• Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Activity, Change, Progress

  • HOME
  • How to
    • Preschool
    • Kindergarten
    • Elementary
      • Geronimo Stilton Books
    • Middle School
    • High School
      • Science 
  • Planner
  • Lapbooks
    • Trioramas
    • History Games
    • LEGO
  • Shop
  • GET STARTED NOW!
    • Learning Styles
  • 7 Step Planner
    • Free Student Planner
    • Free Home Binder
  • Unit Studies
    • Creation to Ancients
      • Mesopotamia
    • Middle Ages to Reform
    • Exploring to Revolution
    • World Wars to Today
    • Science
  • Curriculum
    • More Unit Studies
    • Geography
    • Writing PreK to 12th
    • Free Art Curriculum
  • BootCamp
    • Resources
      • Ultimate Unit Study Planner

Welcome

Finishing Strong – Homeschool Link Up Party {Homeschooling Middle & High School Years} #18.

July 2, 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

Thank you for joining us this week at Finishing Strong–the link-up that focuses on middle & high school students.

Finishing Strong Link Up Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus
This week we’re highlighting our most popular posts from the past month.

Finishing Strong ~ Homeschooling the Middle & High School Years #18 Education Possible

During June, we had many great middle school & high school posts shared here at Finishing Strong. Thank you so much for stopping by each and every week to link up your informative and encouraging posts.

Here are four of our reader’s favorites:

  • High School Homeschool Curriculum: Top Picks by Cindy at Our Journey Westward.
  • Homeschooling Average Middle Schoolers: High School Can Wait! by Vicki at 7 Sisters Homeschool.
  • How to Approach Science in High School by Meridith at Sweetness & Light.
  • Wrapping Up a Homeschool Year: Creating a Simple End-of-Year Portfolio by Tonia at The Sunny Patch.

If you haven’t read these, we hope you’ll take take a look at them this week.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to check out all of our link-up co-hosts – Aspired Living, Blog She Wrote, Education Possible, Eva Varga, Milk and Cookies, Starts at Eight, and Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus.

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 Tagged With: finishingstronghomeschoollinkup, finishingstronglinkup

5 Signs That You Need to Switch Your Homeschool Approach

July 1, 2014 | 3 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Sharing 5 signs that you need to switch your homeschool approach, maybe I will spare you my same stubbornness struggle.

5 Signs to Switch Your Homeschool Approach

Switching from a strictly classical approach to a more unit study approach with an eclectic twist was not easy for me. However, there were tell-tale signs.

Unless you have a public school teacher background (I did not) when you first started homeschooling, you probably were unaware of a homeschool approach. I wasn’t even able to define the term.

First, being able to define a homeschool approach helps to sort through what will work for your family and what will not.

5 Signs That You Need to Switch Your Homeschool Approach
A simple definition for homeschool approach would be the techniques, style, manner, and beliefs as to how you will educate your child.

1.You now understand that you may have chosen your current homeschool approach by default not choice.

Being able to understand and articulate that simple, but powerful definition of a homeschool approach was my first prompt in realizing now that I had homeschooled a few years, I needed to research more carefully the best way to teach my children.

When I started homeschooling I almost felt like I chose a homeschool approach by what I call default.  Classical approach was the homeschool approach my brain was drawn to; it made sense to me.  By default because I was the teacher, I chose that homeschool approach for my children.

2. Regardless of your teaching preference, your children learn better with another style.

My second sign was that although the classical approach worked most of the time for my oldest son, my middle son learned best by more hands-on activities.  I truly was not going to leave any child behind.

3. When you’re losing your homeschool joy because you want something to be successful.

The next sign was one that was real important to me and that was that all of us, including myself, were losing the joy of learning.

Although the definition of homeschool approach in its simplest form means your individual style of teaching, it has to be something you enjoy doing each day too.

Losing a bit of my joy in teaching, I knew the classical approach wasn’t exactly a perfect fit for my teaching style.

Constant moans when we got ready to homeschool played a part too.

You know they weren’t the normal I-am-not-in-a-mood-today-for-school moans, but major moans. The I hate to read now were words spoken in my house. 

My heart was heavy because my push and my drive for a heavy language arts focus was stealing our joy.

Although I can’t all together blame the classical approach because I could have added balance, it certainly started feeling like a noose around my neck.

I could easily move past not having such a great day teaching, but young children don’t have the same ability to reason that sometimes things are temporary.

4. Your day is getting longer and longer because you’ve been focused on following the curriculum instead of the lead of your children.

Another negative sign was that I started making our days go longer and longer, which is beyond anything that I preach tout for teaching kids in the younger years

5. Knowing that when we added in something else other than what our curriculum called for, my kids were more engaged. In our case, it was hand-on activities.

Also, we were finding delight when we took time out of our reading and writing.

For instance, we added a volcano activity, outside geography hunt in the yard or made a themed history meal. They were indicators that we needed more hands-on activities.

Careful Stubborn teacher that I was, it still took me another two years before I changed.

Also, I knew that I had to adopt a homeschool approach that fit my whole family and not just suited me as the teacher.

The good thing about homeschool definitions that you adopt is that they can be expanded.

Now, my expanded definition of homeschool approach would be this:

A homeschool approach would be the techniques, style, manner, and beliefs as to how you will educate your child AND it is the way a teacher nurtures a love of learning recognizing and accepting how a child learns best.

You’ll also love these other tips:

5 Signs That You Need to Switch Your Homeschool Approach
  • Mixing It Up: How to Combine Homeschool Approaches (Without Losing Your Mind)
  • How to Use a Boxed Curriculum without Giving Up Your Homeschool Approach
  • 3 Things To Try When Your Hands-Off Homeschooling Approach is a Failure
  • You’ve Pitched the Homeschool Curriculum – Now What?

Do you have any of these symptoms signs?

5 Signs That You Need To Switch Your Homeschool Approach @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus.

Hugs and love ya,

3 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling, Determine Learning Styles Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschoolapproach, new homeschool year, new homeschooler

Homeschooling Middle School Doesn’t Always Mean Middle Way

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

Arriving at the middle school years can be a time of mixed emotions for both mom and child.  But homeschooling middle school doesn’t always mean middle way in our journey.  It is only natural though that middle school weigh heavy on the mind because it is a midpoint. Also, look at my page homeschool middle school for more fun tips.

3 Smart Strategies to Middle School Homeschool

Having gone through these grades twice now with my oldest sons, there are several things that helps me to stay grounded.

  • It’s about discovering your child’s individuality. 

Curriculum will come and go, but this is the time to focus on who your child will become.  It was hard for me to look at my boys then to picture the men they will become but it happens.

Middle grades are a time for discovering the strengths and weaknesses of your child’s character.  Middle school kids want to know how they fit in the world and they need time to explore a whole host of activities.  Whether you think they are behind or ahead in academics has nothing to do with their changing emotional and social needs.

Homeschooling Why Middle School Doesn't Always Mean Middle Way in Homeschooling

Self-discovery may come through field trips, attending classes without other siblings, or even volunteering for community service projects.  It may even come through an activity they enjoy doing alone.  Bottom line is that it is about discovering who they are and how they will contribute to this world.

I think it is one of the hardest times to homeschool too.  Because the kids are feeling the tug of adulthood but don’t have the skills like driving or the experience at planning to fulfill them, it is very discouraging at times.

It requires extra work on our part because it requires extra time.  Add in the time demands of a toddler or younger siblings to a middle schooler’s unique needs and it can be quite stressful.

Finding another homeschool mom you can trade off with in driving your child to his classes, hosting a co-op on a subject your child likes with only one other family at your house and driving them to classes every other week are things I have done to feed their need for adventure and discovery.

During those grades I have also found that my sons were ahead in subjects and lagged behind in others.

With both of my older sons, it has never meant either that we were exactly middle way in our journey or in academics.

  • Re-evaluate the academics. 

This is the time too that I have to switch from my teacher hat to supervisor hat.  Like us, our middle school kids want the same freedom to pursue subjects that interests them.  Without giving up the parental guidance, we need to throttle back the control.

It’s important for them to understand that though they have more input in their academics now, it doesn’t mean that you are willing to negotiate the core subjects.

You have to be willing though to let them try a new math program (approved by you of course) or writing program.  Negotiating how they approach core subjects, times about when they do them or where they do them shows you are willing to let go of control.

Many times I gave my sons a couple of choices in curriculum that I had weeded through at some of the conventions.  Some of the programs were ahead in some subjects, on target in others and a few for lower grades.

My oldest son was very decisive at that age about which math and writing program he wanted to stick with.  My second son, not so much.  So I made the choice for my second son and he was completely fine with it.

The point I am making is that both of my sons had a choice about academics because I wanted to show my willingness to be reasonable as this journey eventually becomes their education.

Too, some kids are very advanced in middle grades and are already capable of doing high school level work.  I always let me sons move ahead where needed and simmer on other subjects as they needed to.

  • Letting go of the best homeschool approach – your approach.

Ouch, this next suggestion of being willing to let go of a homeschool approach that you have followed for many years is a touchy one.

However, being willing to switch your homeschool method or approach that has been working for you as the teacher is crucial to surviving middle school.  Try to avoid micromanaging your children because it stifles any efforts for self-independence.  Clear accountability works better and is of more value because in real life, that is when they are adults, nobody runs behind us to remind us.  We learn by reaping the benefits or consequences of bad decisions.

I’m right there with you too because this is kind of scary for us as moms when we have been use to taking all control for their education up to this time.  I had to learn differently too because my sons now learned differently.  If you want your children to be independent learners then your method of teaching has to follow what works best for them.

When I started homeschooling and my children were young, the classical approach to homeschooling fit my idea of what my husband and I thought homeschooling should look like.  It still does in many ways.

Along the way though I learned that I didn’t have to be so dogmatic about it but that I could embrace many strengths from each homeschool approach.

Having boys and knowing they learn best by hands-on allows me to mostly choose resources that fit our unit study method.

I have not given up any of my homeschool goals but have partnered with my sons in embracing their homeschool approach that becomes more clear during the middle school grades.

I have found that the middle school years are an exciting time as my sons emerge.  It is a good place to be if you stay flexible and realize that the many different approaches to homeschooling exist because we have many different types of learners.  Embrace it, don’t run from it.   And change for goodness sake if you need to because it will mean the difference between making the most of middle school or having a collision midway.

I will be sharing some resources in upcoming posts that worked good for us too during the middle school grades.

Are you willing to let go of the middle school struggle and seize these exciting years?

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

9 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Multiple Ages of Children, Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation, How To - - -, Middle School Homeschool Tagged With: middleschool

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

June 26, 2014 | 33 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

You’ll love this DIY duct tape ideas for homeschool organizing. You’ll love this DIY Easy Duct Tape Pencil Pouch Back to School Kids Craft.

I admit it, I think I’m weird. Unlike some of my friends, I for sure don’t wither away if I don’t bake a cupcake (yours would probably taste better than mine too) or have a craft area. I told you I am weird. Tie in a project though with something I can’t live without like homeschool organizing and then I become obsessed.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

Too, why is it that you want something when you can’t have it?

I can’t really have a homeschool area now that we are trying to sell our house. I think I am just use to organizing my space normally at this time of the year.

But since I don’t know what type of house (or hotel room I will be vacationing staying in) I will be living in next year or if I can even get some of the same school supplies in South America, I decided to round up some ideas for diy homeschool organizing with duct tape.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

I do admit to being an Amazon girl though because I know they can deliver anywhere. A cereal box, or any box and a roll of duct tape ordered from Amazon and I can be in serious homeschool organizing business.

Look at some of these creative ideas for homeschool storage and see if you get the duct tape bug too.

Duct Tape Storage Crate

A crate, some paint splatter duct tape and some paint and in minutes you get a useful storage container.

Check it out at Michaels.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Aren’t these just too cute? 

Duct Tape Storage Boxes and Containers

Craft storage, office storage or all those school supplies could easily fit in here.  This could be made with some hot looking blue turquoise tape mixed with neon colored funky flamingo duct tape

Check it out at Small For Big.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Talk about inexpensive storage and to create something that you needed for an exact space, I found this on Joanns website. Click on the .pdf to download it and see it.

More Homeschool Organization Room Ideas

  • 100 BEST Ideas to Organize Your Homeschool Area – Storage, Spaces, and Learning Places
  • Homeschool Room Organizing + Organizing Tool
  • Clever DIY Dollar Tree Desk Organizer Back to School Craft
  • Homeschool Organization – 12 Unconventional Ideas for Storage

This project included foam board, poster board along with a few supplies and some of your time to create a nifty little organizer and this is perfect for those hard to find storage places.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

A lazy susan with some buckets, bins, and some duct tape and you have a turn table of storage.  This would go great on a center school table.

This idea is from Wife at Wize House.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

For this next craft, any old ugly box you have on hand could be decorated to match your school room.  That is important you know!  Look at this safari pattern duct tape that could add pizzazz to a box.

Check out this decorated box at DIY Home Sweet Home.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Duct Tape Storage Boxes for Drawers

A few cereal boxes cut down and measured to fit your drawer and then covered with duct tape make awesome storage containers. 

Though she used paper in this next picture, I could easily see this in some pretty retro duct tape.

 Check out how to make the cereal box storage containers for drawers.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Duct Tape Clip Board and Accessories

How easy can this be!  A plain clipboard can be turned chic storage with a couple of rolls of duct tape.

Check it out at Craft Gawker.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Duct Tape Notebooks and Pencil Supplies

Basically turn boring composition book into fabulous by using duct tape. We have so many of those Meade notebooks that could use some love like this.

Check it out at Craft-O-Maniac.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Even pencil cases go from drab to fab!

Check it out at While They Snooze.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Another notebook design here.

Check it out at Inner Child Fun.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Duct Tape Clips and Magnets

I fell in love with how easy this project would be.  It is popsicle sticks glued on the pin,then covered in duct tape with magnets on the back of the pin.  This would make a great way to hang art or use them in your school area.

Check it out at Lines Across.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Duct Tape Covered Textbooks and Books

When we have to use textbooks, it could make the event more exciting if it was a bit more glammed up.

Check out the duct tape covered textbook at Doodle Craft.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Duct Tape Journal

I bet this beautiful rainbow journal could inspire any writer. It has purple stitching along with neon duct tape.

Check it out at Kitty Cat Stevens.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

{Source}

Duct Tape on the Go Craft Storage

And last, but not least is this on the go craft kit.  Isn’t that just swanky? I found it in Pinterest land and wished it has an original source on it, but it did not.

If you come across the creator, let me know because I am a give credit where credit is due type of gal.  But I just had to include it.  It looks like just velcro was used along with duct tape to keep all the supplies contained inside.

DIY Homeschool Organizing With Duct Tape

If you make something, let me know because then I can pine at what your making since I will have to wait for a while longer.

Hope you catch the tape bug. Corny, I know, couldn’t resist.

33 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Space, Homeschool Tools, Storage, & Accessories, Organization Tagged With: ducttape, organizedhomeschool, schoolroom, schoolsupplies

Finishing Strong – Homeschool Link Up Party {Homeschooling Middle & High School Years} #17.

June 25, 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

Thank you for joining us this week at Finishing Strong–the link-up that focuses on middle & high school students.

Finishing Strong Link Up Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

 

This week we are taking the time to learn more about Heidi Ciravola from Starts At Eight.

Heidi Ciravola Finishing Strong Picture Bio

Hi, my name is Heidi Ciravola and I blog at Starts At Eight. I live in Upstate New York where we have 4 seasons and the weather is usually more cold than warm. I am blessed to be married to my best friend since 1998 and we share our home with 3 children ages 14,11,8.

Heidi from Starts At Eight

When I first started blogging in 2009 I wrote a post about “Why Starts At Eight?” It is funny how much has changed since then. Now my blog is almost all homeschool related and not so much a personal journal. My husband jokes that I need to start a new blog to have as a personal journal! LOL!

I have been homeschooling since 2006 when I pulled my oldest out of public school after completing her 1st grade year. I now homeschool a high schooler, a middle schooler, and an elementary aged student, so my curriculum and resources run the gamut! You can check out my interview, The Face of Homeschooling, to learn more about our family and why/how we homeschool.

Besides blogging at Starts At Eight I am also a member of the Hip Homeschool Moms Blog Team and I am an iHomeschool Network blogger. I enjoy getting to know other homeschooling families and learning from their experiences. I also provide Homeschool Consulting Services for those who are in need of assistance along their homeschool journey.

Homeschooling High School

I am just completing my first year of homeschooling high school. I have to admit that even though I had been homeschooling for 7 years already, starting with high school made me feel like a “newbie”. As I researched and learned things I realized that the amount of homeschooling high school information out there was significantly smaller than the early and elementary years. Thus I have switched much of my blog focus to homeschooling the high school years.

I started a 10 day series on homeschooling high school with a post called, So You’re Scared to Homeschool High School. I wanted to let others know that it isn’t as scary as you might think, and that you are capable of homeschooling your high schooler.

So You're Scared to Homeschool High School from Starts At Eight

One of the big changes in high school is the need to choose and participate in elective courses. While researching for my daughter I wrote about the process, from what exactly is an elective, to suggestions for fulfilling elective credits, and I created a FREE Printable called Plan Your High School Electives Pack for you to use to help you along the journey.

My daughter ended up choosing things like photography and Latin as electives. Photography is a fun thing that we can do together as I am a photographer myself. The Latin serves as a foreign language, great vocabulary SAT prep, and will help her with medical terms as she strives to reach her goal of entering the medical field.

Plan Your High School Electives: Free Printable Pack from Starts At Eight

One of the ways we are working towards college is by preparing for and taking CLEP Exams to earn college credit. This spurred me to write a series of articles about this option. The first one is called, What is a CLEP Exam?

Along with this, we have had the opportunity to check out a few options for preparing for these exams, thus opening up the world of dual credit (doing high school and gaining college credit). Both Dual Credit at Home and JumpCourse offer different and viable options for earning college credit while still in high school.

What is a CLEP Exam? from Starts At Eight

Fun Unit Studies

Beyond writing about high school I like to share about what fun unit studies I am doing with my youngest daughter. She is the most unschooled of all our children. We will often veer off the beaten path because of some new interest that has sparked her attention! Things like Canada, Chickens, Balto and the Iditarod, Johnny Appleseed and Teeth (a 3 part series).

One of our favorite unit studies is our Bug/Insect Units Using Eric Carle Books. This allowed us to study so many different bugs using different Eric Carle books, including ladybugs, bees, crickets and grasshoppers, spiders, caterpillars and butterflies.

A Bug/Insect Unit Using Eric Carle Books: The Very Busy Spider from Starts At Eight

I hope you will follow my family along on our journey through homeschooling and find some resources, support, and encouragement along the way! You can follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram and G+.

 

Don’t forget to visit all of our co-hosts – Aspired Living, Blog She Wrote,Education Possible, Eva Varga, Milk and Cookies, Starts at Eight, and Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus.

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 Tagged With: finishingstronghomeschoollinkup

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 412
  • Page 413
  • Page 414
  • Page 415
  • Page 416
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 458
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Footer

Privacy Policy | About Me | Reviews | Contact | Advertise

Categories

Archives

Tina Robertson is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Copyright © 2026 · 5 TNT LLC · Log in · Privacy Policy