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Schedule/Balance Home & School

Making Each Day Count When Homeschooling

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

Beginning the journey of a lifetime when starting to homeschool, we seem to have superhuman strength and a dogged determination.  But then, each new year rolls around and we are faced with making each day count when homeschooling.
It’s not the starting homeschooling that makes us feel defeated, but it’s the constant stopping and starting throughout the year that is sabotaging a school day.

Some things are out of our control like a sick baby, a sick momma and sometimes dad’s crazy work schedule that throws us off our pace.

Let’s not beat ourselves up over things that we can’t control, but sometimes even those days are not a complete loss in making some headway for the day.

Don’t Put It Off to the Future

Homeschooling with Challenges.  One of the things that held me back from attempting to cover something for the day was to realize that perfect circumstances don’t really exist.

Waiting for the perfect day to happen, I missed out on seizing challenging moments because I couldn’t do everything in my curriculum planner.  I felt I was doing half-hearted homeschooling.

Accepting what I could do for the day when a circumstance threatened the day would have caused a few less bitter homeschooling days for me.

Accepting the Circumstances.  When my idea of what a homeschooling day should look like and reality collided, I see that I could have adjusted more easily if I had just simply accepted the change.  This is hard to do for a scheduler type of personality.

For example, when my husband worked a crazy work schedule or had to be out of town for a long period of time, I could have simply had a read aloud day.  That would have been the perfect time to catch up on some reading.

When both the kids and I were tired trying to keep up with my husband’s changing work schedule, we could have slept in and planned a field trip for the day.

Meeting the Challenge

Avoid All or Nothing Days.  Another key to not completely stopping and then starting up again is to lose the mind-set that each day has to be an all or nothing day.

If your personality is more laid back and you are a respond to the moment teacher, then you may have an easier time accepting changing circumstances.  Again, because I like to plan, it was harder for me to accept those things out of my control.

Looking back now, though you can’t see it at the time, I was my own worst enemy.  It’s just that you realize that being organized allows us to make good use of our time.

However, setting unrealistic expectations and not accepting the present moment sets you up for burnout too and homeschool disillusionment.  It’s that feeling of being disappointed because we think homeschooling is not as good as thought it was.

Soon we may regret homeschooling and that is where the bitter homeschool days come in.  As you can see, if we don’t accept what we can’t control, it can have devastating results.

Homeschooling When Sick.  I think the hardest times, once I determined that my days were not a complete loss when something unplanned came up, are homeschooling through sicknesses.

When I had more than one child sick, then I called off school. But I have found that when one child is sick or if I am sick that homeschooling for the day was a relief.
Having activities lined up for sick days beforehand is essential.

Back before Netflix (I am not real ancient I promise), I would buy tapes about history or science at the homeschool conventions. Too, I would look for museum quality educational coloring books like Edupress or Dover and buy board games.

Special art projects and art supplies were also part of my arsenal that I stocked up on.
But I would hold all of them back, in what I call my Mary Poppins bag only to pull them out when I needed them throughout the year. Keeping all the goodies a surprise from the kids is key to them being something that will keep their attention for the day when you need it most.

As soon as I purchased those things, I would hide them and put them away when the kids were occupied.  It’s sounds crazy, but it’s almost like they looked forward to the days when I was sick because they would get something new.
One year at the end of summer, I stocked up on games that were meant to be played inside during the long hot summer months. Of course that is not the reason I bought them.

For example, I bought an indoor mini croquet set.  All of the pieces, the balls, mallets and stakes were lightweight and made to be played indoors. When I had morning sickness when pregnant with my third son, I pulled the set out for my two sons and they played indoors while I was hanging out in the bathroom.

They had no idea they didn’t miss a day on strengthening their gross motor skills and I got my much needed rest.

Buying a pail and shovel at the end of summer that is suppose to be used at the beach made for great indoor play in a plastic pool that I filled with rice, beans or indoor sand during the winter.

Your imagination is the only limit to creating hangouts at your house when you need them.

Taking the kids to the park to study so the Mr. could have the house quiet to sleep in are some of my fondest memories of them when they were little.

Of course grabbing some of their favorite food at the time like hotdogs, which we ate on special occasions made it more special too.

Seasons of Adventure

Now with iPads and tablets, finding an activity is much easier.

I still prefer activities, like board games, where my children have to interact with each other instead of an iPad.  But it’s a relief to have options from our iPad too because you can purchase board game apps, like Monopoly for a group to play too.

Though it took me a while to expect the unexpected, some of our best homeschool moments of learning were ones that I have not planned. I learned that the constant stopping and starting was sabotaging my teaching efforts.

And despite what I thought at the time, I could push on through the interruptions. Besides, I would have missed out some of our fondest memories so far in homeschooling.

Don’t pass up the opportunity to make each day special in homeschooling, you won’t regret it.

Hugs and love ya,

Keep on Going!! Check out some more tips!

How To Fake Homeschooling

Biggest Challenges to Homeschooling

Looking Back To Stretch Forward.

Helping our Homeschool Children Find their Inner Drive When We are Not Sure We Have It

40 Reasons I Homeschool

 

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Homeschool When Nobody Wants To, Schedule/Balance Home & School Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschool crisis

3 Easy Fixes to Recharge Your Homeschool Routine

October 2, 2014 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Because our living location is temporary right now and our homeschool routine not so routine because of our recent move to South America, I thought I would share 3 easy fixes to recharge your homeschool routine.

These are things that I keep in mind when I have a big change in my life.

Recharge Your Homeschool Routine

Too, it doesn’t take such a huge thing as a move overseas to feel defeated.  Some days when the boys were all very young, just a move from their bed to the living room was enough for chaos to follow and my well planned routine go out the window.  

You hope as they get to the teen years that it gets better.  Okay, you do get a break, but even as teens they need a recharge for their routine.

If you are feeling a bit defeated in your new routine, try these easy fixes to bring some peace back into your day.

The Challenge

Easy Fix 1.
Try a new location. 

If there is anything that can breathe life into your day, it is changing where you and your kids do school. 

The old kitchen table has stood the test of time, but sometimes we just need to pull back from it. 

Maybe you’re a rocking chair and porch type of girl. 

Give yourself some room to enjoy spending part of the day where you like to be.  Especially this time of the year when the weather is a bit cooler, you can start part of your school day outside. 

Then, when you do come inside to the kitchen table, everybody will be much more relaxed. 

If you have teens, you know they want to be in their room for part of the day.  But if you have homeschooled them from the beginning or as you do, you will find that teens still look forward to spending some of their day with you.  When Mr. Senior 2013 had those moments, we would move to the living room to read together. 

Here is our new and temporary location until we find a home.  It is just a small space in our apartment that I set up to suit them.  Tiny loves sitting on the floor to do his school anyway so he thinks this set up is just perfect..

Our makeshift school room

And then moving a few tables around in the apartment, I have set up a place for Mr. Awesome do some of his online classes.  The key is we are together and embracing a new change.

Push Back When Your Routine Gets Crowded

Easy Fix 2.
Stick with a Set Time To Begin Your School Day. 

Though I thrive with having a set time to start school, I have a lot of fellow feeling for those that feel jailed when they hear the words “time management”. 

My simple advice is this: There is nothing more important in your day than your children. 

Though I love all my family and homeschool friends, I try to remember that my children’s education has to be first in the day and not the musings of my family or friends. 

And guess what? Instead of thinking that your not a close friend or “be there for them daughter”, your family and friends, whether they support your homeschool decision or not, will respect the priority placed on time with your children.

Easy Fix 3.
Stop and Reorganize. 

Without adding homeschooling to our day, this world is enough to make us think that if we stop one moment to plan or reorganize that we will waste a time.  It is kind of funny in a way though we may not see it at the time. 

I think about all the focus we put on curriculum and not enough on the help we will get with supper, clothes washing or bill paying.

One of my back to school chores includes emptying my pantry or kitchen cabinets

One year, somehow I had hoarded collected 9 pie plates.  Not in any dinner I make would I ever make 9 pies to go with it. 

But the fact, they were taking up room in my cabinets was taking up space in my mind and weighing me down. 

It was completely stressful and a waste of time in making dinner when I would have to reshuffle those 9 pie pans each time to get the pans I needed to actually start supper with. 

Why do we do put up with tiny time zappers that turn huge over time?

You may have another room bothering you. For me, it’s always the kitchen that I make time to organize so that I save time.

A homeschool routine is not about scheduling every block or minute, but only the important ones.  Not everything on your list for the day is urgent.  It’s important, but there is a difference.

Whether you have temporary circumstances like me right now or you are feeling a bit defeated, push back when your routine gets crowded. 

Instead of planning your whole day, plan to get started.  It is so worthwhile.

  • Should You Switch to a 4-Day Homeschool Schedule?
  • Homeschool Organization – Preschool/Kindergarten Free Morning Routine Flip Cards

Hugs and love ya,

3 Easy Fixes to Recharge Your Homeschool Routine


2 CommentsFiled Under: Schedule/Balance Home & School Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschool lifestyle, homeschool schedules, homeschoolchallenges, homeschoolplanning, schedules

A Day in the Life of a Homeschooler Part 1 Early Years

August 11, 2014 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

With glorious rays of sunshine and melodious sounds of chirping birds, I just knew that bright beaming faces would be eagerly greeting me each morning (ok I do tend to be over idealistic at times) ready to start school.  A day in the life of a homeschooler is different for each family, but it is also very different within a family each year as I have learned.

It’s not like you don’t know, when your children are young, that things won’t change as they grow older.  I knew, but I didn’t know.  For example, I just knew that our Bible reading routine would stay the same because it is my top priority in the day.

Getting our reading done first in the day was all that counted.  Cough, choke, sputter—it just does not work out that way and for many reasons.

Let me back up though and share a few tips that worked for me when the boys were all very young.  At the time that I started “worrying” that we weren’t starting our day early enough, my kids were 8, 6 and 2 years old.

Playing IS Learning

Swinging from one extreme to another in scheduling attempts, I think, is pretty common when you start homeschooling.  It’s not like we plan to switch around so much, but we are just trying to find a balance.

Knowing that I tended to show up as a drill sergeant (bad momma) early on in my homeschool years, I tried harder the next few years to be more relaxed.

A Day In the Life Of A Homeschooler Part 1 | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I let the kids play longer in the morning, but that ended up being more difficult for me because they just didn’t want to stop and sit down.

Finding a balance when your kids are all very young is important.  I learned to involve them in my chores as I started the  day.

Playing is learning and they needed that time each day at those early ages, but key was keeping me us on task.  So I used a timer for a few months as we learned our routine.  Okay, some of my drill sergeant mentality wasn’t too bad.  Actually the kids thought it was kind of fun coming back and checking the timer and I made sure I used it as a way to track our time and not feel stressed by it.

Too, I learned that involving them in house keeping and getting ready for the day allowed for an energy release for them, but also reminded them that it was a school day.

Look at how my day flowed then:

5:00 a.m. Mom time. I normally read, study and pray at this time and generally enjoy a few quiet moments.  I still hold somewhat to this time period in the morning.  Also, this was my time to be with toddler if he woke up then.

7:00 a.m. Kids up and time for them to wake up.  Not much time needed before the kids are ready to be active.

7:30 a.m. Breakfast and Bible reading.

8:00 a.m. or so to about 8:30 a.m. Chores, getting dressed and room cleaning.

8:30 a.m. to 8:45. a.m.  School starts. I learned that  starting sooner in the day relieved my stress of the kids getting sidetracked.  It allowed enough time for them to play for a few minutes.

10:30 a.m. Break for snack or to play.

11:00 a.m  Back to school.

11:30 – 1:30 p.m. We eat lunch early, so we broke earlier for the day.  We did more chores during this time and I made sure I decided what was for supper too and prepped it at this time too.

1:30 – 2:00 Read aloud time together.

This was the general flow of my day for many years.  But, life marches on and things change.  I will share how some things changed and why you have to change how you schedule too in part 2 of A Day in the Life of a Homeschooler.

How do you start your day each day?

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature Trail of Tears Unit Study and Lapbook

Want to read some more?

The Sticking Power of a Homeschool Schedule

How To Create a Homeschool Schedule That You Can Stick To

Carpe Diem: Homeschool Schedule by The Day, Month, & Year.

5 Days Of The Benefits & Challenges of Teaching Mixed Ages Together – Day 1: One Room Schools – A Thing of the Past?

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Begin Homeschooling, Schedule/Balance Home & School Tagged With: schedules

How To Create a Homeschool Schedule That You Can Stick To

June 13, 2014 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

By sharing with you earlier The Sticking Power of a Homeschool Schedule, I hope that you placed a high value on your routine.  When I hear the word routine, it conjures up a warm and fuzzy feeling.  But I know for some homeschoolers, the words routine and restrained seem to be more synonymous and that just kills me.  I want you to love what I love, I can wish can’t I?  And it’s true, how to create a homeschool schedule that YOU can stick to, is the difference between organizational agony and thriving in organizational bliss.

This year too, hopefully during the summer, (unless I am on a beach in South America somewhere soaking up the rays and surviving from my upcoming move) I will be sharing more specifics about the different kinds of homeschool routine that vary with your kids ages and seasons in your life.

And before I forget because I have been asked several times, there is no way I am stopping my blog.  When I move, I may be M.I.A. for a while, or longer if a beach is calling me (don’t hate, just saying) but am way too vocal to be quiet now.  I just had to let you know that important information though it has nothing to do with what I am blogging about today.

How To Create A Homeschool Schedule That You Can Stick to

Today, I want to keep it simple for you and give you a beginning point in creating a homeschool schedule.  Sharing tips that are more broad or that can be applied across a number of scenarios helps you to keep the basics in mind when planning.

3 Easy Steps to Homeschool Schedule

First, instead of planning hour by hour and day by day, think of your day as zones.  Later on, I will go through plugging in the details with you, but for now divide your day by general broad zones.

For example, because we do homeschool, we would have our days divided up like this: morning routine, school routine, afternoon routine, personal routine and evening routine.

Wasn’t that easy?  It’s true, we have a bit more to divide out in our day, but it’s still doable.  Whatever you do, AVOID for now assigning everything in your life an hour by hour appointment.  Don’t go down straight jacket, hem me in road because like you, I couldn’t stay there either.  Start with general zones and then work within those zones to assign details or all the activities that fall within those time zones.

Next, list the activities you will have this year or the upcoming year, whichever one you are planning.  It’s important to create a homeschool schedule each year because activities will change.  True, sometimes each year my schedule changed slightly, but other years it changed drastically.

Creating a list of my to-do, whatever it is, helps me to not miss plugging it in a zone.  Did you catch this part?  For sure this will take the longest amount of time because you are listing EVERYTHING you need to do for the day.  Anything for the home, kids, the Mr. and time for you, all have to be listed.  Get it all off your mind and on paper.  It feels better there too.

The last thing to do is to explore your options in how you will accomplish that activity.  What do I mean by this?  Whether it is teaching a child to read or taking the kids to a co-op or class, you want to assign a realistic amount of time to do that activity in your zone.  It is hard to do that unless you know you have investigated all your options.

For example, some years, I combined extracurricular classes for the kids so that we would have one long day out and away from the house instead of breaking up multiple school days to take each kid to their classes.

Explore ways of how to maximize your time away from home.  Can you buy groceries while they are at class or use that as part of your household time?  And while you are at home, explore ways to maximize it too.  Can you combine two kids for one history program?

Finish exploring options so that you have measured your time better when it comes to plugging it in your zone.

Beginning at this basic framework each year helps to avoid unrealistic planning, the feeling of defeat before you start and gives you a boost in organization.

Dividing my zones, listing my activities and exploring my options is the glue that helps my homeschool routine stick.

Learning to stick with a schedule gives you breathing room and almost a feeling that you have just created extra hours in your day.  Ewww, it feels sooo good!

What do you think? Does starting at this point instead of listing it all hour by hour give you some breathing room?

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature

Want to read some more?

{Homeschool Organization Series} Where do you begin?

Must-Haves for the Organized Homeschooler. What to Keep & What to Skip

Streamlined Record Keeping

Creative Storage Solutions

Swoonworthy Learning Spaces

Grocery Shopping, Cooking & Laundry – Oh My!

Day 9: Carpe Diem: Homeschool Schedule by The Day, Month, & Year. {31 Day Boot Camp For New Homeschoolers on My Blog}

4 CommentsFiled Under: How To - - -, Schedule/Balance Home & School Tagged With: homeschool schedules, homeschoolorganization

The Sticking Power of a Solid Homeschool Schedule

June 6, 2014 | 7 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

The staying power of a homeschool schedule cannot be underestimated for the organized homeschooler. It takes time and self-discipline though to stick to a schedule.

POWER OF A HOMESCHOOL SCHEDULE

Too, I have a bit of trepidation in sharing about this topic. 

It has been my experience that homeschoolers obsess worry about this topic more so than some other homeschooling issues. 

Deep down they truly care how to fit everything in a day, maintain their sanity and identity, and strive to make the homeschool journey a memorable one for the right reasons. 

The staying power of a homeschool schedule cannot be underestimated for the organized homeschooler. It takes time and self-discipline though to stick to a schedule. Click here to grab these tried and true tips for planning a schedule!

Sometimes they feel isolated because they think other homeschoolers manage their schedules better.

Doing what I love to do and sharing with you just two points that help me to organize and what sometimes {not always} comes easier for me, I hope to give you a gentle sweet nudge in the right direction. 

You are not alone in your struggle to make it all fit in a day.

Homeschool Schedule Equals A Plan of Action

Visible Schedule.  Achieving success starts by creating a visible schedule.  I know, you may think that is stating the obvious, but I promise there is a fundamental, but powerful point here. 

Understanding that your schedule needs to be visible is the first step to a well-defined plan of action.

This is a very fine and let me emphasize that again—very fine point—that makes a huge difference between the organized homeschooler and the wanna be organized homeschooler.

Having good intentions by going through your schedule in your mind keeps it just that – a thought.

It is not a call to action or a plan. 

Staying in your mind is sort of like keeping it at brainstorming level or at a mulling over stage. 

Too, if you have a creative solution for a hiccup in your schedule, then you want to quickly commit that to a point of action.

When a schedule is committed to paper (or any other location in your house) it becomes a plan of action.  It has gone from abstract to concrete.  Does that make sense?

Paper method is just one way that a schedule is visible.  It is my preferred way, but it does not have to be your way.

Shocking Invisible Homeschool Schedules

Avoid schedule type mayhem. In addition, what type of schedule you create depends on which family members you want to make aware of it.

Don’t just jump out there in your enthusiasm to organize and create something that hems you in. 

Carefully scrutinize the needs and ages of your household.  It will change and your need for different schedules will change.

Homeschool Schedule

For example, when the kids were little and though I hadn’t moved away from stepping in sync with a public school schedule.

I still presented what worked for them at a very young age which was simply something hanging on the wall to talk about each day.

At that time though I still had my schedule down on paper though it was not necessary to share it with my young kids.

Also, having more than one place or location for your plan of action is a recipe for success. 

How? Because you have just doubled your efforts to help you accomplish each task day by day by sharing it with your children.

Many hands do make the work light or in this case, keep all on task.

Children have a natural bent toward routine.  If you want to be more organized, use that natural bent toward helping you to flow through a day with a better plan of action.

Homeschool Organization Means Communication

As your children grow older, they become self-starters and built in motivators when they don’t even know it. 

On more than one occasion when my sons were very young, they would prod me by asking if it was time to start our school or task.

Temporary Command Center

Then last year, I shared my Woo-Worthy Big Calendar by NeuYear that I had visible in my house for a while. 

Even though I had already started downsizing for our move, a temporary command center was a must.

The ages of my children have now changed dramatically, but the need of a visible place to communicate my plan of action has not.

Whether you put your schedule in a student planner, your homeschool planner, on a wall, on your refrigerator, or a central place in your home, it needs to be visible to accomplish your plan of action for that year.

A homeschool schedule is the backbone of homeschool success and a visible schedule has helped me over more than one homeschool hurdle through the years.

However, a common mistake in creating a homeschool schedule that has sticking power is to plan hour by hour, minute by minute and what seems second by second.

Next, I will share a few tips so that your plan of action keeps you organizing instead of agonizing.

How many places do you post your homeschool schedule?

The staying power of a homeschool schedule cannot be underestimated for the organized homeschooler. It takes time and self-discipline though to stick to a schedule. Click here to grab these tried and true tips for planning a schedule!

Want some more tips about scheduling?

  • How to Plan EVERYTHING in Your Homeschool Video
  • {Homeschool Organization Series} Where do you begin?
  • Must-Haves for the Organized Homeschooler. What to Keep & What to Skip
  • 6 Ways to Organize Your Homeschooled Teen
  • Homeschool Organization – Preschool/Kindergarten Free Morning Routine Flip Cards
  • 100 BEST Ideas to Organize Your Homeschool Area – Storage, Spaces, and Learning Places
  • 3 Ways to Instantly Gain More Time in Your Homeschool Day

Hugs and love ya,

Homeschool Organization The Sticking Power of a Homeschool Schedule

7 CommentsFiled Under: Organization, Schedule/Balance Home & School Tagged With: homeschool challenges, homeschool planning, homeschool schedules, homeschoolorganization, organization, organize, organizedhomeschool, planning, schedules, year round homeschool planning, yeararoundhomeschool

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