In the spirit of Olympics, part 2

After kick-starting our Olympic study with delicious cookies and some flag fun, the kids were ready to participate. I planned a few simple “Olympic” events for the kids to participate in: cycling and running, as well as the balance beam and the discus throw. Our left-over blue painter’s tape came in very handy for the events, as well.

 

Olympic Races
At the starting line for the first event

Middlest is fiercely competitive yet hopelessly the “little” sister; thus, I made sure that the emphasis was not as much on winning as it was on having fun. Of course, someone has to win; but I kept everything moving and didn’t dwell too much on the victories. And for those events where winning was all the fun (like running through the painter’s tape at the finish line), we took turns winning.

Olympic activities for kids

 

Olympic races

 

Olympic activities for kids
the discus throw

 

Olympic events for kids
Measuring the distance in the discus throw event

 

Olympics for kids
The “balance beam” was Middlest’s favorite.

 

Olympics for kids
Oldest even mastered hopping on one foot on the balance beam.

Then, we concluded with our own Awards Ceremony, complete with the “Olympic Fanfare” playing on my iPod followed by a performance of “O Say, Can You See,” and a picnic.

Olympic activities for kids
The kids got to color their own medals ahead of time. Oldest wanted to be realistic and colored a gold medal. Middlest opted for a pink medal.

By then, Littlest had all the fun he could take. (He’s not a fan of the great outdoors right now.) We headed back to the house where I fed the little man and the “big kids” prepped themselves for the swimming events. Later, Oldest mentioned to me that he really wanted to play “Opening Ceremonies” and run with the torch, suggesting that we use our left-over July 4th sparklers. I couldn’t resist.

Olympics for kids
My future Olympian

SchoolhouseTeachers.com Review

SchoolhouseTeachers.com review

As a part of the Schoolhouse Review Crew, I got the opportunity to review SchoolhouseTeachers.com, a “massive expansion” on The Old Schoolhouse Teacher Toolbox site.

“Massive” is the word used to describe the site on the home page, and it’s the perfect word. There are so many resources on this site, and an inexpensive membership provides access to all of them: chemistry, preschool, grammar, history, music, lapbooking, and more. Several teacher and student planners are included in the site, as well as recommended reading lists, recipes and monthly meal plans, free ebooks, and on and on.

review SchoolhouseTeachers.com

I especially liked the grammar lessons, which provide brief instruction to the student and then a worksheet to reinforce the concept. I hope to use this extensively through this next school year as Oldest begins studying grammar. Each day’s lessons are very simple and take only a few minutes to complete.

Daily Grammar

The website has also just posted a unit study on the Olympics.

homeschool Teacher resources

The site is extremely practical, with more information added daily, literally. The site is updated with new daily plans in a number of different categories. It makes planning ahead really tricky (unless you are using archived lessons) and learning very spontaneous. And even though I like to be spontaneous, this aspect made using the site a little difficult for me.

The teachers planning the lessons are a “star-studded cast” and include Terri Johnson from Knowledge Quest, Kim Kautzer from WriteShop, Kimm Bellotto and Niki McNeil from In the Hands of a Child for lapbooking specific resources, Michelle Miller from TruthQuest, and many more. There are lessons for every age level, preschool to high school, and every subject, plus extracurricular activities.

If you were to subscribe to one website, this would definitely be one to consider; it’s one-stop shopping at its best. Everything is here.

Membership to the site is $1 for the first month and $5.95 for each additional month. Visit the site to check out the free samples and watch the videos for a tour of the resources. Then, see how others put these vast resources to use at the Schoolhouse Review Crew.

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Disclaimer:  As a member of the TOS Crew, I received this product, at no cost to me, in exchange for my honest review.  All opinions are mine.