How I create a unit study -- using our Australia unit study as an example
I have
been asked how I go about creating my own unit studies, so here we go. This
could get long and if you have no felt need for knowing this, you may want to
click on over to the next blog for today. I realize there is only a small
segment of the population who needs, or even wants, to know this stuff.
I know that there are many, many
(Ack! I can't help myself! This has become H.'s pet phrase and she uses it all
the time... I find it creeping into my speech as well.) unit studies out there
that you can either purchase or look at for free. And sometimes that's great if
you are short of time or energy or find the perfect one. The trouble is, I
rarely find the perfect study already planned out and I end up planning it out
all over again anyway. Plus, I'm cheap and hate to pay for something that I
could do on my own. I try to use the library as much as possible and only buy
books if I absolutely can't find something elsewhere that I really need.
So, what do I do? First, I have to
come up with a topic. It can be anything. Really, anything. As long as someone in
the house is interested in it. (I'm a little odd and for fun sometimes think of
a topic and mentally plan how I would go about creating a study out of it.) It
can be a period of history, a single topic, a field of study, or even based on
a piece of literature (my favorite type). What have we done in the past to give
you some examples? Nearly every period of history, Lewis and Clark,
lighthouses, the seashore, American Indians, the Santa Fe Trail, the solar
system, volcanoes, and the Mississippi River to name a few. Some examples of
studies based on literature include The
Swiss Family Robinson, Around the World in 80 Days, Captain's
Courageous, Johnny Tremain,
Kon Tiki, and The Wheel on the School. If a child expresses interest in something I file it away
for future use. Or if I come across something I think would be interesting I
save the idea. Or sometimes we just start reading a book and become so
engrossed in it that we turn it into a full-blown unit study.
Once I have my topic, I start
brainstorming ideas. Sometimes this is easy, if I happen to know a lot about a
topic, sometimes I have to do some research first to give me a start. This is
what happened when I planned our Australia study. I knew Australia is a
continent and it's basic history and that it was home to some really unusual
animals, but, truly, that was about it. I decided we would learn about it
because I wanted to correct this oversight. I needed books. One plus of writing
a blog with a fairly wide readership, including readers in Australia (Hello!), is that I could ask for book recommendations. I discovered that there is
probably a really good reason why I felt as though I knew nothing and that's
because we just don't hear about Australia much up here. Anyway, my Australian
readers were very helpful in heading me in the right direction. The one thing I
couldn’t find was a long, meaty chapter book, but I was pretty happy with what
we ended up with. Here is the list:
·
Are
We There Yet? By Alison Lester
o
A
family takes a car trip around Australia
·
Storm
Boy by Colin Thiele
o
A
boy and his father live on the Coorong and care for a stranded pelican
·
Ranger’s
Territory: The Story of Frank Woerle
told to Colin Thiele
o Memoir of a man who was a ranger in
the wilds of northern Australia
·
Top
to Bottom Down Under by Ted and Betsy
Lewin
o
Animals
native to Australia and their habitats
·
Possum
Magic by Mem Fox
o
Tells
about the different food common to various areas of Australia
·
Lizzie
Nonsense: A Story of Pioneer Days by Jan Ornerod
o
A
sweet story of a pioneer family
·
Ready
to Dream by Donna Jo Napoli and Elena
Furrow
o
Set
in Alice Springs and has examples of Aboriginal art
And for
fun:
·
Diary
of a Wombat and Diary of a Baby Wombat
by Jackie French
·
Wombat
Goes Walkabout by Michael Marpurgo
·
My
Grandma Lived in Gooligulch by Graeme Base
Now
it’s time to go through the books and figure out how they will all fit
together. I chose Are We There Yet?
as our main book because it is the story (in picture book format) of a family
who takes three months and drives around Australia by car and describes the
things they saw on the trip. It was an excellent way to make our way around
Australia. I decided we would read just a page or two of this book at a time
and then do other activities and readings that matched each place we ‘stopped’.
Each study I plan and set up a little differently, but in general, I have
chosen one or two books to serve as our tour guide and then add to them as we
go along. A mainstay for us has been the Chicago Review Press books of
_____________ for Kids. I highly
recommend them.
Once
I have my books and in general figured out how I am going to make it make
sense, it’s time for the fun part. By learning this way, you can cover almost
every area of learning… literature, science, geography, history, art, music,
etc. OK, I’ll admit I have trouble fitting math in, but you know how I feelabout that already. Now is the time when I try to come up with as many hands-on
activities as I can. We’ll usually do map work, add to our perpetual timelines,
do some art projects, some science experiments, listen to music if possible,
and do some cooking. I’ll also try to work in some creative writing activities. It’s the whole package.
The
last piece that needs to be figured out is how to document it all. We’ve done
different things. We’ve made lapbooks (my children’s favorite), used blank
books to keep track of things, done a big final project which can
incorporate all we’ve learned, posters, dioramas, etc. It can be anything, but
I find it helpful to have a way for my children to keep track and show what
they’ve learned.
With
all that background, I’ll now just write out how we actually did our Australia
unit study using the books I listed. We used blank books to record what we
learned, taping any maps in that we made.
I
began by reading (out loud) some general books on Australia of the ubiquitous mid-grade,
non-fiction type which populate libraries. (J. and I have written on ourselves,
so I feel quite comfortable in being a little denigrating towards them.) While
uninspiring, they did serve the purpose of giving everyone a general sense of
what we were going to learn about. I also printed out a blank map of Australia
and we labeled it marking the territories and surrounding oceans to begin with.
Then
we began the Are We There Yet? book. The first stop was Adelaide and the
Coorong and so we labeled these on the map and read Storm Boy which is
about a boy and his pet pelican. (Warning, my children really liked it, but the
ending is a bit sad.) From this point on, if we came across a word or term we
didn’t know, we added it to our vocabulary page in our blank books. Also, we
made a section for animals and if we came across an animal in our reading we
added it and wrote a little about it. (I did have quite a few non-fiction
Australian animal books on hand to facilitate this.) The other book we read in
conjunction with these was Top to Bottom
Down Under. But since we were travelling ‘bottom to top’, we read
the book backwards.
And
so we travelled around Australia in this manner. We traced our route on our map
as well as labeling cities and landmarks. We wrote about animals and drew
pictures of them. And filled in with our other books as it made sense. When we
got up to the top we read the book about Frank Woerle and his experiences being
a ranger in northern Australia. (Please, since my sensibilities probably differ
from yours, preread any books I suggest to be sure they are a good fit for your
family. I am pretty comfortable reading a very wide range of things to my
children because I am able to discuss it with them at the time. Do what you
feel is right for your family.)
Our
activities included:
·
Learned about the bush poets,
specifically Banjo Patterson. We particularly enjoyed "Mulga Bill’s Bicycle" and
I had everyone draw illustrations to go along with it.
·
Listened to various renditions of
Waltzing Mathilda (lyrics by Banjo Patterson)
·
Looked at Aboriginal dot painting
and then trying our hand at making our own
·
Listened to didgeridoo music
·
Watched a DVD documentary on the
Great Barrier Reef
·
Prepared and ate various typical
Australian dishes
·
Marked the different ecosystems
of Australia on our maps
·
Added important Australian dates
to our timeline books
We
all do this together, though I often have my high schoolers do the same topic,
but have them read different books. This way we can all discuss what we are
learning at dinner and no one feels left out. Well, maybe J. does, but we fill
him in on what we’ve learned. For B., I
had him read Bill Bryson’s book, In a Sunburned Country, which I also
read. (My disclaimer stands here as well. Mr. Bryson can be a bit blue at
times, but I find him both informative and entertaining and anyone who can make
me laugh out loud until I cry is OK in my book.) If we had been doing this
during the fall or winter when things are a bit more serious I would have also
had him read The Fatal Shore: The
Epic of Australia’s Founding by Robert Hughes and had him watch “Rabbit
Proof Fence”. I just wasn’t up for that level of seriousness in the middle of
summer.
Here’s
the short version of how to do this unit-study-thing:
1. Pick
a topic
2. Find
books. I like a really meaty story if I can find it.
3. Sort
out how it fits together. It can either be done chronologically to match a
story or geographically to match a plan of travel. Just a way to sort the
information in a way that makes sense.
4. Plan
activities. Think of all the different areas of learning and see what you can
fit in. Don’t forget creative writing or memory work. (We’ve memorized a lot of
poems as we’ve learned this way.) The more hands-on the better!
5. Record
what you’ve done in some way. It doesn’t always have to be just written out on
a piece of paper. You could even make a family movie of what you’ve done
together.
6. Have
fun and be excited. The world is a wonderful place and it is a thrilling job to
show God’s wonderful creation to our children.
___________
___________
Comments
e
Kim Crawford
When I plan (or if I plan) really depends on the topic and type. More often than not, if it is a book-based study, and we've started it because we're all just really interested in it, I plan it as we go along. This is sort of what I did with Kon-Tiki or The Swiss Family Robinson. For example, in the Swiss Family Robinson, at one point the father used levers to do something, so then I looked up some activities about levers and we did them.
For the unit studies we are currently working on, I spent an insane two weeks (for the rest of the family... I completely enjoyed myself) where I did nothing but plan the upcoming school year. I did as much detail as I could and wrote it all down.
Usually most of somewhere in between. I do a little planning but add in things as I think of them as we are working on it.
For the electricity study we're going to be starting on, I think I will have to take a bit of time (probably evenings or a weekend) and really plan it out because of the experiment-heavy nature of it. I need to figure out what exactly we're doing so I can lay in supplies. (And books!) It is a bit outside of my knowledge base, so I feel I have to prepare more than I would for something else.
Does this help?
e