October Violin Practice Challenge
11 CommentsBy Lostcheerio on Tuesday, October 02, 2007 at 3:27 PM.
Time for the first and only, spookeriffic, autumnimous Little Blue School Violin Practice Challenge!
First, print out the practice chart:

PDF Version Large JPG Version
Remember to choose "Landscape"
Choose "Shrink to Fit" when printing the JPG
At the end of the month, you can print out this certificate, get the appropriate name, number of practices, and signatures in place, and award it to the stellar violinist(s) in your family.

PDF Version Large JPG Version
Remember to choose "Landscape"
Choose "Shrink to Fit" when printing the JPG



Here's a side note: I am working on putting together a page linking to as many YouTube videos of Suzuki violin students as I can find. Sort of a virtual concert. Do you have one? Let me know! My email address is jackets at rpsd.com. Spread the word!
Labels: challenge, halloween, music, october, practice, printables, suzuki, violin
Math Card Game for Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication, Division
8 CommentsBy Lostcheerio on Friday, September 28, 2007 at 1:22 PM.
We shuffled the deck and put the pile next to his paper. He would flip over two cards, write those values in the spaces, then choose whether to use multiplication, division, addition, or subtraction to find an answer. Then he wrote the answer.
This was a great exercise for three reasons:
1. It was fun for him to write his own questions and he loves using the cards.
2. It made him consider the answer to all four of the problems, before he chose one to write down. He most wanted to use division, since that to him is the coolest, so he would be happy if he pulled, for example, a king and a 4, so he could divide twelve by four.
3. He got to test me a little -- on the last few he did, he left the operation circle blank, and asked me which operation he had used. Rather than hesitating to give him the answer, I cheerfully participated in my part of the quiz, because he already had to have figured it out, to be asking me.
I want to do this exercise again, and I made a printable math game page for future use, which I will share with you.
This could be used in different ways -- the kid could fill in the numbers and quiz you on which operation was used, you could use it blank with a deck of cards like we did, or you could use it to solve for X if you leave just one of the spaces blank and give the answers. Hope it's useful!
Here's an image preview of the page, click on it or the link above for the print-friendly web page:

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Labels: cards, games, math, math practice, printables
More Homeschool for Girls: A Useful Flower Printable
1 CommentsBy Lostcheerio on Monday, September 03, 2007 at 11:07 AM.
Here's how it worked. I put a letter in a box, then she copied it into the neighboring box. When she accomplished this, she got to draw a petal onto the flower. When there were ten petals on the flower, she was done. She loved it.
I liked it too and thought I might like to use it again, so I made a digital version of it for reprinting.
If you click here you can go to a bigger version of the image, that you can print. Make sure you go to Page Layout or Print Options or whatever and choose "Landscape" before you print it out. If you use it, and like it, send me a picture of it! :D
Possible uses:
Letter practice. Copy what Mommy writes, or write the letters yourself in upper and lower case in the two boxes.
Number practice. Copy what Mommy writes, or write the numbers in yourself, twice to 10 or once to 20.
Violin/piano practice. Put the song names in the boxes and color the petals for every song you do. Choose ten boxes to practice.
Task list. Put 20 possible jobs in the boxes and let the child choose 10 to accomplish for the week, for each job accomplished fill in a petal.
Schedule for the day. Make a list of everything, everything, everything you're going to do today in the left boxes. Have child fill in the right boxes with everything she wants to do. Each put five top priorities in the petals.
Happy Labor Day
Labels: free, lessons, preschool, printables








