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Tina Robertson

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

June 16, 2023 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Learn how to make a megalodon shark tooth homeschool project. Also, look for more ideas on my page Oceans Unit Study and Lapbook.

Megalodon Day is celebrated on June 15 to celebrate one of the largest predators ever known on Earth.

So, because I have a megalodon shark homeschool project to share with you as well as a host of other fun things. 

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

If you have a shark or prehistoric creature-loving kid, they are going to enjoy this activity and the other ideas to go along with it.

Not only is it a great science project but it also works in an element of art, math, and research skills.

Like much of homeschooling, a good hands-on activity is fun and covers a multitude of subjects.

Megalodon Day Facts

  • The scientific name for the megalodon is Otodus megalodon.
  • The word megalodon comes from the Greek language and means “giant tooth.”
  • The megalodon bite was thought to be 3 times stronger than a T Rex bite, with a grin of 10 feet wide.
  • Megalodons are estimated to have been 40 to 60 feet in length and weighed 50 to 75 tons.
  • They have found fossil remains of the megalodon off the coast of every continent except Antarctica.
  • Studies done between megalodon, and great white teeth have led scientists to believe that they are closely related and also assume their body shape (though not size) was similar.
  • Since sharks don’t have any bones to examine most of what we know about the ancient megalodon comes from its large fossil teeth.

Then, look at some of these resources.

Megalodon Shark Resources

Add some of these fun Megalodon shark resources to your unit study.

Prehistoric Animal Models:Patton The Megalodon

Made of soft plastics, safe and innocuous, healthy and Eco-friendly.

Smaller than last one and with flexible lower jaw.

Shark Teeth in Bag Genuine Fossilized Specimens Perfect for Classroom Lessons Arts and Crafts

Real Genuine Shark Teeth

Approximately 30 teeth per bag (plus fossils and bones!)

MEGALODON!: The Complete History Of The Largest Predatory Shark That Ever Lived!

This book covers the Megalodon and the evolution of its ancestors going back over 100 million years. It also describes the Megalodon's internal and external physical characteristics based on the fossil record and what we know from related species

More Hands-On Shark Homeschool Activities

  • Since so much is a mystery about the megalodon, it takes some time to learn basic facts about modern-day sharks, the ancestors of the mega monster from prehistoric times. Ocean Anatomy is a good resource with pictures and facts about sharks and so much more.
  • Make a shark necklace to wear while you learn all about these fast, hungry predators.
  • You might enjoy this Montessori-inspired shark unit with lots of ideas.
  • Include this Easy How to Draw a Megalodon Shark Tutorial and Megalodon Shark Coloring Page in your plans.
  • Don’t forget Shark Week on Discovery Channel from July 11 to 18th.
  • Create an Easy Shark Art with Scrape Painting.
  • How Do Sharks Float STEM Activity Free Shark Unit Study & Notebooking Pages
  • I love a good-themed snack with a fun topic, munch on these shark tooth snacks.
  • A megalodon replica is a great addition to sensory bins, dramatic play, and even as a display added to a science shelf for your child to investigate.
  • Take a tape measure outside and draw it out to 60 feet to get a better idea of how big they believe the megalodon was.
  • Grab some shark teeth from your collection if you have any and compare the size to your replica.
  • Check out What if Megalodon Sharks Never Went Extinct on Youtube while you work on an activity or Wild Kratts is a wonderfully entertaining animated science show and this Stuck on Sharks video is full of information.
How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

Finally, look at how to make a megalodon shark tooth.

Megalodon Shark Tooth Homeschool Project

Before starting, look in one of your books or online to get an idea of the shape and coloring of a Megalodon tooth. This helps give a good idea of just how massive a single tooth is.

You will need:

  • Air-Dry Clay
  • Craft paints
  • Paintbrushes
  • Clay roller or rolling pin
  • Toothpicks, craft sticks
  • Ruler
How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

Begin by pulling off a sizable piece of clay, we will try to get our megalodon tooth close to 7” long.

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

Then, forming your shape, we are going for something roughly the shape of a piece of pizza.

Add clay as needed and work it in smoothing it with your fingers.

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

This is a great time to pull out your ruler and have your child measure to get the size right, somewhere between 6” and 7 ⅜” (the largest ever found).

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

Once you have your general size and shape roll it out to smooth the lumps.

How to Make a Megalodon Shark Tooth

Add a little build-up to the broader end, this is the root, where it would have been inside the shark’s jaw. Smooth with fingers to make it look like a natural transition.

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

Before allowing it to dry, add some aging and wear marks like pits and grooves using whatever you have on hand- the backend of your paint brushes, toothpicks, craft sticks, and etc.

Maybe there is a small piece missing out of one edge where he fought with another megalodon?

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

Allow to dry, this may take a couple of days, be sure to turn it every 12 hours or so to help it dry more thoroughly. If you place it outside in a sunny spot it will dry fast, be sure to lay it flat so that it dries flat.

Once your tooth is completely dry make a palette of different paint colors like black, white, tan, and gray on a paper plate.

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

Paint each section of the tooth and allow it to dry, you only need one thin coat.

If you want your replica megalodon tooth to last even longer give it a couple coats with a clear spray sealant.

How to Make A Megalodon Shark Tooth Fun Homeschool Project

2 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, homeschoolscience, science, shark

School Year 2024-2025 Homeschool Planning Schedule Sky Color Beautiful Form

June 15, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today I have the 2024 to 2025 homeschool planning schedule for your homeschool planner ready early.

Sometimes having both the current homeschool schedule and marking the next school year in your planner can be helpful.

My homeschool planning schedule allows you to plan your year whether you homeschool year round or not.

The planning schedule begins July 2024 and ends June 2025.

School Year 2024-2025 Homeschool Planning Schedule Sky Color Beautiful Form

Even if you started in August or September, you can use the schedule because it is twelve months.

Remember, I create both academic and physical year calendars.

Although the homeschool planning schedule calendars may seem similar to plain calendars, let me assure you they are not.

Three Different Homeschool Calendars

And I create three different types of calendars each year.

The three different types of calendars I prepare each year are.

  1. Regular calendar for reference. I normally put two or three in my planner.
  2. A planning schedule like I have today which I create both an academic and physical year.
  3. Then the two page per month calendar for tracking appointments.

Also, you need at least one of each type of calendar in your homeschool planner.

School Year 2024-2025 Homeschool Planning Schedule Sky Color Beautiful Form

However, you want to know best how to use it.

Homeschool Planning Schedule

Here are some features and sections it has.

  • 12 months on one page so if you school year round, you can still track;
  • is a calendar where highlight weeks you plan to homeschool and mark out weeks you take off;
  • is used to track each day and total weeks by writing down; and

it has a comprehensive key box at the bottom of the form for you to note things like first day of school, holidays, quarters, and goals for days and weeks to homeschool.

Look at my samples below in how to use the planning calendar.

School Year 2024-2025 Homeschool Planning Schedule Sky Color Beautiful Form

Finally, having a plan to begin your homeschooling year with sets you up for success.

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School Year 2024-2025 Homeschool Planning Schedule Sky Color Beautiful Form

More Homeschool Planning Resources

Look at the free forms for each STEP. Be sure to go to each link to get the free printables offered at each step.

  • STEP 1. Choose a Pretty Front & Back Cover.
  • 2. Choose Calendars & Appointment Keepers
  • 3.  Choose Goals & Objectives
  • 4. Choose Lesson Planning Pages Right For YOU!
  • 5a. Choose Unique forms JUST for You!
  • 5b. Choose More Unique Forms
  • Free Pre-Homeschool Year Planning Checklist For Your Homeschool Planner
  • 2023-2024 One Page Printable Calendar
  • 2023 to 2024 Two Page Monthly Calendar
  • School Year 2023-2024 Homeschool Planning Schedules
  • 31 Popular and Free Homeschool Planner Printables
  • 32 Free Beautiful Homeschool Planner Cover Pages
  • Homeschool Planner Supplies – Organizational Eye Candy
  • 4 Colorful and Editable Homeschool Lesson Plan Templates
  • Homeschool Planner Stickers
  • 3 Free High School Planner Cover Designs
  • 5 Beautiful and Detailed Planners for Homeschool Moms
  • Reasons a Paper Planner Is Better Than a Homeschool Online Planner
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  • Gorgeous 7 Step Free Homeschool Planner You Build
  • 6 Ways a Homeschool Daily Planner Beats a Weekly Planner
  • A Unique Flexible and Beautiful Preschool Homeschool Planner
  • 4 PRE-Homeschool Year Planning Pages (and tips to use them)
  • How to Create A Homeschool Lesson Plan in 7 Easy Steps

How to Get the Free 2024 to 2025 Homeschool Planning Schedule in Sky Color

Now, how to grab the free printable. This is a subscriber freebie.

That means when you sign up to follow me, you get access to my subscribers library and this freebie.

However, not all my freebies are in the library (wink).

I like to keep up to date with what is valuable to you so I can give you more, some freebies you must sign up again on the form below even if you are already a follower.

And it’s the only way I have of freely delivering them to you. Just follow the steps below.

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► 2) Go to your inbox and confirm your email from the automatic reply I sent you. If you’re already a confirmed subscriber, you will not have to do this. You’ll receive the freebie instantly.
 ►3) Last step. look for my reply AFTER you’ve confirmed your email.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic} Tagged With: curriculum planner, curriculum planner. homeschool., homeschool curriculum planner, homeschool planner, homeschool planning, homeschoolplanner, homeschoolplanning, lesson planner, lessonplanning, planner, planning

Free Carnivorous Plants Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas

June 14, 2023 | 1 Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have a free carnivorous plants lapbook and fun unit study ideas. Also, I have my page Carnivorous Plants.

Besides, carnivorous plants are a fascinating topic for every age.

For example, like all green plants they make their food by photosynthesis.

In addition, they are sometimes called insectivorous plants.

Free Carnivorous Plants Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas

Carnivorous plants are plants which derive some or most of their nutrients from trapping and consuming animals or protozoans, typically insects and other arthropods.

And as mentioned they still generate some of their energy from photosynthesis.

6 Types of Traps

Next look at some of the types of traps which can be found in insectivorous plants.

  • Lobsterpot trap
  • Snap trap
  • Bladder trap
  • Flypaper trap
  • Pitfall trap
Free Carnivorous Plants Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas

Also, look at the types of plants.

Types of Carnivorous Plants

Next, look at some of the names and facts about the types of plants.

Carnivorous plants are plants that can absorb certain nutrients from animals they trap. 

All plants need nitrogen to live. They can live in areas where there is poor soil and where nitrogen is not easily absorbed.

So, the plants do not eat the insects for food but digest the captured insects as a source of nitrogen.

Some common carnivorous plants are

  • venus flytrap,
  • bladderworts,
  • pitcher plant
  • and sundew.

Vocabulary Words

  • nitrogen – A nutrient needed in order to make molecules so that a plant can thrive and reproduce. This is normally taken from the soil but if the soil is poor in nitrogen, it gets it from the insect.
  • nutrients – A nutrient is a chemical that an organism needs to live and grow, or a substance used in an organism’s metabolism which must be taken in from its environment.
  • angiosperm – Plants that make their seeds from pollinated flowers.
  • insectivorous – Another term used to describe carnivorous plants.
  • photosynthesis – The process by which plants produce food. By using light, leaves put together carbon dioxide and water to make sugar and oxygen.

More Activities and Resources about Plants

Also, look at more resources for learning about plants.

  • 10 Plant Life in The Amazon Rainforest Facts and Make a Fun Rafflesia Arnoldii
  • Free Carnivorous Plants Notebooking Pages & Easy Hands-on Science Activity
  • Growing a Seed Activity
  • Also, use food to make fun activities. Look at Carnivorous Plants Food Art.

In addition, look at these books and resources for a fun unit study.

11 Carnivorous Plants Resources

Add some of these books and resources for a carnivorous plants unit study for multiple ages.

Eaten Alive by Carnivorous Plants: Grades 2-4

Eaten Alive by Carnivorous Plants. This is a natural science book for a young audience. There are over 760 different kinds of meat-eating plants in the world. They attract, capture, and digest their prey in order to supplement the nutrients that are deficient in the soil they grow in. This book describes all four major types of traps used by the meat-eating plants. Children will learn all the tricks these plants have in store for their unsuspecting prey.

Killer Plants: Growing and Caring for Flytraps, Pitcher Plants, and Other Deadly Flora

Carnivorous plants: they're weird, they're gorgeous, and they're the perfect addition to your urban jungle of pothos, snake plants, and succulents. However, they can also be intimidating to grow and care for. Let Killer Plants be your guide as it walks you through the different types of carnivorous plants and how to keep each variety alive and well.

Carnivorous Plants Coloring Book: Carnivorous Plants Gift With Venus Fly Traps, Pitcher Plants And More

This Coloring Book is a lovely tool to express your creativity and embody your colorful ideas.

35 pages to color With custom sized pages (8,5" x 11") and soft cover this book is perfect for keeping it at hand wherever you go. With it's artful cover page this coloring book will always brighten up your life and be an eye-catcher for everyone else.

Meat-Eating Plants -A Carnivorous Plant Story: Science for Young Readers

Meat-Eating Plants - a carnivorous plant story. There are over 760 kinds of meat-eating plants in the world. They developed this amazing meat-eating habit in order to survive in their mineral-poor environment. There are four major types of traps used by carnivorous plants: pitfall trap, sticky-leaf trap, snap-trap, and suction trap in the water. All these trap mechanisms are explained using amazing color images. Youngsters will explore the wonders of nature as they read along about these amazing plants!

Predator Plants: 20 Questions Kids Ask About Carnivorous Plants

Get ready to dive into the thrilling world of carnivorous plants with "Predator Plants"! This enchanting guide is designed to captivate the minds of both kids and their parents. With 20 fascinating questions answered, this comprehensive book unravels the mysteries of these
botanical wonders, exploring their unique characteristics and abilities.

Elizabite: Adventures of a Carnivorous Plant (Curious George)

Elizabite is a carnivorous plant who eats insects as appetizers and enjoys hotdogs for snacks. Whether it walks, talks, flies, or barks, Elizabite is ready to make a meal of it. Her cheerful, hungry smile and infinite appetite attract much attention - a scientist examines her, a professor studies her, and everyone agrees that she is one of a kind. In an effort to control her diet and her unpredictable temper, Elizabite's admirers chain and muzzle her. But not even a barbed wire fence can prevent her from following her heart's (and stomach's) desire! Only when her unique appetite prevents a crime does Elizabite win the respect she deserves.

Nature Venus Fly Trap - Fun and Easy to Grow Kids Terrarium Set

  • Easy And Fun To Grow - Franki "The Ferocious" Fly Trap - Great Kids Gift
  • Just Add Water! - Everything Else To Keep Your Terrarium Is Included.
  • Watch Out Flies! - Plants Will Grow Into Bug Eating Monsters!
  • Each Kit Comes With A Genuine Jasper Stone (Color Varies)

Hungry Plants (Step-into-Reading, Step 4)

This book offers readers a bug’s-eye view into the strange and fascinating world of carnivorous plants. From the “jaws” of the Venus flytrap to the pretty sundew plant whose delicate tentacles entrap its prey, the unique anatomy and behaviors of meat-eating plants are detailed with clear, engaging text and art.

Plants that Eat Animals (Rookie Read-About Science: Plants and Fungi)

Discover a variety of carnivorous plants, including the Venus fly trap, sundew, pitcher plant, and bladderwort. The natural world comes alive for young readers (Ages 6-7) with Rookie Read-About "RM" Science! With striking, full-color photos and just the right amount of text, this series immediately involves young readers as they discover intriguing facts about the fascinating world around them.

DK Readers: Plants Bite Back! (Level 3: Reading Alone)

There are plants that prickle, sting, and even munch insects for lunch! So, never bite a strange plant—it might bite back!   Stunning photographs combine with lively illustrations and engaging,
age-appropriate stories in DK Readers, a multilevel reading program guaranteed to capture children's interest while developing their reading skills and general knowledge.

Venus Fly Trap - Kids Terrarium Kit - Grow Your Own Seeds. 6 Plants That EAT Bugs

Live Carnivorous Plants Including Venus Fly Traps, Sundew and Pitcher Plants.

Just Add Water! - Everything Else To Keep Your Terrarium Is Included.

More Best Homeschool Unit Studies

  • Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter
  • Free Peregrine Falcon Lapbook And Fun Unit Study Ideas
  • Dandelion Flower Unit Study and Easy Tea Recipe & Notebooking Pages
  • France Unit Study and Make Easy French Bread
  • Free Greek Mythology Unit Study and Greece Lapbook & Fun Hands on LEGO Zeus
  • How Do Sharks Float STEM Activity Free Shark Unit Study & Notebooking Pages
  • Free Homeschool Chicken Unit Study and Anatomy of an Egg Felt Activity & Worksheet
  • How to Incorporate Subjects into a Fun Homeschool Cooking Unit Study
  • Volcano Unit Study and Fun Apple Volcano
  • Solar System Unit Study and Hands-on Planets Activity
  • Charlotte’s Web Homeschool Unit Study and Fun Hands-on Ideas
  • Homeschool Unit Study Ideas | Lewis and Clark Exploration Lapbook
  • Mushroom Unit Study and Kids Learning Activities
  • Little House on The Prairie Unit Study and Fun Punched Tin Lantern

Minibooks for the Lapbook

Moreover, look at these minibooks which come in the free download.

  • 2 color covers
  • Where can you find carnivorous plants in the US?
  • The sower and the seed
  • Types of trap
  • Venus flytrap
  • Pitcher plant
  • Bladder wort
  • Sundew
  • Vocabulary words
  • What is a carnivorous plant
Free Carnivorous Plants Lapbook and Fun Homeschool Unit Study Ideas

Now, how to grab the free carnivorous plants lapbook. This is a subscriber freebie.

How to Get the Free 12 Page Carnivorous Plants Lapbook

That means when you sign up to follow me, you get instant access to this freebie.

 1) Sign up on my list.
2) Grab the freebie now.
3) Last, look for all my emails in your inbox. Glad to have you following me!

1 CommentFiled Under: Lapbooks Tagged With: elementary science, hands-on, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, lapbook, lapbookresources, life science, science

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

June 13, 2023 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have a free Swiss Family Robinson unit study and diy water filter activity. Also, grab more ideas on my best homeschool unit studies page.

When I think of how I can create a Swiss Family Robinson unit study that is more than just a literature study the first thing that comes to mind is survival.

Hopefully, your children are never in a situation where they must rely solely on their own instincts and knowledge to survive the land around them.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

But wouldn’t it be nice if they could do a few simple things which could be applied to camping, a self-sufficient homesteading lifestyle, or even just life in general?

Teaching your child a few skills and maybe learning them at the same time yourself is a fantastic way to build up confidence and basic life skills at the same time.

If you haven’t read the classic Swiss Family Robinson here is quick summary.

A family is on an uninhabited island and salvaged items from their shipwrecked ship.

They build a house, cultivate crops, and live off the land while exploring a nearby island.

It’s just the kind of adventure to bring a family together by being resourceful, brave, skillful, and nurturing a love of nature.

Facts About Johann David Wyss

First, look at a few facts about the author.

  • Johann David Wyss (1743–1818) was a priest in Switzerland.
  • Wyss and his two sons were great admirers of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe, which is a story of shipwreck and survival.
  • He created The Swiss Family Robinson to entertain his children and Wyss wanted to write a story from which his own children would learn.
  • The story was completed and edited by Wyss’s son, Johann Rudolph, and published in 1813.

In addition, grab a copy of the book.

And there are many topics or themes you can investigate while reading the story.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

For example, what is the best way to make a shelter.

Unit Study Theme Ideas

The family begins with a house in a tree and then moves to a cave.

Then ask what type of shelter would work in different areas and how would seasons affect a shelter.

In addition, look at more ideas.

  • Is it safe to keep wild animals as pets?
  • What type of animals would you encounter on an island?
  • What is the geography of an island?
  • How would seasons affect shelter, fire, and food you could get or grow?
  • What would be your top 3 priorities on a deserted island to survive?
  • And what are basic human needs? For example, talk about water, food, warmth and safety.
  • Where Did Swiss Family Robinson Land And Their Unique Homes | Cave Activity
  • From Switzerland to the Author of Swiss Family Robinson Quick Study
  • How to Create Swiss Family Treehouse Blueprints With Kids
  • What is the Swiss Family Robinson About | Simple Jeopardy Style Game
  • How to Make Adorable Swiss Family Robinson Book Characters Bookmarks
  • The Swiss Family Robinson Fun and Easy Movie Night Ideas
  • Embrace Island Life: How To Eat A Coconut Like Swiss Family Robinson
  • Animals in The Swiss Family Robinson Book | Parrot Craft
  • Survival to Inspiration The Swiss Family Robinson Book | Brick Book
  • Exciting Swiss Family Robinson Activities | From Oyster To Pearl
  • Lost In Adventure: 10 Books Like Swiss Family Robinson
  • How to Build a LEGO Swiss Family Robinson STEM Challenge Treehouse
  • How To Make A Swiss Family Robinson Map | Easy Swiss Geography
  • DIY Easy Compass Activity and Survival Ideas
  • Simple Candle
  • Hunting Deer
  • How to Plan And Start an Easy Gardening Unit Study for Kids

Brief Look at the Characters

Also, look at the characters in the story. There is father who is resourceful and mother who is hard working.

Father takes the lead in decision making on the island and mother is nurturing.

How does father’s skill set ranging from plant identification to carpentry help the family?

Next, how does mother’s knowledge of caring for the crops and animals help the family not just survive but flourish on the deserted island?

The oldest son is Fritz, then Ernest, Jack and Franz is the youngest child.

Additionally, Fritz matures from a young boy into a mature adult. And Ernest develops a knowledge of plants and animals like his mother.

Jack is thoughtless but is also creative and resourceful.

Lastly, Franz is 6 years when the family is shipwrecked. He spends a good amount of time helping mother and doing chores. Then matures and can help on hunts. What skills would he have to learn to hunt?

Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study Hands-On Activities

Moreover, add some of these hands-on activities to your unit study.

  • Try this cork raft challenge to learn about buoyancy, engineering, and more just as the Robinsons built their own in the book.

Do you have a tech-loving kid?

You don’t have to eliminate the tech for learning time, incorporate it instead.

  • Have your child build a treehouse with other elements they would need for survival like a garden, animals, and pens to keep them contained in Minecraft.

I am pretty sure this is an assignment they will love.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter
  • Teach your child how to find North. Use a compass, physical and on your phone. Too try by orienting themselves by finding the direction from the sun.
Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Survival Theme Ideas

  • Learn some basic skills that also transfer to emergency situations like learning how to tie knots.

You can make it fun by making it a game with Knot So Fast.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter
  • Another fun thing to learn that can come in handy all the time is how to forage for food in your area.

Even your own backyard has items like dandelions, henbit, and purslane that have edible and medicinal benefits.

Grab a simple book like this to get started, it has great images to help you be sure of what it is. Then head outside and see what you can find and identify.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Even edible berries like this mulberry bush can be a great source.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter
  • Show your child some skills like how to open and close a pocketknife properly as well as how to hold it and use it.
  • Learn how to safely open and enjoy a coconut here.

You can find a fantastic group of flashcards for each chapter of Swiss Family Robinson to work on vocabulary and spelling as well as quizzes on the book at Quizlet.

Add a few survival books to your library to learn some basic skill.

Survive & Thrive is a small pocket guide with some basic skills like how to build a shelter, how not to get lost, use a compass, and even comes with some cards to help identify various dangerous plants and animals.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Watch some survival shows together like Bear Grylls: Survival School together and talk about what you learn, and what things you can try at home.

Too, look at some of these books and resources.

8 Books & Resources for Learning About The Swiss Family Robinson

Add some of these books to your unit study of The Swiss Family Robinson and their adventures on a deserted island.

Swiss Family Robinson (Illustrated Classic): 200th Anniversary Collection

More than 100 original illustrations by Louis Rhead. You want to read this book with illustrations.

Nature Anatomy: The Curious Parts and Pieces of the Natural World

See the world in a whole new way! Acclaimed illustrator Julia Rothman combines art and science in this exciting and educational guide to the structure, function, and personality of the natural world.
Explore the anatomy of a jellyfish, the inside of a volcano, monarch butterfly migration, how sunsets work, and much more. Rothman’s whimsical illustrations are paired with interactive activities that encourage curiosity and inspire you to look more closely at the world all around you.

Tracks, Scats and Signs (Take Along Guides)

Become a nature detective with this illustrative, engaging and fun Take-Along-Guide. You may not know where to look, or what to look for, but animal signs are everywhere and this guide will help you learn how to read them. You'll learn how to spot and identify common clues that 17 wildlife species leave behind in the woods, in the fields and along ponds.

Swiss Family Robinson Movie

The heroic tale of the courageous exploits of the Robinson family after they are shipwrecked on a deserted island. Using teamwork and ingenuity, they overcome the obstacles of nature and transform their new home into a "civilized" community.

Willy Whitefeather's Outdoor Survival Handbook for Kids

From treating a bee sting to building an overnight shelter, kids will gain the knowledge and confidence they need to survive outdoors.

Bear Grylls The Complete Adventures Collection 12 Books Set

Bear Grylls The Complete Adventures Collection 12 Books Set: Titles In This Set: The Blizzard Challenge The Desert Challenge The Jungle Challenge The Sea Challenge The River Challenge The Earthquake Challenge The Volcano Challenge The Safari Challenge The Cave Challenge The Mountain Challenge The Arctic Challenge The Sailing Challenge

Knot Tying Kit | Pro-Knot Best Rope Knot Cards, two practice cords and a carabiner

By Pro-Knot, the number one trusted name in Knots with over 7,000 5 Star reviews! This complete knot tying KIT includes everything you need to learn and practice how to tie 23 essential rope knots. The six card/twelve page waterproof plastic card set contains 23 best all purpose rope knots
clearly illustrated and described, bound together with a no-rust brass grommet in the corner!

Foraging Wild Edible Plants of North America: More than 150 Delicious Recipes Using Nature's Edibles

Edible wild plants are nature’s natural food source, growing along roadsides, sprouting in backyards, and blooming in country fields. North America’s diverse geography overflows with edible plant species.

More Best Homeschool Unit Studies

  • Free Peregrine Falcon Lapbook And Fun Unit Study Ideas
  • Dandelion Flower Unit Study and Easy Tea Recipe & Notebooking Pages
  • France Unit Study and Make Easy French Bread
  • Free Greek Mythology Unit Study and Greece Lapbook & Fun Hands on LEGO Zeus
  • How Do Sharks Float STEM Activity Free Shark Unit Study & Notebooking Pages
  • Free Homeschool Chicken Unit Study and Anatomy of an Egg Felt Activity & Worksheet
  • How to Incorporate Subjects into a Fun Homeschool Cooking Unit Study
  • Volcano Unit Study and Fun Apple Volcano
  • Solar System Unit Study and Hands-on Planets Activity
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  • Little House on The Prairie Unit Study and Fun Punched Tin Lantern
Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Finally, look how to make this DIY water filter.

Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study – DIY Water Filter

This simple water filter uses different layers to filter out various particles.

The larger pieces at the top help to filter larger debris like dirt, leaves, sticks, etc.

The smaller pieces like the fine sand filter even smaller pieces that make it through the first few layers.

Finally, the activated charcoal can filter even further, removing some of the toxins without taking out salt and other important minerals.

You will need:

  • Coarse sand
  • Fine sand
  • Activated Charcoal
  • Small pebbles
  • Rubber band
  • Coffee filter
  • Cotton Balls
  • Old t-shirt
Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Before you begin rinse all your filter supplies well-charcoal, sand, and pebbles.

Grab some water in a cup, and add a few leaves, a little dirt, and a twig or two to better visually demonstrate how the filter works.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Cut the bottom 1” off a plastic water bottle.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Remove the cap and poke several holes in it.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Stuff the other end with cotton balls, gauze, or even a scrap of an old t-shirt. Replace cap.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Pour in 1” of activated charcoal.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Add 1” fine sand.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Layer in 1”-2” coarse sand.

Top with 1” of small gravel or pebbles.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Cover the larger opening with gauze, coffee, filter, or t-shirt secured with a rubber band.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Place the water bottle in a glass where you can see all the action.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Carefully pour dirty water into the homemade filter and watch it drain through.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

While there may be a few small pieces that get through and the water may be the tiniest bit cloudy you will be amazed at how clean the water looks.

Check out the before and after.

You can run the water through several times to see how clean you can get it.

Free Swiss Family Robinson Unit Study And Easy DIY Water Filter

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities Tagged With: earth science, earthscience, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, science, unit studies, unit study

First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography

June 12, 2023 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have first grade homeschool curriculum for history and geography. Also, look at my page Homeschool Geography for hands-on and simple ideas and tips.

Out of all the grades to begin choosing homeschool curriculum, first grade is really overwhelming.

Not from the point that it will necessarily be hard to teach, but it is the first formal grade.

You want to kick off your formal years right.

First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography

The first of anything can be tough just because of inexperience.

Add to that the mega choices we have in homeschooling and it can be downright stressful to choose curriculum.

Starting with history and geography (because they are two of my favorite subjects) I want to give you a bit of help in sorting out the choices.

First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History

When starting with history for any grade and especially first grade, keep these two important things in mind.

1. Decide An Approach to History

When I first started homeschooling, studying history in chronological order made sense to me after I read The Well-Trained Mind: A Guide to Classical Education at Home (Third Edition). I started my homeschool journey with classical roots.

I started off first grade using The Story of the World: History for the Classical Child: Volume 1: Ancient Times: From the Earliest Nomads to the Last Roman Emperor, Revised Edition (commonly referred to as SOTW).

Story of the World covers history in a 4 year cycle beginning with the Ancients and moving forward to Modern. You spend one year on each time period.

The teacher’s guide is helpful and necessary because you have questions and answers to help review the reader. 

History is told in a story fashion and my boys found it delightful.

Homeschool Curriculum for History

However, after schooling for a few years, I realized that because of his younger age, my middle son wasn’t retaining as much information as my oldest son had retained.

So I questioned the chronological approach and switched to a literature approach by Beautiful Feet where my son could learn history through a famous historical character.

This made a huge difference to him and helped my middle son make a meaningful connection to history.

Using living books like George Washington by the D’Aulaires or Abraham Lincoln (Bicentennial Edition) helped my son to understand some of the major players in history. Chronological order came later.

So, using Beautiful Feet is one example of living books and is a literature approach to history.

Using classical books, history comes alive through people and events and it’s not chronological.

First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

If you feel your background in history was lacking, there is nothing wrong with starting in chronological order and adding in living books too.

It’s taking the best of both approaches.

If you have it in your budget, there is nothing wrong with choosing one history curriculum as your spine or the essential guide you are using and another one you like to supplement with.

Now, please don’t make the mistake of doing two curriculum because that is overwhelming.

But using curriculum which fits your teaching style more and using the other one to help add other things your spine may be lacking is a good technique to keep you rounded out in your teaching.

Before you can make curriculum choices, you want to take stock of how you think best your children will learn and how much background help you need in history.

2. Determine If You Want to Tech History Using a Secular, Christian or Neutral View

The next biggie to decide is how you want to approach history.

Do you want the history of religion woven into your curriculum like Mystery of History, which too is taught in chronological order?

Or would you prefer a more neutral stand to history like The Story of the World: History for the Classical Child: Volume 1: Ancient Times: From the Earliest Nomads to the Last Roman Emperor, Revised Edition?

Too, another reason for choosing a program like The Story of the World: History for the Classical Child: Volume 1: Ancient Times: From the Earliest Nomads to the Last Roman Emperor, Revised Edition is because you may want to add your own Bible study information to it.

I didn’t need any help with a worldview and so I chose SOTW. I also used other resources which I’m going to tell you about in a minute.

First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography

Though some may argue that a secular and neutral approach in history are synonymous, it has been my experience that they are not.

In my earlier years of homeschooling I felt that you taught Bible based or used something that conflicted it and this idea is still popular among homeschoolers.

I still feel like that way somewhat but have expanded my view of what is neutral because of using so many different history curriculum.

More Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography

  • Homeschool Geography Go To Resources
  • How to Find A Well Laid Out Homeschool High School Geography Curriculum
  • First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography
  • Homeschool Secular History Curriculum Dynamic Reader Asks 3 Best Teaching Tips
  • 35 Simple But Powerful American History Homeschool Resources K to 12
  • 15 Fun Resources For History for Kindergarten Homeschool
  • 8 Best Classical Style History Curriculum for a Classical Learning Style
  • 35 Hands-on Geography Activities to do in 15 Minutes or Less
  • 5 Steps to Choosing Geography Living Books Your Children Will Love
  • Learn About Indigenous Animal Geography Fun Activity for Preschool to Elementary

There can be some fine differences though it is tough to tell at times until after you have finished the curriculum in full.

Then there is secular curriculum that takes a more neutral approach in that they merely introduces the idea of the big bang theory but then talks about true history like making disciples during Roman times.

The book I am talking about and is an example of a more neutral view is a book by Virgil Hillyer, A Child’s History of the World.

I skipped the first two chapters of the book because of the mention of the big bang theory which I didn’t want to introduce at this age.

A Child’s History of the World makes history come alive for this age and it has been the one book that has held each of my boy’s attention as they started first grade.

I can’t say enough good things about this book.

Looking back now, I could have easily only used A Child’s History of the World and added in my own free resources.

For hands-on learning we’ve always used Home School in the Woods products.

First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography

Look at a couple of the ones for grades K to 2.

Homeschool Geography for the Littles

It is important to mix hands-on activities with formal learning.

I enjoyed using the series by Steck Vaughn called Maps, Globes, Graphs. It was a mix of coloring, crossword puzzles and search and find clues in the workbooks along with maps.

Another super resource for grade K – 4 is Galloping the Globe, which is a unit study approach.

It it not as easy to follow along because I feel it is more like a reference but it is meaty enough for this grade level to understand about the cultural of other places.

The beauty of this resource is that it adds in things like cooking and cultural, which certainly needs to be included to help a child appreciate that geography is more than just a map, which could be boring.

Galloping the Globe would compliment a workbook approach.

My other love to have at this is Geography from A to Z: A Picture Glossary (Trophy Picture Books).

This is a reference book along with pictures to explain different features of geography.  A must have if I were homeschooling this grade again.

I hope this background information along with some of the things I used will keep this process fun and exciting like it should be.

Also, another one that we love for this age and that fits my idea of what teaching history and geography is Beautiful Feet curriculum that I mentioned earlier.

First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography

2 CommentsFiled Under: Geography, Teach Homeschool History Tagged With: history, history resources, historyspine, homeschoolingfirstgrade

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