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When Should I Start Teaching Spelling in Homeschool?

June 2, 2015 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Spelling is more than just associating letters with sounds and deciphering them. Spelling is an essential element to writing clearly and convincingly.

Although I valued the usefulness of spelling prior to teaching my sons how to spell, it wasn’t until I started actually teaching that I was able to see that learning styles affected how each of my sons learned to spell.

I couldn’t possibly understand the struggle of spelling at the beginning of my journey because Mr. Senior 2013, like me, is a visual learner. He looked at words, formed a mental map in his head, and spelling came naturally for him.

I taught him phonics and he began to write the letters he knew associated with the sounds. Pretty easy I thought. Rocking along thinking that I was actually teaching spelling, Mr. Awesome came along and everything I thought I knew about teaching spelling could fit in a button.

My second child was not a visual learner, but a hands-on learner. Laying the foundation for spelling, which is phonics instruction took longer with him.

The Difference Between Readiness and Formal Spelling Instruction

Look at these these tips that I learned and want you know when you formally start teaching spelling.

Don’t be so quick to add formal spelling to your day.

Some programs start testing children right away like at Kindergarten level.

Teaching spelling is one thing and testing spelling is quite another thing.

Before you can test output (which is making the letter or letters the sound makes) a child needs enough time for input.

We live in an educational society that is impatient on seeing results. We have instagram and instant messaging, but there is no such thing as instant education.

Children need enough time manipulating letters and sounds in the formative years or before Kindergarten.

Phonics is the springboard to spelling.

I feel you should be very selective as to when you start testing or beginning a formal program; I feel equally important that stringing letters together to form words should not wait.

Teaching phonics early even before a child can write is foundational to strong spellers later.

One thing I did right in teaching my sons how to spell was to spend a great amount of time on manipulating letters.

Look at these activities that I mean by manipulating letters:

 

Do not let your child’s fine motor skills hold your child back from stringing letters together to form words.

When I started teaching Mr. Senior 2013, one of the very best investments I made was to purchase Spell Time.

 

It was pricey but I knew that I had at least 3 kids ahead of me to teach phonics and using it with each child for several years, I got 6+ years use out of it.

A few things that I loved about it was that it was portable, had several letters of the vowels and I could grab a few letters to teach one child spelling while my oldest son could play with the letters and put them on the mat.

The mats are self-teaching meaning that on the back of the letter tiles are pegs which fit only in the correct spot on the word mat.  It is self-checking because another letter won’t fit.

Bottom line, Mr. Senior 2013 could practice spelling alone while I was teaching the other boys.

Using this great teaching tool, I was able to give them a strong start to phonics before they learned how to write.

Spelling rules are just tools.

Remember too that in English the pronunciation of a word at times gives very little help as to the spelling.

Through the years, I feel I have swung like a pendulum back and forth between constant memorization of rules to very little work remembering them.

I have learned that balance is needed instead of swamping them with too many rules or not giving them any.

Your child needs to understand that though beginning phonics is easy, the English language is not predictable all the time.

Giving my middle son not only direct phonics instruction but memorization along with the rules armed him with tools he needed to encode (spell).

All About Spelling

So it takes time for a child to understand those rules and this is best done after they have been immersed in phonics instruction.

Most spelling programs as I mentioned earlier are focused solely on the testing part of the program instead of activities like games, songs, stories, puzzle word search and fun unscrambling exercises to help a child learn through all senses.

It has been my experience that waiting to the end of first grade or the beginning of second grade to introduce formal spelling, which requires output immediately, gives your child a lot of hands-on practice with sounds.

Natural spelling through writing  and copywork were also key things I did in our day.

By delaying formal spelling until second grade, my middle son came in armed and ready to tackle the tests.

He even jumped two levels in spelling one year because we were immersed in letter fun.

Do immerse your children with the fun of sounds and don’t be so quick to add a formal spelling program if the emphasis is on constant testing.

When Should I Start Teaching Spelling in Homeschool @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

 

 

 

 

 

You’ll love these other tips:

  • 21 Hands-on Ideas for Homeschool Spelling From a Seasoned Mom
  • 7 Budget-Friendly Language Arts Curriculum to Pair with Unit Studies (with printable)
  • 24 Borderline Genius Ways To Relieve Language Arts Boredom

What grade do you start formal spelling?

Hugs and love ya,

 

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Teach Homeschool Language Arts Tagged With: homeschoolanguagearts, language arts, languagearts, spelling

3 Smart Tips to Avoiding Busywork in Homeschooling

June 1, 2015 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

3 Smart Tips to Avoiding Busywork in Homeschooling @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusAvoiding busywork in homeschooling is one of the lures that drew us to homeschooling.

We understand busywork to be any resource that goes beyond what the child needs to master the material.

Should our Homeschool Schedule Include Planning Every Minute?

Simple enough. But, does busywork have practical value or is it – well just busywork?

Look at these 3 smart tips to avoiding busywork in homeschooling and knowing when to turn busywork into meaningful review.

Measure the work for your child and not a classroom.

I made this mistake when using curriculum.

For example, one of my favorite grammar programs is Rod and Staff during the younger grades.

Shortly after using it, I realized that there was an enormous amount of review for a classroom setting.

There was way more review than my sons needed to master the concepts.

Key to avoiding busywork was to find just the right dose of work needed for each of my sons to master the material.  It was different for each of my sons but it wasn’t ever close to what a classroom needed.

Can busywork change to meaningful learning?

Too, I learned that I had to change my thinking about some of the activities I had planned.

For example, doing a craft by a child could be meaningful or meaningless, depending on his personality or needs.

I have shared many times that coloring pages didn’t particularly make my boys squeal with delight at any age.

However, when I switched to museum quality coloring books like Dover Nature Coloring Book or like a Edupress Solar System Coloring Book, coloring took on meaningful learning.

Coloring then became a valuable part of our learning day instead of busywork I added at the end of the day.

Create balanced lesson plans that work.

The last tip has to do with your experience in balancing your homeschool day.

If your day is too short, your children may have too much time on their hands. In other words, sibling rivalry may follow because children are not busy.

The value of play and time alone to stimulate their imagination is an intrinsic part of homeschooling.

However, while children are being trained to wisely use their time with meaningful projects they savor like legos, creative play and pursuing hobbies, they still need help to make their day productive.

If you find that your day ends too short, then add activities to guide your children to make their time purposeful.

When an activity is adding no value to your day, then it’s busywork.  It is a time drain and busywork can be at the very heart of why it can be hard to get done all that is planned for the day.

Don’t forget to look for ways to turn activities into meaningful learning.

The learning style of your child is important because you may need to add more crafts and activities or he may be the type of child that rolls his eyes when you mention crafts. Give him a book instead to read about what he needs to know and move one.

It takes practice to gauge the amount of work each child needs to master concepts.  Remember you can always add more review if they are not grasping a point.  But you don’t want to breed a resistant learner from constant review or busywork when it is not needed.

Lastly, if you find that your day is too short and the children are not filling their time with productive play, guide them to the activities you want them to do.

My boys knew I didn’t like a messy house but I was hindering them from spending productive time exploring a broken computer they wanted to take apart.   Sometimes they need a little coaxing from you and too they need to know that it’s okay to spread out their hobbies.

How about you? Can you use the 3 smart tips to measure your homeschool day?

Also, look at these tips:
Stop the Homeschool Time Drain
How Can I Achieve Simple Homeschooling?

Hugs and love ya,

 

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Homeschool Simply

Homeschooling for the Love of Learning – Does It Really Work?

May 30, 2015 | 3 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Besides building Godly character, homeschooling for the love of learning was also one of the primary reasons homeschooling pioneers touted homeschooling.

Does that philosophy still hold true today?

Are the Methods of Homeschooling Outdated?

Does homeschooling for the lifelong love of learning mean you are more interested in having fun than in helping your child advance in academics?

Some homeschoolers think so.

Not every homeschooler recognizes the value of instilling the love of learning in their children.

Homeschooling for the Love of Learning - Does It Really Work @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusTake a look at some of these attitudes that can go from determined to succeed to devastating effects in the long run.

  • When your sole focus is on planning long term only for academic advancement like AP and CLEP.
  • When your child’s desire to love learning is secondary to your foremost goal of achieving academic excellence.
  • When your homeschool plans are constantly pushing your child through the grades regardless of his age.
  • When year after year, your homeschool lesson plans seem to be always ambitious.
  • When you know that your child is capable of college level work in junior high so you pile on the academics because he is bright and hard working.
  • When complaining by your child is met by you with a tough attitude.

Only you can determine what course you are on.

Instead of getting you to change your philosophy, I want to share the results of some of the families I have known through my 12+ years of homeschooling.

Many of those young kids are now grown.  Some are in college, some have started families of their own and some are considering homeschooling their children.  However, some are not considering homeschooling their own children.  Why?

From Childhood to Homeschooling Curriculum

The adult children are now pushing back at their parents.  Robbed of a childhood where they could have spent endless hours playing, adult children recognize that they were burdened with adulthood too soon.

Other families were met with resentment and outright hostility much sooner in their journey like when their teen started high school.

Instead of following the course the homeschool parent set out for him, one teen I knew rebelled and move out while still in high school.

How sad for those parents who now lost their opportunity for a relationship with their son.



Teens and homeschooled adult children have a way of biting back.  It is dangerous to deliberately year after year put an enormous amount of pressure on a child, gifted or otherwise.

It is one thing for us as parents to want our children to succeed, but it’s quite another to be over demanding of our children and cause them to lose their only childhood.

It is amazing too that while a homeschool parent can sabotage a child’s love of learning they can also be the one that rejuvenates a child’s love of learning.

The power we wield as parents should not be taken lightly because it affects a child lifelong.

When a child’s intrinsic love of learning is fed naturally while balancing a high academic standard, these families have been the ones to not only succeed academically but to maintain a strong bond with their adult child.

Homeschooling for the lifelong love of learning is not only the building block to a strong character but it is the impetus for self-learning.  Self-learning is like a glue that sticks way beyond your few short years of homeschooling.

Do you allow enough free time for self-discovery which will propel your children to homeschool for the lifelong love of learning?

Hugs and love ya,

 

Read on:
What is REAL Homeschooling? Homebound, Co-op, or Public School at Home.
When You Feel Like a Homeschool Failure
3 Reasons You Wouldn’t Want to Homeschool

3 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling, Homeschool Simply

When You REALLY Have No Money for Homeschool Curriculum – Dynamic Reader Question

May 29, 2015 | 18 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

No matter how long it takes me to reply to my emails, every email I get is important to me.

I am not made of stone and so when an email touches me to my heart and brings tears, I have to share it with you too. (Of course I always get permission first and I never share any private information so I can preserve dignity, privacy and respect for my followers.)

I am hoping that by sharing this email from one of my readers that if you are feeling alone and defeated but are hesitant about reaching out, you will find some comfort.

Look at my follower’s words:

I am a struggling homeschool mom of two with a husband that can only work part time. This is my second year homeschooling and I feel stressed to the gills. I have an 11 yo son who has Asperger’s and ADHD and a 10 yo daughter with dyslexia/dysgraphia.
I made the mistake of unschooling last year and I regret it but I don’t have the funds to order a curriculum. My children are working in all the same grade levels.
I may have to go to work because of my husband’s health so I am trying to plan as much as possible. It’s overwhelming to put it lightly.
I have internet access and a mono color printer, oh yeah and Netflix. Is there anything you can suggest that can keep the tears from falling?
I am to the point of when telling my husband that we are out of toilet paper that makes me cry because he is trying so hard…. Thank you for reading :/

After I replied about wanting to help her, her response moved my heart even more.

Thank you Tina for your time. I am an emotional wreck right now and currently crying because this is the first time that I have reached out to anyone that doesn’t know me. I don’t want to send my children back to being bullied and put on meds.
I will not do that but everything seems so stressful right now and I am suffocating with everything that it takes to plan a school year. I have a goal to hopefully start on July 6th considering we have a lot of catch up to do with them being at a third grade level. If I start working I have to get on the ball and make a dent in this madness A.S.A.P! Thank you again Tina!

When You REALLY Have No Money For Homeschool Curriculum @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusFirst, I want to say THANK YOU for reaching out to me. This is something you should never have to bear alone.

And though I can’t completely say that I understand everything that you are going through, I have compassion and sympathy for you.

To give you practical help, let’s break this down into two parts.

One, I want to help you find peace with your present circumstances and two, I will give you specific tips and a starting point for curriculum.

Control What You Can.

I do understand your feelings about your husband’s health.

When my husband had a massive heart attack a few years back and I thought I would be raising my three boys alone, I realized I was not the invincible person I had always thought I was.

After nursing him back to health, I realized that trials have a way of strengthening us though we feel very weak at the time.

Of course we would rather not learn it that way.

I learned to control what I could and that really nothing mattered more than being together as a family because life is precious.  After I put things in perspective, I had a beginning point.

Letting go of the way things use to be before his health declined spurred me on to find new creative ways to homeschool and spend time together.

Homeschool Mistakes. It’s NOT About Forgetting

Another thing I learned along the way was that I didn’t want to exactly follow the popular saying to “forgive and forget” when it came to homeschool mistakes I made.

While I wholeheartedly endorse the thinking that homeschooling is about forgiving your past mistakes so that you can have the energy to move forward, it’s also a lesson in how I don’t want to homeschool.

Instead of carry feelings of guilt, turn those feelings of guilt into some get up and go.

It was just a lesson learned in how the unschooling approach did not work for your family.

You now have a clear direction of the way your family needs to go.

Lesson learned and now you will be a much better teacher because of it.

New Homeschool Beginnings

Next, though it may take you more time to put together your curriculum, if you are willing to work hard in poring over resources, you can just about homeschool for free and your kids receive an excellent education.

Spending a lot of money doesn’t always equate with having an excellent education.

Your upbeat attitude and eagerness toward learning even with the most minimal resources are way more important to success than an ample supply of curriculum with an unmotivated teacher.

One caution I will give you is to not get yourself so overwhelmed with poring over free resources constantly that you don’t have a beginning point.

It is important to pick a main or spine resource and stick with it though you can use other things to supplement it with.

Though I will give you numerous sites at the bottom to find more free resources that I think are worth spending your time at, I have also lined out specific curriculum suggestions that I have picked out uniquely for you.

My reasons for choosing these sites are because they are either laid out to help ease planning stress and some are interactive sites to help with the unique needs of your children.

LANGUAGE ARTS – 3rd Grade

Reading

Choose from Baldwin online living books to read together on line and fill in with other books you get from the library.

There are many grade levels to choose from at the Baldwin website and I have used it for many years.

Children with special needs are not evenly developed across the board (not any kid really is) so it allows you to choose grade level books based on their progress through the year.

Go through them and pick out the ones you want to read together.

Also, Jennifer over at Contently Humble has a wonderful list of free graded readers. You won’t run out but you will run out of time deciding which gem to do first.

One more wonderful resource for reading is by Jamerrill, which is the Ultimate Guide to Free Kindle Books (psssst, you don’t have to own a kindle to get the free kindle books).

Spelling

Free 3rd grade Spelling book. (200 pdf download.) Just look ahead at the lessons, plan, print and go slow. It’s laid out for you.

Vocabulary

Because children that have special needs do better sometimes with interactive content, use this site by Wordly Wise with interactive vocabulary.

The word is pronounced out loud, gives the part of speech and is used in a sentence.

If your children become overstimulated, then turn off the sound.  It’s already laid out for your children. If they finish one grade level, just go to the next one.

Copywork

To help their handwriting to improve as best you can, use free copybooks from copy cat books.

Remember too that they can copy small passages from history and science books but this gives you copywork already laid out.  And already laid out curriculum is easiest when overwhelmed.

Another backup for copywork is Amy over at Are We There Yet has the ultimate guide to free copywork if you run out of ideas or are short on energy.

Grammar

Free grammar pdf download for Grades 1 – 5. (141 pages.) This will help you to go back over the basics and to be sure you strengthen their grammar skills as best you can.

 MATH – 3rd Grade

Free pdf math download for grades 1 – 5. (229 pages)  Use this as a main math spine and use the parts you need to reinforce concepts and teach new ones.

In addition because ck12 elementary math is interactive, your kids can do some math on their own to give you a break as well.

Too, using part printed and part interactive helps to give you some planning help and still addresses the needs of your children.

SCIENCE – 3rd Grade

Though I have two free middle science books here on my site, they are middle school science books. I wanted to be sure you knew about them in case your kids love science and want to go ahead in grade levels.

However, for the time being use this free science book that is a 3rd grade level.

It is a free book online and it is interactive.  When the sound button is clicked, the science book will be read to your children. This will aid them in comprehension.

Again, this gives you a break too if you need to care for your husband, think about part time work or just need to find your calm point again. The kids can read this together or with you or you can choose the interactive portion where they are read to.

If you want to focus on one area of science, then check out these free guides, which are ones I picked out that I think your children will find fascinating based on their ages.

The Ultimate Guide to Studying Plants and Flowers
The Ultimate Guide to Studying Space
The Ultimate Guide to Studying Insects

HISTORY – 3rd Grade

You didn’t mention a specific time period you wanted cover, but here are some free things to use as a spine.

Heritage History books on line. Pick your time period.

America’s Heritage – An Adventure in Liberty. Three free levels to download; Elementary, Middle School and High School.

LibriVox – Has about 25 G.A. Henty books for free.

You know I have LOTS of free lapbooks and unit studies here AND they are in chronological order if you need them.

WHAT YOU CAN DO

Don’t forget to ask other homeschoolers if they are pitching out some unused or gently used curriculum.  Too, we had a homeschool co-op where we exchanged or borrowed curriculum.

Though you may already know, it bears repeating to not forget garage sales, thrift shops and used curriculum sales.  Don’t forget when family or friends ask about gifts for your kids, to steer it toward something educational that your children will like.

Near my last home in Texas we lived close to a big state park. So I checked into park programs that were FREE for the boys to join. They taught science and about nature and it was a fun time to get out of the house. We packed a picnic lunch and spent the day at the park.

Living overseas now, science materials and supplies are non-existent. I have to resort back to my thrifty ways by saving all kinds of material.

I keep and collect ALL empty bottles, jars, liter bottles, shoe boxes, empty toilet paper and papertowl rolls and other things I come across. We now have a nice stash of ready to go science supplies when we need them for hands-on science.

Though I haven’t listed free lessons for art, typing and music, I do have them too.  I wanted to be sure you got to read this in one afternoon and to not also be too overwhelmed, so I stuck to the core subjects.

Once again, I am so grateful that you reached out for support.  I care about you.

Though it won’t be easy, you certainly can homeschool successfully and I hope in some small way that I have eased your stress.

What about you? Do you have any other suggestions to help her?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

 Also, check out my other articles and check out other places to find free curriculum.

Digital Homeschool Curriculum – Big Ol’ List. Some are free, others not but still inexpensive.
Is Homeschooling Expensive?
Homeschooling History – Teaching Ancient Civilizations Using Netflix
Studying Science in your Homeschool with Netflix
Homeschooling with Netflix {Health Class}
Also grab freebies from Homeschool Giveaways and Free Homeschool Deals

18 CommentsFiled Under: Free Homeschool Resources Tagged With: freehomeschoolcurriculum

Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2

May 28, 2015 | 3 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Continuing on with our learning American history, I have some hands-on history today. Also, look at Free American History Lapbook The Old West Through the Life of Wyatt Earp.

Hands-on history as we are learning American history through the life of Wyatt Earp, we did one more easy peazy activity for our unit study opening.

Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2

We made soap.

Now I would have loved to have made one of these cutesy, full of fragrance, pink heart shaped soaps, but I have never been able to get one of my boys to make soap like that.

American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp

So I have to settle for the science of making home made soap, which is to make suds.

Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2

Too, this recipe calls for baking soda but baking soda is not plentiful here in Ecuador because they won’t sell it.  It’s almost like it’s banned here in this country.

I had to substitute with baking powder.

We did learn some chemistry with this because we learned we can substitute baking powder for baking soda but you can’t substitute baking soda when you need baking powder.

Easy ingredients for making soap.

1/4 cup salad oil. I just used what I had.
1/4 quarter cup baking soda. We had to substitute with 3x the amount of baking soda.
Glass jar.

Add oil and soda to a pan and warm it on low heat and stir.

When it thickens, remove from heat and let it cool.  Then add 1 tablespoon of mixture with 2 cups of hot tap water in the jar.

Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2

Shake until you see suds.

Though it may seem like simple science, it was good for Tiny to understand how the things we take for granted today like bubbles and suds just did not exist then.

Of course this would be even more meaningful if we had ashes, but then again reading about making soap in the olden days was a good reading assignment to do on his own.

Next, we were ready to start our unit study so I decided to use a history magazine as our spine.

As a side note, one of my very favorite history magazines, which was Learning through History that we used a lot on our unit studies, stopped printing issues.

I have most of the issues but after they stopped printing, I started receiving another subscription from History Magazine, though it wasn’t for kids. 

HANDS-ON HISTORY FOR KIDS

I do have to look it over when we get it, but because the boys were getting older, I wanted something that wasn’t just bare bones history.

Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2

So for this unit study we are using one of the articles out of our history magazine about Wyatt Earp.

Also because it is for adults, it helps to nurture a love of history for kids who are advanced in reading too.

After he read from the magazine, I had a website that I wanted us to look at together because it is the direction we needed to go in, which is to add some science and a bit of geography.

Though Wyatt Earp is known for his famous gun fight at the OK Corral, he lived most of his life traveling and living in the desert and Southwest area as a lawman.

Features of the SW US - Wyatt Earp Unit Study @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Check out this website Wyatt Earp Desert Lawman, which talks about Earp living most of his life in the deserts of the Southwest.

Then, even though we are finished with our science book for the year,  I love to use free resources I already have to build my unit studies.

So I knew that I had a free science magazine that talked about animals and ecosystems of the Southwest.

I shared that link with you too before, which is Free Science Magazines and the science magazine is Animals and Ecosystems of the Southwestern United States.

Be sure you download it because your child will need it to fill in the minibooks about the desert.

Features of the SW US - Wyatt Earp Unit Study minibook @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Features of the SW US - Wyatt Earp Unit Study Triple Fold Book @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus

One book is a minibook about the states that make up the Southwestern U.S. and the second book is a triple fold book.

On the triple fold book, your child lists 8 features of the Southwestern U.S.

Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp. Learn about American Deserts @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Though hot temperatures and cacti come to mind, Tiny found that a few other things are characteristic of this area of the United States.

Having kicked off our unit study with some fun and easy hands-on ideas, he is ready to start doing a few printables to start building our lapbook.

MORE ACTIVITIES FOR LEARNING ABOUT WYATT EARP AND THE COWBOYS

  • Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp – Hands-on Activities
  • Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday, The Cowboys Minibooks – American History
  • Free Printable History Board Game – American History Through the Life of Wyatt Earp
  • American History Through the Life of Wyatt Earp – Free Notebooking Pages
  • Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
  • Gunfight at O.K. Corral – American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp
  • Free American History Lapbook The Old West Through the Life of Wyatt Earp
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2
Learning American History through the Life of Wyatt Earp Part 2

HOW TO GET THE FREE WYATT EARP LAPBOOK, NOTEBOOKING PAGES & BOARD GAME

Update: The lapbook is now complete. Download all the freebies below.

  • Art cards by Frederic Remington about Wyatt Earp
  • Cover pages for the outside of notebooking pages 1800s and 1900s. Look here how to fold ordinary worksheets to interactive minibooks.
  • 8 Features of the SW United States
  • The 4 Southwestern states
  • American History during the Life of Wyatt Earp 1800s notebooking page
  • American History during the Life of Wyatt Earp 1900s notebooking pages
  • Who was Wyatt Earp
  • Who were the Cowboys
  • Who Was Doc Holliday
  • Gunfight at the O.K. Corral Tombstone, Arizona – About Tombstone – Ed Schieffelin
  • Printable Game with Game Pieces – The Most Famous Shoot Out – Gunfight at O.K. Corral

Now, how to grab the free lapbook. This is a subscriber freebie.

 1) Sign up on my list.

2) Grab the freebie now.

3) Last, look for all my emails in your inbox. Glad to have you following me!

3 CommentsFiled Under: 1. My FREE Learning Printables {Any Topic}, Geography Based, Hands-On Activities, History Based, History Resources Tagged With: american history, hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, history, history resources, historyspine, homeschoolhistory, secularhistory

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