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Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher

6 Things I Won’t Regret After Homeschooling 16+ Years

October 5, 2015 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

6 Things I WON'T Regret After 16+ Years of Homeschooling. Don't give up because in the end it's all worth it @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

If this post, 6 things I won’t regret after homeschooling for 16+ years helps you to make even one tiny step toward homeschool progress today, then it’s well worth it.

Each day can seem to make unplanned demands on our time.

And some days it’s difficult to say the least to decide when to let things go like the house or to not school for the day.

Homeschooling has never disappointed me though I have been disappointed in my own attempts to homeschool at one time or another.

6 Things I Won’t Regret After Homeschooling 16+ Years

Here is what I won’t regret when I faced giants though not always feeling so brave and not always having it together each day.

■ I don’t regret letting go of the thinking that homeschool was something we did on the side and that it was a burden that I added to my day.

For the first five years or so of homeschooling, I really had to fight to carve out our time for homeschool.

Some days I just didn’t feel like the homeschool routine. I had to give myself permission to feel weak at times.

It’s not that we had so much going on all the time, but looking back now what I didn’t realize was that I was building lifelong habits of study. It was hard work.

It was different doing a research project with the kids or even reading to them, but I am talking about enforcing a general start time to each and every day so we could be productive.

It took a lot of energy to form my sons’ habits, but what a payoff I was in store for as they hit middle and high school grades.

My kids were and are the ones now getting off their devices, or cleaning up their messes in the morning so they can start school at 9:00 a.m.

Did I mention, I just follow along now as the boys get our day started?

■ Call me Bible thumping or weird, but I don’t regret one minute of all the time we spent with just fellow Christian homeschoolers at field trips and in co-ops.

Our field trips and co-ops were a time to share the highs and lows about homeschooling with others that were not going to judge me.

And no, I didn’t want to vent to somebody who just thinks that they know what I am talking about when it comes to living the homeschool lifestyle.

■I don’t regret not immersing my boys into association with those who went to public school.

My oldest two boys are confident, strong and determined young men now. And capable of making decisions apart from me.

I didn’t deliberately keep them apart from public schooled kids, it just happened naturally.

Too, I don’t want my sons judging other people for choices they make. Don’t we have enough of that in the world? Public school was just not for us.

However, as you homeschool longer, you appreciate too your schedule is not in sync with the schedule of public school.

Through the many years, I have heard new homeschoolers say it’s important for their children to keep their friends from school.

It really is hard to do that and a lot of it depends on how long your kids went to public school.

As homeschool families, we are not really being off-ish. We just live a completely different life and it’s not running parallel to public school.

For my boys, it wasn’t necessary that they huddle in the evening with the neighbor kids to hang out.

We already went to field trips or co-ops during the day. Evening time was naturally spent with Dad when he got back from work.

■I don’t regret exposing my sons to my vulnerabilities as the teacher.

My boys are not robots of me and neither do they have an overly inflated view of me or my teaching.

I want you to know this because, sad to say, some homeschool parents aren’t homeschooling because it’s the best thing for their children.

Instead of keeping what is best for their children as the foundation of their homeschool, homeschooling can turn into a prove-that-I can-quest.

The mindset what-can-I-do-to-top-your-teaching-method can invade the body of a homeschool mom and she can turn into somebody that she doesn’t even know herself.

Homeschooling becomes a competition instead of a course. Ugly.

The child does get left behind (pardon the cliche) because we can set out to prove that the method we feel is the best is the best.

I learned early on that what worked for me and what worked for my sons were completely different. Look at my article, 5 Signs That You Need to Switch Your Homeschool Approach.

Jumping head first into a teaching style that was opposite of the way I thought I should teach, I showed my boys that homeschooling was about them.

Exposing the Vulnerable Side to Homeschooling

They appreciated that I too struggled and it made me a much more sympathetic teacher with them when they struggled.

■ I’ll never regret using a boxed curriculum when I needed to.

Through the years, I have read many pros and cons about boxed curriculum.

Boxed curriculum can get a bum rap because when it’s first used some homeschoolers don’t use it like they need for their family.

Teaching a child is not an exact science for each child and the boxed curriculum doesn’t really teach anything. You learn that you are homeschooling a child.

However, with the many ups and downs in homeschooling, it has been a breath of fresh air to use laid out curriculum and pick and choose which assignments we will do, which ones we will skip and which ones we will tweak.

By the way, that is how you used a boxed curriculum.

I have no regrets in using all that is available to us as homeschoolers.

■And I will never, never regret all the teachable moments we have had so far together while letting the housework and laundry go.

When I shared this poem below each year at my workshop, I could hardly finish reading it because I couldn’t get through the words without tears or a cracking voice.

It’s hard for me to share it with you today because it reminds me of how fast our journey has gone by.

Homeschool Survivor or Champion?

It has come true in my case because I no longer have babies.

So I want to encourage you to remember that you don’t have long to homeschool. And in the end it is about having no regrets.

Babies Don’t Keep

Mother, oh Mother, come shake out your cloth
empty the dustpan, poison the moth,
hang out the washing and butter the bread,
sew on a button and make up a bed.
Where is the mother whose house is so shocking?
She’s up in the nursery, blissfully rocking.

Oh, I’ve grown shiftless as Little Boy Blue
(lullaby, rockaby, lullaby loo).
Dishes are waiting and bills are past due
(pat-a-cake, darling, and peek, peekaboo).
The shopping’s not done and there’s nothing for stew
and out in the yard there’s a hullabaloo
but I’m playing Kanga and this is my Roo.
Look! Aren’t her eyes the most wonderful hue?
(lullaby, rockaby, lullaby loo).

The cleaning and scrubbing will wait till tomorrow,
for children grow up, as I’ve learned to my sorrow.
So quiet down, cobwebs. Dust go to sleep.
I’m rocking my baby and babies don’t keep.

What will you not regret at the end of your journey? (And yes, I do have tears when I read that poem each year.)

Grab some more go juice below!

  • Wipe Out Self-Doubt: 13 Ways to Show Homeschool Progress (And How I Know My Sons Got It)
  • How to Go From a Boring Homeschool Teacher to Creative Thinker (Boring to BAM)
  • 5 Top Mistakes of New or Struggling Homeschoolers

Hugs and you know I love ya,

7 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Begin Homeschooling, Gauge Homeschool Progress, Homeschool Simply, Homeschool When Nobody Wants To Tagged With: fearless homeschooling, homeschool challenges, homeschool joy, homeschool joys, homeschool lifestyle, new homeschool year, new homeschooler

Second Chance Homeschooling. Can We Have Do-Overs?

September 19, 2015 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Second Chance Homeschooling

Taking Mr. Senior 2013 back out of Kindergarten after putting him in for Kindergarten at the beginning of the year, I knew I had a second chance for homeschooling.

If you are struggling with gearing back up for the school year, I want to share a few pointers that helped me to plod along.

I believe in second chances and do-overs in homeschooling.

Second Chance Homescholing. We can have them. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

There are so many things in life that we can’t do over, but homeschooling is not one of them.

If you didn’t get covered what you wanted to last year, make it a priority this year. Priority means first. You get a second chance.

New Beginnings

If you are sheepishly returning to homeschool because putting your children back in public or private school didn’t work, don’t pick up where you left off.

Determine first if it was the homeschool or because life happened that made you return to public school.

If you just pick up where you left off without examining what was the stress inducer, you could be setting yourself up for another disappointment.

Hear my heart on this next point.

3 Important Truths To Remember When Beginning AGAIN

We read so much about leaving guilt at the door, but not enough about analyzing it. If we had no feelings of guilt, what kind of mom would we be? Would we even be viewed as human?

Having feelings of guilt means that we are aware of our weaknesses and we realize there is a standard.

I feel this way when I can’t live up to God’s standards. It keeps me aware of my weaknesses and that there is a standard I desire to live by. I strive to do better next time.

Balance is required though because we can’t get that confused with trying to be a perfectionist homeschooler.

Are our feelings of guilt because we couldn’t marry our expectations of unrealistic homeschooling with what we could actually do? Then that thinking needs to be left behind.

Analyzing but not constant agonizing over past mistakes keeps us balanced.

If we always tend to contemplate on how we are not doing enough in our day it can erode our homeschooling.

Erosion is a slow process and then we may sabotage our own homeschool because we give up.

Remember, these 3 key ways to get on a different path when you are beginning again.

 1. analyze guilt but don’t agonize over it;

2. don’t be confused between guilt feelings of trying to school by a higher standard and having perfectionist standards that nobody can meet. Good can come out of trying harder next time; and

3. avoid erosion which is constant wearing down.

If it is our thinking we need to change, if we need to join a support group, if we need to leave a support group or if we need minimal contact with naysayers, then take positive actions to do it now to keep your joy in homeschooling.

Each year negative things can take stabs at our every day joy. It’s hard for even the strongest homeschooler to not get wore down. So remove things that can make your homeschool backslide.

I do think that at the end of my homeschool journey that I might want a do over on something, but I won’t ever regret trying to make it right this year.

I was inspired by this quote today as I don’t want to let go of what I have learned from the past years.

“The knowledge of the past stays with us. To let go is to release the images and emotions, the grudges and fears, the clingings and disappointments of the past that bind our spirit.”

Hugs and love ya,

Also, check out these articles:

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children?
3 Tips from the Pros Before You Become a Homeschool Educator

It’s Tough To Start Back Over Again – But Well Worth It

6 CommentsFiled Under: Avoid the Homeschool Blues, Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Gauge Homeschool Progress, Homeschool Simply Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschool crisis, homeschool joy, homeschool joys, homeschool lifestyle, homeschool mistakes, homeschoolchallenges

When to Skip Ahead Or Stay Longer on a Homeschool Subject

September 16, 2015 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

7 Tried & Tested Tips.

Knowing when to skip ahead or stay longer on a homeschool subject can mean the difference between delight and drudgery when learning.

It is hard not to press the panic button when we hit a wall.

There are some basics to evaluating when to pole vault ahead or simmer on a homeschool subject.

There are a few guidelines that I have benefited from through the years and I’m sharing them today though each scenario may have very different circumstances.

  • If your child is real young, basically up to 3rd grade, you are not wasting time by going back over such important topics like reading.

If you are new to homeschooling, you soon find out that it takes at least the first year to know what your child knows and doesn’t know.

  • If purchasing a curriculum turns out to be more of a review than teaching new concepts, then move on just a little faster and skip lessons.

The advantages as the teacher is that you have started from the beginning. You can better evaluate where your child is academically. I had one new bee homeschooler tell me it’s like when you go to a medical specialist for a second opinion.

They don’t really care about your old test results. They start over so they are certain what they are dealing with (wise advice).

It is the same for you. It is not a waste of your time, but enriches your journey when you quickly cover what your child has been taught before. You now know for sure basic concepts have been mastered.

  • It is very different for an older child.

When to Skip Ahead Or Stay Longer on a Homeschool Subject


When to Skip Ahead on a Homeschool Subject

A child that is reading well and past the basics of learning can easily become frustrated when they repeat content they may have done over and over in previous grades.

If you are not sure if it’s the curriculum, but detect resistance, cut back to half the lessons.  Speaking to them and listening with your heart as your child tries to articulate the frustration goes a long way to smoothing over any rough spots. A budget may limit you switching curriculum.



  • Because switching curriculum may not be the answer, learning in a different way may be the solution.

If it is math you are working on, can you do some of it orally? If the complaint is handwriting, can some of it be typed or better yet use their iPad? Turn a project into a creation.

  • Give them a reprieve.

If your child knows that a subject they excel in or will enjoy follows one they struggle in, it makes struggling seem less.

Take a look at the order the subjects are being covered to be sure it fits your child’s personality and remember to give attention to the subject they struggle with the most when your child is at peak performance.

  • Resist the urge to determine curriculum level based on their prior public school grade.

Most of the large curriculum vendors provide free downloadable tests to give you a better rule of thumb.

Don’t be embarrassed if your child is not where you think he should be. Just give them the 1:1 mentoring they deserve, build your confidence and know you are not alone.

  • Finally, don’t be afraid to skip lesson plans or grade levels.

Jokingly, I had another new bee homeschooler tell me that when she started homeschooling she didn’t realize that most homeschool children are gifted.

Reckless or Worth it Risk?

While she was kidding, it is true in a way. It’s not because we push our children, it’s because we prepare them.

Nowadays children that receive an excellent education are viewed as gifted.

Make adjustments needed each year and don’t worry about skipping ahead or moving on. If you make either choice and it’s not right at the moment, you can start back over in the morning.

When to Skip Ahead Or Stay Longer on a Homeschool Subject

You’ll love these other tips:

  • What Homeschool Subjects to Teach and When to Teach Them? Part 1 of 3
  • Am I Doing Enough When Homeschooling
  • Should we Give Grades to Our Middle and High School Homeschooled Kids 
  • Gauging Homeschool Progress – Masters of their Material?

Hugs and love ya,

When to Skip Ahead or Stay Longer on a Homeschool Subject @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

2 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Gauge Homeschool Progress, Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: homeschool subjects, homeschoolprogress

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children? Part 2.

August 30, 2015 | 5 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Whether you begin to homeschool in the middle of the school year, during the summer or at the end of a school year, self-doubt and fear about your decision to homeschool lingers more in the beginning.

This is normal because like anything that is new, there is constant evaluation.

So continuing on with Part 2 of Are You Qualified to Teach Your Children? Part 1, I want to share a few more tips to keep in mind as you remember that the education of your children is not better left up to somebody else.

Homeschoolers are multiplying by the thousands. 

The days are long gone when nobody has heard of homeschooling.  How does that arm you or qualify you to teach your children?

Well in the ‘multitude of counselors’ there is wisdom.  You are empowered because like any novice teacher, you will have plenty of mentors and veterans to receive advice from.

Though I feel my New Bee Homeschooler program is one of the best ways to help you because there is not another program like it, I blog too because I want you to know about the plethora of wonderful resources out there waiting to help you to succeed.

Homeschoolers, much like you and I, have successfully nurtured, homeschooled and raised their children. Those children are adults now and are successfully homeschooling their children too.

The Homeschool Teacher that Doesn’t Teach!

Being the teacher doesn’t mean you have to teach. 

Most of us {if we honestly self-evaluate} are limited in some way or the other in our education.

Whether it is because we did not understand a certain subject when we were in school or whether we had no interest in learning a particular subject, we may feel inhibited.

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children Part 2. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Do not let this hold you back because in the homeschool arena, we can hire private tutors that are experts in an area, buy curriculum that has step-by-step instructions, join a local homeschool co-op or homeschool with another family to fill any perceived weakness on our part.  All of which I have done at one time or another.

Too, if you homeschool from the beginning when your children are very young, then you can learn right alongside them as I have done.

Many subjects I have confidently taught and breezed through because I have learned on the job.

In the end, your standard is the only one that matters.

Adopting a learning without limits attitude will propel you on in your journey.

Also, equally important is not pushing aside the time and curriculum you need as the home educator.

It is hard to teach somebody else when we have so many questions about curriculum, schedules and learning styles.

Allow me to help you by taking advantage of what I offer for free like my Free 31 Day Boot Camp for New Homeschoolers.

Of course, I would be delighted to help you through our New Bee Homeschooler Program too, but I provide many free resources because I care about you staying the course.

And remember, because you’re the teacher now, you can decide which subjects you want to teach and which ones you want to receive help with.

Look at these other tips to help you:

  •  Gauging Homeschool Progress – Masters of their Material?
  • Is Homeschooling Making the Grade? It’s in and the Grade is ALL Fs! 
  • Why Buying Curriculum Won’t Make You a Homeschooler (But What Will)

Hugs and you know I love ya,

5 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: newhomeschoolyear

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children? Part 1.

August 29, 2015 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

The new year reminds me of the haunting question that echoes time and time again and that is,“What qualifies you to teach your children?”

Even after homeschooling for many years, I find it hard to hide my eagerness and enthusiasm when it comes to answering those who question not just my decision, but my qualifications to homeschool.

Just so that it is absolutely clear, I am not a former public school educator.

I do not have a degree conferred upon me in education and never went to college to learn about how to educate children.

But I do have the approval of the Highest Person in the universe to homeschool my children.

I am not a state certified teacher, but I have graduated one son who is now working on his college degree. Oh, wait, the second son just recently graduated too.

Another son is doing middle school/high school level work.

Having taught all of my sons to read and write well, I have homeschooled many years with my standard set to excellence.

By helping former public school teachers get on the road to homeschooling, I have learned that a state certified teacher does not love my children more than my husband and I do.

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children Part 1. This is fantastic stuff. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusNo, I am not asking naysayers to only believe the “love-my-kids-more-than-a-professional-teacher” mantra.

On the other hand, what has held me to my course to the end with two of my sons is my deep and abiding love for my sons. It has been an enormous motivating force which propels me beyond the basics how-tos of homeschooling.

Not everybody questions your motives for negative reasons.

A lot of times questions arise out of pure curiosity. I find too that some parents are flat out scared and they think that somebody else is more patient, organized, loving or smarter than they are. I am still working on all those things.

We know the difference between people who are really interested in how we are going to teach our children versus people who are asking with a critical stare.

Arming you with a few things that jolt through my mind and heart when I think about my qualifications to homeschool, I am hoping you remember these as you start your homeschool year.

Grab some of these and put them down on your homeschool mission statement.

Unspoken Assumptions

Remember as I share these tips that though you may be the only one in your small community to homeschool, you are not alone. Thousands have gone before you successfully.

The key to keep learning is to not seclude yourself and to obtain continual education. Look at my points below with those thoughts in mind. Empower yourself.

  • Whose standard?

Like you, I left the public school system because it was not working for me. Not everybody has a terrible, horrible, bad experience with public school. I didn’t.

But what I did know was that deep down I knew I had different standards for everything and that included academics, emotional, physical and spiritual development.

So I am not interested in meeting the public school standards, but in exceeding them.

That is why you have to come at us homeschoolers with more than just, “What about testing?”

My reply is always the same, “Do you have any idea of why to test?”

It is hard to defend something when a person starts off on untruths and preconceived ideas.

In other words don’t bring the public school’s way of determining whether something is working or not to homeschool and expect them to work at our home. Some homeschoolers test, some don’t. But if and when we do, we have very specific reasons to test. I will be discussing this in a future post.

How does that qualify me to teach my children then?

Because my system or standard works for my family!

I can and do provide a richer environment because it is more practical, useful and tailored to my children.

You are taking control back of not just educating your children, but making the everyday decisions for your family in the other areas I mentioned above.

Did you get that?

My standard has changed because I am not just interested in filling my children’s brain to the full, but hearts are involved.

The bottom line is that your family is the only one you have to worry about as far as standards. The new standard is now meeting and exceeding your family’s needs and not the needs of 100 other families that you do not know.

Tell me, what certified teacher or accredited school will go to that length to create such a unique, diversified, distinctive and one of a kind education for your children?

Too, do you know why a majority of homeschool children outdo their peers?

It certainly is not because we step to the same pace or standard.

Look at my post What is NOT Homeschooling.

  • We give up cookie cutter education for the masses and adopt a learning without limits attitude.

For some folks, they may not appreciate their new found freedom so that mind-set just doesn’t settle right with them. But for a lot of others it does.

How does this qualify you as an educator? You no longer step in sync with the masses, but are intent on creating an extraordinary educational program.

Show me a teacher with a degree who does not know the child she teaches and I will show you a mom cradling her child, which has adopted a firm and dogged-determination to understand how to educate her child.

  • Any guesses who is in it for the long haul?
  • Any guesses who will work overtime with no pay?
  • Any guesses who will drive hours upon top of hours so that her children will have friends?
  • Any guesses who will jump in the college waters not knowing anything to help her child navigate them?
  • Any guesses who will spring into action teaching a child to read as terrified as a mom might be?

This is not about bashing the public school system or public school teachers because I have a few friends that are teachers. But it is about keeping the focus on what is best for your children.

Not settling for mediocrity when it comes to filling your mind with the how tos of homeschooling, I do feel that you can eventually be a force to be reckoned with and that your children receive an exceptional education.

I still do not know a lot about how to manage more than 20 children at one time, but I do know how to choose curriculum with a discerning eye, how to fill a learning gap if any in our year, how to adjust my teaching to fit each sons’ learning style and how to train my sons for college level work.

More importantly somewhere along the way too, my husband and I also nurtured in our sons a desire for spiritual things.

I only shared two things today. What about you? Have you adopted either one or both of those ideas?

In Part 2 Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children, I will share a few more ideas that I hope you embrace.

Also, look at the helpful tips:

  • Wipe Out Self-Doubt: 13 Ways to Show Homeschool Progress (And How I Know My Sons Got It)
  • 3 Unexpected Benefits of Homeschool Narration 
  • When to Skip Ahead Or Stay Longer on a Homeschool Subject

Hugs and love ya,

8 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: newhomeschoolyear

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