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Saturday
Feb072015

Water science

Our math curriculum (Math U See) uses manipulatives on occasion, and we read honest-to-goodness books—no e-readers—for our grammar curriculum, but nothing is quite so tactile as our science work. The science guide that we use lays out suggested lessons that lean heavily on the Socratic method with at least one hands-on demonstration that follows the "show don't tell" principle.

We were learning this week about density. We started with the definition of density, as grams per cm3, then discovered the meaning of that definition through a great "does it sink or float?" experiment. We collected a variety of objects all about the same volume. We measured their weight in grams on our kitchen scale, then, via Socratic method, decided on a means of measuring their volumes: through water displacement. Then, using good old traditional math we calculated each object's density. We also noted whether each item sank, or floated, in which case we used a straw to push it down into the water.

Finally, again via Socratic method, we discussed the pattern and discovered the difference between sinking and floating objects. What might the ultimate difference be? Calvin's hypothesis was that items with a denisity great than that of water sank. We decided on measuring the density of water, and discovered, of course, that his hypothesis was true, AND that the density of water was exactly 1g/1cm3.

It's all in the definition.

Thursday
Feb052015

Week 5, in pictures

Jan 29: Tethered
by Cortney

 

Jan 30: Commitment
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 31: One done
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Feb 1: I heart
by Cortney (walking home from a Super Bowl party at the neighbors in the biggest blizzard in decades)

by Calvin

 

Feb 2: Blurred backgrounds
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Feb 3: Where I stand
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Feb 4: Trees
by Cortney

by Calvin

Monday
Feb022015

Writing, age 8

For the past year we've been using the Michael Clay Thompson grammar curriculum. We love it. It's holistic, rolling grammar, poetry, and Latin based vocabulary into one rich unit full of great lit and poem examples and recommendations. But this isn't a review and I'm not a paid spokesperson. Actually, I just thought I'd share a couple of my favorite samples from Calvin's work this year as we near the end of MCT's Town series.

First, an experiment with enjambed poetry:

My Castle, by Calvin Ophoff, age 8

My castle is a funny place
that I have not explored.
I've seen the front, I've seen the back,
with shining spires reaching up into the sky
to bathe their tips in golden light.
I've seen the sides with pretty emeralds
decorating them, the abbey with its glistening cross,
the pumpkin fields so green. I've seen the
chariots covered with gold and silver,
yet I haven't been inside.
It fades away at dawn's first light,
and reappears at 9:00 at night!

 

Second, an experiment with descriptive paragraphs:

The moon shone bright and clear down onto the woods below. An owl spread her wings gently and let the soft night breeze carry her upward. Down below, twigs cracked as a black squirrel made its way through the undergrowth. A chickadee sang its song loud and clear: "Chick-a-dee! Chick-a-dee!" The blue jay crowed its warning call as a bear smashed its way around the forest. The fish in the forest pool swam around silently under the still water. The moon rose higher as a bell somewhere began to toll.

by Calvin Ophoff, age 8

Thursday
Jan292015

Week 4 in pictures 

Jan 22: Color blocking
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 23: On the third
by Cortney


Jan 24: Who and What
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 25: Resolve
by Cortney

 

Jan 26: Move
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 27: Nourishing
by Cortney

by Calvin

 

Jan 28: Play
by Cortney

by Calvin

Tuesday
Jan272015

Dog photo shoot

Calvin held a dog photo shoot. It was an ordeal. I photo shot the ordeal.

The resulting shot for Calvin's capture your 365 challenge (the prompt for the day was move):