• Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Activity, Change, Progress

  • HOME
  • How to
    • Preschool
    • Kindergarten
    • Middle School
    • High School
  • Planner
  • Lapbooks
    • Trioramas
    • History Games
  • Shop
  • GET STARTED NOW!
    • Learning Styles
  • 7 Step Planner
    • DIY Best Student Planner
    • Free & Easy DIY Home Management Binder
  • Unit Studies
    • Creation to Ancients
    • Middle Ages to Reform
    • Exploring to Revolution
    • World Wars to Today
    • Science
    • Free Art Curriculum Grades 1 – 8
  • Curriculum
    • More Unit Studies
    • Geography
    • Writing PreK to 12th
    • Geronimo Stilton
  • BootCamp
    • Resources
      • Dynamic Subscriber Freebies
      • Exclusive Subscribers Library
      • Ultimate Unit Study Planner

curriculum

When My Homeschool Curriculum has Lost that Lovin’ Feeling – Grab 3 Teaching Tips!

February 15, 2015 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

For sure you do not want me to start singing for you and after I share when my homeschool curriculum has lost that lovin’ feeling with you today I will probably be singing You’ve Lost that Lovin’ Feeling.  It is one of those catchy songs for me.  That song reminds of the lovin’ feeling we have when we first purchase homeschool curriculum that we think is going to love us back.

When My Homeschool Curriculum has Lost that Lovin’ Feeling

You know the curriculum I am talking about.  The pictures are perfect, your husband thinks the price is a real steal and it seems to be laid out where you think it can be finished in a school year.

Let’s not forget the smell of those tantalizing pages as we flip through them imagining that our children are going to eagerly sit down, embrace and complete them.

Then, it happens.  Compliments of curriculum turn to criticism.

Tantalizing pages turn to torture and feelings of being trapped by curriculum brings more stress. Everybody is bored and has the doldrums.

It just makes me tired thinking about it.  Feeling overwhelmed is normal and happens to all of us.

Teaching Tips to Breath Life Back Into Your Homeschool Curriculum

How can we breathe life back into our day?  Here are some tips.

Subjects are not really boring, only the presentation of material or maybe the teacher (ouch).

Many parents I help try to find out what is wrong with the child but never reflect on the type of teacher they want to be.

It has been said that an excellent teacher can use any resource and breathe life into it.  Are we the kind of teacher that others want to learn from?

We don’t always have the luxury of ditching our textbooks or expensive curriculum but we can cut back assignments or embellish them.
Do you know what an embellishment does?  It makes something more attractive by adding a detail.

This doesn’t make teaching harder because a detail is not reworking the whole process but adding an enhancement.

For example, leave out the worksheets and add in one hands-on activity.
Better yet, do the hands on activity with not 10 families (too much energy when you are drained) but with just 1 family.

Let another mom teach and you listen one week and then trade places.

Let the children teach one day or two, or…..

I LOVE doing this with my boys because my days are so exciting. Seriously though I know my boys do get tired of me talking.

So let your children run school for a day teaching their younger siblings. Even the youngest child can lead the Bible reading assignment and act like “mom”.

I learned a lot about myself as I saw it reflected in their teaching. Of course it adds excitement to the day if you could act like you don’t get anything they are trying to teach you.

When the boys were much younger, this teaching tactic worked because it made them explain back to me what they were learning. It was a lot of fun because I made sure I was always the hard kid to teach and the kids got a great laugh too.

Be selectively creative and try to prevent fatigue and exhaustion.

Many things are thrown at us in the homeschool world and we may think that we can’t have boring days.

Understanding that mundane things in curriculum cultivates determination and endurance helps us to be selectively creative.

Do we really need to do a lapbook or unit study on every topic? Does every science topic have to have an experiment?  There is nothing wrong with reading material and moving on.

We live in a world that sows the seeds of discontentment.
Being bored or not bored is more about attitude than curriculum.

Lack of imagination and initiative using any curricula can be more at the root of the problem.

We were created to want a challenge and our minds hunger for it.

Challenges, imagination, and a change of pace generates more energy for the doldrums. When your curriculum has lost that loving feeling remember variety can be the spice of life.

Do you have a favorite thing you do when your curriculum has lost that lovin’ feeling?

Hugs and love ya,
Tina 2015 Signature

“But the little dear doesn’t want to homeschool”
When does homeschooling become “normal“?
3 Easy Fixes to Recharge Your Homeschool Routine

P.S. I couldn’t resist sharing, now you’re humming the same catchy tune. Plus, I just love this song!

 

4 CommentsFiled Under: Choose Curriculum Tagged With: curriculum

Where to Begin When Putting Together My Own Homeschool Curriculum?

January 20, 2015 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Your questions are awesome.  Where to begin when putting together my own homeschool curriculum is another dynamic reader question I have to share with you because sometimes the core curriculum is not real clear.

Look at Nicolle’s question:

I am a single mom of an incredible 6 (going on 7) year old boy.  A hands on entrepreneur with overhead still working on the business and so I am a working mom and my son comes to work with me.  though it may be difficult I work towards doing things I believe in in my heart, after long consideration.  I am very creative; however we are just making more friends and have no family where we are (my sons daddy is here p/t).  With that said and with found support in other (stay at home) home-school moms I took the leap and am just beginning to home-school my son.  I am overwhelmed though still with how to create an initial solid foundation to build a ‘core curriculum’ for him and us.  I’ve been told my style is more eclectic, unit studies, with a twist of Charlotte mason living language.  I was referred to take your course which I will.  I’ve worked on new work etc scheduling…but despite being told it’s easier to buy a curriculum (a bit expensive for me and all I want is the written curriculum and not all the books as I can attain them in a different way and which to choose?!)  I’d like to start working on my own…Where do I begin knowing the curriculum I put together (as you said in your video) will not ‘leave my child’ behind so to say??? 

Singleness can have a huge advantage when you are on the curriculum hunt.  You have time to research curriculum because you don’t have a husband’s demands to meet.  Singleness does have its freedom.

Too, using the creative and entrepreneur part of your personality are strengths and can save you money in long run.

Entrepreneurs rock and are willing to take chances and risks that others are not willing to take. This is where you can think of hands-on ideas on the spur of the moment and where you will seize teachable moments.

The side of your personality that probably needs support is with the details and maybe curbing the desire to “jump” to something different when you need to stay on course.
This is where part laid-out curriculum comes in. You are on the right track.  Just remember though that laid-out does not always mean expensive.

You can use laid-out curriculum without buying a whole boxed curriculum. Just buy each part that you need.

When looking at costs, there are a couple of ways at looking at this.
One way is that when you buy something laid-out, you don’t have the guesswork of whether you are covering the basics or not.

Another way of looking at it that I have seen is that many, many, many homeschoolers think they are saving money only to spend or waste thousands of hours trying out new curriculum in their hunt to find a perfect fit.

What price are you putting on your time to hunt for the “perfect” resource?
Understand that anything you purchase will not be perfect ever.

However, getting something that will help you to stay on task, will allow freedom for you to add your creativity and tweaking or deleting activities that make no sense to you is a great start.

I do believe you can find a balance too. One more advantage you have is that your son is very young.  Just starting out you don’t need very much at this age.

The core curriculum are basically your 3 R’s, which are reading, writing and arithmetic.

The 3 R’s vary slightly at each age, but here is the very short list of essentials for his age:

Phonics

Handwriting

Math

Reading

If you spend your hard earned dollars on these things first, then you are covering the essentials.

These are the subjects he needs to do everyday. They don’t have to be done necessarily by a worksheet either.  Again, you can add your flair to these subjects.  At this age, he needs more hands-on as well.

For example, a day of teaching might go like this: phonics may be about creating an art collage of the sounds he is working on, handwriting practice might consist of playing with slime dough after he writes a sentence or two, math could be a read aloud from a living book about math or doing a candy graph and reading could be him listening on line to a read aloud.

Using the laid out guides, you will know what he needs to learn each day and can enhance it with more hands-on learning.

With your tendency toward creativity you can add in science and history from library books and free resources.

Too, you will want to spend money on items for arts and crafts because at this age it is not just play, but it is about learning.

Used curriculum is not always cheaper. It’s worth looking at all your options.

You do not have to buy a boxed curriculum, but you can buy each of these pieces separate and still make a good fit for your son because they are still laid out.

Choose a Homeschool Phonics Program

Look at some of the choices for phonic programs that I like:

Alpha Omega has Horizons, A Beka has a solid phonics program, All About Spelling which is a reading program too, Explode the Code and Sing, Spell, Read and Write.

Choose a Homeschool Handwriting Program

A Reason for Writing and I like workbooks by Zaner-Bloser.

Too, add in plenty of copywork and dictation starting off with like one sentence to copy and expand to longer ones.

You don’t need to teach formal composition until later grades, which could be another long topic here on my blog.

For now, at this age you are teaching the mechanics of how to write.

Most children don’t have control over their fine motor skills until about halfway through first grade. That is when I started teaching cursive to each of my sons.

Choose a Homeschool Math Program

Math is a fun subject too. There are a lot of wonderful programs to choose from as well.

Besides something rigorous which is a given, I prefer bright colored pages for this age too.

Horizon Math is advanced, Singapore is right there too and so is Math U See.
Each one has a different approach.

Choose a Homeschool Reading Program

If he is not reading yet, then you want some phonics readers that enhance your phonics lessons. I used Pathway readers because they were rigorous and inexpensive.

Too, when I taught my oldest son to read, I went to the local teacher supply store and bought an inexpensive set of phonics readers. It focused on one sound in each book and then I added in way more free stuff I found on line and hands-on art to focus on that sound for three or four days and then added in another book.

If he is reading, then you want to look for living books, which means they are not textbooks. You can also save a lot of money by making regular trips to the library to get books on his reading level.

Keep in mind if you use a program like Sing, Spell, Read and Write or All About Spelling which is called All About Reading, readers will be included.

I also loved Christian Light Readers too. They are inexpensive and beautifully written.  It does not hurt to have phonics readers and easy books for beginning readers a plenty.

Though I see this long scrolling list of subjects that new homeschoolers have for their children, the core curriculum or basics are the bones or framework of an excellent education.

Stay the course by doing them each day in every grade, adding in spice along the way by varying your teaching methods and curriculum and you will have a great beginning.

You might also want to look at these posts:

8 Components of a Boxed Curriculum
How to Use a Boxed Curriculum without Giving Up Your Homeschool Approach
How To Choose Curriculum Other Than the Looks Good Method
Stop Switching Your Curriculum, Switch Your Course of Study 

Hugs and love ya,

Signature T

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.

4 CommentsFiled Under: Choose Curriculum, Dynamic Reader Question Tagged With: boxedcurriculum, curriculum, homeschool, homeschoolcurriculum, new homeschooler homeschool curriculum

Do You Want Me to Look Over Your Homeschool Curriculum Choices?

January 16, 2015 | 9 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I am always trying to think of ways that can help you to keep on homeschooling.  We are all different and have different needs from blogs.

I want you to know that I truly care about you sticking around here and especially about you not just surviving homeschool, but really making the journey one that is a treasured memory while not giving up high academic standards.

So this blog post is really short, but one I hope you find helpful or at least encouraging.  Many times throughout the years, I would have just liked another set of eyes looking over my curriculum choices for my kids.

You know, sometimes you just want another set of eyes to see if you are covering the essentials in homeschooling or sometimes you want to take a different path and want somebody else to take a look at your curriculum choices.

I’m asking:

Do you want me to look over your homeschool curriculum choices?

I can say that I will try my best to look over them all and maybe use some of your choices here on my blog to share with others.

I have just a request or two.  Help me out in case I get overwhelmed because I would like to try to answer each email personally.

List these important things so I have a pretty good picture of your homeschooling situation.

  • Ages of children that you’re homeschooling and the curriculum that each child is using. Be specific about listing the curriculum of each child.
  • Ages of children that you are not formally homeschooling, but are taking care of this year.
  • If you’re working outside the house?
  • How long you have been homeschooling? And finally,
  • What your overall goals are or why you chose that particular curriculum?

Fill in the contact form on my blog form. One tip for forming your email is to type your email in a word document so you can see it, and then copy/paste it into the box on the contact form.

Yikes!!! I may be crazy for doing this, but this is one thing I wished I had in the beginning of my homeschool journey or just when I was struggling as the boys entered another phase or grade.

Hugs and love ya,

Tina 2015 Signature

Finding Curriculum for Unique Learners

What If I Choose the Wrong Homeschool Curriculum

How to Use a Boxed Curriculum without Giving Up Your Homeschool Approach

 

9 CommentsFiled Under: Choose Curriculum Tagged With: curriculum

Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazines

December 4, 2014 | 18 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I thought I would share what we are using which is free middle school science curriculum and magazines. Also, look at my page homeschool middle school for more fun tips

First, the earth science book is one that Tiny just started reading.

Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazines

One of the reasons we loved these books were because of the hands-on activities spread throughout.

Free Middle School Science Curriculum

Next, purchase a few fun science supplies from Home Science Tools and boom – you’ have fun hands-on science for the year.

Also, The Life Science book is a 448 page download. So give it some time to download. It’s geared toward 7th grade-ish. But you know how I feel about grades – they’re subjective.

Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazine

Update: Free books can come and go quicker than at times we can keep up with them. There does not appear a link anywhere right now for this book. However, I have still have plenty of free help for you.

First, look at these life science topics that are in the CPO Life Science book and I have listed some comparable free links below.

Free Life Science Book

Living Systems Unit I

  • Chapter 1 Studying Life
  • Chapter 2 Living Things
  • Chapter 3 Interaction of Living Things

Genetics Unit III

  • Chapter 8 Reproduction
  • Chapter 9 Hereditary
  • Chapter 10 Code of Life

Structure and Function of Living Things Unit V

  • Chapter 13 Diversity of Life
  • Chapter 14 Plants
  • Chapter 15 Animals

Biology Unit II

  • Chapter 4 Chemistry and Physics Connection
  • Chapter 5 Cell Structure and Function
  • Chapter 6 Cell Processes
  • Chapter 7 The Microscopic World

Evolution and Change Unit IV

  • Chapter 11 Evolution
  • Chapter 12 Earth and Life History

The Human Body Unit VI

  • Chapter 16 Human Body Systems
  • Chapter 17 Support and Movement
  • Chapter 18 Vision and Hearing

Next, look at these links which are free other textbooks.

  • Here is a super helpful Life Science online/digital textbook.
  • Then here is another 7th Grade Life Science Textbook by Prentice Hall to download chapter by chapter.

Besides, I love the fact that these books give ideas for hands-on activities, have vocabulary words in the margin and have challenges throughout the book. A nice bonus for a freebie.

The Earth Science book is a 391 page download, so it give some time to download also. It’s geared toward 6th grade-ish. But you know how I feel about grades – they’re subjective.

Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazine

Free Earth Science Book

Updated. This book appears no longer free.

However, look at the topics that are in the CPO Focus on Earth Science and I have listed some comparable free textbooks below.

The Scientific Process Unit I

  • Chapter 1 Science is Everywhere
  • Chapter 2 The Science Toolbox
  • Chapter 3 Introducing Earth

Plate Tectonics and Earth Structure Unit III

  • Chapter 8 Plate Tectonics
  • Chapter 9 Earthquakes
  • Chapter 10 Volcanoes

Ecology V

  • Chapter 14 Resources
  • Chapter 15 Ecosystem
  • Chapter 16 Biomes

Energy in Earth’s Systems Unit II

  • Chapter 4 Heat
  • Chapter 5 Density and Buoyancy
  • Chapter 6 Earth’s Surface and Heat
  • Chapter 7 Heat Inside Earth

The Shape of Earth’s Surface IV

  • Chapter 11 Water and Weathering
  • Chapter 12 Beaches
  • Chapter 13 Natural Hazards

Next, look at these links which are free other textbooks.

  • Nice! The Earth Science online/digital textbook.
  • Free Earth Science Textbook by Chapter
  • Another Free Earth Science textbook.

More Homeschooling in Middle School Resources

  • Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazines
  • 11 Best Science Fiction Books For Middle Schoolers
  • How to Choose the BEST Homeschool Middle and High School Language Arts Curriculum & Options
  • 10 Best Science Movies for Middle School
  • The Best Eighth Grade Homeschool Curriculum | Tips and Recommendations
  • How to Successfully Homeschool Middle School
  • A to Z List: Middle and High School Homeschool Electives
  • Fun Winter Craft Ideas for Middle School Homeschool
  • Beginning Homeschooling in Middle School – 3 Questions Worth Asking
  • Which One is Really the Best Homeschool Writing Curriculum (a comparison)

The last science book is an 8th grade Physical Science book. It is 468 pages long.

Update: Free books can come and go quicker than at times we can keep up with them. There does not appear a link anywhere right now for this book. However, I have still have plenty of free help for you.

Look at the topics that are in the CPO Physical Science book and I have listed some comparable free textbooks below.

The Physical Sciences Unit I

  • Chapter 1 What Physics and Chemistry Are About
  • Chapter 2 Science and Measurement

Laws of Motion and Energy III

  • Chapter 5 Newton’s Laws of Motion
  • Chapter 6 Energy and Machines
  • Chapter 7 Gravity and Space

Matter V

  • Chapter 11 Temperatures, Heat and the Phases of Matter
  • Chapter 12 The Physical Properties of Matter

Changes in Matter VII

  • Chapter 16 Acids, Bases, and Solutions
  • Chapter 17 Chemical Reaction
  • Chapter 18 The Chemistry of Living Systems

Motion and Force Unit II

  • Chapter 3 Motion
  • Chapter 4 Forces

Electricity, Sound, and Light IV

  • Chapter 8 Electricity and Magnetism
  • Chapter 9 Waves and Sounds
  • Chapter 10 Light and Color

Atoms, Elements, and Compound VI

  • Chapter 13 Atoms
  • Chapter 14 Elements and the Periodic Table
  • Chapter 15 Molecules and Compounds

Free Physical Science Book

Next, look at these links which are free other textbooks.

  • 8th Grade Physical Science Textbook
  • Nice! The Physical Science online/digital textbook.

Next, we have been loving these free science magazines for middle school kids.

Picture1Picture3
Picture2Picture4

They are from National Inquirer, a middle school science education journal. 

There are several free issues to download and read.

When you click on each issue, it tells you what the theme will be and some of them have additional lesson plans to download.

Each free issue is chock full of pictures, ideas and questions to stimulate the science mind.

Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazines

Lastly, we have been using them as part of our reading time too. If you just need a break or want to try something different, you can’t go wrong with free curriculum.

Also, check out these other resources for middle school:

  • 10 More Spring Study Free Resources for Middle and High School Kids
  • Mega List Free Resources for Human Body Homeschool Unit Study. Crafts, Lesson Plans, Teachers Guides for Elementary, Middle and High School
  • Middle School Homeschool Science 50 Free Spring Activities
  • How to Choose the Best Middle School Literature And Favorite Resources
  • How to Build Middle School Curriculum Directly From Amazon
  • Texas Native American History Quick Unit Study (Middle School)
Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazine
Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazine. Scoot by and download these AWESOME free resources for your middleschool kids!

18 CommentsFiled Under: Free Homeschool Resources, Middle School Homeschool, Science Tagged With: curriculum, earthscience, homeschool, homeschoolscience, middleschool, sciencecurriculum

What If I Choose the Wrong Homeschool Curriculum

October 13, 2014 | 9 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

What if I choose the wrong homeschool curriculum is at the top of the list of worries for new and seasoned homeschoolers alike.

However, I think on the flip side of worry is getting a shipment of new homeschool curriculum. It can be one of the most pleasurable moments in homeschooling. Don’t you just love the smell of new books? It just feels like you have it all together now.

But then, worry sets in. Will this be the right curriculum for my child? Will this year meet my expectations? We spend hours reading every catalog and website that we can as we pore over curriculum choices.

Many times we still are not sure if we have the best curriculum. Then we read those emails or posts on groups where one mom used something that is working so “perfectly” for her and her children.

And then we wonder what’s wrong with us. Doubt sets in about the choices we made at the beginning of the year and we have a gnawing pain at the bottom of our stomach.

If you are teetering about making a huge change, there are a few things that I have learned about choosing the wrong curriculum. Look at these 5 tips below that I hope will help you.What If I Choose the Wrong Homeschool Curriculum

(Incidentally, I love ALL the curriculum in this picture above and highly recommend it.  It worked beautifully for me in the years that I needed it.  But, what works one year for me, may not work for you. That is the key to determining if it’s the wrong choice for you.)

1.  There is no PERFECT curriculum.  Some years it is just about trial and error. There will be times when you pick something that is not what you need for that year or does not meet your goals. You will make some mistakes. That is okay because at anytime during the year you can switch.

Before you switch though, be sure it is the curriculum that is not working and not issues of scheduling, discipline or being overwhelmed. We might mistakenly think that the curriculum is the culprit of our day when in fact it could be other issues in our homeschooling. So give new curriculum a fair shake so to speak.

The opposite of that thinking is sticking with a curriculum no matter what. I have tried to stick to a curriculum because I begged my husband that I just had to have it, so I felt guilty in not using it.  What I have learned is that this can have detrimental effects on my kids.

It is not a waste when you switch because this is a lesson well learned in how your child learns best.

I am not encouraging you to not be frugal and make the decisions you and your husband make work, but balance that thinking with the hundreds and hundreds of dollars you would have spent in public school on school supplies not used, countless clothes purchased and otherwise frivolous things like a school fund raiser.

Too, if you keep your curriculum neat and clean you can resale it and recoup some of your husband’s hard earned dollars.

2. Don’t forget to read homeschool curriculum reviews.   iHN, which I am a proud member of reviews homeschool curriculum.  So be sure to check out the reviews because in reviewing curriculum, I try to give an objective summary of each one.

This means that I try to recommend which group of homeschoolers that a particular curriculum will work for and what you may need to consider if you end up using it.

Look here at the homeschool curriculum I have reviewed so far.

It is important to read homeschool reviews that are informative instead of biased.  Why? Because what may not work for you this year may be the “perfect” curriculum for another year or different circumstance.

More importantly, try to determine why or why not a certain curriculum worked for a family and see if you have similar circumstances.

3.  Take advantage of talking 1:1 vendors at curriculum fairs or either on the phone.  They spend thousands of hours tweaking their curriculum to meet our needs and most vendors want you to understand how best to use their curriculum.

Too, companies like Rainbow Resource, which has been around for a long time have staff that is well educated in the differences between curriculum. Use these free resources by asking them questions when you can’t find the answer in your own research.

Just the catalog alone from Rainbow Resource is an education in the differences between curriculum with their mini-reviews or write ups about various curriculum.

4.  Children are pretty hardy. Homeschooling in fear is not a good place to be at.  So don’t fall prey to the idea that we will have huge gaps in learning.

The truth of it is, everybody has gaps in their learning unless we all learned at the same school at the same time with the same teacher and we still would come away with differences in our education.  Our educational background and differences are what makes each of us unique.  Embrace it.

If you use a curriculum and feel you are somewhat behind in what your goals are, just remember children have a great reserve to pick up at a new point in learning and move forward.

I have done this more than I can remember. I made a bad choice with Mr. Senior 2013 in math beginning his middle school years and he got behind.  By high school, he was well ahead. Why? Because having made a better choice with math, he was highly motivated to move ahead because he loved math.

The same thing happened with Mr. Awesome with a spelling program in his elementary years.  One spelling program was not clicking with him, but after I changed he went up two grade levels because he now had a much better fit with the way he learned.

Not seeing tears, but a return of their love of learning was well worth any money I had spent previously. Just remember, your time is well spent investigating another curriculum if the one you are using is not making sense to your child.

sharing homeschool curriculum

(One mom in our group ready to share her homeschool curriculum with the group.)

5. Look to your local homeschool support.  Many times in our local support group, we would plan a park day for the kids, but it would be a curriculum swap or show and tell for us as the moms. Don’t you wish you could just rent curriculum for a week or two to see if it will work for your family?

As long as you respect copyright laws of publishers, you can take the curriculum home and give it a test drive. Many of my favorite programs I first put my hands on at a park day with my group.  Looking it over for a week or two gave me a much better picture if it would work for my family or not.

Curriculum is our blue print to see how we want to build the education of our children, but it is not the final building.  There are always changes and adjustments to any construction job. Sometimes the adjustments are huge, sometimes they are trivial.

Most important though is that when you are enthusiastic about learning and teaching any subject, that is contagious and rubs off on your children.

It is your attitude toward learning that matters more than any curriculum you choose. Your children will adopt the attitudes and examples you set.

Share your enthusiasm and passion for learning and your children will remember their unique educational heritage and not the wrong curriculum you chose.

Check out the other stuff I have to say about choosing curriculum:

Stop Switching Your Curriculum, Switch Your Course of Study

 How to Choose Curriculum Other than the “Looks Good” Method.

The A, B, C’s of Picking Curriculum + {part 1}

The A, B, C’s of Picking Curriculum + {part 2}

SaveHugs and love ya,

Signature T

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: Choose Curriculum Tagged With: boxedcurriculum, curriculum, freehomeschoolcurriculum, homeschool, homeschoolcurriculum

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10

Primary Sidebar

Footer

Privacy Policy | About Me | Reviews | Contact | Advertise

Categories

Archives

Tina Robertson is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Copyright © 2025 · 5 TNT LLC · Log in · Privacy Policy