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Welcome! My name is Mary. I help parents educate their children at home one day at a time. This site offers LEGO printablesfree music lessonsunit studies,  and much more. Use the tabs above to discover what Homegrown Learners has to offer. You will be equipped and encouraged to travel a most amazing path in your home!

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Entries in SQUILT (28)

Wednesday
Sep192012

Music In Your Homeschool With SQUILT ~ Lesson 2/Big Band & The King of Swing

Last week I shared the very first SQUILT lesson with you - about J.S. Bach.    

One of the blog comments last week was so insightful.  The commenter thanked me for the lesson and told me she was modifying the SQUILT page to allow MORE room for writing for her older children.  

I LOVE this!

After time I hope that your SQUILT activities will take on a life of their own... learn more about a composer, or a particular style of music; notebook about the composer's life. Turn it into a composer study

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Sep112012

Music In Your Homeschool With SQUILT ~ Lesson 1 

 I've written about SQUILT before.   Do you remember? Since that post during The Ten Days of Teaching Music series several moms have written to me telling me they are doing SQUILT in their homeschools!   Nothing could make me happier.  

If some of you are using SQUILT in your homeschool (we use it once a week) and enjoying it, then I thought I should start posting some easy SQUILT lessons for you to use with your children.  I will be working through these same lessons with my own children.  As I choose SQUILT selections for them I will share them with you.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Sep122010

SQUILT - Beethoven's Symphony #5, First Movement

(click to hear the music)

This week's music is by Ludwig van Beethoven, a composer of the late classical, early romantic period. You can find out lots of information about him here. Note the similarity between the Beethoven music and Haydn's music. You may want to go back to that SQUILT lesson and listen to the Surprise Symphony again to compare the two.

In this first movement of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony (most symphonies have four movements, or sections, each one being different in character) you will hear a very famous theme repeated dozens of times. Ask the children which instruments they hear. This is an orchestra playing. What instruments can you hear in an orchestra? What emotions do you think Beethoven was feeling when he wrote the piece? Give your older students the SQUILT form to fill out.

There are SO MANY interesting thing to learn about Beethoven. I highly recommend a video entitled "Beethoven Lives Upstairs" for the elementary and even middle school aged child. I have seen it at our local library, and Netflix also has it available for rental.

Other Beethoven resources:


I could literally go on for days about Beethoven, so you can do as much or as little as you want. Have fun with this lesson, and let me know if you found it helpful!

Here's a little funny for your kids: Why did Beethoven kill all of his chickens? They kept saying "Bach, Bach, Bach". ha ha ha

Enjoy!
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