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5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 2 Repurpose and Reimagine

July 22, 2014 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

 

 

Today, on 5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 2 Repurpose and Reimagine, it’s all about being aware of recycling and reusing to create beautiful new storage.

I know my family could be better at recycling.  One thing though I have had a good habit of doing through the years is keeping and collecting material that we need for science activities and experiments.  But, I needed some inspiration for using some of those same things to create beautiful storage and spaces.

Too, I take my inspiration from practical everyday things I would actually do and not some over the top outlandish and weird project that not everybody could do.

Whether it’s a cereal box, muffin tin or paint can turned into beautiful homeschool storage, I get excited thinking about the possibilities of creating something new just for my space.

Homeschoolers are the ultimate do-it-yourself type of people so hopefully some of these creative ways will nudge you to bring to life the old and make it new.

Window Cork Board
Window Cork Board
Cookie Sheet Memo Boards
Cookie Sheet Memo Board
Color-Coded Crayon Buckets
Color Coded Crayon Buckets
Reclaimed Wood Shelving
Reclaimed Wood Shelving
Book Lamp
Book Lamp
Paint Chip Clock
Paint Chip Clock
Tissue Box Organizer
Tissue Box Organizer
Stair Post Desk
Stair Post Desk
Rain Gutter Shelves
Rain Gutter Shelves
Knife Block Crayon Holder
Knife Block Crayon Holder
Frame Dry Erase Board
Picture Frame Dry Erase Board
Drawer Bulletin Board
Drawer Bulletin Board
DIY Cardboard Storage Boxes
DIY Cardboard Storage Box
Chalkboard Memo Board
Chalkboard Message Center
Clothespin Magnets
Clothespin Magnets

Do you have ideas that you have used in your homeschool space?

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature 5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 1 Small Spaces

Did you miss the first day in this series?

5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 1 Small Spaces

Look at some of these other creative ideas!

Inspired yet?

Creative Storage Solutions for Homeschool

7 Favorite Organization Tools

Also, Look What is Coming!! I am so excited!

Omnibus Blog Post

4 CommentsFiled Under: Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces, Homeschool Space, Homeschool Tools, Storage, & Accessories Tagged With: diy, homeschoolrooms

5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 1 Small Spaces

July 21, 2014 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

 

 

Sharing 5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 1 Small Spaces today, I am hoping a little bit of inspiration will spur you on to redesign your homeschool spaces.

The Zen of Small Homeschool Spaces

When I started homeschooling, there were 5 of us in a 800 square foot cabin and 200 feet of that was the porch.  So guess what? I used the porch too for outside activities.  True, my kids were very little then and they didn’t mind the shared spaces, but sometimes you just have no choice.

Thinking outside the box and using portable or mobile items was key to making part of our small space an early learning space.  For example, I had a word wall that I folded and put away behind the refrigerator when I needed the bar space to teach Mr. Senior 2013.  I only wish now that I had a picture of it.

Looking back too, I wished I would have appreciated more too that a smaller space also equals less time to clean up and less clutter you get to haul in.  I focused too much on what I didn’t have instead of appreciating what I did have.  It was a simpler life then and with that comes less stress because you simply don’t have the room to maintain it all.

I think that brings a certain peace of mind too though sometimes we don’t always think so.

Look at these ideas I have rounded up that may work work when you are short on homeschool space.

Family Room Space
Family Room School Space
Under the Stairs Space
Under the Stairs Desk
Kitchen School Zone
Kitchen School Space
Side by Side Space
Side by Side Space
Corner Bookshelf Above Dining Table
Shelves Above the Table
Wrap Around Desk
Wrap Around Desk
Under Stairs Shelf
Stair Nook Shelf
Seat Sack Storage
Seat Sack Storage
Movable School Center
Rolling School Cart
Floating Desk
Floating Desk
Desk for Two
Desk for Two
Corner Desk Space
Corner Desk
Closet School Space
Closet School Desk
Closet Command Center
Closet Command Center
Bedroom School Space
Bedroom School Space

Look at these other posts to hook you on homeschool organization!

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

Baskets, Bins and Buckets for Homeschool Storage

17 Creative Book Storage Ideas When You Homeschool

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 2

This is also a blog hop.  This blog hop is organized by iHomeschool Network, a collaboration of outstanding homeschool bloggers who connect with each other and with family-friendly companies in mutual beneficial projects.   I am proud to be a member of iHomeschool Network.  Connect with us on Pinterest, Google Plus and Twitter.  And of course, click the image below to visit all the other blog articles from the homeschool moms of the iHomeschool Network.

Linking up @ these fabulous places:

Link Party Palooza |

6 CommentsFiled Under: Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces, Homeschool Space, Homeschool Tools, Storage, & Accessories Tagged With: diy, homeschoolrooms

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 2

July 19, 2014 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today in sharing how to turn a house into a homeschool space Part 2, I want to share a few things that worked for me  in my homeschool area.  As the boys grow older, some of the things I shared in How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1 stopped working for us.

Sometimes I miss the separate crafts area when they were little.   Not having it now reminds me of how quickly a learning space can change.

No longer was it important to have so many posters and visual aids up on the wall.  Things they needed to learn could now get sized down to letter size and put into their individual notebooks as a reference for them.  Too, as you learn each kid struggles differently in subjects and needs individual references and helps in their own notebooks.

Also, even though I had a learning area upstairs where we homeschooled when we moved into our present home, it lasted just a few short years too.  Again, moving to a different room was one more sign that my boys have grown older because we didn’t have to go upstairs to a separate formal area for part of our day.  Good study habits and a regular routine were now formed.  Easing up on such a formal area is a plus when your kids start taking responsibility for learning.

What’s The Difference Between Relaxed  Learning Places & Play Areas?

It was time to move all of our homeschooling downstairs.  We took over the formal dining area.

It’s important to me that you know from the very beginning of homeschooling that I have always had a time in our day where we moved out of the school room to a more relaxed place like the living room.

Balancing our day with formal and informal spaces has been the key to good study habits for my boys.

In the beginning my school room played an important part in teaching my sons how to learn even at times when they may not have wanted to learn.  Though I am all for relaxed areas, as adults not all things in life indulge us in our whims and moods.   Some days I was just real business-like with our school.

If our school had been in all relaxed areas every day or all formal areas every day, I am not sure if my kids would have self-motivation for learning.  My kids won’t know everything by the time I finish homeschooling, but they will know how to learn.

As your kids get older, learning at the table has a huge advantage over just learning in a space your kids may choose on their own too.

It’s important that the height of the work table encourages neat penmanship, they have good light and adequate cool air.  Sometimes my boys had a tendency to close their doors in their rooms and the warm, still air made for more sleepy time than learning time.  I would change that in the day and insist they come back to the table.  Learning how important their environment is to good study habits, they naturally chose the table to do their formal studying and writing at as they have hit the older years.

Sometimes folding a learning area into a home can look somewhat out of place but there is no need for it to look that way.  At times I miss the cutesy posters on the wall that I had when they were young.  But one huge plus that I am loving is that as they got older, the homeschool area could be organized the way I want it as the teacher.

{No longer organizing for small kids, set up the area in a way that is good for you and your older kids.}

{I used clear shoe box containers for small item storage and toothbrush caddies (new of course) to store pens, pencils and another toothbrush caddie for the scissors.}

{I never use the binder the teacher’s manuals come in because well it doesn’t match. (tee hee hee).  Because I like to label and color coordinate my room as much as I can, I choose binders that will last longer and inspire me.}

Like I told my boys, you have to be a manly man to use the area while mom uses some of her favorite colors like orange passion and hot pink.  On a serious note though most of the time older kids express their creative outlets in their individual rooms so the school area design can be all about mom.  I am loving that!

Look at a few of these tips that helped me to make our last learning area be part of the main living area.

Don’t always look for conventional pieces.

For example, if you’re looking for a bookshelf don’t think you have to look just at bookshelves.  Think: What do I need and how much space do I have? One year, I used shelving that belonged in a garage.  Look at greenhouse storage, baby furniture storage (even if you don’t have babies, this furniture is compact and small), garage storage and even dorm furniture.

Just remember the least inexpensive storage options sometimes are storage pieces made for other places in the house that may not be viewed so beautiful.  A coat of paint and some hooks and it could look like it belongs in the house.

Store crafts in less expensive containers that say they belong in the kitchen or bathroom.

For storing crafts and all those other small bits and pieces of learning tools look outside of storage containers that belong in a kid’s room.  For example, I have the most beautiful color choices when I look for bathroom storage in my homeschool room.

Look for other things that could double as bookends.

I won’t lie here because maybe it’s a fettish of mine that I love bookends.  My weakness, but I will pay top dollar for something that makes my heart go pitter patter.

Look at these things I rounded up to show you where I would start looking for some things when I get to design our next homeschool space.

It says it’s a soap dish, but it looks like a smokin’ hot paper clip holder to me.

It says it’s a bathroom tumbler, but looks like a hot color for storing my pens and pencils to me.

It says it’s a combination toothbrush holder, but looks like a streamlined beautiful way to organize my kids pencils and markers. And another one in a pretty color!

It says it’s a small wastebasket, but it looks like a chic way to store rolled up maps or artwork. Be still my heart because I found orange.

It says it’s a toothbrush holder, but it looks like scissor storage to me.

It says it’s a cosmetic carousel organizer, but it looks like a great way to store school supplies in the center of a table.


Turning a house into a homeschool space means using things that we normally would use each day to redesign, reinvent and rethink how we create learning spaces.  Do you have out of the box organizing pieces you will be trying out this year?

Lastly, I will be doing a 5 Day blogging series next week that I am so excited about.  You know I like reminding you when I go on 5 day rolls.  It is 5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks For Your Homeschool Spaces.

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

Linking Up @ these fabulous places:

The Thoughtful Spot | Hip Homeschool Hop |Turn It Up Tuesday|Titus 2 Tuesday|Good Tips Tuesday|

8 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Space, Homeschool Tools, Storage, & Accessories Tagged With: homeschoolrooms, homeschoolstorage

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

July 18, 2014 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I just can’t contain myself.  Though I’m excited today to share about how to turn a house into a homeschool space Part 1, I just can’t keep my news from you any longer.

We have a contract on our house!!!! I think I will pass out now that the last stages of packing begins.

I have such mixed feelings going on right now because if all goes as planned with the buyer (which you know we have no control over), then we should close on our house by the end of August. 

Does that mean my blog titles will change to Hotel Homeschooling? Maybe so.  Though there may be some blogging breaks from time to time and because some of you have emailed asking me, please know that I’m not giving up blogging.  I have grown too fond of you.

Also, we are not planning right away to move/fly to South America because we want to take a much needed vacation here in the states. 

You have to love homeschooling at times like this.  When everybody is planning back to school, we will be taking our  “summer break.”  For sure, I’ll keep you posted.

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

Today, I want to share a few fun tips that remind me to create a learning rich environment. 

Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space NOT a Classroom

Too, maybe it’s because I am pining to organize, create and decorate a homeschool room which I normally do at this time of the year that I am inspired to share a tip or two that will get you started or help you to make a small change this year.

I have heard it over and over again and that is that you won’t use a homeschool room.  Guess what? I did.  And I loved using it when the kids were young. 

I think some of this depends on the amount of space you have, your need to have some things contained as the teacher and on the ages of your children. 

Transitioning active boys from roughhousing to sitting still for just a bit is a learned art by them you. 

Going into the schoolroom and changing our environment each morning gave my boys a cause to pause. 

It changed their demeanor in the since they got a bit more calm ready to learn.  It was the shift in focus we needed each morning.

It’s funny how when they are small too, they like doing the bunk bed thing and shared bedroom and that freed up an extra bedroom in our house.

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

As the teacher mom, it helped me to tame the chaos and clutter by having one area where our books and supplies were too.

Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space NOT a Classroom

A Print-Rich Learning Environment at Home is Important.

However, with that being said, I set up our early learning room a bit more like a classroom with my posters and too rigid of an early morning routine. 

Having all young children then, I think it’s important to have a print-rich learning environment though because I had to teach them all how to read and that begins with early exposure to print, letters and shapes.

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

I see now that I could have added plastic learning mats at the table where they ate and even some mats in the potty room.  Scattering the place mats throughout the house can make learning more natural at this age.

Are You Sabotaging Your Child’s Natural Ability to Create and Learn

There were some things I did right and would not change if I had to start homeschooling all over again.

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

I couldn’t have schooled without the kidney shaped table.  Though I didn’t have to sit on the other side of a table like a teacher (I still had public school teacher mentality), it worked out great actually because the shape of the table allowed all the kids to sit around together.  Of course the soft round edges were safe too for a toddler pulling up to stand.

Storing all the manipulatives in one area that the kids could easily reach inspired them to create and pretend play. 

Having another separate arts and craft table set up, allowed me to move one or two kids over to that area for some time alone fun time while I still supervised them. 

More Homeschool Spaces Ideas

  • Top 10 Tips for Maximizing Space in (Really) Tiny Homeschool Spaces

This was a sanity saver because it allowed me to work 1:1 with another kid. 

Making time for that precious 1:1 time with each kid whether they are struggling or not in a subject has been vital so that I keep a good pulse on what each of my sons are learning and not learning. 

Sometimes it’s not so easy with a toddler running in and out of a room, but I found that having enough clutter manipulatives in the room I was in along with his favorite snacks bought me some time too.

Last, I loved, loved, the small child-sized forward facing bookshelf. 

Each week, I changed out the books with science and history books that I chose from the library. 

From the beginning, my kids could choose books they wanted to “read” even though they were not reading age yet AND I would make them choose a book or two that I had on the shelf.

Just like eating, learning to read is about exposing them to healthy habits from the beginning.

In Part 2, I will share how to turn a house into a homeschool space when you don’t have a homeschool room and share my learning space for kids that are a bit older.

Too, you know I always give you the heads up when I have a 5 day series coming up.

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

Next week, I will be sharing 5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks For Your Homeschool Spaces, just in time to start preparing your homeschool rooms.

8 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Space, Homeschool Tools, Storage, & Accessories Tagged With: homeschoolstorage. homeschoolroom

Updated Homeschool Attendance Forms

July 16, 2014 | 10 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Thank You! I have said it before that the best ideas for updating forms come from you because like me, you want to make them flexible enough for your family too.

Today, I have two updated homeschool attendance forms and I am so excited about them.  I have been wanting to add a bit more flexibility to them but I like to take my time when I update my curriculum planner forms because I want them to work for more than just a few homeschoolers too.

I want to Thank Kathy for this comment because as soon as I had time, I updated the attendance form.

Hi Tina,
I LOVE your sheets and ideas. I’ve been following you for two years now.

I noticed in Leeanna’s comment she starts her tracking in May for Ga. The group I’m with in SC starts in June. I was wondering would it be possible to have an attendance chart in the trimesters with blank months. That way we can put down what works for our needs.
In addition, have some extra room for other letter codes ~ ie : The S = sick, H = Holiday, F = Field Trip area.
We don’t have music day, art day, it blends into our days. I had to white out those things and fill in what we did. V = volunteering, L= Lab, T = Latin, and such.
It may help others in the future.

Thanks SO much for all your hard work and thinking of us!
Kathy

Below I created a new graphic explaining the two options and it will eventually be going on the STEP 5  Unique Forms page.

Of course, my love for color has grown since my original Attendance Forms and those forms were in need of some color luv.  The Attendance Forms were some of my first forms where I started adding a bit of color not knowing if you would like it or not.  I had just started to move away from creating only black and white copies.

I now know you love all the color collages as much as I do.

Here are a few details about the updated forms:

  • I have 2 options.
  • Both forms have a place for 4 children.  It is not that I have a fondness for the number four (tee hee hee) but that number of columns fits nicely on one page.
  • Both forms have an expanded Key Area. I added a few more codes too AND I created a few blank lines for codes that may be unique for your family and that you need to track.  You just write them in each year.
  • To allow room for the extra key code area because I was already at the bottom of the page, both forms had to be bumped up a bit.  It doesn’t affect binding or anything, I just wanted you to know that height wise it will be a bit taller than the rest of the forms in your planner.  I know, a small detail but those things matter when I create forms.
  • The biggest difference between the forms is that one has a blank area to fill in the month you begin school AND to fill in your semesters.   This allows for a lot more flexibility whether you begin tracking in May, June or July.  The other form follows all the rest of the forms on my 7 Step Homeschool Planner, which run from July to June (academic year) and allow for year around homeschooling.  On this form, the semesters are already filled in too.

Look below at the two different forms.

This one above you add in the months when you begin to homeschool and write in the semesters.

This form matches the rest of my forms that begin on July and go through June for year around homeschooling and it has the months and semesters filled in already.

Download Form Here Where You Add Your Own Month

Download Form Already Filled In.

As the mood creativity strikes, I will be updating more of the forms too.

7 Easy Steps – “Tons of Options & Pretty Color” Begin building your planner.

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! Not a kazillion other people

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!

Enjoy and love ya,

10 CommentsFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic} Tagged With: attendanceform, curriculum planner

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