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Tina Robertson

When Your Homeschooled Child is Interrogated (And How to Get Past It)

February 23, 2016 | 14 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

When Your Homeschooled Child is Interrogated (And How to Get Past It) @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Normally, we love to tell curious folks that we homeschool. Too, it’s okay for others to be concerned because we don’t want to be touchy and overly sensitive about our choice. However, it’s quite another thing when your homeschooled child is interrogated. After all, if somebody was curious and looking for information they wouldn’t be interrogating your child, right?

Today, in sharing when your homeschooled child is interrogated (and how to get past it) I hope to infuse you with a few points to help you stay one step ahead of a situation like that.

What are you looking for?

Too, having your child questioned by a family member, like a mother or mother in law, than by a total stranger is hard. Saying things like what does that sign say or what did you learn today to our children may give them the impression that your parenting and homeschooling should be judged.

In learning how to diffuse the situation, you have to decide what are you looking for. In other words, whether others affirm or condemn your choice, will it affect your decision to homeschool? Are you really seeking their approval?

In a close family, it’s normal to want the approval of family members, but reminding yourself that you will never ever please everybody is sobering.

It comes back to what are you looking for. Are you looking to give your child the best education you can possible give him or please family members? Ideally, we want both, but sometimes we can’t have that.

Having a determined mindset from the beginning helps you cope better with the situation because the go jump in the lake approach is probably not a good reply.

Next, I have learned through helping other homeschoolers that things only get worse if they are allowed to go on for a time.

For example, most parents feel pretty comfortable talking to their own adult child and know what they can say or not say, but to talk to the daughter in law or son in law can be different. Sometimes a mother in law feels at more liberty to speak her mind when it may not be solicited.

And don’t get me wrong, I am all ears for any pearls of wisdom that come from parents that have already successfully raised children, they should be honored.

However, in a family where the adult children are now raising their own children, it their sole responsibility to raise and homeschool them.

Suppressing the the situation is best done by the dad taking the lead if he is talking to his own mother.

Start off the conversation by saying questions to you about how the kids are homeschooled are always welcomed. However there is a difference in wanting to know how the children are progressing and passive aggressive type of comments to your children, which is setting an example for your children to undermine your authority.

Speaking parent to parent helps your mother or mother in law to take the problems to a parenting issue, which is what homeschooling really is all about. If she can see that she could be possibly undermining your authority in front of the kids, you could soften the situation.

Sometimes that does not work and there are times where the law has to be laid down. I have found that instead of saying we will not have anything to do with you, it is better to not take things to that level – yet.

Is Passive Aggressive Questioning Okay?

Instead, say that until the questioning stops or passive aggressive comments stop, your family will  not have a relationship with her. It is sad if a situation has to come to that end and hopefully, it will not.

Try to remember that most grandparents no doubt have a deep love for your kids and their doubts and disapproval come from there.

If it is a total stranger questioning your child, it is easier to just say that your decision is not up for debate or discussion and then change the subject.

Every situation is different when somebody starts questioning your child. On the one hand, a person may just be curious. On the other hand, if an adult has or had kids, they should know that the child should not be questioned about your parenting decision and that is not something to take lightly.

I try to be transparent about our homeschooling, always ready to give an answer for those interested in homeschooling because I want to inform and not automatically assert bad motives.

And finally, try to remember that if you are having a bad homeschool day share with somebody else who homeschools. Though it may be comfortable complaining to family members, if those family members are not supportive of  homeschooling, then you may be bringing more stress on yourself.

Even though family and friends may not understand that questioning your homeschooling goes directly to questioning your authority as a parent, try to cut them some slack and keep the focus on where it should be which is what is best for your child.

Has anybody ever interrogated your child? How did you do with it?

Also, look at these other tips and helps:

  • 5 Top Mistakes of New or Struggling Homeschoolers
  • 8 Colossal Pitfalls of Homeschooling in the WHAT IF World
  • How Do I Socialize My Homeschooled Kids? Are We Really Talking About this AGAIN?

Hugs and love ya,

Also look at 3 Homeschooling Myths Debunked, and Should A Child Have a Choice to Return To Public School?

Check out these books too if you need to recharge your homeschooling conviction!

Lies Homeschooling Moms Believe
When Homeschooling Gets Tough: Practical Advice to Stay on Course
Homeschooling at the Speed of Life: Balancing Home, School, and Family in the Real World

14 CommentsFiled Under: Avoid the Homeschool Blues, Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Begin Homeschooling Tagged With: homeschool challenges, homeschoolchallenges, reasonstohomeschool

Free 2016 to 2017 Year Round Homeschool Planning Form

February 22, 2016 | 3 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

This is NOT a calendar, but a super helpful planning form! Grab your free 2016 to 2017 Year Round Homeschool Planning Checklist @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I know it’s a crazy time of the year to put together my 7 step homeschool planner, but we moved back from overseas at a crazy time. Today, in sharing my free 2016 to 2017 year round homeschool planning form, I am excited to share the first color, which is powder puff for the next academic school year.

Also, keep in mind that my year round planning form doesn’t mean you have to school year round to use it. I have it set up year round because as homeschoolers we do seem, however, to be busy learning all year long.

Curriculum Pages for Planner

The academic year I follow is from July to June. The beauty of my planner is that you can make it at anytime of the year. So if you need to make your planner now, you can grab the previous school year planning form here.  Now you have the current academic year and with my newest form, you can plan for next academic year too.

The second thing I want to remind you of is that the year round planning form was not created as a calendar to note appointments.

I have a nice and large 2 page spread appointment keeper to add to your planner that is big enough to note appointments and field trips.

The form today is for planning your school year. I normally highlight or circle which weeks we will homeschool and then I track the days and weeks on this form.

And the best thing, I think anyway, is that I do several color choices and today is the first color choice for the next school year. I hope you like it.

Download the Powder Puff Color 2016 to 2017 Year Round School Planning Form.

Have you started creating your own Free 7 Step Homeschool Planner? There is NOT another like it since YOU create it with forms that I have here.

Your homeschool changes each year so should your planner.

Begin making your planner today!

{The only thing quick here are the steps because this free planner has grown to over 400 free downloads spread throughout the 7 easy steps. Grab your cup of caffeine, coffee!}

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! 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!

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

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.

Linking up @ these places:
Thoughtful Spot|The Mommy Monday|Modest Monday|Homeschool Nook|Faith Filled Parenting|Inspire Me Monday|Frugal Friday|Tuesday Talk|Laugh & Learn|Turn It Up Tuesday|Let Kids Be Kids|Good Tips Tuesday|A Little Bird Told Me|Moms Library|A Little R & R|Hearts for Home|Weekend Roundup|Friday Free For All

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

Free Ancient Greece Can You Answer Minibook

February 21, 2016 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Free Ancient Greece true or false minibook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I am never ashamed to admit that sometimes we school upside down, sideways and sometimes backwards, but we always go forward. The free Ancient Greece Can You Answer Minibook that I am sharing today is an example of what I mean by the way we homeschool.

We love doing our unit studies and we add lapbooks in for enrichment as we plod along and study many different things. Sometimes we speed through them and sometimes not, like the Ancient Greece lapbook.

FREE ANCIENT GREECE LAPBOOKS

Since this is my third or fourth time around studying Ancient Greece, I have focused on hands-on activities with Tiny.

Be sure you grab the Free Ancient Greece Go Fish Game, Free 4 tab minibook, the Ancient Greece Pull tab book along with the hands on math, making a chariot, making baklava, grab a list of living history books, grab a great big list of Ancient Greece freebies and do a refraction activity.

Don’t forget to grab my first Ancient Greece lapbook here and Ancient Civilization here .(Minoan and Mycenaean civilization)

I luv my followers and make it special for them here when I can.

This freebie is a subscriber only freebie! This means you get access to the exclusive area for subscribers and can download this printable there after you follow my blog.

I would love for you to follow me and give me the opportunity to help you along in your homeschool journey.

Important: IF you are already an email reader, please read this below instead of emailing me right away.

Though I love your emails, it can take a while for me to answer you.

1.) If you are a daily email reader, the private link to the subscriber’s only page was sent to you immediately when you joined my blog. Look for that email in your inbox.

2.) If you are a weekly email reader, the link is sent to you at the bottom of EVERY newsletter. If you have been getting my blog posts, then check at the very bottom of one of my recent newsletters for the link.

Hugs and love ya,

2 CommentsFiled Under: 1. My FREE Learning Printables {Any Topic}, History Based, Lapbook Tagged With: ancient civilizations, Ancient Greece, hands-on activities, handsonhomeschooling, lapbook

365 Days Hands-On Homeschool Activities – One for EVERY Day of the Year!

February 19, 2016 | 15 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.




365 Days Hands-On Homeschool Activities

Today, I am over the top excited to share a resource that I have been working on for a while and it is 365 days of hands-on homeschool activities, one for every day of the year. Hands-on learning not only makes learning come alive, but it makes it stick. It took me a long time to learn that because it is hard to unlearn that worksheets are the way to teach when that is the only thing I was exposed to.

On top of that, my personality fights against me all the time meaning I am the type that would rather not have the mess or at least I thought so. But, there is another part of my personality, which I hope you can relate to and that is I want my time to count when it comes to teaching.

365 Days Hands-On Homeschool Activities - One for EVERY Day of the Year!

If you don’t want to teach the same concepts over and over, hands-on learning, hands down (pun intended, corny I know) is the only way to go.

Hands-on learning is not only fun, but engages the mind, fosters family togetherness and the best part, kids learn and remember for years. Not one worksheet ever has Mr. Senior 2013 said he remembered, but all the time consuming projects we did is what he recalls.

So today, enjoy this huge list of activities and come back here when you need a hands-on activity to teach for your lesson.

I have gathered up many hands-on lesson from top notch bloggers and educators and they are divided by subject instead of age because I feel hands-on learning activities are subjective and should fit your needs.

Hands-On Arts, Crafts & Music Activities

 


Art Project: Paper Silhouettes
 Sew Clothes for Dolls and Stuffies
Make a Notebook
Pointillism Cookies: Art for Kids
Impressionist Art Projects for Kids: Monet
Make Your Own Kid’s Travel Binder
DIY Beeswax Candles With Kids
Inverted Finger Painting
Felt Flowers Craft
How to Turn Children’s Art into Greeting Cards
Sea Turtle Art
DIY Bookmark Greeting Card Tutorial
Hand Stitched Cards
Felt Dinosaur Craft
Stick Weaving Tutorial
Easy Hands On Ideas When You’re Not the Bomb Mom
Winter Craft Ideas for Middle School
How to Turn Boring Worksheets into Fun Minibooks
Make footprint rug
Cicada Shell Art
Tie Dye Art with Baby Wipes
Flower Print & Scrape
Rainbow Painted Toast
Snap Paintings
Weaving Art
Square Foot Gardening
Icon Controversy (art history)
Chuck Close Portraits
Sew a Kitten
17 sea crafts
Create an Art Box
Teaching Kids to Bake
Monet’s Japanese Bridge
Bug Sensory Bin
Finger Knitting Scarf
LEGO Unit Study and Lapbook
Finger Knitting Ear Warmers
Fun, Fast, & Frugal DIY Stickers Your Kids Will Love!
DIY Pop-Up Card Tutorial
DIY Notepads
Hula Hoop Weaving Tutorial
Trees Through The Seasons Art Project
DIY Bath Bombs Tutorial
Make your own Felt Pizza
Make Birdseed Ornaments
Nature Craft Collage
Painted Watering Can
String Art Project
Explore Whittling and Carving
Body Painting
Color Mixing Tops
Rolling Pin Yarn Art Activities
Pretty Princess Beads
Fine Motor Activity with Straws and Pipe Cleaners

Hands-On Geography & History Activities


Civil War Treats: Molasses Cookies
 Mr. Lincoln’s Whiskers
Free Iroquois Lapbook
First Battle of Bull Run
Persian Mosaic Craft
Showing Civil War battles visually
Egypt Cookies
Make an Ancient Greece Chariot
HL Hunley, Civil War sub
What caused World War 1?
Free Westward Ho Lapbook
Clay Map of Greece
Terracotta Warriors
What was it like in the trenches of World War 1?
How did United States end up in World War 1?
Italy Cake
22 Awesome History Field Trips
The Start of World War 2
Roman Coins Craft
Roman shield
World War 2 movies to watch with your kids
History Pop ups
Ancient Rome Comedy Show
Remembering the Holocaust
Free Printable American History Game
Victory in Europe
Egyptian Feast
Make Celtic Cakes
How to Make Cardboard Egyptian Pillars
Make Negrinho from Brazil
Chicken Mummy
Egyptian Mythology
Make Roman Shield & Sword
Roman Mosaic
Make Pan Au Chocolat – French Revolution
Free Printable Storming the Bastille Game
100 Free Native American Resources
Cherokee Garden Pan Bread
How the Catapult changed history
15 Hands on Ideas French & Indian War
Marco Polo Salt Dough Map
Great Big List of Ancient Greece Ideas
Free Meso-America Lapbook
Senet board game
King Tut project
Hanging Gardens of Babylon
Gandhi
Olypmpics
Alexander the Great
Small Arms Combat
Viking brooch craft
Xerxes lesson
Create Your Own Atlas – A High School Geography Project
Battle of Fort Sumter
Easy DIY Compass
Battle of Gettysburg
Make a Confederate Flag
Snack Like they Did in Ancient Greece – Make Baklava
Civil War in the Graveyard
LEGO Civil War Hospital
Ancient Civilizations Hands On
Victorian House Tour
Viking Spear craft
Discovery of Iceland
War of the Roses
Aesop’s Fables
LEGO Trench Warfare
20 Ancient Civilization coloring pages
Antique Train Tour
Ancient Greece Refraction Activity
Edible Roman Road
1920’s Party
Roman Fresco
1950’s Party
Make Your Own State Puzzle
Hannibal
Orange Globe
How to Make Swords and Shields
DIY Lava Lamp
How to Make an Edible Map with Crispy Rice Cereal
Step-by-Step: Making a Paper Mache Map
Extend a Timeline Book
Step-by-Step: Making an Edible Map
Battle of Hastings
How to Make a Salt Dough Map
Make an Arctic Region Salt Dough Map
Free FBI Lapbook
Sumerian activities
Minoan lesson
Phoenician Activities
South America Salt Dough Map
Pompeii
Study Geography of France by Creating a Solar Oven
Study Texas – Make Chili
13 Free Printable History Board Games
Leif Ericson discovered America
Create a Mythological Map
World War II Activities
Make Hardtack
Unrivaled Guide to American Civil War Activities
Free Medieval Japan Lapbook
Free Lewis and Clark Lapbook
Paper Art Landforms
Greek Columns
Julius Caesar

Hands-On Science & Math Activities


Fun Ways to Overlearn Math
 Hands On Teaching: Coin Counting With Free Printable
Parts of the bone model
Making Blood
Learn about muscles through exercise
Dental health lesson
Free Human Body Lapbook
Finding fats in foods
Make a model of blood
Bird Beak Experiment
Microscope Study
Make an edible heart model
Ways to Make Math Fun for Active Learners
Circulatory system game
How to make a candy spine
Activities for Learning about Atoms
Creeks
Colorful Celery Science Experiment
Water filtration experiment
Nervous System Projects
Skin and Hair Science Activities
Learning Perimeter and Area with LEGO
Plate Tectonics and Earthquakes
The Earth: Hands-on Activities
DNA and Genetics Activities
Sugar Cube Rock cycle
Layers of the Earth’s Atmosphere lesson
Clouds unit
Make a heart pump
Plate tectonics unit
Food Web Activity
Build An Aircraft Engineering Challenge
LEGO Bacteria
Make Your Own Volcano
Caves Unit Study
Edible Sedimentary Rocks
Water Unit Study
Groundwater Experiment
Acids and Bases
Paper Structures Engineering Challenge
Dissolving Calcium with Acid
Square Foot Nature Survey
Measuring the Volume of a Solid
Testing Charles’s Gas Law
Newton’s First Law Experiment
Biofilm Experiment
Properties Of Water Experiments
Superhero States of Matter Science Experiment
STEM Challenges with Hands-On Engineering
Making a Hurricane Lapbook
How Big is a Foot? enrichment activity
Teaching Perimeter and Area with Geoboards
Use a Number Balance to Practice Math Facts and Encourage Mathemati…
Using the Six Tens Card Deck to enhance math learning
Origami Math Game {Tutorial}
Domino Stair-Step Pattern
Chemical Reaction Experiment
How to Make a Model of Earth’s Layers – Spice Jar Style!
How to Build a Model Periodic Table of Elements
The Inuit and Arctic Circle Hands On Ideas
Make a Crystal Radio
Make Invisible Ink
Forensic Science – Take Fingerprints
Fall unit study ideas
50 Keep Me Homeschooling During the Winter
Humboldt Current Activity
Edible Geography Sea Currents
Flower Dissection
Edible Ocean Layers
Make Soap
How Carnivorous Plants digest their prey
Mega List of Human Body Hands On Ideas
Make a water cycle in a bag
Measuring Snow
Outer Space Math Maze
Building the Water Cycle by Legos
Hug an Tree to Estimate Its Age
Animal Tracks Match Up
Charcoal Water Purifying Experiment
Water Cycle Experiment
Spiders
Starting Seeds Indoors
Make A Mold Terrarium
Extracting DNA From Strawberries
Reverse Engineering
Making A Polymer Ball
Gumdrop Structures Engineering Challenge
Experimenting With Flexibility
Erosion Hands On Activity
Hands On Learning: Atoms, Molecules, and Compounds
Rigid vs. flexible bone activity
Hands On Teaching: Piggy Bank Math
Learn the names of the bones
Edible skin activity
Teaching first aid: how to treat a broken bone
Why are our bones strong?
Color Sudoku (Logic Game)
Frogs & Toads
Hands on muscles lesson
What food has starches in it?
Play Stomachion Like Archimedes
Amoeba Cake
Learning about blood types
Learning the Order of the Planets in the Solar System
Orange Science Experiments
Brain cell model
Music and Noise Experiments
Playdough brain model
Learn about the brain activities
How to Make an Egg Float
Fake snow activity
Layers of the Earth lesson
Volcano activities
Extreme Winds activity
Earthquake activity
Atmosphere Unit Study
Geo Links (preschool math)
Hands-on Activities for Weather
Ridiculous Weather Report
Moon Unit Study
Solar System Unit Study
Build A Windcar Engineering Challenge
DIY stethoscope
Chemistry Tools
Filtration Experiment
Polishing Pennies Experiment
Static Electricity
Make Your Own Slime
Five Fabulous Frogs (preschool math)
Make Your Own Element Cards
Biopsy Science Experiment
Atmospheric Pressure Experiment
Compost Cup Science Experiment
Digestive System Experiments
Squishy Science
Center of Gravity Experiment
Experimenting With The Senses
Mixtures and Compounds
How to Build Atomic Models
Atomic Cookies
Building Molecular Models
Tropical Rainforest Resources
Breaking Covalent Bonds
Saltwater Experiment
Saturated Solutions
Freezing Alcohol
Hydrocarbons
Using Math Mini Office Lapbooks
Practice telling time with a hula hoop
Practice Math Facts with this FUN 5-Minute Math Drill
8 Ways to Use Kinetic Sand for Math
Bean Bag Measurement Activity
Hand Clap Games
75 Awesome Things to Add to a Lapbook
How to make an abacus
How to Make a 3D Model of the Skin
How to Make an Edible Cell Model
How to Make a Paper Mache Earth
20 Summer Ideas for Teens
Metamorphic Edible Rocks
Enzyme Experiment
5 Free Hands on Science Activities
Make dinosaur bones
Solar System Pipe Cleaner Model
How to Not Pop a Balloon by Fire
Make Winter Ice Jewels
Foil Boat Engineering Challenge
Potential and Kinetic Energy
Oxygen and Fire Experiment
Steel Wool and Battery Experiment
Number Wheel
Measure It!
Red Cabbage Litmus Test
Square Foot Gardening
Comparing Increases in Heart Rate

Hands-On Language Art Activities


Word Family Activities for Beginning Readers
15 Reading Activities
Active Reading Games
Laundry Letter Matching Game
Indian in the Cupboard
The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe
Message in a Bottle
Diy Spelling Magnets
Free Milk Cap Spelling Mats
Make an experience book to learn language
Lego Duplo Sight Word Towers
Sight Words with Winter Tic Tac Toe
Play charades to learn vocabulary
Name Writing Nature Hunt
Roll to Write
Sandbox Writing Printable Cards
Word Wheel Tutorial and FREE Printable
Four-in-a-Row Reading Game
Narration Jar and Narration Cube
Create an interactive word wall
If You Give a…..
Make Berry Ink, Pot & Quill
Spelling Dice Game
Stamping Sight Words
50 Alternatives to Sitting Quietly During Read Aloud
Spelling Game Ice Excavation
Use story sticks to build comprehension
Sight Word Snow Globe for Word Work
Free Spelling Game
Super Easy Stencils
Alphabet Tic-Tac-Toe
10 Easy Language Arts Activities

 

365 Days Hands-On Homeschool Activities. One for EVERY day of the year!!

Hugs and love ya,

15 CommentsFiled Under: Free Homeschool Resources, Geography, Hands-On Activities, History Resources Tagged With: hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling

March 31 Days of Dinner Ideas Menu

February 18, 2016 | 1 Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

March 31 Days of dinner

This year one of my goals is to share with you my insider tips on how I stay organized when it comes to meal planning and that is planning for 31 days is the key. Hands down it beats other types of planning for several reasons. Sure you can plan for 7 days or 2 weeks, but I will share why 31 day meal planning is a huge sanity saver for me. Too, I am sharing my free March 31 days of dinner ideas menu.

31 Day Planning means Flexibility, Saving Money and Being Healthier. That Equals Smarter.

At the end of this post, you can grab two more 31 day meal plans, which are January and February. More on that in a minute because first I want to share another tip or two for meal planning.

I know planning for 31 days may sound like it is one more weighted thing to do on your growing to-do list when homeschooling.

However, nothing is more important than feeding your family meals that not only reflect your family’s unique likes, dislikes, allergies and must haves, but also you do not want to compromise their health while homeschooling for the long run.

It may not be one of the things that new bees think they will hear when they go through my workshops, but first on the list is organizing the living areas and shoring up the meal planning.

Sometimes it’s easier to homeschool and forget about the meals, believe me, I have been there.

It wasn’t because I wasn’t interested or didn’t know how to organize when I started homeschooling, I just didn’t realize that planning far out was the key.

Sure, it takes me another hour or so to meal plan for the whole month, but the return is SWEET.

What I mean by that is that some weeks end sooner than I want them to and then I’m faced again with a new grocery list and dinner ideas for the following week.

This is not the case with 31 days of dinner ideas because I have the next week planned for me.

So during the month, I normally have an hour or two that I can plan for the following month and the really sweet pay off is that I can plan in chunks during the month when I am in the mood.

The flexibility of planning for 31 days too is that contrary to what some may think, I have no problem switching around my ideas to fit the needs we have for the week. In other words, my dinner ideas on certain days aren’t etched in stone. BUT, to have that many ideas at my finger tips that my family loves is worth every ounce of energy I put into menu planning.

Stress has just been pushed wayyyyyyyyyyyy down low and living and savoring each day way up highhhhhhhhhhh.

Free 31 Days of Dinner Ideas

I’ll share some more tips next month too, but in the meantime, I am sharing my free March 31 days of dinner ideas menu.

This menu reflects the likes, dislikes and needs of my family. We love meat, we like variety and try to eat less beef, though we love it. We also, love different forms of vegetables and one pot dinners are a must for me while I homeschool.

Too, I share 31 days each month regardless if the month has 31 days or not because I want ideas and recipes that my family will eat.

Grab January dinner ideas along with an editable menu planner here.

(We repeated two meals in February because we didn’t have BBQ sauce like we liked in Ecuador or made chicken pot pie, so a couple of meals I repeated.)

Free 31 Editable Menu Planner. Because menu planning for a longer period of time makes you a smarter, healthier and better homeschool mom. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

And grab February dinner ideas here.

31 days of dinner menu

Are you following along and doing this with me? What are your struggles?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

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.

1 CommentFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic}, Meal Plan Tagged With: home organization, mealplanning, menu planning

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