- Read/watch miscellaneous library books and DVDs about Canada
- Read aloud of an easy adaptation of Anne of Green Gables
- Go to the zoo and identify animals that live in Canada
- Color the Canadian flag and a map of Canada (easy to find these on the internet)
- Food: maple syrup, butter tarts, apple juice, currants, poutine
- Culture: Invite a Canadian-American friend over and have her share a little about Canada with us
- Watch some shows that take place in Canada (Dudley Do Right, Red Green Show)
- "Reverse curling" on the garage floor (freeze disk of ice with a pipe cleaner handle in it, and use chalk to draw the skip)
- Go camping in the U.S. Rockies (they are fairly similar to Canadian Rockies as to vegetation, appearance, and wildlife)
- Craft: Make cheese curds for poutine (I ended up doing this one alone, my kids having shown no interest in it)
- Computer: free time to play on websites Poisson Rouge and UpToTen since they are bilingual French/English sites
- Listen to Inuit music, Canadian folk music, and Great Big Sea (a Canadian folk-rock band know for sea shanties) (Grooveshark was a good resource for finding much of this music)
A personal blog, named in honor of the novel Petticoat Government by a favorite author, Emma Orczy. The novel is about a fictional woman, Lydie d'Aumont, who attempts to inject some fairness and good governance into the court of France's Louis XVth despite the corruption and selfishness there.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Canada Week
This summer we're doing little formal schoolwork. What we're doing instead is learning all about a different country or U.S. state each week. Last week we learned about Canada. Here is a list of what we did to learn about Canada:
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