20 Years of Homeschooling a Houseful
15 November 2007

Christmas Do's

Posted in Holiday Ideas
Every Christmas I dread the influx of "stuff".  With 12 people living here, a little becomes a whole lot in no time.  For years I have focused on gifts that get used up, or don't take up physical space.  Examples of these would be any type of lessons, art or handiwork supplies, gift certificates for movies, skating, or the zoo.  This year, though, I want us all to focus on gifts that come from a heart of servanthood.  For financial reasons, I also wanted to focus on "doing" instead of "buying".

Here is a list of a few "do's" that I'm giving (or wanting!) this Christmas:


1) A completed "honey do" list....this is what I'm telling my husband I want most of all. 

2) Cookies of the month club for my brother with a sweet tooth...with a certificate listing the types and which months they will arrive. 

3) I'm saving a "meal" each night with our current supper and freezing it for our daughter away at college.  She can take a month's worth of home-cooking back to school.

4) My teen daughters are giving free babysitting coupons for a friend with young children

5) My two oldest boys are giving our elderly neighbor the gift of a shoveled walkway this winter.

6) My husband works for the county plowing snow in the winters and one man always meets him with a treat...coffee and cookies, hot chocolate and brownies...sometimes even a Diet Coke.  The thought means a lot to my husband.  I know he works extra hard to do a good job at their house. 

7) My mom likes to light her fireplace and was buying expensive "fire starters".  My kids made her some sweet smelling starters from cardboard egg cartons, filled with cotton dryer lint or sawdust, and poured melted leftover candle wax on the top.  We stick in a little piece of wicking or kitchen string. 

8) With so many sweets around holiday time, it always amazes me how happy people are to get a loaf of homemade whole wheat bread.  It's a simple gift, but tied with a piece of ribbon you have lying around, people really love it.

9)  I'm an avid bread baker and I'm giving away "lessons" to a group of friends that have been asking for years to learn all the secrets.  We can all get together for a fun day of fellowship, and I'll teach them at the same time.  Most everyone has a skill they can teach to someone else. 

10) My teens are making  a "tree" house (doll house) for my little ones by cutting rings from a large downed tree and using them as "platforms" for rooms.  They used part of a branch with a fork for the main base and then nailed on the platforms.  They left the bark on, but then sanded and sealed it all. We got the idea from a Doug & Melissa doll house. Then they made acorn people for them to play with (some look like fairies).  Very cute.  I realize not everyone has access to the woods...but gifts from nature are fun for little kids.  A corn cob doll is more of a novelty than a "real" one. 

11) My husband hates cold winter mornings while I'm refreshed by them.  I'm giving him the gift of a warm car by going out to start his car before he gets in for a long morning commute. 

12) A gag gift for a young man who drives a lot  (perhaps not the most tasteful!) is a can of Bush's Baked Beans and a convenience store gas card...with a note that says we are giving the gift of gas. 

One other fun family activity that we do every Christmas is to play the game "Pass the Pigs".  We each bring a wrapped "white elephant" and whoever wins the round chooses a gift.  When the gifts are gone we begin "borrowing" from others.  It is so funny to see the gifts opened at the end.  One particular elephant gets creatively rewrapped every year to disguise its true identity. 

I hope these inspire you to give from the heart this season.
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10 November 2007

Charlotte Mason - The Ala Carte Menu

Posted in Curriculum
Curriculum is a lot like a gorge-yourself-for-$4.99 buffet these days.  It is abundant, inexpensive, and somehow still leaves you unsatisfied.  Stuffed full, but with the distinct feeling you've missed something better.  So many of us are longing for more simplicity.  I want to recall here how I homeschooled some of my oldest children...."back in the day".  Twenty years ago, we were blessed with fewer choices.  This allowed for a whole lot less planning, and a whole lot more educating! 

So here is my recipe for an abundant, rich, but SIMPLE education. 

The Core Ingredients:

1 Loving mother who wants the best for her children.  Must be patient and willing to take time from her busyness to really engage her children actively.

Several children who are excited to learn because there is an abundance of rich material around them, and a learning lifestyle is modeled before them daily by their parents and atmosphere.

A houseful of good habits regarding eating, sleeping, exercise, attitudes and behaviors, personal care, and care of the home.  We may not have all those habits perfectly mastered, but everyone in the home knows what is expected and strives to achieve it. 

Add to this base every day the following:
(For best results use this order every time you prepare the recipe)

Bible reading all together
(I recommend and use the Child's Story Bible by Catherine Vos.  We read over breakfast)

Reading instruction for the non-readers & independent reading for the fluent.
(I recommend a combination of living books and a core like Phonics Pathways.  I also follow many of the recommendations in Ruth Beechick's 3R's series for instruction.  Let the older children choose at least some of their own reading from a list you approve)

A Math lesson for everyone
(I take a day every week to read math literature and play games that are very math dependent.  The least expensive and thoroughly designed math program would be to use the The Math Worksheet Site through middle school.  If you feel you must have curricula, then I prefer Singapore followed by Teaching Textbooks.)

Language Skills for everyone
This includes dictation (spelling), copywork (handwriting/grammar), formal grammar instruction, oral and written narration. 
(The best inclusive program for this are Emma Serl's Primary & Intermediate Language Lessons.  You don't have to work in all five of these areas each day, but you must work in some of them EVERY day.  We keep a copy of the cover of each book the child reads with the narration on the back.  Oral, copied by mom for the young child; written by an older child.  I use the child's current literature book for additional dictation, as well as a list of the most common English words for older children who need other spelling practice.)

Family Read-Aloud
This is the fun time where memories are made and great ideas are forged and grown.  We can take turns reading, and those who are not reading may be quietly engaged in drawing, handicrafts, or lego-building.  We read a literature selection daily, followed by something in another inspiring subject like history, geography, nature study, science, or current events.  We might read a biography of an artist, composer, or missionary. Discussion, in my opinion, is the highest form of narration.  The older children model longer narrations for the younger children.  The little ones get to try out their skills.  Sometimes they all look like they've tuned you out completely...but then supper time comes and they narrate to Dad!  If the weather permits, spend this reading time outside in the fresh air and sunshine...or this morning at our house, snowflakes! 

Family Time Outside
Sometimes this is utilitarian in nature (garbage out, wood chopped, animals fed, bodies exercised, food gathered or hunted) and sometimes purely for the joy of it (outdoor games, nature hikes, leisurely walks spent visiting). 

Time for Individual Pursuits
Following this family time, older students can engage more serious studies if they desire.  Those who love reading can do more.  Big boys can stay out trapping, building, inventing.  Children can be crafting, cooking, and playing with dolls.  Moms can cook, do paperwork, clean, nurse babies, and feel refreshed knowing that their children are growing healthy and happy. 

Even with no additional ingredients this recipe is a winner every time.  It is the recipe I use when life has been full of too much "junk food" (literally and figuratively), and we must get back to some homemade goodness.  We may also post some lovely art prints to enjoy or play delightful music when we are about our Father's business.

Once we are ready to spice things up and cook creatively, then we can add some other ingredients to "make it our own".  We choose to add back music practice, foreign language, art projects, science experiments, and working on our Book of Centuries.  Just like a real recipe, those ingredients change over time.  Sometimes we cook it a certain way for awhile, and sometimes we throw in something new.  It's all delicious when it's made at home with love!

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14 August 2007

The Perfect Purple Planner

Posted in Organization

For years I was constantly in search of the perfect organizational system.  Somehow, somewhere, I was certain that I would find the key to keeping it all together.  I tried various systems each one more complex than the previous.  All of them seemed to work…for awhile.  And honestly, the systems that were the most involved to set up and implement seemed to serve me for the shortest amount of time.  Slowly God showed me several truths in this area.


The first was that I was the mother of many children.  At that time, I was the mother of many young ones.  For many years I had at least 4-5 children under 7 years old.  Looking back, those years were simply harder than when you can have some older helpers.  Now, it isn’t impossible to feel peaceful, rested and blessed but it takes different expectations, focused planning and good old-fashioned hard work.


Next, I had to accept that there was no magic system.  While different techniques and strategies can sometimes seem to be “just what the doctor ordered” at some stage in our mothering careers, for the most part, the best system is one that I could easily use and maintain.  I recently lost a lot of weight and everyone asked me how I did it.  However, no one really wanted to hear the answer (which is…I ate very little and exercised like a crazy woman).  This same simple principle is true for most situations I find myself in.  This truth for me is somewhat disappointing.  I still want there to be some elusive magical entity that if I can just wrap my fingers around, will change my whole life.  Alas, other than the transforming power of salvation, all else pales by comparison.


Finally, I had to admit (at least to myself) that I was in love with the idea of organizing and planning.  I like to mess with my schedules and homeschool plans and how to rearrange my house.  I can easily while away the hours “planning” instead of “doing”.  If I wasn’t careful, I would rework the homeschool plan more than I was homeschooling the children.  Part of it was escapism on my part.  I was secretly lonesome for other adults and though I loved my children and my calling as a wife and mother, thinking and writing allowed me to feel more intellectual again.  Let’s face it, there isn’t a lot of intellect that goes into diapering and vacuuming up Cheerios.  Whenever I was working on the “perfect” organizational system, I felt intelligent and in control!


Upon realizing and embracing these truths, I hit upon the idea of the Purple Planner.  Almost perfect!  Now, I had to spend all of that time introducing the concept, because it will take all of one paragraph to explain its high-tech usage!  The purple notebook is a one-subject, 10 for a dollar, spiral tablet.  Now, I do prefer the ones with the tear out pages, but any will do. It wouldn’t have to be purple, but at my house, I’m the only one who can have purple.  I like a standard 8 ½ x 11, but you could choose a different size.


In all of my years of looking for the perfect planner, I could never find categories that were exactly what I needed.  I also realized that while many of my categories remain constant, I have projects that are ever-changing especially during different seasons of the year.  I simply write everything in this one notebook, and each “topic” gets its own page.  If I finish a page, I tear it out.  If I run out of pages in the notebook, I look back over all of my notes and file what I need or copy it into the next notebook.  That way none of my projects go stale for too long.


Now, since I’m sure you are probably curious, I will tell you what some of my topics are.  Yours could be wildly different.  I have a page with my husband’s name at the top, as well as each of my children.  I also have a page with my closest friends’ names and my mother.  When I think of something I want to talk to them about, I write it down.  If I see an academic, character or prayer need in a child, I jot that down.  There are pages of lists: Walmart list, buying club list, grocery store list, library books to request, children’s sizes, Christmas idea list, prayer requests, errands to run, and phone calls to make.  I make lists of people’s phone numbers and addresses and type them into my computer all at once.  I write down websites I want to check out.  Right now, I have a huge section devoted to the planning of the upcoming school year.  There are pages of quotes, inspirations, and funny things that my children did or said.  I keep track of milestones.  Now, I’ll admit that I sometimes have to hunt for the right page, but I know it’s in that notebook.  In a pinch, I just start a new “people to call” page, and I don’t sweat it one bit.  Some days I know I need a “to do” list, and I make one in the notebook.  At the end of the day, I simply tear it out.  I take the planner with me when I leave the house, and write my personal data in the front cover with a “reward offered if found” statement.


If I misplace a notebook at home, I know it will turn up and I simply start another.  This summer with my daughter’s wedding, I had one purple planner just for that event.  I know it seems silly, but this method absolutely works for me and I continually get comments about how I manage minute details.  The wedding probably had 5000 tiny details, and they were all remembered thanks to the 10 cent Mead purple lifesaver.


The only other item in my organizational arsenal is a (purple) binder that holds information I don’t want to leave our home.  It has emergency phone numbers, a photocopied page of our social security cards, credit/check cards and medical insurance cards, a pocket with take-out menus, sports calendars, the permanent phone/address list, copies of school and chore charts for each child, and account numbers and online passwords.


So, there it is.  Complete organization in a couple of hours for under $10.  I probably should package it up and market it!  You get the “free” pilot program.  Let me know if I missed anything!

 

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15 November 2006

9x13 Breakfasts


O.K., due to popular demand, I'll give you a post about these.  For those of you that know me, you know that I'm a handful of this, glob of that, scoop of something else...plus I cook in enormous quantities!  I'll give you these to get you going, and then I'll try to post some  "real" recipes and reasonable sizes.  I call them 9x13 recipes, but I don't ever use a pan smaller than about 14x22 in my family! 

Some of these are beyond simple and you can just use your own regular recipe:

1)  Cornbread, cut in squares and served sometimes with butter and syrup, plus fruit
2)  Baked oatmeal.  I do have a great recipe for this.
3)  Breakfast "bars" individual frozen hashbrowns on bottom layer, cooked bacon, sausage or cubed ham, any veggies you want, mix about a dozen eggs with a little milk, salt & pepper, and pour over.  Cook until set at 350 and then cover with shredded cheese and melt.  I've used other meats (even chicken) and have also used cut-up leftover potatoes, but it cuts best with the hashbrowns.
4)  Susan's breakfast strata...this is similar but uses cubed up bread on the bottom, sausage, cheese next, then egg mixture with salt, pepper, and dry mustard.
5)  Fruit & "granola"  use apples, canned or fresh peaches, pears, berries, or a mixture and place in the pan.  Then make a crisp-type topping by mixing about a stick of butter, 1/2 cup brown sugar (not too sweet or this is like dessert!), 3-4 T flour, and probably 1/2 -3/4 cup rolled oats.  It should resemble cookie dough in texture. Add cinnamon if it "goes" with the fruit you're using.  If the fruit is super tart I sometimes sprinkle it with cinnamon sugar.  If I use frozen fruit or berries I sprinkle them with flour before adding the topping.  Bake at 400 about a half hour...a little longer with fresh apples. Serve with plain or vanilla yogurt, or milk/cream/half & half.  You can also use ready-made granola for the topping if you wish.
6)  Biscuits & gravy  I brown bulk pork sausage and drain.  I add milk, flour, lots of pepper, and sometimes other spices if the sausage is bland and heat until thickened.  Pour the sausage mixture into the pan and then make a recipe for about a dozen "drop" biscuits and plop them on the top. You can use biscuit mix, or homemade, whole wheat works fine, too. Refrigerate overnight and bake in the morning.
7)  Egg quiche with rice crust...I make this when there is leftover rice.  Use about 2 cups of rice, 2 eggs, 2T minced onion and press against the bottom and sides of the pan.  Bake at 450 degrees for about 10 minutes...watch to make sure it doesn't overbrown.  While baking, mix eggs with some milk and grated sharp cheddar or swiss.  Add whatever types of meats and/or vegetables you like or have leftover.  I've done ham/swiss/broccoli or turkey/asparagus, or leftover brats, onions, peppers.  Then pour a dozen beaten eggs (with a a little milk, salt, pepper, spices) If you don't have rice, you can add about 2 cups of milk to the eggs and about 1 1/2 cups of baking mix (like Bisquick...I prefer Jiffy).  It sinks to the bottom and makes "crust".
8)  Breakfast pizza...put bread dough in the bottom of the pan (or refrierated biscuits), and cover with toppings.  I usually make a garlic-parmesan white sauce for this, but you don't have to have any....just try a smear of butter and a mixed garlic/herb spice blend and a shake of parmesan cheese.  We add crumbled sausage or bacon or ground beef (or at our house more likely venison or elk) scrambled eggs, sometimes a leftover potato, onions, peppers, mushrooms, etc...cover with cheese and refrigerate overnight.  The refrigeration slows the development of the yeast...but doesn't stop it altogether...so make this later in the evening, and use less yeast than usual if you're making it from scratch.  Or enjoy a giant breakfast puff...science at the breakfast table...what a great way to start the day!
9)  French toast casserole...cube a 1 1/2 pound loaf of bread and place in the pan.  Mix an 8 oz package of cream cheese (softened) in a mixer, add about 1 cup of maple syrup, 2t cinnamon, 8 extra large eggs (more if they're small), and enough milk to make it pourable.  This one has to soak overnight.  Sprinkle with brown sugar just before baking at 350.  A knife will come out clean when it's done...about 40 minutes, I think.  A good use of a stale loaf of bread. 
10) Puff Pancake...I had never had good luck with these, but my friend Natasha says that her kids love her recipe, so I'll get it and post it here. 
11) Giant Muffin "Cake" - simply double your favorite muffin recipe and bake in a 9x13 pan.  Or use any coffee cake recipe.

In the winter I also make homemade tapioca in the crockpot which is a big hit on cold mornings.  Another good plan if you have bits of leftovers is to throw it all in a pan (potatoes, onions, peppers, other veggies, leftover taco meat or beans, chicken) and scramble with eggs, throw it on a tortilla with cheese, salsa and sour cream and call it breakfast burritos.  And, you can ask Julie about my other weird breakfast recipe that I made up called "lazy mom's french toast".  Maybe she'll post the recipe, I'm out of time!
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11 September 2006

The Breakfasts of Champions

Posted in Organization
I will never forget when I once read a book by a mother of a large homeschooling family.  I was so excited to glean tips about how to "do it all".  In the first couple of chapters I learned that her family ate nothing for breakfast except sugary cold cereal.  My bubble was burst.  First of all, my husband would have to take on another job!  Secondly, I'd be fighting sugar-induced rioting by 9:30 a.m.  And, finally, my little frugal gourmets would organize a mutiny!  They are not picky eaters, but they have come to expect a good meal  (at every meal...::sigh::)

One of the ways I make this much easier on myself is to have a planned breakfast (and lunch) menu.  That way I can still be creative at supper time, but not feel like a slave to the kitchen.  I really worried at first that they wouldn't want to eat the same thing every Tuesday, but after realizing that many children eat cereal and toast EVERY morning, I felt secure that they have it good! 

For this year, I am truly fortunate in the fact that my oldest daughter cooks all of the breakfast before she leaves for work.  As other children are ready to eat, they just reheat if needed.  The days of all of us sitting down for a leisurely weekday breakfast are gone.  Enjoy togetherness if you are still in that season! 

The 2006 fall/winter menu is:
Monday - Hot Cereal (usually oatmeal or farina)
Tuesday - Eggs
Wednesday - Yogurt & Granola
Thursday - Pancakes or French Toast
Friday - Cold Cereal (o.k., I didn't make it out without one day!)
Saturday - Homemade Muesli
Sunday - Breakfast Bread (scones, muffins, cinnamon rolls, etc.)

Toast, bagels, and English muffins are usually available in addition.  I don't allow juice as a general rule, but occasionally we have it at breakfast.  Fruit is always available.  My husband loves "big breakfasts" that include eggs, potatoes, bacon, sausage, and biscuits & gravy so we try to have a big brunch on Sundays after church.  I also incorporate some of those kinds of breakfast meals into my supper menu.

There have been times during pregnancies where I couldn't even bring myself to enter the kitchen in the mornings.  During those periods, I used a plan called 9x13 breakfast ideas.  They were breakfast casseroles that you put together the night before.  I still utilize many of the recipes, and we occasionally do that if we anticipate a busy morning. 

I'm sure that's plenty to "chew" on, so I'll leave lunch for another post!

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8 September 2006

Three Stars & A Wish

This is a little trick that I learned from a special education teacher that has blessed our own family immeasurably.  I use it the most with my children's writing.  Before I let you in on my little secret, I do want to expound for a minute about homeschoolers and writing. 

If we are painfully honest with ourselves, writing is probably the area where homeschoolers as a group are the most lacking.  We have soft mother hearts and when our children are struggling to form the letters, words, sentences, and paragraphs...we like to step in.  Now, don't misunderstand me...oftentimes, we should step in.  But, you need to be excruciatingly aware of the fine line between easing frustration and hindering crucial skill development. 

Children in formal school settings are forced to communicate in writing simply because a teacher cannot possibly get oral answers from twenty children all day long.  We can do most things orally, which is a wonderful blessing for a struggling learner.  It allows a child with poor skill development to continue learning at or above the levels of his peers or grade expectations.  I think that's great....with a giant "BUT" at the end!

Here's the rub...you must always be seeking to improve the lacking skills.  Each day a little more should be required than the previous day.  When they get frustrated, you say "ok, just one more".  Look for non-threatening times away from "school" to practice (grocery lists, notes in Daddy's lunchbox, a "mailbox" with siblings, an email to Grandma, etc...).

So, finally, after all the waiting...here's the tip called "three stars and a wish".  Whenever your children are writing (or doing anything, I guess), you find three things to praise and one thing to work on.  For example, you are looking at an 8 year-old's paragraph about dolphins and you say...
1)  I see that you ended all of your sentences with a period.  Good job.
2)  You have really learned a lot about dolphins.  I love how you described the way they "talk" to each other.
3)  You left just the right amount of spaces between your words.

I have one wish for your next paragraph.  Do you remember how each sentence should begin?  Yes, we need to put a capital letter to help send a signal to the person reading that a new sentence has started.
 
Now, this paragraph is riddled with spelling errors, and probably has very few descriptive words.  Each sentence has the same format and starts exactly the same way.  The handwriting is messy, and there is no identation of the paragraph.  If you enlightened your 8 year-old to all of these truths, the eyes would glaze and you would have a very reluctant writer tomorrow!  Children really achieve when they feel good about what they've accomplished and just need to make one little extension to improve things even more.

Choose a few goals for the year, and work toward mastering one item at a time.  With sentences, beginning with a capital letter and punctuation at the end goes a long way toward a great paper.  If my second grader only got that down, I'd be thrilled. 

This is the way I use three stars and a wish most, but it is also excellent for chore training!  I could go on and on, but I'll spare you and let you come up with more ideas for yourself (and for me!!!)

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7 September 2006

Sometimes It's the Little Things

Have you ever noticed that often it isn't some earth-shattering realization that makes life noticeably easier, better, or more joyful?  Lately, a bunch of little ideas or helps have all built upon one another and things have fallen in to place exactly that way!  (If you're experiencing the opposite feeling...like it's all falling apart...be aware that this same principle can work in reverse.  It may be the little things you can't quite put your finger on that are wreaking havoc in your home.)

So, here's one of the simple little ideas that is making life much easier.  When I have children who are learning to write, I have often "dotted" out the letters that I want them to practice.  Later, I found a cool website that would make writing sheets for me, but they weren't in the style of handwriting I use, and I was always forgetting to print them.  Enter my wonderful friend, Martha, who benignly suggests that I simply use a highlighter and let Sorche go over it with her own pencil.  I am pretty sure there was an audible "duh" heard 'round the world!  Better yet, let's imagine the hallelujah chorus! 

This one little trick has improved her handwriting exponentially, and lowered my stress level.  I can print anything for her to write "on the fly".  Even older children who have difficulty with writing can use this method to practice spelling words.  I like the retractable highlighters with a finer point.  Now, if I could just find one that comes on a lanyard!  I'll just buy in bulk. 

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5 September 2006

Tickle My Ears

Do you get a little excited when the latest homeschool catalog or card pack arrives in the mail?  I know I do.  It's amazing how quickly I can find the time to set aside my regular work to flop down and dream longingly about days filled with homeschool bliss.  Each new book and curriculum promises to fufill all of my lack (or slack! ;) )

Do you know when I am most likely to run to the latest "new" ideas? When I'm struggling...with disobedient children, a messy house, a contentious spirit, and a quiet rebellion that wells up inside me.  I long for those new plans when I'm running away from what the Lord has called me to do.  Run away from God?  Never, you say!  2 Timothy 4:3-4 says "For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine: but wanting to have their ears tickled, they will accumulate for themselves teachers in accordance to their own desires; and will turn away their ears from the Truth, and will turn aside to myths." 

When I start working with new families seeking God's best in their homeschools, it can be hard for all of us.  There are often glaring problems that families cannot deny exist, and yet they really don't want to hear about.  I strongly believe that most of us know deep down what needs changing in our families and homeschools.  It's just that we don't really want to do what it takes to fix it.  So, we spend our time reading, and listening to tapes, and going to seminars, and looking for a revolutionary way to patch things up. 

"Beware of the false prophets who come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly are ravenous wolves.  You will know them by their fruits...."(Matthew 7:15-16)  God's people are destroyed for a lack of knowledge.  I remember when I was a young mother with 5 children under school age and lots of energy!  (Them, not me!)  I read every book on discipline under the sun.  I read books by Christians with large families, small families, and no families.  I read books by psychologists.  I  listened to tapes and attended classes.  I gleaned some good information in a few of those books.  I also filled my head with fluff and false ideas.  I was sufficiently "tickled".  What it boiled down to, is that mothering 5 very small children is a lot of hard work.  I needed a heart consecrated to my Lord, a willingness to accept direction from my husband, and a love of falling into bed at night, exhausted. 

When you are struggling and need help, resist the urge to look laterally.  When you turn your head and look to the side, you just see the rest of the people in the same boat.  Look ahead to mothers who are a stage ahead of you....they can still remember what it was like to be in the boat, but can gloriously describe their arrival at the next destination.  When you have fallen out of the boat and feel yourself sinking, reach UP!  Proverbs 3:11-14  "My son, do not reject the discipline of the Lord, or loathe His reproof'; for whom the Lord loves He reproves, even as a father, the son in whom he delights.  How blessed is the man who finds wisdom, and the man who gains understanding.  For its profit is better than the profit of silver, and its gain than fine gold." 

Do you ever get the feeling that while you have committed to homeschooling your children, it is really YOU who is getting the education? 

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31 August 2006

The Perfect Curriculum

Posted in Curriculum
Homeschoolers today face an array of curriculum choices that are nearly mind-boggling to veteran homeschoolers like me.  I recently received a catalog that was bigger than a phone book.  Larger, certainly, than all of my curriculum catalogs combined during those first few years.  You could spend the whole year just planning a great program, and never have time to get around to teaching it!

I've never been able to pinpoint exactly why it is that we put so much effort into our curriculum choices.  Of course, much of it is because we love our children dearly and want what's best for them.  But, I would speculate that when we start drawing up our 10-year plans (that include even our "potential" family additions), we do it just because it's fun to dream. 

The biggest problem with overly specific long-range plans, is that life circumstances change.  Your homeschool, like your family, is in a state of flux.  What works best for your size family, your ages of children, your learning styles, your budget, your spiritual foundations, your special needs child, etc...may not be right for mine.  The best curriculum is the one that is right for your family.  Beware of anyone who hawks the "one size fits all" program. 

That is what sets my homeschool consulting apart.  Most free consulting services are set in place to sell you their curriculum (which is why they are not really "free).  I'm able to recommend exactly what suits your family at one particular stage in your life.  That could range from a Bible and a library card, to a full-fledged program complete with bells and whistles galore. 

The first step in choosing a program is to seek the Lord concerning His will for your family.  Consult your husband next.  Even if he isn't involved in the day-to-day operation of schooling, God gives him wisdom and insight into the needs of your children that mom is sometimes "too close" to recognize.  If you still need assistance, consider a homeschool consulting service like mine.  If doubts remain...just begin someplace and stop overthinking your options. 

I know many of you have heard me say this time and again....but I'm still at it...the perfect curriculum is the one that gets used! 

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About Me

When I was a young mother and homeschooler over 20 years ago, I searched for a mother of many as a mentor. I found a few women along the way that helped me with parenting, but I was blazing my own trail for the most part with homeschooling. I see now how God used that situation to draw me closer to Him. It also forced me to develop my own vision and legacy of homeschooling, rather than simply copying the plans of another. Other than simple teaching experience, I have been mostly heavily influenced by the philosophies of Charlotte Mason and Thomas Jefferson Education (Oliver DeMille). I have read extensively about all kinds of homeschooling, and have enjoyed or endured brief forays into other methods. Later, as more books were available, and especially when I went online in 1993, many doors for fellowship and sharing ideas were opened. Now that I have moved into a new stage of mothering (no babies or toddlers, children moving out and marrying), I wanted to capture some of those things I most wished I had known when I had a houseful of small children. I want to encourage other moms to "stay the course". I have never regretted these years spent homeschooling. It was the best decision I have ever made. I now know that choosing a philosophy and curriculum need not be the basis for educating my children. God gives the vision, and we just need to get out of the boat and start walking toward Him.

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