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Homeschool When Nobody Wants To

How To Fake Homeschooling

August 5, 2014 | 3 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Mouth the words fake education and whatever issues homeschoolers disagree about are quickly forgotten as they mount a united assault.

Good thing I will only be sharing tips today about how to fake homeschooling.  No, I am not talking about counterfeit homeschooling, but about improvising when you need to. You know, those days when the public school is looking really good is when you need to dig deep to find a solid routine.

Fake Homeschooling

Improvising or creating homeschool days spontaneously without preparation is an area I struggle in constantly.

Admiring artists who improvise and create while painting and musicians who have mastered the art of improvisation, I think about them often when I have to homeschool through times when my plans might not work.

How To Fake Homeschooling - Can we do counterfeit homeschooling?

I have learned that my love for lists, planners, schedules and well-laid out lesson plans can be more of a hindrance than help at times when homeschooling is challenging.

Reminding myself of homeschooling beliefs that I hold dear to my heart and wanting to fend off any feelings of being defeated as we get ready to embark on our huge move across the continent, I want to share a few of my tips today.

Improvise = At One’s Pleasure

Too,  I am hoping you come away armed, encouraged and with a real can-do attitude if and when you have big changes in your homeschool routine.

Nobody does it better than you.

While easier to combat later on in your journey when you have tiny little successes along the way, the thinking that returning your child to public school is the solution can haunt you at anytime in your journey.

At first, I didn’t even have to have a hard year before I thought somebody else could do a better job of instructing my child.  Along the way I learned that when I stopped “talking shop” or worrying all the time about curriculum, quit researching on all the material to cram in a year to avoid big gaps in learning and being behind, I could focus my energy on asking other homeschoolers how they found a curriculum that fit their family, how to use my time wisely to strengthen weak academic skills and to accept the level my child is on.

Yep, nobody does it better than you.

Learning is not a small window of time that quickly closes.

Accepting the fact that I will not be able to school many days in the upcoming months or that it may not look like it does now, I have learned that learning is not a small window of time that is permanently sealed and all is lost.

Avoiding a common pitfall that children will not learn or pick up material previously not mastered is the release to beginning a creative and individualistic education.

For example, as we leaving our co-op and friends here in Texas, my heart is heavy on one hand because Tiny will not have the same homeschool experiences my older sons have had in our group.  However, I am sure my older boys will not experience to the same depth the rich culture, very individualized, extensive field trips and hands-on learning we plan for Tiny in South America.

As mom, I hope all my sons will appreciate the uniqueness of the country, but as a homeschooling teacher I know Tiny’s time for learning more is a wide open window.

Be patient with yourself as you learn how to create out of the box lesson plans and plan on the spur of the moment.

Even the most organized loving homeschooler needs to embrace the wild side to homeschooling.  There is no denying that our children can be powerful learning machines.

Sometimes we overthink the process of learning instead of accepting teachable moments that come up in life.  When I moved away from scripted lesson plans and embraced more of a unit study approach my homeschooling year came alive.

Thinking now as we prepare to move overseas, which is something I never dreamed could happen, I have those same feelings I had when I left scripted lesson plans.   Excitement, mixed with worry, mixed with a huge dose of anticipation have to be all normal feelings.

Even if things only work out for just a few short months due to the Mr.’s health, I will not have regretted this change in our homeschooling adventure.

I’m still working on mastering the quality of patience as I hope to add more spontaneous and spur of the moment days as I learn how to fake homeschooling during our move.  But right now, I say: “Pinch me, am I dreaming?”

Look at these other tips:

  • How to Use Summertime to Put a Foot in Homeschooling
  • How to Get Homeschooled Kids to WANT to Learn?
  • Is Homeschooling Making the Grade? It’s in and the Grade is ALL Fs!

Hugs and love ya

Signature T

3 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool During Crisis, Homeschool When Nobody Wants To Tagged With: homeschoolchallenges, homeschoolcrisis

40 Reasons I Homeschool (And Growing Each Year)

January 8, 2014 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have a secret to tell you and that is I thrive at this time of the year. Call me one of those weird homeschoolers, I don’t mind, but I love cold weather.  My brain goes full throttle ahead.

It might sound like a contradiction, but I also take time to muse about my homeschooling journey.

I am ever so grateful to have the privilege of homeschooling my children. Don’t get me wrong, I am human and go through certain days where I feel it is more like a burden.40 Reasons I Homeschool (And Growing Each Year)When I feel that way, I normally write down something to remind me of the privilege. It is easier as you homeschool longer because each year gives you more positive things to simmer on.

40 Reasons I Homeschool

By sharing publicly a few of the reasons I homeschool not only sears this in my mind, but I hope it lifts you up too.  Homeschooling should be contagious and I want you to keep having a bad case of it.

Listed in no particular order.

1. I want my sons to have a spiritual relationship and that is my privilege to do.

2.  My sons can focus on their own education, which is their responsibility and to not be responsible for other kids in public school which are their parents’ responsibility.

3. I realized soon after homeschooling that my son is not the only gifted and talented kid. Plenty of gifted children exist in the homeschool world and their interests can be fed in a way that is good for them without giving up their childhood.

4. My sons can exercise first in the morning like they enjoy doing. Now only if I can do that.

5. My sons don’t have to read poorly copied papers from one book as a reader, but I can have as many living books as I can stuff into my home.

6. I never have to kiss them good bye in the morning.

7. If a curriculum or schedule is not working, I don’t need the principal’s approval to change it.  Just do it and move on.

8. We can buy better made school supplies and not have to break them in half to share with other kids. This actually happened to us when Mr. Senior 2013 went to part of Kindergarten public school.  Of course the teacher explained to me that this was to help with fine motor control by having to grasp a smaller crayon.  If that was the case, why didn’t I break them at home and they keep them separate at school?

9. We never collected enough soup labels to help out with the playground at school or library either one.

10. We love peanuts and because we have no allergies here, we can roll around in them at my house if we want to.

11. I can count my all day house cleaning day as a Home Economics 101 course.

12. Because the world IS our classroom, my sons have a no holes barred attitude toward education.

13. Because the Bible is our best copywork source, history and science resource, I won’t give this up in favor of education for the masses.

14. Because my kids are square pegs, I won’t force them to fit in round holes.

15. Because I would never give up our all day reading days, or all day history days, or all day science days, or all day geography days.

16. Our lunches are more healthier, not to mention taste great.  Even peanut butter and jelly tastes better at home.

17. I don’t have to schedule conferences with the teacher.

18. Because the on-site campus policemen don’t have to escort my sons to the bathroom for fear they may be beat up or bullied. Yes, this happened to a friends of ours and it has taken their son quite a few years to recover, but the emotional damage is deep.  We all hug them each time we see them.

19. Because any day can be declared a school holiday.

20. I want my children to learn to be community minded, and avoid learning mindless acts like standing in line. Too, do you ever raise your hand when having conversations with other adults?

21. How does that quote go? “I homeschool because I have seen the village”.

22. Because I wanted my kitchen filled with growing crystals, and can grow mold on purpose, and want my refrigerator filled with all kinds of future science projects.

23. We don’t have to wait on the rest of the class to catch up with us and because we don’t care what the other kids are doing if we don’t want to move on.

24. Because I want my kids socialized in the truest sense of the word and not adopt what the world tries to burden us with.

25. Because I want my children to love reading and I can change our schedule on a whim to feed that habit.

26. Because my husband wants time to influence my sons to grow up to be capable, responsible, loving, hardworking, and spiritual men.  Its hard to do that when they are apart for 8 or more hours each day.

27. Because teaching about not using drugs and reserving (yes I am going there) *sex* for when you are married is our responsibility as parents.  I won’t leave that up to a person whose life may or may not model Bible based thinking.

28. Because regardless of a person’s belief system, I want my sons to respect and love other people. It is our job as parents to live that every day and not just say it.

29. Because once I teach a skill to my older sons, they can model and teach to my younger son. This equals more time spent together as a family.

30. To teach subjects that I am not well versed in, I can hire as many excellent and caring private tutors as I want to. I consult only my budget and not have to wait weeks or years to change my educational budget and get approval for supplemental activities.

31. Because I cannot even begin to imagine what our day would look like if we could not spend as much time on hands-on as we like to.

32. Because learning is not about sitting at the computer all day with a virtual school, but it is about getting outdoors and learning about the creation around us.

33. Because our homeschool has gone way beyond academics and we have made life-long friends who cannot ever be replaced.  We are overflowing with the blessings of their loyal friendship.

34. Because it is easier to teach children to read than the public school would have you think. Ten to fifteen minutes each day wrapped up in a blanket on the couch with living books and you will have a life-long reader that you have to command to put down his book to finish his math. Oh and a few cheetos and some chocolate milk doesn’t hurt either.

35. Because my goal in high school was to not simply have my sons graduate but to have an introduction to college level courses. And, you want to ask about testing to see what they know?

36. Because as a teacher, my obligation is not to learn how 30 other kids learn best, but just how my children learn best. This equals a hidden, but gratifying joy because I can learn right alongside my children. It is hard to infuse this feeling in a new homeschool teacher until she is actually teaching her children.  It is just surface talk until she is infected with the art of teaching.

37.  It my sons’ privilege, responsibility, and delight to learn. I am not raising passive sit back and let the teacher tell me what to do kids. They are learning independence and not dependence from an early age.

38. Because when it comes to studying our favorite subjects like history and geography, we can arrive at at history destinations via a family vacation.  We can eat, drink and dress the culture and come away with an appreciation of the true value of any culture and not accept what a few pages in a textbook tells us.

39. Too, if you want to know what my sons know about a subject, I can show you our stack of 20 or 30 books on one subject for our unit study and compare with your few pages in a textbook. So testing fear is conquered because I realize standardized testing is a tool that if not wielded right by the holder can be abused.  It’s true when those signs read “To avoid personal injury, select the right tool for the job.”

40. And, lastly because it works!

40 Reasons I Homeschool (And Growing Each Year). I am ever so grateful to have the privilege of homeschooling my children. Don’t get me wrong, I am human and go through certain days where I feel it is more like a burden.When I feel that way, I normally write down something to remind me of the privilege. It is easier as you homeschool longer because each year gives you more positive things to simmer on. Click here to be rejuvenated!!

I shared a few things that rolled off the top of my head and I will be printing this to go in my planner.Also, you’ll love grabbing some go juice from these articles!

  • 4 Undeniable Reasons People Hate Homeschooling (I’m Keeping It Real) 
  • 7 Homeschool Lies I Want to Tell My Younger Self 
  • 6 Things I Won’t Regret After Homeschooling 16+ Years
  • When Homeschooling is Not an Overnight Success (Is it Worth the Risk?)

What about you? What reasons keep you getting up in the morning with a can do spirit?

Reasons Why I Homeschool

Hugs and love ya

7 CommentsFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling, Homeschool During Crisis, Homeschool When Nobody Wants To, Homeschooling, Kick Off Your Homeschool Year Tagged With: homeschool joy, homeschool joys, homeschooljoy, reasonstohomeschool

Put A Little Spring In Your Winter Weary Homeschool Step

November 13, 2013 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Put a Little Spring in Your Winter Weary Homeschool Step

Oh well yippee we have had our first real snap of winter though I know in some places you already have snow.

With the time change too, do you feel yourself slowing down to a homeschool crawl?

Maybe you just feel like quitting. Oh please don’t. You are not alone.

It is normal this time of year and a lot of us feel the same way. It is has been my experience to not fight the change. We may need to slow down or change things up a bit.

The change is natural in the season, natural in our bodies and I always feel we should embrace it. Oh for sure I am not saying to stop school, unless of course it is your winter break or you really need to grab some rest.

About this time, the demands of our school and family can take a toll.

For me and my family, I always do best by taking off a little longer during the winter break. I know that works best for us because I have fought it for many years not wanting to feel like we are getting behind. Too, for some reason we get itchy about the curriculum we have chosen. So all together, it can be stressful to school during the winter or long cold days.

Until we decide to take our break, we do need to keep on homeschooling and try to avoid the winter blahs. So I have a few things that hopefully will put a little spring in your winter homeschooling step when the days are long and cold.

Pull an All-Dayer

About this time of the year, those projects like science experiments or history maps you may have wanted to get done may still be sitting there for you to do. One way to change your day is to pull an all-dayer and do one subject or project you may have been wanting to do. That’s right do something you and your kids enjoy and do it all day long until you’ve had your fill.

The kids look forward to this each year. They don’t know when I am going to pull one of those days out of my hat. I just pipe up one morning (when I need the rest of course) and let them know we are having an all-dayer. Of course history and geography you know are our favorite subjects here so they are the first ones we look at for doing something we enjoy.

There is something about spreading all our books, maps, map pencils, activities and globe all over the floor and working on everything we want to do for the full day. No stopping, just moving along on it doing exactly what we enjoy the most.

One year, we did 3 science activities for the day because that is what we wanted to do for the day.

We stop for lunch and come back for some more. This works great too for an all day game day. If they don’t like history and it ends up being more work, then do an all day game day. I still play board games with my kids. Too, there is something about board games that builds a bond between my kids and me like an iPad can’t.

If the kids have been fighting with each other a lot, I know its time for a break and to pull an all-dayer. Eww, it just feels good to be so free too and not plan, just learn in the moment and enjoy.

Of course sitting by the fireplace in the floor and making homemade hot chocolate during this time doesn’t hurt a bit either.

The best part of this is we are still learning. We love our all day game days and there is NOT one subject that can’t be taught through a board game.

 

Indoor Activity

Though I am there with you if going to the mall shopping counts as indoor activity, but the kids needs something a little more active. Locate what is around you for entertaining them indoors. Some places it is just too cold to get outside and do a nature sketch so plan for those times when you are tired of being indoors at your house and want to be elsewhere.

Near my home, we have an indoor rock climbing wall, an ice skating rink and a pizza place that has an indoor car racing track. They are pretty close without us traveling far, but we have more options if we wanted to drive a bit longer. Indoor tennis is great too for the older guys.

Our field trip in January for many years has been to the same indoor huge pizza place and we camp out stay all day and the kids run high on socialization.

Just stirring around and getting out of your house keeps the winter blues to a minimum.

Embrace the Season

Winter NaturExplorers 735x1102 (Pinterest)

Homeschooling seasonally is one of the best advantages about homeschooling. In the fall season you can cover topics like apples, leaves or Native Americans. The same applies when homeschooling in winter. I don’t always have to create the unit study. Sometimes the fun is in following something somebody else created.

There is a series of nature/science unit studies that I really love by Shining Dawn Books. We will be dabbling in the Coping with the Cold unit study to bring some fun to our day. It is geared for grades 1 –8, but the beauty of unit studies is that you can make them a bit harder by adding in research for your older high school group and throwing in some coloring pages if you have a Kindergartener. Too, this is suppose to be a nice change to our routine so keep it fun and light. Don’t try to make it hard because children are natural learners.

Good Reads

From the time I could hold my sons in my lap until each one gets to high school reading aloud together will continue to be our number 1 go to activity when we feel the blahs.

Yes, even in high school I read to my sons. I don’t know what it is about all of us coming together in the living room with our favorite blankets and favorite spots in the living room, but just the feeling that nothing else matters as we lose ourselves in whatever adventure we are reading makes it all better.

I am the one that reads aloud. From the time they are young, they have all been soothed by my voice and it is my way to give to my kids. They can enjoy it without me trying to teach something like inference or do an analysis of the literature, just let them soak up the pure delight of reading.

Just Stop

Sometimes none of that helps because you may really need to stop and take a break. Get some rest girl! It is okay. Forget what other people are doing and do what is best for your family.

I don’t worry about what other bloggers or homeschoolers are doing when I stop and break because I blog and homeschool both because they are my passions. Passion doesn’t go away when you rest, because it is built around dedication. We put in a lot of hours as homeschool moms and dads both learning as we are teaching our children day to day and after hours too. Tired is okay, burnout is not. There is a difference.

Something as simple as moving from a different room to start off your day can make a big difference. Or, changing around how you are teaching a subject too brings a nice relief from the monotony. Tiny has been getting the blahs when working on his spelling each day. So instead of calling out his words to him, I have been doing some sentence dictation with him. Is there really a big difference between calling out a list of words and dictating a sentence? He obviously thinks so because he is really charged about it. If I knew that, I would have started earlier to help him stay on track with his spelling.

Change your day up and focus on the little things that you can change that will bring a spark to your day. Breaking up your routine or grabbing some much needed rest revives your body.

Do you want some more ideas of things to do both inside and out during the winter? clip_image004

Look at my post 50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

Also See: Winter Season Unit Study

You know I love ya,

 

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Homeschool When Nobody Wants To, How To - - - Tagged With: preventinghomeschoolburnout

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