Charlotte Mason And Picture Study

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In our home we regularly study great works of art. Picture study is an integral part of a Charlotte Mason style education; it opens the child’s heart to the beautiful ideas that artists over the ages have expressed.

“Every child should leave school with at least a couple of hundred pictures by great masters hanging permanently in the halls of his imagination.” Charlotte Mason

The idea is to look at the picture very closely, and for the child to give a narration .The following questions may be helpful discussion-starters:

• What is happening in this picture?

• How is this picture different from real life?

• How would you describe the colours?

• How do you think the artist felt when they painted this picture?

This morning Rose and I had been studying a beautiful work of art by Albrecht Durer:

Wing Of A Blue Roller

After discussing the painting, we found this video on YouTube, which shows of the amazing colours of this beautiful bird.

 

In the afternoon we spent a few moments seeing which colours from the painting we could recreate with our own watercolours. I printed out a photograph of the painting for us to add to our journals for reference at a later date. Our time was short but sweet, however as the lure of the sunshine was too great for Rose, who declared she needed to go looking for frogs in the garden!

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Happy exploring!

 

 

Vernal Equinox Week ~ Exploring Nature With Chilren

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This is Vernal Equinox week in Exploring Nature with Children, Sunday being the actual day. In anticipation of this event, the frogs are coming out of hiding in the garden.

Rose found this wee fellow this morning, and we spent time observing him, and then sketched him in our journals.

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We added venn diagrams to show information about frogs and toads.

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Afterward, we watched this short video about Glass frogs, that were discovered this time last year.

Such a gloriously sun-shiny day! Spring is almost here!

 

 

 

Nesting Birds ~ Exploring Nature With Children

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We are technically a week behind with Exploring Nature With Children, our focus this week having been our local bird life.  Rose did find two rather lovely frogs in our pond this morning, so she spent time observing them, whilst I worked with the big girls on their IGCSE Biology prep.

We had a smashing nature walk earlier in the week; there is so much going on in the natural world. Unfortunately, whilst I had taken my camera along, the battery was dead, and I had managed to run over my own mobile phone with my car, so no camera there, either!

Rose & I set off bright and early; around 7am. On entering the park, we noticed lots of twigs all over the lawns, caused by the high winds in our locality earlier in the week.

Rose was soon greeted by her pigeon friends, hungry for their food, with the ducks and geese waddling along after.

The puddles of water left behind after the huge amounts of rainfall we have also experienced were frozen on this chilly, beautiful morning.

Some of the Mallards, and some of the Canada geese were busy pairing up with a mate. The pigeons were too hungry to bother with all that! Rose was covered in pigeons as usual, and she spotted one of the squirrels perched on a tree stump eating a nut. “He looks like he is doing yoga!”

We spotted both a Magpie & a Crow breaking twigs from trees to build their nests. They were so fascinating to watch!

We came home and worked in our respective journals.

Rose recorded the Magpie.

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I sketched the gorgeous Mallard we saw the previous week.

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Happy exploring!

Calendar Of Firsts 29 ~ 6 March 2016

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My Calendar of Firsts this week:

  • Geese honking overhead.
  • Swathes of Daffodils in the park.
  • Snow! It came down hard, but was short-lived.
  • Rosie’s grasshopper Jerry died on Sunday.

My ‘colours’ for the week, along the top left hand page, are the moody greys and pinks of the skies this week.

Cathy Duffy’s Review Of Exploring Nature With Children

I am so utterly thrilled to share the wonderful review of Exploring Nature With Children, published by Cathy Duffy.
Cathy has been reviewing curriculum for the homeschool community since 1984, and her book and website are a real treasure trove.

Happy exploring!

Lectio Divina And Expanding Nature Study

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“Lectio Divina” is a Latin term for the Christian practice of “divine reading”, a way to read the scriptures, meditating upon them, and moving forward in prayer. The reader is changed by this deep and powerful experience; but what has this to do with nature study?

These three stages of learning are reflected through many ideas of education. They are a truly wonderful way to approach nature study. Let us look at the three stages of Lectio Divina and how we can bring these ideas to the study of nature.

  • Reading ~ Observing

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When studying nature, this would be the stage at which we closely observe. Like the grammar stage of The Trivium, we are learning the facts about our subject. We spend time closely observing nature, learning, reading books and field guides and building up a store of knowledge about our subject.

In our nature journals, this may look like:

Key facts such as the location, date, time of day or night.

Brief notes on the weather.

We may make quick sketches to capture what we see, notes at the sides of our sketches to help us remember key details, such as notes on textures, position etc.

Latin names of subjects

Measurements

Photographs

  • Meditating ~ Thinking

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This is such an important step in nature study; not to be rushed or missed by the harried parent! Reflecting upon what we have learned, making our own connections, thinking critically is important to building a relationship with, and understanding, the natural world around us. How does all that we observed in stage one fit together? This would be the logic stage within The Trivium.

In our journals we may make notes on connections; ‘what does this remind me of ?’ I would strongly urge you to read this blog post by naturalist John Muir Laws: Prompts For Deeper Nature Observation. His questions, I notice, I wonder, It reminds me of, are wonderful, thought provoking tools.

  • Praying ~ Responding

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The final stage is our response to all we have learned and discovered. We have been changed by our experiences and have a need to communicate and express that. We cannot do this stage well, or authentically, without the building blocks of the previous stages, like the Rhetoric stage in The Trivium.

Our nature journals are the perfect place to respond; we may choose to:

Create more intricate, fully formed paintings or drawings of the focus of our nature study.

 

An arrangement of pressed flowers or leaves

Quotes that pertain to the subject

Passages of scripture

Poetry; either written by ourselves in response to our wonder at the focus of our studies, or poetry written by another, that our heart connects with.

Lists – insects, wild flowers, mammals, trees, whatever appeals to the journal keeper.

These stages are not fixed rules, but an oft-practiced pattern to mark the way as we progress in our journaling of the natural world, and enter into a deeper relationship and knowledge.

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Happy exploring!

 

 

Nesting Birds ~ Exploring Nature With Children

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This week in Exploring Nature With Children is the ‘nesting birds’ week. Rose and I headed to our special nature spot, looking out for any nesting activity, and whilst we didn’t see any birds obviously nest building, we did spot existing nests.

Once we arrived at the park we saw lots of mating behaviour; male pigeons puffed up and strutting their stuff to impress the females, male mallards fighting with each other and chasing females. Two of the males chased each other ’round and ’round in the pond, snapping at each other’s tales. It was quite a drama!

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Young Mallards

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Rose with her pigeon friends

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We also spotted this unusually marked fellow!

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Isn’t he handsome!

The snowdrops are still thriving.

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There was a glorious display of Daffodils.

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We spotted beautiful lichen!

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And Pansies!

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I found this smashing interactive on the Mallard Lifecycle that you may be interested in taking a look at.

We didn’t work in our journals this week; we have been busy visiting my poorly Mother-in-law, and our walk fell on our 100th day of school, so we were focused somewhat on the fun activities surrounding that.

How was your walk this week? Do let me know in the comments or FaceBook group.

Happy exploring!

 

 

Calendar Of Firsts 22 ~28 February 2016

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My Calendar of Firsts this week:

  • The glorious, full, bright moon on a crisp, (almost) clear night.
  • The Mallards were hungry this week, and were splashing around in the sunshine.
  • Budding daffodils at my monthly spinning guild meeting.

My ‘colours’ for the week, along the top left hand page, are a lovely bright yellow for the sunshine, along with the splashy blues of the sky.

As it is the end of the month, I thought I would update you on my ‘list’ pages.

Temperature

My chart is not reflecting the cold temps we have had this last few days. I need to make a regular time of day for temperature reading.

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My flower list is picking up!

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My bird List.

A lovely reader shared her smashing idea to use the traffic light system to denote ‘birds of concern’ from the RSPB

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Colours of the year (The idea for this is from Claire Walker Leslie)

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February was rain, rain, and more rain. We had some bright sunny days, so I had to represent those too, with a splash if bright yellow!

How is your calendar coming along?