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hands-on

DIY Atlas – North Star Highschool Geography

April 26, 2014 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I had to give you a sneak peek at the progress on the diy atlas cover that the boys designed as we use North Star Geography. Too, look at my page Homeschool Geography for hands-on and simple ideas and tips.

I love the progress the boys have made on their atlas cover.  

Between getting ready for our big moving sale today and cleaning out their closets, they still have managed to come up with a design unique to their age.  I thought too that they would be finished by now, but what do I know? 

They assure me you can’t rush perfection and because they are taking this quite seriously, they are working on their geography masterpieces in shifts.

DIY Atlas Cover Homeschool Geography

DIY Atlas – North Star Highschool Geography

I like the fact too that the ideas they have come up with so far shows their ages and perspective on the world in general. 

My oldest has a slight bent toward architecture that I didn’t even realize until this project.  He chose a concept that may be more science fiction right now which is arcology, but I think it is way cool.  He sure likes it.  He still has more picture to add to it and then of course he can’t decide his lettering or title.

The bottom half of the picture shows Tiny’s idea of geography which is still relative to where he lives.  So though he thinks somewhat globally by showing the world first, it all still comes down to where he lives or about him.

And then one more thing I have to tell you and that is yippee I am so excited because North Star Geography is finally released and ready for pre-orders.

Front Cover Highschool Geography North Star Geography Ready

We have done a couple of other hands-on projects that I have to show you next.

Also look at these other high school resources.

Homeschool High School Geography Resources and Books

Geography for high school should still be fun and hands-on. It can take years to find the right resources. However, I’ve gathered up some of my favorite books and resources.

North Star Geography

North Star Geography covers basic geography skills (maps, navigation) as well as physical geography (topography, biosphere, structure of the earth) and human geography (environmental stewardship, agriculture, culture, heritage & more)—all from a Christian perspective. Each lesson in the Reader is approximately 10-15 pages and geared toward junior high-high school students, though it may be adapted for younger students; the text features full-color maps, illustrations, and interesting sidebars. Accompanying each lesson on the Companion Guide, hands-on project options, as well as an “atlas building” section where students label outline maps, are provided. Note-taking pages feature ten questions taken from the text that can be used for review or comprehension questions, as well as for a study guide for the exam

Welcome to the Wonderful World of Geography

Brenda Runkle’s World Physical Geography makes an often-boring topic come to life!

With our world seeming to shrink with each passing week, knowing about virtually all peoples and nations is more important than ever.

World Physical Geography

It focuses on physical geography, providing the basis for learning the fundamentals of geography. 

Geography Challenge

Challenges students to remember important facts and encourages them to enjoy themselves in the process.Deals with facts and principles related to the study of life science, physical science, and earth and space science.

Around the World in 180 Days, 2nd Edition (two-volume set)

Around the World in 180 Days is a geography and history program covering the history, geography, and culture of each continent. And yet this is not a textbook. It is a series of questions that the student must research in order to answer. Plenty of resources are suggested to help students conduct their research, and the teacher's edition provides all the answers. This revised and updated curriculum is written with a multilevel approach with study questions for students of all grade levels, making this a curriculum your whole family can do together! This two-volume set includes an illustrated teacher's edition and a student workbook.

Eat Your Way Around the World

Get out the sombrero for your Mexican fiesta! Chinese egg rolls! Corn pancakes from Venezuela! Fried plantains form Nigeria! All this and more is yours when you take your family on a whirlwind tour of over thirty countries in this unique international cookbook. Jam-packed with delicious dinners, divine drinks, and delectable desserts, this book is sure to please. 

Lifepac History & Geography & Geography 11th Grade

Student worktexts include daily instruction and review as well as ample opportunity for assessment of student performance using self tests and unit tests. To encourage individualized instruction, we have included a teacher's guide designed to help you guide your student's learning experience according to his specific interests and needs. This essential teaching resource includes teaching notes for each unit, a complete answer key, and information about additional resources and learning activities.

Trail Guide To World Geography *OP

If you would like a geography course that includes mapping activities, atlas usage, research, notebooking and culture with very little teacher preparation, look no further. The Trail Guide to World Geography is a week one, day one kind of teacher s manual with daily geography drills (answers included) and numerous weekly assignment choices. <P> Multi-level geography course for 36 week school year for elementary through high school. <P> Assign as much or as little as YOU decide.

What do you think? Are you going to be using this with your kids this summer or next year?

More High School Geography Curriculum Resources

  • Simple and Fun Homeschool Geography Ideas for High School
  • Homeschool Geography Go To Resources
  • Mega List of Workbook Style Homeschool Curriculum For K to 12 Kids
  • DIY Atlas – North Star Highschool Geography is Here!

Read the other posts about this wonderful new geography program!

DIY Atlas - North Star Highschool Geography
The Anatomy of a Well Laid Out High School Geography Curriculum
DIY Atlas - North Star Highschool Geography
Homeschool Geography Go-To Resources
DIY Atlas - North Star Highschool Geography
Homeschool High School World Geography Program
DIY Atlas - North Star Highschool Geography
Homemade Compass – Simple Geography Project With a Wow Factor
DIY Atlas - North Star Highschool Geography
Homeschool Geography – DIY Lava Lamp

8 CommentsFiled Under: Geography Tagged With: hands-on, highschoolgeography

How To Make An Easy Ink pot & Quill Pen with Berry Ink

April 22, 2014 | 5 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

If I do start a series called hodgepodge homeschooling it would include how to make an easy ink pot and quill pen with berry ink that Tiny did today. This is such an easy and fun hands-on activity that can go along with any topic on westward expansion, Lewis & Clark or just the life of a pioneer.

Howtomakeaneasyinkpotandquillpenandberryink

While I worked in the kitchen pricing my items for the moving sale this weekend, Tiny could do most of this on his own.  Plus, this easy activity went along with the Free Westward Ho History cards he is memorizing right now.

How to Make an Easy Ink pot

The first thing we did was to make an easy ink pot so that the paint could dry while we made the berry ink.

Here is the list of what we ended up needing:

  • 1 empty plastic bottle.
  • sharp craft knife.
  • 1 small piece of cardboard.
  • masking tape.
  • black acrylic paint/paintbrush.
  • one sharpie.
1inkpot2inkpot
3inkpot4inkpot

Cut the top off the plastic bottle because the top is the perfect size for an ink pot.  I actually did the cutting because the knife was just too sharp to let Tiny do it by himself.

Then place the cut lid on the cardboard and trace a circle or template out of the cardboard with the sharpie.  The cardboard circle is the bottom of the ink pot.  Using the craft knife, cut the circle out.  Then start wrapping masking tape around the ink pot and taping the bottom round cardboard piece to the ink pot.  We ended up not using the cap that is for the lid.

5inkpot

Then Tiny painted the ink pot with the black acrylic paint and set it aside to dry.  How easy was that?

Easy Berry Ink and Quill Pen

The next thing Tiny did was grab some ingredients he thought he would need for the berry ink and quill pen. He was pretty close.

Look at this list for making the berry ink and quill pen.

  • 1/2 to 1 cup berries.  We actually had mixed blackberries, blueberries and some raspberries that were overripe in the refrigerator.
  • 1/2 to 1 teaspoon salt depending on how much ink you make.  We used a full one teaspoon because he used a whole cup of berries.  So about 1/2 teaspoon of salt for 1/2 cup of berries is the measurement.
  • 1/2 to 1 teaspoons of vinegar depending too on how much ink you make.  Again, we used a full one teaspoon because we used a full cup of berries.
  • 1 feather. A contour feather is better.  We had feathers laying around the house from some Native American head dress we had, but you could easily buy one or better yet, send your kids outside to find a couple of feathers.
  • 1 small bowl for mixing.
1 quillpen4quill pen
2 QuillPen3quillpen

First, he tried to smash the berries because I knew they needed to be strained and the pulp taken out.  It wasn’t too easy and that seemed like too much work to me.

So I pulled out the hand held lemon squeezer and it worked much better.  No need to mash, then strain because it’s all done at one time in the hand held lemon squeezer.  So we added berries, squeezed and out came the juice and we threw away the pulp.  The squeezer took a little bit more time, but I think that process helped Tiny to understand the effort the early pioneers had to put forth to produce ink.

Add the salt and vinegar and stir.  That’s it.  If it’s too thick, add a wee bit more vinegar.   Our concoction came out just right the first time.

6inkpot17quillpen
7inkquill8 ink quill

The feather required some kitchen shears to cut it to a point.

You probably have most of this stuff laying around your house like we did.  It was a fun way for Tiny to spend the morning learning about the early pioneers and Lewis and Clark.  He had to try his hand at writing a bit more like Lewis and Clark did.  It makes you appreciate how fond Lewis and Clark must have been of journaling because of the sheer effort it took to make ink and then to preserve their writings for generations to come.

GRAB THESE OTHER RESOURCES AND HANDS-ON IDEAS

If hodgepodge homeschooling tastes like this today, we might add it a bit more.  No complaints from Tiny or his mom on the fun we had today.

Hugs and love ya,

If you want some other activities to go with an early American history unit study, then grab these other ones too. Free Printable History Board Game – Learning American History Through the Life of Wyatt Earp, make soap and make hardtack.

Check out some other fun resources for studying about Westward Ho, Lewis & Clark and Pioneer Life

5 CommentsFiled Under: Geography Based, Hands-On Activities, History Based Tagged With: hands-on

Beware of the 3 C’s of Lapbooking

February 23, 2014 | 21 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Would you believe me if I told you after creating more than 30+ lapbooks with my children {I have lost track} that using lapbooks in our homeschool seemed like a turn off to us when we started homeschooling?

Today, using lapbooks as enrichment in our every day unit studies have kept them a delight and not overwhelming our day.  My journey did not start off that way. 

Beware of the 3 C's of Lapbooking

I made three basic mistakes when I initially folded in (corny pun I know) lapbooks into our day.

If you are the non-crafty person and have been avoiding creating a lapbook  with your kids, hopefully steering you clear of my mistakes will nudge you to try one or two.

I had to have an attitude adjustment first and I have to confess about it now.

  I knew that my kids were not the crafty loving (or so I thought) type of kids and I knew lapbooks were for those “other” homeschoolers.  You know the ones who pine to do crafts all day.

Interactive Tool or Time Waster Tool?

I just knew that lapbooks were more about crafts than conscientious and diligent learning. 

Because crafts are at the opposite end of my personality style or I should say as I understood crafts to be at the time, I missed out on several years of creating lapbooks with my older son.

Fast forward about five years after that thinking, my teaching methods were boring and blah. 

I knew worksheets didn’t take long for my children to do (I admit it, I was bad because that is all we did) and they took even less time for my children to forget about them.

Moving out of my comfort zone and wanting our homeschool journey to be a memorable one, I knew the hands-on element was missing in our every day learning. 

I wanted to capture that element of learning for my sons and gradually did more research on lapbooks.

Slowly, I started to see that the greatest benefit to my children about lapbooks is that they are a fantastic interactive learning tool. 

The interactive part to opening/closing the minibooks, turning the circle minibook and folding/unfolding to read information is much like— well— the learning that is done in museums.

Why did we prefer a day at the museum over doing a worksheet? 

Museums are a fun place to visit not because you look forward to doing a worksheet when you get there. 

Learning can be done informally and at your child’s pace while he presses buttons for information to light up, turns a wheel for more information, listens to the information and otherwise follows along to see the exhibits and read the information. 

Even adults still like this part of a museum. 

We never out grow a museum.

Beware of over Crafting!

Lapbooks are like a mini museum in a file folder.  Redefining my meaning of crafts, I first tried several months of crafts or I should say over crafting. 

I almost gave up because I tried to be something I was not and my boys weren’t having fun either.

When we would rather read something from a book than glue a bean on a paper, I knew I went too far the other way in trying to incorporate crafts.

Beware of Coloring!

That wasn’t the only mistake I made.  I remember when my sister who has all girls would meet up with us to school together when our kids were preschool.

Lapbooking Can Be for the Non Crafty Kid and Mom too!

Her girls would sit so patiently and sweetly as they couldn’t wait to color, doodle and create.  My boys ran from coloring and were outside using tree branches for swords on each other. 

Both my sister and I had a lot to learn as new teachers because we both thought the other family had something “wrong” with their kids.

Because I know boys learned differently and needed to strengthen their fine motor skills, I realized coloring was just one way to do it, not the only way.

As I created lapbooks, I understood the way my boys learned. 

For my sons the fun is not necessarily in coloring pictures so I added more and more pictures or clip art already colored to my lapbooks.

They could focus on learning the content, folding the books, and if they wanted to, they could do something crafty for the outside file folder flap. 

Still to this day, I add in color pictures and coloring pages so if the mood strikes they can choose either option or a combination of both. 

I didn’t restrain their creativity, but gave them options when they didn’t want to be.

Beware of Cutting!

I had already made two mistakes and this last mistake which was throwing a gazillion pages at my kids to cut actually did make us move away from lapbooking for a few months.  

In doing school, I had to remember I wasn’t teaching scissor skills necessarily.

minibooks - emphasize the writing and not the scissor cutting

There is nothing about cutting out minibooks that inspired my children to want to do another lapbook.  Quite the opposite, they wanted to run from it and I did too.

Realizing that I was not teaching my sons how to cut when we did lapbooks, I did a majority of the cutting for my sons in the early grades. 

What a breath of fresh air as we sat down to start the next lapbook because most of the pages were cut.

This is perfectly okay to do.  Just like any teacher would prepare flashcards or some other hands-on manipulative for her classroom, this was the part I did as a teacher for them.

 Even as they got older, I still help with cutting out the minibooks.

Focusing on my family, I redefined the meaning of crafts in our home.  Crafting now in my mind equates with hands-on and it can be virtually anything that your children enjoy doing. 

  It really is that easy and I had to understand that sometimes the house doesn’t always have to be a mess to enjoy them.

Today, my mind races with hands-on ideas, but I always weigh them against what my sons will really find delight doing and weigh the value of it against the concept I want them to learn.

Whether you have kids who desire to do crafts all day or run from them, you can still lapbook.  Adjusting lapbooking to work for your family is key to savoring them.

I certainly don’t consider myself a true lapbooker if there is such a thing.  Why?  Because the crafts, cutting and coloring are not reasons we weave them in our day.  While maintaining a hint of my classical roots while we do a fun hands-on easy lapbook, I have found a way to not miss out on something that brings learning alive for us.

It doesn’t have to be either or when you choose an approach to homeschooling, it just has to be good for your family.

Do you want to give lapbooks a try? Try one or two easy ones.

I have made it easy for you, I have divided  up my lapbooks by history time period or science topic.

Pssst..They are ALL free too!

Hugs and love ya,

21 CommentsFiled Under: How To - - -, Lapbook, Lapbooks Tagged With: hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, lapbook

French Revolution Unit Study – Pain Au Chocolat Easy Recipe

February 15, 2014 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Studying about the French Revolution Unit Study Pain Au Chocolat will make for a fun topic today. And look at my page Free Quick France Unit Study and Make Easy French Bread for more ideas.

I wanted to add in another easy hands-on project for our study about the French Revolution. We alread haves the Storming the Bastille board game I created.

French Revolution Unit Study – Pain Au Chocolat Easy Recipe

Because the French Revolution is a pretty deep topic, I wanted to focus some on the culture and aspects of the country.

When I think of France and it’s culture, I think of, besides wonderful aged wine, (which Tiny was up for a taste test on) the best bread and chocolate.

French Revolution Game - French Revolution Unit Study @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

So I came up with an easy hands-on idea for studying about France and that is to make chocolate sandwiches or pain au chocolat.  Tiny is for sure getting his home economics in on this semester.

I probably wouldn’t make a great ambassador for France because I didn’t bake my bread all from scratch with wholesome ingredients.  I used store bought wheat rolls because I had them in the house already for meatball subs that night.

After reading some about what kids in France snacked on, the idea of a chocolate sandwich for breakfast sounded too good to be true for Tiny that morning (or so he thought anyway).  He was pretty eager to get started with “school”.

Recipe Pain Au Chocolat from France

After gathering up the bread and mostly the chocolate and a bit of butter and milk, Tiny was ready.

French Revolution Unit Study – Pain Au Chocolat Easy Recipe

Tiny cut the bread on a diagonal so we would have 4 halves to share.

French Revolution Unit Study – Pain Au Chocolat Easy Recipe

He buttered the bread so we could toast it in the oven after we put the chocolate spread on it.

French Revolution Unit Study – Pain Au Chocolat Easy Recipe

Then he added a tad of butter to the mixture. 

Pain Au Chocolat from France

And actually we used half and half in our mixture because it was a bit creamier. But you can use milk too. 

Pain Au Chocolat Easy Recipe

Microwave the mixture until heated through  and melted.

No, I didn’t pull out the bowl on top of the boiling water pot for this.  Microwave is fine for us.

French Revolution Unit Study – Pain Au Chocolat Easy Recipe

Then spread the chocolate and we baked the sandwiches in the oven on 350 degrees until toasted.

French Revolution Unit Study – Pain Au Chocolat Easy Recipe

Tiny wasn’t sold when he tasted it.  I think he worked himself up to thinking about the word sandwich and couldn’t think of anything else when he bit into it.

Unlike his mom, he is not a big bread eater either, but I was hoping this would make him like it a bit better.

Me? It was actually pretty good for a sweet roll for breakfast. 

If we had used some other bread too besides wheat, it would have been even better. 

I was pleasantly surprised that with the butter and toasting it, we almost felt a bit like we were eating at the outside cafes in France. 

Flaky, crunchy and sweet, it was pretty good.  Some home made bread or wafers could make this even better. 

At least with wheat rolls, I felt like it was a bit healthy. {it sounds good anyway}

I found a couple recipes too that you can fuss over a bit more and that could be used when studying about France, it’s food and culture.

Here is a grilled chocolate sandwich with a bit of confectioners’ sugar dust which is no long on Martha White site.

grilled chocolate sandwich

{Source: Martha Stewart}

And then this one is from Dying For Chocolate blog. 

I love the crusty vanilla pound cake and the whip cream. Ewww la, la.

grilled chocolate sandwich 2

{Source: Dying for Chocolate}

However you serve it up, this definitely will send you and your kids’ blood sugar sky high in the morning, but a little bit doesn’t hurt.

French Revolution Lapbook Minibooks

Next, look at the minibooks which come in this free download.

  • Beethoven and the Revolution
  • The Guillotine – The French Terror
  • Timeline of Events Leading up the French Revolution
  • 3 Estates – French Society
  • Causes of the French Revolution layered book
  • Queen Marie Antoinette and King Louis XVI
  • What is the Directory, What is the Reign of Terror and What is the Sans Culottes

How to Get the Free French Revolution Lapbook

This is a subscriber freebie.

That means when you sign up to follow me, you get my emails in your inbox and you get this freebie.

 1) Sign up on my list.

2) Grab the freebie instantly.

3) Last, look for all my emails in your inbox. Glad to have you following me!

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Science Based Tagged With: hands-on

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

November 23, 2013 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I have 50 winter activities for homeschooling. Grab more ideas on my page winter season unit study.

Hoping to have a few activities to pull of out my bag when the kids are bored and the days are long and cold, I rounded up some activities to keep us learning.

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

Some of them are easy and don’t take quite as long and others a little more involved.

We always keep back some chalk pastels too and our easy books for doing seasonal pastels.

Whether you want art, some reading or hands-on ideas, you’ll love this roundup of 50 learning activities.

Types of Frost Minibook @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus
Winter Lapbook Cover @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Pluswhat are the winter months minibook @ Tiina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Grab these fun minibooks on my Winter Unit Study and free lapbook page.

Bird Video Art Course for All Ages

Winter Activities for All Ages

Besides the fun hands-on globe to make below, there are many crafts too.

12 side globe about Antarctica

Construct a 12 sided globe to display facts about Antarctica @ Crayola.Com

Design a winter landscape with long shadows @ Crayola.Com

CP439 

CP snow-mosaic-winter-craft-photo

Create a snowy self-portrait mosaic @ Family Fun Crafts.

Grab some free easy winter worksheets @ All Kids Network

CP winter-worksheet-handwriting-small

Snowman Pack Get your FREE activity bundle!

virtual snowman

Virtual Build a Snowman

  Have a snow date @ Martha Stewart

Have a Snow date 
 polkadotmasonjars

Do a glitter polka dot mason jar @ A Bubbly Life

Grab a free frosty blend sorting game @ Heather’s Heart.

CP Frosty Blend Fun
Homeschool Geography - DIY Lava Lamp @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus-1

DIY Lava Lamp

Hands-on Learning Activities

Grab a Free Winter Ecology Teacher’s Guide Nice.

Glacier Winter Educator Guide @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool PlusGlacier Winter Educator Guide 2 @ Tinas Dynamic Homeschool Plus
candy

Make candy crystals @ Science Sparks

 

In addition, add a fun unit study on the history of science with beautiful literature.

winter globes

Make a DIY ice globe lantern

50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days

Make frozen watercolor ice cubes @ Learn Play Imagine

Frozen Watercolor Ice Art (1)-1

3 Fun Cocoa Winter Hands on Science Activities

Make toilet roll snowman using tiny sock for hats @ Red Ted Art

toilet roll snowman craft

 

 

Furthermore, winter is a great time to do art. Pair art with history in this fun study.

Chocolate-Snow-Balls

Make chocolate snowball cookies @ tasteofhome

DIY Handwarmers

 hand-warmer-

Also, learning music is fun to do this time of the year. I love all these choices for learning about music at home by this homeschool mom.

Just what we need for teaching multiple children.

cookie-envelopes

Printable Cookie Envelopes

Make DIY Snow Globes @ Refresh Renew

snow.globe1

 Milk tags

Milk Tag Snowman

Easy paper straw snowflakes @ Echoes of Laughter

 Paper Straw Snowflakes

CP pine-needle-instructions craft

Easy Pine Needle Craft @ Live Craft Eat

Make Pinecone Fire Starters

pine cone fire starter
Medieval Video Art Course Semester 1

Your kids will also love learning about Medieval History through art.

Crayon-Art

Crayon Art

Coffee Filter Snowflakes @ The Pink Couch

CP snowflakes coffee filters

Finally, add a movie and a book from another one of my favorite providers Literary Adventures for Kids.

https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/the-little-prince-online-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15
https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/there-are-rocks-in-my-socks-said-the-ox-to-the-fox-online-nature-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15
https://www.literaryadventuresforkids.com/p/the-rocket-that-flew-to-mars-online-nature-book-club?affcode=168584_izgghx15

Cp Making Snow Dough

Making Snow Dough

How to Explore Melting Ice

 make your own snow paint

Make Your Own Snow Paint @ One Little Project

Ice Sculptures @ Not Just Cute

CP Ice Sculptures

 gold-glitter-dipped-jars-diy

DIY Gold Dipped Jars

Snowman in a match box

 Snowman in a Match Box

snowmanpizza

Snowman Pizza. And you have supper made!

Make an iceberg

 Do an Iceberg Experiment

gemstonetitle

Create an indoor gemstone nature table

DIY Fingerless Gloves by Shop Ruby Jean @ The 36th Avenue

 DIY fingerless gloves

blue-nature-notebook-graphic

Grab some more free nature printables for your notebook @ Our Journey Westward

Winter Nature Scavenger Hunt Exploration & Printable @ Teach Beside Me

Winder Nature Scavenger Hunt Printable

Winter-Fun-Chalk-Pastel-Tutoriale

Winter Fun with Pastels

Make snow ice cream

make snow ice cream

diy_winter-wonderland-art

Family Handprints Winter Wonderland @  Lisa Leonard Blog

Make an ice sun catcher

ice sun catcher

family bingo printable

Family Bingo

Edible Winter Snowman

Edible Winter Snowman

Flowers Printable Lesson

When you are tired of winter, use this free educator’s guide about flowers & birds

DIY Winter Diorama @ Bloesem Kids

winter forest diy diorama DIY Winter Diorama @ Bloesem Kids

Long WinterLapbook by Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Long Winter Lapbook/Little House Series @ Marine Corps Nomads

Do some Folk Art Lessons and here for lessons.

Four-Season-Landscapes-
mitten wreath

Mitten Wreath

       

Free Penguins Lapbook

Free Penguin Lapbook

Also, check out:

Free Unit Study: Inuit/Arctic

Winter Craft Ideas for Middle School

Winter Season Unit Study

 50 Keep Me Homeschooling Activities During the Long Cold Winter Days @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Hugs and enjoy,

Save

6 CommentsFiled Under: Free Homeschool Resources, Hands-On Activities, History Resources, Look Alive: Winter Homeschooling Ideas & Free Downloads Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, homeschoolinginwinter, middleschool

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