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Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

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Welcome

2 Pages Per Month At A Glance Physical Calendar {2016} Sparkles Color

March 24, 2015 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Are you thinking about 2016? Okay, okay. I know a long way off. 

Actually some of you emailed me asking me to include the next physical year calendar because you wanted to include this calendar as part of your long range planning.

Today, I have the 2 Pages Per Month At A Glance Physical Calendar {2016} Sparkles Color theme and I am so tickled that I got it done so early.

Word Art Physical Calendar Sparkle-1

2016 2 Page Spread Physical Year Calendar Sample Pages @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Like my academic 2 page spread calendars, you get a full year with this download too.

You can use this calendar to add to your home management binder, my forever blog planner or to your 7 Step Homeschool Planner.

I hope you love this color choice and can use it for your long term planning.

You can get it for only $.99 cents! Instant Download.

Important: READ THIS FIRST.

Before you email me asking where your download link is or tell me that it is not working, read this to ensure that you get your pretties timely and that you don’t pay for something and not get it.

  • All my products are digital.  You will not receive a physical product for anything in my store.  A digital physical year calendar does not mean a physical product or calendar.
  • Downloads are INSTANT.  When you pay, you will receive an email with a download link INSTANTLY.  Depending on your internet connection, the email could be just 30 seconds or so, or a bit longer.  The point is it will be soon, not a week later,etc.
  • The email with the download link will go to the email you used for paypal. If you used your husband’s paypal, your downloads will go to that email. Please check that email and your spam before emailing me telling me you can’t find it.
  • Links are TIME SENSITIVE, meaning you need to download right then AND save to your computer.  Please do not email me a week, two weeks or a month later telling me the “link  is not working” because it has expired or because you did not save it to your device.  I will not respond to those emails.
  • If a link is not “clickable” when you get your product download email, then copy/paste the link in your browser and your digital product will open.
  • Please put my email tina @ tinasdynamichomeschoolplus dot com {substitute the correct symbol} in your address/contact list so that your product does not go to spam.

MY GUARANTEE:  To treat you like I want to be treated which means I know at times technical problems may cause glitches, so I will do everything possible to make your experience here pleasant.  I value your business and value you as a follower.   I stand behind my products because they are actual products I use and benefit from too.  Though I cannot refund purchases after you have been given access to them, I will do what I can to be sure you are a pleased customer.

Hugs and love ya,

And if you want to get started building your free homeschool planner, then click the 7 Steps below:

Step 1. Choose a Pretty Front/Back Cover

Step. 2. Choose Calendars/Appointment Keepers

Step 3. Choose Goals/Objectives

Step 4. Choose Lesson Planning Pages Right For You!

Step 5a. Choose Unique forms JUST for You!

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

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

Step 6. Personalize It

Step 7. Bind it! Love it!

Linking up @ these awesome places:

A Little Bird Told Me|Pincrazy Thursday|Hearts for Home|Family Fun Friday|Freedom Fridays|Sharing Saturday|

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Curriculum Planner Tagged With: curriculum planner

Mini Volcano Book and Label Layers of Earth Mini Book

March 23, 2015 | 1 Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

We are finally getting caught up on our Earth’s Structure lapbook.

So today, I am sharing two more minibooks that go in our latest lapbook.

They are the mini volcano book and label layers of earth mini book.

What is a Volcano

Earth's Layers

Free Homeschool Lapbook – Earth’s Structure

Also, I am using the free Focus on Earth Science textbook

Unit Three: Plate Tectonics and Earth’s Structure and Unit Four: The Shape of Earth’s Surface are the chapters that I hone in on to prepare these minibooks and they are the ones your child will need to focus on when researching to find the answers to the minibooks.

Additionally, like most of my minibooks, I give you some facts that you can add to the minibook or like I mentioned, you can add your own from your research.

The volcano is a simple fold minibook and the label earth’s layer book is an open faced page.

Minibooks/Topics in the Earth Science Lapbook

  • Why Are Beaches Sandy
  • Summer Beaches Versus Winter Beaches
  • What is a Natural Hazard
  • Energy Sources for Natural Hazards
  • Features of Rivers & Streams
  • Plate Tectonics trifold book
  • Earth Structure Lapbook Cover
  • What is a Volcano
  • Earth Layers Book
  • Extreme Winds
Free Earth Science Lapbook & Unit Study Ideas

Next, add some more of these earth science activities.

Earth Science Hands-on Activities

  • Hands-on Geography Wool Earth Craft to Celebrate Earth Day
  • Cookie Sheet Activities Make Earth Day Cookies & Fascinating Earth Facts
  • 40 Awesome Earth Science Movies for Kindergarten
  • Celebrate National Vinegar Day With A Hands-on Study of Volcanoes
  • Free Homeschool Volcano Unit Study and Fun Apple Volcano

How to Get the Free Earth Structures Lapbook

Now, how to grab the free printable. It’s a subscriber freebie.

When you sign up to follow me, you get access to this freebie.

 1) Sign up on my email list to follow me and get this freebie and many others.
 2) Grab the printable.
3) Last, look for my emails in your inbox as a follower. Glad to have you.

You’ll love these other earth science activities!

  • Erosion Hands-on Easy Homeschool Science Activity
  • EASY Hands-on Earth Science: Fun Water Testing Kit
  • When You Are Afraid of Homeschool Science Gaps

Finally, check out:

Middle School Homeschool Science 50 Free Spring Activities

Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazine

Mini Volcano Book and Earth's Layers Mini Book @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

1 CommentFiled Under: 1. My FREE Learning Printables {Any Topic}, Lapbooks, Middle School Homeschool, Science Tagged With: hands-on, handsonhomeschooling, middleschool

What is REAL Homeschooling? Homebound, Co-op or Public School at Home

March 22, 2015 | 12 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

To the world outside of homeschooling, it is hard to define the “normal homeschooler”.  Is it a family who raises chickens and who milks their own cows?

Is it a family who believes in the conveniences of city life or a family that loves fast food?

Is it a family that loves homesteading and eating only organic or is it a family who loves traveling?

We know as homeschoolers we embrace families from all backgrounds as the norm.

Satellite Schools, Cyber Schools, Independent Study Programs – Homeschooling?

More important, we understand the one common weave among so many different homeschooling families is that we all respect the right we have as parents to make the educational choices for our children.

However, as important as that choice is, it can cause quite a bit of stir in the homeschooling community to define what is real homeschooling.

Too, many new homeschoolers are joining our ranks by the hundreds and bringing with them their definition of what they may feel is homeschooling.
It is important to not only sharpen their definition of homeschooling but to remind us as veterans what is real homeschooling especially if we have seen times when homeschooling was not so freely allowed.

For example, when I was a high school freshman in public school, I got real sick and was homebound for a year.

Some people have never heard of being homebound.

What is REAL Homeschooling @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschooling Plus

My mom was not homeschooling at that time and we understood as a family that learning at home was an exception made for me because of my health. I would have to do my public school work at home.

I was simply changing the location of where I did my school.

My lessons were issued by the teacher and my parents had no say over the lessons I did and also, like a public school, the cost was free.

Did I consider myself homeschooled then? Absolutely not. Just being at home did not make me a homeschooler.

There are two very fundamental things that define what is real homeschooling.

The first significant factor is that all teaching is parent-led or parent directed.

You notice, I did not say all teaching is parent taught.

It does not have to be and that becomes important as you homeschool the upper grades where you may want to receive some outside help.

Classes offered online, private tutors, co-ops and homeschool events are all chosen by the parent.

Parent-led means that the education and instruction of the children falls squarely on the shoulders of the parent, free of government input, which is the key to understanding the very fine but clear-cut difference.

The way a parent uses a homeschool co-op too, for example, can be quite controversial today though it wasn’t that way before I started homeschooling.

I didn’t take my son out of public school to only enroll him in a 5 day “homeschool” co-op which was ran more like a private school.

I would be exchanging one task master for another had I put my son in a 5 day homeschooling co-op.

All I really would be doing would be enrolling my son in a private school and “helping” him with his homework.

I could see the difference in using a homeschooling co-op to supplement and add enrichment and relinquishing all teaching over to somebody else.

The second important point of what is real homeschooling I touched on briefly and that is you are free of public school or governmental control.

If you are newer to homeschooling, you may not fully appreciate the bristling of homeschooling parents who when they hear a family solely using a free, government backed, full online public school say that they are homeschoolers.

The second definition is not meant to put homeschoolers at odds but it is to remind all of us of our homeschooling roots and what we hold dear when it comes to homeschooling unencumbered.

Homeschooling options, like having cyber schools, have changed tremendously even since I started homeschooling.



This is a good thing because it allows more families to homeschool.  However, even with online schools, there is almost always an option to choose what is not free.

Why would a family make that choice? Because free for online public schools is not really free. You are giving up something.

Free of charge is different than freedom to educate in the way you feel is right for your family.

Homebound, Co-op or Public School at Home – Homeschooling?

Free for a lot of online public school means you are required to test, “attend” online parent teacher conference, join in live classes and more than not have a workload that has taken some homeschoolers 6 or more hours to complete.

More importantly, you are not picking and choosing the lesson planning day to day.

I have helped numerous new homeschoolers get out of on line schools because they thought they would be stress free to only find out that again, they have exchanged one taskmaster in public school for another one online.

Though free may sound inviting in the beginning, you are given up something else valuable, which is the right for your children’s education to be parent-led or directed.

This does not mean that online schools are to be avoided but it means that you want to maintain control over what your children learn day to day.

Most online schools or boxed curriculum providers have options for you to pay for the program as well or to enroll in their “free” program.

If it does not have an option for you to pay for the program then it is just an online public school.

Did you know that some states only consider a family homeschooling by law if it’s parent funded and parent directed?  Even they recognize the two fundamental differences.

Using outside sources is for sure part of homeschooling, but turning over full control of your children’s education has not ever been a definition of what is real homeschooling.

In sharing today, I am encouraging you to value and to not give up so easily the time tested methods that have worked for years and years in graduating well-educated children.

Giving over control of your homeschool changes the dynamics of your homeschooling and it’s worth every effort to be sure our homeschooling stays parent-led.

What about you? Do you think the dynamics of homeschooling has changed over the last few years?

Hugs and love ya,

 

What is NOT Homeschooling?

What Do You Fear Most About Homeschooling?

Should You Really Give Homeschooling a Trial Run?

12 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling, Homeschooling Tagged With: new homeschooler

15 Hands-on History Ideas for Kids Studying the French and Indian War

March 20, 2015 | 12 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have rounded up 15 hands-on history ideas for middle school kids studying the French and Indian War of 1754 – 1763. Hands-on history not only sparks excitement for continuing to study a topic, but learning sticks because your child is doing and making a connection to the past. Also, look at my page homeschool middle school for more fun tips.

15 Hands-on History Ideas for Kids Studying the French and Indian War

Too, it is always my aim to continue to flesh out my unit studies and add more hands-on history activities as I find them.

Okay, I actually have more than 15 hands-on history ideas for studying about the French and Indian War.

This topic is not an easy one to teach at lower levels and most resources are at the high school level.

French and Indian War

However, I am tickled to share this free resource from the National Park Service which I came across after I completed our first study of the French and Indian War.

It has several downloads and you want to be sure and grab each unit because they are awesome.

french and indian war

Look at each download below. {Source Don Troiani, www.historicalprints.com}

Teacher Background

Unit 1: Who Were the People Involved?

Unit 2: What Were they fighting For?

Unit 3: How Did the Conflict Begin?

Unit 4: How did the War Progress?

Unit 5: How Did the Conflict End? What Were the Consequences?

Unit 6: How Did the French and Indian War Set the Stage for the American Revolution?

Unit 7: Biography Cards

Unit 8: Primary Documents and Artifacts

The ideas for these hands-on activities come from the background information on the free downloads.

15 Hands-on History Ideas for Middle School Kids

One and Two.
Bio Bingo – This free download at NPS has a Bingo game about key events and your student can create biography cards on major characters.

Three.
Nearly everyone in the army would carry flint and steel for starting fires. Check out how to make a flint & steel fire starter. (adult supervision)

Four.
Baskets were made by woman and had many uses. Check out how to make a coiled bowl.

Also, we love the hands-on ideas from Home School in the Woods.  Look at their American Revolution hands-on unit which covers the French & Indian War.

Five.
Europeans gave pipe tomahawks as gifts to Indian leaders. With adult supervision, this tomahawk could be made, by an older teen, but there is also an easy cardboard tomahawk . Great activity for a younger learner.

Six.
A compass was an important tool for navigating in North America. Check out my post – homemade compass.

Seven.
Learn about powder horns and create your own.

Eight.
Check out these French and Indian War images which can be used for a fun writing activity.

Nine.
How To Make An Easy Ink pot & Quill Pen with Berry Ink.

French and Indian War Kids Activities

Ten.
Make a tricorn hat.

Eleven.
 Learn how to make a beaver hat.

Twelve.
Make a leather pouch. Even though this link is a puzzle pouch, I like it because it has a template for the pouch.

Then here is an easier pouch for a younger child.

Thirteen.
Make an authentic turtle rattle and then there is another version on this same site for a younger child too.

Fourteen.
This is cool to build a fort fence at your house.

The Seven Years War Hands-on Ideas

Fifteen.
Create your own Iroquois wampum belt with string and beads.

And MORE fun things to bring this topic to life!
grab my free French and Indian War lapbook too.

French and Indian War Lapbook | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Also, prior to The French and Indian War, the Iroquois Confederacy was formed and tried to stay neutral for most of the war.

To flesh out a study on The French and Indian War, be sure to check out my Iroquois Confederacy Unit Study and Lapbook.

Have your student memorize some of the George Washington’s Rules of
Good Behavior close to 1746
, read the story of Mary Jemison who was captured by Indians amidst the war between the British and the French and read the speech of Chief Pontiac of the Ottawa tribe addressing a gathering of Ottawa, Huron, and Potawatomie Indians, May 5, 1763.

Here is a printable crossword puzzle on the French and Indian War. Click printable .pdf at the bottom. Be sure to the answer key too.

Make a bear claw necklace.

Look at this older site, the Fort at No. 4 for postcards to print for a writing exercise or to make it art, learn about colonial money, colonial tools, do an acrostic poem, and a map of the area.

15 Hands-on History Ideas for Kids Studying the French and Indian War

Hope this round up will help you to find some hands-on history activities for this time period and to keep it fun.

Also you’ll love these other hands-on history activities:

  • Westward Ho Lapbook and Unit Study
  • Daniel Boone Lapbook
  • Lewis and Clark Lapbook and Unit Study

15 Hands-on History Ideas for Middle School Kids Studying The French and Indian War @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

12 CommentsFiled Under: Geography Based, Hands-On Activities, History Based, Science Based Tagged With: hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, history, history resources, homeschoolhistory

What Do You Fear Most About Homeschooling?

March 18, 2015 | 12 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

What do you fear most about homeschooling?  If we could see the list of others, whose list would be longer?

  • Fear that I won’t prepare my kids for the world outside of my home.
  • Fear that my extended family that is watching ever so close will inspect us at the end of the year to see if we failed.
  • Fear that I won’t guide my children to fulfill their God given talents to the best of their ability.
  • Fear of being a perfectionist on top of that being unorganized – is that possible?
  • Fear that I will miss some vital subject.
  • Fear that my children will get behind.
  • Fear that I am the only one that loses patience with my kids.
  • Fear that I am the only one where public school looks like the perfect solution on some days.

Does your list look similar?

What would make you more confident?

Knowing that you are not alone in your fears and knowing what worked and what did not work for others is encouraging.
However, there is one noteworthy step in my experience that stand outs among all others and that is goal setting.

What Do You Fear Most About Homeschooling @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Goals are not only essential but they are crucial.

Fears are normal in the beginning when homeschooling, but what is more important to remember is that you are now swimming upstream so to speak.  You are going against the norm and that requires hard work.

Goals energize us to stay focused on our family’s needs.

We will avoid just floating along, responding to the moment or jumping ship to adopt the newest trend in homeschooling when our goals are specific and measurable.

The second important thing to remember is that your journey will be unique.

This point is so important I want to say it again.

Though some of your experiences will mirror my experiences and other homeschoolers, they will not all be the same.

How to Make a Strong Start in Homeschooling

Bottom line is you have to be able to measure progress for your own unique journey and you need a way to do that.

Look at how setting goals reduces fears, gives you very specific ways to measure the progress of your unique family and fortifies you for each year.

  • We make progress based on our family’s need.
  • Instead of wasting time checking out all the latest trends in homeschooling, we are analyzing our own efforts and measuring progress within our own family.
  • We avoid boredom and a stagnant year because we are focused on whether we need to speed up our homeschooling journey or slow it down to meet our family’s need.
  • Homeschooling is more purposeful and inspirational because out time is focused on meeting goals instead of coasting along.

Though I have made some pretty pages for you to write your homeschool goals on, you can write them anywhere.

I tout it all the time and that is though goals may sound good in our mind, when we put them to paper they are concrete.

Don’t ever forget what brought you to homeschooling in the first place.

If our goals and reasons are not in plain sight each day we give in to fear.

As time passes, it happens to all us and that is we forget why we chose homeschooling as a superior education.  Those reasons quell any fears and keeps us plodding forward.

Like the subjects we teach our children, reminders are needed throughout the years when fears resurface.

Overcoming fears happens by not only arming yourself with homeschool knowledge but with goals.

When your goals are met each year, you don’t need the validation of others, either by testing or by family approval.

What are your fears about homeschooling? Where are your goals?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina 2015 Signature

Also, check out these other posts.

When You Feel Like a Homeschool Failure

When does homeschooling become “normal”?

 

12 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschoolchallenges, new homeschooler, newbeehomeschooler

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