The theme for this week’s Unplugged Project was smell. I had some fun ideas so it’s too bad we didn’t have time to get to it this week. Oh well, I’ll have to try and work them into future Unplugged Projects.
If you did a smellUnplugged Project this week, then please link to your project post, not just your blog. The reason for this is that we always want people to be able to easily find your post, even a year or two from now! If you did not join in, then please do not link, but you can always read more about how to join in here.
This week’s post is a change from other Unplugged Project posts. The theme for this week’s Unplugged Project was change. We did lots of things this week that involve change, but no real sit down and do it kind of “project.” None of these projects were planned around the theme, they just happened.
Change the world: On Thursday I took my oldest daughter and a few other children from her class to our local soup kitchen to help serve lunch and clean tables. I am leading a community service workshop for our small Montessori school’s elementary class (6 to 9 year-olds). If we want to change the world, we must start with the children. More on this project later.
Small change (can change the world): Of their own initiative, my oldest daughter and two friends have formed a secret club called The Helping Hands Club (The HHC for those in the know!). On Saturday they sold homemade chocolate chip cookies that they made (by themselves) and pumpkins (that they bought with their own money) to a few neighbors and made $21+ in small change for charity! (Reminded me a bit of the great Heifer International Christmas ornament sale a few years ago.)
Change of seasons: It is fall in our part of the world and we walked together on this glorious fall day. The sky was blue, the fall colors vibrant, the air crisp yet comfortable. A fire is crackling in the fireplace now as I write this.
Changing the worm bin: Yes, the worms in our worm bin are still happily eating, reproducing, and pooping. It was time to change the bedding and harvest the castings, so we did it today. The kids love interacting with the worms. We are trying a new harvesting method this time, more on that later if it works.
++++++++++
If you did a changeUnplugged Project, then please link to your POST not just your blog in the Linky below. If you did not join in, then do not link, but you can always read more here about how to participate in the Unplugged Project. We’d love to have you!
The theme for this week’s Unplugged Project was “The Letter B.” We made treasure jars. What is the relationship between treasure jars and “B”? The children decorated their jars with dried beans and barley (and some of our colored rice, not “B,” but pretty!). The Unplugged Project is as flexible as you need it to be.
I just gave the kids some white glue and the beans, barley and rice. Then they chose jars from my packrat collection of “Useful Looking Jars” and went happily to work on their own while I made dinner.
By the way, this is a good toddler project too (great for exercising fine motor skills), as long as you don’t mind mess. I recommend using a vinyl craft tablecloth and having a wet washcloth and a vacuum cleaner nearby.
Here are the results. My 3 year-old made the jar on the left, and my 9 year-old made the one on the right. My 7 year-old son just made a big mess mixing things together, but he enjoyed himself.
I finished by spraying them with an acrylic coating to help keep things in place.
Remember, projects don’t have to be fancy or complicated to be fun!
++++++++++
If you did a “Letter B”Unplugged Project with us this week, then please link to your project post in the Linky below. If you don’t have a blog, you can leave a comment with a description of what you did. If you didn’t do a “Letter B”project, then please read about how to join in here, we’d love to have you!
The theme for this week’s Unplugged Project was wheel. I searched around for ideas and came up with this one which sounded really interesting: a zoetrope!
What is a zoetrope you ask? (I didn’t know what it was either.) A zoetrope works on the same principle as a flipbook, one of those little books where you flip the pages and it looks like an image is moving, but it uses a rotating cylinder to produce the illusion of movement.
I like this definition from Wikipedia: “A zoetrope is a device that produces an illusion of action from a rapid succession of static pictures.” The word zoetrope comes from the Greek zoe (life) and trope (turn), so it is really a “wheel of life,” perfect for our theme!
Then I found a totally ingenious person who made one out of a salad spinner! Why didn’t I think of that? We absolutely had to try it and the result was AWESOME! It is an easy project that produces a maximum “wow factor.” Try it, here’s how:
Use electrical tape to tape off the slits on the salad spinner basket leaving every third slit open. We used 3/4″ electrical tape and that just happened to be exactly the right size for the job.
For images, the salad spinner genius used cutouts of the phases of the moon from a calendar. Very clever but I decided to draw my own pictures.
On a piece of white paper I marked off a series of 3/4″ x 3/4″ squares.
Then, using a black Sharpie, I drew a face with a changing mouth and waving hair, making each image slightly different than the previous one.
The tedious part was cutting out all 26 images and taping them in sequence to the blocked off areas of the inside of the salad spinner.
Finally, using a clump of rolled up tape, stick your zoetrope onto the overturned lid of the salad spinner, centering it as best you can. The zoetrope will be sitting on the rotating disk, and the salad spinner handle will be underneath.
Now for the fun: spin and look through the slots to see the “movie!” The view is best if you shine a bright light into the bowl of the zoetrope.
Hopefully you’ll see from this little 10 second video that we made, how cool this project really was!
Let’s not forget THE SCIENCE:
So how do flipbooks, zoetropes, thaumatropes (a rotating card with a different picture on each side, the pictures appear to combine when card is spun), cartoons, and old time film movies actually work? Many people still believe in the “persistence of vision” theory, in which it is thought that an image remains in the eye for a certain time after the image source is actually gone (ie. the optic nerve is the cause). Apparently that theory is no longer in favor these days. A more popular theory at the moment involves something called Beta movement where the brain itself apparently combines rapidly flashing images thus forming a perception of movement (ie. the brain is the cause). It seems that no one really understands any of this completely, but here are a few informative links if you are interested:
We are in Albuquerque for the long holiday weekend, but we did do a wheelUnplugged Project. I of course forgot to pack my camera cable, so photos (and my post) will have to wait until mid-week when we are home again. I think this is kind of a cool one, so be sure to check back later in the week to see it!
I did want to get the Linky up now though for anyone else who is ready to link to their wheelUnplugged Project.
If you didn’t do a wheel project, then please don’t link but feel free to read more about how the Unplugged Project works here. We’d love to have you join us!
The theme for next week’s Unplugged Project will be another really loose one:
I am "Mom Unplugged," Montessori teacher and mother of three children ages 13, 11 and 7. I invite you to read more about me and my blog here. Thanks for stopping by!