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Homeschool Space

Top 10 Tips for Maximizing Space in (Really) Tiny Homeschool Spaces

August 3, 2016 | 9 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have 10 awesome tips for maximizing space in really tiny homeschool spaces. Also, you’ll love How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1.

Improvising and finding inspiration when setting up a learning area in cramped quarters doesn’t mean you have to give up style too.

I have not always had such large homeschool spaces to have my boys learn in, but I’m always up for new and creative ideas to expand on what I have already used.

Does that resonate with you too?

Top 10 Tips for Maximizing Space in (Really) Tiny Homeschool Spaces @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Look at these top 10 tips for maximizing space in really tiny homeschool spaces.

Maximizing Storage

First, I love any idea which maximizes spaces and there are some creative ones here.

10 Tips for Maximizing Space in Tiny Homeschool Spaces

Creating more storage from smaller spaces is not easy to do. But I have gathered some great ideas for your homeschool area.

Photo Credit: www.hgtv.com

Short on Space? Turn a Closet Into a Homeschool Station

I love this area and whether you need a place to store your curriculum, or your teen needs a quiet place away from siblings, this is a great idea when limited on space.

Photo Credit: www.twotwentyone.net

2. Use for Laundry Bag

Store puzzle pieces, school supplies and even books in them.

Use a S hook and hang the bags on the wall. Looking at a row of clear mesh bags, it’s easy for you to take down what you need.

Your children can bring one or two bags down and put them away when not in use.

3. Height Adjustable Dining Table

Have you seen dining room tables, which lowers and raises?

When it’s lowered, it can be used for younger children or do double duty as a coffee table.

4. Crystal Clear Over The Door Hanging Shoe Organizer, Turquoise

An over-the-door organizer is one of the most versatile and inexpensive ways to add instant storage.

Sure, it can be a shoe organizer, but an over the door organizer can come with different size pockets.

Just be sure to label each pocket so that your children know what belongs in each one.

Photo Credit: www.lushome.com

5. Keep your books underfoot.

Books are always challenging to store in small spaces. Don’t forget floor spaces under furniture.

If you have the room to create a drawer, that is best.

Photo Credit: hiphomeschoolmoms.com

6. Homeschool Bookshelves on Small Wall Space

The small wall area between the bottom of a widow and the floor may seem like wasted space.

Create DIY shelves to fit the exact niche by using inexpensive repurposed wood or sturdier industrial looking pipes.

Photo Credit: lalymom.com

7. Use a baby gate as an alphabet wall or sight word wall.

Many years, I used several baby gates in my home. That too is valuable ‘wall space’ that is just waiting to be used.

I love this idea from Lalymom. Create an activity center for your preschooler by creating the wall with soft fabric.

Adding pockets for a preschooler to sort letters or numbers in makes this a great learning area.

Not only does it make for a pretty cover for your gate, it doubles as an activity center. When the baby is up, put away the small pieces, like letters or numbers that fit in the pockets.

Photo Credit: www.alwaysneverdone.com

8. Sofa Table Tutorial

Then I just couldn’t pass up sharing this next genius spacing saving hack.

Can you say, oh let me add some more books there? And the best part is that not only can you do this skinny minny table yourself, but it’s inexpensive.

I would, however, measure my books and use the one that has the largest depth to use as the width of the table.

Look at the tutorial over at Always Never Done.

9. Free up precious wall space. Use the middle of the floor.

When the boys were preteens, I bought a large oversized craft table and put it in the middle of the floor to free up valuable wall space.

Our wall space was also limited because one wall had all windows.

The added bookshelves under the table was a welcomed storage space.

Photo Credit: www.pinterest.com

10. Curtain rods are not just for curtains but for hanging storage.

Use magnetic curtain rods. And though you can put them on your walls, hang them on your refrigerator for extra storage.

In addition, you can add two or three stylish curtain rods at eye level on a wall. Add and use drapery clips to hold clear storage bags.

The storage uses for a humble curtain rod are endless. It can corral paper clutter, school supplies and even a book. The best thing is that when you hang clear bags, you can see what is inside.

Pin by Lanell Proffitt on Back to school | Teaching organization, Classroom fun, Teaching classroom

paintaninteriordoorwithchalkboardpaintforhomeofficehomeschoolroombathroomkidsroombedroom

toy-storage

(Credit: Two Twenty One)

For younger kids, use storage folding lap desks, which can be folded and tucked away behind a sofa or in the closet.

homeschooling in tiny homeschool areas


When my boys were younger and we were limited on homeschool space, they sat on the floor and set up lap desks on the floor for our science activities.

Homeschool Learning Spaces Without Limits

under bed storage

(Credit: Lushome)

bookshelve to fix an exact niche
homeschoolbookshelves-copy

(Credit: Hip Homeschool Moms)

curtain rod

Homeschool Hacks

DIY-Baby-Gate-Cover-Alphabet-Chart-from-Lalymom

(Credit: Lalymom)

sofa-table-Always-Never-Done-23-400x600

(Credit: Always Never Done)

More Tiny Homeschool Spaces Ideas

  • Day 11: Swoonworthy Learning Spaces & Homeschool Rooms And New Homeschooler Free Bootcamp
  • Dedicated Homeschool Room or Dining Room Homeschooler
  • 5 Ingredients Every Well-Organized Homeschool Space Needs
  • How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1
  • How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 2
  • Homeschool Organization + {Storage, Spaces and Learning Places Part 2}
  • 17 Creative Book Storage Ideas When You Homeschool

Taking a homeschool space from drab to fab is worth it especially when you’re homeschooling because of how much time we spend in an area.

What tiny space hacks are you going to try or have used?

Don’t forget to follow BOTH of my Pinterest accounts for more AWESOME pins.

Visit Tina Robertson’s profile on Pinterest.


Visit Tinas Dynamic Homeschool ‘s profile on Pinterest.

9 CommentsFiled Under: Home, Homeschool Space, Homeschool Tools, Storage, & Accessories Tagged With: home organization, homeschool challenges, homeschoolorganization, homeschoolrooms, new homeschooler homeschool room, organizedhomeschool

4 Clever Ways to Store Writing in Lapbooks

February 11, 2016 | 9 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

You know I’m not the crafty loving type of person, but I know that learning with lapbooks stick. Today, I’m sharing 4 clever ways to store writing in lapbooks. Not only are these good ideas for long term storage, but they are also out of the box ideas that nudge reluctant writers to put pen to paper.

First, look at these ideas that work for younger kids or even kids that are not so young, but hate writing.

4 Clever Ways to Store Writing in Lapbooks @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
List Making

Though there are three ideas on this one page above, I list them as one way to store writing because they are similar.

The lapbook above comes from one of our earlier frog lapbooks. One idea is the sandwich shaped book.

Any shape makes learning fun and lapbooks are perfect for creating shaped pages.

Not only is the shape of the sandwich book perfect for helping your child to remember what they are writing about, but the small size breaks down writing into bite (corny pun intended) size pieces.

Though I love shaped books for this age, list making is also another way to gently coax a writer to write.

And then, any book that folds up and fits into a pocket is just plain fun. The sheet in the pocket is a maze that one of my sons wanted to do and he colored the snake on the outside and we folded it up.

Look here at my post How to Turn Boring Worksheets into Fun Minibooks – From Boring to Interactive.

List Making Inside

The list making book and the sandwich book are attached by a brad. You can use one brad so that the book is flip up style or use two brads so the book opens from left to right or vice versa.

Really a number of these short books can be used for writers up until middle school.

2. Vocabulary Flip Book Open

The next way to store writing is through a vocabulary book with lift tabs.

This two page spread above is big enough for eight words.

Vocabulary Flip Book Inside

When the tab is lifted, the definition is underneath. I didn’t even create these books. It was a simple paper cut and fold.

The books are in our Plains Indian lapbook. Of course with these books, no brad or staples are needed, just paper and glue. They have held up nicely over the years.

Then the third way to store writing is shown below in our Westward Ho lapbook and unit study.

Word In a Barrel Sentence strips inside

I love this way we stored our writing, which is sentence strip style.

Some unit study topics or lapbooks are more suited than others for out of the ordinary shapes and our Westward Ho was one of them.

Inside view sentence strips

I made the Barrel of Words and the boys wrote on the sentence strips.The sentence strips are not intimidating looking when you want your child to love writing.

What I like about this third method of storing writing is that depending on my child’s age, I can have them write as many strips as I want them to. There is something about writing on separate strips that doesn’t make writing overwhelming. Of course, piece the strips together and your child can have one or two pages, but they don’t need to know that do they?

It is just another creative way for a child to not only love what he is learning about, but to feel that writing is manageable.

High School Writing Lapbook

This fourth way I stored writing now moves on to middle and high school level.

This short research paper comes from one of my sons in ninth grade and it is from our Amazon lapbook and unit study.

By this age, your teen really needs a normal size page to write on so you need to be a bit more creative.

High School Writing Lapbook Inside 1

First, I added another inside flap to the lapbook. Then again I used brads just because they are so versatile.

I added two brads at the bottom outside of the page protector and pushed it through the flap..

High School Writing Lapbook Inside 2

And then added two brads inside the page protector and pushed it through the flap.

By opening the page protector and only pushing the brad through the back side of the page protector, it stays open at the top so the research paper can be top loaded.

High School Writing Lapbook Inside

By also mounting the research paper on acid free paper and using good quality tape, it has kept the pages straight as they are pulled in and out of the page protectors.

Though tempted to use cheaper products, using higher quality products like acid free paper keeps precious things like writing looking awesome for a longer time.

There are more ways to store writing, but these 4 ways have been timeless for us and fit a variety of lapbooks.

How do you like to store your child’s writing?

You may also like to read these great tips:

  • 3 Ways to Choose the BEST Writing Curriculum (for a Growing Homeschool Family)
  • Cursive Matters; Handwriting Style Doesn’t + Free Resources
  • Plains Indians Free Writing Prompts. For Elementary, Middle and High School Homeschooled Kids

Hugs and love ya,

9 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Space, Lapbooks, Organization Tagged With: homeschoolorganization, lapbook, writing

5 Ingredients Every Well-Organized Homeschool Space Needs

April 25, 2015 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I’ll admit it. My knees go weak and my heart goes pitter patter when planning and organizing a home school space.

It is one subject that I get plain excited about anytime of the year.

5 Ingredients Every Well-Organized Homeschool Space Needs  @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Whether you have a homeschool room or not there are just some things that I have found through the years that make my overall day run smooth when I have things that I need.

Look at my list of 5 ingredients every well-organized homeschool space needs.

Writing Surface that is Age Appropriate.

I tried it and I tried it again but the kitchen table just did not work for me in my early years of homeschooling.

Even when I lived in the 800 square foot cabin for the 5 of us and we had no school room, I still fought for a space for the height appropriate table for writing.

The kitchen table and bar area was fine for projects, art and hands-on but it is hard to have good posture and put both feet flat on the floor when my son couldn’t reach the floor.

It is one reason that I believe that my

Bookshelves.

Need I say more. Okay, maybe a bit more because there was one thing I would have done differently.

Instead of getting caught up in those cutesy little bookshelves, I wished I would have just bought regular size bookshelves because you get more use out of them.

Cutesy Bookshelves for early homeschool room @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusPreschool and Kindergarten are only a very few short years of schooling compared to elementary, middle and high school.

I could have easily used the bottom shelves where my sons could reach when they were Preschool and Kindergarten ages.

I did waste a couple of years with cute shelves but it would have been more practical with regular sized bookshelves.

Out of the Box Storage Supplies.

Buying zipper pouches to use for flashcards, buckets found in the kids gardening section of Target to hold pencils and small plant pots without the plant in the outside gardening section all made for inexpensive and beautiful storage that looks good in any part of the house.

I preferred clear storage containers that could be moved to any part of the house that held atlases, maps or references.

Pencils That Never Require Sharpening

Another must-have in my organized home school space is a mechanical pencil.

Your kids will not waste time sharpening pencils and the best thing about it is that your not so neat writers become neat because the pencil always has a nice point.

We use only the .9mm lead because it didn’t break so easily and it is sturdy. These are the ones I use by Pentel.

 


Organized Homeschool Teachers Rock.

Too, don’t focus so much on the needs of your children that you forget to organize material in a way that is good for you.
Don’t be afraid to rip the binding off any book and coil bind if needed. Coil bound books lay flat and I am able to highlight and write in my teacher books.

It doesn’t hurt to add a few pretty but well need supplies like paper clips, high lighters and pens.

Too, I love notebooks not only for my boys but to organize my material.

More and more resources are going digital and I love the fact that I can print exactly what I want to put in my teaching binders.

There are more things that I love to add to my homeschool space but these things are the basic ingredients to start with.

How about you? What is on your basic list of must-haves for your homeschool space?

Hugs and love ya,

2015 Tina Signature co

Check out these other posts:
How To Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1
How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 2

2 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Space Tagged With: homeschoolstorage. homeschoolroom

Dedicated Homeschool Room or Dining Room Homeschooler

January 23, 2015 | 16 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Pining for more books and bookshelves is something that most all homeschoolers agree that we can never get enough of.

Collecting materials, books, supplies and every possible learning tool that we can imagine is a never tiring hobby pursuit too.

Dedicated Homeschool Room or Dining Room Homeschooler @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

However, when it comes to either having a dedicated homeschool room or dining room homeschooler that is where the similarities end.

Homeschooling not only for 15+ years but also in helping new homeschoolers and yes I even made house visits to set up a few homeschool rooms, I want you to know there are so many things that weigh in on the decision to either have a dedicated homeschool room or be a dining room homeschooler.  It is not as easy as it seems.

As I school longer, I have come to value the fact that we have very little control over most of the factors.

This point has become more sharply focused for me now and I appreciate it way more than I did 5 or 10 years into my homeschooling.

cabin homeschooling

For example, we may just not have the space for a dedicated room and become dining room homeschoolers not by choice.

This was the way I started off with Mr. Senior 2013.  A 800 square foot cabin for 5 people just did not allow room for a dedicated learning area.

Too, I have heard many positive and negative points made for doing school at the dining room table or setting up a homeschool room.

I have even heard that learning can’t be contained in any one room no more than living can be. That learning in a dedicated homeschool room separates living from learning.  You can disagree with me right away on this too, but that simply is not true.

Let me expand on that thought too and here is my stipulation, which is if you only school in that area for your whole journey from preschool to high school, it could seem more public school-ish than homeschool.

On the other hand, I have never meant a homeschooler who spent their entire journey, preschool to high school in one room, including my family. Have you?

So this is not another blog post about whether you should or shouldn’t have a homeschool room, but it is about sharing how when you and your children’s needs change, so should your area.

Whether you are a dining room homeschooler by choice or not, or you have a dedicated homeschool room, the points today will help you to decide if you need or just want a dedicated homeschool room.
Too, I will share some tips about how to maximize the room in your house if you are a dining room homeschooler.

You Can’t Afford to Ignore This

Looking back on my journey if you were to ask me when my sons were 5 years of age and 2 years of age and a newborn, I would say that a homeschool room was an absolute must.

Fast forward to high school years where my sons spent more of their day away from me and in their room, I would say it’s not a necessity. Again, your current needs should be considered.

Look at my list of things you really can’t ignore when deciding how to set up a school room or if you should make a switch.

  • Space. There is no getting around it. If you don’t have the room, you just don’t have the room. There is not really a choice of where you homeschool.

I have schooled about half of my  journey around the dining room by choice and some years when we lived in the cabin not by choice.

  • Ages. Ages of your children really matter and affects your view at the time.

This is where, if you do have a choice, that it makes a difference having a space when training very young children to a routine.

When Mr. Senior 2013 was 3 years old and I was teaching him handwriting, he would just set at the bar because we did not have a dedicated room.

Right away I could see that it was hard for me to tell him to have good posture for an emerging writer if his feet couldn’t touch the floor.

At this age though too, his attention span was real short and he would be out of the chair as we danced our way through the ABCs each day.

The rest of the day would be spent cuddled up on the couch with a warm blanket as I read aloud to him, my middle son and my newborn.  The need for a dedicated area was not really a need during those years.

homeschool room 2 homeschool room

After we built a new house and had a dedicated school room, Mr. Senior 2013 was now 5 years old and having a place for him to write that was ergonomically correct was absolute key to his beautiful penmanship later.

Along that time, came Mr. Awesome right behind him and at 3 years old, having a dedicated school area was a sanity saving tip for me as I corralled the mounting educational clutter.

When teaching study habits and especially for wiggly boys, they knew I expected different behavior in that dedicated room.  It was not the time to get down on the floor and wrestle.

homeschool room younger years-1Though I did tend to run my day more public school-ish because I was still learning back then, the dedicated area helped me to train my sons for good future study habits.
Back then, looking at the dynamics of a family, which had kids of different ages than mine was an eye opener for me.

Helping moms who started their homeschool journey when their children were middle or high school, the dining room table was a welcome sight and a relaxed way to foster family togetherness as they gathered around the family table.

It was a relief from the rigid schedule of public school confined to one room.

  • Listen to your inner teacher/mom needs. I don’t mind you knowing it and that is part of my personality is that I simply can’t overlook clutter and start off my school day by stepping over it.

Some days I wish I were different.  As hard I try through the years to be more easy going about it, the truth of it is that I am so utterly distracted by the sight of clutter, it’s crippling.

I envy the moms who can look past the clutter to start school because I could probably learn something from them.

Don’t get me wrong, it was a joke when I was pregnant with my number three son because it didn’t matter if we had clutter, I couldn’t really do anything about it.
When I got to the point in my journey when I could do things the way I wanted to, I embraced that part of my personality because I could come to my children “whole”  for the day.

An organized school room was a breath of fresh air every morning for me.

A dedicated homeschool room, when they kids were very little, was more than a relief, it was an unexpected blessing.

As moms sometimes we are so busy filling the needs of our children, we don’t stop to think what do we need to keep homeschooling each day too.

What rocks our homeschool world as we start the day?  For me, I could not push down my need to have things organized and not have clutter strewn all over the house.  I simply would not be a good teacher to my kids.

As the boys grew and hit middle school and high school years, I had help around the house now.  We moved away from a dedicated homeschool room to the dining room table. Coming to the table with my morning cup of coffee to meet them after they gather their school books for the morning is sheer delight.

I realized too that I didn’t have to give up my need for organization either.

By using furniture we had in our dining room for school books and supplies, it still gave my sons a place to put away their books for the days.

Fast forward this many years and I have changed some too because I don’t mind science and history projects around the house because it is evidence that we live and learn in the same places.

Repurpose and Reuse

Look at this list of ways I organized our school things when either by choice or not by choice, we learned at the dining room table.

  • small pretty and clean trash cans turn to map fold up storage
  • plant pots turn to teacher utensil holder and writing utensils holder
  • wooden or plastic crates turn to stacked and inexpensive bookshelves
  • empty gallon paint cans can be painted pretty turquoise and orange (couldn’t resist you know I love that color) and hung on the wall for shelves
  • cedar trunks in the boys bedroom become a place to hold our tons of books
  • empty picture frames hung on the wall in the guest bathroom became a place where I hung and switched out weekly
  • metal baking sheets in the kitchen become a place for magnet play during the day and used for baking at night
  • the small space between the refrigerator and the wall become a place to put away and store my diy trifold cardboard word “wall “ when teaching them to read for the day
  • china cabinet turned book and craft supply storage
  • the standard for buying sofas in my house changed to something that was high enough off the floor so that I could store rolling storage with school supplies in it
  • scaling back my love for shoes, I used my over the door shoe hanging bag for school games and manipulatives
  • my newborn’s armoire got a shoe bag added to the side of it so it would be height appropriate for my then 3 and 5 years old boys to reach to grab books to “read”

teacher area{one area in my dining room}

Embracing both you and your children’s needs at the time is the deciding factor for how each learning area worked for us.
If you are mom with a young household, I encourage you to spend part of your day in a room that engenders routine.

As we schooled longer, we did end up doing science and history in the living room.
Embracing both routine and relaxation in our day was key to keeping balanced.  My boys looked forward to entering our lively learning room in the morning each day and did so without me prompting them each day.

Homeschooling well trained middle school and high school students is a time I savor too.

Organized Homeschool Room in a Dining Room{I didn’t give up my need for organization when we moved from a dedicated homeschool room to the dining room. I used part furniture intended for dining room use like the hutch and then part storage containers like shorter bookshelves and drawers so my sons could put away their supplies each day.}

Our day starts off with us together at the dining room table now and the rest of it is spent by the boys being in their room or in another part of the house on computers.
Now, I couldn’t imagine all of us entering a homeschool room each day.  In the past, I couldn’t imagine not having a dedicated homeschool room when I needed it too.

Has your journey changed through the years too?  If you are a dining room homeschooler, do you have any great tips to share for clever storage?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina 2015 Signature

Check out these other posts.

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 1

How to Turn a House Into a Homeschool Space Part 2

Linking up @ these awesome places:

16 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Space

5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 5 Things the Teacher Luvs

July 26, 2014 | 5 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Homeschooling is not all about the kids.  Okay, well maybe it is.  Today though it’s all about you and in 5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for your Homeschool Spaces, Day 5. Things the Teacher Luvs,  I rounded up some things to keep the teacher happy.

Whether it’s eye candy, a cute printable or how to make a diy magazine holder (swoon), I have to be excited about the new school year too.  Besides creating my 7 Step Homeschool Planner, I try to create a teacher space that I want to be at each day too.

Sometimes it’s a small thing like a new pen or a new chair.  One year, I got tired of looking at my lamp shade and knowing that a little coral color loving doesn’t hurt anything, I painted my lampshade.  Adding a little chic to your homeschool spaces will keep you excited about the new school year too.

Look at some of these things I rounded up. So swoonworthy! Just click the image to find out how to DIY each project.

15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Easy Labeling & Storage Containers
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Art Print Quotes to Display on your Walls
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Paper Storage & Folder System
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
DIY Chalkboard Window Calendar
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
DIY Ombre Pen Pots
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Easy DIY Message Center to Keep it All Organized
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Easy DIY Zipper Pouch
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Comb Binding Machine Luv
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
DIY Decorated Magazine Holders
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
DIY Geometric Drawers
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
School Paperwork Storage
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
DIY Fabric Covered Storage Boxes
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
DIY Floating Book Shelves
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
DIY Teacher Clipboard with Washi Tape Luv
15 DIY Hacks | Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
DIY Personalizd Pencil Cases

Do you have any favorite things you luv as the teacher?

Hugs and love ya,

2012Tinasignature 5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 4 Just Plain Clever Storage

Did you miss any days in this series?

5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 1 Small Spaces

5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 2 Repurpose and Reimagine

5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 3 Eazy Peazy Learning Tools

5 Days of Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces Day 4 Just Plain Clever Storage

Look at some of these other creative ideas!

Creative Storage Solutions for Homeschool

Streamlined Record Keeping

Baskets, Bins and Buckets For Homeschool Storage

 

 

5 CommentsFiled Under: Clever DIY Hacks for Your Homeschool Spaces, Homeschool Space, Homeschool Tools, Storage, & Accessories Tagged With: diy, homeschoolrooms

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