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Dynamic Reader Question-How to Begin Notebooking?

September 19, 2014 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

You know I love answering your questions and when I get one that I think others can benefit from, then I like to share with you.  The dynamic reader question-how to begin notebooking is one I want to share today.

Look at Karen’s question:

I realize this may sound silly, but I have thought of using notebooking pages in the past and have never really understood how to go about it. Now my kids are 6th grade and 9th grade, I feel we need a drastic change. If it’s not too late to start notebooking…can you suggest how do we begin? What and how do you decide to use these wonderful printables? How would I incorporate notebooking into high school?

It’s not silly at all.  As creative teachers, we want to push ourselves outside of what we feel comfortable with when it comes to teaching. 

Not only will your children love this, but you might discover some hidden talents among you and your children.

Dynamic Reader Question -  How To Begin Notebooking

Notebooking Needs to Be Tweaked for Your Family

Notebooking is a tool, which means we decide how it best suits our family.  Often, I am told that notebooking is for older kids and lapbooking is for younger kids, but I don’t hail to that thinking.  I think each tool can present challenges and win-win situations.

I think one of the best ways to describe notebooking is to tell what it is not.  It is not a worksheet.  Oh you can make it a worksheet, but notebooking is about your student showcasing his work in a format that is easy to understand.

Some homeschool moms encourage just writing or text on the page.  I do not.  Each of my sons are different learners which means the page needs to be suited to meet each of my son’s needs.

Notebooking is about making the page come alive and organizing content in a way that your children understand.  For example, other things like drawings, sketches, collections (examples like leaves and shed skin of a snake my son collected) can go on the notebooking pages.

Each child is different in how they best recall information learned or how they want to showcase mastery of it.  Your job as the teacher is to help them (as needed) to organize it in a way they understand, not you.

French Revolution Game - French Revolution Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus Native American Lapbook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Do not limit what your child wants to include from printable board games to minibooks.

How to Begin Notebooking?

Basically, notebooking is about your child taking charge of the way he wants to remember his information.  While he is young, there is nothing wrong with you helping him to lay out his page.

For example, part of the page can be writing, part of it may be illustrations.  Depending on the ages of your children, the page may look more like a drawing. 

To begin notebooking and keep it easy, use pages created by others.  There are so many free notebooking pages found on homeschool blogs and websites that you want to use them to save time and utilize work by other hardworking moms.  Also, the basics of any notebooking pages are just boxes or shapes which contain bits of information.

If you have the basic skills to use any program like Word or other free document creating software, you can create a few boxes on topics your family chooses to learn about. 

Really, with the ages your kids are, just let them create boxes, circles or graphs depending on what you are studying.  

Also, my sons remember key points best by funny sayings or mnemonics.  We used divorced-beheaded-died-divorced-beheaded-survived to remember the fate of the wives of Henry VIII.  So sayings like this can be added by your children as a way to remember information.

What and How Do You Decide Notebooking Printables?

I like to use notebooking pages or lapbooking pages as much as possible though it takes more work.  I view notebooking and lapbooking as a significant return on our learning efforts.  Paying upfront so to speak by taking more time in prepping pages equals a huge return later because the pages are something we can visit and use year after year.  They can always be added to as your child grows and learns.

I like to use the pages too when I want the boys to remember something important or when they find something that interests them.  Because they do take longer to do, it also means that your child has a tool that can be used over and over again to study. 

Studying something your child prepares allows him to take ownership for learning instead of memorizing boring worksheets created by others.

Try to remember that less means more sometimes.  The public educational system would have us think at times that “more” equals productivity.  It may mean more busywork and not meaningful productivity. 

Making the notebooking pages meaningful and focusing on the delight of the topic at hand will make your children masters of their page. 

Master of their pages and content is your ultimate goal and not a mass of pages that have no meaning to your children.

 

Make A Solar Oven  Pain Au Chocolat

The pages can include photographs of experiments and activities.  You can see that it not only becomes a valuable and fun way to memorize information, but a great way to keep a portfolio of your child’s work each year.

Because notebooking pages can be decorated by them, (or not) they take ownership of it.  Some kids thrive on being crafty, others do not find satisfaction that way. 

Again, this is an advantage of notebooking because their page reflect personality in style and set up.

How Would I Incorporate Notebooking into High School?

Notebooking is especially good in high school when note taking becomes more important.  Doodling should be permitted on notebooking pages because if it helps them remember a key point, then it’s important. 

The rule is there is no rule for how a page should be set up at this age.  As they enter adulthood, they need to hone in on the best way they learn information and it is an art on how they should lay out information on a page.  Too, I know many adults who do not know how to easily convey their thoughts and ideas to others.

High school becomes a time when they not only learn how to review their notes and organize thoughts but how they articulate it to others.

At first, it may seem strained or take time to refine information to a page, but after you have done notebooking for a while, you see the freedom in creating pages either like a timeline page, illustration page, text page or even an art page.

Older Teens Learning

In high school give them superior resources to choose from to add to their unique pages. The pages may include timelines, bits of information from primary sources and include their own feelings about perceived injustices on certain controversial topics like government and religions.

A lot of high school students, including mine, struggle with how to streamline content.  Notebooking reminds me a bit like outlining because your students have to decide how to narrow down the key point to remember.

There could be no more important skill to learn in high school than to streamline content AND more importantly to be able to look at their visual set up and recall critical information.

I have one son who wants more text and one who wants less when creating their pages.  We have successfully used notebooking when I have sat down with each of my sons and spend a bit of time creating with them to suit their learning style. 

A bit of guidance in the beginning helps the highschooler who wants clear guidelines of what they are doing.  Once they understand that notebooking is about helping THEM recall and display information learned instead of meeting your requirements, they feel the freedom.

Also, you can use notebooking for your expectations and grading.  They will be called on plenty of times in college to manipulate information and present it in a clear, concise and organized manner. 

Really, college bound or not, honing in on key points when explaining to others is a valuable communication skill for any adult.

Free Resources for Homeschool Notebooking, Any Ages!!!

I think the queen of notebooking is Jimmie Lanley at Notebooking Fairy.  You need to scoot by her site and check out her free pages for all ages.  You will love how easy she makes notebooking for all ages!

Check out some of these other free notebooking pages.  I listed just a few and a variety of them so that you can see what you can find on line for any homeschool subject.

http://harringtonharmonies.com/2013/06/free-state-notebooking-pages-2.html

https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/world-wars-to-today/geography-country-studies-timelines-2/

http://www.livingandlearningathome.com/2013/09/animal-kingdom-science-notebooking-pages.html

http://thesetemporarytents.com/2013/09/11/wassily-kandinsky-notebooking-study/

http://www.brightideaspress.com/2013/01/amelia-earhart-pages/

http://imanshomeschool.wordpress.com/2013/09/30/human-body-notebooking-pages-5/

http://museofthemorning.com/homeschool/2014/02/07/free-basic-notebooking-pages/

http://practicalpages.wordpress.com/free-pages/free-sonlight-world-history-pages/

http://ourworldwideclassroom.blogspot.com/2013/03/m-is-for-monkey-printable-notebooking.html

Don’t forget to check out my blog category for my free learning printables.

https://www.tinasdynamichomeschoolplus.com/category/1-my-learning-printables-any-topic/

And finally, remember that minibooks are part of notebooking too which is why I think lapbooking and notebooking overlaps so much. Minibooks can be glued on any page.

When you glue minibooks on pages, the variety of setups are then endless: minibooks with part text, minibooks with part graphics, all minibooks and no text, minibooks and nature drawing or minibooks and shapes.

Don’t make notebooking boring and your kids won’t be bored with it!! 

Give it a try!

Hugs and love ya,

 

2012Tinasignature When you step back . . .

4 CommentsFiled Under: Dynamic Reader Question, Notebooking Pages Tagged With: notebooking

Back Cover Curriculum Planner

September 3, 2014 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Because I take my time creating my curriculum planner printables for my 7 Step Homeschool Planner, I find inspiration at anytime.  So today, for the back cover curriculum planner, I was so stoked when I was reminded of the saying that “One Mother Teaches More than a Hundred Teachers” that I created another option choice for the back cover.

Back Cover Option for the 7 Step Homeschool Planner | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

That is such a powerful statement that I felt like it deserved it’s own page. 

Don’t underestimate the influence and power you have today over changing your children’s future.  And a gentle but power packed reminder each day, will hopefully keep us both pumped up for the days when we wonder why we are homeschooling.

I’m in a pinkish, purplish and turquoise-y (my new word) kind of elegant mood today.  Too, since I never strive to have all my pages matching because I always want you to have a unique planner and not one huge boring matching conundrum, I hope you like the color choice. 

You never know when the inspiration strikes and I will have to create more options.

Enjoy the newest back cover!

Download Back Cover Option 3 Here.

Hugs and love ya

2012Tinasignature Top 10 Tips To Getting a New Homeschool Year Rolling

Did you already grab your 2 page spread appointment keepers for the academic year or for 2015?

Rainbow, New Beginnings  and Dreaming Color Schemes shown below.

 

2 Page Month At A Glance Academic Calendars Rainbow| Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

 

2 Page Month At A Glance Academic Calendars New Beginnings | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Physical year 2015 Dreaming Calendar | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Leave a CommentFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic}, Curriculum Planner Tagged With: curriculum planner

Finishing Strong – Homeschool Link Up Party {Homeschooling Middle & High School Years} #27.

September 3, 2014 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Finishing Strong – Homeschool Link Up Party {Homeschooling Middle & High School Years} #27.

Welcome to Finishing Strong!

Today we’re featuring another one of our co-hosts, Kyle from Aspired Living. Don’t forget to link up your own posts with us after you read all about her.

Finishing Strong ~ Homeschooling the Middle & High School Years #27

Howdy, I’m Kyle McVay of Aspired Living and I’ve been blogging since 2006. I’ve been married for nearly 18 years to the World’s Best Husband and we have 5 children and live in the great state of Texas. Our oldest child is autistic, and we have both biological and adopted children. We hope to adopt again, but we are getting old. Our 5 awesome kiddos range in age from 4 to 16 years old, which creates a really interesting school day!

Our School

For the upcoming 2014-2015 academic year, we’ll be homeschooling all 5 of our kiddos. We will be teaching our autistic 8th grader, 6th grader, 4th grader and 2 preschoolers. We are utilizing the classical model, but we are not purists. Plus, I really like Charlotte Mason’s ideas. I use the book Teaching the Trivium by the Bluedorns as a guide.

We emphasize independent study by the student with Mama in the role of tutor. Thus we adopted much of the methodology of the Classical Method, which allows me to insert Charlotte Mason type elements into our homeschool without usurping the role of teacher.

I like to keep our homeschool simple. By this I mean I shouldn’t overload my children, or choose curriculum that is complicated for the children to complete or for me to implement.

Popular Posts

The Ultimate Guide to Classical Curriculum

This is an exhaustive (and exhausting) list of classical curriculum providers, co-ops, continuing education & bloggers. We begin by looking at the classical curriculum providers that offer curriculum choices across all subjects. For the most part I will not mention their individual curriculum except in the case of products I feel are often overlooked.

ultimate guide

Understanding Saxon Math

Saxon Math has been a homeschool mainstay for 20+ years. It was written by John Saxon and remained a family company until 2004 when it was sold to Harcourt Achieve. It is still however the same high quality program as when it was owned by the Saxons. This curriculum has been used by homeschoolers practicing nearly every homeschool method.

saxon

5 Great Mystery of History Posts

I know I always benefit from seeing how other folks are using and organizing curriculum that I use. These 5 posts have been very helpful to me in getting my MOH organized and running smoothly.

mysteryofhistory

Homeschool for Free

Homeschooling does not have to be expensive, in fact it can be free. This post lists a lot of places for you to find free homeschool curriculum.

homeschoolforfree

Don’t forget to check out all of the co-hosts – Aspired Living, Blog She Wrote, Education Possible, EvaVarga, Milk and Cookies, Starts at Eight, and Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus.

Guidelines for the hop:

Follow Me Linky Party Finishing Strong

Blog Button Link Up Pinterest Button  Link Up Google Plus Link Up

Twitter Link Up You Tube Link Up

Follow Group Boards Linky Party Finishing Strong

Pinterest Button Link Up-1 Google Plus Group Link Up

Easy Details to Remember & Even Easier Guidelines.

      • The link up party goes live at 5:00 a.m. CST each Wednesday and stays open until the following Tuesday at 11:55 p.m.
      • Each week we will pick our favorite links as features and share them.
      • You can link up to 3 posts. Please do not link up advertising posts, or other link ups, or parties. I will remove them. Homeschool related reviews are permitted and of course all topics related to homeschooling middle to high school students.
      • Grab a button to add to your post after you link up and if you were featured, grab an “I was featured” button.
      • By linking up with us, you agree for us to share your images and give you credit of course.
      • That’s it! Glad to have you here and let’s party!

 

Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

An InLinkz Link-up

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Homeschool Link Up Party

Top 10 Tips To Getting a New Homeschool Year Rolling

August 31, 2014 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

In sharing my top 10 tips to getting a new homeschool year rolling today, I hope that you will remember that nobody can replace you as the teacher. 

And that while some of my tips apply to our kids, a lot of it is shared to encourage you to keep on plugging along because I am here to tell you that in the end it’s WORTH every bit of effort each year!

1. Make time for the teacher, not just mom. 

We get a lot of encouragement to make time for ourselves as mom though we don’t always follow the advice.

I am guilty too, but I have always taken time each year to polish up my teacher skills. 

It is easier, we think at the time, to turn the teaching reins over to somebody else either through a co-op or on-line class.  When in fact if we do that, we may be bringing more stress to our year.  Taking time to hone your skills as the teacher will help you to choose more carefully any extra “help” you think you may need.  Look at the bottom of this post for books I read that set me on fire when I teach.

2. Make time to be with other homeschoolers.

No, you don’t have to get fuzzy wuzzy with other homeschoolers if you’re not the joinder type.  But your kids may need to be around more people than you may need in your inner circle. 

How to Begin Your New Homeschool Year

Too, I have learned more about myself and the fact that though, like you, I can be pretty independent, that has nothing to do with needing encouragement. 

ALL of us, independent or not, eventually need to know that we are not alone and that others are in our unique circumstances. 

There is just something about being around other homeschoolers that brings my blood back to a boiling point for homeschooling. 

Being around other homeschoolers is contagious and keeps you plugging along.  Even on days when you don’t feel like leaving the house, try to maintain your park dates, field trips or co-op classes that you have carefully chosen.

3. Dad is not just a figure head.

Unless you are a single mom (hopefully she has a support system too), you are not raising or educating your children alone. 

Your husband should play a large role in your homeschooling. 

You may wonder how that is possible if you are doing a majority of the teaching.  As you know there is more than the academic growth of a child. 

Your husband provides not only a safe environment in which your children can learn, but his love for your children stimulates intellectual growth. 

Too, discipline is very important in homeschooling. 

And some days after teaching, I was just too pooped to think about discipline. 

Discipline is more about instruction and my husband had the mental reserve when he got home to keep the instructing going when it was needed.  Don’t leave him out and let him know how you feel daily. 

In all my years of helping homeschoolers, I have never met a dad supportive of homeschooling that did not want to be plugged in to the every day goings on.  You are not doing this alone, so don’t go it alone.

4. Adopt a routine. 

A routine has been one of the mainstays or anchors of my homeschooling year after year.  Not assuming you should follow the same homeschool schedule you followed last year will help you to see clearly if you need a different routine this year. 

Check out the tips I share in A Day in the Life of a Homeschooler Part 1 Early Years , The Sticking Power of a Homeschool Schedule and How To Create a Homeschool Schedule That You Can Stick To .

5. Show Up Earlier & Stay Later. 

There are just some tips that work equally across the board for all teachers and showing up earlier and staying a bit later than the kids is one of them. 

There are a variety of things that your kids can start working on that don’t require you (I will share some of them in an upcoming post) but taking a few minutes to look over your lesson planner for each child will help your day to go smoother. 

This is especially important if all of your children are very young. 

Young children have shorter learning spurts and your being well prepared will help to engage them quicker. 

Choosing to stay a bit later after the kids are playing or having computer time will also help you to think of what needs to be prepared for the next day while the children’s needs are fresh in your mind.

Top 10 Tips to Getting a New Homeschool Year Rolling

6. Don’t Shove Your Toddlers & Preschoolers Aside. 

I know you would never do that intentionally, but when it comes to school time, include them.  It’s hard I know because they seem to be pint size destroyers of your just so schedule. 

But hear my heart on this and that is if you don’t include them now and make school part of everyday, they may not want to be part of it when it is time to formally learn. 

Don’t make the mistake I have seen by veteran and new homeschoolers alike and that is to shove them aside only to want them to be ready to homeschool later. 

Taking time to set up your house and school area to suit them, whether it’s by activities you have created ahead of time or an area, then they will naturally want to be included in the formal part of your day as they are older.

7. Make Time For Middle School  Merriment. 

Though I hear many homeschoolers who believe that their 6 or 7 year old needs “friends” what they really want are playmates. 

Unlike your middle school kids who actually need friends, it is important that your middle school kids have time to explore friendships and pursue goals. 

At a time when puberty hits, our middle school kids can go through a whole host of emotions. 

From feeling useless to insecure because of possible hormones highs and lows, it is important that they not become self-absorbed. 

More New Homeschool Year Tips

  • 5 Ideas to Kick-Start Your New Homeschool Year By Including Others
  • Get Organized – Rev Up for the New Homeschool Year
  • It’s a New Homeschool Year and My Child Wants to Go Back to Public School
  • How to Plan Your First Homeschool Year When You Don’t Know How To Start

Healthy friendships are a way to help push our kids through difficult times and especially friends who are homeschoolers.

This will take work on your part because as I always say at this age, our middle school kids are independent dependents.  It is easy to overlook this age with all the tug and pull of the little ones.  Add in the mix a high school student who demands our time and it becomes almost impossible. 

My best tip on how I survived the middle school years was to make a date and stick with it.  Something that I could plan for each week or so was much better than spur of the moment planning when my plate was full.

8. Is Curriculum Worth the Cost? 

You paid for new curriculum and want it to work out for the year.  You know the one that you told the Mr. you just had to have this year. 

Knowing when a curriculum has ran its course (no pun intended) whether it’s in the middle of a year or just a few months into the year, is not an easy thing to try to figure out.  Counting the costs sometimes just does not always come at the beginning of the school year no matter how careful we are.

Our children’s needs can change just a few short months into the school year.  One year, Mr. Awesome jumped two grade levels in spelling. 

No matter how hard I worked with him the previous year, he just did not make improvement.  It was a developmental thing and keeping him in a lower grade, even just the few short months into the school year, would have held him back.  I had to buy upper grade curriculum after only completing a few short lessons. 

Curriculum is a constant process to check throughout the year.

9. Our Home Reflects We Care. 

Just a few short weeks into homeschooling when I was a new homeschooler, I was embarrassed by my home.  The truth of it was I had underestimated my energy level and time. 

Instead of having my kids’ nose buried in worksheets I had assigned, I should have had them buried in folding a load or two of laundry. 

I had to end up taking off a whole week to get caught up on cleaning my house. 

Because the care in our home reflects the way we care for each other in our family, it is an important part of homeschooling. 

Successful New Homeschool Year

While it’s important to have a comfortable home that we can study at, it is also important that it is a place where we can find peace and rest at the end of the day.  Remember that when your children do chores at home it teaches them about responsibility, caring for others and gives them a sense of pride.

10. Just Push it Aside and Stop. 

I wished I could say that each day will be full of fun and exciting things to do, but we both know that is not true.  What is not easy to figure out is to know when to just take a break for the day and when to push school aside for a longer bit of time.

It is a lethal combination when everybody in the house is tired and overworked.  I have made the mistake of pushing through a day when we were in a slump and needed a break.  When you take a break, it actually shows a bit of homeschooling maturity because it means that you now know that homeschooling is a journey and not a one year fix.

Celebrate each year because if you are like me, you are grateful each year that you have been given precious time with your children that will pass by quickly.

What do you do to keep your new homeschool year rolling?

2 CommentsFiled Under: Kick Off Your Homeschool Year

Trail of Tears Notebooking Pages

August 30, 2014 | 10 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I can’t help it. We love geography and we love starting our unit studies off with something about geography when we can.  So in preparing the first set of the Trail of Tears Notebooking Pages, I started with a bit of easy geography.

Even easy geography is important to understanding the trek that not only the Cherokee made, but several other tribes took because it helps to build appreciation for the harsh conditions they endured.

Too, because I like big graphics for any age, young grades or middle school, it is good sometimes to add a few notebooking pages to your study because you can use the full page for a map.

You know I have never fallen for the popular homeschooling mentality that lapbooks are just for young learners and notebooking pages for older learners.  I always try to incorporate the two types of pages when I can.  Don’t limit homeschooling tools like lapbooks and notebooking pages to preassigned ages and you will be able to make a well rounded out unit study.

Back to what I was talking about. I also like to build background information first about any topic.  Earlier, I had shared a minibook about the 7 Clans which is a minibook to build appreciation for the culture of the Cherokee.

Trail of Tears Notebooking Pages

Then today, I am sharing some notebook pages will which help with understanding about the different types of tribes that lived along the southeastern part of the United States. This will also help to build appreciation for the way they care for the land and depended on it for survival. They were hunters, farmers and they fished.

By locating the tribes on the southeastern part of the United States in their atlas, your children can understand that they lived in log homes, and planted squash, beans and corn in the rich soil. The land they loved and built on was wooded and had rivers.  As they worked the land, they enjoyed the bounty provided by it.

More Trail of Tears Activities

  • Free The Trail Of Tears For Kids Fun Unit Study Ideas And Lapbook
  • Books About the Trail of Tears
  • Trail of Tears Indian Removal Act Minibook
  • Cherokee Garden Pan Bread
  • Trail of Tears Notebooking Pages

How to Get the Free Trail of Tears Lapbook

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

That means when you sign up to follow me, you get access to my subscribers library and this freebie.

However, not all my freebies are in the library (wink).

I like to keep up to date with what is valuable to you so I can give you more, some freebies you must sign up again on the form below even if you are already a follower.

And it’s the only way I have of freely delivering them to you. Just follow the steps below.

► 1) Sign up on my list.
► 2) Go to your inbox and confirm your email from the automatic reply I sent you. If you’re already a confirmed subscriber, you will not have to do this. You’ll receive the freebie instantly.
 ►3) Last step. look for my reply AFTER you’ve confirmed your email.

10 CommentsFiled Under: 1. My FREE Learning Printables {Any Topic}, Geography Based, History Based Tagged With: nativeamerican, notebooking

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