Showing posts with label computing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label computing. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 November 2012

This month (November)

November is nearly over and it's time for a quick catch-up of what we've been up to this month.


Autumn walks in the woods


 (with home-made dart shooters)


Visits to home ed group to do Chemistry, Spanish, Art, Arts Award (and time for dd to sneak off and play on the communal computer)


Bat-themed activities


Bat origami

Online bat jigsaws (here )


Putting together a festive mini-swap for Worldwide Culture Exchange (sent to the USA). Pick three to five items representing Christmas/The Winter holidays in your family and send it to another family. Mini-swap sign-up form can be found here (festive mini-swap open til the end of November)


Digging for dinosaurs in a wolf suit (thank you 99p shop!)



Playing lego games

 Fungal foraging



 And spore printing



 
 Enjoying outdoor times with friends



Looking at lichen


Sewing Christmas decorations and printing cards


Making a mobile of the solar system (printable here)


Ds digs up our area in the name of archaeology (and finds pottery, nails, bones and a medieval tile painted with a griffin) 


Leaf rubbings



Making a printer out of Lego Mindstorms




Artwork (experimenting with symmetry)


 Trip to Aldeburgh Poetry Festival (me, without the children). Hence plenty of time to take arty photographs...

Fencing competitions


Bug handling workshops


Sunday, 11 November 2012

Saturday 10th November.

Today we are mostly...

 Making bird boxes




Constructing tracks on Lego Loco:



Making a printer on Lego Mindstorms:







Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Thursday, 6 September 2012

And what else...

...has been happening with the children for the past few weeks (apart from all the art!)

Ds1 plays drums at Rock School for a week. (The staff praised him on his talent and were gobsmacked he'd never had any lessons - just a teeny proud mum moment :) ). Meanwhile ds2 went rollerblading in the local park, and dd went for playdates with her friends.



We go to a local festival, held at a large allotment. Dd stays at the festival with friends for the rest of the day, while we made our way home.



We pick courgettes from the garden. (Note the closeness of the yellow football. Plants in our garden have to be hardy to survive!)


Ds1 continues with his IGCSE chemistry and Geography reading


  Blackberry picking, to make crumble and wine.


Ds2 empties the counties' libraries of books about manga. Then teaches himself.



He makes a short list of equipment he needs to do animation 'old school', then goes onto the internet to do a price comparison.


 Ds2 decides he wants to make shortbread.


We move paving slabs to make a base for the new chicken coop that we're making out of a packing case that was being thrown out (our 10 hens need more space).


 And discover a huge ants' nest:



 Lots of reading - Guinness World Records, British History, The Aztecs, and a 4-inch tome called "3D Game Development"...


Lots of talk and plans for the kids' new Minecraft server:



 Thoughts on design:



We took down our posters and information about Australia and New Zealand:


 And replaced them with posters on space and art:




We started a chart of moon phases. The moon decided to hide behind cloud for the next three nights :)

The children caught flies and fed them to the garden spiders, overcoming their fear of spiders and experimenting with size and type of fly.


We walked to the park intending to pick blackberries. But came home with elderberries for wine.



 Swimming in the lake (bit chilly, but fine once we got over the initial shock!)


And catching crayfish


Ds2 took the screwdriver to the waterpistol to try to fix it.


Wine, all bottled up and fermenting happily under the piano.


Dd and I have a discussion about wine-making, fermentation, yeast, gas and the similarities with the chemistry of bread baking. So that's chemistry, biology, self-sufficiency and home economics in one 5-minute conversation.


Dd continues on her reading journey. Having finally decided she wanted to learn to read (or at least was willing to give it a go), in a matter of weeks she has gone from simple words like cat and bed to reading words like 'couldn't' and 'everyone'. She seems to have an excellent memory for sight-recognition of words, less tendency I think towards phonics deciphering. Each of my children has been different and found their own combination of what works for them. I haven't been teaching her. I just sit with her while she reads. She'll do it at her own pace when she wants to. Being, at the peak of "reading readiness" (which she, herself, has recognised) I expect there'll be no stopping her now.