Tag Archive | 3 Boys and a Dog

Thanksgiving in Brief

We did not cover the origins of the American Thanksgiving this year, rather the emotions that are connected to the holiday – being  thankful and together with friends and family. However, I do have some resources to share!

Our Crafts:

  • Thanksgiving Tree (Activity Village) HERE
  • Paper Turkey (Peapod Labs) HERE
  • I am Thankful Pumpkin (Moffatt Girls) HERE
  • Horn of Plenty – Gratitude printable (Kids Activities Blog) HERE

Our Worksheets:

  • Thanksgiving skip counting (The Homeschool Den) HERE
  • Thanksgiving Activity Pack (Itsy Bitsy Learners) HERE (I did not use some of the pages as I was not impressed by the illustrations but they had a nice Mayflower picture and some colour and shape pages that were ok)
  • Thanksgiving math and number families (The Homeschool Den) HERE

Lapbooks:

  • Thanksgiving Dinner – A Fun Study (Homeschool Bits) HERE

Helpful sites:

  • 3 Boys and a Dog reference list HERE
  • Cornucopia explanation with more links about Thanksgiving (Thanksgiving-Day.org) HERE
  • All things Thanksgiving at Activity Village HERE
  • Wild Turkey Facts at NWTF HERE (National Wild Turkey Foundation)

Books:

  • An Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving by Louisa May Alcott HERE
  • The Apple Doll by Elisa Kleven HERE
  • Free emergent readers by The Measured Mom HERE
  • Nursery Crimes by Arthur Geisert HERE
  • A Thanksgiving Turkey by Julian Scheer HERE

Videos:

  • Modern Marvels: The Turkey HERE
  • The Land Before Time: The Time of the Great Giving HERE101_5422
This entry was posted on 15/12/2013, in Uncategorized. 1 Comment

The Needs of Our Boys to Learn With the Least Strife…

As the mother of 3 rather active and unique boys (regardless of the twins’ identical LOOKING status) I am always a wee bit curious about whether or not they learn the same way as girls… if there are things I should be doing that as their mother I would not necessarily see without some sort of prompting. So I was rather pleased when I came across a blog post by the site 3 Boys and a Dog titled The Learning Curve for Boys: Is it Different? (You can read the post in its entirety HERE.)

There have been many studies made into the differences in our brains. Apparently there are many in regards to female and male. I remember being told, when I was younger and bemoaning that the boys in class were annoying and childish, that boys mature slower (in general) that girls. This has, to some extent, held true in our own little group of 5. Trinity has shown more maturity than her brothers when hitting her age milestones. Though from time to time my boys surprise me as well.

3 Boys and a Dog sites 5 main categories where boys differ in learning needs than girls – Reasoning, Movement, Structure, Motivation, and Teams. The one that interests me the most as a mother AND as a homeschool educator is the second – movement.

In order to learn most effectively, boys must stay active, engaged and motivated.

  • Staying active is an integral piece of effective learning for boys. “Movement seems to help boys not only stimulate their brains, but also manage and relieve impulsive behavior.”
  • Movement increases blood flow to the limbic region of the brain, allowing boys to process emotions and reduce stress.
  • “Physical exercise is essential for… boys.  It helps calm them, helps them sleep at night, and helps them perform learning tasks.”

I can honestly say I have experienced the squiggly seated learners, the brains that just can’t motivate for the boring sit down lesson. Spring and summer are our best months… the small amount of learning in the morning and then run run run for an hour or more before settling back into routine has saved many a headache. As has ensuring that our memorization includes gestures and wiggling… nothing is better than a poem or song that has you dancing along.

That is not to say that Trinity and Echo don’t need some extra go time… I think all kids need that feeling of activity in their day. Motivation is another point I have found that has become rather important.

Boys tend to get bored more easily than girls.

  • The male brain literally requires a “recharge” between tasks, meaning that the brain goes into a rest state before moving on to something new.
  • “Boys require more and varying stimulants to keep them attentive” and to decrease the length of time that the brain is at rest.
  • Focusing on a goal maintains boys’ concentration and paves the way for success both in school and in life beyond the classroom.

Now I am not sure hot true to my kids all 3 of these points are but I have found that when it comes to an activity or focus the boys are often much harder to force a focus. Of course, that is often tightly tied to the Movement point. Boredom is often the result of excess energy when faced with a sit down task. We have had to work hard on concentration with Zander. When he was 2 he had a prolonged and a typical febrile seizure. We were VERY lucky in that his concentration was really the only issue we have had resulting from that episode.

Let’s backtrack a bit to Structure, we have found this statement true:

  • Calendars can be useful tools for boys since they provide visual and spatial representations of what they need to accomplish and how much time they have to complete the task.

I know for our boys a knowledge of what comes next, of what they are working towards (events, etc) or even knowing that I have a list in a book that will be checked off as they accomplish their assignments causes a calming to the OCD like concern and the feeling that there is an end to the work each day. While I have found that for our family too much structure overwhelms our boys, I have to agree with the author that knowing there IS structure to our day adds to the motivation in all of our children.101_3366