We are about half way through the book Castle by David Macaulay. I have been reading it aloud during learning time. It tells the story of one actual castle built in Wales during the reign of Edward Longshanks. When we started the book, we found the town on the Wales map where the castle was built, and located King Edward I on our neat-o,massive timeline. The children have worked on various castle related drawings during the readings. So far, they have each made up their own country map, and figured out where to place their castle to defend it. (Of course, when you make up a country, you have to design its flag. That has been accomplished satisfactorily as well). Today they started work on designing their castle, using a Castles of the World coloring book we have for inspiration.
Moriah and Toby are poised to complete Exercise 26 tomorrow, the lesson at the halfway point in their Singapore Math workbooks. Samuel is a few lessons behind them, not due to any difficulty understanding the work, but due to him being Samuel.
Tomorrow, we will enjoy an outing to the zoo with another family from church. The children will be looking for answers to zoo questions so that they can get another stamp in their Science Passports.
And Wednesday, the 4 older children start sign language class. Their class books (You Can Learn Sign Language!) arrived on Saturday, and Toby has come up to me several times already, showing me various signs. “Hey, mom, you know what this means?”
On Saturday, James and I picked up summer reading sheets from Barnes and Noble. The children have earned free books the last two summers in that reading program. Elsie already has her sheet half full, and Moriah has started on hers as well. The library reading program starts this week, so I’ll have to stop by there (and pay my library debt- ) and get the children signed up. I got a lead from the Peoria Area Homeschoolers egroup that the local Christian bookstore has a reading program, too. That one sounds fun. I did not sign them up for the Pizza Hut Book-It program this year. I liked the aspect of being able to set individual goals for each child, but the chore of going out for Pizza Hut pizza every month proved to be way too strenuous.