A Continent Study of AFRICA

Monday 16 February 2015

It’s a month of African studies in the house.  Mavi enjoyed learning about this beautiful continent, its geography, exploring the different places and landmarks, the wildlife and habitats and of course the different culture and practices that makes Africa unique!

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Map and Location.  Just like in any of our continent study, we always start with identifying the location of the continent.  Though Mavi is already familiar of the African continent, he still likes using our Montessori Continent Map, which I got from Tower High Learning.  I got it for a reasonable price and excellent in quality! I purchased a few materials from them and will talk about it in a separate post.

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Plotting the animals in the continent map.  He loves doing this!

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I am so pleased this this purchase of world map puzzle. I got this for 50% off in a local bookshop.  We can work with individual continents or work it entirely. 

DSC_0886Flags.  We love working with pin maps!    This activity is to familiarize Mavi with the different countries in the African continent and their flag symbol.

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We love LEGO and we use them in so many ways! Here, I instructed Mavi to create the South African flag using his LEGO.  This is a similar activity with our Asian Study of flags.  After which, he worked on his African flag nomenclature cards.  The picture card of the South African flag is in the wrong position, reason why I have to remind Mavi to be very careful in positioning flags because they might be interpreted in a wrong way.

DSC_0940 He likes positioning his other “favourite” flags in the plate.

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Landmarks.  Of course, we made our pyramid version using LEGO. This is what Mavi picked because it is easier to replicate.

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Animals and their Habitats.  This is by far Mavi’s favourite.  He’s not yet over with his animal toys and still looooves playing with them.

First one, learning about the different animals in Africa.  Mavi reads the fact cards of my Africa animals and loves talking about it while he play pretends.DSC_0902

If you have a preschooler, it is best to have a matching game. Using animal figures (these are Safari Toobs Wild), match the figure to the picture.

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Or in case the figures are not available, you can still use the picture card and label (3 part cards)  for a 3 period lesson in African Animals.  Mavi still loves doing this even though he can easily read and finish the entire activity in a minute.

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Another favourite activity is matching the animal skin patterns! Wooohooo! Aren’t these cool? Mavi was so enthralled with this! He did a similar activity on this here.  Next time we visit Africa, we’ll paint the patterns!  Your preschoolers will definitely enjoy this!

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Again, if you don’t have animal figures, you can match the animal skin pattern with a picture of an animal, similar to the ones shown here.

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And I asked Mavi to pick between a zebra and giraffe, he wanted to work on zebra… so here’s learning the parts of a zebra!  This will familiarize children with the different parts of the animal, and how it is similar to other animals that they are familiar with.  Another great thing about this activity for preschoolers, it will enhance their reading skills :) 

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And this how we study the habitats of Africa. Using our cards, we recreate the map of Africa with its biomes.  We also identified the animals that live in each habitat. We follow the colour code of our map and cards.africa habitat

Plants.  We use our Plant Atlas file to learn about the plants that grows in Africa. We worked on the Control Chart as well, differentiating the plant life in each continent.

bot_leafchartLanguage.  Mavi worked on this briefly.  I printed this African proverbs from here and we used Montessori grammar symbols to identify the nouns, verbs and adjectives in the phrases.  This is also a copywork in case you want your kids to practice writing.

DSC_0124Culture and Beliefs.  I’ve been doing research about Africa and made fact cards (significant) for Mavi to read and use. We did some of the activities in the cards, like creating African patterns (designs on textiles), researching about the ethnic tribes of Africa and enjoying the beaded bracelet my friend gave me that resembles African jewelries.

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DSC_0272I’m teaching Mavi how to do research.  We do it using the internet as of the moment but I would like to bring him to the library and do it there as well.  We love our tablet and we use it so many ways! He loves how this girl looks.

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And he thinks it is cool to have a lip plate!

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Natural Resources.  We did this last year but was not able to touch it because the boys got sick.

Art.  I purchase art lessons from Deep Space Sparkle and they were all amazing! This one is the Africa art lesson which comprises learning how to make mud houses, giraffes, African patterns and creating your Maasai Tribe.  See how he applied the patterns on the body of the tribe?

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Videos.  We watched the entire series Africa (BBC TV series) on Netflix. The series was beautifully created and entertaining! It was breathtaking! To see all those beautiful landscapes, different habitants, the richness of wildlife. Just WOW.  Watching this video made us want to jump right then and there in Africa! (And a friend also shared a video of Gambia. Thank you!

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Songs.  We listened to a few songs on YouTube and see how the people used some of the native instruments.

 

Stories.  I borrowed this book from the library and you can purchase them at Book Depository[aff.link] as well, free shipping!  They contain lots of beautiful African tales and stories. Mavi reads them at night before going to bed.

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World History. And to complete our unit, we did an Ancient Egypt Study.  These figurines are from the Ancient Egypt Safari Toobs and they are awesome! Perfect for hands on learning!  Read more about it here.

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Here’s a summary of the materials we used in this Continent unit:

  1. African Flags
  2. Africa Animals
  3. Africa Landmarks
  4. Africa in a Nutshell
  5. Animal Habitats
  6. Plant Atlas
  7. African Art
  8. African Proverbs
  9. Safari Toobs Ancient Egypt
  10. Safari Toobs Wild

And that’s about it!!  I hope you can pick up a lot of ideas that you can do with your kids!  You can also checkout my pinterest board for other African activities.  Don’t forget to visit us as well in our other social media sites for updates! Thank you!

Follow Pinay Homeschooler's board Continent Study: Africa on Pinterest.

This post is part of the 12 Months of Montessori Learning which is hosted by Natural Beach Living and The Natural Homeschool.

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Amazing blogs involved in the 12 Months of Montessori Learning

Natural Beach Living ~ The Natural Homeschool ~ Living Montessori Now

The Kavanaugh Report ~ Mama's Happy Hive ~ Study at Home Mama ~ Child Led Life

Every Star Is Different ~ Grace and Green Pastures ~ The Pinay Homeschooler

5 comments:

  1. All I have to say is WOW! Such a fabulous unit! I love how you incorporated LEGO. You have so many fabulous components here!

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  2. I love the use of Lego! We have several boxes and I'm always at a loss on how to add them into our lessons. Great post!

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  3. Wow! I never would have considered using legos for flag work. And using playdough to create biome maps is brilliant. I'm going to need your printables sooner than later. I hope you eventually create them for all continents.

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  4. This unit study on Africa is SO amazing! I love everything about it and I especially love the lego flag. I also love the art and the play-dough maps! Awesome work!

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  5. I absolutely love it! we will be making flags using lego!

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