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5 Fun and Natural Ways to Teach Grammar

5 Fun and Natural Ways to Teach Grammar

The following post contains affiliate links. The day students anticipate every year is almost here: March 4th—National Grammar Day! Ok, so maybe your children haven’t been doing a Christmas-style count down. But what a great subject to celebrate in your homeschool every day. Grammar really doesn’t need to be difficult or boring—for you or your children. You can teach it in both fun and natural ways. 1. Teach parts of speech through games Let’s take our dear friend, The Noun. There are common and proper nouns, concrete and abstract nouns. And at this point you may think, “But I don’t even remember all of those things!” The beauty of homeschooling though is that we don’t have to. We can learn, or relearn, right alongside our children. Begin by investing in a good grammar reference and show your children how to look up whatever term, concept, or rule you are studying. My favorite resource is More Nitty Gritty Grammar: Another Not-So-Serious Guide to Clear Communication by Edith Fine and Judith Josephson. The authors arranged terms in alphabetical order so they are easy to find. And the best part: they included comic strips to help illustrate them. Or you can google it. This is the way my two college-aged sons find all the answers to life. So look it up. Then together read about whatever you are studying. After that you can play a game to help your children understand the concept. Here are some ideas for teaching nouns: Call out objects in your home and see who can bring it back to you the quickest. Talk about how these are concrete nouns because you can use your senses to experience them. Cut out symbols or pictures for abstract ideas: a heart for love, a light bulb for an idea, someone laughing for happiness. Hold up each symbol or picture and have your students guess what it stands for. Or call out the idea and have your children find pictures that show or symbolize it. Write the names of different objects around your home or outside on index cards. Challenge children to find the object and tape the index card with its name on it. Get out books your kids love. They can be board books, picture books, fiction or non-fiction, even joke and riddle books—anything! Then ask them do a noun treasure hunt. Set a timer for thirty seconds and see how many nouns they can find in their books and write down on a sheet of paper or whiteboard. On a whiteboard or poster board make a list of common nouns down one side. On the other side have your children write a proper noun that matches it. For example, write store. Your children then write the names of one or more in your city, such as Kroger. Give a point for each one they come up with. A few more ideas for other parts of speech: To teach action verbs, write some out on index cards—words like running, skipping, sitting, jumping. Have your children choose a card and act it out for the rest of the family so they can guess what the verb is. (Go ahead and add vacuuming, dusting, and cooking. You might as well get some chores done!) Or encourage them to draw instead of acting out the word for others to guess if you don’t want to make your kids clean during school. Want a way to entertain the kids in the car while stealthily teaching them (Yes, you too can be a Ninja Homeschooling Mom!)? Tell your kids to give “Crayola” names to describe the colors they see while driving around. We did this and I still remember my youngest describing a cream-colored car as “melted-mozzarella-cheese” cream. No, we don’t normally think of melted-mozzarella-cheese as an adjective, but that is how it is functioning because adjectives are describing words. Adapt store-bought games Our family recently discovered Tenzi. It is a simple game, but can be played with so many variations. In the original game, everyone playing rolls 10 dice at the same time. Each chooses a number to collect and continues rolling until all the dice show the same number. Whoever finishes first yells “Tenzi” and wins that round. Easy. For Christmas we bought 77 Ways to Play Tenzi. On each card, a variation of the game is written. You can use the same idea. Write some “grammar variations” to use while playing such as “Do an action (verb) between each roll” or “Call out a describing word (adjective) between each roll.” Your children will have fun creating their own. Bonus: You covered some math and grammar at the same time. Ninja mom wins again. 2. Find Out-of-the-Box resources Visit your library and you will probably find some great picture books that teach grammar. Brian Cleary has written a series, Words Are CATegorical (yes the illustrations include cats), that my boys really enjoyed. A Mink, A Fink, a Skating Rink: What is a Noun?; Under, Over, By the Clover: What is a Preposition?; Dearly, Nearly, Insincerely: What is an Adverb?—you get the idea. Adjectives, verbs, pronouns, conjunctions are also introduced in the series using rhyme, colorful illustrations, and cats.  And if you have KindleUnlimted, you can read them for free. Or you can go “old school” and learn like I did while watching cartoons on Saturday mornings. SchoolHouse Rock is available on DVD or instant streaming. This collection of animated songs will stick with your children for years. To this day I can sing Conjunction Junction, What’s Your Function. (Warning though: you may find yourself singing these throughout the day. They kind of get stuck in your head!) 3. Adapt curriculum to your children You don’t have to throw out a grammar curriculum you love. Just be willing to make it work for your children. Do your children dislike writing on paper? Let them do it on a whiteboard or answer orally. Are the lessons taking too long? Choose the number of exercises you

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Homeschooling with Pokémon

If your kids are interested in Pokémon, be excited! You will be amazed at the ways you can capitalize on their interest by homeschooling with Pokémon. Have you heard your kids talk about Pikachu, Squirtle, and Charizard? Do they discuss attacks, trainers, and “evolution”? Sounds like your kids might be into Pokémon—which is great for you. Believe it or not, they’re going to learn a ton of stuff! Pokémon began many years ago as a trading card game and eventually grew to include video games, books, movies, and a TV show. In 2016, Pokémon became popular again for a newly released location-based, augmented reality game/app called Pokémon Go. When my two sons became interested in Pokémon years ago, I thought it was just a silly game—but I also wondered how I could capitalize on their interest by making Pokémon a part of our homeschooling. There are many neat Pokémon based activities that you can add to your day if you’re looking for something extra. Brain Power Boy – Pokemon Learning Activities Teach Thought – 5 Ways to Use Pokemon Go for Critical Thinking Mother Natured – Educational Pokemon Activities Pinterest – search Pokémon Homeschool for many more ideas! Don’t feel that you need to make Pokémon extras a thing, however. Sometimes the addition of too many interest-based extras can actually backfire on the interest! By simply watching my sons play the Pokémon card game and video games, I quickly discovered that I really didn’t need to do anything extra—my sons were learning in many different areas that I never would have thought Pokémon could help with. Traditional School Subjects Math: In order to play the game your kids will need to do math. Now, don’t let this concern you if you think your kids struggle with math. I can tell you from experience that it’s not uncommon for a kid who can’t complete a worksheet to suddenly be able to perform multiple level computations in his head and tell you his score after each and every battle in Pokémon. Go with it. My oldest, now 14 years old, remembers, “Pokémon helped me to manage numbers in my head better. I always had to think ahead and know what attack would deliver how much damage, and what the best way would be (mathematically) to survive my opponent’s next attack.” Reading/Language: Once again, it was always amazing to watch kids who “didn’t have an interest in reading” or struggled with reading in general, and how they would plow right through a game of Pokémon and not even realize all the reading they had to do in order to play the game. This goes for the card game as well as tech based versions of the game. I know one mom who said her child really improved in reading because he wanted to play the Pokémon video game, but she was often busy with siblings and couldn’t tell him what it said on the screen. “I was amazed at how quickly he learned what the screen said,” she told me. “He wanted to know…and so he learned to do it.” What’s also interesting is what your kids will learn about etymology—the origin of words and how they are put together. The hundreds of characters in Pokémon are all named for specific reasons. You might find your kids picking up on some Greek or Japanese root words (and many others!) as they work through the names of the Pokémon they’ve captured. Heliolisk is named for helios (Greek for sun) and basilisk (a type of lizard). Kyurem is named for kyuurei, which is Japanese for ‘rapid cooling’. Zubat is a combination of zubattoa, (the Japanese word for a sound of something being hit) and a cave-dwelling flying mammal As the creatures of Pokémon evolve (which means that they change form, type, or ability as they level up), their names will also change. Your kids will come to realize that the way the Pokémon names change makes sense and helps your kids keep track of who the creatures are. Magnemite evolves into Magneton (small to big) Doduo evolves into Dodrio (two to three) Koffing evolves into Weezing (coughing to wheezing) For more information on Pokémon etymology, visit the Pokémon Database. History/Mythology/World Cultures: When your child discovers that Kangaskhan was named for Genghis Khan (the Mongolian leader) or that Natu was named for Atu, the first man in Samoan mythology, you might find that a new interest is sparked in different histories and cultures. Pokémon was started in Japan. Because of my children’s interest in Pokémon, it was natural that they became very interested in Japan. This led to endless hours of researching Japanese language, food, and history. When we started our homeschooling journey, I never would have imagined that Japanese culture and history would be something we’d spend a ton of time on, but my sons (and Pokémon) certainly proved me wrong. Geography/geospatial: Pokémon Go is clearly something you will want to check out before you let your kids run with this. It’s an app that takes you on an adventure a little like geocaching, but instead of looking for a physical cache, you’re trying to capture a virtual Pokémon. My sons were 12 and 13 when this game hit big, and really had a fun summer heading out in our small town and neighboring communities to see what they could find. Higher Level Thinking/Life Skills Besides traditional school subjects, Pokémon has helped my kids with many other things, such as: Organizational thinking: What surprised me most about my kids playing Pokémon was the many things they had to keep straight, all at the same time, in order to play the game. I’m not going to lie: there were times I was totally confused and they were miles ahead of me.  It gave me hope that they really can keep it together—and that’s reassuring to a homeschool mama’s mind! Decision making, Reasoning, Analytical thinking: “It’s important to have situational awareness about the battle you’re headed

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