This will be a random/ad-hoc book month because we will be travelling away from base camp. In the past few weeks we have read a few books which lead to great themes but we have not explored the themes in depth. So while the foundation is laid out, we will build upon it in the next few months.
This month if we weren't traveling we would have been reading about Spring, Easter and Evolution. My recommendations for the themes for my kids' age groups are below.
SPRING


We will also read the Vegetables we eat, Farming and Early people to connect how people came about growing their own foods, and how people have learned to selectively modify the plants they grow.Update 7/25/2014: We did not read these books



As a humerus addition I would also include the Magic Finger by Roald Dahl, it does mention how birds build their nests and how people don't think of animals as equals. As a self-read, related to birds and nature I would also include the Best Nest which will also open up the doors for discussion about 'home'. (Кокло мило колко сладко е при мама и при татко, Птичка в кафез, Стара спретната къщурка, Облаче ле бяло). I found Flap your wings to be a perfect and humorous self-read addition to the theme.
EASTER
Since it's Easter month we will also read about rabbits and eggs. We will read Peter Rabbit, First come the egg, The goose and the golden egg and Green Eggs and Ham.Update 7/25/2014: We did not read these books



EVOLUTION
Evolution we started with One Cool Friend. We read about how volcanic islands are created and die (Island, a story of the Galapagos). We talked about the Galapagos Penguins and how they are thought to have arrived at the Galapagos Islands (Galapagos Penguins). From there we will move to Charles Darwin's voyage (Darwin's Beagle) and the process of arriving at the theory of evolution which explains his observations (Evolution and Early people).


UPDATE 4/24/2014
SO WHAT DID WE READ IN APRIL?
We read The Curious Garden, One Cool Friend, The Best Nest, Flap Your Wings, Switch on-Switch off, The shocking truth about energy, Pinocchio, Гатанки, various Bulgarian folk stories. We just started reading
. I read it during my trip to New Jersey and I think this is a book adults should read and discuss with their children of all ages. This book touches on a fundamental problem of human societies and history-humankind has been held back centuries by prejudices and irrational, unmotivated fear. Yes, there is brutal death in this book but don't allow that to deter you. What you can teach and learn is that death is inevitable and that one can be smart (Ragweed is very smart and asks the right questions) but one carefree, bold decision is all it takes to ruin your life (we have in-house real-life examples of that). I love the language (even if I am translating it), I love the descriptions, I love the suspense, the tension, the adventure, the drama, the ever-present generation gap.
I read this book last week. It contains elements of each of the following titles: Pipi Longstockings, the Hunger Games, Huck Finn and Карсон които живее на покрива. This is a very quick-read story and it can really let the reader's imagination run wild. I enjoyed it tremendously. I did not like the ending as much, so when reading it aloud I will add the ending that I would find satisfying. I think we will read this book after we finish Poppy. We will take a small break in between.
I think it is important to read about ordinary girls who even when frightened and faced with a a challenge do their best and persevere. Our girls need to strive for knowledge because knowledge will come handy when you need it and also and most importantly when you least expect it.
SCIENCE FAIR
The kids' school had a science fair this month. I received the formal guidelines and I found them too rigid, too conformist, and too dry. Science fair is supposed to inspire-kids are to ask and seek answers to any question that intrigues them. For little kids (elementary school kids) no question and no answer is impossible. This and the rigidity of the guidelines were clearly in conflict. Science in its core is a story, a logical story about observable phenomena based on physical observations. So, if science is a story, why cannot we present our projects in this format, as a story.
What are our favorite characters-Piggie and Elephant. Thus, we came up with the characters who will tell the story.
What was the question-how the electricity comes to our house? What we did-we built an ultra-simple electricity generator following the guidelines presented here. Building it was not a piece of cake. First it helps to know that I wound the wire the only wrong way possible. When I unwound, the wire twisted, tore and I was plain miserable. Finally, I resolved to obtain a second wire and repeat. Still not results. I had tried building the structure from Legos rather than cardboard too, but that did not make the generator light the bulb. Then I had the sudden idea, the aha-moment, to try and measure the presence of current. I connected the generator to a AMP-meter and yes the arrow moved! I had produced current. Finally, I connected the ends of the light bulb to the ends of the coil via alligator clips, and then the light did light. The generator, the moving (rotating) magnet, did induce electric current in the coils. I was content.
Ballet girl told a good story during her presentation. She was very excited about this project. And yes, she did win the kindergarten science fair.
What are my take aways:
- Science is not a school subject. Science is a word that summarizes our human endeavors to seek answers to questions we have about all around us. Since we are making observations and looking for answers, we might as well do that. We must be engaged with what we have a question about. We must observe and we must ask questions and we must record not only our observations but also our questions, always.
- When answering a question we might as well answer in the form of a story to make it natural to the audience who is supposed to learn something from our investigation.
- Since the question is about something we investigate, we might as well get our hands dirty, and make mistakes and acknowledge them. Aha-moments, the best moments in the world, the light at the end of the tunnel moments, can only be achieved if we have made mistakes, if we have been frustrated, exhausted, disappointed, almost given-up. We have to try, strive persevere, keep on going. We have to learn patience. We have to learn humility and the immensity of science teaches us this.
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