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Homeschool Unit Study Human Body Hands-On Kids Stethoscope Activity

September 24, 2015 | 12 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

This next homeschool unit study human body will be a large one for us. Also I have this Human Body Crafts page for more fun ideas.

We won’t get lopsided with our unit study topics, which is so easy for us to do because of our love for history and geography.

I got excited about this next unit study though because with the older two boys they just wanted to read and health and move on.

Homeschool Unit Study Human Body Hands-On Kids Stethoscope Activity

Tiny is always up for as many hands-on activities as we can fit into the day and he doesn’t care if they are too young-ish or old-ish, he’s in.

Did I mention the kid is such a joy to teach?

We started off with an easy hands-on activity. And you know my standard is always minimal fuss with maximum fun when doing hands-on.

So we made an easy diy stethoscope.

We use to have a stethoscope when we were in the states, but not here. Besides, it was more fun to make it quickie quick.

Human body unit study DIY Stethoscope. Hands-on Learning @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

More Human Body Crafts

  • Simple and Easy Circulatory System Hands-on Activity for Kids
  • How to Turn a Pizza Into a Fun Edible Human Cell Model
  • How To Make A Fun Bones Of The Hand Labeled X-Ray Craft
  • 7 Human Skull Facts and Cool Human Skull Anatomy Activity
  • How to Make a Fun Hands-on Playdough Brain Activity
  • Major Organs Labeled Fun Felt Anatomy Activity
  • Fun Resources and Books About The Human Body For Preschoolers
  • 8 Eye Facts & Activities Middle School & Fun Eye Model
  • 12 Body Games For Middle School & High School
  • Craft a Fun Hand Straw Model to Explore Human Anatomy Muscles & Tendons
  • How to Make a Human DIY Heart Model Easy Craft for Kids
  • 8 Facts About the Respiratory System & Fun Lung Craft for Kids
  • 7 Body Facts and Kids T-Shirt Project
  • Fun Edible Spine
  • Making Blood + What Are the Components of Blood
  • DIY Heart Pump
  • Kids Stethoscope Activity
  • Build An Edible DNA Model
  • Edible Skin
  • Rigid versus Flexible Bone Activity.
  • Pregnancy Belly Female Study of Human Anatomy Kids Fun Craft

Kids Fun Stethoscope Activity

The list is short and easy for what you need and if you’re like me, you already have these items in your house.

  • paper towel tube
  • funnel
  • masking tape
  • watch to count seconds

Place the paper towel tube on top of the funnel, the narrow end.

Wrap the tape around the tube for a DIY stethoscope @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Be sure to tape it down real good as you don’t want any air to escape or want any gaps.

Listen to the heart @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Then practice finding the heartbeat and count the beats within 15 seconds. Multiply that by four and that is the resting heart beat.

Mr. Awesome 2015 was sick that day, so he was actually a good candidate for Tiny.

Though Mr. Awesome did not feel like exercising, he walked up and back down the stairs one time to elevate his heart beat.

Tiny compared that to the resting heart beat. It was a fun and easy activity to kick off our next unit study.

We have several more fun hands-on activities we are doing for this unit study. You’ll love the homeschool lapbook.

Lapbook

Homeschool Unit Study Human Body Hands-On Kids Stethoscope Activity

  • Dynamic and Fun Human Body Lapbook for Multiple Ages

    Dynamic and Fun Human Body Lapbook for Multiple Ages

    $5.00
    Add to cart

I think we will enjoy learning in a more interactive way.

Homeschool Unit Study Human Body Hands-On Kids Stethoscope Activity

Grab all of the hands-on activities below.

What is blood hands on activity and free blood components minibook for a human body homeschool unit study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body-4/
Homeschool Unit Study Human Body. Hands-on Activity 5. Edible Skin + Skin and Major Body Systems Minibook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus Featured
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body-5/
Mega List Free Resources for Human Body Homeschool Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/human-body-homeschool-unit-study/
Body Part Labeling and Human Skeleton Quiz Free Minibooks - Free Human Body Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus FEATURED
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/body-part-labeling-and-skeleton-quiz-free-minibooks/
Human Body Unit Study. Rigid versus Flexible Bones Hands-on Activity @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body-3/
Human body unit study DIY Heart Pump @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body-2/
20 Human Body Books for Middle and High School Homeschooled Kids @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/human-body-books-for-middle-and-high-school-homeschooled-kids/
Human body unit study DIY Stethoscope. Hands-on Learning @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body/
Free Human Body Lapbook and Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/free-human-body-lapbook-and-unit-study/

Hugs and love ya,

12 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Science, Science Based Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, human body, lapbook, lapbookresources, life science, middleschool, science, sciencecurriculum

What Makes Reading Painful for Homeschooled Kids. Let Go of Busywork to Raise Lifelong Readers.

September 23, 2015 | 20 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

When I started homeschooling, it was only natural to immerse myself in the how-to-teach-reading world.

What I didn’t realize then was that the greatest thing I could bring to the reading table was the fact that I was hooked on reading.

Of course it’s easier to know that now, but back then I thought I had to follow the method a lot of “professional” teachers used, which is to assign numerous crafts, activities and worksheets.

The way I started off teaching reading reminded me of a witty observation made by Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird when she said, “Indeed, they were an endless Project that slowly evolved into a Unit, in which miles of construction paper and wax crayon were expended by the State of Alabama in its well-meaning but fruitless efforts to teach me Group Dynamics.”

I find it funny that I too was following the same mindset of how to teach reading.

Though I wasn’t teaching a group, I used busywork activities instead of just allowing as much free reading time as possible.

What Makes Reading Painful For Homeschooled Kids and why you need to break the chains of how reading is traditionally taught @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusQuickly, I learned that what makes reading painful for homeschooled kids is the massive amount of busy work that is associated with learning how to read.

Reading is not suppose to be painful, but pleasurable.

I do agree that it’s absolutely necessary to teach children reading skills by analyzing a book, however, worksheets or boring book reports never inspired my boys to love reading. Check out my article, Eliminating 3 Non-Essentials in Homeschooling.

Reading is NOT Schoolwork

Sharing a few thing that I did and did not do to fuel the reading fire early on in my children, I am hoping you will let go of some of the entrenched ways of teaching reading that makes it a painful process for homeschooled kids.

  • Say no to book reports.

When I assigned Mr. Senior 2013 a book report in 3rd grade, he read the book as fast as he could, did the book report and gave it to me so I could grade it.

I can’t blame him for my mistake of wanting something to grade to prove reading progress. Who was this book report for anyway?

Book reports are part of that group dynamics Scout so intuitively realized early in her school career. I am not teaching a group, I am just teaching one kid.

If it was handwriting I was teaching, then I needed to focus on that. But, I was not. I wanted a report from him or his review on the book. It didn’t have to be reduced to some boring formal writing lesson.

Too, wanting my son to use critical thinking skills was important to me.

That is when I switched to using narration because then I could truly evaluate what he learned from the book. Check out my tips at Narration – Telling Back or Testing.

From narration, I didn’t just want my boys to retell me the plot, but to comprehend the author’s message. Hands down, narration was the best choice when I needed feedback to gauge their understanding.

Did I mention this was the turning point to my boys liking books?

Book reports repelled, but narration renewed their loved for reading.

  • Say yes to choices always.

Another reason book reports didn’t work was because I assigned them. They had no choice. As a reader, I want a choice.

If I want to read something frivolous for pleasure, I want that choice.

Concerned that I introduce my boys to a variety of genre, I gave them choices within one type of genre so they didn’t feel trapped.

I could then guide them to reading material I wanted to fill their mind with and give them choices as a reader.

A choice to read what interested them also sparked a love for reading.

  • Say yes to a  Mom who models reading as pure pleasure.

Like I mentioned before, I could have taken it a little easier on the reading path if I had just not focused so much on how to teach them to read and just read to them more.

It seems almost bizarre now, but I didn’t want my kids to see me stick my nose in some frivolous book while we had a bit of time off from our homeschool schedule during the day. I guess I didn’t want them to think I was getting sidetracked.

I didn’t know then that readers model what they see. Crazy, I know.

I mean I knew that my kids modeled everything else they may see me or my husband do, but I didn’t associate that with reading.

It was my quest each day to steal time to read for the pure pleasure of it and that showed my boys that reading is not schoolwork.

  • Say no to crafts and busywork (unless of course they want to).

When the kids were little, crafts are part of making a book come alive and interacting with the story line.

And too if my sons want to go down other trails while we were reading, I am never opposed. I am all for hands-on activities and for creating unit studies.

However, that can never overshadow the pure delight of reading or turn delight into drudgery to amass a bunch of papers we can grade.

A reader can’t read just a few books a year and get hooked on reading. He has to be immersed in good books and that means other things have to be secondary.

Allowing busywork to choke the love of reading is a common mistake made even even by seasoned educators.

Hopefully, a few of these pointers will help you to avoid mistakes even seasoned educators make.

Do you have a kid who hates reading?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

20 CommentsFiled Under: How To - - -, Teach Homeschool Language Arts

2016 Free Year Round Homeschool Planning Schedule – Free 7 Step Homeschool Planner.

September 22, 2015 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Scooting right along because I like to always stay ahead, I have ready today the second choice for the 2016 Free Year Round Homeschool Planning Schedule – Free 7 Step Homeschool Planner.

I always like to remind you, but I have several different calendar-like pages, but each is very different.

For example, to help keep you organized for appointments like field trips, homeschool co-ops and every day appointments, I have the 2 page spread monthly calendars, which gives you way more room to plan and to look at one two page at a glance.

This free year round homeschooling planning schedule is not for that though. This year round homeschool planning schedule is to use to highlight, mark off or circle days that you want to homeschool.

It also has a place to track the days and weeks you homeschool each month. Tracking your days and weeks of school is very useful whether you live in a place that has strict record keeping or not.

For example, I have tracked my days and weeks for many years just because I want to know how much we are covering each year. Too, when you school year round, it helps you to gauge the amount of time you make want to take off from school.

Even if you don’t school year, just start on the month you do start your school and track from that point. The schedule is very flexible.

2016 Year Around Planning Schedule Navy @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

At the end of the form, it has a comprehensive key so that you can calculate your actual days and weeks of homeschooling.

I love doing this each year because it helps me to see how much more I am doing than I actually think I am doing.

I hope you enjoy the newest color choice. You can download it below.

2016 Year Around Planning Schedule Navy @ Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

If you have not used my 7 Step Homeschool Planner before, then for your quick reference I have listed each page or step below!

7 Easy Steps – “Tons of Options & Pretty Color”

Step 1. Choose a Pretty Front/Back Cover

Step. 2. Choose Calendars/Appointment Keepers

Step 3. Choose Goals/Objectives

Step 4. Choose Lesson Planning Pages Right For You!

Step 5a. Choose Unique forms JUST for You!

Step 5b. Choose MORE Unique Forms JUST for You!

Step 5c. Choose MORE MORE Unique Forms Just for You!

Step 6. Personalize It

Linking up @ these awesome places:
Family Fun Friday|

Leave a CommentFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic}, Curriculum Planner Tagged With: curriculum planner, homeschoolplanner

Homeschool Pressure – When It Is PRICELESS a/k/a Homeschooling the Rebel

September 21, 2015 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

The homeschool world is teeming with negative pressure. And it seems we are constantly worried about doing everything ‘right’, but there is a time when homeschool pressure is priceless and positive.

I was thinking back to a mini unit study we did on diamonds. I was in awe of how some beauty is discovered, like a diamond, which is formed through intense heat and pressure.

The name diamond comes a Greek word adamas meaning unconquerable and whatever the complexities of how diamonds are formed, the end result is a precious and valued gem.

Homeschool Pressure - When It Is Priceless @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusAt the time of doing the unit study, I was homeschooling a strong-willed child, you know a rebel.

I learned a parenting technique from our everyday learning or unit study.

Not wanting to curb my rebel’s enthusiasm for doing things outside the box, I still had to strike a balance between what I would and would not accept when the little dear told me one day he wasn’t going to do his school.

Finding the line between rebellion and resistance is not easy because they can be very different.

I have never minded a child that disagreed with me or was resistant because it is a sign that he was testing the ability to make good decisions as he got older.

However, rebellion is quite different and I had to have sanctions.

A strong-willed child can be molded like a diamond as I learned. It required just the correct amount of heat and pressure.

Pressure can be a good thing for our children when applied correctly. This is not the same as forced learning which can ruin the natural love for learning.

Like a diamond, some natural pressure is necessary in order to achieve goals.

Along with the resistance to this pressure there is usually rebellion.

I had to learn to look past the nasty looks from my teen to find the root of the problem.

I am not saying overlook rebellion. I have learned to take a teen’s bedroom door off its hinges when needed.(yes don’t slam that door on me, )

I had to come up with a plan for a child that is defiant and strong-will.

Here are some tips that will and will not work.

  • As adults we all want a voice when it comes to determining what part of the day we want to do housework, do school, relax or just zone out.

Children are much the same.

Give them an ear to show you care and if you can, incorporate their suggestion into the day.

Too, no matter how much you may think it can’t be done, let them try.

Failure is a good teacher. But also, try to make their suggestions work. Show yourself a willing participant in their plan.

  • Expectations need to be clearly defined without resorting to losing your temper.

I have a son who tried to push the limits. One day he just decided that he was not going to do math.

He was not going to do it lying down, he was not going to do it sitting up, he was not going to do it outside, he was not going to do it inside. (okay, okay)

The advantage I have though as mom teacher is that I know when he is feeling bad and when he is copping an attitude. That day, it was attitude because he decided he wasn’t going to do it. And he didn’t during school hours.

I had to think how to handle this rebellion because one quick-tempered child to one quick-tempered mother does not a good combination make and I knew it.

So my expectations were very clear that he was doing his math. I told him he was going to do it and I did it without resorting to threats or hollering.

At the end of the school day and because it was Friday, we were on our way into the living room to watch a movie and have ice cream.

When he showed up to be with us, guess what he could not do?

And because I knew movies and ice cream were the “object of his affection”, I just withheld them.

Did I mention how calm I was as as his sweet, little precious nostrils flared out and blew steam?

He got the message and completed his math in 20 minutes, which had been a tug of war for the whole day.

This type of personality needs very CLEAR expectations and then FOLLOW THROUGH on consequences. I learned a valuable lesson too.

  • What will not work is argumentative words.

This type of personality thrives in an environment where he is waiting to debate with you. Just-dare-me can be their motto at times.

Be reasonable and calm, yes hard to do, but think about your other children looking on.

This strong-will child just needs boundaries and will push them and test them.

Defiant, willful, rebellious and confrontational are a few traits of this type of child. This is only what is displayed on the outside.

If we examine our child closer, we see that the inside person can be different if we give a lot of tender and sometimes tough love.

Unlike the diamond, I am not looking to conquer him or break his spirit.

A strong spirit can set him apart from others and when channeled, he can rise up as a strong fierce leader.

Negative traits can be guided to determined, willing and respectful traits.

Value, nurture, guide and be determined to polish your priceless gem in the making.

I thought about this quote when it comes to what it really takes to homeschool a willful and defiant child.

When you fish for love, bait with your heart, not your brain.

What about you? Do you have a precious gem you are raising?

I am here to tell you as a young man now, my ‘rebel’ is fiercely determined and resolute when he sets out to do something and yes, he listens to me too.

I love that rebel turn spirited and passionate person he is today.

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

 

 

8 CommentsFiled Under: Build Character in Homeschooled Kids, Homeschool When Nobody Wants To, Teach the Rebel Homeschooler Tagged With: homeschool challenges

Winter Homeschooling – Activities and Free Downloads. 5 Days of Look Alive. Day 2 – Look to the Sky.

September 20, 2015 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

5 Days of Look Alive Winter Homeschooling. Day 2 Look to the Sky. Free Downloads & Activities @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I love this series, winter homeschooling – ideas and free downloads because it gives us a variety of sweet freebies to choose from when the days are long and cold.

The next thing I look to for inspiration when I want a change is the sky.

5 Days of Look Alive day 2

So today, in Day 2. Look to the Sky, I have some great downloads and ideas for some hands-on fun.

Meteor 1

Scholastic has a nice download that explains how some people get comets and meteors mixed up, so it gives some nice easy explanations. It says to use for grades 3-5. Click here to download it.

If you have a highschooler, check out this lesson plan page Meteor Monitor.

Here is what it says: Student’s measure sporadic meteor activity. In this physics and astronomy lesson plan, students construct a dipole antennae, and build, test and wire a full wave diode rectifier between the dipole antenna and the laptop.

Comet Cookies

Comet Cookies

Then of course no unit study is near complete unless some eating or snacking is involved, both of which we enjoy.

So this next download is extremely helpful too because besides having the fun recipe above, it explains the difference between meteor, meteoroid and meteorite. 

meteor math

This lesson plan even has some Meteor Math.

Click here to download the activities above called Meteor, Meteoroid, Meteorite: What’s the Difference?

Star Gazing Guide
telescope
star biscuit

The next resource I have for you is from the BBC Learning Astronomy resources.

It has a star map for the current year, eclipse guide, a Nasa sun poster, make a telescope craft (middle picture above), a star party pack (star biscuits above) or how to host a star party and how to buy a telescope guide to name just a few.

You want to be  sure to download all of the fun and free freebies.

I love these freebies for learning about the sky.

So I read this quote as I ponder the lessons we can learn from the sky.

Maybe it will spark you to keep looking to the sky to keep your day lively.

By reading the scriptures I am so renewed that all nature seems renewed around me and with me.

The sky seems to be a pure, a cooler blue, the trees a deeper green.

The whole world is charged with the glory of God and I feel fire and music under my feet.

~Thomas Merton~

Grab the rest of the winter homeschooling ideas below!

5 Days of Look Alive Winter Homeschooling. Day 1 Look to the Sea. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured

Hugs and love ya,

 

6 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Look Alive: Winter Homeschooling Ideas & Free Downloads, Science Tagged With: hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolinginwinter, sciencecurriculum

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