I could not find any batteries a few days ago so I decided to kinda/sorta clean out the junk drawer in hopes of finding some lost batteries. As usual, this task ended up just being a treasure hunt for the kids. One of the more popular treasures I found was a plastic bag full of poetry word magnets from before the kids were born.
The kids were enjoying making sentences like, "Her elaborate spider makes fancy pie," and I saw in this an educational opportunity for the upcoming week. I divided a dry erase board up into the 8 parts of speech (conjunction, adjective, adverb, preposition, pronoun, noun, verb, interjection) with a corner blocked off for "spies." Spies change names (parts of speech) depending on their environment (use in a sentence.) Tricky ones, those spies.
The next day, I had El grab a word out of the bag and place it where it belonged on the board. If it was a spy, he was supposed to use it at least 2 different ways and tell me what part of speech it was as used in those different ways. It was awesome and fun for about 5 minutes. Then it was complicated and confusing. Apparently the fantastic combo of Mad Libs, FLL3, and Grammarland do not a grammar master make.
Today, I picked 10 words out of the bag that could only go into one of the 8 parts of speech section and a few more that were "spies." I kept these 2 groups divided and told him which group was composed of spies and which group was composed of words that would only fit into one part of speech. This made it a lot easier since he wasn't holding up every word and saying, "is this a spy?" Again, he had to use spies in at least 2 sentences and tell me what part of speech the spy took on in each sentence. How much of this was he able to do on his own? Probably 75%. I definitely think it was a good learning experience.
Overall, the project was a success once we simplified on the second day. I wouldn't use this with Em because she has not yet learned the parts of speech well enough to not be confused by my spy section (and the little section I made for articles within the adjective sections.) However, for a third or fourth grader this was a pretty fun and helpful.
(And we still had to go to CVS for more AA batteries. Of course, the extras were then thrown haphazardly into the junk drawer.)