Latter-day Family Resources - Our Mission is to Strengthen YOUR LDS Family   LDSHomeschooling.org
home catalog specials curriculum discussions policies about us your cart
    home page   |   join our email list   |   email specials   |   request catalog   |   question of the week   |   homeschooling you can do it!
 
  Saturday, May 17, 2008   enter item#, title
or keywords:
 

 

Heart-to-Heart with Diane

Homeschooling You Can Do It!

Email Newsletters

Question of the Week

Visit our clearance table


Homeschooling: You Can Do It!

Homeschooling Introduction

Laugh with me

Homeschooling Assignment #1

Homeschooling Assignment #2

Homeschooling Assignment #3

Homeschooling Assignment #4

Homeschooling Assignment #5

Homeschooling Assignment #6

Homeschooling Assignment #7




Create Anything with Clay



The Incredible Clay Book



Sculpey Clay



Fun with Modeling Clay



Non-drying Modeling Clay



Eraser Clay



Modeling Tool Set



Great Deals:
Click Here!


Homeschooling Assignment #6:
Sculpting Time!

(My favorite--you are going to like this!)

I'm excited 'cause this is so much fun! Your children are going to love it, and so are you!

First, you need supplies, so put this on your grocery or "gather" list so you'll be ready to have a good time!

Supply List
1--plastic (plastic $1 tablecloth or old vinyl tablecloth or plastic placemats--not your best ones)

2--colored clay
(Playdough, homemade play dough, Sculpey clay or store clay that hardens when it bakes or dries) Make sure your clay is the kind that dries or can be baked to hardness. What fun is it to spend your time creating something wonderful just to smash it when you are done? If it is soft clay, even if you try to preserve it by not touching, it just doesn't hold its shape that well, especially when bumped! If you don't like collecting too much stuff, your child can give it their creations to someone warmhearted that would appreciate their creative effort. Maybe with a little card or scripture verse done in their best handwriting!

3--tools
(garlic press, toothpicks, rolling pin, fat pencil to serve as a mini rolling pin, tweezers, kitchen utensils, chop stick, pizza cutter, fork, etc.) The more the merrier, as this is where you can really get creative and expressive. A garlic press is hard to clean. If you can find a cheapy one and use it just for clay, you'll be happier to sculpt more often! But it makes such great hair or fur that you really can't deny yourself of the pleasure of squeezing clay through a garlic press!

4--ideas
Pick up an idea book at the library or get out some children's coloring books that simplify objects and animals to black line drawings. The ice cream bars above are made from clay!

Let's Sculpt!!
Lay out a cheap vinyl tablecloth so you can have fun without making a cleaning job for yourself before lunch. You can fold it up and re-use it next time you play clay. If you feel more creative with classical music, put that on too! Start with a newborn in blanket. This will get everyone sculpting and ideas brewing. Think "small". You only need a golf ball size of clay to create something charming! Remember, this activity is for Mom and teenage boys and middle sized girls and little babies and everyone.

Here's how to make a Newborn in Blanket: (pictured above)

Step 1
Take a marble sized ball of clay to roll the head. You can use white with a little pink blended in, or white with a little brown blended in or straight dark brown (depending on skin tones of your baby). Roll this into a ball and set aside.

Step 2
Get another marble-size piece of colored clay. In our sample, we mixed white with blue and green flecks of clay. When we rolled it out thin it looked like a blanket. Use a rolling pin or a pencil to roll out the clay very thin. Use a pizza cutter to cut a 3" square shape.

Step 3
Scratch the back surface of the baby's head ball to rough it. Scratch the inside upper corner of the blanket on the surface and then press the head on.

Step 4
Fold the blanket up from the bottom until the point touches the baby's chin. Fold in the side of the blankets.

Step 5
Roll a little pinch of brown, black or blonde colored clay into a little curlicue. Poke a toothpick down to make a hole in the top of the baby's head. Stick the piece of "hair" into the hold and pinch inside the hole with the end of a toothpick.

Step 6
Make a little teeny ball for a nose and adhere it just like the hair.

Step 7
Using the end of a pencil or other tool, make a poke for the eyes and mouth of the baby. You can enlarge the mouth into a big crying mouth by wiggling the pencil around to make the hole bigger.

Bake your baby to permanence and you'll have a little creation that makes everyone who sees it go, "Ohhhhhh, how cute!".

Instructions for Sculpting a Pig (found on page 11 of Create Anything with Clay)

You will need:
A small marble-size ball of pink clay
Scraps of pink and black
Toothpick or paperclip

Step 1
Roll clay into a ball

Step 2
Make the face parts:
Triangle ears
Round eyes
Nose: a flattend ball with toothpick-drawn nostrils
Curly tail (wrap around a toothpick or wire)

Step 3
Bake 30 min at 275 degF/135 degC

Now, when your creativity is spent, lay your objects carefully on a cookie sheet to bake or dry. FUN!

Your kids are going to be asking when you are sculpting next! Friday afternoon sculpting sessions can become a nice reward for a week of schoolwork done!

Love,
Diane

Assignment # 7 (click here to view)

$1.99 Online Shipping!
for 48 States
select standard shipping option at checkout


In the Court of King Arthur (Adventure Classics)

In the Court of King Arthur (Adventure Classics)

Thrill to the legend of King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table! Includes a snap-in-place model of King Arthur. Unabridged.. . . Retail $6.99    Our Price $2.95    58% Off   Going Fast! While supplies last. Click here





Hi!

I am Diane Hopkins, mother of 7 children (ages 10 to 30) whom I have had the privilege of homeschooling over the past 18 years. I'm a mom, just like you, and have those fabulous days and those not-so-good days like we all do. My hope in writing is to share experiences, and hopefully we can encourage one another in this wonderful, intense adventure of childraising--that is really what homeschooling is, after all.

Hoping to help, if I can!

Love, Diane

Please send me your homeschooling questions.


 
 
1-800-290-2283
 

© 1996-2008