Monday, June 20, 2011

Stress Free Summer 2- Activity Passports. Avoiding the phrase "I'm bored!" All summer long!

As many of you know, my 10 year-old nephew lives with us for the better part of the summer each year. He will be here in less than a week. He's a wild little boy with beautiful eyes and the holder of a special place in my heart. I love him. And, quite often?

He drives me nuts.

You see, for some reason, this young boy feels the need to be entertained daily. Every hour. Every minute. The previous summers he has spent with us he has expected daily trips to the zoo or the park or the water park, or visits to a friend's, or visits from a friend, or a trip to the movies, or brand new video games, or trips to the Children's Museum, or something new and grand and different and life changing every single solitary day! ...I can't, I just...I can't... There is NO way I can meet all of these demands requests.

This summer, while considering how I may indeed tie him up and gag him if he repeatedly tells me he's bored and/or rolls his eyes and stomps his feet when I yell, "Nothing!" in response to his repeated "What are we doing today?" questions, I decided to be proactive.

While browsing one of my most favorite homeschool websites, I discovered these cute little passports this blog author and homeschool momma used in a geography unit with her children. I loved the idea of recording a learning objective and then stamping the objective in a "passport" once the objective was met.  I decided to create one for my wild boy, which will be met with much grumbling and complaining. Good thing I have 2 years of parenting and several years teaching experience under my belt which have fully prepared me to not care at all about either of these responses.

Now, the "Passport" I created is not cute at all. In fact it's just three different pages with lists of activities, followed by a recording/stamping page, all bound together in a three-ring folder. You could totally put it into any format you want, though, and even add pictures and clip-art. I did not, but my nephew is quite the little artist so I will tell him to jazz up his folder and the pages with whatever he sees fit! This could be modified for younger children by using pictures of activities coupled with words.

Each page is a different category: Math, Literacy and Free Choice. I chose math and literacy because he still needs to work on some school related objectives during the summer to help his success during the school year, and free choice because he can never seem to think of what to do in his spare time. Which results in him asking me the aforementioned question constantly, which results in me locating the duct tape and threatening his existence, which results in really just a negative atmosphere for everyone.

Anyway, on each page, I listed 12+ ideas that fall in the category, with space to add more as we think of them. He then chooses from the ideas and records what he wants to do that day in the passport section. Requirements are that he must choose at least one objective from reading and math each day, and then he can do whatever he wishes from free choice the rest of the day. He is not allowed to say he is bored because he always has options before him of how to spend his time. At the end of the day, I'll stamp his passport for him, and by the end of the summer, he'll have quite a nice little log (and some cool projects) to show for what he did all summer. Some projects are lengthy and will take more than one day to finish. That. Is. The. Point. :) Oh, and also he'll be enriched by learning and trying new things, yada yada yada.

I tried to make it as fun and creative as possible. Here are some of the activities I listed for him in literacy:

Literacy Passport Destinations:

  • Write a play or puppet show and then make the puppets or props
  • Make a comic book
  • Write a poem
  • Write a story
  • Make a book with illustrations, a cover, a title page, and an author page
  • Make a dictionary of made-up words- don't forget to use ABC order and to tell what part of speech each word is and to use it in a sentence!

Mathematics Passport Destinations: (Disclaimer- is there a way to be fun and creative with math objectives? Someone help me come up with more fun ideas!!)

Mathematics Passport Destinations:


  • Choose a math activity from softschools.com- 20 minutes
  • Play Number Munchers- at least 15 minutes
  • Sort Number Cards by multiples
  • Write and solve at least 5 word problems
  • Write a math story using at least 5 math vocabulary words

And then Free Choice consists of things he loves to do like play the Wii, draw, arts and crafts, making his own snack, playing outdoors, etc.  I'm sorry I don't know how to give you a PDF copy of my Passport yet, but I assure you that the lists I showed are really all it is. Oh- and the stamping page looks like this:


Passport Stamp Page
Date_________________
1. Activity_________________________________
2. Activity_________________________________
3. Activity_________________________________
4. Activity_________________________________



I just stamp the end of the line when he finishes the activity.

I really hope this, and the other fun stuff we're doing this summer, which I'll highlight tomorrow, will be enough for me to avoid the dreaded phrase. We'll see! I did stock up on duct tape just in case.

Oh, and here's the link to the inspirational website!

Wish me luck!

3 comments:

  1. I love, love, love this idea Latrice. Way to be proactive. If I might offer one suggestion though . . (and you know I will with or without permission). . .the activities on the literacy list might be daunting for a boy like yours. Breaking down a big project "Make a comic book" into smaller pieces will seem less overwhelming. Example: Invent a super hero.
    Draw a picture of him.
    Write a list of his super powers.
    Make up five cool gadgets for him to use.
    Draw a 5 panel comic strip telling a story about him.

    Hand him the assignments one at a time instead of all at once. He can do all the activities in one day, but broken down like this it will be easier for him to process/accomplish.

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  2. Good luck! I admire your ambition and creativity. I hope that you'll be in my life to train me when my time with children comes.

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  3. Good luck! You'll do great. The Summer Reading Program at the library also has some ideas that you may want to check out. That way he can also read (I know, I know, every 10 year old boys dream...) but you can win some great prizes by doing it!

    We'll have to make sure you guys come over for some BBQs this summer, we'll break out the football and let the guys go to town playing football out back!

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