My mom was the only person game enough to accept our invitation! lol She was shocked to see us! (At this time, ds is 10 and dd is 12.)

Here we are with Slipper kitty. Moments before Mom's arrival, ds suggested that we come up with a brief introduction of who we were, with a testimony that we had changed our faith to the one true God of the Hebrews. Slipper posed as the Cat of Bubastees, one of our favorite books written by GA Henty that I read aloud to them. Mom never dreamed we would be dressed up! She loved it!
After our introductions, ds opened the unit celebration with the shofar he made out of paper mache. 
Then we ate food typical of the various cultures we had studied.

Our favorite was the pomegranate. I have never used these before. I had to google instructions on how to use them. They are full of seeds and these are what you eat. They are filled with a great liquid. I also found a wonderful recipe! First you roll the pomegranate on the counter top to smash the seeds inside.

Then you poke a hole into the fruit with a skewer and insert a straw. The world's first soft drink! LOL

Then we showed off our projects. Here is one of ds' seven page flip books on Creation. We made each page a different size and they increased by one inch as they got bigger. This is the day the stars were created. We already had a million foam stars someone had given the dc for crafts, so we pulled them out for this project.

Here's his page on the day the frogs and turtles (more foam shapes) were created.

Here is one of dd's pages. Don't you love the flamingo? I think she used a stencil for that, the cat and the flower. And she used cotton for the clouds.

Scanning the table from right to left you see...

Here are overlay transparancy maps. We did these for the Great Flood. I used numerous Creation resources to study geology and the Flood. From looking at recent big floods and volcanic eruptions (like Mt. St. Helens) Creationist Scientists have seen that big floods create huge canyons within days, not millions of years. After all, when do you see the greatest erosion, over years of peaceful weather, or after floods? When we first moved into our house, there was no grass and we had a hill. That was fine, until it rained and the harder it rained, the more erosion I had. I needed to hurry up and put grass down before my yard washed completely away! We've had 3 different hundred year floods in our area since our dc have been born. The one flood caused waters to go over the spillway of a dam for the first time ever...creating a new course of direction for the river and a new canyon. After the flood waters started to recede and the river road was passible again, we drove down and were shocked at the change! Using this as the baseline for our theories, our transparency maps reflect these changes. I think my next blog article will feature how we did some of these activities. I'll do a close up in the next article as well as some of the resources we used which were not part of the TOG curriculum.

These are the salt dough maps of the Nile River.

My dc were just learning how to use IEW and KWO with simple paragraphs. So we took one of our paragraphs and made a pop up book!

Another pop up book with a paper boat...
Our major art project was the tabernacle. I knew this represents our relationship with God and is referenced over and over again in the Bible. Therefore I prioritized for us to understand this better. And how better to understand it than to make a model? I'll detail how we made it in the next blog entry.

Here is ds lifting the different covers to the tabernacle, explaining the significance of each one.

Here is the inside from the top...

Today, we can sketch out all the pieces and what they are and what they represent! This is an extremely meaningful project!
Well, at the end, Mom was quite impressed! She said she was going to tell everyone they needed to come to the next one..when would that be she asked? This was not fluff she said, as best as I can remember. But she was really impressed and wanted us to do another one! For the record, my mom has come to all of them (8 now), Dad has come to the next 7, my MIL has flown in from 1500 miles away to 2 (at the end of each school year). My dad's cousin was visiting during one and she attended the Elizabethan one. We now e-mail these blogs to my ds' former Sunday School teacher who has been a wonderful encourager to us! I've been to shy to invite them! Should I? ;) I should also add, that although my mom is incredibly impressed with this and could sit and just ask questions all day and listen to every book, every story, every detail, my dad gets lost...and so do I! I also quickly saw the opportunity to do speeches and recitations. So I add something new that is higher level to each one, trying to make them more creative and interesting, building skills my dc need to build anyway. I am open to the idea that this could be boring for someone who is not a grandma or grandpa, so I've been hesitant to invite anyone else for fear of boring them to tears. That was one reason I had the "walk through the museum" idea, but that has never happened. Our guests are always ready for us to tell our story of HIStory. To God be the glory! |
• Jul. 18, 2008 - Untitled Comment