• 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
    • Middle School
    • High School
  • Planner
  • Lapbooks
    • Trioramas
    • History Games
  • Shop
  • GET STARTED NOW!
    • Learning Styles
  • 7 Step Planner
    • DIY Best Student Planner
    • Free & Easy DIY Home Management Binder
  • Unit Studies
    • Creation to Ancients
    • Middle Ages to Reform
    • Exploring to Revolution
    • World Wars to Today
    • Science
    • Free Art Curriculum Grades 1 – 8
  • Curriculum
    • More Unit Studies
    • Geography
    • Writing PreK to 12th
    • Geronimo Stilton
  • BootCamp
    • Resources
      • Dynamic Subscriber Freebies
      • Exclusive Subscribers Library
      • Ultimate Unit Study Planner

3. {5 Days of . . . Blogging Series}

3 Homeschool Co-op History Resources Worth Exploring

June 3, 2014 | 10 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

As the homeschool co-op group leaders, we would go to the park each year to begin planning our co-op for next year.

Sharing 3 homeschool co-op history resources worth exploring, I hope to pass on a few tips to ease planning and to help you think outside of the box.

It is easier in the beginning of your homeschool co-op to have ideas and many hands do make the work light. However, life marches on, kids grow up and seasons of change hit all homeschool families. That normally meant that on more than one occasion, we were caught short-handed if some families had to plan graduations, had illnesses, added another baby to their family and well you get the idea.

3 Homeschool Co-op History Resources

Having a few tricks up your sleeve helps your history co-op through a few rough patches, but it can also add a welcomed change when needed.

History Brought To Your Classroom Co-op

contents of Mountain Men traveling trunk: beaver pelt, trading beads and ribbons, playing cards, tobacco twist, powder horn, moccasins, tin cup, bait bottle, leather flask

{Mountain Men Trunk Pic Attribution: National Park Service}

Traveling Trunks.

Traveling trunks have been a life saver on more than one occasion for us.

They are just what they say they are, which are trunks or mini-museums as I call them that come to your group. Chock-full of fun hands-on things like toys, books and magazines and objects from a time period or topic like beads or household items, our kids flipped over them. One trunk had an apron a pioneer girl would wear, a beaver pelt and things that a mountain man would use every day.

They can be the highlight of your history co-op or you can use them like we did, which was as a table display or station for the kids to visit and learn about.

Too, when you want a fun round up of things from a certain time period and not have to spend tons of money buying each item to only have to get rid of it later, they have been worth the cost.

I got our trunks from the National Park Service. They list what comes in each trunk at that website.  Too, some sites have a free .pdf for you to use to teach and the trunks I got had teaching notes.  Look at some of the choices of traveling trunks:

  • Frontier Classroom
  • Gold Miners
  • Heritage of the Southwest
  • Overlanders
  • Plains Indians
  • Steamboats A’ Comin’

These certainly are not all the topics available. A simple google search will also yield some wonderful results from other places for various themed trunks.

My first tip for arranging for a trunk to come to your home is to call the park or institution.  I know, it sounds like a bit of trouble, but a friendly voice that explains who you are and what you do means more than an email that might otherwise leave out some details.  People like to deal with real people that they can hear and have a friendly conversation with and ask questions to know that you will take care of what they will ship.

The most important tip is to reserve them way ahead.  Public and private school teachers reserve these trunks months ahead of time. So NOW is the time to reserve it for next year.  If your co-op meets during the summer you may not have much competition from public schools.

Traveling Trunk Fun{Our kids playing with the toys that came in our Overlanders (Oregon Trail) Trunk.}

Second, be prepared to use your credit card.  It never bothered me because I knew our group would reimburse me and it was an expense our group paid for.

Third, be sure somebody is in charge of it the whole time at the co-op because if something is broke, per the contract, you will probably have to reimburse them.

Finally,  be sure you have arranged shipment back to them.

Even with all that, I would rent a traveling trunk in a heartbeat anytime for my group. Also, there are some resources that we’ve used through the years that have made teaching history to a group so much fun.

We love the products by Home School in the Woods.

Look here at our history co-op where we learned about 14 different empires and where we used the Ancient Empires Study Guide.
Like-Minded Folks From Your local community.

The next resource is pretty nifty and that is local people from your community who are history buffs.  Where do you find them?

I found so many resources through our local chapter of the Daughters and Sons of the American Revolution and here in the south we have Daughters of the Confederacy.

Veterans of war and retired history teachers many times are involved in doing reenactments and spend their spare time doing things they love.

Again, a little time on the phone calling a few people and I had more people calling me interested in what I was doing and wanting to offer their help. Sharing a love of history, some of these people have gone to great lengths to have accurate time period dress and to buff up their knowledge about a time period in history or about a person.

George Washington Mother 2 George Washington Mother

When we had our Early American co-op, I finally connected with this lady above, which was “George Washington’s mother, Mary Ball Washington”. A retired public school history teacher, she had spent many years dedicated to learning about Mary Ball Washington. She brought her fishing pole and even baked the favorite cookies of George Washington to bring and share with our kids. Mary Ball Washington was not a person that we had made time to learn about in our history co-op and it was an unexpected treat. Through her story telling and love of this time period, she had brought this time period to life when she talked about “her son”.

Most folks who are educators are priceless and giving of their time.  They share a common interest, which is the love of teaching children. Most have gone out of their way to help me when I explained what I was doing.

Even though “Mary Ball Washington” did not ask for any compensation, we presented her a thank you bag from our group, which had a gift certificate for gas and some nice smelling perfume and body lotion.

In addition, we also offered to feed her lunch. She was very pleased with how well-behaved our children were and not distracted by the little ones underfoot. But we all know, that is nothing new for our kids.

Take the co-op elsewhere.

Most of us visit museums for field trips and science classes, but sometimes we don’t know about all the educational programs they offer educators for history. Also, don’t assume that you have to be a public school or private school to take advantage of the educational programs they offer.

Educational Program in Museum 2 Educational Program in Museum 3

{Part of our class was inside as our kids learned about the chores of pioneer children.  Then, we had another wonderful instructor outside as our children explored the “comforts” (chamber pot) of pioneer life.}

Some museums are very organized as far as instructions for the group and programs and very aware of homeschoolers in their area.  Others, are still trying to understand how we don’t learn by segregating grade levels.

If you do delve into the programs, again, I encourage you to take time to make a phone call.  There is just no substitute for the amount of information you get because most personnel enjoy talking about the programs offere for educators.

Another insider tip, if you have never been to this museum or do not know other homeschoolers who have listened to the program you are looking into, is to try to mix up the activities.  Part of the time the kids can sit down and listen to the program and part of the time they need to move around or go outside.  This works best for a mixed group.

A long-winded educator that is boring and doesn’t know it can be a huge turn off to co-op classes.  And believe me they exist, and I have done my best to avoid them in our co-op classes.

Whether you are a small group and need help with adding some entertainment to your history co-op or you are a larger group and need a change, I hope your group can benefit from an idea or two here.

Look at these other tips:

  • 5 Days of A Homeschooling Co-op Convert – Day 1:Who needs one anyway? 
  • Homeschool Co-op Tracking Form– 7 Step Homeschool Planner 
  • 10 Homeschool Co-op Subjects That Are Better Learned With a Group
  • Homeschool Co-ops, Support Groups and Regional Groups. How Does It All Fit?

Hugs and love ya,

 

10 CommentsFiled Under: A Homeschooling Co-op Convert, Hands-On Activities, History Resources, How To - - -, Teach Homeschool History Tagged With: hands on history, hands-on activities, history resources, historyspine, homeschoolco-op

Curriculum Pages for Planner – Homeschool Planner–Free Inside Title Page

February 19, 2014 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I am love, love, loving the fact that I have decided to spread my curriculum pages for planner printables throughout the year.  When the mood hits me and it hits often, I have to create and make my homeschool planner printables.  Sharing the new printables with you too is one of my favorite things to do because I hope you get as excited as I do.

Because my 7 Step DIY Homeschool Planner has been the product of many, many years to refine the core of it, I feel like now I can add those refining touches as it grows larger with more options.  From the beginning, I never wanted one curriculum planner with all the same pages to share with you knowing that everybody else has the same download.

I love options from year to year and I will continue to add them as I plod along.

Curriculum Pages for Planner

Today, I have the first printable for an inside title page.  It is one of those refinements or new sections.

I have switched over the years to keeper covers for the homeschool planner which means there are no more dated planner covers.  This allows you more choices to choose from each  year.

Homeschool Planner Inside title page

With that switch though, I know some of you have wanted some place to put the school year and maybe a few notes near the front of your planner.  Some of the homeschool planner covers allows you to edit and fill in the school year and some don’t.

Also, because you may want something between your front cover and where your papers actually start, I have created the first inside title page for this new section of the planner.  I haven’t decided where to place this new section of pages, but I will let you know shortly after I find an organized spot on my blog.  Probably, I will keep them on the same page as the front covers and back covers.  It kind of makes sense to keep them there.

7 Step DIY Homeschool Planner

The inside title page has a page for you to fill in the current school year and a place for your name.

You can use the lines below that to add other personal information or emergency contact information and/or to add some of your favorite quotes for the year.  I kind of left it generic meaning you may prefer to add other items and I didn’t want to hem you in to what I thought needed to go there.

And like all my forms, the inside title page will eventually have many font choices and colors and here is my first form.

Hope you like it.  I can’t wait to create my planner for next year, but by starting early now and adding the new forms, we will have plenty to select from.

Download Inside Title Page 1 here.

Whoa, it’s been a while since I shared an inspirational quote.  You know how much I love them because they pack a punch of energy and I want my everyday filled always with lots of it.  I heart this one today.

There are two ways to live: you can live as if nothing is a miracle, or you can live as if everything is a miracle.”

~Albert Einstein~

So true!

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature Day 4. Finalize Sub topics. 10 Days of Diving Into Unit Studies by Creating a Unit Study Together.

Linking up to these beautiful people

A Little R & R

Leave a CommentFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic}, Tina's 7 Step DIY Customized Curriculum Planner Tagged With: curriculum pages, homeschool curriculum planner

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

November 23, 2013 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have 50 winter activities for homeschooling. Grab more ideas on my page winter season unit study.

Hoping to have a few activities to pull of out my bag when the kids are bored and the days are long and cold, I rounded up some activities to keep us learning.

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

Some of them are easy and don’t take quite as long and others a little more involved.

We always keep back some chalk pastels too and our easy books for doing seasonal pastels.

Whether you want art, some reading or hands-on ideas, you’ll love this roundup of 50 learning activities.

Types of Frost Minibook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Winter Lapbook Cover @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Pluswhat are the winter months minibook @ Tiina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Grab these fun minibooks on my Winter Unit Study and free lapbook page.

Bird Video Art Course for All Ages

Winter Activities for All Ages

Besides the fun hands-on globe to make below, there are many crafts too.

12 side globe about Antarctica

Construct a 12 sided globe to display facts about Antarctica @ Crayola.Com

Design a winter landscape with long shadows @ Crayola.Com

CP439 

CP snow-mosaic-winter-craft-photo

Create a snowy self-portrait mosaic @ Family Fun Crafts.

Grab some free easy winter worksheets @ All Kids Network

CP winter-worksheet-handwriting-small

Snowman Pack Get your FREE activity bundle!

virtual snowman

Virtual Build a Snowman

  Have a snow date @ Martha Stewart

Have a Snow date 
 polkadotmasonjars

Do a glitter polka dot mason jar @ A Bubbly Life

Grab a free frosty blend sorting game @ Heather’s Heart.

CP Frosty Blend Fun
Homeschool Geography - DIY Lava Lamp @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus-1

DIY Lava Lamp

Hands-on Learning Activities

Grab a Free Winter Ecology Teacher’s Guide Nice.

Glacier Winter Educator Guide @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool PlusGlacier Winter Educator Guide 2 @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus
candy

Make candy crystals @ Science Sparks

 

In addition, add a fun unit study on the history of science with beautiful literature.

winter globes

Make a DIY ice globe lantern

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

Make frozen watercolor ice cubes @ Learn Play Imagine

Frozen Watercolor Ice Art (1)-1

3 Fun Cocoa Winter Hands on Science Activities

Make toilet roll snowman using tiny sock for hats @ Red Ted Art

toilet roll snowman craft

 

 

Furthermore, winter is a great time to do art. Pair art with history in this fun study.

Chocolate-Snow-Balls

Make chocolate snowball cookies @ tasteofhome

DIY Handwarmers

 hand-warmer-

Also, learning music is fun to do this time of the year. I love all these choices for learning about music at home by this homeschool mom.

Just what we need for teaching multiple children.

cookie-envelopes

Printable Cookie Envelopes

Make DIY Snow Globes @ Refresh Renew

snow.globe1

 Milk tags

Milk Tag Snowman

Easy paper straw snowflakes @ Echoes of Laughter

 Paper Straw Snowflakes

CP pine-needle-instructions craft

Easy Pine Needle Craft @ Live Craft Eat

Make Pinecone Fire Starters

pine cone fire starter
Medieval Video Art Course Semester 1

Your kids will also love learning about Medieval History through art.

Crayon-Art

Crayon Art

Coffee Filter Snowflakes @ The Pink Couch

CP snowflakes coffee filters

Finally, add a movie and a book from another one of my favorite providers Literary Adventures for Kids.

https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/the-little-prince-online-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15
https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/there-are-rocks-in-my-socks-said-the-ox-to-the-fox-online-nature-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15
https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/the-rocket-that-flew-to-mars-online-nature-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15

Cp Making Snow Dough

Making Snow Dough

How to Explore Melting Ice

 make your own snow paint

Make Your Own Snow Paint @ One Little Project

Ice Sculptures @ Not Just Cute

CP Ice Sculptures

 gold-glitter-dipped-jars-diy

DIY Gold Dipped Jars

Snowman in a match box

 Snowman in a Match Box

snowmanpizza

Snowman Pizza. And you have supper made!

Make an iceberg

 Do an Iceberg Experiment

gemstonetitle

Create an indoor gemstone nature table

DIY Fingerless Gloves by Shop Ruby Jean @ The 36th Avenue

 DIY fingerless gloves

blue-nature-notebook-graphic

Grab some more free nature printables for your notebook @ Our Journey Westward

Winter Nature Scavenger Hunt Exploration & Printable @ Teach Beside Me

Winder Nature Scavenger Hunt Printable

Winter-Fun-Chalk-Pastel-Tutoriale

Winter Fun with Pastels

Make snow ice cream

make snow ice cream

diy_winter-wonderland-art

Family Handprints Winter Wonderland @  Lisa Leonard Blog

Make an ice sun catcher

ice sun catcher

family bingo printable

Family Bingo

Edible Winter Snowman

Edible Winter Snowman

Flowers Printable Lesson

When you are tired of winter, use this free educator’s guide about flowers & birds

DIY Winter Diorama @ Bloesem Kids

winter forest diy diorama DIY Winter Diorama @ Bloesem Kids

Long WinterLapbook by Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Long Winter Lapbook/Little House Series @ Marine Corps Nomads

Do some Folk Art Lessons and here for lessons.

Four-Season-Landscapes-
mitten wreath

Mitten Wreath

       

Free Penguins Lapbook

Free Penguin Lapbook

Also, check out:

Free Unit Study: Inuit/Arctic

Winter Craft Ideas for Middle School

Winter Season Unit Study

 50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Hugs and enjoy,

Save

6 CommentsFiled Under: Free Homeschool Resources, Hands-On Activities, History Resources, Look Alive: Winter Homeschooling Ideas & Free Downloads Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolinginwinter, middleschool

5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades

October 16, 2013 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

This is fay 5, tips for homeschooling multiple grades. Also, look at my page The Dynamics of How to Homeschool Easily and Smarter for more tips.

I love sharing nitty gritty blog posts with you. 

I know thee practical know how can help you to smooth out one day. Or if helps you to leap into trying something new, it is worth it to me.

5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades

We do need to learn to let go of the thinking that children need to be segregated by age. 

Its not easy and by nature we fight it.

We are so very aware of the fact that the educational future of our children is in our direct hands.

However, I think knowing we are not trekking alone empowers us.

So the nitty gritty of homeschooling multiple grade levels can be reduced to 3 practical and lasting tips.

Nuts and Bolts Of How To Homeschool Multiple Grades – Read Aloud First

Reading aloud is my number one help mate. Yep, it’s not laid out curriculum, well initially anyway.

Building back ground information on the subject gives you a direction.

From there, you can decide a subject.

Not only that, the whole purpose in teaching together is so that each of your children can delight in what interests them.

So I look for a book on a topic

  • that spans many grades or ages.
  • that covers just that topic. It’s unlike a text book which can veer off the main topic you are trying to teach.
  • that includes some hands-on activities.
  • that teaches a content subject.
Homeschooling Multiple Children Secret Planning Sheet Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus Copy thum 5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades

Remember from my form above, right away you can see which subjects you can teach together.

How to Get the Free Homeschooling Multiple Children Secret Planning Sheet

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

 1) Sign up on my list.
2) Grab the freebie now.
3) Last, look for all my emails in your inbox. Glad to have you following me!

For example, look at his book I used for teaching the rainforest.

The title is Discover the Amazon.

It spanned many ages, had lots of sub-topics, vocabulary was marked throughout the book AND it had 20 activities to choose from. You can look at it here.

Too, living books are some of the best books to encourage a love of learning and to get excited about teaching a subject together.

You can take a look at my boards on Pinterest too for living books, but really just putting your hands on them and viewing them is the best way to see if they will work for you.

  • Living Books Geography
  • Living Books History
  • Living Books Science
  • Living Books Math

Reading  – Then to Grade Level Lesson Plan

After reading, you want to actually turn that material or background information into workable lesson plans.

This may seem scary at first, but remember the insider’s tip to homeschooling multiple children is that we are focusing on just the content subjects.

Does it matter if your lesson plan ends up being too easy or too much? Try again until you get it right on target for your children’s age.

You can NOT mess up content subjects AND you always can revise your lesson plans the next month, the next year or even the next day.

More Homeschooling Multiple Ages Tips

  • 65 Best Teaching Tips for Embracing Homeschooling Multiple Ages
  • 6 Best Homeschool Hacks Teaching Multi-Aged Children
  • 26 Nature Unit Studies for Multiple Ages
  • 5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades
  • 5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades

I get my ideas from many sources, but my main source of inspiration is my children.

As we are reading, I am noting or highlighting (yep I highlight my books, probably a bad habit, but it works for me) in the book what they find interesting or are talking about with me.

For a library book, having a pad of sticky notes works too.

Also, look at the chapters on the book because they are your main ideas or objectives. Too, the index of words gives you an idea of where to head on your lesson plan if your children are too small to mouth their choice. You CAN do this!

A specific example of how I have done this is on Chapter 1: What is the Amazon? For my youngest children,  I just explained from the book what is a rain forest and they did a minibook.

For my oldest, I had him compare/contrast to a temperate rain forest and turned that into a table.

To me, that is very basic information of studying the rain forest because we have to know what it is.

It doesn’t matter their grades if you have never learned about it. So go in as much depth as your children want to.

More Homeschooling Multiple Ages Tips

  • 65 Best Teaching Tips for Embracing Homeschooling Multiple Ages
  • 5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades
  • How to Choose the Perfect Homeschool Planner for Multiple Students
  • 26 Free Nature Unit Studies for Multiple Ages
  • 5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades

Skill Subject Laid Out Lesson Plans Equals Simplified Homeschooling

I can remember the time when I started homeschooling and it wasn’t really called doing your own teaching unless you prepared every single subject.

I am hoping never to return to those insane days because life is very different now.

Too, we just have many wonderful curriculum providers to choose from that there should be very little stress because  we do  have choices for math and language arts.

Using something out laid to cover the skill subjects is the trick and secret to honing your teaching and making the time count when homeschooling multiple grades.

Don’t get me wrong, I still feel like learning math, vocabulary words or spelling in the context of what you’re learning about is not disjointed teaching and has long term practical value.

I do tend to assign copy work and vocabulary words for what we are learning about because I want my children immersed in the subject, but that is not the only way to do it.

Reading aloud, making lesson plans on content subject eases the teaching time and using laid out curriculum for skill subjects are the top 3 survival tools of homeschooling multiple grades.

As you can see sometimes we are together when we are covering content subjects and maybe not so much when covering skill subjects. Too, some separation is needed so that the younger children do not get overshadowed by the work of the older children.

It is natural for our kids to compare themselves to each other, but it is our job to be sure we nurture them in their own unique talents.

This means separate time for the little ones so they can shine and not be overshadowed.

The one room school house is still alive and well in homeschooling today though it has its challenges, the rewards are well worth it.

You know I love you much and hope you enjoyed this series.

What do you struggle with when teaching your children together?

Read the other posts in this series:

  • One Room Schools – A Thing of the Past? Day 1
  • Benefits Of Homeschooling Together Day 2
  • Challenges of Teaching Kids Together Day 3
  • Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades Day 4
  • Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades Day 5
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades

2 CommentsFiled Under: Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together, Homeschool Multiple Ages of Children Tagged With: teachingmultiplechildren

5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades

October 10, 2013 | 5 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have day 4 embrace homeschooling multiple grades. Also, grab more ideas on my page How to Homeschool.

Would you think I was insane if I told you that the word excited is a pretty poor adjective to describe how I really feel about homeschooling my children together?

I promise I have no “keep me on a homeschooling high” vitamin, but I feel at times that the unequaled joy and sheer satisfaction of seeing the blessing of your hard work gets overshadowed by the process.

5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades

Because homeschooling multiple children can be hard work, I think about this quote; something worth having or in our case worth doing is worth waiting for.

It reminds me of labor in a way (sorry guys I have to go there today). There is a reason it is called labor regardless of how long you were actually laboring.

For me, none of my sons were born easy or in a few short hours.

The Mr. and I spent more time reading books about the how to process and taking all those breathing classes and relaxation classes than we did visualizing what the actual moment was going to feel like when we held our firstborn in our arms.

As I share these tips today and on Day 5 on the how to of homeschooling multiple grades, I want you to “go there” and spend time imagining what you want from the end of your journey for each of your children.

Teaching Children At the Same Time – Insane?

It doesn’t mean it won’t be hard.

One of the most common mistakes or misunderstandings about teaching multiple grades is thinking that we have to sit all of our kids down together in front of us and teach them at the same time. 

While it’s easier to do this when they are very young, it gets harder to do as they get older.

An insider’s tip to teaching multiple grades is to remember that you are teaching multiple lesson plans on one topic.

A big difference.

So this means you have to know when to teach together at the same time and know when to teach separately.

Your time as the teacher is better spent because you are studying, focusing or gathering facts and resources for one topic, i.e: American Civil War, Inventions or Authors, but creating multiple lesson plans for each grade. Do you see the difference?

Can you see where you may become an expert along with your children on a topic because you have spanned several grade levels teaching one theme?

Give yourself some credit because a public school teacher may only teach one to maybe 3 grades during his or her career, but NOT you.

Master the School Subjects

When helping new and some not so new homeschoolers, I see scrolling huge lists of subjects they want to cover. 

I am going to tell you about how to master the school subjects when teaching children together and some tips on how to know when to teach at the same time and when not to.

But before I can do that you need to understand how to categorize school subjects.

Math

Language Arts

Bible

Everything Else

 Grammar History
 Reading Science
 Writing Art
 Spelling  

Above is the secret formula. EVERYTHING you want to teach should fit into one of these general categories on this list.

Math and language arts are considered skill subjects and this means that its very important to understand how you teach these subjects or rather how you build on each concept.

For example, along with reading to your child, it is important to teach phonics. It is hard to learn to spell unless you have a systematic way of teaching phonemic awareness which is a fancy way of saying that your child needs to associate letters with sounds.

Too, do you skip right to algebra without learning addition? Teaching these subjects in a systematic order will avoid some of the gaps we all fear.

Content subjects like history or science won’t hamper your child’s future reading ability if he understands the parts of a cell in 5th or 7th grade.

It doesn’t matter if he covers the American Civil War in 6th grade or 9th grade. Content subjects don’t really need grade levels. You just cover them to your child’s delight and interest.

More Homeschooling Multiple Ages Tips

  • 65 Best Teaching Tips for Embracing Homeschooling Multiple Ages
  • 6 Best Homeschool Hacks Teaching Multi-Aged Children
  • 26 Nature Unit Studies for Multiple Ages
  • 5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades
  • 5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 5: Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades
  • How to Choose the Perfect Homeschool Planner for Multiple Students

Grade levels were assigned back in the day to equal work load and the depth of information to cover. Unless, it’s high school, you can cover as lightly or as in-depth as you want to.

Even in high school you have some leeway but that is another topic we can talk about later.

I have added in Bible too because most of us are homeschooling for Bible based reasons and it is part of our critical foundation so it deserves a separate column.

Now, take ALL of your resources and fit them into one of the columns. I have made it easy for you.

5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades

I have created a form for what I visualize in my mind when organizing subjects.

Like the track your week form, this too is a working form. In other words, it is a way of seeing all of your curriculum resources that you have or want to use, what it covers and what subject area it falls under.

You can’t embrace homeschooling multiple children when covering all of the subjects may be a fog.

5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades

Here is a sample of how to fill it out. Just add ALL of your resources, and pencil in your child’s name if you want to and check the box that applies to that subject.

How to Get the Free Homeschooling Multiple Children Secret Planning Sheet

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

Just follow the steps below.

1) Sign up on my list.

2) Grab the freebie now.

3) Last, look for all my emails in your inbox. Glad to have you following me!

Let’s look realistically at how to do this. If you are not sure where a subject goes, give me a holler because ALL of the subjects fit into these categories.

You know me, I always give you time to mull over my blog posts so take your time.

Switching subjects on you, I will be thinking about you this weekend but we are expecting family from out of town for our Texas Hoe Down Graduation. Even though we had to wait until now to celebrate, it is so much more special since the Mr. is feeling back to his old self.

Here is a quote I am inspired by today as I am thinking about the process of refining how to teach our children.

“You must have long range goals to keep you from being frustrated by short range failures.”

~ Charles C. Noble ~

Hugs and you know I love ya,

Read the other posts in this series:

  • One Room Schools – A Thing of the Past? Day 1
  • Benefits Of Homeschooling Together Day 2
  • Challenges of Teaching Kids Together Day 3
  • Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades Day 4
  • Tips For Homeschooling Multiple Grades Day 5
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades
5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 4: Embrace Homeschooling Multiple Grades

5 CommentsFiled Under: 2. My FREE Organizing Printables {Any topic}, Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together, Homeschool Multiple Ages of Children Tagged With: homeschoolmultiplechildren planning forms

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • 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 © 2025 · 5 TNT LLC · Log in · Privacy Policy