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The Socially Conscious Bookshelf

14 Aug

The newest school year is almost here for us, hooray! Is there anything more exciting than opening a fresh box of school supplies and educational materials? Ok, ok, I can think of a few things, but this is definitely in the top 10! I’m really excited about kicking things off, especially because it is the first year of officially homeschooling two kiddos! That’s right, I’m the proud parent of a 6th grader (OMG MIDDLE SCHOOL) and a kindergartener!

Let me tell you though, there have been some serious panic moments about starting off my little kindy girl on the right foot, I’m her first real schooling experience. Talk about pressure. One thing I am absolutely mandating are books that are socially conscious and promote people of color and women in roles that, frankly, are hard to always see. The world is a complex place and I really feel that little ones are capable to understand and act with compassion if given the right tools. That being said, I’ve loaded up on some really fantastic books for our home library to enhance her lessons and life. I did some real searching for titles that were written by women or POC, told their stories, and titles that featured a beautiful amount of diversity with important life lessons.

Lets see what made the cut! I would say these titles range from pre-K through 5th grade level.

 

*Just a note, this post contains affiliate links. I have not been paid for my opinions here, but may receive compensation if you decide to use my links for purchasing.*

1. Ada Lovelace Poet of Science

Ada is credited to writing the first computer language! Using to coincide with her engineering portion of science class. Lots of promotion of science and math for women, talks about how it was not recommended for women in her time.

2. I Dissent, Ruth Bader Ginsburg Makes Her Mark

RGB has garnished mixed feelings, even among activists, but I still really enjoyed this. It talks a lot about her early life and career of bucking gender norms to get to her position and that it’s ok to not be a stereotypical girl.

3. Say Hello!

Really cute illustrations, a Latina girl walks through her city neighborhood and greets people and families in a variety of languages.

This was a random buy in-person, so I wasn’t able to vet the author. I did a little eye roll at the “urban” attempt by the girl’s friends in the park, a kid calls a dog “snoop dog”. Sooooo….lol other then that.

4. Peace is an Offering

Really beautiful book for any time about peace and kindness. Features a diverse range of people. It does briefly mention loss in a few different ways, but does not specifically mention death (implied loss of a pet and 9/11). Safe for secular families.

5. Last Stop on Market Street

Story about a boy and his grandma (POC) riding the bus through their city. The boy is a typical kid, wondering out loud why he doesn’t have things others have or why people are different (tattoos, blind). Grandma has answers that foster appreciation of everyone’s differences and uniqueness. Gratitude and compassion is a theme, the book ends with them helping at a community soup kitchen (not detailed, but pictured). New berry, Coretta Scott King, and Caldecott award winner, written by POC and reflected their life. Lots of diversity. Note: secular families, the book does start with them leaving church. That is the only religious content.


6. Hidden Figures: The True Story of Four Black Women and the Space Race

Same author as the New York Times bestselling novel, based on the novel and not the movie (the movie took some creative license). Very wordy for younger kids, but still really engaging! It discusses segregation outside of the storyline as well. Timeline of NASA and biographies of each woman in the end.

7. Mae Among the Stars

About the first black, female astronaut! It does include how she was discouraged by a teacher and mocked by classmates, but still achieved her dreams. Really beautiful artwork!

8. The Water Princess

Addresses communities without water, but still shows the beauty of the land and people. The story was based on an actual woman from a Burkina Faso that now runs charities to bring water to the people so that the women and girls have educational opportunities.

9. This Is How We Do It

Really cool book! They collected and illustrated the stories of real, modern kids in 7 different countries! They talk about their nicknames, languages, customs, families, etc.

The kids range between 7 and 11 years old, but all are pretty relatable. Nice to see similarities and differences across the globe!

10. If You Were a Kid During the Civil Rights Movement

This one is really heavy imo, but well done. It describes a fictional set of kids in Oklahoma during the civil rights era getting involved with activism. Each page is paired with a real life blurb to bring the fiction to life and show this is more than a story, these are real things that happened. They did not whitewash the fact that police brutality and violence against activists existed/exists.

11. Little People Big Dreams Series

I bought several in this series because they were adorable 😂 they had really great, little kid friendly versions of notable people. We own the books on Marie Curie, Amelia Earhart, and Frida Kahlo. We will definitely be buying more of these!

12. Ordinary People Change the World Series

Another really cute series on notable figures. We currently own the books on Harriet Tubman and Jane Goodall. These are so well done, another series we are going to need to invest in!

13. Nat Geo Wild Animal Atlas

This has really great photos and the book is pretty large. It would be good for reference or circle time/animal unit studies. It seems to be a favorite among homeschoolers!

14. Brave as Can Be

We already own another book in this series about feelings, so I was excited to find this one (especially since we’ve been dealing with monsters under the bed). Not specifically for school, but a good one!

15. Home

Tentative with this. They include realistic homes for animals and people alongside fictional homes and creatures The thing that gave me pause was some potential stereotypes, but I need to investigate more because they aren’t things I’m super confident on. I was hoping to see more realistic homes for the global community aspect. Could still be fun with the fantasy aspect, maybe art projects about fantastical homes!

16. One Family

This is really beautiful with all the different family types! One family is the theme, be it inter generational, interracial, small or large. Lots of diversity!

17. I am Enough

Ok so this made me cry. The book features all girls and is about how they are all valuable and deserving no matter who they are. It shows girls that are ballerinas, but also girls in karate. Science, math, art, and flowers. Another really nice part is the types of girls. So many ethnicities and skin tones represented, in addition to a girl in a wheelchair and a girl in hijab. The natural hair styles features are on point!!!

18. Women in Science: 50 Fearless Pioneers Who Changed the World

My best friend actually bought this for my kids as a gift. Its a fantastic, comprehensive book full of brilliant women, what’s not to love? They also have a Women in Sports book, we’ll be ordering that one soon!

19. A is for Activist

This is not your standard, ABC board book. This book highlights equity, social action, and resistance. It is definitely well loved in our family, I hope it will be for yours. They have an additional book that follow this format of activism for the tiniest ones on the front lines of change!

20. This Little Trailblazer: A Girl Power Primer

This is an adorable book full of women, historical and modern, that have accomplished great things in their lifetime. Obviously, I love a good girl power theme here and this is no different!

Are some of these topics heavy? Totally I really believe that glossing over historical atrocities does a huge disservice to them, so I’m so happy to have these trusted resources. What are some of your favorite woke kids books?

(Not at all) Spooky (but rather very) Cute Halloween Bat Craft

6 Oct

We’ll be making these awesome bats this week! How fun!

Homeschool Gameschool

I’m always looking for inexpensive ways to deck the halls for the holidays. Today’s craft is courtesy of my mother, she brought over a bunch of paper towel tubes that we were supposed to use for a castle 😉

batpin

To make these cute little bats you’ll need:

bat1

cardboard tubes (tp size or paper towel tubes cut into halves or thirds)
poster paint
construction paper
googly eyes
white glue

First you want to paint the tubes the desired color.

While the paint is drying draw the outline of bat wings onto construction paper, we printed a template out from the internet, there are tons out there!

Cut the wings out and decorate as desired.

When the paint is dry attach the wings to the back of the bat with white glue.

Glue on some googly eyes and you’re done! Cuteness overload!

bat3

TIP: If you do like things on the spookier side…

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Kiwi Crate-September!

6 Oct

I have a minor love affair with subscription boxes. The idea of getting something fun in the mail every month excited my inner child like none other. Lets not forget that I actually *have* children that share the excitement of getting the mail. Kiwi Crate has sealed the deal with getting my business! Most boxes cater to the 5 and under crowd, so they already win by providing items for my big kid. It is a monthly box full of crafts! They provide all of the supplies needed and all kinds of extra goodies! Take a peek! Continue reading

We’re officially homeschoolers!

30 Sep

Yes, we’re now one of *those* families.

I was once like you. Sitting there on the couch, raising an eyebrow when the word homeschool popped up. That was until I stopped worrying about what everyone else thought and took a good look at our life. Was the Bug’s school really the best place for him? Not really. If not, what were my options? Public school, private school, homeschool, and each came with their own set of pros and cons.

Husband and I are educated people. Why could’t we play to our strengths and school him ourselves? Luckily enough, I have a good number of friends that homeschool and one in particular had some great conversations with me about it. One of the big sticking points was that with public school, a child goes a mile wide in topics, but only an inch deep in all of them. With homeschool, you have the option of going inch wide and a mile deep. No moving on when the child has more questions for the sake of getting through material for the big test. For my kiddo, that is huge. He loves research.

Either way, we made the leap and are pretty happy with it. I’m calling it our one year experiment. We’ll reevaluate at the end of this school year (sooner if need be) and go from there. Don’t worry he’s plenty socialized. Between field trips and play groups, he is definitely taken care of.

Sooooo yep. Now I can share all of our homeschool awesomeness!

Strasbourg, France -As told by Nate

31 Jul

Nate wanted to write in the blog, so I told him that I would type whatever he wanted to tell us about our most recent trip to France. Enjoy 🙂

All us were on a train and us went on a train journey to Wisemburg. Then I had a lot of fun. We got some baguettes and a ham sandwich. Jambon is how you say ham in French. Then we hopped on a train and we went to a town called Strasbourg and we got beignets! Beignets look like hamburger buns, they are squishy and sweet like donuts and they have sugar crystals all over them. We ate a lot a lot of the beignets and got some to eat on the train home.

We went to a big, big church and I had to be very quiet in there. There was a big clock and a skeleton rode around and hit bells on top of it. There were very cool statues, too. There was a lot a lot of people in there. Then we went out of the church and I got to eat more beignets ‘cause I like them.

We went to La Petite France. That means Small France. I got to play in a park there. Some kid was trying to talk to me, but I don’t know what he was saying. We had dinner in a restaurant and I had a yummy sausage and some French fries and some ice cream.

Then we hopped on another train and go home. The end.

Getting settled in

11 Jun

We survived our first full week here and things are becoming a little easier. We’ve got our routine down and know where basic things are. We’ve located several grocery stores and farmer’s markets, we are friendly with the cafe around the corner, and we know where at least two really great playgrounds/parks are. The language barrier is still a little bit rough, but I think that was going to be difficult no matter what we did, save from spend a year taking formal German lessons. Either way, we make do. As long as we’re polite (which we always are!) no one seems to mind our flubs in language. Only once did I panic and whip out my tourist phrase book, panic some more when the words I needed weren’t there, and then start miming what I needed. The poor pharmacist eventually understood that I was itchy from an allergic reaction and got me the medicine I needed!

As for Nathan, he does just fine. Kids have an odd way of communicating with each other anyhow, so naturally they would find some way to get the point across on the playground. Today was especially cute though. Nate was playing in a sandbox and as usual, the other children were skeptical about him at first since they realized we were speaking a language that wasn’t German, all except for one little girl that kept coming closer to me and smiling. So eventually I kneeled down and said, “Hallo!” Well, that was all she needed to hear! She stood up and let me know that she can count in English! Then she counted to five very proudly. “Sehr gut! (very good) Super!” I told her. I told her that I spoke English and was American. She was very excited that she got to show off her English skills and then told me that she spoke German and was from Germany 🙂 It was too cute.

3 Jun