Posts in Educating at Home
Even More Workfile Resources!

Many of you are familiar with workboxes.  Our family has tweaked the concept to work for us, and two of our younger children (9 and 6) have workfiles they work through systematically each day.  While filling ours for the fall, we discovered some neat new resources:Quiet Times for Kids has neat little thoughtful devotionals that kids can work through on their own. I love reading the answers my youngest ones give. ♥ Jolanthe has created downloadable tags for workboxes and files.  I ♥ Jolanthe ♥ My sweet-mama friend Stacy shared an idea for practicing addition and subtraction facts here.  You can download the pre-made sheets here. So many ways to use these, aren't there?
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Balancing Academics and Life: Wisdom from Elizabeth
I've written several times about one of my favorite authors/bloggers/internet mentors, Elizabeth Foss. I just soak in her blog posts, hoping to absorb her gentle spirit and her deep devotion to the Savior. I am not a Catholic mom, but I have learned so much from Catholic moms like Elizabeth and Holly Pierlot about being purposeful in our prayer lives and devotions. I wrote to Elizabeth several years ago, and am not only pleased that she responded last week, I am encouraged that I'm not the only blogger who finds it difficult to respond to emails in a timely manner!  Can we just redefine "timely" to mean "within a couple of years?" I'd feel so much better. :) Anyway, Elizabeth answered my question,  "How do you think moms can better maintain a balance between academic excellence and the nurturing of relationships with their children?  Are they mutually exclusive?" The answer is good.  Good good. This is why I love reading Elizabeth's blog. ♥ Kendra
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Fall 2010 Circle Time, Part II
So, here we are. We just spent ten days traveling with our three oldest children, spent a day getting unpacked and settled back at home, started school today, and will tear out our kitchen next week. At the same time, God has been sending those BOLD but GENTLE warnings He's so good at, and this time we are hearing two words repeated: GIVE GRACE. GIVE GRACE They pack a punch, don't they?

The highlight of our Fall 2010 Circle Time is our Lamp and Quill Bible Study on the books of Acts, Romans, Galatians, and eight more of Paul's epistles. God has seen fit to move our family out of one church and into another, so we thought it appropriate to study the early church this year. I love the layout of Lamp and Quill studies. Each age level has their own book with questions and activities geared especially to them, so while my junior higher is answering questions about the text, my three-year-old is coloring a picture of what happened in the chapter that week. There are crafts if you want that option, and the study is meaty enough for me. We're also still (still! Year three, I think) working through Notgrass's Draw to Learn the Book of Proverbs, but we remain with it because my four who are doing it love it so much. Maybe one of these years we'll get to move on, eh? But the reason it has taken us so long to get through the whole book is that I tend to toss it into the mix only a few days a week. They literally squeal when I pull it out, though. Lamp and Quill will take up the bulk of the 45 minutes we have set aside for Circle Time, so last on the list for the fall is A Young Scholars Guide to the Composers. I pretty much like everything Maggie Hogan produces, and this one promises to be a good fit for us, too. Coloring pages, links to sample pieces, chronological so I can major on the composers in the time period we're studying this year. And if I'm lucky, we'll actually memorize some poetry from First Language Lessons. Really, we will. I printed out the poetry pages posted at Homeschool Creations and at least they look cute in my Circle Time binder :)

I love it when big brothers read the Word to us

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Bad Attitudes in the Homeschool

Recently found on a notebook

Awhile back I asked on the Facebook Preschoolers and Peace Fan Page if anyone had questions they'd been wrestling with.  The subject of bad attitudes came up: How to deal with bad attitudes at school time. You know, when they cry about having to sit down, be still and get to work?! My children have never, ever had bad attitudes pertaining to schoolwork.  They just dig right in and smile the whole time.  HA!  We've had our share of bad attitudes over the years, and they tend to manifest themselves when a disliked subject is on the schedule. I have had two approaches: 1. "Just do it/Get over it/This is life/You can't always get what you want", and 2. "Go ahead and go sit on your bed until you attitude changes because until it does, I really think you need to be on your bed". Interestingly, the second approach tends to work every time, and in a much shorter time frame than one might imagine.  You would think that given the opportunity to put off schoolwork, a child would choose to sit on their bed for the entire day, but that's not what's happened here.  Every time I've done this, the child has returned within a half hour. That's not to say you wouldn't have a child who'd stay in their room for hours.  You might.  But in that case, my back-up plan was always to announce to Dad at dinner, "Well, so-and-so didn't want to do her math today, so she chose to sit on her bed instead", to which Dad would inevitably reply, "Bummer.  Guess you've got to do it now".  No one wants to spend the evening hours doing schoolwork here; the clear benefit of not going to school is the complete lack of evening homework. Hope that helps!
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Books We Read Aloud This Spring
In keeping with the time period we were studying in history this year, many of our read-alouds were about the Renaissance and Reformation. All were a delight, all I would recommend. The children who were in on our read-aloud sessions (and actually paying attention ;) ) were 12, 10, 8, and 6. If you're reading this post in a reader, you might want to click over to the Preschoolers and Peace site to see the book link buttons.
Set in 1587, Red Hugh, Prince of Donegal is a fast-paced, exciting story of warring between the English and the Irish. Definitely a worthwhile read.
We've enjoyed the Building on the Rock series very much, and How God Stopped the Pirates didn't disappoint. Used in our morning devotions/Circle Time, the readings are short and to the point. Memorable, too.
Soldier Fritz and the Enemies He Fought is a story of the Reformation. Set in 1525, young Fritz learns what it means to live like a Reformer and be a soldier for Christ.
Bartholomew’s Passage is part of the wonderful Advent series written by Arnold Ytreeide. Favorites here: we've done the series twice now.
Before the Dawn follows Wycliffe and Huss, and brings us into the life of a young man named Conrad who must choose between the church he's always known and the words of Scripture.
We read The Year of Miss Agnes because we needed a light-hearted little break from the heavy topics of our history studies. A delightful story of an itinerant school teacher in Alaska and the sweet and funny children under her care.
And then we jumped into King Solomon’s Mines, where adventure loomed large. Got any Indiana Jones fans in your house? King Solomon's Mines' Allan Quartermain was the original Indy. And we laughed out loud, too! My Brother’s Keeper is a series of letters from an older brother to a younger one, writing on various topics. I read it to all the kids because I felt we could all use reminders on being in the Word, serving others, and choosing friends wisely. I highly recommend it as a read-aloud for the youngers, but high schoolers can read it on their own.
From out of the Renaissance and Reformation we headed into the New World. Voyage to Freedom is the story of the Pilgrims' journey on the Mayflower, and in particular focuses on a brother and sister and their point of view. We all liked this one because it didn't soft-sell how difficult the journey actually was, and the story had nice little ups and downs. Hands That Hold the World: the Biography of M.A. Thomas has been an inspiration to me, personally. I see my kids pondering the faith of M.A. Thomas, and I love the discussions we've had around the table about the man and his work in India. I want to inspire my kids to break out of the mold and serve God, no matter the cost. M.A. Thomas has done so in such a way that his steadfastness is awe-inspiring. You can click on the link and download the book for free.
The Shakespeare Stealer is a romp through Shakespeare's London. If this is the time period you're heading into next year, put The Shakespeare Stealer on your list. Orphan Widge learns to write in a remarkable shorthand that takes him into the Globe Theater and changes his life!
...and Shakespeare’s Scribe, every bit as good as it's predecessor!
I've read The Witch of Blackbird Pond twice now to my kids, and I find myself pondering different elements of the story often. That's the sign of good writing, isn't it? Thought-provoking, historically representative, and compelling story-telling.
My adventure-loving ten-year-old daughter adored Island of the Blue Dolphins. The story of a young native woman left stranded off the coast of California, this one will inspire your kids to get out into the backyard and try to start a fire with two sticks ;)
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