#11: "Crossing the Pond" (game)
#12: "3-D Shape Hunt" (looking for geometric figures around you)
#13: "Last Shape in Wins" (game we've been playing during choice time) and
"What Can You Do With a Square and 2 Triangles?" (our homework this week)
#14: "Is it Symmetrical?" (exploration around home for symmetrical items)
#15 "Sorting Quadrilaterals"
Again this is all FREE! Comes with gameboards, paper patterns for manipulatives, etc.
We continued by reading aloud A Cloak for the Dreamer
We made our own patchwork quilt blocks with paper. We explored the number of lines of symmetry in each block and graphed our class results. Next session, each child will select a favorite block to replicate for our own paper mini-quilts.
Toward the end of our class, students participated in choice time ("Work Places") utilizing activities from Geometry with Geoblocks (hands-on math for homeschoolers) and Bridges.
I ended the session by reading Sir Cumference and the Sword in the Cone
If I'd had a few more minutes, I would have read a book on quilts. I'd prepared several to choose from:
The Keeping Quilt
The Log Cabin Quilt
Oma's Quilt
The Name Quilt
The Patchwork Quilt
The Promise Quilt
The Quiltmaker's Gift
Quilts in the Attic
The Quilt Story
Selina and the Bear Paw Quilt
This is only skimming the surface of the abundant children's book titles on quilts. It would be an excellent unit study in tandem with geometry. If your children are up to the challenge, consider having them make their own wall hangings. The photos capture examples that my students did several years ago during a study of the Oregon trail. The drawings are done using Pentel Fabricfun Pastel Dye Sticks
**Our lessons today come from The Math Learning Center's Geometry with Geoblocks (hands-on math for homeschoolers) and Bridges. I noticed that they sell A Cloak for the Dreamer for less than I've found it elsewhere. But it's also available through Amazon
Have fun! And if you do any of this, I'd love to know how it turns out! :)