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Welcome

Great Homeschool Convention– Ticket Discounted Until 11/30 + Free History Download

November 21, 2013 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

This is a sponsored post and I am proud to be partnering with Great Homeschool Conventions this year because I LOVE their convention philosophy and because I love freebies.

Homeschool Convention Discount Ticket Price Extended

I am still waiting anxiously as to when more details will be announced about Great Homeschool Convention coming to Texas. Even though I am moving, I can still plan our vacation time around conventions like I always have.

One thing I wanted you to know is that Great Homeschool Conventions has the price of registration discounted through 11/30. If you are going, then you want to take advantage of grabbing your registration now by clicking below or on the picture above.

Great Homeschool Conventions

But that is not all they have for you. They also have a free history download for you by Michael Medved.

Click here to grab the free history download.

Michael Medved will be  a speaker at all 3 Conventions in 2014 and guess what? He will also be in Texas in early 2015.  Michael Medved is a homeschool advocate and has a crazy-popular radio show across the US.

Check out the registration!

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature 7 Favorite Organization Tools

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Sponsored Posts Tagged With: greathomeschoolconventions

My Free 2014 2 Page Calendar Appointment Keepers are Here

November 17, 2013 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Free 2014 2 Page Calendar Spread CP @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

It’s a disease I am telling you. I get so giddy when it comes time to creating or updating my forms that I can hardly take it.

I normally try to get these to you by December, but this year I am getting them to you a bit early because I just can’t stand making you wait too long.

Forever Blog Cover CP - 3 @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I wanted to give you a peak at what I have been working on too over the last several months. I have been needing a comprehensive blog planner and so I decided to create one. I know not everybody blogs, but if you do, you might give it a look when I’m done. I don’t make deadlines for myself on planners because you know how fussy exacting I am about my printables, but I have set a goal for completing it by the end of the year. I will put it in my estore, but will give you the heads up when it’s ready.

Today, I actually have two options or color choices for you for the 2014 – 2 page per 1 month spread for appointments.

Download Light As Air here.

Download New Beginnings here.

I couldn’t resist naming them or the pun on our slogan. Corny I know, but I like it.

Light as air doesn’t have as much color as New Beginnings. I get overboard loving the color on my calendar and then try to rein myself back in realizing not everybody likes so much color on the calendars.

You know how I feel – I love as much color as I can get, but I gave you the light as air choice in case you are saving your ink for something else.

Guess what? Next post, I will let you in on the secret I have been holding back for months now. It’s time and I am excited to tell you.

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature Day 3 Homeschool Graduation Invitations–Which Words Matter. 10 days of Planning A Homeschool High School Graduation

Linking to

A Bowl Full of Lemons

Hip Homeschool Hop ButtonSkip To My Lou

8 CommentsFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic} Tagged With: freecalendars

Free Machu Picchu Mini Book & Completed South America Lapbook

November 15, 2013 | 3 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I think  we have exhausted our reading about Machu Picchu for our South America unit study.

Free Machu Picchu Mini Book & Completed South America Lapbook

Free Machu Picchu Mini Book & Completed South America Lapbook

There was plenty of free information online for this subject and then with a little pinch of information from our geography textbook I got this year, we had enough to cover this topic lightly.

South America Machu Picchu

South America Lapbook

I think we have satisfied our appetite about South America for now and have our lapbook to go with it. 

Like all of my unit studies, we can visit them anytime we decide and add in more information.

I hope you enjoyed tagging along with us on this unit study. I will let you know soon what we have decided to scoot on to next.

South America Printable Minibooks

Also, look at these minibooks which come in the free South America lapbook 27 page download.

  • Animals of the Galapagos fan book which includes the Giant Tortoise, Lava Lizard, Marine Iguana, Green Turtle, Galapagos Penguins, Magnificent Frigate Bird, Blue-Footed Booby, and Blue-Banded Goby.
  • Comparing Mountain Climate Zones
  • Simon Bolivar Copywork
  • Map of South America to label and one labeled
  • Machu Picchu – Lost City of the Inca
  • Negrinho – A dessert from Brazil
  • How to Memorize the Countries of South America and Dependent
  • Map Flags to put on your salt dough map
  • 2 – The Galapagos Island layered book. One prefilled with facts and one blank to add your own information.
  • Vocabulary Pocket and Vocabulary Words

More South America Unit Study Resources

  • Appreciating the Culture of South America Through Dance
  • 6 South America Country Notebooking Pages
  • How to Memorize the Countries of South America & Mountain Climate Zones Minibooks
  • South America Unit Study– Colorful Free Printable Map
  • South America Geography Salt Dough Map + Printable Pennants
  • South America Unit Study resources

How to Get the Free South America Printable Lapbook

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

That means when you sign up to follow me, you get this 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!

Ocean Currents and The Galapagos1

3 CommentsFiled Under: 1. My FREE Learning Printables {Any Topic}, Geography Based, Science Based Tagged With: hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, machpicchu

Put A Little Spring In Your Winter Weary Homeschool Step

November 13, 2013 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Put a Little Spring in Your Winter Weary Homeschool Step

Oh well yippee we have had our first real snap of winter though I know in some places you already have snow.

With the time change too, do you feel yourself slowing down to a homeschool crawl?

Maybe you just feel like quitting. Oh please don’t. You are not alone.

It is normal this time of year and a lot of us feel the same way. It is has been my experience to not fight the change. We may need to slow down or change things up a bit.

The change is natural in the season, natural in our bodies and I always feel we should embrace it. Oh for sure I am not saying to stop school, unless of course it is your winter break or you really need to grab some rest.

About this time, the demands of our school and family can take a toll.

For me and my family, I always do best by taking off a little longer during the winter break. I know that works best for us because I have fought it for many years not wanting to feel like we are getting behind. Too, for some reason we get itchy about the curriculum we have chosen. So all together, it can be stressful to school during the winter or long cold days.

Until we decide to take our break, we do need to keep on homeschooling and try to avoid the winter blahs. So I have a few things that hopefully will put a little spring in your winter homeschooling step when the days are long and cold.

Pull an All-Dayer

About this time of the year, those projects like science experiments or history maps you may have wanted to get done may still be sitting there for you to do. One way to change your day is to pull an all-dayer and do one subject or project you may have been wanting to do. That’s right do something you and your kids enjoy and do it all day long until you’ve had your fill.

The kids look forward to this each year. They don’t know when I am going to pull one of those days out of my hat. I just pipe up one morning (when I need the rest of course) and let them know we are having an all-dayer. Of course history and geography you know are our favorite subjects here so they are the first ones we look at for doing something we enjoy.

There is something about spreading all our books, maps, map pencils, activities and globe all over the floor and working on everything we want to do for the full day. No stopping, just moving along on it doing exactly what we enjoy the most.

One year, we did 3 science activities for the day because that is what we wanted to do for the day.

We stop for lunch and come back for some more. This works great too for an all day game day. If they don’t like history and it ends up being more work, then do an all day game day. I still play board games with my kids. Too, there is something about board games that builds a bond between my kids and me like an iPad can’t.

If the kids have been fighting with each other a lot, I know its time for a break and to pull an all-dayer. Eww, it just feels good to be so free too and not plan, just learn in the moment and enjoy.

Of course sitting by the fireplace in the floor and making homemade hot chocolate during this time doesn’t hurt a bit either.

The best part of this is we are still learning. We love our all day game days and there is NOT one subject that can’t be taught through a board game.

 

Indoor Activity

Though I am there with you if going to the mall shopping counts as indoor activity, but the kids needs something a little more active. Locate what is around you for entertaining them indoors. Some places it is just too cold to get outside and do a nature sketch so plan for those times when you are tired of being indoors at your house and want to be elsewhere.

Near my home, we have an indoor rock climbing wall, an ice skating rink and a pizza place that has an indoor car racing track. They are pretty close without us traveling far, but we have more options if we wanted to drive a bit longer. Indoor tennis is great too for the older guys.

Our field trip in January for many years has been to the same indoor huge pizza place and we camp out stay all day and the kids run high on socialization.

Just stirring around and getting out of your house keeps the winter blues to a minimum.

Embrace the Season

Winter NaturExplorers 735x1102 (Pinterest)

Homeschooling seasonally is one of the best advantages about homeschooling. In the fall season you can cover topics like apples, leaves or Native Americans. The same applies when homeschooling in winter. I don’t always have to create the unit study. Sometimes the fun is in following something somebody else created.

There is a series of nature/science unit studies that I really love by Shining Dawn Books. We will be dabbling in the Coping with the Cold unit study to bring some fun to our day. It is geared for grades 1 –8, but the beauty of unit studies is that you can make them a bit harder by adding in research for your older high school group and throwing in some coloring pages if you have a Kindergartener. Too, this is suppose to be a nice change to our routine so keep it fun and light. Don’t try to make it hard because children are natural learners.

Good Reads

From the time I could hold my sons in my lap until each one gets to high school reading aloud together will continue to be our number 1 go to activity when we feel the blahs.

Yes, even in high school I read to my sons. I don’t know what it is about all of us coming together in the living room with our favorite blankets and favorite spots in the living room, but just the feeling that nothing else matters as we lose ourselves in whatever adventure we are reading makes it all better.

I am the one that reads aloud. From the time they are young, they have all been soothed by my voice and it is my way to give to my kids. They can enjoy it without me trying to teach something like inference or do an analysis of the literature, just let them soak up the pure delight of reading.

Just Stop

Sometimes none of that helps because you may really need to stop and take a break. Get some rest girl! It is okay. Forget what other people are doing and do what is best for your family.

I don’t worry about what other bloggers or homeschoolers are doing when I stop and break because I blog and homeschool both because they are my passions. Passion doesn’t go away when you rest, because it is built around dedication. We put in a lot of hours as homeschool moms and dads both learning as we are teaching our children day to day and after hours too. Tired is okay, burnout is not. There is a difference.

Something as simple as moving from a different room to start off your day can make a big difference. Or, changing around how you are teaching a subject too brings a nice relief from the monotony. Tiny has been getting the blahs when working on his spelling each day. So instead of calling out his words to him, I have been doing some sentence dictation with him. Is there really a big difference between calling out a list of words and dictating a sentence? He obviously thinks so because he is really charged about it. If I knew that, I would have started earlier to help him stay on track with his spelling.

Change your day up and focus on the little things that you can change that will bring a spark to your day. Breaking up your routine or grabbing some much needed rest revives your body.

Do you want some more ideas of things to do both inside and out during the winter? clip_image004

Look at my post 50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

Also See: Winter Season Unit Study

You know I love ya,

 

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Homeschool When Nobody Wants To, How To - - - Tagged With: preventinghomeschoolburnout

7 Easy Hands on Homeschooling Ideas When You’re Not the Bomb Mom

November 11, 2013 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I was a Nazi homeschooling momma prior to adding hands-on activities to our homeschool day. I will say it: I didn’t like hands-on activities. All I could think of was how time consuming they would be. And what could you possibly learn from doing them that you can’t just pick up and read in a book and understand faster or watch a video.

Hands On Learning For Hands Off Mom

My hallucination dream at the time the kids were small was to have a clean house, that is ALL at one time. You know what I mean. One day I had a clean commode, oh wow. Never mind the kitchen was a mess on the same day, but I was sure proud of that commode. Okay, you get the idea why a great big huge mess hand on ideas didn’t appeal to me.  I was too busy being clean organized. My mantra then: Get up, get started on your school work and I don’t want to hear about being behind.

My kids were afraid of me. I was afraid of myself.  Feeding my crazed notion was the fact that Mr. Senior 2013, like me, was a visual learner so he was fine with “reading” picture books as our great hands-on activity” for the day. There were many times he wanted to do more hands-on, but I failed to see the signals. Okay, no, I didn’t want to see the tell-tale signs because it meant straying off my well-laid out lesson plans and the Nazi momma in me couldn’t do that.

I added in Mr. Awesome to our school and right away, I had huge problems. Besides being overwhelmed because I was teaching more than one child now, he learned best — yep—by hands on.  Horrible mom that I was, I first blamed his “resistance” on him. He can’t sit still, he doesn’t want to learn, he has a bad attitude (oh uhmm let me see he is only 4 years old) and he is behind were all things that I uttered.

I came to the point where I even considered putting them both in public school. Yes, I went there. I was not the bomb mom.

At that lowest point in my homeschooling, I had to decide if I wanted to succeed and to start taking responsibility for it instead of doing what was comfortable for me. I realized that there was going to be no quick fix, but I could start small. Yes, I set out to be a risk taker.

Here are 3 simple tips to help you be a risk taker by bringing in more hands-on learning to your day.

  • The ideas do not have to be complicated. The emphasis is on “doing” and being together or fostering sibling bonds.  Children are content with a lot less than we realize.
  • Try to keep a supply of materials that you keep separate and already organized so that when you decide to do an activity, especially for science then you have a small stash. I use clear shoe boxes for my supplies. For example, I know that food coloring, baking soda and funnels are not going to be in my box because that is in the kitchen. I collect as I go and I do put pieces of sandpaper, magnets, corks, string, beads, beakers, droppers, magnifying glasses, tape, goggles, and baby food jars in there to name a few. It cuts down on the stress of rounding it up and allows us to be spontaneous if we want to.
  • Try to do one hands-on activity a week with all of your kids, NOT per child. When they get older, then they can start helping by rounding up the supplies like my sons did.

Controlled Creativity

Look at this easy list of things to do to bring in hands-on learning to your school. You can use these with a mix and match of ages. I listed hands-on activities that keeps the mess to less at your home when you don’t have the time and energy to keep your house clean.

Hands On Homeschooling Using Puzzles

(putting together a puzzle about the Amazon)

Puzzles girl! Yep, keep it easy. Old or young, not one of my sons complained when they put together a puzzle. Look here at GeoPuzzles too. When purchasing them just think about learning and keep age appropriate puzzles in your home when you need a break for hands-on. Love the mess on this one. (ha ha)

American Civil War Lapbook Notebook | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
American Civil War Lapbook Notebook 2| Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Do a lapbook/notebook TOGETHER as ONE family project. I know I have said it before, but lapbooks are an easy fun way to bring in hands on EVEN for older kids.  You know we do ours for enrichment and to break up our routine so we go slower on them.

Several times throughout  the year, we have created one family project.  The first time we studied the  American Civil War unit was an example of this. We did a combination of lapbooking and notebooking. Each of the boys contributed to it.

So instead of having 3 projects going on and being insane because I tripled the amount of work I had to help them finish, I managed just one and this kept it where we could enjoy it.

Eating An Afican Meal when Studying about Africa | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Eating An Afican Meal when Studying about Africa 2| Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Cook a meal together. One year when studying about Africa, we cooked a meal together AND a side benefit to this was supper was already done.

Sometimes the practical side of me wants to take over and I let it.  I think of the benefits of something hands-on to the family if we prepare food.

Think of home made bread, home made pizza when studying about Italy and baking pastries when studying about France.

Look at here Switzerland Homeschool Geography Unit Study (and Lapbook) where my son made bread.

Ancient Egypt Snake Game | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Egyptian Game

Play Educational Games together. This year when I couldn’t really find a game they liked or didn’t have one on studying Ancient Egypt, I created an Ancient Egyptian Game. Grab it if you want it too.

Again, I can create in my own time and use the game at the time that I need it or when they need a break for something hands on.

Rainforest Experiment Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus (2)

Instead of growing plants, use them to experiment with. Growing up my mother loved to work in the yard almost to a fault. I think it is therapeutic in a way for her. She constantly had us out there digging in dirt when I would have preferred to do something else.

Call me insane, but now I have no desire to grow a plant much less dig in dirt. My siblings all love it. I am the only one that cringes with agony when I think of digging in the dirt. So I use plants already grown, thank you, to do my science activities. Oh I planted a garden one year too and it was pure agony for me. But, I did it when the kids were little so they could learn about plants.

About the picture above, one year we were investigating if a bromeliad (pineapple) could actually hold water and then the boys did play in the dirt to see if they could grow another pineapple.  Another year too, I purchased a (one) tomato plant in a container when the boys were little. When it sprouted and we had tomatoes, they were enamored. I learned that I didn’t have to grow a garden for them to understand plants. A simple bean in a jar and a plant purchased works too.

Native American BeadWork Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Coffee Filter Book

Leather & Beadwork/Coffee Filter Book. Neither one of these projects are messy either. My sister is almost an expert at leather crafts so we did these pouches for our Native American unit.

But, you can buy leather craft kits already and have the kids put them together. Hobby Lobby has craft kits already put together. I love that place! So many hands on history things to choose from too.

Another easy thing is a coffee filter book. Yep those are coffee filters and we used some pastel chalk (get in some art) to create pictures on each page and then used shoe string with bead work to bind it. That’s it! Easy peasy but they loved it.

Drawing a Cell | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Let them “draw” those worksheets. When studying animal and plant cells, I think we probably could have yawned ourselves to sleep if we read about one more cell. Because I wanted my sons to take something away from our study, I allowed them to draw about the topic we were covering. Look ahead in your nice neat well laid out plans and see if there is something better understood by a simple, but fun drawing.

Sometimes I hear homeschoolers say that their kid learns better by just reading.  That has never been my experience. What I have seen though is apprehension or fear of hands-on activities from the parent.

They fear

  • the unknown;
  • the mess;
  • not knowing how to grade hands-on projects or not knowing how to measure progress and
  • it being a flop.

True, all those things may happen and they did to me. I had a rude awakening when some things I planned did not work. However, out of that failure came self-determination to try other things because I saw a tiny spark of the passion for learning in my boys.

There is something about doing hands-on that strengthens the skills of a child and stirs him to be intellectual.

Remember, hands-on activities can have humble beginnings and stay that way until you feel like homeschooling on the wild side. They do not have to be complicated or messy.  I still don’t feel like the bomb mom, but it won’t be because I wasn’t willing to take the risk.

Do you have any activities that you do that are simple, but pack a punch?

Look at these other must-reads:

  • 365 Days Hands-On Homeschool Activities – One for EVERY Day of the Year!
  • How to Grade Hands-on Homeschool Activities and Projects (Free Rubric for Grading)
  • 21 Hands-On Math Activities for Elementary and Middle School
  • Amazing Hands-on History Activities for 14 Ancient Empires (free notebook cover too)

Hugs and love ya,

8 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Hands-On Activities, How To - - -, Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling

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