Showing posts with label feng shui. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feng shui. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Montessori Home

Okay, I am back....with a slightly different perspective and way of blogging (well, I guess it will unfold as I continue to post new discussions). Currently, I have been trying to make our living space an optimal learning environment for our children. As a family, we have been drifting more and more toward what we have learned from the Montessori method. We are working on creating a space in every room for our children. This includes all rooms: the bedrooms, the kitchen, the dining room, the family/living rooms, any home offices, the bathrooms, the garage, the front entry... We have yet to complete the boys' bedroom and the child workspace in the garage (the kids can participate nearby while Daddy woodworks or works on our car). Even so, things that are "complete" are still just ongoing works in progress, especially when I get new ideas, when toys or materials must be rotated, and when things are outgrown. Here is a brief glimpse at how we have incorporated the children in our fairly small 2 bedroom home.



The living room is one of the most used areas in our home, mainly by the children. A great way to include them in the family living space is to give them some low shelves with some items of choice. Right now, our budget is extremely tight, so we are not able purchase all of the fabulous Montessori supplies, but we are able to improvise using Montessori principles and our own ideas.
I just changed the toys on these shelves. They cater to both Bobcat and Jaguar. Shown is a wooden xylophone and a harmonica, an interchangeable teddy bear and clothing, a basket of building blocks, Autumn trees, nesting cups (Bobcat is really into these right now), a leaf shaped wooden tray holding Autumn produce (apples and pumpkins) in natural fibers, a wooden bowl with wooden eggs, a "tray" of matching animals to that of the wooden puzzle next to it (zebra, elephant, and giraffe), plus an elephant finger puppet, and lastly, a latch board.

This is the cabinet under our TV, which usually is not on. It is next to the low shelf. The top shelf has Caillou alphabet flashcards, a matching numbers game, and homemade color cards in numerous shades (actually, they are Behr paint swatches). This shelf is designated for Jaguar, hence the blue baskets (I decided to coordinate Jaguar's stuff in blue and Lynx's stuff in green). The lower shelf is Bobcat's (and Jaguar's), with a basket of rice and corn bags, and a small collection of wooden cars.

The dining room is one of the other spaces in our home that is most frequently used by us and the children. There is a drawer with a cupboard underneath off on the dining room side of the kitchen counter. The cupboard has become a semi-neat storage space for floor puzzles and board games. The other feature of the dining room is Jaguar's very own "kitchen", which is on the other end of the kitchen table.


This is a fun area for Jaguar because it promotes his independence in serving himself and others in the family. The plant on top is there to add beauty to his space, but it also is there for him to take care of (I have yet to get a small watering can). The bowl of fruit is filled with what will be eaten that day (I got this idea from another lovely home schooling Montessori mom on the internet). On the next shelf, there are a few easily pourable containers with cereal from which to choose and some smaller containers with various snacks. Below that, there are enough plates for us all, bowls, and cups. On the bottom shelf is silverware and a towel for cleaning. I would like to get a cutting board and a small pitcher, as well.

This is a book shelf set up exculsively for Jaguar and Bobcat (Lynx's book shelf is in their bedroom). There is a basket full of board books for Bobcat and on top, there are numerous library books to coincide with whatever theme we are engaged in.



















The hallway has a linen closet that has sheets on the top shelves and also houses crafty supplies on the bottom shelves. This is a great tucked away place, but still very close and accessable for the children. The top shelf seen here is lined with my sheets. The second shelf down has receiving blankets (we use them in the bathroom and for other various things) and Lynx's sheets, so they are reachable for him, though he is nearly my height as it is. The storage boxes on the lower shelves are filled with craft supplies: popsicle sticks, cotton balls, beads, paint supplies, foam, puff balls, pipe cleaners, moss, fabric scraps, ribbon, tissue paper and so on. They also have numerous stamps, markers, colored pencils, crayons, paper, and old magazines and wildlife publications for cutting out images. We keep glue out in the dining/entry in a wooden desk.

In the bathroom, there are 2 large caninets that reach to the ceiling. Jaguar would complain about not being able to reach his brush, so I decided to move his and Lynx's stuff to the lower cabinet on the top shelf (the bottom one is where we store toilet paper). I simply utilized a receiving blanket to lay each of their hairbrushes (remember, Jaguar has the blue theme and Lynx, the green), their toothbrushes, toothpaste (it is Tom's of Maine Lemon Lime) and a bowl of flossers.

This is all I have done currently, but in the future I plan on maybe making a cabinet in the kitchen a place for all of their kitchen equipment, completing their room, and eventually setting up something in the garage so they can sort screws or help Daddy woodwork. The key is to make a space just for them rather than setting up your home with things that are forbidden, breakable, or dangerous. They are free little explorers and they should have access to what is in their enriching environment.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Rearranging the Boys' Bedroom

This last weekend, I decided to go through the kids' bedroom once again to do a cleansing. I took out 95% of the of remaining plastic toys, junk, and character stuff from the last toy cleanout. Most of that is in my trunk, ready to be sent off to the local thrift store. Then, I decided to remove all the movies from the living room (too accessable, and yes, we are still watching movies, though we haven't had TV in about 6 years) and into the top shelves of the kids' closet. I want them to still be accessable, but sort of forgotten as they gather dust up there. I can't remove them completely yet, but it is a gradual process. Although, I did implement a new rule upon starting to formally "homeschool" my preschooler yesterday, which was that he can only watch movies on the weekends. This, I am excited about because I have been bad with this since we moved to our new house a few months ago.

My husband is starting a bunk bed business and he just built a short loft bed for my son, which has a spacious space underneath for just about anything in a young child's world. Right now, all we have done is hang a sarong across the front and put some cushions and animals inside. I plan to refine this, like put playsilks across the ceiling of the "castle" or "cave" part of the bed or hang needle felted ornaments from the wooden slats, or something. This inspired me to do a whole bedroom/living room arrangement. My husband is going to build a tall loft bed that creates an even bigger space below to place a desk or whatever. We are getting rid of the previous bunk bed that was separated into 2 beds and the matching colossal dresser/shelves. I am excited because there is all this open space and vacant room...I can think clear-minded, the kids can play clear-minded. Well it will be filled in with more attractive custom made drawers, kitchenette, fridge, and low shelves. This will be a slow process, but hopefully we can get this all implemented within a couple of months. There is still a bit of rearranging to do, but we are headed n that direction.

Books were another category of items we had too much of. So many of these books that I decided to get rid of were based on movie characters, or were just of lower quality. From 2 bookshelves-full, we ended up with one. So, I moved the low bookshelf into the boys' room as a temporary home for all of their kitchen toys. When I was in there, I gazed at our 9-year-old's bookshelf. I ended up eliminating 1/3 of his chapter books, which were mostly GooseBumps. Now he is left with an array of Newberrys, naturesque books, animal stories, fairy tales, and so on...

Furthermore, the only kiddie things we have in the living room anymore are the couple of Waldorf babies in the corner of the sectional couch blanketed by a couple of fairy play silks, and our developing nature table, which, by the way, gets "rearranged" at least 20 times daily by our 16-month-old...we are working on it. See pic for our nature-table-in-progress. This is great because our old house was dominated by little kid junk! I guess I just didn't really know where to start at the time.

There will be more updates in the future on the updates in our home and life!

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