Renoir and Vivaldi

We’ve initiated our new art and music study over the last several days, beginning with Renoir and Vivaldi in these first few weeks.

Renoir

Our first assignment was a picture study and coloring page of Renoir’s “The Girl with the Watering Can.”

What do you talk about in a picture study with a four year old and a three year old? I keep it pretty simple.

First, I usually ask them questions about the picture. Who’s in the picture? What is the girl holding? Where do you think she is? What makes you think she’s in a garden? etc.

Next, I ask them about colors, lighting, or anything unusual about the picture. For this one, the kids were fascinated that that her boots were black and her dress was blue. My fashion-conscious daughter really thought she ought to have had blue boots.

And last, I have them choose a part of the picture that is their favorite. The whole exercise probably takes us maybe ten minutes. I don’t drag it out. I just want them to get used to looking for details.

Over the next few days, we continued our picture study by coloring a picture of Renoir’s painting. I love this exercise because it really gives me a good look at the different personalities of my children. My son is Mr. Meticulous, and he scrutinizes every inch of the original to match it as closely as he can. And he does fret if he can’t find the right color to use to match the picture. My daughter, on the other hand, is a true artist and balks at the thought of anyone telling her how she ought to color her picture. She HATES to match the colors, and in this instance, showed her distaste by purposely scribbling outside the lines. And, I might add, included all the colors of the rainbow in the margins around the picture. But regardless, I know she will remember that blue dress with the black boots for a long time to come.

She finished her picture in two days (she was done with it after the first day, but I stretched it to two days). My son, however, took the whole week. And why not? It was because of his precision that it took so long. I just gave the little one some extra coloring pages to make up the difference in days.

Vivaldi

For Vivaldi, we’ve danced to the music, listened to it a number of times, and read his biography in Lives of the Musicians. Our facts to remember: He was called “The Red Priest” because of his red hair and red robes; he worked most of his life in an orphanage for girls; and he played the violin. I picked simple facts that I knew would stand out to my kids.

Next, we’re tackling a little music theory this year, too. We clapped out quarter notes and half notes and will gradually add in the rest as time allows.

Art and music time is my fun time. I’m not at all worried about sticking to a schedule; it’s just a fun subject to open our day with.

Nature Study: a Frog’s Life

I mentioned in an earlier post how inspired I was by a friend’s blog to pull out our frog study and try a few of her links. This is another of the fantastic ideas featured on her post, with a few modifications.

Since I didn’t have the right kind of paper plates (all mine have dividers), I cut out pieces of blue construction paper and glued it to a piece of cardstock. The craft was easy enough, a cut and paste craft. But I was surprised how much it helped them to remember the basics of a frog’s life.

My son's having a mini show-and-tell with his craft.

 

Next up, we’ll go into a little more detail and fill out our notebooking page. I’d still love to find some actual tadpoles, if anyone has some suggestions for where to find them.

Nature Study: Frog File Folder Book

We’ve recently had a tree frog regularly visiting our living room window each night and eating bugs, which has been so fun to watch. And, it inspired us to do a nature study on frogs. Then, a friend of mine who just started her own blog, had some terrific ideas for a preschool unit study on frogs. From the links in her post, we got started this week with a frog file folder book.

frogs nature study | frogs file folder book | mini books | lapbooks

Many of our frog projects, including the templates for this book, came from this link. To make the frog file folder book, paste the frog face to a file folder and cut the folder along the face outline. The eyes are glued to the back of the book, and the pages stapled to the inside.

frogs nature study | frogs file folder book | mini books | lapbooks

 

frogs nature study | frogs file folder book | mini books | lapbooks

What was most fun about this introductory activity, is that the story inside the frog file folder book was on my son’s reading level! He had so much fun reading the book he had made. There were only two sight words that he hadn’t learned, and he easily tackled them. Overall, it was a blast to make these, and the perfect way to open our long-delayed frog study.

frogs nature study | frogs file folder book | mini books | lapbooks

frogs nature study | frogs file folder book | mini books | lapbooks

Music Study: Learning the Brass Family

We have been learning about the instruments in the brass family, since those were among the instruments of choice for Handel’s Water Music.

In addition to reviewing our instrument cards that I got for free off of CurrClick.com, I’ve also been using the kidsite from New York’s Philharmonic Orchestra: nyphilkids.org. The “Instrument Storage Room” allows the kids to click on the silhouette of an instrument, then the instrument appears with a brief history of that instrument, a musical clip of the instrument to listen to, and occasionally a video clip to watch.

My son had such a blast with this! I’d love for him to learn to identify the instruments by their sound, but I’m not sure that the clips they provide are distinct enough for that lesson. We’ll see how it goes: I’ll “play it by ear” (wink, wink).

Discovering Thunder and Lightning

The next step of our weather study was trying to explain the idea of thunder and lightning—positive and negative forces, magnetism, moving molecules. I admit, it was a lot for a four year old mind to handle. But we managed through it with a little help from a library book and some sidewalk chalk.

Thunder and Lightning

Inside our school room, we read the book, looked at magnets, and talked about the idea of opposites attracting. Then, we headed outside for a little more hands-on approach. We talked about lightning jumping from cloud to cloud or from cloud to the ground. They both loved jumping from cloud to cloud and then crashing their molecules together into a mighty “clap” of thunder.

Was most of it lost on them? Of course, but I’ve learned that right now, I’m giving them landmarks. Later on, they’ll remember these little moments and will understand the details more readily (I’m hoping, anyway). If not, well, we sure had fun.