My son and I have chosen global positioning as a study theme for 2022. For every topic we tackle this year we are going to to answer this question: where in the world is this or where did it come from? (We are primarily limiting our focus to countries.)
Our world map and colored pens are at the ready. Every time we find out where something originated we mark a color coded dot on the map (example: goat breeds – a black dot, penguin breeds – a silver dot). Our big map is becoming our big polka dotted map. The idea is to find ourselves at the end of 2022 knowing where every country on the globe is located.
To illustrate: reading from Jack Byard’s “Know Your Goats”, we learned
- the Girgentana goat (best in class for truly WOW horns) originated in Sicily: mark a dot on the island of Sicily.
- the Boer goat (super sweet Basset Hound ears) is indigenous to South Africa: mark a dot on South Africa.
- the Kiko goat (off-the-charts hardy – resistant to disease, parasites, weather) initially from New Zealand: mark at dot on New Zealand.
- we have read about 6 breeds of goat from Switzerland. When you keep going back to Switzerland to mark yet another dot, you finally learn where Switzerland is (this is for my son’s benefit, please don’t think I didn’t know where Switzerland was).
Our topic line-up so far: goats, penguins (hey! 18 species of penguins and only 2 live their lives in Antarctica: so, 18 sparkling silver dots scattered about our map’s southern hemisphere), owls, bears, and here’s a change of pace: breads of the world. This dot marking is more satisfying than one would think.
But all other topics get a dot on the map, too. Example: we are reading Lori Alexander’s well researched, well written, “All in a Drop – How Antony van Leeuwenhoek Discovered an Invisible World” (BTW: illustrations by Vivien Mildenberger are just so right for this book)(and another BTW: the timeline at the back of the book is worth the price of the book) .
- I can finally pronounce his name without pausing to gather my wits: “LAYVENHOOK”
- this man ground down a lentil shaped lens (hey! we learned “lens” comes from the word “lentil”) and made a separate microscope for every single item he viewed
- kind of chilling: van Leeuwenhoek saw things under his microscopes that had NEVER EVER BEEN SEEN before. My son and I reflected upon this crazy wonderfulness
- after seven years of heel dragging, the Royal Society in London finally accepted van Leeuwenhoek as a Fellow (1677)
Yes, yes, yes, but where did he come from? Delft, The Netherlands. Bring forth the map and mark a gold dot on The Netherlands.
Current Fiction Reads (and global positioning dots) –
“Room to Dream”, Kelly Yang. The third in her very readable and very worthy series. At the point we are in the story, protagonist Mia’s family is about to embark on a trip (from Anaheim, CA) to see family in China (2 dots marked on the map).
“Surviving the Applewhites”, by Stephanie S. Tolan. I think this is our 4th time through this relentlessly entertaining book. With each reading we discover new truths about human nature and the creative spirit. Location? North Carolina: another dot on the map.
Back to the Goats: Story Problem –
Farmer Brown has 6 acres of overgrown weeds that need to be cleared out, so he is hiring a team of goats from neighbor, Farmer Fran (yes, THE Farmer Fran of “Farmer Fran’s Grazin’ Goats”), to get the job done. Farmer Fran has a herd of 30 goats that can clear a half acre in 3 days. The cost runs $400 per acre.
1) How long will it take the goats to clear Farmer Brown’s 6 acres?
a- 3 days b- 18 days c- 30 days d- 36 days
2) How much will it cost to have the land cleared?
a- $240 b- $400 c- $2,400 d- $4,000
3) If Farmer Brown hires a local construction company to clear the brush, it will cost $4,000 per acre. How much will he save if he hires the goat team instead?
a- $0 (they both cost the same) b- $2,400 c- $4,000 d- $21,600
(answers at bottom of post)
Classical Music Time with the Goats –
Farmer Fran says that her goats work more efficiently if they are munching to music, so my son and I looked for music with a happy, rambunctious melody and rhythm –
- “Hoe-Down”, from “Rodeo” by Aaron Copland (1942). An A+ performance by the USA National Youth Orchestra of 2018. Thanks to the outstanding percussion section we can imagine the goats’ little hoofbeats all over this exuberant composition –
- “Maple Leaf Rag”, Scott Joplin (1916). Oooooh, we found an actual pianola roll played by Scott Joplin. The tempo is much faster than we’ve ever heard this piece played. Just the right thing to keep those goats moving –
- Alexander Glazunov’s “Symphony No. 4”, movement 2 (1893). This piece transports us smack into the middle of Farmer Brown’s acreage. We can feel the fresh air, we can see the goats scampering from one clump of weeds to the next. They are making short work of this 6 acre task! This is not exactly rambunctious music, but there is a playfulness and joyfulness present –
Welcome to the best part of my day!
– Jane BH
(story problem answers: 1) d- 36 days 2) c- $2,400 3) d- $21,600 )
I love everything you do!!!
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❤️❤️❤️thank you! I love working on this blog.
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Jane, you are AMAZING!!!
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We need a goat 😜. Mowing in the cold is just silly. Can visualize the goats’ hoofbeats coming from percussion section and all the continents!
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