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Welcome

Free Year At a Glance Form For Moms Buried in the Organizing Details

January 2, 2015 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have a gorgeous free year at a glance form for you today.

I promised you that when I talked about Planning Homeschool When Drowning in a Sea of Ideas I would share my fix for my planning struggle.

Instead of staying buried in the details which I have a tendency to do on my Glam It Up Planner, Unit Study Planner and my 7 Step DIY Homeschool Planner, I always struggle with the broad strokes on any type of planning.

Year at a Glance Printable Form

First, you know I am not a fan of having house management printables, homeschooling, and blogging stuff all jumbled together in one planner.

Too, weekly homeschool planners which give you teeny tiny boxes to write in is now how I roll.

Free Year At a Glance Form For Moms Buried in the Organizing Details

Detailed day to day lesson planning requires writing space and I have found that daily planning overall is much better. 

Each area of life needs to have details worked out. With that being said, I do see adding a few pages of menu planning or week at a glance pages to keep you seeing the broad strokes while you homeschool.

And since most of us wear more than one hat whether we homeschool, we are just plain busy mommas.

So now that you know I always tackle details first and I have pages in my 7 Step DiY Homeschool Planner for looking at the big picture in those specific areas of life. But, my struggle is looking at ALL of it!

Today, I have my fix for those buried in the organizing details and I have created a free at year at a glance form. 

I wanted to keep it free so that all of you could benefit. I try to keep my prices down for my products, but I really wanted this form available to all of you so I kept it free.

I have already filled in some of my goals for January’ I’m loving this new glance at a year form because it helps to be honed in on one area of life. 

It has already helped me to clearly see projects that I need to pull back away from and look at the big picture so that I can make the next goal.

Free Year at a Glance Form

Look at the Year at a Glance form which I have for you and me. 

Print one or two or however many you need and put it with your planner to remind yourself to keep looking ahead at your yearly goals and to keep tracking them.

Can you believe that it was painful for me to create this because I wanted to fine tune it some more for detail?

I refused to let myself go there because I needed a place to plug in general homeschooling plans, personal goals and just you name it any type of goal for the year.

Also, in the busy mayhem homeschooling sometimes I have forgotten what makes me move and rock when I need to and that is inspirational quotes.


Though I tell you how much I love them and share them occasionally, I try to limit myself on posting them at the end of my blog posts sometimes because I tend to give detailed blog posts talk a lot.  I can’t help it, I have a lot to say.

Getting back to what makes me stay on fire throughout the the whole long year of homeschooling, parenting, helping other homeschoolers and generally just being energized about life, I added a section to the top of the year at a glance form on the right side for a quote of the year.

Curriculum Pages for Planner

Your quote of the year may just be a few words that you are focusing on or verse that you are fond of. 

This year I came across a saying on Pinterest which struck a chord with me.

This is the year I will be stronger, braver, kinder and UNSTOPPABLE. This year I will be FIERCE.

Some years I have just wanted to mildly goal plan and other years, like this one I need some fierceness.

With a few trips planned back to the states this year and in between catching up on homeschooling, updating my blog and writing a book along with some other changes, it will be one hectic rocking year.

By the way, I wanted to update you on what came from this form. Look at what I accomplished the next few years with this year at a glance form.

  • I wrote a book, Homeschooling 31 Day Boot Camp for New Homeschoolers: When You Don’t Know Where to Begin
  • Also, the New Homeschooler Boot Camp I taught for years in person and wrote a curriculum for, I put it online for all homeschoolers.

A bit of encouragement for you too. Whether you meet your goals or not is not the sign of success, but by planning you greatly increase your chance of successfully meeting them.

It is better to plan than to not plan.  Also, though I remind you of this, I need the reminder myself too and that is, as I explained in Planning Homeschool When Drowning in a Sea of Ideas don’t over plan.

Over planning and not meeting goals is just a road for burnout. 

With goals clearly marked in order from 1 to 12, a plan stays reachable.

Then at the bottom  of the form, I left an area for a 6 month evaluation to write in what you have successfully done and what you may want to work on half way through the year.

Too, sometimes goals can completely change mid-year. 

We may have a child struggling with a subject that we may think it will take all year to master and they may do it in three months.

Again, big picture goals change and hopefully, this general year at a glance form will keep all the goals you make wrangled in one place to remind you and me both to look up sometime.

I hope you love the new form as much I do.

Remember it’s a two page spread so be sure to bind it that way in any planner you use of mine.

Look at these other homeschool planner products that I know you’ll love!

  • Glam It Up Package

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  • 2. Ultimate DIY Homeschool Unit Study Planner

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  • Editable Homeschool Lesson Planning Pages - Mink Over You

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  • Dynamic and Fun Human Body Lapbook for Multiple Ages

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  • Editable Weekly General Planning Page

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  • Doodle Curriculum Planner Cover Store 1 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus 600x

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  • 0. Westward Expansion History Fun 10 Coloring Pages

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  • 00. Ancient Civilization History 20 Coloring Pages

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  • 1. The Best Undated Dynamic Daily Homeschool Planner

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  • Dynamic Renaissance Lapbook for Multiple Ages

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

Step 1. Choose a Pretty Front/Back Cover

Step. 2. Choose Calendars/Appointment Keepers

Step 3. Choose Goals/Objectives

Step 4. Choose Lesson Planning Pages Right For You!

Step 5a. Choose Unique forms JUST for You! Not a kazillion other people

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

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

Step 6. Personalize It

Step 7. Bind it! Love it!

How to Download this Freebie.
It’s a Subscriber Only Gift.

From time to time, I do Subscriber Freebies only. This is a subscriber freebie. I do this to show my appreciation and because I want you to follow me and give me a chance to make a difference in your homeschool.

Too, when you join my email list, you get access to my Subscriber’s Only Exclusive Library of Freebies.

This is how you get access to this form quickly.
1) Sign up on my list.
2) Confirm your email.
3) Look for the automatic reply giving you the password to the private subscriber’s area. You should have it soon.

IF you are already a follower/subscriber, PLEASE do NOT email me asking how to find it. You may not want to wait on me replying since I get bombarded with emails.

IF you’ll find the MOST RECENT email from me, the password and link to the Subscribers Area are ALWAYS at the bottom of every email. Look for the most current email since I change the password frequently.

And be sure to check out my Free Organizing Printables Category because I plod along my blog and may have new forms that are not listed yet on one of 7 Steps.

Free Year At a Glance Form For Moms Buried in the Organizing Details

Hugs and love ya,

Year At a Glance Planning Tina's @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

8 CommentsFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic}, Curriculum Planner, Student Planners, Subscriber Freebies Tagged With: curriculum planner

Top 10 Favorites

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

I don’t try to get too sappy here on my blog with the new year and all because I like to keep it to helping you with homeschool how-tos, unit studies, and of course my love for planners.  But before I list the top 10 favorites places and posts you loved this past year, I just wanted to say THANK YOU from my heart!

This past year has been a huge change for our family in moving from Texas to South America and downsizing, selling our house, packing and being on a whirlwind adventure took up a good part of the year.  It has been exciting, but exhausting. 

We are loving it here in South America more than we even imagined and are grateful for however long we can stay. I can’t wait to share more posts about the everyday life here along with all the other topics I love to blog about.

Too, though I shared articles on my New Bee Homeschooler site, the end of this past summer finished my first official year of blogging.  I just wanted to say how much I appreciate your comments and emails.  Truly, I am touched by each one and you are the best followers.

Each comment and email means a lot to me and I try to answer each one because without you my new little blog would not have seen the tremendous growth it has seen this past year.

I am also grateful that you support my products in my new store.  I have many things planned for 2015 and one of them is a book along with other things.  I look forward to telling you more about them this year and my other goals. 

Soon, I will be posting the top curriculum planner favorites, but check out these top 10 favorites y’all visited.

My Ancient Civilizations Unit Study and Lapbooks which includes Mesopotamia, Indus Valley, Ancient China, Phoenicia, Assyria, Ancient Babylon, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome continues to be my number 1 unit study and free printables.

 

Though I posted 50 Keep Me Learning Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days roundup at the end of 2013 when I first started my blog, it was the 2nd most popular one in 2014.

Then, we all loved the 50 Free History Unit Studies–History Lover’s Round Up to give us more ideas for keeping history fun. It took the number 3 spot.

Then I am loving that my first series of my blog my 31 Day Free Boot Camp for  New Homeschoolers stayed at my number 4 spot.

Even if you are not new, have you gone through it yet? You may find a tidbit or two to help you if you are struggling with homeschooling.  We all need encouragement and on some days more so than others.

Then feeling a little crafty and making it the center of the pack, how to make an Eazy Peazy Roman Costume and Free Printable Set of Wings post took center stage at number 5.

And then my Tropical Rainforest South America Unit Study and Lapbooks for older and younger children along with the page for the Rain Forest Animals of the Amazon comes in 6th place.

 

Y’all are loving these seasonal roundups.  And again, though I posted this in the first few months of blogging in 2013, Free Fall Unit Study Ideas– For Older Kids Too grew to the 7th spot in 2014.

Loving to read about homeschool organization, my post Homeschool Organization + {Storage, Spaces and Learning Places Part 1} came in at number 8.

Then you are loving this Free 8 Page Fan Book–Animals of the Galapagos Islands for number 9.

Then last, but not least, you are visiting my American Revolution Unit Study and lapbook.

What do you think? Were any of these your favorites or did you miss any?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina 2015 Signature

 

 

Top 10 Favorites Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Linking up @ these awesome places:

Motivation Monday | Mommy Monday | Inspire Me Monday |

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Homeschooling

Mythological Map – Marco Polo Unit Study

December 30, 2014 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

We started our next unit study, which is Marco Polo and a study of the Mongolian Empire.

It seems like history books are sometimes focused so much on the conquest of Alexander the Great and don’t realize that Genghis Khan created an empire from China to the Adriatic Sea in Europe. Massive and impressive!

Creating a mythological map for our Marco Polo unit study was just the perfect start to exploring this empire.
I really don’t teach myth when we do history, but just introduce it to the boys.

This was such a perfect time to talk about the myths that existed in the time of Marco Polo because basically the world was unexplored.

They had parts charted like Africa and then because Marco Polo lived in Venice, he was familiar with the Mediterranean Sea and then the rest of the world was unknown.

Hands-on History: Mythological Map – Marco Polo Unit Study

Some of the mapmakers would put warning signs on maps and fill them with mythological creatures because the land was uncharted territory and they thought the rest of the world was filled with dragons and such.

Of course Tiny thought this was way beyond cool and I found the activity to create a mythological map in the book Marco Polo for Kids: His Marvelous Journey to China, 21 Activities (For Kids series) which sparked our creativity.

Look at this short list of materials needed to create this fun and aged map.

  • Paper size of your choice. We had regular old paper.
  • Permanent Marker
  • Coffee and coffee grounds
  • here.

Have those things in your house?

Another reason why this is such a fun project is that there was very little known of the world and so most of the map can be made up from imagination.
A short geography project is a win-win. No moaning when mapping out mythological and unexplored areas.

Tiny just drew Africa, labeled the Mediterranean Sea and filled in the rest with creatures and monsters and added in his own warning.

I grabbed some left over coffee and a soft rag.

Next, he crumpled up the page and wadded it up real good (he loved that part) and laid it back out again. This helps it to look worn.

The coffee grounds were a must too.

He add in a few of those over some holes he made on the map and it started to take shape. We both wished he had added a bit more coffee grounds over it to mimic aged spots.

Then he took his soft rag and used the old coffee to soak  the map.

Be careful to not tear the page, though you do want some of the edges torn. Add a few torn edges.

Then I stuck it in the oven on the lowest heat and dried it for about 5 minutes.  Take it out and be careful because now you have an old and brittle map.

Here are a couple of other books, we have for this unit study too that we will be using.

We can’t wait to do our next hands-on activity and oh yes, I have printables coming on this unit study too! Have you studied about Marco Polo yet?

Hugs and love ya,

Marco Polo Unit Study, Lapbook, and Hands-on Ideas

Also check out:

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

4 CommentsFiled Under: Geography Based, Hands-On Activities, History Based, History Resources, My Unit Studies {Free Printables & Hands-on Ideas} Tagged With: hands-on

December Dynamic Sponsor Shout Out

December 29, 2014 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

December Dynamic Sponsor Shout Out

I always, always have time to show my gratitude for my sponsors and I am especially excited for today’s December Dynamic Sponsor Shout Out.

I have had an amazing year and mostly because you are here, but also because I have made some awesome connections with companies that love homeschoolers.

[tweet_box]Kids email is one of those companies that is keeping up with the needs of our children today which is to communicate via email just like we do.[/tweet_box] 

However, that also means as more people connect via the internet, more predators wait to find uneducated parents.  Yep, I mean parents not children.  Children are the poor victims of a parent not finding a suitable company that gives our children protection while on line.  Kids email takes the worry out of your hands while your kids can enjoy what we do.

Read about my review of Safe Email for Kids – Can You be Too Protective here and then scoot by and check them out. You’ll love them!

December Dynamic Sponsor Shout Out Kids EmailAnd then of course if you even visited my site just once, you know our love for geography and history. BUT not just any geography and history, but those kinds of [tweet_box]homeschool curriculum programs like Bright Ideas Press that believe in hands-on are the type that I want to use.  [/tweet_box]

If you don’t choose curriculum wisely, geography and history both can be meaningless and full of boring dates. Not so with Bright Ideas Press.

Did I tell you?

I am a brand ambassador for Bright Ideas Press. What does that mean?

Well, it means I get to choose a company that I want to represent because I luv their products.  Okay, okay, they get to choose me too. 

That is a win – win and I am PROUD to use their geography program and let you know about it because it is hard to find geography programs for the middle and high school age that are hands-on.

North Star Geography keeps it hands-on even in the older grades. Thank You Bright Ideas Press.

 

December Dynamic Sponsor Shout Out - Bright Ideas Press

You can check out a few of my rantings about them on the posts below:

Discovering Geography Through a Field Trip to Incan Ruins

Homemade Compass. Simple Geography Projects Equals Huge Wow Factors

 DIY Atlas – North Star Highschool Geography is Here!

You know I finished up my first year blogging here on WordPress this past summer and my blog has seen such huge growth that was so unexpected.

I am TRULY grateful and it wouldn’t be what it is today without my  Dynamic Sponsors.

Thank you Bright Ideas Press and Safe Email for Kids for a WONDERFUL year!! I am grateful.

When you get a minute, scoot by and give them a shout out!

Visit Safe Email for Kids Here.

Visit Bright Ideas Press Here and if nothing else drool over their products for next year.

Hugs and love ya,

Tina 2015 Signature

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Sponsored Posts

Planning Homeschool When Drowning in a Sea of Ideas

December 28, 2014 | 9 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Sitting in my living room and deciding what we wanted to do for school next, I realized that planning homeschool when drowning in a sea of ideas can be daunting and energy zapping.

Like you though, ideas, projects, and lists are all made because we want to problem solve or craft ideas into projects.

However, my to-do list and ideas for everything from homeschool to personal goals to my blog was growing more detailed by the moment.
Impatient person that I am to meet some of these goals, I realized it can make you feel defeated before you even start planning.

Do you find that you just pull back and don’t do anything because you can’t find a starting point? Organized or not, this can happen to anybody and it has happened to me more times than I care to admit.

One top of that, a problem with most people who love organization is that we have our noses so buried in the details of homeschool planning we can’t see the big picture.

I focused on things that inspire me to find a starting point. Don’t let your brilliant or creative flashes harness you.

Look at these 4 steps for a starting point as you plan your new homeschool year.

STEP 1. Clearly Identify

Start by just writing all that you want to do, but don’t worry about organizing your ideas just yet.

I want to finish a book on homeschooling that I have started, get my youngest son caught up with where I want him to be, help my next highschooler finish and graduate this next year, lose more weight, blog more passionately, help new homeschoolers with more detailed articles, create more unit studies, spend more time with the Mr. now that we live in beautiful South America and . . .  and . . .

Pen your ideas and identify them as clearly as you can, but don’t separate them into categories just yet because that will stifle what is on your mind for now.

STEP 2. Slice And Dice

After you have mounds of ideas and things that you want to do, take your list and prioritize what is most important to you.

What I have found in this step of the thought process is that some ideas are not worthy of my time after I weigh them against other things I have on my list.

You need to either shelf or shave ideas that you can’t get to this next year.

I have been ask, but how do you know how many to delete or shave off and how many to keep? I have found that a simple way to accomplish more is to use the 12 calendar months or physical year as a strainer.

In my mental process, I limit myself to 12 ideas or things that I want to get done for a new year.  Some ideas or things will only take a few days or few weeks and other ideas may take longer.  Too, some things like my goal of spending time with the Mr. can be grouped with another goal.

I find that a base of 12 ideas is a good starting point because it allows one idea or project per month.

It’s a natural way to plan, but most of the time we over plan with no filter in place. The physical year is my filter.

Don’t give up any of the ideas you have if you see in looking over your list that there are more worthwhile projects to pursue right now.

Just put them back for now and save your list because you never know during the year when you have time to reach into your treasure trove of thoughts and get one more project done.

At this point too, I can see a clear picture of how many are homeschool related, personal related, and business related and I group them together now.

STEP 3. Arrange In Importance to YOU

We both know that clearly our homeschool planning takes a prominent place.  But so should your health and spiritual welfare.

If you have been homeschooling at all costs and sacrificing either your physical or spiritual health, your homeschooling journey may not survive.

Some years, I have added in workbooks for the kids or hired a tutor because I needed the break.  Balance has always been hard for strong-willed homeschooling mamas.  I’m right there with you too.

The homeschooling survivors are ones that are willing to change when something needs to be done instead of heading straight to burnout.

Too, sometimes you have to decide what is a want versus a need.  For example, I am so over the top giddy on wanting to finish my homeschooling book, but I won’t do it at the expense of sacrificing Tiny along the way.

Will there still be homeschoolers the next year or the next?  For sure. But my son’s homeschool years are fleeting so it maintains priority for me.

Priority is uniquely different to each of us and we need to not only dig deep to determine them, but be honest on what is something we need to do versus something that we desire to do.

Now the challenge – number each one from the most important to the least.

Can you see the plan emerging? Remember, you should have only 12 numbered.

You can have more on your list, but only 12 numbered. Remember, this is about getting them done, not dreaming about them.

Too, some things which are long term projects, like my homeschool book, can be worked on throughout the year as I accomplish my 12 tasks.

So leave one or two long-term projects on your list that can simmer on the backburner while you meet your other goals.

STEP 4. Make A Visible Plan of Action

The fourth step is the most critical and it is to write it all down.  Did you know this is where a lot of people stumble or just give up?

After going through the grueling process of planning, they fail to make it cement or concrete.

Get it off your mind and onto something that you can see and physically check off.  Put the plan into action by writing it down.

See the big picture by assigning it to a calendar month. If you shriek at paper planning (can’t imagine, just saying) then put it down in your digital planner.

It is not a plan – well until it is.

Sounds easy enough, but a major reason we feel trapped before we start is that if it is not put down in some action form, our ideas might stay as pie in the sky goals.

In an upcoming post, l will show you how I finally solved my problem and got my nose out of those details that I love to wallow in.

Keeping this process of how I arrived at homeschool planning for the year does me no good to keep it in my head and so I hope this 4 step process simplifies the planning process for you.

Follow the four easy steps of homeschool planning which are clearly identifying all that you want to do for the year, organize ideas by category and slim your ideas down to just 12 with a few extra long-term projects, arrange them in importance by using the cruel (you cannot start them all at once, I tried that one time. Stay sane, don’t try it) number system because you have to have a Number 1 starting point and then avoid using invisible ink by writing it ALL down.

I guarantee you will have success in planning for a new year if you try faithfully to follow those four easy peazy steps.

What about you? Do you see a new plan of action or are you using one that works for you?

You’ll love these other tips!:

Over Scheduling + Over Planning = Over Load

3 Easy Fixes to Recharge Your Homeschool Routine

How To Create a Homeschool Schedule That You Can Stick To    

Hugs and love ya,

9 CommentsFiled Under: Plan For & School Year Around, Schedule/Balance Home & School Tagged With: homeschoolplanning

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