Jump to content

Menu

craftyerin

Members
  • Posts

    1,181
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by craftyerin

  1. I sew, knit, and crochet.

     

    Sewing: I do mostly home dec stuff (throw pillows, curtains, etc). I recently did a hang-from-the-doorway puppet theater for my 4yo's bday. I also have sewn several mei tai baby carriers for friends lately.

     

    Knit and crochet: I do mostly baby gifts for people and knitwear for my kids. Lots and lots of hats. :tongue_smilie: Today my daughter and I are taking a pile of preemie hats to the NICU at our children's hospital. I'm working on the sweater-that-will-never-end for my mother. She might get it for her bday in November. Maybe.

     

    I have a craft blog, if you want to some of the things I work on. http://lookwhaterinmade.blogspot.com/

  2. City Park has great playgrounds, and Storyland is cheap ($3/kid). My kids love it. I also like taking the kids to walk around the Quarter. We have never run into problems, especially on a week day morning. We park in the French Market parking lot between the French Market and the river. The zoo and the aquarium are wonderful, but pricey. My kids like to ride the Algiers ferry back and forth a few times. LOL It's free to pedestrians. You get on the ferry right by the aquarium. Riding a street car is a good idea. Inexpensive. You could park somewhere along St. Charles and ride the street car down to the playground right across from Tulane. Pretty ride, nice playground. I'll come back and edit if I come up with any more ideas.

  3. You are fabulous and this is just perfect. Thank you. Now off to find the books. :D

    You're sweet. I hope you can find that Olympics! book. I checked it out of my library and I think it's the perfect intro to the olympics book for my kids' age/stage, but apparently it's out of print. Crossing my fingers for your library to hook you up!

     

    Here's my pinterest board for the crafts I have planned:

    http://pinterest.com/craftyerin/olympics-unit-study/

  4. I'm Erin, just getting started in this homeschooling adventure. I have a just-turned-5yo son and b/g twins who just turned 4. We live in the suburbs of New Orleans.

     

    Before I got married, I spent 5 years teaching 3rd grade at a wonderful classical private school. I have always wanted that sort of education for my own children. Nothing like that school exists here, so we're DIY. I'm excited about it!

  5. I am planning a VERY simple week-long unit study. Mine are pk/kinder, so it's storybook and craft heavy. Here's the outline (c&p):

     

     

    Olympics Unit Study

     

    Olympics! by B G Hennessy

    How to Train with a T. Rex and Win Eight Gold Medals by Michael Phelps

    Wilma Unlimited by Kathleen Krull

     

    Day 1: read Olympics! Watch clips of diving, swimming, running, and gymnastics on YouTube. (pre selected)

     

    Day 2: read Olympics! Locate America and London on the map. Stamp Olympic rings.

     

    Day 3: read Olympics! Discuss opening ceremonies, make torches.

     

    Day 4: read How to Train... Discuss medals, watch a YouTube medal ceremony. Listen to the national anthem. Make medals from salt dough, stamp, bake.

     

    Day 5: read Wilma Unlimited. finish salt dough medals, paint, wear.

     

    All throughout, watch sports!

     

    Read aloud Hour of the Olympics (Magic Treehouse) at bedtime.

     

    All of my crafts are on a pinterest board, but I'll have to link that later when I'm on my laptop instead of my phone. (eta: http://pinterest.com/craftyerin/olympics-unit-study/)I'd also do a medal count and practice tally marking or something if we weren't going to be out of town for the whole 2nd week of the games. I don't want to keep up with it while traveling.

  6. I am doing FIAR with my Ker and two PKers next year. I own volumes 1-3, and picked and chose the books I wanted to do next year from all three. BUT, I only have 17-18 penciled in. I'm planning on doing 2 books/month, on average. We'll do other read alouds and such as well, but for FIAR, I think 18 books a year would be just fine. There are some titles in vol. 1 that are out of print, I believe, so make sure you can get as much milage as you want from that volume. You may want to consider owning more than one volume. I plan to work through vol. 1-3 over two years, and figure we'll cover most of what my library system has in the process.

  7. I had to laugh at the butterfly method (which I do remember being taught), since just this past week, a pin on pinterest on how to teach it spread through my elementary school teacher and homeschooling teacher friends' boards like wildfire. I kept seeing it pop up!

  8. I think Expedit bookshelves are the BEST. I have several, in myriad sizes, in multiple rooms.

     

    Other Ikea things we use regularly--

    *Agam Junior chairs to give the 2-6yo set a boost at the table,

    *Dragon flatware, in their adult kitchen section, but IMO it's about 3/4 sized, making it perfect for my preschoolers, but doesn't feel babyish

    *the $15 easel in the kids' section

  9. We aren't super crafty (they color and draw and playdoh, etc, but I don't initiate craft activities very often). We have loved Handwriting Without Tears Pre-K materials and All About Reading pre-level for letters and sounds.

     

    eta: We are also starting Five in a Row in the fall. Super excited about that!

×
×
  • Create New...