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Tina Robertson

5 Easy and Quick Breakfasts Kids Will Eat (Grab the Egg McMuffin Recipe)

January 20, 2016 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

5 Easy and Quick Breakfasts that Kids Will Actually Eat (Grab the Egg McMuffin Recipe)

Whatever the controversy with nutritionist about whether or not breakfast is the most important meal of the day, there is no denying the fact that kids need food to kick start their day and their brain. I do too.

Breakfast has always improved my boys academic attention.

5 Easy and Quick Breakfasts Kids Will Eat

The problem is that I also like my morning time and want to spend it in a less stressful way like reading, looking over lessons for the day or doing a bit of blogging and I also want my kids to eat well.

Too, you remember I shared with you how I plan my dinners for 31 days and not breakfast.  Look at that article here Free 31 Days of Dinner and Editable Menu Planner.

The reason I don’t plan breakfast is that I rotate a handful of quick, but delicious ideas that have worked for us through the years.

Keeping breakfast simple and not preparing extravagant breakfasts that kids won’t eat is the key to a morning that gets booted up quickly, which leaves more time to wake up and start school on time.

Look at these 5 breakfast ideas that make my morning run smoother and keep it relaxed.

1. Egg McMuffins, Breakfast Sandwiches or whatever you want to call them.

This morning I spent about a little more than an hour preparing 30 egg mcmuffins.

After Tiny started school, I stayed in the kitchen and worked on the egg mcmuffins until I needed Tiny for the assembly line, but again, I made these later in the morning, not first thing.

Look at what you need:

  • eggs. 1 egg for each muffin. So grab as many eggs as breakfast sandwiches you are going to make.
  • meat (if any, of your choice) I rotate between ham, Canadian bacon, bacon and sausage patties.
  • English muffins. Grab as many packages as you are going to make. I normally grab two packages (which makes 6) and don’t make less than two packages, but sometimes I make enough for a month.
  • Pam spray
  • cheese. If your family likes it. This morning I am trying Monterrey Jack cheese because Tiny and I love a bit of spice.
  • muffin pan (if you bake your eggs in the oven like I do)
  • diced up onions if you’re eggs are scrambled.

When the boys were little, this would last us a full month or longer.

But I have mean eating machines over here now and 30 sandwiches will go us maybe 2 weeks, but then again they can eat two or more at a time.

Decide right away if your family prefers scrambled eggs or baked in the oven.

Now, I cook my eggs in the oven because I love the taste.

However, for years, I did scrambled eggs because the boys were little and knew what was in their sandwich. Look at this post, Homeschool Organization – Forget Once a Month Cooking When Meal Planning, I did a few years ago where I scrambled the eggs and would freeze only one package.

I prepared this quick breakfast like this:

First, I started cooking my ham slices or bacon. While that is cooking, I heated up the oven to 275 degrees.

Next, it’s true, like most recipes call for that you have to spray the heck out of the muffin pan if you want your eggs to not stick.

Spray it some more for good measure and then do it again. Then I start cracking the eggs in the muffin tin.

I put the ham or meat aside now and let it cool.Then I start toasting the muffins.

egg mcmuffin 1

Depending on how many I am making, I will stick the pan in the oven right away with a bit of butter to let it start browning.

This morning though, I used my 4 slice toaster and toasted the muffins while the meat cooked and I cracked eggs. By the way, I add butter the muffins slightly after they were toasted.

After the eggs are cracked, take a fork and break the yoke and add salt and pepper.

Then stick the muffin pan in the preheated oven and cook for about 12 to 15 minutes depending on your oven.

The Trick to Finding More Mom Time

You want the white cooked, but the yellow doesn’t have to be all the way cooked. It finishes cooking in the microwave when you heat it up. Look at my picture below.

egg mcmuffin 2

Then I let the eggs cool off and set up firm before I lift them out and build the muffins.

Add your meat, cheese of choice if any and egg.

egg mcmuffin 3

Then I wrap them in saran wrap and stick them back in the same muffin bag and in the freezer they go.

egg mcmuffin 4

Heat them up in the morning for about a minute.

Then here is another quick break that I do.

2. Toasted English muffin + 2 tablespoons peanut butter = Done.

Then, normally, in the winter, I love hot oatmeal and not the quick kind, but the slow and healthy kind of oats.

BUT, when I know I want to get a start on the day earlier, I often make Overnight Oatmeal in a Jar.

3. Cold oatmeal in the winter?

Believe me, they are to die for delicious when you make them right.

I make them while I cook supper and stick those babies in the refrigerator and they are ready to go the next morning.

You can make them different ways, but mine always include; regular steel cut oats, cinnamon, greek yogurt, chia seeds, organic maple syrup, blueberries or strawberries, some walnuts or pecans and coconut milk.

It’s such an easy and great tasting breakfast. I can eat out the jar and read.

The hardest part is chopping the strawberries and I if I get real lazy short on time, I use blueberries. Besides, I prefer blueberries a bit more than I do strawberries.

5992

(pic attribution: The Yummy Life. Reminder pin from original sources.)

Check out Monica over at The Yummy Life because she has a super easy step by step how to make them. I just throw all mine in and stir. (yum)

4. Blueberry banana deliciousness.

Then talking about blueberries, that brings me to another family favorite, which is blueberry banana smoothies.

  • 1 cup frozen blueberries
  • 1/2 banana
  • 1 cup yogurt (I use low sugar or sugar free).

It’s quick and I blend it up in a snap and ready to go.

Too, I can put several batches of this in the blender and just whip it up in the morning.

5. Apple and cheese for the boys, but for me avocado toast.

Then another one that Mr. Senior 2013 loved was apple and cubes of cheese.

For me, I love mashed avocado on toast or another go to for me in the morning is cottage cheese and peaches.

Finding more time for mom and not compromising on a great start to the day always starts the previous day for me by knowing what we will eat.

We have many other go to choices, but these five quick and uncomplicated breakfasts have always helped us to kick off our day and stick to our homeschool schedule. Did I mention picky kids will eat them?

Do you have any quick and fast breakfast favorites?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

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Leave a CommentFiled Under: Schedule/Balance Home & School Tagged With: breakfast, mealplanning, recipes

DIY Kitchen Tongs Holder (Using Paper Towel Tube)

January 16, 2016 | Leave a Comment
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DIY Kitchen Tongs Holder (From Paper Towel Tube)

Part of organizing this new small place we are in now is being sure that my kitchen is organized too.

DIY Kitchen Tongs Holder (Using Paper Towel Tube)

I have encouraged you over and over that when your home needs a bit of organizing love to stop your homeschool and organize it.

Diy kitchen tongs holder (using paper towel tube) is one of the few things I have been doing this year to get my kitchen running a bit more smooth since our move back to the states.

Look at what else I have been doing and that you may want to grab.

Grab my 31 day editable menu planner with 31 dinner ideas here, look at how I made diy brads cheap and chic here and diy family calendar with free printable cover here.

It may not sound like a big deal, but it is one of the pesty things in the kitchen that kept slowing down my cooking and that is tongs sticking together.

Or, maybe it was just one of those day where I had my fill with those tiny, but hugely annoying things in the kitchen and I undertook a quick diy projects.

It was one of those days where all my cooking utensils, especially my kitchen tongs, which I use a lot kept opening up in the caddy. Again, small, but totally annoying.

So I came up with a pretty and quick way to store the humble kitchen tongs in my utensil caddy or even in the kitchen drawer.

Look at what I gathered up real quick.

Collect items for diy paper towel holder @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

You know I am into easy and quick diy fixes.

So I grabbed my washi tape, some discarded paper towel tubes, and I had a pastry brush in storage (don’t ask me what possessed me to store that long term, like I was going to use it again..ugg), and some mod podge.

It took just a few minutes to wrap each paper towel tube and I used the mod podge and pastry brush to put a layer over it to seal it.

DIY paper towel holders

Tiny, but annoying problem solved for me.

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

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Leave a CommentFiled Under: DIY, Home Tagged With: organizedhomeschool

Top 5 Tips for Homeschooling Parents

January 15, 2016 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Best Parenting Tips @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusLet’s face it. Parenting is hard enough, but then you decide to homeschool. Knowing which hat to wear, the teacher hat or parent hat seems more like a juggling act than educating a child.

By the way, this blog hop is organized by The Jenny Evolution, where bloggers have connected to share their top parenting tips of the year. Be sure to click the image above to visit all the other articles shared on each blog.

Look at these top 5 tips for homeschooling parents that I rounded up from 2015 that I hope will help to smooth the homeschool path for you.

3 Wrong Ways to Homeschool a Hotheaded Child @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

My article, 3 Wrong Ways to Homeschool a Hotheaded Child really resonated with you. Avoid my same parenting mistake.

Here is my excerpt from my article that you need to scoot by and read:

When I started homeschooling my first son, Mr. Senior 2013, he was the perfect child to school or least I thought so.  Along came Mr. Awesome and I was humbled because all of the sudden I had a hotheaded and stubborn child on my hands or least I thought so.

Then this next article goes directly to the decision you have to make to homeschool your children as the homeschooling parent.

But the Little Dear Doesn't Want to Homeschool

You’d be surprised at how homeschooling parents feel with this article, But the Little Dear Doesn’t Want to Homeschool.

Fake It Til You Make It

Here is my excerpt from my article that you need to scoot by and read:

“In my workshop, I hear the statement often “but the little dear doesn’t want to homeschool”. Okay, maybe not quite like that, but you get the idea. And it’s not from just parents of preteens and teens, but from parents who have very young children, as young as 5 years old.”

What is the alarming truth behind who makes the decision to homeschool? It goes directly to parenting!

Treasure-the-Moments-of-Homeschooling-Testosterone-Armed-Teen-Boys.png

Then, I received a lot of emails and feedback about this next article, which is Treasure the Moments of Homeschooling Testosterone Armed Teen Boys.

It’s tough to  homeschool boys, who can think completely different than I do much less parent them.

Geography BundleThey learn differently, handle their emotions differently than girls and you have to be ready to teach and parent outside the box.

Real Life Parenting Tips

Here is my excerpt from my article that you need to scoot by and read:

“I don’t want to sound cliché, but I treasure the moments of homeschooling testosterone armed teen boys.  Thinking back when all the boys were real young, my sis came over to my house one day with her girls, which are about the same age as my boys to discuss how we could join forces to homeschool our kids together. 

When we looked up, my boys were outside in the yard with tree branches fighting and her girls were inside coloring pages, inside the lines no doubt.”

Patience, Confidence, Knowing all the Answers – NOT Required to Homeschool @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Then many things are required of us as homeschooling parents, but Patience, Confidence, Knowing ALL the Right Answers is NOT Required to Homeschool.

Here is my excerpt from my article that you need to scoot by and read:

“If somebody had told me that prior to starting homeschooling I needed patience, confidence and all the answers to every subject, I would not have plunged into homeschooling.”

3-homeschooling-myths-debunked.png

Then, this next post, 3 Homeschooling Myths Debunked, you loved because it goes directly to facing head on some of the critics of homeschooling because we do spend a lot of time together as a family.

“Taking time to debunk popular homeschooling myths helps to avoid mommy guilt.  Confronting head-on homeschooling myths that I have both encountered and that I hear from homeschoolers that I’ve helped through my New Bee program also deepens my dedication to homeschooling.  It gives me a chance to ponder, because I know there is always room for improvement in both my parenting and homeschooling skills.”

Also, don’t forget to go through our New Bee Homeschool Program for more great homeschooling parent tips!

New-Bee-Homeschooler-Program-Tinas-Dynamic-Homeschool-Plus.jpg

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

Be sure to follow BOTH of my Pinterest Accounts to grab more homeschooling parenting tips!

Visit Tinas Dynamic Homeschool ‘s profile on Pinterest.

 

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2 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Begin Homeschooling, Homeschool Simply Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschool joy, homeschool joys, homeschool lifestyle, homeschool mistakes, homeschoolmultiplechildren, multiple children, teachingmultiplechildren

10 Signs to Know When to Walk Away from “Perfect” Curriculum

January 14, 2016 | 11 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I’m sharing 10 signs to know when to walk away from the perfect curriculum. Also, look at my page The Best Homeschool Curriculum by Grade Level for more tips.

The perfect homeschool curriculum is music to our ears or at least we think so.

Well, it was “perfect” homeschool curriculum at the time.

However, times change.

And having two homeschooled graduates, you think I would learn from my quest for the perfect homeschool curriculum.

Admittedly, I can be hard-headed, but I learned a few things as I knocked my head on the wall. (ouch, don’t do that)

10 Signs to Know When to Pitch the “Perfect” Curriculum

Sharing 10 tips to know when to walk away from the “perfect” homeschool curriculum hopefully you’ll not do some of these same things.

1. When your child out grows the curriculum.

You may think well duh, my children are getting older and they will outgrow it. No, I am not talking about that.

What I mean is that whatever made you decide to use the curriculum at that time and then suddenly the circumstance is not there, curriculum can turn from sweet to sour.

I have one son that went from wanting the full picture each day in his curriculum to a checklist.

The curriculum outgrew its usefulness and now becomes a burden. Time to move on.

2. When your child’s learning style changed.

Most kids are wiggly willies (meaning girls too) until about the age of 6 or 7 years old.

Along about 8 to 10 years of age, a child’s true learning style emerges. Normally, this learning style will be the one that will be with them longer or maybe even their whole life.

This happens at anytime and kids don’t wait to the first day of school to present their new learning style. But, you can start seeing frustration now in a curriculum that seemed to have worked before.

This happened to me with another one of my son and it was in the middle of a school year.

The textbook method to math no longer worked because his auditory learning style started to be dominant.

So in the middle of the year, I was on the prowl for a math curriculum that suited his auditory learning style.

 3. When you have to change your homeschool approach.

Saying that you’ll use the same homeschool approach your whole journey is a rookie mistake. I know, I did it.

There is nothing wrong with wanting to stick to a homeschool approach because it works for your family, but the problem is that life gets in the way.

Changing my homeschool approach because either I was pregnant, sick, or had to take care of aging parents are all things I’ve had to focus on.

Curriculum then becomes a burden when I don’t have time to plan it. Switching to a boxed curriculum was a welcomed relief.

It was easier to see this coming unlike some of the other signs.

Check out my tips at my article, Taking a Hit Doesn’t Mean to Quit– Homeschooling Through Crisis.

4. When most of your days are filled with tears. (yours and your kids)

I thought this would be another one of those duh things that you think that most homeschool educators know, but I have tell you about helping a homeschooler one year.

I won’t forget her because no matter what her boys said about not understanding the method and curriculum she chose, it was going to be her way. They were going to use it.

She had great kids and their tears flowed because the curriculum just didn’t click with the kids.

However, because the curriculum fit her learning style, she wasn’t giving it up at any cost.

It was a pretty ugly standoff and ambitious homeschooling has a way of biting back.

Look at my article, Homeschooling for the Love of Learning – Does It Really Work?

5. When your curriculum makes you feel like you’re behind.

Pitch it. That is all there is to it.

When a curriculum takes over your life, your day, and your kids because it no longer is a tool but a taskmaster it’s time to walk away from it.

It really is very simple and uncomplicated though you may read a lot of curriculum tips that try to make you feel like its you or your kid’s fault. It is not.

Unless your child has learning disabilities, he is just where he should be.

Let me say that again. He is where he is suppose to be and not where the boxed curriculum touts that he should be.

Also, check out the tips in 102 Top Picks for Homeschool Curriculum.

6. When you didn’t ask specific questions before you bought it.

It’s okay for one of your homeschooling friends to be over the moon excited about a curriculum. However, that doesn’t mean it will work for you because she has tremendous success.

Your kids are different and unique and so are you.

I have purchased curriculum based on suggestions before asking specific questions.

Questions like how long does it take you to get through the curriculum, how much teacher prep does it require, do you have to buy anything supplemental and can I use it with multiple ages are some very specific questions to initiate conversation.

7. When your curriculum doesn’t reflect your family’s values or goals.

When you start to homeschool, it seems like there are lot of things you are just suppose to know right from the beginning.

And knowing exactly the goals and values for your family is one of those things you need to know, but I also learned that goals and visions change and grow.

Do You Need to Unlearn these Homeschool Curriculum Habits

Whether you want to move toward more faith-based homeschooling or want to move toward a more secular approach, don’t wait to switch curriculum.

When a curriculum is not working, it sets your homeschool back.

Move forward by letting go of the weight of a curriculum that is not working.

8. When your teaching style has changed.

As you grow in your homeschool experience, there will be some subjects that you feel more comfortable teaching than others.

Some curriculum gives more detailed back ground information about a subjects than others do or they may not give enough background information. Your teaching needs changed and may be different than the present curriculum you are using.

What was a homeschool help at one time can become a hindrance.

Your teaching style will change, so don’t delay switching curriculum to breathe life into your teaching journey.

Also, I love trying out curriculum for free on a limited bases because it gives me a chance to see if it will work for me. You’ll love being able to do that with the Homeschool Buyers Coop. Although they have a lot of free curriculum during the summer to try out, they have many freebies throughout the year.

9. When you over buy one type and now need separate curriculum.

You are not alone. I think we all over buy at one time or the other.

But, what I am honing in on is that you may want to buy curriculum from different approaches.

For example, I have one son that likes textbooks and another son that wilts when one is pulled out.

Instead of buying or using the same curriculum across the board for all my children, I bought separate products that use a variety of homeschool approaches for each of my boys.

10. When you seem to be leaving more out than you’re covering.

This was the final straw for me when I left more curriculum out than I was actually using.

I knew that I had to change my curriculum. Becoming weighed down with curriculum caused stress instead of easing it.

There may be a lot of things you regret by the time you finish homeschooling, but switching to a homeschool curriculum that better suits your present needs won’t be one of them.

More Homeschool Curriculum Tips

  • Why Buying Curriculum Won’t Make You a Homeschooler (But What Will) 
  • 7 Budget-Friendly Language Arts Curriculum to Pair with Unit Studies (with printable)
  • You’ve Pitched the Homeschool Curriculum – Now What?
10 Signs to Know When to Walk Away from the Perfect Homeschool Curriculum

11 CommentsFiled Under: Choose Curriculum Tagged With: boxedcurriculum, curriculum, homeschoolcurriculum

11 AWESOME Ways to Learn Geography (Other Than Labeling a Map)

January 13, 2016 | 17 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Slapping down a map to label states and countries has never been an engaging way to teach my kids homeschool geography. Too, look at my page Homeschool Geography for hands-on and simple ideas and tips.

Drill and kill of boring facts to remember only worked for a short time too.

So today, I am sharing 11 awesome ways to learn geography that don’t include labeling a map because geography is so much more than writing out the names of states and countries.

11 Awesome Ways to Learn Geography (Other Than Labeling a Map)

Can you say snore? zzzzzzzz. (okay, okay)

Including ways to teach geography to a variety of ages, I hope some of these help you to get out of your geography rut.

ONE|  Sing geography songs.

You can listen to a sample of these Geography Songs here.

Music helped my boys to remember important key geography terms and countries.

TWO|  Learn landmarks.

Learning about the Grand Canyon or the Amazon Rain Forest brings life to geography.

Even when teaching about ancient civilizations, it’s easier to remember them when they are associated with landmarks.

Look here at my information and free minibook about the 7 Wonders of the Ancient World.

THREE|  Cover geography with science.

History and geography are not the only subjects that go hand in hand.

Geography Bundle

Science can also easily be added to geography.

Whether you have a child that eats up geography and could leave science alone or you have a child that runs from geography to study science, combining the two subjects is a win-win.

For example, we made a fun lava lamp when studying about how convection currents rise and fall.

FOUR|  Eat up and learn about geography.

Talking about eating, geography is especially fun if you can learn about the different foods of a country.

Isolating this idea more, focus on one food like the breads of the world or the spices of a country.

Have you seen the How Did That Get Here series?

And then you can never, never go wrong with making a food from a country or region.

Looked at a few things we have made when studying about certain areas.

  • Make pan au chocolat when studying about France.
  • Make celtic cakes when studying ancient civilizations.
  • Make baklava when studying about Ancient Greece.
  • Make victory soup when studying about the countries of World War II.
  • Make Cherokee pan bread when studying the states in the Southeastern United States.
  • Make soups from South America.
  • Make chili when doing a state study on Texas.
  • Make negrinho when doing a study about Brazil.

FIVE|  Make a DIY atlas.

My boys loved making a diy atlas when we studied geography using North Star geography for middle and high school kids.

Instead of labeling for the sake of busy work or so it seems like it to your kids, a diy atlas gives them a purpose for map making.

Make the project large if you are doing a world geography tour or make it only for a certain area if you don’t want to get too overwhelmed.

I like easy projects that focus on specific areas.

We tend to get more out of our projects when we can sharpen our focus on smaller chunks of information.

SIX|  Unleash your inner artist.

Another way to draw in a reluctant learner or to mix up your geography is to draw it.

Take a look at Geography Through Art or Mapping the World with Art.

Geography Through Art is a multi-age resource and has some terrific resources for hands-on activities.

SEVEN|  Use technology.

I love the free world geography games from Sheppard Software.

Shepphard Softward has been around for years and is another great way to change up geography. Another one we love is the stack the states app. The free version is fun.

EIGHT|  Do a lapbook or two.

You know our love for lapbooks and in most all of my lapbooks, I add in minibooks for geography.

Also, you can do a lapbook just on geography.

Check out the free geography lapbooks at Homeschool Helper Online.

NINE|  Living books and literature.

Another fun combination of subjects is to mix language arts with geography. A living book brings geography alive through a story.

Tell a child a story, adding in hands-on activities and they’ll see a purpose for learning about the world around them.

Though the series of books by Holling C. Holling say they are for upper elementary kids, they are such a precious and meaty resource that I feel you can use them for middle school kids too.

Also, grab this free 166 .pdf supplement to enhance your study of Paddle-to-the-Sea.

Then, I love these free vintage books that are recommend to study geography Charlotte Mason style. They are Charlotte Mason’s Elementary Geography and Long’s Home Geography for Primary Grades.

Scoot by and grab them if you are looking for free geography.

TEN|  Geography games.

Of course, who can deny the benefits of learning through games?

Have you seen GeoDice: Educational Geography Board Game and GeoPuzzle World – Educational Geography Jigsaw Puzzle?

ELEVEN|  Virtual travel.

And lastly, I love this unique and creative idea of virtual travel without leaving the comfort of your living room. Search for each day on her website. (day 1, day 2, etc. up to day 7)

Don’t settle for boring worksheets to teach geography.

Using one of these eleven ways, I hope will bring a little more pep to your step when teaching geography.

Hugs and love ya,

Also, check out the tips for First Grade Homeschool Curriculum for History and Geography and also 3 Reasons Why Hands-On Geography is Important in Middle and High School.

Are you following my geography board on Pinterest on my first account?

Follow Tinas Dynamic Homeschool ‘s board Ge-og-ra-phy {Earth Writing} on Pinterest.

And are you following my newest Pinterest account too?

Visit Tina Robertson’s profile on Pinterest.

Save

17 CommentsFiled Under: Geography, Hands-On Activities Tagged With: geography, handsonhomeschooling, highschoolgeography, homeschoolgeography

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