Posts in Educating at Home
Jumpin' On the Workbox Bandwagon- With a Twist
Anything that gets me organized, motivated, and allows me to keep school running (nearly) on its own is a winner of an idea. Sue Patrick's workbox system sounded like a good fit for our family, except I wasn't sure how in the world I would get so many boxes in our schoolroom (plus, my frugal side didn't like shelling out so many clams to invest in them, either). After reading through several great blogs which described how workboxes were being used in other people's homes, I landed on the idea of making work files for two of our children- the 3rd grader and the k/1st grader.  While I am planted in the school room in the afternoons, available to any one who needs my help, these two girls can be working through their files systematically. Here's what we did:

I numbered 4 sets of file folders, 1 through 12.  Each set holds the work to be done for each day, and I figured I'd just organize them for four days and keep Fridays for any make-up we need to do. There are 12 folders for each day because that number gives me a lot of options.

Each folder contains a designated activity or paper to complete.  Here in folder number one we have Rod and Staff First Grade Reading Workbook papers, one per day.

Here's the fun part.  I photocopied the boxes of several of her favorite games and then laminated them.  Instead of having to put the whole game in the file or box, I just drop the card in and she goes and gets the game.

Works for outside activities, too...

...and chores...

...and snacks!

So, what goes into each folder?  For our first grader:

1. Rod and Staff Worksheets 2. Rod and Staff Reading Workbook 3. game 4. penmanship 5.  art or Literature Pockets 6.  math 7. outside activity 8. snack 9. puzzle 10. fold laundry 11. dry erase board 12. tidy schoolroom

And for the third grader:

1. Math 2. Art 3. Pathway Readers 4. Visual Perceptual Skill Building 5.  Cursive 6. outside activity 7. snack 8. Writing Tales 9.Craft 10. Copywork 11. Fold Laundry 12. tidy schoolroom

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Homeschooling Won't Save Your Kids
The board in our kitchen sports a new message every few weeks or so.  Sometimes it's a verse we're working on, sometimes it's a reminder to be kind, other times it's a thought we wish to permeate our lives. This summer we've been camped on one main motto:

We're here to please, live, breathe, and give glory to One.  If what we are choosing to do doesn't glorify God, love Him with all of our heart, soul, mind, strength, and love our neighbor as ourselves, then it ought not be done.  Beyond that, however, is freedom. Freedom from the lists of man.  Freedom from someone else's idea of what a sanctified life looks like.  Freedom from trying to please an audience bigger than One. Recently in our Sunday School time at church (which includes all ages all at once), we were discussing idol worship, and suggestions were given as to what modern day idols might be. "Money!", someone volunteered.  "Sports!", yelled another.  As I sat at the back table with my little ones and a box of crayons I couldn't help thinking, "Those are the easy ones."  Who among us in a church of passionate believers really places those things above God? The idols in our lives tend to creep in under the auspices of godliness: Homeschooling.  Family integrated worship.  Modesty. Ouch.  Did I hurt you?  I didn't mean to.  It's just that the longer I walk this path of home education, the more I see people dropping off the cliff of self-righteousness and formulaic spirituality.  Formulas do not save. Ideologies don't either. Take your children to the cross.  While there, lay down all of those things that stand in the way of Christ's redemptive work in their lives.  Get yourself out of His way.  There is only One who saves, and it is for Him we live and breathe.
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Mega-Planning Strategies
We talked about planning everything for the school year all at once here.  It's a HUGE undertaking, but one that frees you up for the whole rest of the school year.  No more Sunday night planning marathons!  That's worth it, isn't it? Dana emailed to ask me some questions as she was working steadily on her mega-planning this summer.  I thought I'd share our dialogue since I know some of you have the same questions. ♥ Question: After I make the binders with ALL of the photocopies, and I make spread sheets for the subjects I do with them (like history) what do you use to communicate with the kids what you want them to accomplish each day in their individual pursuits? Checklist or spread sheet? I assume you load that into the binder also. Answer: A little of each.  I have spreadsheets that I put into page protectors and that go into binders for the older guys.  They keep them where ever it is boys keep those things.  I have a checklist for the others.  But truth be told, this summer everyone got a checklist that I have been updating weekly.  It's a "quickie" checklist, made with capital "o's" to bubble in and printed out on Sunday nights: Jack- Checklist for the week of August 2nd Breakfast prep               --       --          O           --          O Devotions                      O         O         O          O           O Circle Time                    O         O          O          O          O Chores                          O         O          O          O          O Greek                            O         O          O          O          O Lunch Prep                     --         O         --          --         -- Omnibus Reading            O         O         O          O           O Red Herrings                   O         O         O          O          O Piano                              O         O         O          O          O Fold Laundry                   O         O         O          O          O Weed Trampoline             O         O         O          O          O Clean Timmy's Cage        O         --         --          --        -- Evening Chores & Zone    O         O         O          O         O Garden                           O         O         O          O         O The bubbles, by the way, represent each day of the work week- Monday through Saturday.  Just couldn't get them to line up here on the blog :) Question: Do you ever take apart a book and put it in the binder simply to have it all in one place (to lessen the chance of it being misplaced or lost)? Am I going overboard? Answer: Yes, I do.  Definitely.  And the year I did Story of the World III I interspersed the text pages with the student activity pages and maps, etc., just so I could see what was on tap for each week.  In other words, I took the binding off the book, punched holes in it, then organized it by weekly tabs.  Then I did the same with the student pages and maps, filing them in the correct week as well. Dana and two other friends got together to plan over the course of a weekend away.  You can see what fun they had at Rebecca's blog, Leading Little Hearts Home.
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Marvelous Monday- PHONICS

Our Marvelous Monday series ends today, but you can view all the posts if you haven't caught up.  Click on "Cheryl" to read Cheryl's posts, and click on "Kendra" to read mine.  Brilliant, isn't it???

Preschool and Kindergarten  Cheryl Kendra

Electives  Cheryl Kendra

Geography  Cheryl Kendra

Art and Music  Cheryl Kendra

Foreign Languages  Cheryl Kendra

Logic  Cheryl Kendra

Science  Cheryl Kendra

Handwriting and Spelling  Cheryl Kendra

English and Grammar  Cheryl Kendra

Literature  Cheryl Kendra

History  Cheryl Kendra

Math  Cheryl Kendra

Phonics has been a fairly natural ebb and flow kind of subject in our home.  I find it easy to point out sounds and letters just as we go about our daily life, saying something like, "Let's put on your red shirt.  R-r-r-e-e-d-d.  Do you hear that 'R'?  It makes the Rrrrrrr sound."  I point to letters in print or play rhyming games fairly naturally as we go about life.

For formal phonics, however, we use TATRAS.  I wrote a wee bit about this program in my post on preschool and kindergarten materials.  TATRAS has been a thorough program for us, so much so that I gave the phonics chart a permanent place on our schoolroom wall.

I refer to the chart often in the elementary years because my budding spellers need reminders of what consonant blends make which sounds, etc.  And it seems as if I'm teaching someone to read around here every other year or so :)  In fact, although I don't love teaching reading, I am looking forward to helping my daughters and daughters-in-law with their little ones as they begin to learn to read.

TATRAS begins with a little booklet called The Penny Primer, in which the first eight letters are learned and 43 words are decoded.  It's exciting to get through that first booklet and be able to tell the child that they are reading!

When the entire TATRAS program has been completed, the child is a strong reader, has learned all the necessary phonograms to decode and read anything in the English language, and has had ample writing practice as well.  I personally don't stress the writing aspect of TATRAS, and if I have a child who is particularly aprehensive about writing I ignore it altogether.

Check out Cheryl's final Marvelous Monday post here, and don't forget to visit her blog after this series.  She is a wise woman and I count myself very blessed to have her in my life.

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Marvelous Monday- PRESCHOOL AND KINDERGARTEN

I really don't know anything about preschool or kindergarten materials.  :D

What I do know is that over the course of the past 16 years, we've used a lot, seen a lot, ditched a lot, and loved a lot.  Because this is a subject that could garner a ridiculously long post for me, I thought I'd offer here only the things that have really worked for us.  If you don't see something mentioned, it's likely because we either haven't used it, or we have used it without success.

In the earliest years, I like to offer learning tools that are hands-on.  Preschool attention spans are notoriously short, so if I can get ten or fifteen minutes out of one of these items, I am happy.

Lauri Alphabet Puzzles are my favorite way to purposefully review the alphabet with a preschooler.  The puzzle's bumpy texture and bright colors allow the child to feel the letter, trace the letter with a finger or two, and associate colors as well.

Lauri also makes lower case alphabet puzzles, number play puzzles, and many others: cars, flowers, people, and play packs such as this one.  The price is right, they're pretty durable (ours have lasted over ten years), and the company will replace missing pieces.  Incidentally, I love to put these away as birthday and Christmas gifts; they don't know I'm sneaking "school" in that way.

Wedgits are building blocks that are suited for little hands because they are larger and easier to hold.  The pieces drop right into each other and stack in interesting geometric ways (aha!  math!).  Bonus: they can be thrown in the dishwasher.  Another bonus: older kids like them, too.

Wikki Stix allow preschoolers to bend the little waxy sticks into any shape, including letters (my older kids have been known to write messages to dad on the front door).  Wikki Stix are quiet, mess-free, and intriguing.  Perfect for the car or church, too!

Big, fat crayons.  I'm sure you're familiar.

Preschool in Grammy and Pop Pop's motorhome

♥ Kumon workbooks are a lovely little thing for preschoolers.  Books range in subject from math to rhyming, cutting to tracing.  Workbooks can get a bad rap in some homeschooling circles, but to my way of thinking, they are a nifty way to keep a preschooler happy, productive, and learning.

Our preschooler loves games, too.  And pretty much anything with Charlie and Lola (including pink milk)

Kindergarten is simple here.  I haven't changed my approach too much with each child, except with the last two I have waited to teach reading.  While I was busy helping the older kids, our fifth child decided she didn't need me to teach her and she taught herself to read.  She's an amazing reader, so I'm not expecting the same from the others younger than she.  It was quite a bonus though!

♥ We use TATRAS in our home.  TATRAS stands for "Teach America to Read and Spell".  I love this approach, adore the man who authored the book, see huge and wonderful results, but I do wish it was laid out a little better.  Don't let the book scare you off; it's a bit busy (ie, too many things going on each page), but it works and it works well.  TATRAS employs the vertical phonics method, which you can read about here.

The reason I adore the author is that when I first began using TATRAS nine years ago, I was flabergasted to receive a phone call from him after I had purchased the program.  He wanted to make sure I understood it and knew I could call him at any time if I had any questions.  Six weeks later, he called me again to follow up.  Now that's a man who stands behind his product and believes in what he is doing.

♥ We jump right into Rod and Staff preschool, which is equivalent to kindergarten.  Motor skills, letters, numbers, comprehension, and following directions are all covered in the series.  These books are long on preparation and short on fluff. The illustrations are engaging and the work leads to really solid skills needed for first grade. They are also very reasonably priced.

Don't forget to go see Cheryl's Marvelous Monday post.  We've only one left; these have been fun, haven't they?

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Marvelous Monday- ELECTIVES
Electives.  Wasn't that the category you loved in high school?  Finally, you could study something you really loved or at least wanted to know more about. In our home, electives are chosen either because we see an area of giftedness in a child, the child has a growing interest in something, or because we know it's a skill they'll be thankful for later in life. Case in point: I didn't take typing in high school because I thought something really lame like, "I don't plan to be a secretary; why would I need to know how to type?"  Oh brother.  Proof that parents are wiser.

Let's start with typing :D

We have used Typing Instructor Deluxe with good success in  the  past.  It is a straight-forward program that features the ability to tailor-make a typing program for the student's unique needs.  Unfortunately for us, Typing Instructor does not have a platform for Mac. ♥ When my husband was in dental school, I taught myself to knit.  At the time, knitting wasn't enjoying the popularity it has in recent years, and there just weren't as many lovely books on the subject available.  I checked out every knitting book our library had, pouring over them and soaking in everything I could. My favorite book for beginning child knitters is Melanie Falick's Kids Knitting. Explanations are clearly illustrated and the projects are cute and enticing.  Among my favorite websites are KnittingHelp.com, Knitty.com, and Ravelry.com. ♥ I know I've touched a wee bit on cooking before, but just in case you're looking for some good kids' cookbooks, here are our favorites: Pretend Soup, by Mollie Katzen Paula Deen's My First Cookbook, by Paula Deen Better Homes and Gardens New Junior Cookbook Our copy of Pretend Soup is soiled, dog-eared, and used weekly here.  Such a simple book, such good results.  Even the teenagers drag it out, but don't tell them I told you ;) ♥ If you have a budding draftsman or someone who needs a constructive way to spend some free time this summer, check out Complete-a-Sketch books.  All three of my older guys loved these when they were in the 8-12-year-old bracket, and I think I'll give them to my almost-10-year-old-daughter this summer as well. ♥ I've linked several times to homeschool graduate Amanda McCoy's really fun nature and art kits.  We're a season behind, but my younger kids have all loved these projects.  Several of them have been county fair entries for us, and blue ribbon winners! (I've learned to save the really good projects they do all year long for the fair.  Otherwise, we'd be scrambling at the last minute and that's never fun). If you've got crafty girls and boys, they'll love the projects.  If you have nature lovers, they will too.  It's an elective that can also be counted as nature study and art! ♥ My boys and oldest daughter have dabbled somewhat in woodworking, but we are blessed to have a grandfather on the property who has all the tools and patience they need.  I have some neat homemade gifts they've given me over the years, and just tonight there was talk about asking Pop Pop to show them how to make boxes with locks so they can keep little peoples' wandering hands out :)  They've browsed the Woodworkers Resource site for free patterns and help. Incidentally, asking grandparents to give tools for gifts is a great way to build a stash for your young men and women.  The look of elation on the face of our then-nine-year-old boy when he received his own cordless drill was priceless! ♥ I'm looking for a good beginning sewing DVD or online instruction for our almost-ten-year-old.  Anyone have any favorites? Cheryl's Marvelous Monday post can be found here.  She has at least one child who has exceptional baking skills!
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