Here are the lessons for that unit (listed by type, but completed by
date):
Thursday, November 7, 2013
US History Unit 4: 1800-1860
This period in US history too often gets rushed through, even though it
offers an interesting look compared to our current times. We spent four weeks
on this, which is a big chunk of our total school year, but still not enough
time to fully explore the political and social tides of the era.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
English Unit 2: Writing a Science Fiction Story
This was a
continuation of the free writing unit. For the last week my son had an assignment to write 30
lines of a science fiction story and another 30 lines of a story with dialogue.
On his own, he decided to combine those assignments (yippee for initiative!!!) into a story that then took on a life of
its own. In fact, he was so proud of his story, he asked to keep working on it
and, eventually, get it published.Tuesday, October 29, 2013
US History Unit 3: The Late 1700’s
This unit included the Constitution as well as the first two
presidents. We started with Crash Course US History videos #8 “The
Constitution, the Articles, and Federalism” and #9 “Where US Politics Came From.”
For the Constitution, we used a detailed worksheet (similar to those on thiswebsite) with questions about what powers
and duties were assigned in the articles, the Bill of Rights and the evolution
of the amendments. We also studied the differences between the Constitution and
the Articles of Confederacy, and finished with a graphic organizer showing the
separation of powers. This unit also included the first two President's Day
studies for Washington and Adams.
Chemistry Unit 2: Matter—Solids, Liquids, and Gases and Unit 3: Changes of State
Both of
these were taken straight from the ACS Middle School Chemistry curriculum. Since I added an introduction unit, we’re off
by one on the numbering – Unit 2 is Chapter 1 and Unit 3 is Chapter 2. Oh well.
Each chapter
had several pages of student reading, so we started with those. Next, we went back
to Brain Pop for vocabulary (Temperature, Measuring Matter, States of Matter, and
Matter Changing State). After my son had a solid grasp of the fundamentals, we
started into the individual lessons and labs. I like the emphases on what was
happening at an atomic level. That continues through the whole program.
You don’t
need elaborate equipment for the labs. Each day has a simple experiment and
questions focused on one concept. Even though some of these seemed overly
simple, my son learned advanced facts that are normally reserved for high school
chemistry, such as the affect of pressure on the volume of a gas. There are also
nice, short videos that can be used for the teacher demonstration part of the
daily lessons. A favorite is the slow-mo water balloon.
Monday, October 28, 2013
US History Unit 2: The American Revolution
We spent a week on this topic
just a few months ago in 7th grade, so this unit was focused on filling in a
few remaining ideas about the government during the revolution. My son started with two Crash Course US History videos: #6 “Taxes and Smuggling” and #7 “Who won the American Revolution?” The map activity was a simple map of the colonies. We studied the Declaration of Independence with short answer questions and the Articles of Confederation with a chart detailing limits of power compared to the current Constitution. Both of these assignments came from the textbook we’re using. The last day of the unit was spent watching the second chapter of America: The Story of US (Revolution). These were this unit’s test questions:
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Unit Calendar: September
Click on the calendar for a larger and clearer image.
This page was generated from the calendar spreadsheet.
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