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Welcome

Pinterest Secret – The 3Cs of a Smart Pin. From a Homeschool Mom Who Grew Her Followers to 35K Without Complicated Algorithms.

October 10, 2015 | 19 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Social media tops the list of things that can engulf a blogger’s time.

However, social media is also inextricably linked to a blog’s success. If you want your blog to succeed, then Pinterest demands your attention.

Pinterest is my number one referrer to my website and it always commands my time each day.

Pinterest Secret - The 3Cs of a Smart Pin from a homeschool mom who grew her followers to 35K without complicated algorithms. You can too @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

And because I don’t have time to be analyzing algorithms constantly, sharing my pinterest secret of growing my Pinterest following to almost 34K followers, I hope will speed up your pinterst learning curve.

No-Fail Pinterest Tips

The first key tip growing your audience regularly is to be consistent. Wait. Don’t get discourage though if you think you have to squeeze one more thing into your day.

Consistent on Pinterest means a completely different thing than it does for blogging.

For example, you need to ask these questions:

■When are the majority of my followers pinning?
■Where are the majority of my followers located?

For example, I know that a majority of my followers are from the U.S. and a good amount of them are in Los Angeles.

Los Angeles is two hours behind me.

And knowing that one of the prime times for followers on my blog are between the hours of 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., I know that I can start pinning from about 9:00 my time onward.

This is information I found out from my analytics after I made my blog a business account. Look at my tips on my article, 11 Amazing Tips to Grow Pinterest That You Need to Know Now.

That is just one way I have of gauging the amount of time I need to be on Pinterest.

Of course, if you are using schedulers like Buffer or TailWind, you can schedule those pins.

In addition, because I know I want to grow my followers from other places, I choose other times of the day that I think my followers would be on.

Knowing that a good amount of my followers are homeschool moms like me, I know that sharing a few pins before I start school always garners new followers for me each day.

So that is an are of the day I am expanding on.

As you can see, consistency gets very doable once you have a handle on when a majority of your followers are pinning.

That is a good starting point.

The Three Cs To a Smart Pin

The second tip is for your pins to be creative.

And no, I am not an artist or professional graphic designer. I just learned a few things the hard way about what makes a pin captivating.

Bright, clean and big photos work best.

But, also you can use:

■free dingbats
■free fonts
■free clip art
■and color to make your pins live.

Look at this pin that has received thousands of pin and where I have tastefully combined all the above elements.

Pin 1 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I  started off with my bright photo, added fonts with color and added free dingbat (fish).

Now, it’s not necessary to add all of these elements and you want to be sure to not overcrowd a pin and take away from the photo.

However, because this pin was about sea levels, labeling with text added to the appeal of this pin.

This last tip took longer to learn, but it’s just as important. Sharing constructive and helpful tips on your pins is another must do.

Ban These Saying From Your Pins

I am still going back to some of my earlier pins and correct things I did like this on my pins:

:), yum, okey dokey, yes, give me some, ok, must have and awesome.

None of those things are constructive, descriptive for your followers or worst yet they can’t be found when followers search potential pins.

When describing your pins, give your followers helpful and pertinent information and a reason why they should pin your image.

The area where you describe your pins is like a second chance for your pin. Your image and text on your image is your first chance to make a good first impression and your description is your second chance.

This is not where you want to put some cool saying or smiley face, but a place to put key words that will propel your follower to not only follow you, but repin.

Be helpful and give your followers tips in the description.

Consistency, creativity and constructive pins are three small but very powerful tips on growing your audience quicker.

Have you implemented these tips yet?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

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Also grab iBlog Pro for taking your blog to the next level and read more about my Pinterest tips.

19 CommentsFiled Under: Pinterest

Body Part Labeling and Skeleton Quiz Human Body Unit Study

October 9, 2015 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

The body part labeling and skeleton quiz minibooks are part of the completed human body unit study.

The human body lapbook was free for a limited time.

Body Part Labeling and Skeleton Quiz Human Body Unit Study

Body Part Labeling and Skeleton Quiz

Be sure to grab the other activities we have done so far with our Human Body Unit Study.

Also, make an eazy peazy DIY Stethoscope and a great project for a middle school kid is the Heart Pump activity. Too, do the rigid versus flexible bone activity too.

Today, I have two more minibooks for the Human Body Lapbook.

You already have the heart minibook and the Did You Know heart facts minbook.

One minibook is titled I am Wonderfully Made and it is a labeling of general body parts.

This book  can for sure be used for a younger child and a middle school kid.

Human Body Hands-on Unit Study Ideas

Because we have only read about the human body and not really done any written work, I wanted to be sure Tiny had a good visual placement of the major body parts.

I Am Wonderfully Made

The human body minibook is a triple fold book. Triple fold and put the cover on the outside.

Human Body Unit Study

Too, remember, because I don’t like to waste paper, the cover page for this body labeling book you already downloaded with the heart minibook.

Be sure to grab it and place it on this minibook.

Skeleton System Quick Quiz

This next fun minibook is a 4 question quiz about the skeleton system.

The four questions are:

■ How many bones are in your body?
■How many bones are in your skull?
■What is the largest bone?
■What is the smallest bone?

We generally pull out our file folder at this time and start trying to place the minibooks we have so far on the lapbook. But we don’t glue them yet until we are finished.

Generally though when I have about 4 minibooks or so, I do try to start laying them. Not all the time do I chose portrait position on the lapbook.

This lapbook just feels like it might look pretty hot if we turn the lapbook landscape. But that is generally what I do right now, which is to start looking at the layout.

However, we are still undecided, which is why we also keep the minibooks in a ziploc bag until we’re done.

Completed Human Body Lapbook

  • Dynamic and Fun Human Body Lapbook for Multiple Ages

    Dynamic and Fun Human Body Lapbook for Multiple Ages

    $5.00
    Add to cart
Body Part Labeling and Skeleton Quiz Human Body Unit Study

Lastly, more human body unit study activities coming! (Update: The hands-on activities are all at the bottom of this post. Click on each one for all the fun hands-on ideas.)

Grab all of the lapbook printables and hands-on activities below.

What is blood hands on activity and free blood components minibook for a human body homeschool unit study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Making Bloodhttps://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body-4/
Homeschool Unit Study Human Body. Hands-on Activity 5. Edible Skin + Skin and Major Body Systems Minibook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus Featured
Edible Skin https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body-5/
Mega List Free Resources for Human Body Homeschool Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Free Resourceshttps://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/human-body-homeschool-unit-study/
Body Part Labeling and Human Skeleton Quiz Free Minibooks - Free Human Body Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus FEATURED
Body Part Labelinghttps://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/body-part-labeling-and-skeleton-quiz-free-minibooks/
Human Body Unit Study. Rigid versus Flexible Bones Hands-on Activity @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Rigid versus Flexible Bonehttps://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body-3/
Human body unit study DIY Heart Pump @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
DIY Heart Pumphttps://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body-2/
20 Human Body Books for Middle and High School Homeschooled Kids @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Human Body Bookshttps://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/human-body-books-for-middle-and-high-school-homeschooled-kids/
Human body unit study DIY Stethoscope. Hands-on Learning @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Stethoscope Activityhttps://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/homeschool-unit-study-human-body/
Free Human Body Lapbook and Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Beautiful Humanhttps://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/free-human-body-lapbook-and-unit-study/ Body Lapbook and Fun Unit Study

Hugs and love ya,

Body Part Labeling and Human Skeleton Quiz Free Minibooks - Free Human Body Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

2 CommentsFiled Under: 1. My FREE Learning Printables {Any Topic}, Free Homeschool Resources, Science, Science Based Tagged With: hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, human body, lapbook, lapbookresources, life science, science, sciencecurriculum

How to Write a Simple But Effective Homeschool Lesson Plan

October 7, 2015 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

The skill of how to write a simple but effective homeschool lesson plan is one that you will need your whole homeschool journey. Also, look at my page The Dynamics of How to Homeschool Easily and Smarter.

Too, the advantages of learning how to plan a well thought out and organized lesson can mean the difference between a mediocre home educator and one that soars.

Here is the first secret. Beginning lesson planning start with the basic understanding that lesson planning is part journaling at the end of the day. I will explain more on that in a minute.

Lesson planning for the beginner homeschooler has two components.

One part is journaling (at the end of the day) and one part prior (before your day begins) lesson planning.

How to Write a Simple But Effective Homeschool Lesson Plan @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

When I learned to lesson plan, I realized I was doing the same thing over and over, which was documenting what we had accomplished for the day and erasing what I had planned for the day.

Basic But Effective Homeschool Lesson Plans

The two concepts were not the same in the beginning.

Like most inexperienced homeschoolers, I had over planned.

It wasn’t a realistic view of what my kids could do.

I learned that if I wanted accurate lesson plans for my children’s ages, I had to have a realistic view of what they could and could not do. That meant jotting down what we did for the day as a way to gauge what was realistic.

It’s not the way professional teachers learn for sure, but then again I wasn’t a professional teacher.

However, it is a creative and extremely beneficial way to learn how to lesson plan.

By jotting down what we did each day, I could then start planning similar activities for the same amount of time.

It was a great way to start off lesson planning because then my lesson plans fit my children’s ability.

Also, look at my video How to Homeschool Lesson Plan EZ.

Too, lesson plans are just visual presentations.

There is no right or wrong on lesson planning. There is just right for your children.

Lesson Plans Equal Visual Mapping

A mom that can visualize where she is going with a subject will get better use with her time when her goals are met instead of the goals not being clear.

Write down those lesson plans.

Look at these parts to the basics of lesson planning that helped me to plan something I wanted to cover for the day.

  • 1. Subject – Start with the subject or topic that your lesson plan will be about.
  • 2. Age/Grade Level – Are you writing this for all your children or designed for one child in mind?
  • 3. Description/Explanation – This is where you describe the purpose of your lesson plan. If you are clear in your mind about what you are accomplishing, your lesson plan will be of great value because you hit your target.
  • 4. Process/Plan – This part is the actual detailed lesson plan of how you will accomplish what you want your children to do. If you don’t know and it’s not clear to you, how will your children know?
  • 5. Supplies Needed – This is your list of supplies and hands on items you will need for any projects.
  • 6. Assessment – Here I write if I felt like my children learned what I intended for them to or I describe in this section how I could have done something different and I also explain what they liked or didn’t like.

If you’re a new homeschooler, look at my book below.

Grab My Book on How to Homeschool

Homeschooling 31 Day Boot Camp for New Homeschoolers is a real eye-opener on homeschooling. It will alleviate a lot of the anxieties about getting started homeschooling.

Reading each chapter’s highlights will give you encouragement, knowledge, guidance, and peace of mind to homeschool with confidence. The best part is that you’ll be educating the person who loves your kids the most in this world--YOU! Armed with the knowledge to make better choices in curriculum will empower you to continue the path of home education. Unlike many books based on one family’s experience, Homeschooling 31 Day Boot Camp for New Homeschoolers is also based on Tina’s many years of mentoring hundreds and hundreds of new homeschoolers at live workshops.When you don’t know where to begin Homeschooling 31 Day Boot Camp for New Homeschoolers equips you to successfully homeschool your children.

How to Easily Lesson Plan

All of the above serves as a plan to look back at on when you study another subject.

It gives you a glimpse into what your children liked and did not like.

Lesson plans for us as homeschoolers do not have to be so detailed as to overwhelm us.

Yes it can get time consuming and that may appear to be a disadvantage.

However, the time saved in preparing a lesson plan that does not need a lot of extra work or review is of immense value. Your time is actually freed up to explore other things about that subject or topic.

Don’t be intimidated by lesson planning. It is just visual mapping and can be of great help in not being tied to boxed curriculum.

I love this quote.

“You will never change your life until you change something you do daily. The secret of your success is found in your daily routine.”

~ John C. Maxwell~

You’ll love these other tips:

  • 3 Risks of Not Tracking Your Homeschool Lessons (Even If They’re Laid-Out) 
  • 4 PRE-Homeschool Year Planning Pages (and tips to use them)

Hugs and love ya,

4 CommentsFiled Under: Lesson Plan Tagged With: lessonplanning

Homeschool Unit Study Human Body. Hands-on Activity 3. Rigid versus Flexible Bone Activity.

October 6, 2015 | 5 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, in our homeschool unit study on the human body, I have another hands-on activity to learn about the makeup of human bones. Also I have this Human Body Crafts page for more fun ideas.

Human Body Unit Study. Rigid versus Flexible Bones Hands-on Activity @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Homeschool Unit Study Human Body

By the way, this is a 24 hour activity meaning your child needs to observe it over night.

Look at these ingredients that I had on hand:

■bleach
■vinegar
■water
■three or four bones
■pot for boiling
■3 plastic cups
■masking tape and sharpie

The object of this hands-on lesson is to test how rigid or how flexible are our bones.

Bones Activity 1 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Bones Activity 2 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

So we started by gathering up all of our supplies. Too, try to get all the grizzle and meat off the bones so your child can observe it better.

Then we boiled the bones in water for about 25 minutes or so and took them out to cool.

Bones Activity 3 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Bones Activity 4 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Tiny went ahead and took a test try of the bones to see how rigid or flexible the bones were.

Tiny made an observation and then he guess how they would be after he exposed each one to water, bleach and vinegar over night.

Then we set up each glass and placed one or two bones (depending on how many you have) in each glass.

He covered each one with liquid. I poured the bleach over the one bone.

Bones Activity 5 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Bones Activity 6 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Then Tiny took tape and labeled each glass and set aside for the night.

More Human Body Crafts

  • Simple and Easy Circulatory System Hands-on Activity for Kids
  • How to Turn a Pizza Into a Fun Edible Human Cell Model
  • How To Make A Fun Bones Of The Hand Labeled X-Ray Craft
  • 7 Human Skull Facts and Cool Human Skull Anatomy Activity
  • How to Make a Fun Hands-on Playdough Brain Activity
  • Major Organs of The Human Body Labeled Fun Felt Anatomy Activity
  • Fun Resources and Books About The Human Body For Preschoolers
  • 8 Eye Facts & Human Body Activities Middle School & Fun Eye Model
  • 12 Human Body Games For Middle School & High School
  • Craft a Fun Hand Straw Model to Explore Human Anatomy Muscles & Tendons
  • How to Make a Human DIY Heart Model Easy Craft for Kids
  • 8 Facts About the Respiratory System & Fun Lung Craft for Kids
  • 7 Human Body Facts and Kids Human Body T-Shirt Project
  • Fun Edible Spine
  • Making Blood + What Are the Components of Blood
  • DIY Heart Pump
  • Kids Stethoscope Activity
  • Build An Edible DNA Model
  • Edible Skin
  • Rigid versus Flexible Bone Activity.
  • Pregnancy Belly Female Study of Human Anatomy Kids Fun Craft

Sticks and Stones May Break My Bones

The next morning, he took each bone out of the liquid to test the flexibility of each bone.

Bones Activity 7 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Bones Activity 8 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

He tested each bone by trying to move it back and forth.

Which ones bend and which ones did not is the secret for your child to find out.

Here is some information to help you.

■Bones are both stiff and flexible and can bend a bit without breaking if healthy.
■Soaking the bones in acid, which is the vinegar dissolved the calcium. What was left was collagen and they were much more flexible.
■Bleach is a strong base that breaks the collagen and the bones became brittle and broke.
■Soaking the bones in water didn’t do anything.

This was a great activity to help explain the care of bones and healthy eating habits.

Grab all of the lapbook printables and hands-on activities below.

What is blood hands on activity and free blood components minibook for a human body homeschool unit study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Making Blood + Free What Are the Components of Blood Minibook
Homeschool Unit Study Human Body. Hands-on Activity 5. Edible Skin + Skin and Major Body Systems Minibook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus Featured
Edible Skin + Free Minibook About Skin & Body Systems
Mega List Free Resources for Human Body Homeschool Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Mega List Free Resources for Human Body Homeschool Unit Study.
Body Part Labeling and Human Skeleton Quiz Free Minibooks - Free Human Body Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus FEATURED
Body Part Labeling and Skeleton Quiz Free Minibooks
Human Body Unit Study. Rigid versus Flexible Bones Hands-on Activity @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Rigid versus Flexible Bone Activity.
Human body unit study DIY Heart Pump @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
DIY Heart Pump + Free Heart Mini Book
20 Human Body Books for Middle and High School Homeschooled Kids @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Human Body Books for Middle and High School Homeschooled Kids
Human body unit study DIY Stethoscope. Hands-on Learning @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
DIY Stethoscope
Free Human Body Lapbook and Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus featured
Free Human Body Lapbook and Unit Study

Hugs and love ya,

 

5 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Science, Science Based Tagged With: hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, human body

6 Things I Won’t Regret After Homeschooling 16+ Years

October 5, 2015 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

6 Things I WON'T Regret After 16+ Years of Homeschooling. Don't give up because in the end it's all worth it @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

If this post, 6 things I won’t regret after homeschooling for 16+ years helps you to make even one tiny step toward homeschool progress today, then it’s well worth it.

Each day can seem to make unplanned demands on our time.

And some days it’s difficult to say the least to decide when to let things go like the house or to not school for the day.

Homeschooling has never disappointed me though I have been disappointed in my own attempts to homeschool at one time or another.

6 Things I Won’t Regret After Homeschooling 16+ Years

Here is what I won’t regret when I faced giants though not always feeling so brave and not always having it together each day.

■ I don’t regret letting go of the thinking that homeschool was something we did on the side and that it was a burden that I added to my day.

For the first five years or so of homeschooling, I really had to fight to carve out our time for homeschool.

Some days I just didn’t feel like the homeschool routine. I had to give myself permission to feel weak at times.

It’s not that we had so much going on all the time, but looking back now what I didn’t realize was that I was building lifelong habits of study. It was hard work.

It was different doing a research project with the kids or even reading to them, but I am talking about enforcing a general start time to each and every day so we could be productive.

It took a lot of energy to form my sons’ habits, but what a payoff I was in store for as they hit middle and high school grades.

My kids were and are the ones now getting off their devices, or cleaning up their messes in the morning so they can start school at 9:00 a.m.

Did I mention, I just follow along now as the boys get our day started?

■ Call me Bible thumping or weird, but I don’t regret one minute of all the time we spent with just fellow Christian homeschoolers at field trips and in co-ops.

Our field trips and co-ops were a time to share the highs and lows about homeschooling with others that were not going to judge me.

And no, I didn’t want to vent to somebody who just thinks that they know what I am talking about when it comes to living the homeschool lifestyle.

■I don’t regret not immersing my boys into association with those who went to public school.

My oldest two boys are confident, strong and determined young men now. And capable of making decisions apart from me.

I didn’t deliberately keep them apart from public schooled kids, it just happened naturally.

Too, I don’t want my sons judging other people for choices they make. Don’t we have enough of that in the world? Public school was just not for us.

However, as you homeschool longer, you appreciate too your schedule is not in sync with the schedule of public school.

Through the many years, I have heard new homeschoolers say it’s important for their children to keep their friends from school.

It really is hard to do that and a lot of it depends on how long your kids went to public school.

As homeschool families, we are not really being off-ish. We just live a completely different life and it’s not running parallel to public school.

For my boys, it wasn’t necessary that they huddle in the evening with the neighbor kids to hang out.

We already went to field trips or co-ops during the day. Evening time was naturally spent with Dad when he got back from work.

■I don’t regret exposing my sons to my vulnerabilities as the teacher.

My boys are not robots of me and neither do they have an overly inflated view of me or my teaching.

I want you to know this because, sad to say, some homeschool parents aren’t homeschooling because it’s the best thing for their children.

Instead of keeping what is best for their children as the foundation of their homeschool, homeschooling can turn into a prove-that-I can-quest.

The mindset what-can-I-do-to-top-your-teaching-method can invade the body of a homeschool mom and she can turn into somebody that she doesn’t even know herself.

Homeschooling becomes a competition instead of a course. Ugly.

The child does get left behind (pardon the cliche) because we can set out to prove that the method we feel is the best is the best.

I learned early on that what worked for me and what worked for my sons were completely different. Look at my article, 5 Signs That You Need to Switch Your Homeschool Approach.

Jumping head first into a teaching style that was opposite of the way I thought I should teach, I showed my boys that homeschooling was about them.

Exposing the Vulnerable Side to Homeschooling

They appreciated that I too struggled and it made me a much more sympathetic teacher with them when they struggled.

■ I’ll never regret using a boxed curriculum when I needed to.

Through the years, I have read many pros and cons about boxed curriculum.

Boxed curriculum can get a bum rap because when it’s first used some homeschoolers don’t use it like they need for their family.

Teaching a child is not an exact science for each child and the boxed curriculum doesn’t really teach anything. You learn that you are homeschooling a child.

However, with the many ups and downs in homeschooling, it has been a breath of fresh air to use laid out curriculum and pick and choose which assignments we will do, which ones we will skip and which ones we will tweak.

By the way, that is how you used a boxed curriculum.

I have no regrets in using all that is available to us as homeschoolers.

■And I will never, never regret all the teachable moments we have had so far together while letting the housework and laundry go.

When I shared this poem below each year at my workshop, I could hardly finish reading it because I couldn’t get through the words without tears or a cracking voice.

It’s hard for me to share it with you today because it reminds me of how fast our journey has gone by.

Homeschool Survivor or Champion?

It has come true in my case because I no longer have babies.

So I want to encourage you to remember that you don’t have long to homeschool. And in the end it is about having no regrets.

Babies Don’t Keep

Mother, oh Mother, come shake out your cloth
empty the dustpan, poison the moth,
hang out the washing and butter the bread,
sew on a button and make up a bed.
Where is the mother whose house is so shocking?
She’s up in the nursery, blissfully rocking.

Oh, I’ve grown shiftless as Little Boy Blue
(lullaby, rockaby, lullaby loo).
Dishes are waiting and bills are past due
(pat-a-cake, darling, and peek, peekaboo).
The shopping’s not done and there’s nothing for stew
and out in the yard there’s a hullabaloo
but I’m playing Kanga and this is my Roo.
Look! Aren’t her eyes the most wonderful hue?
(lullaby, rockaby, lullaby loo).

The cleaning and scrubbing will wait till tomorrow,
for children grow up, as I’ve learned to my sorrow.
So quiet down, cobwebs. Dust go to sleep.
I’m rocking my baby and babies don’t keep.

What will you not regret at the end of your journey? (And yes, I do have tears when I read that poem each year.)

Grab some more go juice below!

  • Wipe Out Self-Doubt: 13 Ways to Show Homeschool Progress (And How I Know My Sons Got It)
  • How to Go From a Boring Homeschool Teacher to Creative Thinker (Boring to BAM)
  • 5 Top Mistakes of New or Struggling Homeschoolers

Hugs and you know I love ya,

7 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Begin Homeschooling, Gauge Homeschool Progress, Homeschool Simply, Homeschool When Nobody Wants To Tagged With: fearless homeschooling, homeschool challenges, homeschool joy, homeschool joys, homeschool lifestyle, new homeschool year, new homeschooler

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