Saturday, September 20, 2014

Mini Milestones: Gymnastics

Gwyneth started Gymnastics at the end of August and it has been so fun watching her! She is taking a private lesson right now which is fulfilling the P.E. or Physical Therapy part of her home school curriculum. She is getting much stronger and braver already.

Climbing a slanted ladder:

Hanging and swinging on the rings:

Jumping on the trampoline:

New School Unit: Apple Trees

We started a new unit for September all about Apples and Apple Trees. On Monday, we all painted together. First we traced our arms and hands to make the tree trunk, then filled in the brown trunk, green leaves, and red apples. I love how different everyone's paintings turned out. From left to right: Grandma Sue's tree, Gwyneth's tree, Ryker's tree, and Megan's tree.

Through the rest of the week, Gwyn and I (and sometimes Ryker) did other Apple related projects and worksheets. We also read a few books we found at the library related to apple trees. 

I cut out red and green construction paper apples and wrote the letters of each kid's name on yellow ovals. The kids then had to put the letters in the right order to spell their names and we glued it all down.
We have a few more Apple themed things for next week, but I'm guessing that we won't have a full home school week since we are expecting Baby #3 to arrive any day!

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Mini Milestones: Playground

Gwyneth had a fun playground outing last week with me and Grandma when Ryker was in preschool. She impressed us with her bravery and completed a few mini milestones.

She rode on the big kid swing and kept her balance well.


She climbed up the chain ladder mostly by herself over and over again to go down the swirl slide.


We're very proud of her!

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Montessori Monday: Granola Recipe

I haven't posted for a while because we are on Baby Watch for #3 to arrive any day and we have a Grandma visiting to help out. The other Grandma will arrive next week, so we will have a very fun house and busy household! But despite all the changes right now, I'm keeping up with homeschool days for Gwyneth.

Last week on Monday, I prepped a cooking project for the kids using a granola recipe. It had lots of things to add to a bowl and mix and then bake in the oven, so it was a simple and repetitive task for them. I measured everything out for each of them ahead of time and wrote up a "Granola Recipe Book" using short sentences like "Put the oats in the bowl" and "Stir and mix in the bowl." We followed the recipe directions in this book and I took pictures of everything. Afterwards I added the pictures to the book so Gwyneth can read it as one of her sight word books. 


The kids had a lot of fun being chefs and then enjoyed the granola on top of some yogurt. It was great to have Ryker alongside Gwyn. She really feeds off of his enthusiasm for projects like this.


Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Montessori Monday: Sunflower Art

Even though it was Labor Day and other kids had the day off from school, we went ahead with our plan for a Montessori/project-based day at home. Inspired by the sunflowers we grew this summer, I planned a sunflower art project. Sunflowers have always been my favorite flower probably because they bloom in August, the month of my birthday. 

We read the book "Sunflower House" by Eve Bunting and talked again about the parts of the plant. I had a large faux sunflower that the kids could hold and describe since our real ones on the back deck are almost dead. The book describes the life cycle of sunflowers through the summer, so it gave us a great Science component to our day.

We used markers, glue, different sized green yarns, and brown and yellow felt to create the sunflower stems, leaves, center with seeds, petals and the dirt for the flower to grow in. Ryker also wanted to color his background blue for the sky. 

They were very proud of their pictures and we wrote numbers on the flower petals so we could practice 1 to 1 counting correspondence (a math IEP goal for Gwyneth).


Later in the day, we practiced rote counting to 20 with a sunshine worksheet. Gwyneth and I also worked through another Reading Lesson. She is starting to pick up on some of the oral instructions of the lesson which is more difficult for her to process than the visual tasks.  For the handwriting part of the Reading Lesson, I'm starting to lighten up the pressure of my hand over hers so she can start to make the motions herself. Gwyn seems to be having fun with the short 15-20 minute lessons. After she finished her school "work" she picked out a Signing Time DVD for her "choice time" break. 

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Homeschooling Week # 1

I've decided to have units or themes for our home school work that will last 2 or 3 weeks each. This will help me brainstorm things to do and have a fun way to repeat and practice concepts each day.

So for the end of August and beginning of September, our main theme is SUNFLOWERS. Our colors of the unit are YELLOW and GREEN, the shape is CIRCLE, and the letter sounds (instead of just letters) are "Ssss" and "Mmmm." Other themes we'll be including are Summertime, Sun/Sunshine, and Plants/Growth. I was inspired to start with sunflowers because the kids and I planted sunflower seeds in a container pot on our deck and we have watched them grow all summer long. They are now at the end of their life cycle and withering away.

Our first week was just three days: Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Here are the highlights of what we did:

Wednesday, August 27th
- We talked about sunflowers at the breakfast table, the different parts of the flower and the colors yellow and green.
- After we dropped Ryker at preschool, Gwyneth went to her Speech Therapy and Occupational Therapy appointments.
- Gwyneth and I went to Starbucks for lunch where we worked on some sight words, read some library books, and then practiced walking on the cement parking beams (one of her PT goals). She surprised me with knowing 5 sight words already. The library books were all picked out to go with our themes for the week, focusing especially on the "Ssss" and "Mmmm" sounds. We read:
Shine, Sun! by Carol Greene
Purple is Part of a Rainbow by Carolyn Kowalezyk
My "s" Sound Box by Jane Belk Moncure
My "m" Sound Box by Jane Belk Moncure
Big Monster, Little Monster by Mary Tillworth
Morris the Moose by B. Wiseman

Thursday, August 28th
- With Ryker at preschool, we were able to be alone to start our Reading Lessons from this book: Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons by Siegfried Engelmann. 

I had read online that the methods in this book could work really well for a child with Down syndrome. So we did the first 15 minute lesson which covers the sounds "Mmmm" and "Ssss."
- We worked on sight words again and read more books, then went to the library to participate in the Storytime and craft they had going on. It was mostly for toddlers, so not the best age group for Gwyneth, but she still had fun listening to the books, dancing to the kid's songs, and doing a quick craft.
- We also played with our first Lakeshore Learning "Ready To Go Learning Pack." I ordered six of these portable games that each contain cards and teach the following: Rhyming Sounds, Opposites, Beginning Sounds, Sequencing, Category Sorting, and Alphabet Matching.


Friday, August 29th
- Gwyneth had her Gymnastics private lesson in the morning for 30 minutes. She had a lot of fun especially on the trampoline.
- Ryker has an hour Gymnastics class after Gwyn, so during that time she and I worked on the next Reading Lesson which reviewed "Mmmm" and "Ssss." Each lesson ends with a handwriting task to "write the sound" so I'm using a composition notebook and small markers to do hand-over-hand writing with her. Then Gwyneth played some spelling/reading games on the iPad. We love these apps:
FirstWords Deluxe
Starfall Learn To Read
Endless Alphabet (and Endless Reader)
- When we returned home from Gymnastics, it was time to do our "Fine Motor Fun Day" for both kids. We got out big plastic bowls and some empty milk jugs and I let them experiment and play with the Cuisenaire (Counting) Rods that I had bought but they had never seen before. 

They dropped the rods into the milk jugs one by one, then poured and shook them out. We spun and mixed the rods in the bowls then sorted by colors. And we "built" some 2D shapes on the table and then some rainbows, flowers, etc. Ryker built some magic wands for all of us also. With the geometric shapes, I tried to have Gwyn copy the shape that I made with her own rods, but I had to guide her a lot in this. But we kept the activity fun and they played for over an hour with the counting rods.


- Later in the day, Gwyn spent more time on the iPad with the Reading Rainbow app which we subscribe to for $10/month. Both kids love this app because they each get to pick out 5 books at a time to download into their virtual backpacks. They get to turn the pages while the app reads the book to them, and there is an interactive component on many of the pages. They can exchange the books for new ones an unlimited amount of times.

Our first week of homeschooling was very quick and simple. I'm feeling really good about the choice we've made!

Monday, September 1, 2014

School Changes

For many months now I have dwelled on what school option would be best for Gwyneth: public, private, or home school.  At the end of Kindergarten in the public school last year, something seemed to be changing in her emotionally. She was having a lot of frustrated outbursts and didn't seem to be enjoying school anymore. She was acting out at times in school and also at home. I started to question if it was the right environment for her. Her learning seemed to stop and she made no progress on her academic goals through the spring.

Her school day was fairly chaotic with moving back and forth during the day from the Special Education homeroom to the General Ed Kindergarten, and being pulled out of class for various therapies. I think it was overwhelming for her to have such a random day. Also, I think she was noticing that she was somehow different from the "typical" Kindergarten kids. She was just a visitor to their class and not an equal member or someone that they could become friends with. She didn't eat lunch with them or go to recess with them. She was with them a couple times a week for Art or Music or PE as long as the schedule didn't conflict for her separate therapy sessions (Speech or OT or PT).

We knew she would need to repeat her Kindergarten year. I looked into a few private schools for her, but only one of the three would accept her as a student. The others explained that they would not have the resources available to accommodate her needs. Specifically, her needs include extra help with potty time and clothing, learning to write, draw, and cut, and extra time or modifications on school work. The very small private school that was willing to take her did not end up with enough Kindergarten age students signing up to form a younger class (and even if they had it would have been a struggle financially for us to afford that school.)

Over the summer I did a lot of research about her learning style and how Down syndrome would affect her accomplishments in Kindergarten subjects. I tried out some homeschooling and "unschooling" days and it seemed to go really well. She also seemed to come back to her generally happy self during the two summer months away from public school.

In July, we met with administrators, teachers, and therapists at the public school to talk about changing the school day for Gwyneth to include her more in Gen Ed. We were met with some resistance, but many of our requests were put into Gwyn's new IEP (Individual Education Plan). So on August 4, she started the new Kindergarten year. I went to the school to shadow her on two different days and observed some positive and some negative things. We had pushed for her to be included in the morning routine, recess, and lunch time with the regular Kindergarten class, and those were all positive changes for her. But she was still missing time in Kindergarten to be shuffled to other therapies or to the Special Ed room. I know that the school was really trying to do the best for Gwyn, but overall I still felt like she wasn't getting the right kind of instruction or schedule to benefit her learning. Also, some of her behavior problems from last spring were popping up again even in the first week of school. She was getting less sleep, acting more defiant and irritable, and wasn't communicating as well.

We made our final decision and withdrew Gwyneth from the school and began our "home study program" last week. The plan is that we will meet with the public school again in March to discuss the 2015-2016 school year and see what we can all agree on. In the meantime, I will work with her on her Kindergarten IEP goals and our schedule will be more flexible, allowing us to do outside therapies and activities. Ryker is in preschool 3 days a week so I have some time to focus on her academic goals on those days.

Here is our general home school weekly plan with activities:
Monday - Montessori/project-based learning
Tuesday - Reading/writing/math etc.
   - Story time at the library
   - Horseback riding lesson
Wednesday - Speech therapy
   - Occupational therapy
Thursday - Reading/writing/math etc.
Friday - Gymnastics class
   - Fine motor fun day

There are also two different nature-based science classes for young kids that we will try to sign up for that will take place in Oct/Nov/Dec. One is through the parks & rec department and the other is at a home school enrichment center. I'll try to keep up with my blog posts to document the fun we have and progress we make with home schooling!