• 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

Begin Homeschooling

Homeschool Learning Styles

June 4, 2015 | 9 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Understanding homeschool learning styles can mean the different between head butting or propelling ahead in your homeschool. Here at Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus, I have many tips to help you determine what is your child’s learning style.

Over 20 years ago, I not only started educating myself on the value of learning styles but helped other homeschool parents and my children to understand their learning style.

I remember reading a Swahili proverb that said “The greatest good we can do for others is not just to share our riches with them, but to reveal their riches to themselves.”

Best Homeschool Learning Styles Tips

For example, recognizing a need helps to identify a way to succeed. 

Learning styles are similar.

Educate a child about his strengths and weakness

When a child has a talent, we are quick to expand on that?

However, when a child has a weakness, we can equally be eager to help him understand tips in how to deal with his weaknesses.

Learning styles imply refers to a personality, the way a person likes to learn and the subjects he likes to learn.

Cathy Duffy is queen when it comes to helping us to understand learning styles.

Up until the time she coined the terms Perfect Paul, Sociable Sue, Wiggly Willy and Competent Carla, only trained professionals could understand what a concrete sequential learner was versus an abstract thinking learner. Uh? Sometimes they couldn’t understand either. That’s just between us though.

Also, much has been said about using the right or left side of our brain as the dominant side.

left brain drawing by Eden
right brain drawing by Eden
{Drawings Copyright Eden @ geeden blogspot} Please Pin from original source.

Why Your Child’s Learning Personality is Important

Because teaching styles are only part of choosing curriculum easily, I’ve included a link to my online course Identifying Your Homeschooled Childs Learning Personality.

How to Determine the Best Learning Styles Approach for Your Child? Determining the best learning style approach is much easier when you know about homeschool learning styles. A learning style is not something I thought about when I started homeschooling or even when my kids were struggling. However, had I taken time to learn what is the best learning style for each of my children, I would have saved myself unnecessary stress.

YOU WILL LEARN:

  • How to understand the way your child prefers to learn so that you can teach him in a way that he enjoys learning;
  • How to pinpoint your child’s learning personality;
  • A starting point in understanding (barring any special learning challenges or disabilities) and accepting your child’s preferred way of taking in information;
  • Understanding when the learning personality emerges; and
  • Teaching tips for each learning personality to stop the head-butting.

Too, much has been written about encouraging children to use both sides of their brain in a balanced way.

However, while I believe we should encourage use of both the analytical and creative sides, I also know we’re born with natural bents.

These natural bents are our personality or learning style.

Like a default setting, we can’t always reset it.

However, as homeschool educators we want to teach a child to use his strengths and to understand why he may struggle in other subjects.

How Homeschool Approaches Can be Aligned to Learning Styles

Too, we know there are many homeschool approaches in the homeschool world.

I’ve learned through my many years of homeschooling that approaches can be matched to learning styles.

  • 6 Easy Ways to Identify the Charlotte Mason Homeschool Style

But first, it’s important to determine what is your learning style and your child’s learning style.

  • How to Determine the Best Learning Style Approach for Your Child?
  • How Understanding Homeschool Teaching Styles Makes You Successful
  • A Easy Introduction for Homeschool Parents to the List Of Learning Styles
  • 3 Veteran’s Superb Tips to Understand Homeschool Learning Style Differences
  • What Are the Homeschool Top Main 5 Learning Styles
  • How Homeschool Learning Styles Helps You to Accept Each Child’s Differences
  • How to Fuse Personality and Learning Styles to Choose the BEST Homeschool Curriculum

How to Match Curriculum With Learning Style

Then, one of the most important reasons to understand learning styles is to help you make better choices when choosing curriculum.

  • 35+ Best Homeschool Curriculum By Learning Style (free printable)
  • What Are the Top 5 Homeschool Styles
  • What Are The 5 Learning Styles to Know to Form a Powerful Homeschool Foundation

Furthermore, the workbook, worktext, approach matches a learning style that normally does well in an academic setting.

  • Mega List of Workbook Style Homeschool Curriculum For K to 12 Kids
  • 8 Best Classical Style History Curriculum for a Classical Learning Style
Best Homeschool Learning Styles Tips
Homeschooling Learning Styles What's The Difference Anyway @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

9 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschool learning styles, learningstyles, new homeschooler

Homeschooling for the Love of Learning – Does It Really Work?

May 30, 2015 | 3 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Besides building Godly character, homeschooling for the love of learning was also one of the primary reasons homeschooling pioneers touted homeschooling.

Does that philosophy still hold true today?

Are the Methods of Homeschooling Outdated?

Does homeschooling for the lifelong love of learning mean you are more interested in having fun than in helping your child advance in academics?

Some homeschoolers think so.

Not every homeschooler recognizes the value of instilling the love of learning in their children.

Homeschooling for the Love of Learning - Does It Really Work @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusTake a look at some of these attitudes that can go from determined to succeed to devastating effects in the long run.

  • When your sole focus is on planning long term only for academic advancement like AP and CLEP.
  • When your child’s desire to love learning is secondary to your foremost goal of achieving academic excellence.
  • When your homeschool plans are constantly pushing your child through the grades regardless of his age.
  • When year after year, your homeschool lesson plans seem to be always ambitious.
  • When you know that your child is capable of college level work in junior high so you pile on the academics because he is bright and hard working.
  • When complaining by your child is met by you with a tough attitude.

Only you can determine what course you are on.

Instead of getting you to change your philosophy, I want to share the results of some of the families I have known through my 12+ years of homeschooling.

Many of those young kids are now grown.  Some are in college, some have started families of their own and some are considering homeschooling their children.  However, some are not considering homeschooling their own children.  Why?

From Childhood to Homeschooling Curriculum

The adult children are now pushing back at their parents.  Robbed of a childhood where they could have spent endless hours playing, adult children recognize that they were burdened with adulthood too soon.

Other families were met with resentment and outright hostility much sooner in their journey like when their teen started high school.

Instead of following the course the homeschool parent set out for him, one teen I knew rebelled and move out while still in high school.

How sad for those parents who now lost their opportunity for a relationship with their son.



Teens and homeschooled adult children have a way of biting back.  It is dangerous to deliberately year after year put an enormous amount of pressure on a child, gifted or otherwise.

It is one thing for us as parents to want our children to succeed, but it’s quite another to be over demanding of our children and cause them to lose their only childhood.

It is amazing too that while a homeschool parent can sabotage a child’s love of learning they can also be the one that rejuvenates a child’s love of learning.

The power we wield as parents should not be taken lightly because it affects a child lifelong.

When a child’s intrinsic love of learning is fed naturally while balancing a high academic standard, these families have been the ones to not only succeed academically but to maintain a strong bond with their adult child.

Homeschooling for the lifelong love of learning is not only the building block to a strong character but it is the impetus for self-learning.  Self-learning is like a glue that sticks way beyond your few short years of homeschooling.

Do you allow enough free time for self-discovery which will propel your children to homeschool for the lifelong love of learning?

Hugs and love ya,

 

Read on:
What is REAL Homeschooling? Homebound, Co-op, or Public School at Home.
When You Feel Like a Homeschool Failure
3 Reasons You Wouldn’t Want to Homeschool

3 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling, Homeschool Simply

28 Reasons to Not Give Up Homeschooling

May 13, 2015 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

28 Reasons to NOT Give Up Homeschooling @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

1. I don’t want to be part of a system that as a whole is failing.
2. I know what my sons are learning. Want to see? Check out my blog where I share part of it publicly.
3. Even on a budget, each of my sons can have their own book without having to share.
4. If we fall behind, we can easily catch up.
5. I know my sons’ friends. Their families know us and are like-minded.
6. Why should same age peers be their only friends? Cultivating lasting friendships takes time like being around each other every day.
7. I can foster my sons’ creativity, passions and ideas which may or may not be accepted as the norm.
8. Learning outside the classroom like taking field trips should not be something that is just done in primary grades. High school kids especially benefit from real life learning.
9. Inculcating Bible values take a priority which are of most lasting value than covering any academic subject.
10. Did I mention that I don’t have to make a choice between rigorous academic standards and Bible standards? I can teach both.
11. A waste of time is well – a waste of time. Enforcing a valuable use of my sons’ time builds their self-confidence.
12. Because I know my sons the best, I can apply the right amount of discipline or gentleness each day.
13. Extended family members like precious grandparents can be part of my sons’ everyday learning experiences.
14. Not if but when a crisis hits our family, we can take time to heal.
15. Because my grading system can accurately reflect strengths and weaknesses.
16. I choose to refuse the government’s cookie cutter education.
17. Because my husband and I alone want to decide how my children should be educated.
18. Because I don’t believe in incarceration within four walls for children when it comes to teaching them about the world around them.
19. Because when children are away me for eight hours, I am not the one influencing them.
20. Because schools are more obsessed with testing than building a database of knowledge.
21. Some families of public school are more interested in public school providing day care instead of education. An attitude I don’t want my sons adopting about education.
22. I am not interested in my kids attending public school so that it can be improved and reformed at the expense of my child’s one shot at being a child.
23. Children grow up, get jobs and have families and I want to be able to say I gave them an excellent education without interference from those not like-minded.
24. During the most vulnerable time of my child’s life, they don’t have to be crushed by the words of a bully.
25. Children are not robbed of a childhood because of the workload of homework that steals their time in the evening for exploring, imagining and playing.
26. Because public school can’t even come close to the healthy and varied amounts of lunches we have every day.
27. Because exercise is a valuable part of my son’s development and I can feed their natural need to move by adding more activities to our day.
28. Because my boys would not spend as much time with older kids, adults and their grandparents as they have been able to during our many years of homeschooling.

Have any of your own to add to the list?

Hugs and love ya,
2015 Tina Signature co

Also, check out:

What Do You Fear Most About Homeschooling?
3 Reasons You Wouldn’t Want to Homeschool
3 Homeschooling Myths Debunked

6 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling

Top 10 Tips For New Homeschoolers – When You Don’t Know Where to Begin . . . Part 2

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

As if expressing your fears is not enough to make you want to turn and run from homeschooling, feelings of being overwhelmed can dominate each day.

In Top 10 Tips For New Homeschoolers – Curriculum, curriculum, curriculum – Isn’t that how to begin homeschooling? Part 1, I shared 5 homeschool tips and tools for the panic stricken.

Top 10 Tips for New Homeschoolers Part 2 @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Today I will be sharing 5 more tips.

From Panic Stricken to Empowered Educator

6. Long & Short Term Goals Equals Grounded Homeschooling.

Not just visualizing in your mind, but writing down what your goals are or what brought you to homeschooling jolts you back to reality not IF, but when homeschooling gets tough.

It is easy to forget what is so vivid now in your mind about what you want to change when you start to experience problems in your homeschool.

The very foundation of your homeschool journey will be determined by clear goals.

Keeping the end goal in mind by writing them down now will ensure you that you will not swerve.

Sure, you will make mistakes, but that is part of the adventure. However, you will always come back to your goals to stay grounded in homeschooling.

Pen your goals, draw your goals, record your goals – Goals are the foundation of our journey!

7. Your Family’s Rhythm is Unique.

I have seen and shared lots of homeschool schedules over the years.

The problem with following other people’s schedule, even seasoned veterans is that you don’t lead their life.

You need to determine your family’s rhythm first.

This takes some time because homeschooling is new. You may have a young household and 10:00 a.m. may be a more realistic time to start school when the baby is down for his first nap time.

You may have an older household where the children are somewhat independent, then you need to get started earlier like 9:00 a.m.

Every homeschool household is at different stages in homeschooling and has different ages, but don’t get me wrong there are some across the board tips for finding your family’s rhythm and turning that into a schedule.

Here are just two basic tips.

  • Homeschool has to be the first in your day.

A simple research on this subject will show that a majority of children learn better when school is first in their day.

You notice I didn’t mention the time for what is “first” in your day.

Each of us will have to determine that, but it is safe to say that it is not after they are exhausted from a full day of activity.

  • Consistency Over Abrupt Stop/Start.

Key to making the homeschool lifestyle and schedule feel part of our everyday is consistency.

Planning too much, answering the phone in the middle of teaching a lesson (not an important one anyway) and willy-nilly scheduling can create a resistant learner faster than us understanding what that means.

Taking time to understand the natural flow of your family now will help you to minimize any potential scheduling distress.

8. Understand what is NOT Homeschooling.

Many times you will hear seasoned veterans talk about the difference between homeschooling and schooling at home.

I too wondered when I started homeschooling if such a choice of words was enough to be concerned about.

I can tell you now that fully grasping the meaning behind them would have saved me some tears shed in my first year.

Schooling at home means that you have only changed the geography of where your children are learning at now.

You have duplicated the public school method of teaching at home. Your home may look like a mini version of public school. I agree it is probably cuter, but have you taken time to learn about delight-directed learning?

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

Homeschooling is about choosing a method of instruction that works for our family. When the only method we know is what is taught in the public school and we haven’t take time to research other homeschool methods we could be setting our self up for a homeschool crash and burn.

There are reasons prestigious colleges actively pursue homeschoolers and there are reasons why homeschoolers are in the news for being high achievers.

It certainly is not for staying in sync with the public school curriculum and schedule built for the masses.

9. Curriculum is a Tool – It won’t Love You Back.

I get plain giddy when I talk about the subject of curriculum because I absolutely loving poring over the catalogs or putting my hands on it at a homeschool convention.

After I buy it, I sit over in the corner someplace out of my sons’ view so they can’t see as I inhale all the fresh smelling pages. It is a sickness I tell you, but you too will be joining us soon.

Though choosing curriculum each year end ups being more entertaining now, it certainly is quite overwhelming for any new homeschooler.

Choosing curriculum is an equal opportunity offender. Whether you have a public school teacher background or if you are like me with no prior teaching experience, having a few pointers will help you to be selective when first choosing it.

  • Curriculum does not teach anything.

You are the teacher now and that means you decide whether it is working for your children or not.

  • Your children are each different so that means you could possibly be using a different program for each of your children.

This is not meant to over whelm you, but it is about making smarter choices.

  • There is a difference between completing a curriculum and finishing it by using it to fit your purposes.

Completing a curriculum means having your child do every lesson plan and the other way you do every lesson plan that fits your child regardless if you finish the curriculum or not.

Simply put, curriculum does not hold some curative value.

Though using the right curriculum can help you to heal a child’s prior distaste about education and create a yearning for learning, your love and your finesse in wielding curriculum to help your children is of way more value. This too takes time to learn.

10. Relax – Easier said than Done.

As organized and prepared as I thought I was when I came to homeschooling, I wish I would have listened more when the few seasoned veteran homeschoolers I knew told me to relax and savor some of the journey.

The poor first born child seems to take the brunt of our over achieving learning because we feel that we have to prove to our family and of course to our self that we are doing this right.

Relax, find humor in all the things you will mess up and take comfort from the fact that unlike public school, you can change on a moment’s notice anything that is not working. You ARE the teacher now.

Adjusting expectations to survival mode the first year is much more realistic. Forgive yourself for what you cannot accomplish the first year while experiencing on the job training.

Just like parenting, homeschooling is accepting what you can accomplish to a point and then that progress and experience inspires you to work on being the best parent you can be to your child.

You can do it!

Also, be sure to go through my 31 Day Free Homeschool Boot Camp for New Homeschoolers and Homeschool Boot Camp Resources.

Hugs and love ya,

Tina-2015-Signature

 

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, new homeschool year, new homeschooler, newbeehomeschooler

Top 10 Tips For New Homeschoolers – Curriculum, curriculum, curriculum – Isn’t that how to begin homeschooling? Part 1

March 28, 2015 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Top 10 Tips for New Homeschoolers Part 1 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

What if I fail to prepare my child for the world outside of my home? Do I have what it really takes to inspire, teach and train my children? How do I prove to my extended family that my children will soar with homeschooling when I am not even sure they will?

A New Homeschooler’s Greatest Inhibitor

Whatever your fears are, you are not alone.

You are looking for what every other new homeschooler needs at the beginning of their journey.

Confidence, patience, curriculum information, how to build character in our children, understanding how to balance a day and not get stressed out in the meantime, homeschooling toddlers while the older children don’t get behind and what to do when the high school years approach are questions you want answered right now.

While you absolutely need all the details about each of these topics, it might make you run the other way because of information overload.

However, giving you some practical tips now and tools for the journey that come from my many years of helping new homeschoolers will help you to avoid common mistakes of the first year homeschooler.

Homeschool Tips and Tools for the Panic Stricken

1. Education First for the Educator.

I know you are on the great curriculum quest now, but it is hard to make decisions on curriculum when you don’t take time to understand the differences between them.

Making time to carve out a niche so you make better decisions for your family takes time and when we are new, we feel the new school year breathing down our neck.

The truth of it is the public school year of schooling from August to May has very little with how you determine to set up your school year.

2. Blessed Are the Flexible.

Though you will hear many times in your journey that others admire the patience of homeschoolers, it is actually the quality of being flexible that a lot of us pray for.

When you set expectations too high and want to right all the wrongs, perceived or not by public school in just a few months or even your first year, you are heading for a breaking point in your journey.

Burnout follows and the public school, which you just left behind, seems now to be your solution.

3. Extra Curricular Activities – Extraordinary?

What sometimes follows the thinking that purchasing curriculum by August is a must-do before we pass out is the thinking that our children must join every possible homeschool group or activity known to our area.

Keeping the kids busy so they are happy, or at least we think they are instead of finding time to read all we can about homeschooling can do the opposite of what we are trying to achieve and that is surviving joy.

Taking time to be home the first year and getting to know your children instead of signing them up for too many outside activities, even the best ones, is a tremendous pay off in capturing your children’s heart and understanding their struggles the first year too.

For now, keep it simple by doing one or two outside regular activities total, not per child. As you get more experienced, others will marvel at how you do all those outside activities. I promise.

4. Connecting Equals Comfort and Support.

When I first started homeschooling, I was perfectly content, or at least I thought so at the time, to connect or do activities with my one or two friends. That lasted as long as my children were real little, which, by the way, goes by real fast.

I found myself scrambling to make connections both online and in real life with other homeschooling families because my children needed the experiences.

I needed practical tips on how to teach multiple ages and what to do with my terrible precious toddler.  I realized soon the power and benefits of outsourcing.

Connecting with other homeschoolers both online and in real life also brings comfort and a sense of camaraderie.  Even if you live in the far-fetched quiet woods or the hustling hopping metropolis, you need others.  Simply put, we all do.

Of course you don’t have to turn into a social guru, but you want to connect through homeschool blogs.

As you can see, balance is key in not planning too many outside activities or finding yourself to be a homeschool hermit either.

5. Homeschooling is a LIFESTYLE change.

Take time to mull over those words because when you adopt the lifestyle of a homeschooler, it becomes more than a method of educating our children.

This is something hard to appreciate at first when our only focus is on how we are going to get those little desks to line up in our school room.

Understanding that you are switching from a public school driven schedule to a family centered lifestyle you realize that we do not need to copy the public school model of how children should learn.

Learning is a natural process. Trust your mommy instinct to teach your children at any unplanned moment.

It doesn’t mean we don’t have a schedule for formal learning, but it does mean we seize teachable moments each day.  Right now, shed the weight of guilt for past mistakes because it is never too late to adopt the homeschooling lifestyle.

Do you really think that I am going to make you wait too long for all that detailed information you want?

 Learn the Homeschool Lingo – Then Go

Wheels on the Bus Go ‘Round and ‘Round – So Get off

Homeschool Hangouts & Socialization Situations

Okay, maybe I will make you wait just a little bit on the next 5 tips. After all, I don’t want any overwhelmed homeschoolers here.

So for Part II of  the Top 10 Tips For New Homeschoolers – Curriculum, curriculum, curriculum – Isn’t that how to begin homeschooling, I will be sharing 5 more I will survive and thrive homeschooling tips.

Your turn, what is your greatest fear about homeschooling? I care and I’m listening.

Read the second part of this post here at Top 10 Tips for New Homeschoolers, Part 2.

Hugs and love ya

7 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling Tagged With: new homeschooler

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 14
  • Page 15
  • Page 16
  • Page 17
  • Page 18
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 21
  • 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