TheHomeSchoolMom's Free Homeschool Resources - October, 2004
7. Product Review - Hands On Mathematics
8. Article - The Science of Destruction by Teresa Bondora
Welcome to the October issue of TheHomeSchoolMom's Free Homeschool Resources. We are currently experiencing the wind and rain from what is left of Jeanne. I am praying for those unfortunate enough to have had to deal with the past month of hurricanes in Florida. Having Isabel blow through our backyard last year has given me a new appreciation for extended power outages and other prolonged disruptions from natural disasters. Just having fresh water without having to haul it was a blessing after having no electricity to pump our well for 9 days; I can't imagine how frustrating it must be to have 2, 3, or even 4 hurricanes in a row as some areas of Florida have had this month.
I have been working on a new look for TheHomeSchoolMom website and newsletter which I hope to complete in the next few months. It will include a fresh look and updated links and resources. In the meantime, each month the newsletter will continue to bring you great homeschooling resources that you can find online and offline. This month brings a CNN election resource, a new homeschool outreach group, new Let's Get Real challenges, an intriguing science article by homeschooler and former science teacher Teresa Bondora, and more. Also, October 8-10 will be Borders Books Educator Appreciation Days, so don't miss this opportunity to save 25% on almost all regular price purchases (see www.borders.com for exclusions) at your local Borders store whether they are school related or not! Just take your homeschool association membership card or notice of intent to homeschool (or the school board's reply) as proof of your educator status.
Enjoy this month's resources.
Warm regards,
Mary Ann Kelley
Editor, TheHomeSchoolMom's Free Homeschool Resources
- Freebies
- Homeschooling Resources for Election Day 2004
- Homeschooling Resources for Columbus Day
- 2004/2005 monthly calendar
- September Free Homeschool Resources Newsletter
3. Learning through History News – It’s Free! (Our Sponsor)
Want to find great ideas for lesson plans, pointers to project resources and teaching tips relating to world history study? Look no further.
Learning Through History News is published once a month to share great ideas you can use in your history program. We continuously gather articles, activity ideas, and all kinds of helpful information - and bring the best of those to your email inbox. Best of all – it’s FREE.
Visit the archives to check it out and sign up at:
http://www.homeschoolingcompanion.com/newsletter/archives/archives.php
4.Educational Sites & Freebies
"HomeschoolMath.net is a comprehensive math resource site for homeschooling parents and teachers: find a homeschool math curriculum guide, free worksheets, math ebooks for elementary grades, an extensive link list of games, interactive tutorials & quizzes, and teaching tips." HomeschoolMath also offers articles on topics such as math anxiety, where you need square roots and algebra, teaching place value, irrational numbers, and more. Be sure to get the free Division 123 ebook at:
http://www.homeschoolmath.net/123-math.htm
http://www.homeschoolmath.net/
"Let's Get Real™ is a competition and an opportunity for teams of students to gain experience working on real business problems. Corporate co-sponsors supply real problems for which teams submit solutions in business format. Each team chooses from the list of problems the one it finds most interesting. Problems might include areas such as environmental issues, manufacturing, distribution, engineering, software creation, human resources, health and safety, facilities design, public relations, or any other areas deemed important to the corporations involved... All 6th through 12th grade students from any school are eligible. Students do not have to be affiliated with a school setting to participate...in other words home schooling, Scouts, neighborhood friends, etc. can form teams with an adult coordinator. Students may work on any of the problems. All entries must be by teams." Let's Get Real continually adds new challenges and in September added challenges from Hershey Foods, PPL energy corporation, and Visteon automotive system supplier. Let's Get Real is an excellent way to introduce students to a real world business environment and is my favorite academic contest. These challenges are similar to research and presentation projects found in upper level business curricula at many universities. The Let's Get Real challenges would make an excellent addition to an academic portfolio.
http://www.lgreal.org/index.shtml
The America Votes 2004 Teaching Kit
CNN has developed a fun, informative course of study called “The America Votes 2004 Teaching Kit,” comprised of a CD-ROM that contains multimedia resources and teaching activities related to the U.S. presidential election process. The kit is offered free of charge. The educational materials in this kit are presented as a complete curriculum unit on the U.S. presidential election process. The unit addresses the following six topics: primaries and caucuses, national party conventions, political polls, presidential debates, the Electoral College and Inauguration Day.
CNN Student News also offers a daily news program for middle and high schools returns for the 2004-2005 school year. CNN Student News is a 10-minute, cost-and-commercial-free educational program airing Monday-Friday throughout the school year on CNN Headline News at 3:12 a.m. (ET). CNNStudentNews.com offers the full 10-minute CNN Student News program streamed on the Web. CNN Student News will air special political packages called “Getting to Know the Issues” each Tuesday leading up to the national elections on Nov. 4. These fast-paced, pop-music-infused features will highlight such issues as homeland security, the war in Iraq, employment, health care and social security. CNN Headline News produced “Getting to Know the Issues.” A newly designed, daily e-mail, the “Daily Education Alert,” allows educators to obtain free daily curriculum and features the day’s top story from CNN Student News from the education section of CNN.com.
http://www.CNNStudentNews.com
A new grassroots movement called H.E.A.R.T.S. (Homeschoolers Educating, Assisting, & Reaching-out Through Service) recently began bringing together a diverse group of homeschoolers in loosely coordinated outreach projects - to provide service to our communities while generating increased public awareness, understanding, and acceptance of homeschoolers / homeschooling as a single focus - unrelated to any other issues. Projects and press releases are presented and coordinated to move toward this goal. There are seven "themes" planned for throughout the year plus several "special projects". This month turn "fright night" into "Sight Night" by notifying neighbors ahead of time and collecting old eyeglasses on Halloween, or sponsor a book drive for local homeless and domestic violence shelters. H.E.A.R.T.S. continually updates their website with current outreach projects, so check back regularly.
http://www.h-e-a-r-t-s.org/
http://astroventure.arc.nasa.gov/
Sites For Teachers
Sites for Teachers is regularly featured in TheHomeSchoolMom Newsletter because it is one stop shopping for lesson plans, activity sheets, unit studies, and more. Over 500 of the best teacher sites! I found a great new site in Social Studies for Kids, currently at number 57. Excellent resources for all social studies topics including history, cultures, languages, religions, economics, geography, government, and more.
Top Teacher Sites
Teach-nology.com has put together a list with the top 200 teacher sites that they have found on the web. Great resources! I love the fact that these resources always have new sites on them. Number 110, the Chevron Cars Flags of the World page, is a nifty site to help learn the flags of the world through an interactive game.
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7. Product Review - Hands On Mathematics by Gisela Hausmann
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| Hands on Mathematics Numbers from 1-10 |
Hands on Mathematics Arithmetic from 1-10 |
Learning numbers is typically done early in a child's life and many parents automatically include counting as we teach our young children their first numbers. Without realizing it, we are conditioning the child to count with the left side of their brain, where things are learned in a linear fashion. When children learn numbers through counting, they often must count to figure out math in later years. By equipping our children with the ability to do math with the right side of their brain, we give them the tools to think dimensionally instead, allowing math facts to be more easily recalled because they were learned dimensionally, not simply counted.
Gisela Hausmann, author of the unique book obvious LETTERS: The Associative Alphabet Every Child Will Remember (recently republished on CD-ROM), has published an equally exceptional method to teach numbers and arithmetic. Hands on Mathematics Numbers and Arithmetic are two CD-ROM books which are unusual in that they not only encourage the association of the number symbol with physical items, but they discourage counting. By following Ms. Hausmann's method your child will quickly grasp the concept of what a number represents without the associated counting. When it is time for adding, they will be able to grasp the math facts through visual imagery and intuitively understand the arithmetic without the necessity of counting.
The programs have an unfamiliar interface and it took me a few moments to navigate my way around the books, but once I got accustomed to the different look and feel of the program it was easy to find and print exactly what I needed.
Hands On Mathematics works with visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learners, allowing the highest retention rate by using methods that work for all three learning types. HoM comes in two different programs. The first is simply teaching numbers with no arithmetic involved and is appropriate for bright 3 year olds through Kindergarten age. The second CD teaches addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division concepts using the same kinesthetic methods that the Numbers CD uses and should follow the use of HoM Numbers when the child has mastered the first program. The programs would be an excellent preparation for Math-U-See, which uses similar reasoning and also encourages learning math without counting.
You can find Hands on Mathematics Numbers from 1-10 and Hands on Mathematics Arithmetic from 1-10 at amazon.com.
8. Article - The Science of Destruction by Teresa Bondora
I’ve been without power for a week since we were hit by Hurricane Ivan. While we had it good compared to most, being without power wasn’t fun. But as a scientist, I couldn’t help but love the experience. And it got me to thinking about nature’s awesome power and destructive forces and why they’re so necessary and the wonderful benefits of these destructive events.
Just like humans spring clean (well, some of us anyway) Mother Nature cleans out as well. From the microscopic to the global, what seems like destruction is actually a healthy cleaning process necessary for growth and rejuvenation.
So as I drove around looking at the damage and destruction I couldn’t help but see the cleaning work that had been done and the process that was unfolding. The typical hurricane teaching that is done at this time of year is usually plotting hurricanes, learning how they form off the coast of Africa, El Nino, etc. But I wanted to cover the topic of destruction and why it happens. This can be a discussion or you can make worksheets for your kids. I like to do discussions while we are in the car and I can ask questions and we can talk.
So ask your children to name some destructive forces in nature. I think of forest fires, hurricanes, tornadoes, landslides, avalanches. Take one of them and ask your child what damage happens. Ask them what benefits could come of that damage.
Hurricanes
After a hurricane you’ll see large tree limbs down, dead limbs down, whole trees down. As you probably already see, this is necessary to clear out dead limbs that can tax a tree’s energy, remove dead trees from the forest population and remove dying or weak trees. This opens up the forest for more sunlight for smaller new trees, gets the debris to the floor of the forest where bacteria, worms, insects and other decomposers can have more work and food and returns the nutrients to the soil.
Flooding, beach erosion, sand hundreds of feet into the beach and onto the streets is a common aftermath of a hurricane. This helps to renew the beach, move the landscape and create more homes for the sand crabs, sandpiper birds and other animals that depend on the beach for homes and food. It’s not so good for human homeowners on the beach but it’s a fact of nature that our landscape is in constant flux and movement. Placement of beaches moves, sand dunes are destroyed and rebuilt in other locations, our crust is taken up at earthquake faults and recreated by volcanoes, mountains climb higher, rivers dry up and lakes are created by flood.
Where I live, in Mobile, AL, USA, we had a fresh water lake that sat about half a mile from the beach. The hurricane washed out a channel from the beach and merged the lake with the ocean. Now the lake’s trees and fish are dying and the water will become an inlet of ocean water. New life will flourish here and the fauna will change.
Forest Fires
Many of you are aware of our country’s struggle to learn our lessons about forest fires. Before the 1990’s our National Parks had a policy of watching for and preventing or putting out forest fires. This policy prevented fires and caused a large build-up of forest floor litter (leaves, pine straw, dead trees). When the great Yellowstone Fire of 1988 occurred, it confounded all attempts to control it or stop it. The result was devastating destruction. What we learned from that event resulted in a “let it burn” policy for our national parks and taught us even more about Mother Nature’s reasons for the things she does. We have learned that forest fires help clean out undergrowth and forest floor litter. Lightning is going to cause fires and if they are allowed to burn, they keep the flammable material to a minimum. When not allowed to burn, the buildup causes unrelenting fires that burn for months. We also learned about seeds that need intense heat to open and depend on fires for their population’s survival. Fires also return to the earth, the necessary nutrients the soil supplies for growth. After years of growing seasons, nutrients are depleted. Fires rejuvenate the soil.
Avalanches
While an avalanche may look unnecessary and an accidental slip of too much snow meeting gravity, avalanches are also necessary. The movement of water on our planet may look slow in some areas whereas, in others water comes down as snow, freezes for the winter then moves rapidly down from the mountains as water in the spring. This cycle is well-known to those who live in mountain areas. When snow seasons begin early, as they are in Utah now, in September, more snow is allowed to accumulate, freeze and be stored up as ice until the spring thaw. This thaw will then cause widespread flooding. Avalanches are nature’s way of removing large amounts of water (as snow) from the higher points and taking them to lower points where they will thaw sooner and reduce the amount of flooding in the spring. It reduces pack ice and thins the snow. Animals who must live in the snow find it much easier to subsist in thinner snow.
I find this fascinating and it’s one of the reasons I know that science isn’t hard. It makes sense. The natural world isn’t much different from us. What works for us, works for nature too. And what works on the microscopic level works on a human level and works on a global level too. From the microscopic to the universal, radiation slowly kills an atom, our immune system kills our own cells when they become weak, hurricanes kill trees, land is destroyed in earthquakes, stars implode and it’s all for the greater good.
Teresa Bondora is a former science teacher turned homeschool mom of two. She hosts an on-line workshop on teaching science, is writing a book on the same and has developed educational products to help introduce chemistry to children. Visit her website at www.steelcreek.com for links to this and other science topics.
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Hope you found something useful for your homeschool in this issue of TheHomeSchoolMom newsletter! More great stuff next time...
Mary Ann Kelley
Editor, TheHomeSchoolMom Newsletter
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