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newhomeschoolyear

How to Use Summertime to Put a Foot in Homeschooling

June 2, 2018 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Summertime homeschooling is the time to add spice to your routine. Because summertime conjures up lazy days at the pool or a trip to the beach, also take advantage of a more relaxed schedule.

Besides, summertime is not only a great time to begin homeschooling, but a way to have a relaxed start to the new year. Kids won’t even realize they’re still learning with these fun summertime schooling ideas below.

How to Use Summertime to Put a Foot in Homeschooling

Whether you want a break from a more rigid schedule, feel like last year’s curriculum left you feeling less than inspired, or want to use summertime to put a foot in homeschooling, you’ll love these eight tips.

8 Ways to Use Summer Time to Kick Start the Homeschool Year

Mix and match these tips or use one to put the spark for learning in your new homeschool year.

ONE/ Target one element of language arts like writing.

Although many new homeschoolers think they have to wait until the fall to begin their year, it’s so much better if you get a feel for teaching by focusing on one subject.

It may be a subject your child is struggling with or a subject which interests him.

When I have summertime with my high school teens, being absorbed on one subject like their writing keeps it from being overwhelming when they have a heavier load at the beginning of the year.

I love the courses by Writing Rockstar.

For example, one year we focused on strengthening writing skills through a course set to my teen’s pace.

Slowing down and lingering on a subject like composition encouraged my son’s love for writing; it allowed him time to pursue his passion of writing without the pace of a hectic schedule.

TWO/ Add a new self-paced class like these fun online Literary Adventures classes.

Also, whether you’re looking for a poetry class, an online fun self-paced course for a high school teen or your younger kids, you’ll love the variety of wonderful literature at Literary Adventures.

THREE/ Dive deep into a subject which gets overlooked like ART or MUSIC

Art is a subject that can easily get overlooked during the year. Have you seen this fun Art History Kids.

Until we started taking online art classes art was a struggle for us. I’m not an artsy person, but we love art.

During the long relaxed days of summer, it gives us a time to indulge our love art.

Then,, music study is a much overlooked study, although it shouldn’t be. You’ll love these courses.

These are high school courses, but Music in our Homeschool has something for just about every age.

20th Century Music Appreciation for High School
Music Appreciation: Middle Ages Thru Classical Era for High School

FOUR/ Teach your kids to cook with Kids Cook Real Food.

Kids love the feeling of doing authentic jobs, and kids these days really need creative work to do with their hands. Your Kids will love their courses.

FIVE/ Add fun subscription boxes.

And subscription boxes nowadays rock our world with fun learning. They keep our homeschool day fun and lively. Try one or two!

SIX/ Watch educational movies.

Educational movies make a great start to school. It’s easy after pulling your kids from school to jump straight into book learning.

You may think that is what homeschooling is about. Beginning your year with educational movies puts the whole family in a relaxed mood.

Pop some corn and grab one of these movies from the list below to begin your learning journey.

  • 7 Educational Movies for Kids About Westward Expansion 
  • Homeschool History Teaching Ancient Civilizations Using Netflix.

Grab my Free and Useful Editable Movie Report For Homeschool to learn with movies.

SEVEN/ Don’t forget refreshment and education for the educator.

The worst thing you can do in the beginning of your school year is to focus solely on the needs or your kids.

Taking time to educate yourself about homeschooling or just grabbing some refreshment will give you the boost you need for the new year.

I love the fact that Fortuigence has a free course for parents about writing. It it a subject lot of us struggle to teach.

EIGHT/ Homeschool unit studies nurture a love for learning. Do one or two.

When children have control of their learning, school can go a lot more smooth. Unit studies have a way of nurturing a love of learning because you can pick topics that pique your children’s interests.

I have volumes of free unit studies here on my site. Here are some of my 26 Free Nature Unit Studies for Multiple Ages.

Living books for multiple ages is also a great tip when your budget is limited. These nature living books I use below are from – NaturExplorers.

Our Journey Westward

Pick one or two and recharge your kids’ love for learning.

How to Use Summertime to Put a Foot in Homeschooling

You’ll also love these other ideas to use summertime as way to put your foot in homeschooling:

  • 7 Advantages to Starting Your Homeschool Year in the Summer 
  • 30 Summer Activities for Middle School Kids 
  • Wildflowers Unit Study & Lapbook
  • Kinder Gardening to Celebrate Nature and Science
  • How to Dissolve a Seashell – Beach Hands-on Fun Activity
  • 10 Fun Amazon Prime Movies for the Youngest Homeschoolers
  • A to Z List: 100 Fun Summer Homeschool Unit Study Ideas
  • Homeschool History Teaching Ancient Civilizations Using Netflix

Hugs and love ya,

Summer time conjures up lazy days at the pool, a trip to the beach, and more relaxed schedules along with a family vacation or two. Summer time homeschooling is not only a great time to begin, but a way to have a relaxed start to the new year.
Summer time conjures up lazy days at the pool, a trip to the beach, and more relaxed schedules along with a family vacation or two. Summer time homeschooling is not only a great time to begin, but a way to have a relaxed start to the new year.

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Begin Homeschooling, Homeschool Multiple Ages of Children, Homeschool Simply, Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation, Kick Off Your Homeschool Year, Middle School Homeschool, Plan For & School Year Around Tagged With: bootcamp, homeschool, nature study, new homeschooler, newbeehomeschooler, newhomeschoolyear, relaxedhomeschooling, summerideas, summerschool

7 Homeschool Lies I Want to Tell My Younger Self

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

Seven homeschoool lies I want to tell my younger self remind me of how homeschooling is not always easy.

Homeschool Lies

7 Homeschool Lies I Want to Tell My Younger Self. Why do we do that? Grab some super helpful, not shallow tips @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Having the courage to chase away secret homeschool fears is not easy to do when you’re a new homeschooler.

You’re worried about doing everything right; I was no different when I was new to homeschooling.

Fear was one of the biggest obstacles to overcoming homeschooling. If I could turn back time, I would share these 7 homeschool lies to my younger self.

When the Biggest Obstacle to Overcoming Homeschooling is YOU

ONE/ “Tina, don’t fall for it a bit. Your three year old won’t be behind by the time you get to high school.”

Focusing less on what if my children are going to get behind instead of delighting where they were at would have helped me to teach and savor the here and now moment.

TWO/ “Tina, girl, you know you love Star Wars, so remember what Yoda said. There is no try. Do or do not.”

Even coming from a family where my mom homeschooled my youngest sister, I wished my thinking was less of I’m going to try it for a year and more of what an important life changing decision my family had made.

If I had viewed beginning to homeschool like my commitment to having a child, being a new mom, having a new marriage or making big move to a place where you can’t go back, I would have stressed less.

Realizing more time should have been spent on making homeschool a lifestyle change would have been a better use of my time.

THREE/ “Tina, why didn’t you let the boys watch TV more even when school was finished?”

Instead of focusing on extreme rules for our house like not having a tv and no video games, I should have worked more on finding a balance instead of creating extreme schedules for my little kids.

Realizing that some homeschoolers don’t have a tv in their home by choice is good for their family but not ours.

My family likes tv, video games, and techie play things. A balance would have been so much better for us.

FOUR/ “Why didn’t you go out during school hours, Tina? What were you afraid of?

I wished I would have changed my school schedule earlier than I did instead of thinking that during the day I couldn’t go out because it was school hours.

Little did I know that even though I lived in Bodunk, U.S.A., homeschoolers are oozing by the thousands.

Most people have heard of it before. I was the new one, not homeschooling.

FIVE/ “Girl, you’re stressing way too much by prepping Mr. Senior 2013 for visits by grandma. Why do you feel the need to prove to others that you are exactly what your sons need when it comes to teaching them?”

I wished I would have worried less about proving my homeschool success to my in-laws, outlaws, and any other family relationship that I may not have wanted to claim kinship to and focused more on the how-tos of teaching.

SIX/ “Leave the house Tina. It’s okay. Learning is not just taking place within the four walls of your school room. You can actually skip lessons plans. Throw them away if you need to.”

Understanding that field trips, homeschool conventions and open houses are not always in my back yard or even my side of the county, I would have attended more conventions, open houses and gatherings for homeschoolers.

SEVEN/ “Don’t worry about all that homeschool curriculum you’re buying. You’ll be an expert before you know it and if you need it while you’re learning how to teach, then use it. Don’t worry when other people tell you that you won’t use all that curriculum.”

I wished I would have found this quote about the piles of curriculum I had bought and may not get to in a lifetime by Sally Clarkson out of her book Educating the WholeHearted Child, “It is nearly a rite of passage for new homeschooling families to buy curricula that ends up gathering dust on the shelf. Usually, it turns out to require more preparation and involvement than they are willing to invest, or it doesn’t fit their lifestyle. It becomes an investment in experience.What we all learn, though, is that any curriculum is only a tool — it doesn’t really “teach” anything. The attitude and commitment of the teacher is far more important than the tool. So if it doesn’t work, don’t worry. Put your unused used curriculum on the table with everyone else’s and buy real books next time. You’re experienced now.“

Beginning to homeschool doesn’t mean you have to give up the educational tools you learned in public school.

Through the years Tina, I’ve learned that changing my expectations opens the way for a whole new way to learn and that is powerful! THAT is how you grow.

Homeschool fearlessly Tina and rock on!

(Psst, from my struggle I wrote a book for YOU)

Also, Tina look over these posts and gently remind yourself today:

  •  From Struggling Homeschooler to Empowered Educator 
  •  31 Day Free Homeschool Boot Camp for New Homeschoolers 
  • How to Cope Successfully With Homeschool Mental Stress
  • First Time Homeschool Mom: Am I Doing This Right?
  • 65 Best Teaching Tips for Embracing Homeschooling Multiple Ages and Ideas You Wished You Knew Earlier
  • Is Homeschooling Right for Your Family? Hear From the Kids!
  • How to Mesh Your Personality With Homeschooling When They Collide
  • How To Start Homeschooling the Easy No Stress Way (Maybe)
  • What to Expect When You Expect to Homeschool (25 Silliest Questions Ever)

Hugs and love ya,

Signature T

9 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Begin Homeschooling, Homeschool Simply, Homeschooling Tagged With: homeschool, homeschool challenges, homeschooljoy, new homeschool year, new homeschooler, newbeehomeschooler, newhomeschoolyear

10 Books That Boost Your Homeschool Zen (When It May Be Sagging)

November 10, 2015 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

10 Books that Boost Your Homeschool Zen (When It May Be Sagging) @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusWhen you lose your homeschool swagger or just need a boost, grab some of these great homeschool reads.

Especially at this time of the year when self-doubt may set in and the new look has worn off the curriculum, it is time to re-energize your enthusiasm for homeschooling.

A few of the books are just to remind you of what you left behind like compulsory schooling.

10 Books That Boost Your Homeschool

When you keep fresh in your mind what you left behind, you are not so tempted to go back and give up easily.

A few other books are gentle reminders to trust your child’s natural desire to learn and to also simplify your day.

Less can be more when homeschooling.

Real Homeschool: Letting Go of the Pinterest-Perfect and Instagram-Ideal Homeschool
Teaching from Rest: A Homeschooler’s Guide to Unshakable Peace
Simply Homeschool: 2nd Edition: Have Less Fluff and Bear More Fruit
Simplify Your Homeschool Day: Shorten Your Day, Sweeten Your Time
Project-Based Homeschooling: Mentoring Self-Directed Learners

Free Range Learning: How Homeschooling Changes Everything
The Unschooling Handbook : How to Use the Whole World As Your Child’s Classroom
Teach Your Own: The John Holt Book Of Homeschooling
The Art of Strewing: Instilling the Love of Learning by Piquing your Child’s Natural Curiosity
Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling, 10th Anniversary Edition

One common theme that most of the books have which I am passionate about too is to avoid falling into the comparison trap.

Homeschooling is not about comparing our homeschool methods, children or husband with another family. But it is about supporting each other free from criticism regardless of the homeschool method another homeschooler chooses to follow.

Remember to always make time to revive your passion for homeschooling by grabbing some of my favorite reads!

What books do you read to renew your determination?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

Also boost your teacher techniques by reading these articles:

The Creative Process: 5 Ways to Cultivate Inspiration

Mustering the Courage to Face the 4 Homeschool Biggies

2 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Begin Homeschooling, Homeschool When Nobody Wants To Tagged With: new homeschool year, new homeschooler, newbeehomeschooler, newhomeschoolyear

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children? Part 2.

August 30, 2015 | 5 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Whether you begin to homeschool in the middle of the school year, during the summer or at the end of a school year, self-doubt and fear about your decision to homeschool lingers more in the beginning.

This is normal because like anything that is new, there is constant evaluation.

So continuing on with Part 2 of Are You Qualified to Teach Your Children? Part 1, I want to share a few more tips to keep in mind as you remember that the education of your children is not better left up to somebody else.

Homeschoolers are multiplying by the thousands. 

The days are long gone when nobody has heard of homeschooling.  How does that arm you or qualify you to teach your children?

Well in the ‘multitude of counselors’ there is wisdom.  You are empowered because like any novice teacher, you will have plenty of mentors and veterans to receive advice from.

Though I feel my New Bee Homeschooler program is one of the best ways to help you because there is not another program like it, I blog too because I want you to know about the plethora of wonderful resources out there waiting to help you to succeed.

Homeschoolers, much like you and I, have successfully nurtured, homeschooled and raised their children. Those children are adults now and are successfully homeschooling their children too.

The Homeschool Teacher that Doesn’t Teach!

Being the teacher doesn’t mean you have to teach. 

Most of us {if we honestly self-evaluate} are limited in some way or the other in our education.

Whether it is because we did not understand a certain subject when we were in school or whether we had no interest in learning a particular subject, we may feel inhibited.

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children Part 2. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Do not let this hold you back because in the homeschool arena, we can hire private tutors that are experts in an area, buy curriculum that has step-by-step instructions, join a local homeschool co-op or homeschool with another family to fill any perceived weakness on our part.  All of which I have done at one time or another.

Too, if you homeschool from the beginning when your children are very young, then you can learn right alongside them as I have done.

Many subjects I have confidently taught and breezed through because I have learned on the job.

In the end, your standard is the only one that matters.

Adopting a learning without limits attitude will propel you on in your journey.

Also, equally important is not pushing aside the time and curriculum you need as the home educator.

It is hard to teach somebody else when we have so many questions about curriculum, schedules and learning styles.

Allow me to help you by taking advantage of what I offer for free like my Free 31 Day Boot Camp for New Homeschoolers.

Of course, I would be delighted to help you through our New Bee Homeschooler Program too, but I provide many free resources because I care about you staying the course.

And remember, because you’re the teacher now, you can decide which subjects you want to teach and which ones you want to receive help with.

Look at these other tips to help you:

  •  Gauging Homeschool Progress – Masters of their Material?
  • Is Homeschooling Making the Grade? It’s in and the Grade is ALL Fs! 
  • Why Buying Curriculum Won’t Make You a Homeschooler (But What Will)

Hugs and you know I love ya,

5 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: newhomeschoolyear

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children? Part 1.

August 29, 2015 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

The new year reminds me of the haunting question that echoes time and time again and that is,“What qualifies you to teach your children?”

Even after homeschooling for many years, I find it hard to hide my eagerness and enthusiasm when it comes to answering those who question not just my decision, but my qualifications to homeschool.

Just so that it is absolutely clear, I am not a former public school educator.

I do not have a degree conferred upon me in education and never went to college to learn about how to educate children.

But I do have the approval of the Highest Person in the universe to homeschool my children.

I am not a state certified teacher, but I have graduated one son who is now working on his college degree. Oh, wait, the second son just recently graduated too.

Another son is doing middle school/high school level work.

Having taught all of my sons to read and write well, I have homeschooled many years with my standard set to excellence.

By helping former public school teachers get on the road to homeschooling, I have learned that a state certified teacher does not love my children more than my husband and I do.

Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children Part 1. This is fantastic stuff. @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusNo, I am not asking naysayers to only believe the “love-my-kids-more-than-a-professional-teacher” mantra.

On the other hand, what has held me to my course to the end with two of my sons is my deep and abiding love for my sons. It has been an enormous motivating force which propels me beyond the basics how-tos of homeschooling.

Not everybody questions your motives for negative reasons.

A lot of times questions arise out of pure curiosity. I find too that some parents are flat out scared and they think that somebody else is more patient, organized, loving or smarter than they are. I am still working on all those things.

We know the difference between people who are really interested in how we are going to teach our children versus people who are asking with a critical stare.

Arming you with a few things that jolt through my mind and heart when I think about my qualifications to homeschool, I am hoping you remember these as you start your homeschool year.

Grab some of these and put them down on your homeschool mission statement.

Unspoken Assumptions

Remember as I share these tips that though you may be the only one in your small community to homeschool, you are not alone. Thousands have gone before you successfully.

The key to keep learning is to not seclude yourself and to obtain continual education. Look at my points below with those thoughts in mind. Empower yourself.

  • Whose standard?

Like you, I left the public school system because it was not working for me. Not everybody has a terrible, horrible, bad experience with public school. I didn’t.

But what I did know was that deep down I knew I had different standards for everything and that included academics, emotional, physical and spiritual development.

So I am not interested in meeting the public school standards, but in exceeding them.

That is why you have to come at us homeschoolers with more than just, “What about testing?”

My reply is always the same, “Do you have any idea of why to test?”

It is hard to defend something when a person starts off on untruths and preconceived ideas.

In other words don’t bring the public school’s way of determining whether something is working or not to homeschool and expect them to work at our home. Some homeschoolers test, some don’t. But if and when we do, we have very specific reasons to test. I will be discussing this in a future post.

How does that qualify me to teach my children then?

Because my system or standard works for my family!

I can and do provide a richer environment because it is more practical, useful and tailored to my children.

You are taking control back of not just educating your children, but making the everyday decisions for your family in the other areas I mentioned above.

Did you get that?

My standard has changed because I am not just interested in filling my children’s brain to the full, but hearts are involved.

The bottom line is that your family is the only one you have to worry about as far as standards. The new standard is now meeting and exceeding your family’s needs and not the needs of 100 other families that you do not know.

Tell me, what certified teacher or accredited school will go to that length to create such a unique, diversified, distinctive and one of a kind education for your children?

Too, do you know why a majority of homeschool children outdo their peers?

It certainly is not because we step to the same pace or standard.

Look at my post What is NOT Homeschooling.

  • We give up cookie cutter education for the masses and adopt a learning without limits attitude.

For some folks, they may not appreciate their new found freedom so that mind-set just doesn’t settle right with them. But for a lot of others it does.

How does this qualify you as an educator? You no longer step in sync with the masses, but are intent on creating an extraordinary educational program.

Show me a teacher with a degree who does not know the child she teaches and I will show you a mom cradling her child, which has adopted a firm and dogged-determination to understand how to educate her child.

  • Any guesses who is in it for the long haul?
  • Any guesses who will work overtime with no pay?
  • Any guesses who will drive hours upon top of hours so that her children will have friends?
  • Any guesses who will jump in the college waters not knowing anything to help her child navigate them?
  • Any guesses who will spring into action teaching a child to read as terrified as a mom might be?

This is not about bashing the public school system or public school teachers because I have a few friends that are teachers. But it is about keeping the focus on what is best for your children.

Not settling for mediocrity when it comes to filling your mind with the how tos of homeschooling, I do feel that you can eventually be a force to be reckoned with and that your children receive an exceptional education.

I still do not know a lot about how to manage more than 20 children at one time, but I do know how to choose curriculum with a discerning eye, how to fill a learning gap if any in our year, how to adjust my teaching to fit each sons’ learning style and how to train my sons for college level work.

More importantly somewhere along the way too, my husband and I also nurtured in our sons a desire for spiritual things.

I only shared two things today. What about you? Have you adopted either one or both of those ideas?

In Part 2 Are You Qualified to Teach Your Homeschooled Children, I will share a few more ideas that I hope you embrace.

Also, look at the helpful tips:

  • Wipe Out Self-Doubt: 13 Ways to Show Homeschool Progress (And How I Know My Sons Got It)
  • 3 Unexpected Benefits of Homeschool Narration 
  • When to Skip Ahead Or Stay Longer on a Homeschool Subject

Hugs and love ya,

8 CommentsFiled Under: Be an Exceptional Homeschool Teacher, Teach/Which Subjects to Teach/Cover EVERYTHING Tagged With: newhomeschoolyear

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