Monday, June 20, 2011

Tip #83 From Mrs. Sunny

"Keep your kids learning through the summer!"

Here are a few Montessori-inspired things I have been doing with the kids this summer:




Above is Kristofer's shelf of "work" he can get out daily when he wants. He's only 3 1/2, so if he feels moved to learn, he can grab it off the self himself (everything is on a tray) and work at the table. He loves it and really takes ownership for what is his "work" on the sehlf. The first picture is his alphabet sound boxes and below are the shelves with various works.



Nature is going to be a very big part of my homeschooling style. Above is a bucket of tadpoles from Granpa's pond that we are currently feeding and watching them grow! Kristofer has already discovered some have their legs and others don't!




Kathryne loves to "wash" EVERYTHING - dishes, her hands, the counters, floor, etc. So I decided to show her how to wash her baby. She washes her face, body and hair nicely and then dries her baby off when she's done! It was a big hit!




Last...just today we found THREE TREASURES! First, a bird's nest that I know was unoccupied, a big turkey feather and not pictured is a catepillar that we put in a jar to observe! It was an exciting day for the kids!


Keep those kids busy in a fun way this summer - there are soo many ways to learn!






















Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Tip #82 From Mrs. Sunny

"Go With The Flow"

The last time I wrote a post we had just moved to my parents house and now it has been almost 3 months! The kids have amazingly adjusted well and we celebrated the arrival of Kjersten Miriam on Kathryne's 2nd birthday - May 19th!

She is such a joy and I can't believe she's almost 1 month old! I have to say that she started out to be my quietest baby and best sleeper. She's still a good sleeper but I have not bounced a baby so much throughout the day. She needs constant motion and stealing a 2 minute shower is about all I can get sometimes.

These are beautiful times, though. I love cuddling with my baby and the evenings are our best times together without the 2 toddlers running around.

I can't believe how much Kristofer & Kathryne have grown, either! Kathryne is the big two now and she is just talking up a storm - I love having conversations with her!

Kristofer is a such great big brother to two sisters! Kjersten was only 1 week old and I had to make a trip with our van to get hail damage estimated, and he really stepped up to the plate by holding doors open for me without being told! Such a gentelman!

We certainly have had to "go with the flow" the last 3 months. We have come to the realization that our house will not be selling any time soon with the market slowing down like it is. We will get it rented for the time being and take this time to save some money and spend some precious time with grandma and grandpa in the country!

Our days are filled with what's most important in life: walks to the pond (to see the tadpoles, frogs, and ducks), picking strawberries and watching grandma's garden grow, looking for animals tracks and ant hills, baseball, trips to the library, baking cookies, fishing with grandpa, looking for night crawlers, baking bread with grandma, and the never-ending picking up of toys and cleaning as usual ;).

We count our blessings every day and continue to "go with the flow"!

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Tip #81 From Mrs. Sunny

"Sometimes you just have to take a leap!"


If you haven't heard, Sunny and I moved into my parents house on Thursday. Sunny ended his position as co-manager of a bank and I stopped my in-home daycare business in the last 2 weeks! Josh is now managing a country club and I will be playing the piano at the church my parents attend.


We just dropped everything and moved, with really no time to take it all. Now all-of-a-sudden my kids are attempting to take a nap at grandma and grandpas house - our new home until our house sells.


Thursday I packed the kids in with boxes so high neither one of them could see me driving! We left the house feeling bare and empty with the things we could live without.


I had a few errands before leaving town. First, Mediacom, to drop off our internet box. After taking boxes out of the van to get the kids out and putting the boxes back in...there was a line! My kids were running in circles in the empty waiting space. We survived, and 3 blocks away Kathryne cries - "Baby!". Of course she left here baby doll there! This is after she decided to poop on the way out the door and there was no room to change her in the van, so she got changed on the parking lot.


I turn around, run in and grabbed her baby and we are off to the bank. I am not used to having to take checks to the bank since Sunny worked at a bank. I haven't gone to the bank in over 2 years - weird.


Then we were off to the countryside at my parents!


Thankfully one of my daycare moms burned me a Disney CD for the kids to keep them entertained while they were boxed in the van and beautiful flowers to smell from another mom. We survived the hour drive with few tears and were greeted by Sunny who we haven't seen much of the last 2 weeks. Big hugs and kisses!


It has only been 2 days and I am exhausted! The kids love having their 7 cousins to play with everyday and they love being out in the country. They can't wait to go fishing with grandpa at the pond and grow a garden with grandma...and I'm excited about having extra hands after having our 3rd baby in May!


So this is the start of our journey...sometimes you just have to take a leap!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Tip #80 From Mrs. Sunny

"Find something for your younger kids to do independently while you
make supper in the evenings"

With the encouragement of a high school friend I have another post to share with you!

Here is my top 10 list of things for your kids to do so you can accomplish supper at the "witching hour" of all kids! Some nights my kids do fine occupying themselves, but on the nights when they're nagging one another I use one of these ideas:

1. Pull up a chair to the sink, fill it with water, keep the water on a drip and fill the sink with measuring cups, funnels, & anything else on hand to keep them busy!
This isn't just "water play" it's pre-math skills! For example, they learn what happens when you fill the cups with too much water and it's great for eye-hand coordination pouring from one container to the next!
2. Get out the play-dough! I don't have any of the "fancy" play-dough utensils...the kids love old cookie cutters, small rolling pins, plastic knives & forks, and small containers! What kid doesn't like play-dough!
I have found that home-made play-dough lasts up to 6 months whereas the store-bought stuff only lasts a few months before it starts crumbling which makes it really hard to clean up! Or if you don't want to make your own, the play-dough at Dollar Tree works really well, because it's a more wet like the homemade stuff.
3. My son loves to cut paper. I just give him a pair of scissors and scrap paper and away he goes! Of course you have to be at the right age for this, but again it's a great skill to be practicing! Beware - you will have to sweep up all the paper, but you will get supper made without fighting! :)
4. Buttons! My mom happened to have a bunch of buttons given to her and I made two games for Kristofer. 1) Matching colors (different sizes and shapes) & 2) Matching pairs of the same button based on color, shape, etc.
5. Old-fashioned crayons and coloring books! I have found that girls will stick to this better than boys. Although, Kristofer's friend that I watch is a girl and she has taught Kristofer much patience when it comes to coloring. The older kids obviously like markers better. Kathryne's getting better with markers...10 minutes is her limit then she starts painting her skin!
6. Stringing beads. Depending on how difficult you want it to be you can use shoe laces or pipe cleaners!
7. Let them help you make supper if you're not in too much of a rush and in a fairly good mood :)! My kids just like pushing chairs up to the counter and watching!
8. Give them a fun chore to do that they are able to do on their own: give them a microfiber cloth to wipe all the wood in the house (I don't use the spray anymore, and I wouldn't trust either of my kids with that bottle!), a wet cloth to wipe all the windows! Be creative and don't be critical of how they get it done...it's just to keep them occupied and to let them accomplish a task on their own! :) Unless they're of age where they should know how to get it done correctly!
9. Put on the Beetles and let them dance! (Or any other music you prefer...the oldies always get me in a good mood, though! :)
10. Now that spring is arriving just let them run outside! As long as it's not lightening or cold, I let them go outside even when it's raining. How else to you learn about weather than to actually be in it and experience the water coming out of the drain spouts, puddles in the yard and sand box full of water! :) It's messy but fun - that's what being a kid is all about!
My kids spend more time outside than inside during the day once spring and summer arrive for good - kids are cooped up too much these days!
****I use these throughout the day if the kids are having a hard time getting along because usually it's just because they need something to do. I give them the option of picking a game (or activity above) or reading a book when they can't find anything constructive to do other than pick on their sibling! Many times Kristofer will pick a book because he knows he needs to just sit and relax.
Hope this helps your evenings run a little smoother!

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Tip #79 From Mrs. Sunny


"Use 'Goldilocks and the Three Bears' to teach your preschooler the concept of
Large, Medium, and Small"

I thought I would share with you one of the many things I'm trying to put together for Kristofer's homeschool materials before the new baby arrives because I know I won't have any time in just three months!

We all know the story. I just changed the wording to LARGE Father Bear, MEDIUM Mother Bear, and SMALL Baby Bear. Along with the LARGE cereal, MEDIUM cereal, and SMALL cereal...LARGE chair, MEDIUM chair, SMALL chair...and the LARGE bed, MEDIUM bed, and SMALL bed!

I just made pictures by hand portraying the different sizes of bears, cereal, chairs and beds to use along with the story and Kristofer loved it! Before telling the story I had him match up the sizes and then he helped tell the story.

Here's a picture of our settup. We started the story and I realized I didn't have a house for them to live in so we built one out of Jenga blocks which worked really well! Sorry I still don't know how to rotate pictures...if anyone knows let me know!















































"

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Tip #78 From Mrs. Sunny

"Shop thrift stores for things you need but can wait to find
rather than buying new!"
When I say I'm going shopping, it usually means I'm shopping at Goodwill, St. Vincent de Paul's, Little Folks Trading Post (which is a children's consignment shop) or garage sales in the summer (my absolute favorite).
Not only is this more cost effective, but it's better for the environment to buy used rather than buy new.

I have to say I've got enough toys for a lifetime even after just having 2 children from birthdays, Christmas, and everything inbetween! So I don't go out looking for toys, unless it's for a birthday, but some things I look for regulary at thrift stores are:

1. Books (.25-.50) I will always encourage the library, but at this price anyone can afford to put together a home library! I currently just found over 24 Zoobooks Magazines about different animals for just a few dollars!

2. Games (.75) I have found Operation, Boggle Jr., Monopoly, LIFE, preschool games, etc.

3. Records (.50) This may seem a little old fashioned, but after finding a Fischer Price record player for $2 at a garage sale, records are the cheepest way to get new music in the house! The kids love setting the record on, putting the needle on just right and turning the music up! Of course I have a CD player as well..which the library is a good place to check out CD's I've found! My CD player is also a cassette combo for books on tape that I have and those we check out from the library.

4. Classic VHS movies: Like records, I know, old fashioned. But we have a perfectly good VHS/TV combo and I have found about every classic Disney movie from Cinderella, Beauty and the Beast, Little Mermaid, 101 Dalmations, Pinnochio, Robin Hood, Lion King and on and on...for .50 to $1. Much more affordable than $15 brand new or maybe they're more than that - I don't know!

5. Children's clothes: Every summer I get the next size up for my kids at garage sales for the following year. I don't get clothes at Goodwill or consignment stores...they're often more expensive then what I can get at garage sales (.50-.75 per item of clothing)

Things I need around the house that I am currently looking for:

1. Kitchen chairs - I'm also looking on Craigslist, with no luck, yet. I currently have the table I grew up with, but my chairs are stained and broken. But they are still usable, so I'm just taking my time looking until I find the right chair at the right price.

2. Coat hooks - I bought new ones about a year ago thinking they were metal, but apparentlly they were actually a really hard plastic and one-by-one they have broken. I'm just going to wait for good heavy-duty ones now!

3. Tea Pot - I've just always wanted one for on top of the stove. Obviously not a necessity when I can just heat water in the microwave...it can wait.

4. Electric Skillet - The one we have still runs but is pretty beat up.

I couldn't believe the other week I ran into my midwife at Aldi's doing her grocery shopping and when leaving mentioned she was on her way to Goodwill to buy a cookie sheet! Now I know she makes enough to buy a new cookie sheet if she wanted, but that's not the point...it's not necessary to buy "new" all the time. Of course some things like socks and underware are best to buy new, but in general used is just fine.

Give it some thought next time you're shopping at Wal-Mart or Target: "Is this something I need right now, or could I wait to find it used somewhere?"

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Tip #77 From Mrs. Sunny

"Never be afraid to ask for help"

Okay...so I'm asking for advice. Kathryne has consistently felt the need to get up at 5 am and I have to put her back to sleep. No biggy, she goes right back to sleep...as long as her brother doesn't wake up!

Kristofer who is over 3 has started doing this again like when he was first potty training. He comes into my room honestly thinking it's time to get up at 5 am and I have to be the mean mom who yells to get him to stay in his room. He's totally out of it and can't settle down.

When he was potty training I would put the potty in the living room and let him watch cartoons, otherwise he would get too upset and wet himself. I don't want to put him in front of cartoons now because then it will become habit and he will never sleep in!

I feel like my kids haven't turned their sleeping habits since the time change! But my idea so far is to put a digital clock in Kristofer's room because he's starting to learn his numbers. I'm okay with 6:30 as his wake up time. My kids are "usually" in bed sleeping between 8:30 & 9:00 other than Sunday nights Sunny and I have bowling league and every other odd night life brings us. For some of you that may seem early, but 6:30 is not unreasonable considering that would be over 9 hours of sleep for my kids.

I just don't know if he would actually look at the clock and stay in his room until 6:30 since he's soo out of it.

I'm at a loss. Suggestions welcome!

Mrs. Sunny