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August 31st, 2007

The Best Way to Learn Geography

I believe that the best* way to learn geography is the way we did it over the years. (Don’t I sound all braggy?)

We read books aloud in the afternoon for usually 1-2 hours, and we used our laser pointer to point out locations on the wall map.

So here’s how it worked: I’d read a book … let’s say He Went With Vasco Da Gama. It was a long time ago, so I’m going by memory here which is extremely faulty these days … okay? So, the expedition started out on the Tagus River. That is in Portugal, right? For some reason, though, I’m thinking the Tagus is in Spain, but I’m almost positive that Tagus was the river at the beginning of the Da Gama book. So, we point out Portugal on the wall map with the laser pointer. We just lay or lie there — whichever is the more proper (lie, probably, but I teach the kids that lying is wrong so laying could actually be more proper, especially for chickens) — and one of the kids will point to Portugal while I say something seemingly inane like, “It’s west of Spain and just north of the Rock of Gibraltar, you know, there by the Pillars of Hercules.” Inane, yes, but also instructive in a sneaky, possibly obnoxious sort of way that some kids don’t notice as being obnoxious.

On other days, I would say other trivial things like “Cape of Good Hope, Verde means green, residents of Sao Tome and Principe still speak Portuguese, Angolans might also, the Pope gave the eastern side of the Line of Demarcation to Portugal.” You get my drift.

Then, because our wall map doesn’t show the Tagus River or which cities prevaricate … I mean lie … on its shores, I pull out Goode’s World Atlas, which is not overly unwieldy, and pass it around. Sometimes, when reading a book with a bit of history in it, we have to resort to a historical atlas because the names and borders of the countries have changed. When we were reading about Cyrus the Great, we initially couldn’t figure out which was the Hycanian Sea.

So, back to Da Gama. We’d read He Went With Vasco Da Gama, and each day we’d get further along on the journey in the book. I seem to remember it ending in Goa, a city/province in India. And each day we would collaborate to retrace the trip that Vasco Da Gama and his men took, trying to remember his stops. I’d read (sometimes the kids read aloud) and we’d enjoy the story and keep track of where the characters were by means of the map and the laser pointer. By the end of the book, we had a pretty good idea of a number of places on the coast of Africa.

Oh, sure, I know that not all of the geographical information sticks, but a lot does stay with you. You’d be surprised. And if all that was gleaned from the exercise was just knowing the locations of Atlantic Ocean, Indian Ocean, Portugal, South Africa, and India, it still puts one a bit ahead of things and starts a framework for future geographical learning.

We also sometimes used a globe on a stand that I found at a thrift shop one day for a measly few bucks. It weighs about a pound and is still surviving. It has been awarded a prominent position in our living room behind a chair. It wasn’t too outdated when we got it. It has Zimbabwe and East Germany on it; the geographically average will be able to surmise the decade the globe was manufactured from that info. Because it’s on a stand, it’s pretty easy for us layabouts to pass around.

We also have two different inflatable globes that we tossed around to mix things up, you know, sedentary variety. After some years, my life partner made a map framed — one side was the US and the other was the world. It actually resides in a type of rack on the wall in the office, and it gets brought out to the living room to be set against the tv armoire during most school days. These maps were the most up to date that we could find even though the globes weren’t. That way we did have a definitive place to look for geographical truth. Of course, now Google Earth takes care of that.

Drats! I just tried to “save and continue editing” and it didn’t save and I lost some content. Drats. I can’t remember what I wrote.

Okay, so, let’s see … after a while I started bringing out my change jar. I’d read aloud and ask questions as I went. I’d ask questions, some geographical and some not, and the first to answer would have a random coin tossed to them. Sometimes I’d ask a specific question of each student and other times I’d give a bonus if the students could stump the teacher with one of their own questions. I’m not sure that it’s really a good idea to drag out the money, not just because I about went broke playing that game, but because I tend to believe that learning itself should be its own reward, Alfie Kohn, and all that. And once you start the whole money thing, it’s difficult to go back to the way things were. It does add a spark to the reading period if you can get the right balance. Grapes could also be the reward if you want to do the reward thing. Marbles. Legos. M&Ms ::Shrug::

I think I got off of the topic of geography. Um. The best* way to learn geography, right? So did it work? Yes, fairly well. I don’t believe that my students need to know the location of every country and its capital. However, something close to that would be ideal. I believe they should know where about 98% of the countries are. (You know, Upper Volta is in Africa, near the Sahara, and Malaysia is a bunch of islands basically northwest of Australia. Mumbai used to be Bombay and Myanmar used to be Burma and the capital of Australia is not Sydney.)

MAIN POINT: I think that geography is something more easily retained when learned in context. When it’s married to a story, it tends to stick around longer. When it’s part of a shared story between family members, then we can together refer back to that information for years thus supplying us with a painless method of review. Oh, I know, this method takes years to implement, but we started early … like from Day One. I think I started it initially because I spent day in and day out with these children and when I discussed country X, I wanted them to know where I was talking about — we needed a common ground, so to speak, when having discussions. A basic geographical knowledge is something that most people should bring to the table; I think most people agree, probably.

In the end, we can use World Discovery Deluxe (discontinued) and Geosense.net or some similar software program to learn the capitals and countries that were missed somewhere along the line. We have a GeoSafari Laptop, too, which provided some enjoyment over the years and can help fill the inevitable, but mostly inconsequential, gaps. And we are currently enjoying Geosense.net quite a bit. You log in (only a user name and password) and play online with others. My daughter and I can even sometimes manage to play each other. It’s not an easy game; it’s actually challenging because time is also a factor. It’s fun to see how close you can get to the proper city. I am awful at all those countries that used to be part of the USSR.

*Of course, I don’t believe that our way is best. I’m poking a bit of fun at “the experts” who have a penchant for telling us what is “best.”

August 17th, 2007

AAAspell.com Is Free Online

I really like AAAmath.com; it’s worth its weight in gold. You can use it online for free or order the CD. It goes way beyond the basic functions of + - x /.

Just recently, the person who gave us AAAmath.com has started AAAspell.com. Just type in the spelling words for the week and your student can practice them online. Of course, I think that other methods of spelling practice should be used in addition to online practice, but AAAspell.com can be another way to keep spelling practice from getting boring — you know, add a little variety to the mix.

We bought two games of Scrabble just so we could have enough letter tiles to spell words for spelling practice.

February 8th, 2007

Can’t Afford Rosetta Stone?

Okay, so maybe Rosetta Stone seems cheap to you at $200+. But there is another program out there in case you just think that Rosetta Stone is couldn’t possibly be worth what they’re charging.

We were using Triple Play Plus years ago when Rosetta Stone first came out … or when we first heard of it anyway. Around 2000 we got the free disk to try out Rosetta Stone — before we bought it. But it was so similar to Triple Play Plus, that I wasn’t ever sure that Triple Play Plus wouldn’t serve our needs just fine. The result was that we never bought Rosetta Stone.

Even now, I’m not convinced that Rosetta Stone is better. Oh, I know it could be and probably is. But Triple Play Plus gives us enough practice that I figure we’ll be fine without Rosetta Stone. We still haven’t gotten to the end of Triple Play Plus in French, Italian, or Spanish.

But if you’re wanting something to supplement Rosetta Stone, you know, something for review, Triple Play Plus (TPP) would be handy. Also, if you’re saving up for Rosetta Stone, you can get Triple Play Plus right now and use it until you can afford Rosetta Stone.

Triple Play Plus can be used by students aged 8 to adult. There aren’t as many languages choices as Rosetta Stone, so that can be a drawback. There’s Italian, French, Spanish, German, Hebrew, Japanese, and possibly others. That’s all I saw listed online. Info on Triple Play Plus is severely limited because the company got bought out and then soon afterward went out of business. So even the software is a little old and, depending on when it was published, wonky.

You can still buy it sometimes on www.ebay.com really, really cheap — for like about $5 - $8 plus shipping. I think I bought our copies of French and Spanish for $50 or so each at Costco. TPP auctions are infrequent, but you just have to go to eBay and use “My eBay” to have notices of when Triple Play Plus goes up for auction sent to your email. I think you do this through “All Favorites” and then “Searches” — at least that how I do it.

Oh, and don’t tell your friends. There aren’t that many copies of TPP out there. Not too many people read this blog, so there are no worries there.

We got the Spanish and the Italian programs to work with Vista by fiddling with the compatability features of Vista. We also have the programs currently running with a little tweaking on XP, but use at your own risk. No guarantees.

And yes, we really like it. No English is used; it’s pictures and a native speaker. 3 levels: Aural, Text, and Voice Recognition. And there are also different levels of progression in those sections, though I’ve not used the Voice Recognition too much.

Funny story: Back in the mid-late 90s, when I had little kids, I was friends with another mom who had lived in France. She had little ones also. So she came over to my house, and my husband and kids went over to hers. I don’t think that’s clear, so I’ll try again. Our husbands took care of the little people at her house, and we ladies got a night off … to goof around with the French Triple Play Plus. Oh, yes, what a wild life I lead.

Actually, though, we were trying to put TPP through its paces. She thought the speaker/announcer was quite good. So we blended ourselves some margaritas and sat down to play one of the games for two people. Fine. It was fun. We heard many, “Félicitations!” and other French words of delight when we clicked on the correct pictures, etc. We were so proud of ourselves.

Then we started the voice recognition stuff with our frozen tongues. We did fairly well, but there was one phrase that we must have tried 30 - 50 times. I am not kidding. We’d say it in French, but the program just kept responding with the French words for “Not quite right. Try again.” It felt like the announcer was only mocking us, though. Being mocked by the French … could that be a little irritating?

We kept repeating something like, “La souris est sous la chaise” over and over again. (The mouse is under the chair.) We knew we could get it correct. We were stubborn persistent, but we did finally give up with some words of disgust like, “This is the stupidest thing I’ve ever seen. And I hate it.” And as the microphone was tossed to the side, the program cheerfully said, “Formidable!” Roughly translated that means, “Finally you got it right, you idiot Americans.” Anyway, we laughed so hard we about fell over.