Friday, April 17, 2026

Math

 April 20-25 

Math Antics - Numeracy

Video: Number Line [link]
Worksheets
The Number Line - Exercise
Missing Numbers
Numbers In-Between

Video: Rounding [link]
Worksheets
Rounding Up or Down?
Rounding Whole Numbers with Guides
Rounding Decimals with Guides
Rounding Whole Numbers (Four Ways)
Rounding Decimals (Four Ways)
Rounding Practice - Set 1
Rounding Practice - Set 2 

 Completed work [link]

 April 14-17 

Math Antics - Numeracy

Video: Place Value [link]
Worksheets
Place Value - Exercise
Number Place Names
Identifying Number Places 1 & 2
Invisible Number Places
Place Value
Expanded Form

Video: Decimal Place Value [link]
Worksheets

Decimal Place Value - Exercise
Decimal Place Names
Identifying Decimal Number Places
Invisible Number Places
Place Value with Decimals
Expanded form with Decimals

Completed work [link]

History

April 14-17  

DK. First History Encyclopedia

Kingfisher Encyclopedia of History
- First Farmers

April 14-17 

E. H. Gombrich. Little History of the World
    - Once Upon a Time (Causal Nature)
    - The Greatest Inventors of All Time
    - The Land by the Nile 

Kingfisher Encyclopedia of History
    - The First Humans 

DK First History Encyclopedia
    - Early Humans (Instructional Reading)
    - Stone Age (Instructional Reading) 

History as it Happened (Geography)
    - Prehistory
    - Africa 

Oral Narrations:

- Ancient Egypt Facts

Projects & Topics:

- Decoding Phonetic Hieroglyphs

- King Tut (Observe & Copy//spacial reasoning, art & motor skills)

-Greek Amphora

- Ea-Nasir & Ancient Scams
- Writing in Alphabetical Hieroglyphs 
- Ancient Egyptian Memes

- Ancient Instruments: Ocarina, Lyre
- Ancient Egyptian Mythology
- Greek & Roman Mythology
- Homer, Ancient Greece, Discovery of Troy 

English Language Arts

April  20-24

Reading - Skills: 

DK. First History Encyclopedia / Stone Age (Instructional)

Reading - Literature: 

World Book. Enigmas of History - The Mysteries of the Trojan War / The Trojan War/ The Story of the War 

Oral Narrations:

The Mysteries of the Trojan War - The Story of the War (Summary of the Iliad)

    There was a party and a bunch of goddesses and gods there, but Eris didn't get invited because she was the goddess of discord. She got a golden apple with an engraving that said "to the most beautiful". So three people fighted over it and then they chose some guy eventually and he chose the third goddess because she promised a hot babe, Helen.

    But Helen was already married so the king of Sparta, to get her back, put an expedition against Troy. 

Grammar:
(Kumon)

Irregular Plural Nouns
Verbs

Spelling:
Dolch Words/Spelling Rules

Which/Witch
Write
Very
Every
Does
Their
There
They're
Blue
Eight
Laugh
Together

Writing:
Letter formation with Handwriting Without Tears daily practice, 15-20 minutes 
    - Imitating, from memory, & following visual instructions. Copy-work & dictation inclusive. [link]

April 14-17 

Reading - Skills:
 

Smithsonian kids. Ancient Egypt StepUp Readers Level 3 (at-level)
Kochalka, James. Banana Fox (below-level)
DK. First History Encyclopedia / What is History? (instructional) 
DK. First History Encyclopedia / Early Humans (instructional)

Reading - Literature:

Sutcliff, Rosemary. Black Ships Before Troy - Chapter 1 
Aliki. Gods & Goddesses of Olympus 

Also: Big Nate, Little History, & various others 'for fun'. 

Oral Narrations 
 

Black Ships Before Troy: The Golden Apple

Black Ships Before Troy is based on a story called the Iliad by Homer. The Iliad was one of the oldest books in the world. There was a wedding but they didn't invite Eris, goddess of discord, because everywhere she goes trouble happens. Because Eris wasn't invited she went there anyways and threw a golden apple on the table that said "to the fairest". After she threw the golden apple on the table there was three goddesses who said;
"I'm the fairest!"
"No, I'm the fairest!"
"No, you're both wrong, I'm the fairest!"

How to Survive Being Lost in the Woods

    Don't cry for help immediately because you will probably lose your voice by the time somebody actually hears you. Set up bright things around where you are like paper, cloth, but not your clothes. I think the most important thing was to make a shelter.

From:
Buchholz, Rachel. How to Survive Anything 

 Ancient Egypt Facts 

    Egypt is in North Africa. Scientists who study Egypt are called Egyptologists. Every year the Nile flooded. The flood helped ancient Egyptians grow crops. Ancient Egyptians built their homes with mud bricks. Kids were bald except one part of their right side was hair. Egyptians believed there were gods and goddesses for almost everything. When a families' cat died the owner shaved off his eyebrows and wouldn't stop mourning until they grew back. In 1799 historians couldn't read hieroglyphs, they found a stone with demotic Egyptian (their daily language) and hieroglyphs. When a pharaoh died, the oldest son became a pharaoh. If there was no son, another family member could become a pharaoh. Pharaohs would wear a fake beard, and if they were ladies, they would still wear the fake beard. 

Grammar:
(Kumon, BrainQuest)

Past/Present Tense
Verb Tense
Pronouns
Irregular Plural Nouns

Pending: First Language Lessons - Level 3

Spelling:
Dolch Words/Spelling Rules

Pull
Which
Why
Write
Right
Your
Their
Very
Upon
Again
Some
Could
Best
Every
Does
Pretty
There
They're
White
Blue
Here
Hear
Where
Eight
Hurt
Keep
Laugh
Together 

Writing:
Letter formation with Handwriting Without Tears daily practice, 15-20 minutes 
    - Imitating, from memory, & following visual instructions. Copy-work & dictation inclusive. [link]


Science

April 13-17

 Kingfisher Science Encyclopedia 

Chapter 1. Planet Earth

Fossils and Geological Time - comprehension & finding information

1. What is a fossil?
    "... the preserved remains of a once living organism."
2. How old is the Earth?
    "...Earth's history began over 4.55 billion years ago."
3. What part of an organism usually survives to become fossils?
    "....usually only the hard parts such as shells or bones survive."
4. What is radioactive dating?
    "Some minerals can be accurately dated by calculating the amounts of radioactive elements within them... which decay at fixed rates."
5. What ended the Cretaceous period 66 million years ago?
    "...thousands of species, including dinosaurs... became extinct... an asteroid hit earth..."
6. What usually caused mass extinction events?
    "... mostly volcano induced climate change. Rarely... large asteroids or comets."
7. When did life on Earth begin?
    "... 3.8 billion years ago..." 

Bill Nye The Science Guy - S04E19 Fossils [link]

April 13-17

 Kingfisher Science Encyclopedia 

Chapter 1. Planet Earth


Earth and the Solar System - comprehension & finding information

1. What is a Solar System?
"A solar system consists of a star and the planets and other bodies that orbit around it." 
2. What is accretion?
"Earth formed from a disk of dust that surrounded the sun... the dust clumped together in a process called accretion."
3. What do scientists think cause the moon to form?
"...an object the size of Mars crashed into it. This threw a cloud of material into orbit, forming the moon."
4. What are the four inner planets in order form the sun?
"Mercury is the closest to the sun... next are Venus, Earth, and Mars."
5.
What happened to water on Mars?
"... water froze or escaped into space and left a cold desert." 
6. Why is Venus so hot?
"Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere led to a greenhouse effect..." 

Q & A

Q: Does the planet Mercury contain the chemical mercury?
A: No, not in any significant amount. 

Q: Then why is it called 'Mercury'?
A: The planet is named after the Roman god 'Mercury' - messenger of the gods.

Q: Wait, isn't he Greek?
A: The Romans had different names for the same gods.

Q: Mercury is the smallest planet? What about Pluto?
A: Pluto is no longer considered a planet.

Q: Why not?
A: To be considered a planet, it must have these 3 characteristics;

    1. Orbit around the sun.
    2. Have enough mass to draw itself into a round shape.
    3. Must have cleared all other celestial bodies, except it's moons, from it's orbit.

Pluto is a "dwarf planet" in the Kuiper belt with it's own distinct orbit, but too small to be considered a real planet.

Q: What's the Kuiper belt?
A: A vast region of empty space beyond Neptune, home to icy, rocky objects left over from the formation of our solar system; including Pluto and thousands of other dwarf planets and comets. 

Kurzgesagt: Building a Marsbase is a Horrible Idea: Let's do it! [link] 

Earth's Rotation  - comprehension & finding information
1. What causes our seasons?
"... Earth spins like a top as it orbits out sun. These rotations cause... seasonal variations in sunlight and temperature."
2.
What is a lunar month?
"The moon orbits the Earth in about 27 days... it takes 29 days (a lunar month)
to pass through all it's phases.
3.
How long does it take the Earth to orbit the sun?
"Earth also orbits the sun in 356 1/4 days."
4. What is a lunar eclipse?
"...Earth comes between the sun and moon and the Earth casts a shadow on the moon.
"
5.
What is a solar eclipse?
"A solar eclipse is when the moon comes between the Earth and the sun."
6. What causes tide?
"... the moon('s) gravity pulls water in the ocean towards it. The changes in water level... are called tides."
7.
What are spring tides?
"Spring tides occur when the sun and the moon pull in the same direction."

Bill Nye The Science Guy - S01E15 Earth's Seasons [link]                 

Solar System (Observe & Copy, techniques)



Moon Phase Chart


Thursday, April 16, 2026

Religion

Ancient India
Hinduism & Buddhism

Adapted excerpt from The Dhammapada, by Eknath Easwaran;

    Like the Buddha, the sages of the Upanishads did not find the world capricious. Nothing in it happens by chance – not because events are predestined, but because everything is connected by cause-and-effect. Thoughts are included in this view, because they both cause things to happen and are aroused by things that happen. What we think has consequences for the world around us, for it conditions how we act. 

 

    All these consequences (for others, for the world, and for ourselves) are our personal responsibility. Sooner or later, due to the laws of nature, it is sure to come back to us. Someone who is always angry, to take a simple example, is bound to provoke anger from others. More subtly, a man who pollutes the environment will eventually have to breathe the air and drink the water that he has helped to poison.

 

    These are illustrations of what Hinduism and Buddhism call the law of karma. Karma means something done, whether as cause or effect. Actions in harmony with dhamma, or the laws of nature, bring good karma and add to health and happiness. Selfish actions, at odds with the rest of life, bring unfavorable karma and pain.

 

     In this view, there is no need for a God to punish and reward us, we punish and reward ourselves. This was not regarded as a tenet of religion but as a law of nature, as universal as the law of gravity. No one has stated it more clearly than St. Paul: “As you sow, so shall you reap. With whatever measure you mete out to others, with the same measure it shall be meted out to you.”

 

    For the Upanishadic sages, however, the books of karma could only be cleared within the natural world. Unpaid karmic debts and unfulfilled desires do not vanish when the physical body dies. They are forces which remain in the universe to quicken life again at the moment of conception when conditions are right for past karma to be fulfilled. We live and act, and everything we do goes into what we think at the present moment, so that at death the mind is the sum of everything we have done and everything we still desire to do. That sum of forces has karma to reap, and when the right context comes – the right parents, the right society, the right epoch – the bundle of energy that is the germ of your personality is born again. We are not just limited physical creatures with a beginning in a particular year and an end after fourscore years and ten. We go back eons, and some of the contents of the deepest unconscious are the dark drives of an evolutionary heritage much older than the human race.

 

    The law of karma simply states that cause and effect apply universally and that the effect is of the nature of the cause. Every event, mental or physical, has to have effects, whether in the mind, in action, or in both – and each such effect becomes a cause itself.

 

   

 

Definitions

sages — wise people, especially ones whose wisdom comes from long reflection on deep questions; in Indian contexts, often the ancient teacher-poets who composed scriptures.

capricious — acting on sudden whims, without reason; unpredictable in a fickle way. A capricious universe would be one where things just happen for no reason.

predestined — fixed in advance by some outside power, so that the outcome cannot be changed.

cause-and-effect — the principle that every event is produced by prior conditions and in turn produces further events; nothing arises in isolation.

consequences — the results or effects that follow from an action, especially ones the actor is answerable for.

provoke — to stir up or call forth a reaction, usually a strong one like anger.

subtly — in a fine, not-obvious way; requiring attention to notice.

Hinduism — the family of religious and philosophical traditions native to the Indian subcontinent, rooted in religious texts called the Vedas and Upanishads.

Buddhism — the tradition founded by Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha) in the 5th century BCE, teaching that suffering arises from craving and ignorance and can be ended by following the Eightfold Path.

karma — literally "action" or "deed"; the principle that intentional actions leave consequences that shape future experience, in this life or beyond.

dhamma//dharma — a many-layered word meaning the natural law or order of things, the truth of how reality works, and also the teaching that describes that truth.

tenet of religion — a principle or doctrine held by a religion.

St. Paul — the first-century Jewish-Roman apostle whose letters make up much of the New Testament; a foundational figure in Christian theology.

quicken — to bring to life, to animate; an old word used especially for the moment when a fetus first stirs in the womb.

conception — the moment an egg is fertilized and a new life begins to form.

epoch — a particular period of history, usually one with a distinctive character ("the Victorian epoch," "our epoch").

germ — the tiny starting point from which something grows. (Not the disease sense.)

fourscore years and ten — ninety years. 

eons (also spelled aeons) — immensely long stretches of time.

 

 


Questions

 

What connects everything that happens in the world?

 

What example did the author use of a person who’s own behavior comes back to them?

 

According to the passage, who punishes and rewards us?

 

What is another name for the law of karma?

 

What is an example of another universal law of nature?

 

According to the passage, what happens to unpaid karmic debts and unfulfilled desires when the body dies?

 

 

 

As you sow, so shall you reap. With whatever measure you mete out to others, with the same measure it shall be meted out to you.”

 

This is a saying built out of two farming-and-marketplace images that were everyday life for the people who first heard it. Once you see the pictures, the meaning becomes very plain.

 


"As you sow, so shall you reap."

 

Sowing means scattering seed in a field. Reaping means cutting down and gathering the crop that grows from that seed months later. A farmer who sows wheat reaps wheat. A farmer who sows thistles reaps thistles. You cannot plant one thing and harvest another, and you cannot plant nothing and harvest something. The harvest always matches the seed, and it always comes later than the planting.

 

Used as a saying about human life, it means: the kind of actions you put into the world are the kind of results that will come back to you, even if the results take a long time to appear.

 


"With whatever measure you mete out to others, with the same measure it shall be meted out to you."

 

This second image comes from the marketplace. In the ancient world, grain and flour and oil were sold by measure, you'd scoop them into a cup or a basket of a fixed size. To mete out means to measure out and give. A generous seller used a big, heaping measure. A stingy seller might have used a smaller one.

 

The saying means: the size of the measuring-cup you use when you give to other people is the same size of measuring-cup that will be used when things are given to you. If you are generous with others, generosity of that same size will come back to you. If you are stingy, stinginess will come back in the same small cup.

 

(Related: Causality, laws of nature, 'once upon a time' of history) 

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Penmanship

 April 20-24




April 13-17