Dingoden Family Outback Yapper

Welcome to our Family blog. It will try to capture the various asundry activities of our mundane lives, but with an attempt at making it seem not quite so mundane.

23 July 2009

Let's look it up on the Internet

Logan's always asking me great questions. Often my answer is, let's go
look it up on the Internet. Today, for example, he wanted to go find
ladybugs. I replied that it was winter and he wouldn't find any. He
then asked, "Well where do ladybugs go for the winter?" So here's what
we found --
http://cc-calendula.blogspot.com/2006/12/where-do-ladybugs-go-for-winter.html
-- they hide in the crevices of houses among other places.

16 July 2009

A Visit to the Reptile Centre

The school holidays are coming to an end, but we did one
last outing with Linda to the Reptile Centre. The kids really
enjoyed the Reptile Show and loved getting to hold the
lizards and snake.























































































Viewing the crocodile
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The Kids Just Love the Hands-On Portion of the Show




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Feeding the Rock Wallabies

I took the kids out to feed the wallabies the other afternoon.
They come out at dusk to feed; now that it's winter they were
down around 4pm. These wallabies live among the rocks behind
a motel/caravan park. These particular wallabies are fed regularly
by tourists. They're so cute! Notice the little joey peeking
out of Mama Wallaby's pouch.



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Posing with the Wallabies




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15 July 2009

Hanging out at home




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Making T-Shirts



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Elora (17 months)


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A Day at the Camel Cup, July 11

The weather was gorgeous and we enjoyed a lovely day at
the camel races. The first picture is the camel parade. Then
the last couple pictures show the camels in action. A record
number of people came to the Camel Cup according to the
paper, nearly 5,500.





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13 July 2009

Toddler Activities

Someone on one of the homeschool groups I participate in needed ideas for keeping their toddler busy.  I wrote this up and thought I'd put it on the website too.  I hope you find these ideas useful.  Here's what I wrote:

I have a 17 month old daughter and am wondering just how we'll get much done when we start back with school in another week.  She likes (insists!) on being in the middle of everything!  Here are some of the activities she likes to do.  Some things need an adult eye so that I can remove the activity when things start going in her mouth.

PUTTING THINGS IN, activities:

clothes pins into a plastic drink bottle; I used one that was larger than a coke bottle b/c this is one of the activities she's been doing from 12-13 months (I use the non-hinged clothes pins).  This is probably her FAVORITE toy and has been for months and months

square blocks into a square hole (I handmade one out of blocks and a used box; my daughter can't yet put more than one shape in at a time, so I had to make a simple one.  Montessori suggests introducing only one shape at a time whereas many toddler toys have three shapes like the circle, square and triangle.)

baby food jar lids into a "mailbox" (decorated box with a slit)

putting matchsticks into a small hole (I use a toothpick holder that has a small hole and also a plastic toothbrush holder that happens to have a hole at the bottom); you could do the same thing with straws if you feel more comfortable with that.

putting dried noodles into an empty cereal box (with holes poked into the front of the box)

putting plastic animals into a decorated box with a hole cut out and "secret door" to pull open and retrieve the animals (my 3 year old helped decorate a box with sea creature stickers, then the whale, star fish, plastic things go "swimming"  -- my 3 year old also plays with this)

SORTING:

pompoms into colored silicone muffin cups (Large 1.5 inch pompoms, silicone baking cups I have on hand)

rocks, colored sorting bugs/animals into ice cube tray, I have one for making mini-ice cubes, 60 squares (this is one my daughter will do for a LONG time before she tries putting any in her mouth.  That said, I'm always around when she does this and you might not feel comfortable with something so small yet)

plastic milk container lids into colored bowls


metal mixing bowl and various sized spoons


PRETEND PLAY:


plastic animals
pretend kitchen (plates, bowls, teapot, spoons)
matchbox cars
her own box of playing cards (where I don't mind if the cards get bent; we have heaps of cards from airplane trips)
basket of board books
colorful plastic Easter eggs (she likes to pull them apart)
wooden blocks
wooden puzzles (the big kind)
pop-up toy (push a button and the animal pops up; my daughter loves that)

CRAFTS:


cut up straws on a pipe cleaner:
my daughter amazed me last month when she copied my three year old and spent a LONG time putting straws onto plastic string with help.  Once I changed the string to pipe cleaners she can do it by herself.  She'll spend quite a long time doing that, concentrating very hard.  You made need to spend time at first sitting with your child, but they sure do improve quickly

clear contact paper
taped securely sticky side up to a tray--they can just play with it (feeling the sticky side and then putting toys onto it and experimenting with pulling the toys off)

coloring -- I offer her colored pencils because she too will eat crayons and markers.

large round stickers
--she can pull them off and put them on paper (15 months is probably a bit young but by 17-18 months you might give them a try.  I ordered rolls of 100 from Oriental Trading and had my dad ship them over to us, but they're worth it because  she can do them on her own!) I remember my son at about 18 months covering himself from head-to-to with stickers!

*****The reality for me at the moment is that I get these activities out, they hold her interest for a little while, but as soon as I'm doing something with the other kids she stops what she's doing and comes over to climb into my lap.  Sigh...  I just plan to do my best and not to not get worked up if things don't go as I had envisioned. 

I really love the ideas for toddlers at Tot School:
http://lapbooksbycarisa.homestead.com/TotSchool.html
she has lot of thumbnail pictures now posted at: http://www.squidoo.com/TotSchool

Oh, one more thought before I go -- when we do school-stuff outside my daughter will happily wander about doing her own thing.  That's probably the most independent she'll be.

09 July 2009

Timez Attack by Big Brainz

There is an amazing, free video game called Timez Attack for kids who are learning their times tables. You can download it free at http://www.bigbrainz.com/Download.html

It's well worth taking the video tour to get a feel for the game: http://www.bigbrainz.com/VideoTour.html

There's also a version you can buy if your child needs more practice (or loves the game), but I downloaded it and sat down with Logan to see what it was all about. The free version is really impressive! Because it starts off so slowly, even Logan can play (though it's definitely geared towards the 2nd-5th grade crowd who are in the midst of learning their times tables facts, 2-12).

Love those Ghost Gum Trees!

We went out for an hour or two to one of the dry
river beds near us. The kids spent a long time
collecting rocks and climbing about. Boomer got
some much needed running time; Elora enjoyed
throwing the ball for Boomer too!




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We sure enjoyed the beautiful temperatures!

Oh, and by the way, Delenn dresses herself!




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Phonics Puzzle Cards

This website has some nice print outs if you're working on
word families. The puzzles below are called "Partner Puzzles"
and you can print them out for free at
http://www.carlscorner.us.com/WdFamilies.htm

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07 July 2009

AUGH!

This is how Logan and Delenn felt after Show Days [like a
county fair in the States with animals, competitions for best
crafts and (most important to the kids) rides, lots of rides] -- not
only because it came to an end, but because they both
got sick. On Sunday night they both didn't want dinner and
went straight to bed. Logan threw up all night and Delenn
screamed and yelled in (ear) pain. Logan also complained of
a sore ear. Delenn's ear drum ruptured sometime in the night
(and so the pain eased off for her). The doctor said they both
had raging ear infections.

The next night, Monday night, everyone was exhausted. But
unfortunately it was Elora's turn for a horrible night. She was
up screaming and crying most of the night. She went (back) into
the doctor the next morning and she too has an ear infection.

Strange that they all came down with ear infections at the same
time. Poor kids.

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Show Days Crafts

Here are the crafts that the kids entered into the Show. Logan's
lego creation won second place as did his cross stitch. Delenn's
decorated bottle came in 1st (for ages 8 and under). She worked
for three days on it (cutting the tissue paper from strips into
squares, gluing them onto the bottle, helping wrap the pom-pom
and cutting the loops herself and putting the feathers and eyes on.
they were all HER ideas!) She won 3rd for her egg carton creation
and 3rd place for her cross stitch.

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Math Cards

I read about these cards and thought the
kids might enjoy them. After he did one,
Logan said, "Cool! I want to show Daddy
when he gets home." Obviously the yarn
matches up better in the addition equations
(1+3=4 and wrapping to new problem), but
Logan didn't seem to care that the yarn wrapped
around back to link some of the numbers.

I did one for Delenn with numbers from 1-17 (as
many as I could fit on the card comfortably).

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Word Families, German

There's a website I have used a lot that has word family picture cards
(bat, cat, hat, mat) at
http://curry.edschool.virginia.edu/go/wil/rimes_and_rhymes.htm#

This_Week I found another one and thought I'd let anyone interested
check it out. It looks like it's got a lot of other good resources for
beginning readers as well. http://www.carlscorner.us.com/ShtAWdFamilies.htm

It also has little German readers for anyone who is teaching their kids
German. I'm excited about that because it's been hard to find good
German resources: http://www.carlscorner.us.com/GermanRdrs.htm

Science Centre Folders

I mentioned a couple of days ago that I finally organized our
biology cards into various file folders:

Living - Non-Living
Five Kingdoms
Vertebrates vs. Invertebrates
Invertebrate groups
Vertebrate groups

I've written about them before, so it's not really anything new
except for the fact that I feel better about being organized. We
went back and have been reading our science book (Real Science
4 Kids-Biology, http://gravitaspublications.com/products/index.htm)
and these cards fit in perfectly with the discussion of taxonomy
and classification.

The Living vs. Not Living activity is from a book I bought
called Take it to Your Seat Science Centers.




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Five Kingdoms (Animals, Plants, Fungi, Protists, Monera)

I just love this set of cards from http://homemademontessori.blogspot.com/search/label/5%20kingdom

You can use them for living vs. non-living and (if you leave the non-living cards out) for sorting into the
five living kingdoms. Delenn (3) has especially gotten a lot of use out of them.





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Vertebrates and Invertebrates sorting cards and activities

Vertebrates and Invertebrates:

Picture 2: sorting cards I found at http://homemademontessori.blogspot.com/search/label/vertebrates

Picture 4: animal sorting (mammals, birds, reptiles)-- http://filefolderfun.com/KindergartenScience.html

Picture 4: animal classification cards (amphibians, arachnids, birds, crustaceans and more): http://www.montessorimaterials.org/science.htm




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05 July 2009

Math Games and more

Logan and I enjoyed playing Mancala today. We made one out of an egg
carton, using all 12 cups. You need 4 stones (or other small pieces)
per cup. There's an online version of the game
http://www.coolmath-games.com/0-mancala/index.html that you can play if you need to learn the rules. It's a simple game, but as you get better you learn more strategies to win.

I also got a lot of great (kindergarten/1st grade) math games and math
ideas this weekend from this site:
http://www.mathwire.com/games/numbergames.html -- you should have a look around! I'll probably post some pictures and talk about this more in the next couple of weeks. I've got more than 1/2 dozen new activities for Logan (especially using the 100s board --
http://www.mathwire.com/archives/october07.html; I also got some ideas from this site: http://www.squidoo.com/hundredboard)

As for us, we're all doing pretty well. Elora continue to teethe (or
suffer from a cold), which means Mom isn't getting much sleep. We
really enjoyed Show Days (like a county fair with crafts, animals and
lots of rides). We'll hopefully post some pictures of the entries that
Logan and Delenn submitted soon. Delenn got a 1st place and two 3rd
places for her entries. Logan won two 2nd places and a special mention
for his entries.

Mom was very happy to finish putting together some science centres for
the biology/natural world science cards we've been working with the last
couple months. The folders go hand-in-hand with this chart of the
natural world:
http://www.maitrilearning.com/files/naturalworldchartweb.pdf
(Non-living vs. Living; Five Kingdoms; Invertebrates vs. Vertebrates,
etc.) For example, here is one of the card sorting activities I used for Non-living vs. Living http://talibiddeenjr.files.wordpress.com/2008/04/science_living-non-living.pdf Again, I hope to post some pictures at some point soon (but not
today -- I'm going to REST!).

03 July 2009

Show Days




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Show Days Fun!




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