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Welcome

Dedicated Homeschool Room or Dining Room Homeschooler

January 23, 2015 | 16 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Pining for more books and bookshelves is something that most all homeschoolers agree that we can never get enough of.

Collecting materials, books, supplies and every possible learning tool that we can imagine is a never tiring hobby pursuit too.

Dedicated Homeschool Room or Dining Room Homeschooler @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

However, when it comes to either having a dedicated homeschool room or dining room homeschooler that is where the similarities end.

Homeschooling not only for 15+ years but also in helping new homeschoolers and yes I even made house visits to set up a few homeschool rooms, I want you to know there are so many things that weigh in on the decision to either have a dedicated homeschool room or be a dining room homeschooler.  It is not as easy as it seems.

As I school longer, I have come to value the fact that we have very little control over most of the factors.

This point has become more sharply focused for me now and I appreciate it way more than I did 5 or 10 years into my homeschooling.

cabin homeschooling

For example, we may just not have the space for a dedicated room and become dining room homeschoolers not by choice.

This was the way I started off with Mr. Senior 2013.  A 800 square foot cabin for 5 people just did not allow room for a dedicated learning area.

Too, I have heard many positive and negative points made for doing school at the dining room table or setting up a homeschool room.

I have even heard that learning can’t be contained in any one room no more than living can be. That learning in a dedicated homeschool room separates living from learning.  You can disagree with me right away on this too, but that simply is not true.

Let me expand on that thought too and here is my stipulation, which is if you only school in that area for your whole journey from preschool to high school, it could seem more public school-ish than homeschool.

On the other hand, I have never meant a homeschooler who spent their entire journey, preschool to high school in one room, including my family. Have you?

So this is not another blog post about whether you should or shouldn’t have a homeschool room, but it is about sharing how when you and your children’s needs change, so should your area.

Whether you are a dining room homeschooler by choice or not, or you have a dedicated homeschool room, the points today will help you to decide if you need or just want a dedicated homeschool room.
Too, I will share some tips about how to maximize the room in your house if you are a dining room homeschooler.

You Can’t Afford to Ignore This

Looking back on my journey if you were to ask me when my sons were 5 years of age and 2 years of age and a newborn, I would say that a homeschool room was an absolute must.

Fast forward to high school years where my sons spent more of their day away from me and in their room, I would say it’s not a necessity. Again, your current needs should be considered.

Look at my list of things you really can’t ignore when deciding how to set up a school room or if you should make a switch.

  • Space. There is no getting around it. If you don’t have the room, you just don’t have the room. There is not really a choice of where you homeschool.

I have schooled about half of my  journey around the dining room by choice and some years when we lived in the cabin not by choice.

  • Ages. Ages of your children really matter and affects your view at the time.

This is where, if you do have a choice, that it makes a difference having a space when training very young children to a routine.

When Mr. Senior 2013 was 3 years old and I was teaching him handwriting, he would just set at the bar because we did not have a dedicated room.

Right away I could see that it was hard for me to tell him to have good posture for an emerging writer if his feet couldn’t touch the floor.

At this age though too, his attention span was real short and he would be out of the chair as we danced our way through the ABCs each day.

The rest of the day would be spent cuddled up on the couch with a warm blanket as I read aloud to him, my middle son and my newborn.  The need for a dedicated area was not really a need during those years.

homeschool room 2 homeschool room

After we built a new house and had a dedicated school room, Mr. Senior 2013 was now 5 years old and having a place for him to write that was ergonomically correct was absolute key to his beautiful penmanship later.

Along that time, came Mr. Awesome right behind him and at 3 years old, having a dedicated school area was a sanity saving tip for me as I corralled the mounting educational clutter.

When teaching study habits and especially for wiggly boys, they knew I expected different behavior in that dedicated room.  It was not the time to get down on the floor and wrestle.

homeschool room younger years-1Though I did tend to run my day more public school-ish because I was still learning back then, the dedicated area helped me to train my sons for good future study habits.
Back then, looking at the dynamics of a family, which had kids of different ages than mine was an eye opener for me.

Helping moms who started their homeschool journey when their children were middle or high school, the dining room table was a welcome sight and a relaxed way to foster family togetherness as they gathered around the family table.

It was a relief from the rigid schedule of public school confined to one room.

  • Listen to your inner teacher/mom needs. I don’t mind you knowing it and that is part of my personality is that I simply can’t overlook clutter and start off my school day by stepping over it.

Some days I wish I were different.  As hard I try through the years to be more easy going about it, the truth of it is that I am so utterly distracted by the sight of clutter, it’s crippling.

I envy the moms who can look past the clutter to start school because I could probably learn something from them.

Don’t get me wrong, it was a joke when I was pregnant with my number three son because it didn’t matter if we had clutter, I couldn’t really do anything about it.
When I got to the point in my journey when I could do things the way I wanted to, I embraced that part of my personality because I could come to my children “whole”  for the day.

An organized school room was a breath of fresh air every morning for me.

A dedicated homeschool room, when they kids were very little, was more than a relief, it was an unexpected blessing.

As moms sometimes we are so busy filling the needs of our children, we don’t stop to think what do we need to keep homeschooling each day too.

What rocks our homeschool world as we start the day?  For me, I could not push down my need to have things organized and not have clutter strewn all over the house.  I simply would not be a good teacher to my kids.

As the boys grew and hit middle school and high school years, I had help around the house now.  We moved away from a dedicated homeschool room to the dining room table. Coming to the table with my morning cup of coffee to meet them after they gather their school books for the morning is sheer delight.

I realized too that I didn’t have to give up my need for organization either.

By using furniture we had in our dining room for school books and supplies, it still gave my sons a place to put away their books for the days.

Fast forward this many years and I have changed some too because I don’t mind science and history projects around the house because it is evidence that we live and learn in the same places.

Repurpose and Reuse

Look at this list of ways I organized our school things when either by choice or not by choice, we learned at the dining room table.

  • small pretty and clean trash cans turn to map fold up storage
  • plant pots turn to teacher utensil holder and writing utensils holder
  • wooden or plastic crates turn to stacked and inexpensive bookshelves
  • empty gallon paint cans can be painted pretty turquoise and orange (couldn’t resist you know I love that color) and hung on the wall for shelves
  • cedar trunks in the boys bedroom become a place to hold our tons of books
  • empty picture frames hung on the wall in the guest bathroom became a place where I hung and switched out weekly
  • metal baking sheets in the kitchen become a place for magnet play during the day and used for baking at night
  • the small space between the refrigerator and the wall become a place to put away and store my diy trifold cardboard word “wall “ when teaching them to read for the day
  • china cabinet turned book and craft supply storage
  • the standard for buying sofas in my house changed to something that was high enough off the floor so that I could store rolling storage with school supplies in it
  • scaling back my love for shoes, I used my over the door shoe hanging bag for school games and manipulatives
  • my newborn’s armoire got a shoe bag added to the side of it so it would be height appropriate for my then 3 and 5 years old boys to reach to grab books to “read”

teacher area{one area in my dining room}

Embracing both you and your children’s needs at the time is the deciding factor for how each learning area worked for us.
If you are mom with a young household, I encourage you to spend part of your day in a room that engenders routine.

As we schooled longer, we did end up doing science and history in the living room.
Embracing both routine and relaxation in our day was key to keeping balanced.  My boys looked forward to entering our lively learning room in the morning each day and did so without me prompting them each day.

Homeschooling well trained middle school and high school students is a time I savor too.

Organized Homeschool Room in a Dining Room{I didn’t give up my need for organization when we moved from a dedicated homeschool room to the dining room. I used part furniture intended for dining room use like the hutch and then part storage containers like shorter bookshelves and drawers so my sons could put away their supplies each day.}

Our day starts off with us together at the dining room table now and the rest of it is spent by the boys being in their room or in another part of the house on computers.
Now, I couldn’t imagine all of us entering a homeschool room each day.  In the past, I couldn’t imagine not having a dedicated homeschool room when I needed it too.

Has your journey changed through the years too?  If you are a dining room homeschooler, do you have any great tips to share for clever storage?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina 2015 Signature

Check out these other posts.

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 2

Linking up @ these awesome places:

16 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Space

Free 5 Year Holidays List – 7 Step Homeschool Planner

January 22, 2015 | 14 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I normally like to get my free 5 year holidays list – 7 Step Homeschool Planner done this month and I got it done kind of early.  Don’t you love it when you get things done a bit earlier?

Today, I have the first choice of the 5 Year Holidays List, which has the years 2015 to 2019 on it.

I love this reference page and try to put it in each planner I have and it doesn’t hurt to have several placed throughout your 7 Step Homeschool Planner.

I use to add holidays to the calendars but everybody likes to track holidays differently and too not everybody observes the same ones.

A handy reference page has worked much better for planning and allows you to plan long range too. 

Free 5 Year Holidays List  – 2015 to 2019

Passion pink is the first color choice today. I have to keep a bit of a girly girl name on it.

I want to give you a heads up too because I have another color choice coming soon, which is turquoise gem because I know you love turquoise like I do too.

Choose one of each color, which the other color choice is coming soon or print off several of one color.

Holidays Listed 2015 to 2019 passion pink

 Download here Free 5 Year Holiday List 2015 to 2018

Hope you like this handy reference as much as I do.

Did you grab my other new free printables ?

Free Back Cover Pages 7 Step Homeschool Planner

Free Year At a Glance Form – For those Buried in the Organizing Details

If you can’t wait to get started building your 7 Step Homeschool Planner, follow the steps below:

7 Easy Steps – “Tons of Options & Pretty Color”

Step 1. Choose a Pretty Front/Back Cover

Step. 2. Choose Calendars/Appointment Keepers

Step 3. Choose Goals/Objectives

Step 4. Choose Lesson Planning Pages Right For You!

Step 5a. Choose Unique forms JUST for You!

Step 5b. Choose MORE Unique Forms JUST for You!

Step 5c. Choose MORE MORE Unique Forms Just for You!

Step 6. Personalize It

Step 7. Bind it! Love it!

Hugs and love ya,

Tina 2015 Signature

Linking up @ these awesome places:

Thrifty Thursday |Share It Sunday | Motivation Monday | Inspire Me Monday | Mommy Monday |Thoughtful Spot| Mom 2 Mom Monday |Inspiration Monday |Titus 2 Tuesday | Turn It Up Tuesday |House to Home | Laugh & Learn | Good Tips Tuesday | Mom’s Library |Hearts for Home |Family Fun Friday |Sharing Saturday | The Handmade Hangout |A Little Bird Told Me| Wise Woman Link Up |

14 CommentsFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic}, Curriculum Planner Tagged With: curriculum planner

100+ Best and Free Tropical Amazon Rainforest Educators Resources

January 21, 2015 | 22 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Updated 2021

Tropical Rainforest Amazon Educators Resources

The tropical rain forest Amazon was a huge unit study and co-op for us when we studied it a while back. I will be doing it again with Tiny because he was real young when we studied it the first time around.

Too, we might have a chance to visit the rain forest while we are living here in Ecuador. Update: Oh yes we trekked the Amazon Rain Forest while living in Ecuador.

Part of Ecuador borders the rain forest. So either by visiting Brazil or traveling here in Ecuador, I want to be sure we get by to see it because that will be one way to bring the study of the Amazon Rain Forest alive.

Because I didn’t get to share too many tropical rainforest Amazon free resources when I shared my unit study (I already had three pages here on my blog) I thought I would gather a few of them here and then well – – I kept adding and adding.

100 Tropical Rainforest Amazon Free Resources for Educators

I have over 100 free rain forest resources listed below.

Amazon Rainforest Free Educator Resources

Here are my three pages and then scoot down and grab more below.

Rainforest Amazon

Rainforest Animals

Rainforest Co-op Pictures

Free Tropical Rain Forest Amazon Teacher Guides

  • Teachers Guide – Bugs 8 page .pdf
  • Teachers Guide – No Monkey, No Chocolate 10 page .pdf
  • Teachers Guide – Tropical Rain Forest Grades 2-4. 54 page .pdf
  • Teachers Guide – Welcome to the Rain Forest 8 page .pdf
  • Teachers Guide – Rain Forest Upper Primary 17 page .pdf
  • Rain Bird Rain Forest 126 page .pdf Grades K to 12.
  • Journeys in the Film with Amazon Aid 202 page .pdf for Grades 6 to 12.
  • Butterfly Rainforest Educator’s Guide 56 page .pdf
  • Finding My Forest 20 page .pdf
  • Discovering Forests 68 page .pdf for ages 10 to 13
  • Teachers Guide – Rain Forest Pack 5 page .pdf
  • Teachers Guide – Time for Kids 4 page .pdf
  • Teachers Guide – Rain Forest Puppetry  12 page .pdf
  • Teachers Guide – Desert to Rain Forest – Middle School 92 page .pdf
  • Teachers Guide – New South Wales. Teachers Guide – Too cool not to include though it isn’t the Amazon, it shares similarities. Teachers Guide and template to build the rain forest. Scroll down to documents to download and grab all the downloads.
  • Reptiles Alive 15 page .pdf
  • The Jungle Book 50 page .pdf Grades 4 to 8.
  • The Magic Rainforest 15 page .pdf guide.
  • Tropical Rainforest K to12
  • Guide for The Rainforest Grew All Around 58 page .pdf

Free Tropical Rain Forest Amazon Lesson Plans

  • What are Rainforests
  • Does Medicine Grow on Trees
  • Rainforest Facts
  • How chocolate is made –6 .pdf lessons
  • “Afternoon on the Amazon” by Mary Pope Osborne
  • Rainforest Animal printable book for Grades 3-5
  • Tree of Dreams Chocolate Covered Rainforest Activities
  • AmaZone based on a fictional world summit about the rainforest
  • Rainforest Lessons
  • The Earth’s Rain Forest 14 page .pdf
  • Regions of South America
  • Ancient Farmers of the Amazon – High School
  • And the Rains Came Down
  • Journey Into Amazonia
  • Zoozoo Animal Teaching Guide (have to give your email) but the download is 114 page .pdf (nice) of various animals
  • Animals of the Amazon
  • Facts about the Rainforest
  • Amazon Water Cycle Role-play
  • Design a Rainforest Postcard
  • Tropical Treehouse 11 page .pdf

Free Tropical Rain Forest Amazon Coloring Pages

  • Supercoloring Rain Forest Coloring Pages
  • Coloring Pages from First Palette
  • Jaguar Animal Coloring Page
  • Lots on Coloring Home
  • Collection of Rain Forest Coloring Page
  • Coloring Pages from Rainforest Alliance
  • Howler Monkey Coloring Pages
  • A Walk in the Rainforest
  • Save the Rainforest
  • First School Rainforest

Tropical Rain Forest Amazon Lapbooks

  • Be sure you grab the rainforest lapbooks I have on my page. I have enough for 3 or more lapbooks.
  • The Great Kapok Tree Lapbook by Little Beans – Ideas
  • Rain Forest Lapbook by All that’s Good – Ideas
  • Free Brazil Lapbook by Too Many Flowers Travels
  • The Great Kapok Tree lapbook by Homeschool Share
The Basement Workshop Store

Tropical Rain Forest Crafts and Activities

  • Bromeliad Pattern
  • Make a Blue Morpho Butterfly
  • Make a Bromeliad and Other Activities
  • Live Rain Forest in a Jar
  • Printable Tree Frog Craft
  • Rain Forest Plants Activity
  • Make a Paper Plate Frog
  • Preschool Snake Craft
  • Amazon Water Cycle Role Play
  • Make a Brazilian Rainforest Triarama
  • Rain Forest Dioramas
  • Parrot Crafts
  • Felt Iguana
  • Butterfly Life Cycle Paper Plate Craft
  • Rainforest in a Jar Kid Craft
  • Camouflage Habitat Diorama
  • Paper Rain Forest in a Jar
  • Twirling Paper Plate Snake
  • The Great Kapok Tree Printable Board Game
  • Another Paper Plate Snake Craft
  • Build An Ecosystem
  • Toucan Craft
  • Devastating Deforestation Triarama
  • Edible Rainforest Dirt Pudding
  • Make a Jaguar Mask or Poison Dart Bean Bag

Free Rain Forest Printables

  • Animal Research Report
  • Easy Crossword Puzzle
  • PreK Rio Pack
  • Jan Brett Umbrella printable
  • Cute printable passport and map
  • Giant Rainforest Word search
  • Free The Umbrella Animals
  • Shrinking Rain Forests
  • The Rainforest printable lesson
  • Free Printable Mini-Book
  • Free Rainforest Bingo

Rainforest Facts – Infographics

Degradation of the Brazilian Rain Forest

Rain Forest Infographic

Rain Forest Media Resources

  • Rain forest Animal and Plant Life
  • Hidden Animal Games
  • Interactive How Plants Grow
  • Amazon Interactive The Ecotourism Game
  • Rainforest in a Box YouTube
  • The Rain Forest Grew All Around Math Quiz
  • Rainforests 101 | National Geographic
  • Virtual Field Trip – Amazon Rainforest
  • Rainforest Facts for Kids
  • Amazon Rainforest 

If you want to do a literature unit study with fun weather themed book for your young ones, you’ll love these online self-paced literature workshops for your kids.

Look at the course the book Raindrop Plop.

Check out ALL the online self-paced courses for your kids. They have classes for K to 12.

Best Rain Forest Books for Kids

You’ll love my Ultimate Unit Study Planner with my eye for detail! You can grab it below or see more pictures in my shop and check out the Unit Study Enhancer for Temperate Rain Forests.

  • 2. Ultimate DIY Homeschool Unit Study Planner

    2. Ultimate DIY Homeschool Unit Study Planner

    $5.99
    Add to cart
  • Temperate Rain Forest Unit Study Enhancer (4 Printables)

    Temperate Rain Forest Unit Study Enhancer (4 Printables)

    $1.25
    Add to cart

100 Tropical Rainforest Amazon Free Resources for Educators

You’ll love these other resources:

  • Fascinating and Fun Honey Bees Unit Study and Lapbook for Kids
  • The Ultimate Guide to the Flora and Fauna of the Amazon Rain Forest
  • Toddler to Teen 100 Popular Free Homeschool Unit Study Resources
  • Meso-America Unit Study and Lapbook
  • Foraging and Feasting Nature Unit Study and Lapbook
  • Free Earth Science Lapbook
  • Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazine

Hugs and love ya,

Over 70 Free Amazon Rain Forest Resources! Great for a homeschool unit study or just learning about the Amazon Rain Forest. Click here to grab these AWESOME resources!

22 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Science Tagged With: amazon rain forest, earthscience, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschool, life science, science, sciencecurriculum

Where to Begin When Putting Together My Own Homeschool Curriculum?

January 20, 2015 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Your questions are awesome.  Where to begin when putting together my own homeschool curriculum is another dynamic reader question I have to share with you because sometimes the core curriculum is not real clear.

Look at Nicolle’s question:

I am a single mom of an incredible 6 (going on 7) year old boy.  A hands on entrepreneur with overhead still working on the business and so I am a working mom and my son comes to work with me.  though it may be difficult I work towards doing things I believe in in my heart, after long consideration.  I am very creative; however we are just making more friends and have no family where we are (my sons daddy is here p/t).  With that said and with found support in other (stay at home) home-school moms I took the leap and am just beginning to home-school my son.  I am overwhelmed though still with how to create an initial solid foundation to build a ‘core curriculum’ for him and us.  I’ve been told my style is more eclectic, unit studies, with a twist of Charlotte mason living language.  I was referred to take your course which I will.  I’ve worked on new work etc scheduling…but despite being told it’s easier to buy a curriculum (a bit expensive for me and all I want is the written curriculum and not all the books as I can attain them in a different way and which to choose?!)  I’d like to start working on my own…Where do I begin knowing the curriculum I put together (as you said in your video) will not ‘leave my child’ behind so to say??? 

Singleness can have a huge advantage when you are on the curriculum hunt.  You have time to research curriculum because you don’t have a husband’s demands to meet.  Singleness does have its freedom.

Too, using the creative and entrepreneur part of your personality are strengths and can save you money in long run.

Entrepreneurs rock and are willing to take chances and risks that others are not willing to take. This is where you can think of hands-on ideas on the spur of the moment and where you will seize teachable moments.

The side of your personality that probably needs support is with the details and maybe curbing the desire to “jump” to something different when you need to stay on course.
This is where part laid-out curriculum comes in. You are on the right track.  Just remember though that laid-out does not always mean expensive.

You can use laid-out curriculum without buying a whole boxed curriculum. Just buy each part that you need.

When looking at costs, there are a couple of ways at looking at this.
One way is that when you buy something laid-out, you don’t have the guesswork of whether you are covering the basics or not.

Another way of looking at it that I have seen is that many, many, many homeschoolers think they are saving money only to spend or waste thousands of hours trying out new curriculum in their hunt to find a perfect fit.

What price are you putting on your time to hunt for the “perfect” resource?
Understand that anything you purchase will not be perfect ever.

However, getting something that will help you to stay on task, will allow freedom for you to add your creativity and tweaking or deleting activities that make no sense to you is a great start.

I do believe you can find a balance too. One more advantage you have is that your son is very young.  Just starting out you don’t need very much at this age.

The core curriculum are basically your 3 R’s, which are reading, writing and arithmetic.

The 3 R’s vary slightly at each age, but here is the very short list of essentials for his age:

Phonics

Handwriting

Math

Reading

If you spend your hard earned dollars on these things first, then you are covering the essentials.

These are the subjects he needs to do everyday. They don’t have to be done necessarily by a worksheet either.  Again, you can add your flair to these subjects.  At this age, he needs more hands-on as well.

For example, a day of teaching might go like this: phonics may be about creating an art collage of the sounds he is working on, handwriting practice might consist of playing with slime dough after he writes a sentence or two, math could be a read aloud from a living book about math or doing a candy graph and reading could be him listening on line to a read aloud.

Using the laid out guides, you will know what he needs to learn each day and can enhance it with more hands-on learning.

With your tendency toward creativity you can add in science and history from library books and free resources.

Too, you will want to spend money on items for arts and crafts because at this age it is not just play, but it is about learning.

Used curriculum is not always cheaper. It’s worth looking at all your options.

You do not have to buy a boxed curriculum, but you can buy each of these pieces separate and still make a good fit for your son because they are still laid out.

Choose a Homeschool Phonics Program

Look at some of the choices for phonic programs that I like:

Alpha Omega has Horizons, A Beka has a solid phonics program, All About Spelling which is a reading program too, Explode the Code and Sing, Spell, Read and Write.

Choose a Homeschool Handwriting Program

A Reason for Writing and I like workbooks by Zaner-Bloser.

Too, add in plenty of copywork and dictation starting off with like one sentence to copy and expand to longer ones.

You don’t need to teach formal composition until later grades, which could be another long topic here on my blog.

For now, at this age you are teaching the mechanics of how to write.

Most children don’t have control over their fine motor skills until about halfway through first grade. That is when I started teaching cursive to each of my sons.

Choose a Homeschool Math Program

Math is a fun subject too. There are a lot of wonderful programs to choose from as well.

Besides something rigorous which is a given, I prefer bright colored pages for this age too.

Horizon Math is advanced, Singapore is right there too and so is Math U See.
Each one has a different approach.

Choose a Homeschool Reading Program

If he is not reading yet, then you want some phonics readers that enhance your phonics lessons. I used Pathway readers because they were rigorous and inexpensive.

Too, when I taught my oldest son to read, I went to the local teacher supply store and bought an inexpensive set of phonics readers. It focused on one sound in each book and then I added in way more free stuff I found on line and hands-on art to focus on that sound for three or four days and then added in another book.

If he is reading, then you want to look for living books, which means they are not textbooks. You can also save a lot of money by making regular trips to the library to get books on his reading level.

Keep in mind if you use a program like Sing, Spell, Read and Write or All About Spelling which is called All About Reading, readers will be included.

I also loved Christian Light Readers too. They are inexpensive and beautifully written.  It does not hurt to have phonics readers and easy books for beginning readers a plenty.

Though I see this long scrolling list of subjects that new homeschoolers have for their children, the core curriculum or basics are the bones or framework of an excellent education.

Stay the course by doing them each day in every grade, adding in spice along the way by varying your teaching methods and curriculum and you will have a great beginning.

You might also want to look at these posts:

8 Components of a Boxed Curriculum
How to Use a Boxed Curriculum without Giving Up Your Homeschool Approach
How To Choose Curriculum Other Than the Looks Good Method
Stop Switching Your Curriculum, Switch Your Course of Study 

Hugs and love ya,

Signature T

Don’t forget to follow BOTH of my Pinterest accounts for more AWESOME pins.

Visit Tina Robertson’s profile on Pinterest.


Visit Tinas Dynamic Homeschool ‘s profile on Pinterest.

4 CommentsFiled Under: Choose Curriculum, Dynamic Reader Question Tagged With: boxedcurriculum, curriculum, homeschool, homeschoolcurriculum, new homeschooler homeschool curriculum

20 Ideas for Bringing Writing Alive through Unit Studies About Ancient Civilizations

January 19, 2015 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have 20 ideas for bringing writing alive through unit studies.

Whether we are teaching handwriting readiness to our younger kids or how to form a coherent paragraph with our middle school or high school kids, writing is an essential skill to communicating.

Try explaining the value of this vital skill to a reluctant writer.

20 Ideas for Bringing Writing Alive through Unit Studies About Ancient Civilizations

Normally the conversation just ends in moans and groans.

Unit studies have been a way to curb the fear of the writing process and blank paper syndrome in our house.

Today, in sharing 20 ideas for bringing writing alive through unit studies, I want to share ideas for writing assignments.

They not only make writing a joy but create value in the eyes of your budding writer.

As teachers sometimes we are all too eager to get our kids to meet our expectations of the mechanics of writing instead of instilling a passion for writing in the beginning.

The trigger for getting a writer to mind the details or mechanics of his writing is to get him to write something that is relevant to the subject he is learning.

But also to give him freedom to write about what stirs his soul.

Whining or Winning Your Way Through Writing

Writing is a subject where unit study topics are powerful motivators,

Too, the unit study approach has an enormous edge over other homeschool learning approaches.

If you have included your children in the process of selecting a unit study, you already have a topic they eagerly want to know about.

Unlike boring workbooks or programs that focus first on the mechanics of writing and the subject or topic of writing is incidental, it is opposite with a unit study.

Choosing a topic for writing already has a palatable start.

Your child had a choice when planning your unit study theme. 

Your child’s freedom to choose a unit study topic gives you the necessary starting point.

Too, you take a potentially stressful subject to teach and turn it into something they look forward to.

Instead of grouping writing ideas by grade level, from kindergarten to high school, I will leave that up to you. 

You know whether your young writer is doing more advanced work or if you need to have your highschooler focus on the basics of writing.

Too, from the list below, I want to encourage you to continue to give handwriting priority in your day instead of feeling defeated.

BRINGING WRITING ALIVE THROUGH UNIT STUDIES

Look at this list of ideas as I use my unit study theme, Ancient Civilizations, as an example to plan related handwriting or composition topic.

Ancient Civilizations.

  • Describe silkworms; explain the silk making process;
  • explain the process of becoming a Samurai warrior;
  • how would you compare the lives of Egyptian Pharaohs and Queens to the common people;
  • list 3 facts that you learned from the life of Jonah;
  • research about the animals of Africa and label the parts of an animal;
  • write a quality paragraph about the art of mummy making;
  • describe Hannibal’s trek across the Alps with elephants so that your reader can experience it and picture it;
  • color an animal by number to strengthen fine motor skills or color an animal by letter recognition;
  • write an essay about the Punic Wars so that each part of the essay is clearly distinguishable, which are an opening paragraph, three detailed body paragraphs and a closing paragraph;
  • observe nature and write about the flora of the Hanging Gardens of Babylon;
  • show the relationship between Shang script or Chinese writing to cuneiform and hieroglyphics;
  • do Ancient Greece copywork; use reliable and quality resources to research about Egyptian Gods; use time order to explain the days of creation;
  • outline how to build the pyramids of Egypt;
  • describe pieces of art from Ancient Civilizations;
  • have a younger child edit a paragraph written by an older sibling;
  • choose scriptures to narrow down a topic about the pagan practices of Ancient Civilizations;
  • creative writing by using If I lived back in the times of mummies . . . or If I traveled back to the ancient land of Greece … or What I would wear to be part of the high fashion society of Greece . . . or What my weapon would be if I were training to be a Roman Legionary Soldier and copy one sentence or quote like “All Roads Lead to Rome”.

From a Word Rookie to Word Wizard

Don’t be afraid to put aside composition assignments that are meaningless in favor of choosing a topic with a meaningful message to your child.

Also, setting aside laid out curriculum and grabbing helpful reference books will allow you to create writing assignments for your family.

One resource I have used over the years and still use is Great Source Write Source. 

Matter of fact I like all their books.  It has been easy to assign written work we choose following the composition types in these books.

Also, for a teacher reference, I really like The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation: An Easy-to-Use Guide with Clear Rules, Real-World Examples, and Reproducible Quizzes and refer to this probably more often than some other references.

Another one that is timeless and has stood teaching all three of my sons with the fads of books coming in and out is If You’re Trying to Teach Kids How to Write . . . You’ve Gotta Have This Book.

Writing topics are sparked from themes that make sense to your child.

Why? Because they are based on what topic you are learning about.

Smothering the Embers of Beginning Creativity

When emphasis is put first on the engaging process of the topic then a tool like grammar can be applied afterwards. 

Kids can feel crippled when they have to think about the mechanics of writing when thoughts should be flowing.

Working on the mechanics of grammar like the who and which clauses.

Too, study nonessential and essential clauses.

Focus on narrowing down topics, planning paragraphs and editing can be done after the child has composed what he finds entertaining.

Don’t stifle the love for writing by focusing first on the rules. 

Keep the teacher mom reined in for this subject.

Rules of grammar are important and you want them to be important to your children.

The necessity of the rules can be seen when applied to something personal, which is their writing. 

Rules for the sake of rules without validity never made sense to anybody.

Does this list spark some creative ideas for writing on your present unit study? Do you want me to create lists like this for each unit study on my blog?

20 Ideas for Bringing Writing Alive through Unit Studies

Check out these other posts:

  • Teaching Handwriting When Homeschooling the Early Years Part 3
  • Dynamic Reader Question: Tips for Teaching a Young Writer to Take his Ideas from a Trickle to a Waterfall

 

 

2 CommentsFiled Under: Do Unit Studies, Teach Homeschool Language Arts

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