas crackers, and paper crowns, and I have folded in any traditions my husband wanted. A complicated and strange set of traditions, but it’s the only way I feel home for Christmas.

home-for-ChristmasKeep up with missionary kid posts: like my Missionary Kid Page on Facebook.

Buy the book: Growing Up as a Missionary Kid (all profit goes to missions)

New Jerusalem Drawing

December 5th, 2014

new-jerusalem-drawingMy children did a New Jerusalem drawing after reading the last two chapters of Revelation. The city was built as a cube, and it was lowered from the sky. Each of the sides of the city had three doors, for a total of twelve doors, representing the tribes of Israel. Each gate was made with a single pearl. And there was no need for any sun, because the glory of the Lord filled the city!

new-jerusalem-drawing-2The New Jerusalem is a proper city with buildings and mansions because Jesus said that He was going to prepare a place for us to live with Him. “In my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.” John 14:4 KJV

new-jerusalem-drawing-3God will sit on a throne, and the River of Life would flow through the city. The Tree of Life will be in the middle of the river and on both sides, with the leaves bringing healing to the nations.

new-jerusalem-drawing-4If you want to make a 3-dimensional model of the New Jerusalem, you can get the instructions here:

New-Jerusalem-modelIf you are looking for more crafts for the book of Revelation, I also have a Tree of Life craft:

The most delightful part of being in the New Jerusalem is being in the presence of God and the absence of sin. There will be no more crying and no more pain. To be in the presence of Jesus will be such exquisite joy!

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To see all the other posts from this series, see 31 Days of Drawing through the Bible.