First Week at Hayati

It's been a lovely first week at Hayati Homeschool and not chaotic at all as I thought it might be - what with new faces, new routines and unexpected issues inevitably cropping up. Must be all that organizing we got done before we started! As I always say about pretty much any situation - you can never be too organized!

This month our learning themes in all languages are colours, numbers (0-5) and the caterpillar into butterfly story. The Very Hungry Caterpillar is our core book of the month - we read it everyday and we have it in English and Arabic. It's a great story both in the way it depicts the magical process of how a caterpillar transforms into a butterfly introducing themes of growth, development and change - but also a great resource for introducing counting, food vocabulary and colours. 

We made butterfly art to hang on the tree

We made our own caterpillars from cotton wool which dried hard after painting. We went stick hunting in the garden and painted them red for the antennae and of course wiggly eyes - what art project is not transformed by sticking on wiggly eyes? The day I found these in a store in Marrakech was a serious art & craft coup I can tell you.
Friday is Arabic day and we set up the book display with Arabic only books. This is the first time the children have heard Modern Standard Arabic, which is very different to Moroccan Arabic known as Derija, which all the children hear at home. Derija is a spoken language and so all texts are written in MSA. We started with books they were already familiar with in English and while they often got up to play with other toys or flip through different books (which we never discourage), our Arabic teacher continued reading and over time the children will get more used to hearing and crucially understanding MSA.


Free painting with sponges and rollers and introducing their names in Arabic


Oh and dancing. Lots and lots of dancing. Children and music are a match made in heaven - music is always my go to activity when I feel things are flagging a bit and they (and me!) need a pick me up. We had a very up tempo rai music session complete with bellydance outfits, tambourines and bells. Needless to say it was probably our favourite activity of the day and what better way to accustom their ears to Arabic than hearing it sung along to rhythmically pounding drums.

In between art activities, story time and imaginative play the children get physical, engaging the world with their bodies crawling through tunnels, going up and down the ladder to the tree house and zooming down the slide

The water and sand table are lots of fun to experiment with (this is a photo taken before anyone has actually played with it) usually by the end of the day the water has turned to a muddy brown sludge, as of course the favourite activity here is to add spadefuls of sand to the water...
And so our first week at Hayati is over and as our family Sunday winds down (Daddy making supper, daughter watching Happy Feet after a long post-rain walk jumping into puddles) I'm working on next week's menu. Pomegranate season has just begun and it makes such a great healthy snack and beautiful garnish for pretty much any dish... I'm thinking sweet melon & pomegranate jellies; vegetable, chick pea & pomegranate tagine; rosewater and almond biscuits decorated with pomegranate seeds; but best of all a bowlful of pomegranate seeds and a spoon!

Pomegranates at Hayati look just about ready

Let the learning adventures begin

We are officially open for the first day of Hayati Homeschool tomorrow! The excitement is building as everything has been dusted, cleaned and put in place. Books that were sheltered in a cool room to avoid the 50C Moroccan Summer heat melting the glue in their spines and causing all the pages to fall out are back on display waiting for little hands to turn their pages, listen to their stories and wonder at their pictures. The crayons, having spent their Summer in the fridge, are back on the shelf ready to turn blank pages into colourful works of art. The old play dough has been thrown out and my daughter and I turned our kitchen into a play dough factory using natural ingredients for colouring such as turmeric and beetroot.


Much to my daughter's delight we have also added a trampoline next to the tent - another way to help develop those gross motor skills!


Now it is time to hurry back to the kitchen to finish off our chocolate beetroot brownies for tomorrow's afternoon snack and let my toddler taste test the fresh tomato and date sauce we made for tomorrow's spaghetti lunch. After all some of the best (and most tasty) lessons are learned in the kitchen!
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...