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Archives for 2015

Winter Homeschooling – Activities and Free Downloads. 5 Days of Look Alive. Day 1- Look to the Sea.

September 14, 2015 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I actually like winter homeschooling, but I also like change. So when I need inspiration I look to the ocean or sea to inspire me. Did I tell you that I grew up close to the ocean?

I have fond memories of walking on the beach even when the weather was cold, collecting shells and afterwards grabbing a hot cup of southern gumbo. It brings calm to my day when I ponder about it.

Creating this series will allow me to share ideas I rounded up to give us a boost when we sag, while at the same time saving these links and ideas here on the blog for later.

I tend to get a lot of attitude pep in my step this time of the year.

One tip that has saved me several bucks over the years is to determine first if it’s the curriculum, winter homeschooling doldrums, my attitude or all of it when we feel like blah.

Before I make a change, I try new activities, preferably free and see if I can find my rhythm again. I find many times, it is wanting a change during winter homeschooling.

5 Days of Look Alive Winter Homeschooling. Day 1 Look to the Sea. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

But, if you get the blahs during winter homeschooling, maybe you can use some of these links and get wild and savage.

Winter Homeschooling – From Humdrum to Humdinger. (well, okay, okay)

Too, be sure to download everything you like from these sites because links can change and even if you don’t use them until several years down the road, you will have them.

The sites I wanted to focus on today are Independence Seaport Museum. and Project Oceanography  and The Mariners’ Museum. All of these sites have multiple packets, free lesson plans or guides to download.

Hands-On Homeschooling

A lot of them with tons of wonderful pictures and printables. I took just a snippet of some of the printables from each site to share with you. Mark these, download and peruse them.

Independence Seaport Museum has teacher packets available for free from grades K – 12.

Download here K to 3 Teacher Packet.
Download here Grades 4 to 6 Teacher Packet.
Download here Grades 6 to 8 Teacher Packet.
Download here Grades 9 to 12 Teacher Packet.

Free Downloads from Independence Seaport Museum @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Free Downloads from Project Oceanography @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Also check out the free online resource How to Identify Sailing Ships on the site. A

wesome. You better take your time on this site too. Project Oceanography has about 14 Program Packets on the right side of the page.

Snippets of Free Downloads from the Mariners Museum @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Click on each packet and you will be kept happy sorting through links, lesson plans and downloads. A snippet from The Mariners’ Museum has quite a few projects that are hands-on and in pdf form. Scroll to the bottom of the page for the printable activities.

This is probably my favorite of the three sites because it has such a treasure trove of things that are easy and hands-on.

Ready for winter now.

Oh, wait, four more days of goodies to go. Here they are below!

5 Days of Look Alive Winter Homeschooling. Day 1 Look to the Sea. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured

Hugs and love ya,

Also, look at 50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days and Winter Season Unit Study.

7 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Look Alive: Winter Homeschooling Ideas & Free Downloads, Science, Science Based Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolinginwinter, homeschoolscience

How to Turn Boring Worksheets into Fun Minibooks – From Boring to Interactive

September 13, 2015 | 10 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

How to turn boring worksheets into fun minibooks is a great way to make worksheets go from boring to interactive.

I have been hankering to share a few more of my lapbooking how-tos because lapbooking is something I totally believe in up to and including the high school years.

Oh sure, it can be crafty, but if you have been following me for any length of time you know it’s the appeal of wild, unrestrained learning that appeals to us and not so much the crafty part.

How To Turn Ordinary Worksheets into Fun Minibooks. A great way to include your middle and high school students in lapbooking @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Read my article here, Beware of the 3Cs of Lapbooking.

What does this have to do with today’s post, how to turn boring worksheets into fun minibooks?

Well today, I have a quick and easy, but very useful tutorial of how you can turn any page into a minibook.

Hands-on Homeschooling – Lapbooking

I will share a few reasons why this tutorial has been so handy for me through the years, but first look at this easy tutorial.

Grab any sheet you want to include in your lapbook.

1. Grab your worksheet to go in your lapbook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Fold it in half long ways.

At this point too, me or the boys eyeball about dividing it into fourths.

2. Fold the worksheet in half longways @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I usually do like an accordion fold back and forth.

3. Accordion fold and put outside cover on minibook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Only the part of the worksheet that is the back of the accordion fold is glued to your lapbook, not the whole length of the page.

Your child can create his own cover, like Mr. Senior 2013 did above or you can create a cover for the minibook.

Including Middle and High School Students When Lapbooking

There are several reasons why I love this easy tutorial.

  • If lapbook topic printables are too babyish for your middle and high school students, you can still include your older kids by having your kids write a page or by you creating a worksheet for them.

  • Also, there are a wealth of freebies that my boys may want to include in the lapbook and we can still add them as minibooks. No sense reinventing the wheel.

  • There is no need to choose between notebooking and lapbooking, you can just simply add your notebooking pages to the lapbook.

The worksheets turned minibooks suddenly elevated a boring worksheet into an interactive tool.

I have always touted the benefit of hands-on learning even up to high school.

Also check out Free Lapbooking Resources.

And lapbooks are a way to present informational not only visually, but in a way that appeals to a child of any age.

Do you want some other creative ways to homeschool?

I hope you enjoyed this quick tutorial, which is useful for many lapbooking topics.

Hugs and love ya,

10 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Lapbook, Lapbooks

5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids

September 12, 2015 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have 5 free and fun hands on science activities for homeschooled kids.

About this time of the year when fall and winter start setting in, I always like to share some freebies that give me a quick and free (always nice) way to change my pace.

Okay, okay, you know I love freebies and I always store them and organize them so I can share with you too.

5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids

With all the wonderful free educational things online sometimes it can take long to sift through the ones not worth messing with and the ones that can add enrichment to your day.

So I have done that for you today.

Since they are free too, they are great options to even just drop what you’re doing and switch gears.

Change is good and when change in curriculum is free, it’s pretty sweet.

Remember, download each guide and keep it because all the downloads are just full of fun things and ideas to do.

Besides, some of the freebies go away after a time.

So today, I have 5 free and fun science activities for homeschooled kids.

Okay, maybe I have a bit more as I started collecting.

5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids
5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids

1.Alaska Songbird Institute has a Creamer’s Field Student Activity Book. Free 28 page download.

This is a fun way to learn about birds with the little guys and for the kids that like to color.

Though it’s a guide for that area, it has several different birds in it like geese, ducks, birds of prey, cranes, chickadees and sparrows.

Each page has a color number code so you know what color to color the bird.

Just print off the guide, do with your children and enjoy.

5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids
5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids

2.This guide has already been archived so you want to be sure  to download it.

This next free 23 page .pdf download is intended to be used in a nature reserve, but it has so many excellent pages.

From habitats, to bird beak matching to dormouse and bird identification sheets, it is full of activities.

You can even scoot out doors to see if you can find some of these shrubs and trees in your area.

MORE FOURTH GRADE HOMESCHOOL CURRICULUM ACTIVITIES

  • 35 Simple But Powerful US History Homeschool Curriculum Resources K to 12
  • The Best Fourth Grade Homeschool Curriculum | Tips and Recommendations
  • Easy Hands-On Science: Label the Atom Playdough Activity for fourth grade
  • 5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids. Free Science Guides.
  • Do Homeschoolers Need to Know What is a Scope and Sequence 4th Grade
  • The Dos and Don’ts of Homeschool Objectives – fourth grade writing objectives

It has a sheet for a newt lifecycle, hummingbird moth lifecycle and a bramble lifecycle.

From beginning to end, it’s a cool  download full of helpful and interesting tidbits.

5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids
5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids

3. Another favorite of mine is the New England Aquarium site.

Winter would not be complete without talking about penguins.

I have used the Penguin Teacher Guide and love it.

Why create any extra printables when they are all there for free and nice?

It includes information on the various penguin species, penguin anatomy, behavior, habitats and conservation.

5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids
5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids

4. The next freebies come from the Boston Harbor area.

Activities are for upper elementary to middle school age.

It has a lot of background information and a couple of ideas for hands on activities if you are studying about tides and plankton.

It has information about the rocky and sandy shores, tidal mudflats, salt marshes — and the creatures such as harbor porpoises and seals, fish and waterfowl, mussels and kelp that inhabit them — that are accessible from Boston Harbor, or any New England coastal area. 

5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids
5 FREE and FUN Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids

5. Next are SEVERAL pdfs on this page from the Florida Sea Grant program.

There are about three .pdf downloads of plant name cards for studying about beach plant life and one about Coastal Plants.

They would go well in a pocket on a lapbook or a notebooking page.

5 FUN and FREE Hands-on Science Activities for Homeschooled Kids @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

There is third grade curriculum about manatees and fourth grade curriculum about whales and dolphin.

I also love the 21 free food web cards on the Estuary Food Web Activity .

We haven’t done the edible estuary that is for grades K to Gray, (love) but we are eyeballing that one.

Grab the beach coloring book and the beach scavenger too off that page.

Also, there is a free curriculum about sea turtles for middle and high school.

Grab ’em and enjoy.

Also check out 50 Keep Me Homeschooling During the Long Cold Winter Days.
Middle School Homeschool Science 50 Free Spring Activities.
Easy Hands-On Science: Label the Atom Playdough Activity.

Hugs and love ya,

7 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Middle School Homeschool, Other Unit Studies, Science Tagged With: earthscience, freeprintables, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, life science, science, sciencecurriculum

Homeschool Tips for Teaching a Young Writer to Take his Ideas from a Trickle to a Waterfall

September 11, 2015 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have some homeschool tips for teaching a young writer. Look at this question.

Hi Tina, I really enjoy reading your emails. This is my first year home schooling and you’ve really helped a lot. My son is 9 & is now enjoying learning.

He loves being home schooled also. I do have a question tho and hope you can help me. When doing projects with my son. He has a lot of ideas. Or when he learns something & it gets his interest sparked.

We have really great discussions. But when asked to put those ideas on paper and summarize a paragraph, that’s where he has trouble. I’m finding that he knows the curriculum, but just can’t compute getting his thoughts down on paper. What can I do to help?? Any suggestions??

Homeschool Tips for Teaching a Young Writer to Take his Ideas from a Trickle to a Waterfall

Thanks for sending in your questions and I sure try to get to all of them.

This one really struck at my heart because part of my homeschooling journey has always been about helping others and it is part of who I am.

Too, writing can be a subject that strikes fear and makes a young writer’s hand go limp. As parents too we may have been taught that writing can be subjective so that adds to the mystery of this subject.

However, there are basics to writing and it does not have to be subjective to each person’s view.

Some helpful background information to remember is that writing is about many skills being used at the same time.

How to Conquer the Fear of Writing

There are two basic types of writers. You noticed I said writer, not writing. Big difference.

One type of writer is creative and the other type writes about facts. I think if you excel at one, you tend to struggle slightly with the other.

Knowing just that key fact can unravel a lot of the mystery with writing because you can help your child identify his writing self.

For example, does he like to write a lot of stories drawing on his imagination or does he prefer to write about things he already knows about? Identifying his strong points helps you to hone in on his weaknesses.

Creative writers crave to write and sometimes can’t wait to get other things out of the way so they can use the rest of the day to write.

Writing is an art to them and rightly so because they are talented. It has been my experience that talented writers emerge at an early age.

Factual writers are strong writers too because they can use direct and meaningful words to explain and teach points that can impact people’s lives.

A creative writer may struggle to get to the point he is attempting to make.

Giving our children both skill sets equips them for a lifelong love of writing and it does not have to be a woeful experience.

After identifying your child’s strong points, the next point to realize is that the physical act of writing can be painful too.

Homeschool Tips for Teaching a Young Writer to Take his Ideas from a Trickle to a Waterfall

Not only is writing about using mental skills, but it also is about the physical act of the process.

Looking at this from a new writer’s point of view, he has to use tools like grammar and spelling that you have been teaching him in addition to the physical act of pushing the pencil.

All of this can be enough to bring any writer to tears.  What is the solution?

Break down the process and do not hold him to all of these standards at one time. 

The writing process of draft, edit and publish is a long and tedious process for a new writer to understand.

Let him lounge in his thoughts and you do the actual writing of brainstorming ideas. This breaks the writing process down into smaller pieces.

Boys especially can lag behind girls in the physical process. Give love and praise for any effort that is put forth, but do a little each day.

Working a little each day on the process is key.

Do not work on all of these skills at the same time at this age either.

When he is writing, do not have a mini spelling lesson with him as well. Give him the correct spelling of the word and go on instead of quizzing him on that too.

Thoughts have to be put to paper while they have been ignited. Don’t make him suffer learning to spell alongside writing. Not just yet anyway.

As he gets older, your standards will get higher as you expect him to know how to spell as well.  The same rule of thumb applies to grammar. Give him an adverb without explaining that one ends in a -ly so that his focus remains on his noble and beautiful ideas.

Be sure he understands that writing is not a one day event. 

This will go a long way in him accepting this as a process. Unlike completing a math worksheet for the day, writing needs to be spread out over several days and even weeks. Make your expectations clear so he does not have a different standard for himself.

Look at these 4 ways to help with the physical part of writing.

  • If the struggle is with the actual physical process of writing, then introduce typing at an early age.

Teaching a Young Writer

Also, cut back the number of sentences to do for the day. Writing is about consistency and quality over quantity. One or two well written sentences are worth more than five sentences where you have not a clue what he is expressing.

  • Tiny uses the iPad and still does to this day to type his draft after he pencils an outline.

Typing his thoughts down on the iPad as he moves along keeps the focus on content. Part handwriting, part typing works.

Some children and writers are visual learners and we live in a visual world.

  • Visual graphics are sometimes key to helping children understand the process.

This age is not too young to delight in fun graphic organizers.

Houghton Mifflin has some graphics here.  Keep the writing varied by sometimes using just a fun graphic organizer like a sandwich organizer instead of always making paragraphs.

Even high school writers need graphic organizers to get a picture of the process, so keep using them.

  • Use a voice to type software like Dragon NaturallySpeaking to keep the initial draft at minimal penmanship skills so the focus remains on content.

Realize that sometimes everything doesn’t have to be reduced to writing. 

You are teaching a child not a curriculum so move away from the instructions of the curriculum when you need to.  For example, I have used a lot of Charlotte Mason tips on narration.

When a child can explain back what you are teaching, it is not always necessary to reduce that to writing.

The most grueling part of the writing process can be recalling information and brainstorming.  If your child is doing this well, then as time goes on he will learn to put those thoughts on paper.

Praise the effort and progress so far and employ the Charlotte Mason tips on narration. Click here to read about narration and use some of these ideas.

Though many teachers praise children that are creative writers, a lot of children are factual writers.  If your child is a factual writer, change the topic of the assignment.

For example if the topic of writing is about something abstract like emotions or personality flaws or strengths of a character change it to something concrete like how to ride a bike.

Riding a bike is something most boys can explain in multiple steps.

Look at topics that are how-to for him to write about.  How to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, how to play a sport, how to take care of a goldfish, and how to play mindcraft.

Teaching a Young Writer

If your child is a creative writer, get him to start using a key word outline.  This helps him to express his thoughts or words in a few key words.

This is hard to do for a word connoisseur and one who loves to write stories.  All words and details are important to them, but it is critical to bring those thoughts from broad to narrow so their art is recognized.

Materials matter for any writer.

Many fancy things come and go in the writing world but there are two basic items that are keepers for me.

One is a mechanical pencil and the other is a two toned notepad.  I find using a Mechanical Pencil where the lead is .9mm limits and almost erases (pun intended) pencil sharpening time.

There is always a fine point on the pencil and it helps the print to be more neat. Erasing should be omitted all together from a draft copy. Mark out and keep going.  This is hard to do for first time perfection seeking writer, but it emphasizes the point that writing is a process.

The second keeper throughout the years has been TOPS Stinger Writing Pads

skip line method

The writing pads have alternating colored lines that makes skipping lines easier.

From the beginning, teach your child to skip a line.

Errors and spelling can be corrected on the line below the writing and it helps them to visually see that writers take multiple steps before they show their final product.

My kids write on the white lines and save the colored line for rewriting and grammar mark ups.

On regular white paper, you can have them put an X on the next line so they know to skip it, but I find we prefer the notepad for our drafts.

The alternating color pad helps a child who struggles with being neat to stay in one area when writing as well. I have used them for final copies also when the older two boys were younger. So the pads have many uses and are keepers.

Writing is an Art and Should be Taught as an Art

Finding the gem in their writing, expression emotions or not and writing about topics that fire up our children are all ways to avoid tears and to help an aspiring writer.

Help them find their writing voice and the trickle of ideas will flow into a waterfall of graceful words.

I have to share this quote that I heart today since I got all giddy about sharing with you about how to teach writing.

“The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and a lightning bug.”

~Mark Twain~

Homeschool Tips for Teaching a Young Writer to Take His Ideas from a Trickle to a Waterfall @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Also look at these posts:

  • Narration – Telling Back or Testing? And Books that Make Teaching Narration Easy Peazy
  • 3 Tips to Avoid When Teaching Homeschooled Kids Beginning Composition

7 CommentsFiled Under: Teach Homeschool Language Arts

How to Get an Out of Control Homeschool Back on Track

September 10, 2015 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Those deep about life conversations with your highschoolers are not only memorable, but can keep you on your toes when your teens ambush you.

Right before his graduation, Mr. Awesome 2015 and I were having a conversation after reading a psychology article about the fascinating inner workings of the brain. I love these types of conversations with my teen.

Anyway, the focus of the article was on what is needed to see something through to the end or in our case how to get an out of control homeschool back on track after our last year of moving overseas.

How to Get an Out of Control Homeschool Back on Track @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Now that Mr. Awesome 2015 has graduated, I have been doing a lot of reflecting on the layers of homeschooling and the grit (or is it) that you need to pant on to the end.

Sometimes it’s not my style to write so contemplative, but it does my soul good when I can share with you and with a few tears as I ponder about my past.

Hopefully, you will be infused with a bit more enthusiasm for this lifestyle choice you have made too.

Three Layers of the Homeschooling Lifestyle

Look at these three levels that you go through as you trek through the homeschool journey.

They are absolute key to the driving force you need to finish homeschooling to the end.

Layer 1. Homeschool pleasure equals instant gratification in learning.

Finding instant relief after escaping from public school is how a lot of homeschoolers feel.

Starting out your journey finding pleasure in learning every day is a strong motivator to begin homeschooling.

Leaving behind the model the public school sets for schooling the masses and creating a unique one of a kind education plan for your family is not only rewarding, but essential.

Meeting with other homeschoolers, taking field trips especially in the spring and fall when you and the kids want to spend every minute outdoors and signing up your children for enrichment classes that suit your homeschooling method are all needed in the beginning.

However, they are just momentary pleasures. What do I mean by that?

Is a Force of Habit Good?

Once you get your homeschool off to a great start, the next cycle is a flow.

Layer 2. It’s about the homeschool flow.

The middle layer of homeschooling (I’m not talking about middle school necessarily) can be longer for some than others because of the number of children you may have.

As each child comes along that you fold into your day and you get restless with the changes you made in the beginning, you soon realize that key to homeschool happiness is a flow to your day.

Giving up some of the things that brought pleasure to me in the beginning was a mistake. I still needed them peppered throughout our year.

However, I soon realized that our homeschool journey wasn’t contingent on others.

Though I would never trade our experience for anything for the active co-op Kelley and I lead, you find that a sense of satisfaction comes from doing things that you and your children like doing regularly.

Routine – Monotony or Momentum?

For us, we looked forward to going together to the park when nobody else was there and we did that on a regular basis. We could take our art supplies and sit under the huge shade trees and soak up the breeze.

Key to pushing me through many of those middle years was my routine though I didn’t realize it then.

I thought I was passed needing that flow to my day because we had done so many activities through the years.

Settling into a routine may seem boring, but it’s not about having a dull day. It’s about fostering determination.

Instead of seeking instant pleasure, which is a great kick start, finding your groove in the middle of the trek and settling into a routine that fits your family is needed so that your children can be prepared for a heavier workload in subjects.

Layer 3. Meaningful homeschooling is lasting. It’s a REAL sweet spot.

The last layer is finding the meaning in what you are doing.

That is the key to be contented once you have shed the comparison trap and is the key to being so very grateful and happy that you chose this road.

I have to admit that though I thought about high school or what I viewed as the end of the journey, life past high school for my sons seemed so far away.

In the beginning, I was so focused on how I was going to teach high school instead of realizing that there is life after high school.

Then, homeschooling takes on a whole new meaning.

When you get to this part in your homeschooling, you treasure the choice you made because you spent every spare minute with your child nurturing them into manhood or womanhood.

What I am trying to say is that time can pass, but it’s what you do with your time that makes homeschooling meaningful.

Trying not to go through a box of kleenex each day now that Mr. Senior 2013 has moved out and started his own life, homeschooling was not about co-ops, park days or even choosing the right math curriculum.

It has been about making moments meaningful.

When we dropped Mr. Senior 2013 off at the airport, I didn’t think about whether or not we did a craft or attended enough field trips, I tearfully thought back to the many moments we had from the first time he finally sit down in my lap to let me read to him until we told him goodbye at the airport.

Homeschooling was the best way to give him the kind of childhood I wanted him to have.

When the time comes for Mr. Awesome 2015 to move out, it will be the conversation we had to today that I will think about. By that time, I should have another box of kleenex in the house too.

Savor each layer of life when homeschooling, the best is always yet to come.

Which layer are you are at right now?

Look at these other posts:

  • How to Use Summertime to Put a Foot in Homeschooling
  • If Your Homeschooled Kids Aren’t Bored, You May Not Be a Homeschooler
  • How to Grow to Love Being a Homeschooler

Hugs and love ya,

7 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Simply, Homeschool When Nobody Wants To Tagged With: homeschool

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