ONE WAY TO GET RID OF "BORING" WHEN TEACHING

When you picture a “teacher” do you see yourself? Perhaps you do; perhaps you don’t. If a teacher is simply someone who teaches, then welcome to the club. Whoever you are, welcome.

As we take a glimpse at creativity, let’s consider creativity in the context of teaching. You may think, “Fine, as long as you give me a teacher’s manual.” While teacher’s manuals are often great resources, you don’t need a teacher’s manual to be a great teacher. May I suggest that your students may benefit more from some creativity than from one more teacher’s manual. Scrap the manual and think outside the box just a little. Here we go!

  •  Instead of using a grammar book, grab a real book and circle all the strong action verbs you can find in an entire chapter (or at least one whole page!). Then add your favorite strong action verbs to your personal list so you can use them again in the future . . . in your own writing.

  • Spend 15 minutes outside observing nature. Write down as many nouns (things) as you can find while outside. Now everyone compare your lists and cross off anything that someone else has on their list. The person with the most items left wins. (Be sure to think of a creative prize for the winner!)

  • Read a child’s book - or a single chapter of a chapter book - and write down every character that was mentioned. Who remembers the most characters?

  • After watching an excellent movie, in writing, describe your favorite scene. Be sure to use amazing adjectives and adverbs to help the reader visualize the scene.

    These are just a few ideas to get your mind exploring the possibilities. Whether you teach in your own home with your own children, in a co-op with other homeschool students, in a traditional school with children of all ages, you get to be whatever kind of teacher you choose to be. Among other things, I challenge you to embrace creativity - in yourself and in your students. Sometimes, think outside the box. Learning will be fun when you do.

CAPITALIZE ON FUN!

As the weather settles into nicer days with ample sunshine and warmer temps, we encourage you to take some time to get outdoors. Do you know that whatever you do, you can find a learning opportunity? As adults, we get to explore new ways of experiencing education . . . we get to look through the lens of learning as we venture out beyond the walls of our school room or even our home. We encourage you to embrace the freedom that’s yours.

Connect with some friends or family while enjoying the beautiful weather. As we enter the last stretch of the school year, schedules may allow plentiful time to take a field trip or visit the local parks where learning opportunities abound. Here are a few ideas to consider:

  •  Visit your local downtown area

  •  Pack a picnic, and meet with another homeschool family at a park

  •  Find a trail that you can walk or hike

  •  Go out and find as many different types of flowering trees or wild flowers as

    possible

  •  Take a field trip to a nearby location, such as these excellent choices:

    • Science centers,

    •  nature preserves

    •  historic sites 

    • museums

  •  Set aside time to make something artistic. Invite friends to join you for added fun!

  •  Have a coffee date, and ask each other good questions. Pinterest has great

    conversation starter ideas.

  •  Have a cookout with another friend at a park, or invite someone over to your home. Grills work for lunchtime as well!

  •  While sitting in the sunshine, write a note to a family member or friend. You might even send a note to your teachers!

  •  Share your adventures to our social media pages, and show everyone what your family and groups do to spend quality time together learning.

Creativity in the Ordinary Areas of Everyday Life

This month we are exploring creativity. I don’t know about you, but some of us (myself included) often don’t “feel like” creative people. Perhaps that’s because we compare ourselves to poets, artists, musicians, decoractors . . . you know the truly creative individuals. Then there’s me: plain Jane, Miss Practical, dutiful, simple . . . just not creative. Or so I thought. Then I read a book: The Hidden Art of Homemaking by Edith Schaeffer. Now I see creativity through a different lens.

Mrs. Schcaffer showed me that:

I AM CREATIVE . . . because I am created in the image of God!

I’m not sure I should comment further. Just stop and ponder that TRUTH. Those are words of life, being spoken into you and over you. I don’t need to know you to know that YOU ARE CREATIVE.

If you agree that this is TRUE, I invite you to take 5 minutes or less to send me a message at krisspeakslife@gmail.com, and tell me in two or three sentences how YOU - as an image bearer of God - are creative. This is a challenge to affirm your creativity. Feed it so it will grow: little by little, blessing your family and your community.

When you send me a message, I’ll add your name to a drawing to win a free copy of The Hidden Art of Homemaking; then you’ll have a great book to add to your summer reading. You’ll learn how “‘hidden art’ is the art found in the ordinary areas of everyday life.”

Speaking life,
Kris krisspeakslife@gmail.com

MOVING BEYOND THE PAGE WITH ENRICHMENT PROJECTS

In depth studies in literature bring the texts alive. In our classes, students pay close attention to their amazing novels, oen reading much more slowly than ever before. They learn to ask questions while reading, and notice much more than the basic storyline. When students find some area of interest in a novel, and want to know more, what might they do? Enter the Enrichment Projects!

At the end of each semester, our students finish reading their novels, oen 2-3 weeks prior to the end of the class. The remaining weeks allow the students time to explore an aspect of their novel in which they find interest. Topics related to history include:

  •  The time period of the novel

  •  The state in which the novel takes place

  •  An interesting element not directly related to the story’s events

  •  Various professions from the era

  •  Famous persons, such as leaders or heroes

  •  Clothing from the period

  •  Tools used by the characters

 Types of travel

Additionally, students may create a written composition that differs from the typical writing assignment completed during weekly assignments in class. These various types of writing include:

  •  An extra chapter or two to the end of the story

  •  An epilogue that revisits the characters further along in their lives

  •  Their own short stories that relate to the novel in some way

  •  A different ending of the story

 Research on an assigned topic related to the novel

We have seen a variety of creative writing projects come to light over the years. In our classes, the written portion of this project explores just one element of creativity. Students also create a visual project to share, and they give an oral presentation to their classmates. These projects allow students to expand the subjects much farther than the text. We hope to see many new projects from this semester’s topic: Pioneering!

HAVE YOU EVER WONDERED WHAT AN ENRICHMENT PROJECT LOOKS LIKE?

Have you ever wondered what students might create for an Enrichment Project? Here is a writing assignment and video created by one of our students, Asher Bertholf! Asher was in 5th grade at the time, and had been in our classes for 2.5 years at the time of this project’s creation. You’ll notice that the written composition is not without some errors; that’s to be expected. However, he did a wonderful job on both portions. Be sure to read to the end and even click on the YouTube video to see this student’s visual/oral project!

Asher Bertholf
21 Balloons Enrichment Essay 3/22/2019

A Suspenseful Reaction
After reading the book, Twenty One Balloons, By William Pène du Bois, I innovated a chain reaction related to Professor Sherman’s adventure. A chain reaction is a sequence of reactions brought on by an initial movement. Will Professor Sherman’s ideas and choices allow him to escape the trap of Krakatoa?

I incorporated a metal screw in my chain reaction. Standing on a ladder, I got a huge screw-like pole and stuck it in the ground. My dad lent me a pole driver from his garage to pound the screw into the ground. Then, I got some twine tied it around the center of the screw and attached the end to the next object. I got a square metal plate with a hole in the middle and slid it down the screw. When it went down, it pulled the twine like a pulley system. That caused the next object to release. This replicates the Airy-Go-Round in the story. The Airy-Go-Round floated up the screw, high into the sky. In the story, it was seventy feet tall, whereas mine was seven feet tall.

The next apparatus in the chain reaction involved a balloon house. I made the balloon house with cardboard, Sharpies, a balloon, and paperclips. With my colored Sharpies I drew a magnificent house on cardboard and attached a blown balloon to the back using a clothes pin. I attached two paper clips to the top of the house which hung from a fishing line that stretched to the next object. When the twine got pulled from the metal plate, it tugged the house from the tree. The house slid smoothly down the fishing line. It triggered the next piece. This structure symbolized Professor Sherman floating over the ocean. He wafted smoothly until he reached a sudden stop. The future of the unknown looked uncertain.

The next station, the island of Krakatoa led to be treacherous. I built a replica of a volcano out of K’nex. Configuratively, I attached a track and car to it, made to fit the K’nex volcano. I set a cup followed by a ball at the end of the track. A small string held the car in place, so when the balloon house hit the vehicle, down the track it went. The car flew off the track. It hit a cup into the ball. This symbolized the volcano on Krakatoa. Like an electric chair racing around the volcano, the car flew. The car soared off the track just as the passengers in the electric chair were thrown out the window.

Subsequently, Dominos lined the next event. Carefully, I placed the Dominos in line. At the end of the line, the Dominos were set flat and built like a staircase. I lined the Dominos up the staircase. As the ball hit the first Domino, they all came falling down sequentially. Orderly, they fell from the bottom to the top of the staircase. The last Domino fell off the edge of the staircase onto the next object. This scene symbolized the houses on Krakatoa catastrophically crashing down one right after another. Sequentially, the houses kept falling down until the last one crashed. Professor Sherman’s telling of events collapsed.

The final stage of the chain reaction ended with the treacherous trap of Krakatoa. First, I got a mouse trap and hot glued a clothespin to the end. I set the trap. I attached a helium balloon to the mouth of the clothespin. When the last Domino fell, it landed on the trigger of the mousetrap. The trap snapped, crushing the clothespin, releasing the helium balloon. The balloon flew upwards. This relates to Professor Sherman narrowly escaping the the trap of the island.
To the second, he grabbed onto the balloon strings. He floated to safety.

Watching the chain reaction was the most fun of all. The ingenuity of my different ideas were attempted over a full week of building. Some plans I abandoned. Some I kept. I learned about friction, force, resistance, weight and angle. I liked combining all my subjects of school into one project: science, math, geography and literature.


We love to see our students dream up all kinds of amazing projects. Great job, Asher Bertholf!!