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Hands-On Nature Study: Make a Fun Bird Nesting Bag

February 9, 2018 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

The first signs of spring are still a few weeks away, but we are starting to see a few more birds in our neighborhood. So I thought it would be a good time to try one of the fun hands-on nature study activities suggested in NaturExplorers: Beautiful Birds, which is to make a bird nesting bag!

I had no idea that birds could use a little help making nests. I always thought they just used twigs.

But birds can use lots of materials to construct their nests, including some of the things we might throw away.

This was a great project to share with the kids, because it showed them that we can actually help animals to build their homes.

Hands-On Nature Study: Make a Fun Bird Nesting Bag

See how to make this simple nature craft and try it to see if your kids like it for a spring project!

Hands-On Nature Study: Make a Bird Nesting Bag

Here’s what you’ll need to make a bird nesting bag:

  • Mesh bag (I used the one that came with our onions)
  • Twigs and grass leaves
  • Yarn
  • Brown paper bags
  • Paper napkins
  • Scissors

Just a tip: If you’re going to use an onion bag (like we did), be sure to leave the bottom end sealed. It usually has a metal clip on the end for keeping the bag closed. If you keep that intact, then you’ll only have to close the nesting bag at one end.

DIY Bird Nesting Bag Supplies

I let the kids run out in the backyard to gather the twigs and weeds. (We don’t have grass in our yard, but I don’t think the birds are that picky.)

Making a Nesting Bag for Birds

Next, we used scissors to cut the paper bags into thin strips. We did the same with the paper napkins.

Make a Bird Nesting Bag

Then we just mixed them into a pile with the weeds, twigs, and yarn clippings.

Making a Bird Nesting Bag

After we removed the tag from the mesh onion bag, we just stuffed all of our materials into the bag opening.

Stuffing a Bird Nesting Bag

We cut a long piece of yarn (about two feet in length) and used one end to cinch the mesh bag closed.

Simple Bird Nesting Bag

It’s finished! Now we just need to hang it up.

Hanging a Bird Nesting Bag

We used the yarn to hang it from a low tree branch.

Easy Bird Nesting Bag Craft

And now it’s ready! Since the mesh bag has plenty of holes, birds can just fly up to it and grab some things for constructing their nests.

Making a Bird Nesting Bag with Kids

It’ll be interesting to check in a few weeks to see what’s been used already.

You’ll love all of these easy nature study books.

Our Journey Westward

I loved this project. It was so simple and it was a nice way to get outside with the kids and start thinking about the signs of spring that we’ll see soon. Plus, it was cool to extend a little “invitation” to the birds in our neighborhood to stop by and pick up a few building supplies.

Hands-On Nature Study: Make a Fun Bird Nesting Bag

Try some of these other nature study activities with your children!

  • How to Make Easy DIY Bird Feeders
  • Northern Cardinal Lapbook & Unit Study
  • Easy and Fun Nature Study: Beautiful Birds

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Science Based Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, nature study, science

Hands-On Middle School Math: Everyday Math Scavenger Hunt (Printable)

January 31, 2018 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

I have a hands-on middle school everyday math scavenger hunt free printable.

My children learn best through hands-on activities.

So far, I have managed to easily incorporate experiential learning into our history, science, and language arts studies.

Math, however, has been a different story. Finding age appropriate and relevant hands-on math for my middle schooler has been a challenge.

Add to this the fact that he doesn’t see the point in doing his math work at all, and it becomes clear that I need to find an out-of-the-box approach to this subject.

Hands-on Middle School Math and printable scavenger math hunt

I knew that the first thing I wanted to incorporate was an activity that would take math out of the textbook and into everyday life.

Too often, I find myself trying to simply tell him all the ways we use math everyday.

Hands-on Math for Older Learners: Everyday Math Scavenger Hunt

I am pretty sure he hears about 10% of what I say and then I become one of the adults in the Charlie Brown movies.

Rather than lecturing him about everyday math, I decided it was time to save my breath and create an activity that would allow him to explore it on his own!

What you will need for this activity:

  • Everyday Math Scavenger Hunt Printable
  • A Pen or Pencil
  • Time to Explore and Think
Our Journey Westward


It’s super simple, to be sure, but I found it to be super effective as well!

After printing the scavenger hunt, I reviewed the different types of everyday math listed with my son.

Everyday Math Hunt for Kids

The hunt requires the learner to look for examples of:

  • Temperature
  • A Recipe with Fractions
  • A Decimal
  • Numbers Written in Word Form
  • A Number Greater than 200,000,000
  • Height and Weight
  • Percentage
  • A Price
  • Volume Measurement
  • A Repeating Pattern
  • A Graph
  • Date and Time
  • An Angle
Math Scavenger Hunt

It also asks the learner as a bonus, to find three examples of everyday math on their own.

The only rule for this activity is that no textbooks or typical “school materials” can be used. The learner must find examples of math in everyday places.

Looking for Everyday Math Examples

In order to make it a little more challenging and also a bit more fun, I asked my son to first try to find as many of the items as possible outdoors.

Hands-On Middle School Math

Looking for Everyday Math with Kids

My son did really well, and he really had to think a bit to find some of the items.

(Let’s just say percentages are not all over the place in our home – an old grocery receipt, with savings listed, did the trick, but it took a while to find.)

Overall, this was a great way to help my son understand why we learn math in the first place.

Everyday Math Scavenger Hunt

It also allowed to him to see first hand, how critical basic math skills are for his success in life.

More Every Day Math Activities

  • How to Teach Limits: Hands-on Middle School Math
  • 25 Creative and Tasty Edible Math Activities that Keep Learning Fun
  • Hands-On Math: Factoring and Balancing Chemical Equations
  • 21 Hands-On Math Activities for Elementary and Middle School

Having to critically think of how these math examples are present all around us, combined with having to come up with three of his own examples made for a math filled afternoon (with zero complaints!).

Our Journey Westward
Hands-On Middle School Math: Everyday Math Scavenger Hunt. Making homeschool math of your everyday life by doing this fun hands-on middle school math activity of a scavenger hunt. Download a free printable everyday math scavenger hunt. CLICK HERE to grab the free printable and teach your kids out of the box middle school math!

How to Get the Free Printable

Now, how to grab the free printable. It’s a subscriber freebie.

When you sign up to follow me, you get access to this freebie.

 1) Sign up on my email list to follow me and get this freebie and many others.
 2) Grab the printable.
3) Last, look for my emails in your inbox as a follower. Glad to have you.

If you’re looking for a way to bring math to life, you’ll love the book, Loving Living Math for homeschoolers. This how-to guide for parents will help you understand and implement living math principles at any grade level.

We gave this activity an A+.

Written by Shawna at Not the Former Things.

2 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Math Based, Middle School Homeschool Tagged With: hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, math, middleschool

How to Teach With an Easy DIY American History Timeline

January 26, 2018 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

When my older two sons were in middle school we created an American history timeline.

It was a clip art heavy timeline with lots of coloring, cutting, and gluing.

I’ve been looking for something which is not as craft intensive while still being challenging.

Until now, I couldn’t find an American history timeline curriculum which inspired me to want to do another one with my third son.

How to Teach With an Easy DIY American History Timeline. If you’re looking for a curriculum resource to easily teach American history by using a timeline, you’ll love this one. Not only do your kids cover major historical topics but learn about famous people and events. Because it’s reproducible you can use it for all of your kids. Click here to grab this great resource!

 Too, being an eclectic homeschooler, I want products which make it easy for me to teach in my style and in a way my son understands.

When I got The Giant American History Timeline from Sunflower Education, I was stoked to prepare another timeline in my simple diy fashion.

 I was given this product for free. I was compensated for my time and for hosting the giveaway. However, paid for my time does not mean paid off. ALL opinions are my own and for sure I will always tell you what is on my mind. When I do accept a product it’s because I’m giddy to tell you about it. Read my full disclosure here. Now on to the fun stuff!

How to Rock History Using An American History Timeline

One of the things I find perfect about this two-volume bundle, besides not having to do time consuming coloring or crafts, is that each unit or timeline can stand alone.

We didn’t begin with The Giant History Timeline Book 1: Pre-Colonization-Reconstruction.

We did spend the majority of time in The Giant History Timeline Book 2: 1870s-Present because Tiny was interested in modern American history.

I loved the fact that we didn’t have to start at the beginning and could skip right to the parts that we found fascinating.

For years we’ve covered significant early American history events through our history lapbooks which I share right here on my site Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus.

So, feeling like he didn’t really have a clear outline of major modern historical events, Tiny wanted to delve deeper into modern history.

Another downside to doing clip art based timelines or date only timelines which I found out after doing my first one is that no real connection is made between dates and key historical events.

And timelines can quickly becoming boring if they’re not studied along with the events or the people.

Intriguing events and colorful personalities of significant people of the past and present is what brings history alive.

That is another win for The Giant American History Timeline bundle.

Let me backup first and give you an idea of all the goodies in the The Giant American History Timeline  bundle so you can see how it can be used as a stand alone unit study or to enhance your study of geography, famous Americans, or history.

Look at the historical time periods and units in each book.

The Giant American History Timeline Book 1.

Unit 1: Discovery and Exploration Prehistory-1606
Unit 3: The Revolutionary Period 1765-1783
Unit 5: Expanding the Country 1790-1860
Unit 7: Social Issues 1790-1860
Unit 2: Colonial America 1585-1776
Unit 4: Creating the Constitution 1781-1803
Unit 6: An Age of Advancements 1790-1860
Unit 8: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1850-1877

The Giant American History Timeline Book 2.

Unit 1: Industrial Growth and Technological Advancement 1870-1910
Unit 3: America and the World 1867-1910
Unit 5: The Roaring Twenties and the Great Depression 1920-1940
Unit 7: The Cold War 1940-1990
Unit 2: Big Business and Social Reform 1870-1910
Unit 4: World War I 1910-1920
Unit 6: World War II 1930-1950
Unit 8: The Civil Rights Movement Technology and Terrorism 1954-Present

Look at all the teaching perks in each book.

  1. Teaching notes which contain an overview of key events, suggested focus activities like when we listened to the inspiring I Have a Dream speech by Martin Luther King, Jr., instructions on how to create the timeline, points to teach critical thinking skills, and instructions on how to do the activity sheets.
  2. Six types of activity sheets which contain maps, primary sources, help for comparing and contrasting time periods, biography sheets, a voice from the past sheets and a fun time machine activity page.
  3. One of the parts I loved the best is the variety. In Book 1 there are 126 activity sheets and in Book 2 there are 125 activity sheets. That easily adds up to a huge amount of resources for kids of any age.

The hardest part for us was keeping to a few topics so that we could study it for any length of time.

We had so many choices of time periods, timelines, and topic ideas and couldn’t wait to start piecing the timeline together.

How to Teach With an Easy DIY American History Timeline

Since we moved into our new home, we haven’t really decided on a school area. It wouldn’t really matter anyway because Tiny has almost always taken to the floor to study something like this.

He does best by using the floor to put his events in order and the The Giant American History Timeline gives excellent examples of how to connect the information and events to each other.

Benefits of The Giant American History Timeline

It can be done by event, which is the one we loved, main ideas or sequence of events which is what we’re all familiar with.

Also, another facet of creating an easy diy timeline is storage.

You want your child to engage with the facts and the historical period he is learning, but you need a way for him to come back to them and study it.

However, since we don’t have a huge empty wall like a classroom, we are storing our timeline in a lapbook and doing one for each time period or unit we’re studying.

How to Teach With an Easy DIY American History Timeline

After researching and organizing the material he wanted to study, we reviewed key facts and then organized the material so that we could review in the future.

How to Teach With an Easy DIY American History Timeline

Also, I shared with you how to turn a worksheet into an interactive minibook.

How to Teach With an Easy DIY American History Timeline

So, we applied that same folding technique to our mini-giant American history timeline.

How to Teach With an Easy DIY American History Timeline

One of the best things about using a lapbook besides great storage is that anytime he can take out the lapbook and memorize the significant events that match the dates.

Then because this is a research intensive project, we added a pocket on the back of the lapbook to add the extra activity sheets that he did.

This lapbook fits in well with the other American history lapbooks that we have done.

Did I mention that all pages are reproducible?

For some of the parts, we shrunk the pages when we printed. The other pages are just regular paper size but folded using my special technique that I mentioned earlier.

How to Teach With an Easy DIY American History Timeline. If you’re looking for a curriculum resource to easily teach American history by using a timeline, you’ll love this one. Not only do your kids cover major historical topics but learn about famous people and events. Because it’s reproducible you can use it for all of your kids. Click here to grab this great resource!

American History Timeline Activity Sheets

The Giant American History Timeline may be a good fit for you and your kids if:

  • You have multiple ages you’re teaching, but want one sanity-saving resource.
  • Your kids don’t mind a few hands-on activities like labeling and coloring maps, but prefer straight research on topics.
  • You want a reproducible resource instead of a workbook.
  • You’re thinking about a lapbook or notebooking style of timeline because of a lack of space.
  • Your kids prefer to learn more independently without having day to day lesson plans.
  • You prefer an overview and guideline for topics and events to create.
  • You want flexibility in how you cover topics by choosing ones that interest your children.
  • You want to use timelines as a stand alone unit study topic covering multiple historical topics.
  • Your kids prefer more worksheet and notebooking style pages.
  • You want something faith-free or more secular so you can add your own worldview.
  • You want teacher helps with answer keys.
  • You want one comprehensive resource for teaching American history.
  • You want your children to learn independently.

Look at these other American history lapbooks you’ll love!

  • American Revolution 1775 – 1783
  • Daniel Boone – North American Explorer
  • Lewis and Clark Expedition 1804-1806

How to Purchase It.

  • Product Name: The Giant American History Timeline.
  • Grade Level: Multiple ages resources, Grade 4 and up.
  • Price: Physical Book: 29.95

2 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, History Resources, Product Review, Sponsored Posts Tagged With: american history, early American history, hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, history, history resources, historyspine, homeschoolhistory, modern history, timelines

Easy and Fun Nature Study: Beautiful Birds

January 19, 2018 | 3 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Sometimes nature study can be a little overwhelming (at least for me), but what I love about NaturExplorers is that I can use the program right in my backyard with the animals we see locally. It makes observing animals so simple and stress-free!

Beautiful Birds is truly a beautiful nature study unit for spring! Click here to grab this easy and fun nature study about birds!

The same is true of Beautiful Birds. We can use the curriculum without doing a lot of planning or traveling. Once we printed it out, we could just look through to find a simple activity, head outside, and get started!

Take a look to see what’s included in Beautiful Birds!

Easy and Fun Nature Study: Beautiful Birds

Birds are one of the first signs of spring approaching. Since our climate is fairly warm, all of the birds don’t leave our area in winter. But we do see flocks of them migrating to and fro during winter and early spring. So, when we start to see large groups of birds hanging out in the neighborhood, we know that spring is on the way.

And, since I cannot wait for warmer weather, I was thrilled to break out Beautiful Birds to start taking a look at what’s in this beautiful nature study unit!

Nature Explorers Beautiful Birds

Like Coping With the Cold, Beautiful Birds is a Charlotte Mason-inspired nature study curriculum.

All of the lessons, hands-on activity ideas, and notebooking pages are designed to help kids slow down, observe nature, and appreciate creation.

We’ll be sharing some of the hands-on crafts and activities soon, but for now I wanted you to have a look at the lovely notebooking pages included in Beautiful Birds.

Bird Migration Notebooking Pages

There’s a migration mapping activity and a signs of birds scavenger hunt.

Anatomy of a Bird

Kids can use birdwatching as an art project by drawing pictures of the birds they observe. They can also learn more about the anatomy of birds by labeling the parts of a bird.

Tracking Backyard Birds

Did you know that birds have different types of feet? I didn’t! But various species have differing styles of feet, depending on the food they hunt and the environments in which they live. As you work through the unit, kids will learn more about how these types of feet differ.

There’s also a birdwatching printable to help kids keep up with the species they spot.

Spotting Birds In the Backyard

Track where you spot birds with this backyard mapping activity and learn more about common bird behavior as you watch them move around!

Comparing Local Birds

Use this printable Venn diagram to compare bird species and challenge the kids to think of bird-inspired figures of speech for a quick ELA lesson!

Bird Feeder Observation Sheets

Make some DIY bird feeders and then let the kids observe to see what kinds of birds flock to them!

Bird Color Observation Sheets

Did you know that birds also have different types of feathers? As you learn more about them in the unit, kids can sketch the different types! And use the Flying Colors activity to have a color hunt in the sky!

Examining Eggshells

Go looking for pieces of eggshells on the ground and then examine them. Then spend a little time watching birds forage for food to see how they gather it!

Sayings About Birds

Personally, I loved the Bird Sayings activity. I’m a reading and literature fan, so I’m looking forward to making several copies of this activity so we can keep up with all the bird-related idioms we think of.

Bird Scavenger Hunt Activity

The Signs of Birds Nature Hunt will also be one of our favorites. Our goal is to try to spot every item on the list by the end of spring!

Flying Colors Bird Spotting Activity

And for the Flying Colors activity, we’re going to see how many different colored birds we can find this year!

Beautiful Birds is truly a beautiful nature study unit for spring! Click here to grab this easy and fun nature study about birds!

Beautiful Birds is truly a beautiful nature study unit for spring! Get a copy and see how it easy it is to weave nature study into your outdoor science lessons!

Plan even more fun nature study learning with these simple, hands-on ideas!

  • How Animals Cope With the Cold (Easy Nature Study)
  • Easy Hands-On Science: Animal Camouflage Activity Hunt
  • Winter Nature Craft: Easy DIY Bird Feeders

Hugs and love ya!

3 CommentsFiled Under: Hands-On Activities, Science Tagged With: birds, hands, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, nature study, science

5 Ways to Raise a Natural Geography Lover Easily

January 18, 2018 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Kids have a natural inborn inquisitiveness for how the earth is made and the different cultures they see around them.Too, look at my page Homeschool Geography for hands-on and simple ideas and tips.

Somewhere between that and the first day of formal Kindergarten, they can lose their curiosity if we direct them straight to a textbook.

Raise a Natural Geography Lover

One myth I need to slay before I go on is that geography is just about labeling/coloring maps.

Although maps are a huge part of geography, unless your child is fixated on coloring at the moment, merely coloring a map will not infuse a love for learning.

Look at my tips here 11 AWESOME Ways to Learn Geography (Other Than Labeling a Map) and then look at these 5 ways to raise a natural geography-lover.

ONE.
TAKE GEOGRAPHY OUTSIDE

Geography is a subject that is best taught using the outdoors or taking it outside as you can.

There are things that you just can’t explain in a geography textbook.

How a pinecone feels, the texture of a bird’s nest carefully crafted with just a beak, and the smell of the flowers from a Southern Magnolia tree that grew in our backyard couldn’t be appreciated from a book.

Even if you don’t, like me, have a naturally formed mountain in your backyard, being outside with nature helps to pique your child’s eagerness to understand geography features.

A trip to the park to study the trees and why certain ones grow in your area helps a child to understand the geography of where he lives.

When we lived on the Texas Gulf Coast, we saw many tall reeds in our neighborhood.

Understanding how plant life was affected by our nearness to the ocean helped my sons understand the part that geography plays in plant life.

Geography and science are interlinked. Many times it’s impossible to separate the two subjects and you shouldn’t.

Look at these 7 Super Easy and Free Nature Lapbooks Guaranteed to Beat Boredom and to create a natural love for geography.

Let geography flow into science and vice versa.

Fun Geoscavenge Geology Scavenger Hunt!

Here is a fun activity to connect the two concepts. Grab this form for a Geoscavenge – A Rock and Mineral Hunt: Day 6 Hands-on Learning.

TWO.
DO GEOGRAPHY ACTIVITIES, NOT JUST READ ABOUT IT

Nothing kills curiosity more than just reading about something and not being able to experience it.

It reminds me of what my husband told me that his family would do sometimes. They would drive to a vacation spot that they waited half the year to see.

After arriving, they would only look at the mountains or whatever it is from their car, turn around, and start driving home.

I can’t even imagine the disappointment of not being able to get out and explore!

Geography should be both an academic study and a hands-on investigation.

Too, hands-on geography shouldn’t be abandoned when your child gets to the older grades.

Hands-on geography is not just for the younger grades, but we tend to skip hands-on learning in the older grades just when our children are demonstrating self-teaching and independence.

Contrary to popular myths, hands-on learning in middle and high school can be rigorous because a young teen is now learning for intrinsic value.

What does this means? It means that learning about geography becomes a natural part of his everyday life. It goes from labeling maps to making learning concrete.

Hands-on learning is paramount at each level of a child’s development and geography is no exception.

Look at Homemade Compass. Simple Geography Projects Equals Huge Wow Factors for an easy activity for older kids.

Homemade Compass - Simple Geography Project With a Wow Factor

THREE.
INCLUDE OTHERS WHEN DOING GEOGRAPHY

Although I wasn’t always eager to meet with other families to study geography because I assumed it would be stressful, my boys beamed when we did.

Not only did they love meeting with other kids, but they loved learning from another teacher. I learned several things about the way my sons learned while they interacted with another homeschool teacher mom.

Homeschool moms who teach well are gifts. Homeschool moms don’t have to teach some really deep topic, but they have a way of bringing learning alive even using the tiniest fact or activity.

For example, while learning about the people and geography of Japan, one homeschool mom and her son taught my boys how to make an origami frog that hopped.

My sons were thrilled and played with that frog for hours while reading and using the atlas about Japan.

Learning geography with others doesn’t have to be complicated. Just do it with one other family and keep it simple and stress free.

Hands-on geography with other homeschoolers equals fun!

(something about blowing up volcanoes with others just makes learning about geography fun too)

FOUR.
COOK TO LEARN ABOUT GEOGRAPHY

There is nothing more natural than having fun cooking and learning a real-life skill in the process.

Kids love to eat normally and have an adventurous spirit when it comes to trying out new foods or snacks.

In the beginning, I would cook a meal from a country, but learned that my boys had just as much fun even if it was just a snack.

Whether you have time for a full meal on the menu or time enough to prepare just a bite for a snack, your kids will remember this part of geography.

As they associate food and culture from different parts of the world, their appreciation for geography grows.

Looked at a few things we have made when studying about certain areas.

  • Make pan au chocolat when studying about France.
  • Make celtic cakes when studying ancient civilizations.
  • Make baklava when studying about Ancient Greece.
  • Make victory soup when studying about the countries of World War II.
  • Make Cherokee pan bread when studying the states in the Southeastern United States.
  • Make soups from South America.
  • Make chili when doing a state study on Texas.
  • Make negrinho when doing a study about Brazil.

FIVE.
LEARN GEOGRAPHY THROUGH ART

Another way to incorporate natural geography fun is to do art. Too, an unexpected benefit is that art can one of those subjects that is hard to get in.

When you study about a country while do art or a craft, learning sticks.

For example, when we used Geography Through Art for part of our learning it helped my boys remember about not only basic geography of the earth but about countries.
Look at this idea Hands-On Geography Activity: Make a Pangaea Puzzle which is in the book.

Hands-On Geography: Australia Awesome and Deadly Animal Art

And look at Hands-On Geography: Australia Awesome and Deadly Animal Art which is fun.

Hands-on Homeschool Geography

Teaching geography naturally doesn’t mean you have to avoid curriculum. It does mean curriculum should follow our approach not the other way around.

For years, I have used North Star Geography because it fits the way I feel geography should be done in the older grades which is hands-on. 

When I lived overseas, I grabbed the digital version because I wanted to take it with me everywhere and because the boys could keep it on their device. I printed it as we needed it.

But North Star Geography has many hands-on ideas for older kids along with a helpful teacher’s guide. We have made our own atlas using their curriculum. I know you’ll love it.

It’s so easy to fall into the trap of just teaching geography without using hands-on ideas but it also kills a child’s natural love for the world around him.

5 Ways to Raise a Natural Geography Lover Easily

You’ll love these other tips!

  • Hands-on Geography: Longitude/Latitude Mapmaking Activity
  • Edible Rock Cycle Fudge and Hands-on Rock Activities
  • 35 Hands-on Geography Activities to do in 15 Minutes or Less
  • 100 BEST Books for Kids from all 50 States (Easy Geography)
  • History of the Texas Cowboy, Cattle Drives, and Chisholm Trail
  • How to Make a Kids’ Fun Ceremonial African Tribal Mask
  • Hands-on Geography Mesopotamia: Fun Salt Dough Map

Hugs and love ya,

5 Ways to Raise a Natural Geography-Lover. Kids have a natural inborn inquisitiveness for how the earth is made and the different cultures they see around them. Teach geography naturally. Look at these 5 ways to teach geography naturally. Click here to see how!
5 Ways to Raise a Natural Geography-Lover. Kids have a natural inborn inquisitiveness for how the earth is made and the different cultures they see around them. Teach geography naturally. Look at these 5 ways to teach geography naturally. Click here to see how!

2 CommentsFiled Under: Geography, Hands-On Activities Tagged With: geography, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, handsonhomeschooling, highschoolgeography, homeschool geography, homeschoolgeography

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