Natural Paths
30 May 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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More notes from a seminar I attended years ago at my state homeschool convention.......

 

How To Avoid Burnout

** What is burnout?  What are the symptoms?

- Physical

- Mental

- Emotional

- Spiritual

 

 

** How can we recover from or avoid burnout?

- Step back and look at the big picture.

- Recognize God's economy at work.

 

 

** There are days for all of us where we feel like we can't keep going.

 

** Burnout only happens to people who care deeply about what they're doing and who are following something they believe with all their heart.

 

** You can't keep taking out without putting in. 

 

** Learn to say NO!  Don't give in to weakness.  Say no when you need to without apologizing.

 

** Burnout can happen from your children, your husband, your church, etc.  Anyone can get burned out. 

 

** We feel a lot of stress for our children to achieve.

 

** We have reminders all around us of what we haven't done.  There are things that can "accuse" you wherever you go.  When you start taking all this in, it can overwhelm you.

 

** Are you tired all the time or often sick?  These are signs of physical burnout. 

- You need to rest!

 

** Do you feel stressed or easily become discouraged and vulnerable to the enemy (satan)?  These are signs of mental burnout.

- Don't try to manage everything yourself.  You have a "team" in your house to pray for you and help you.

 

** Do your emotions come and go?  This is a sign of emotional burnout.

- Handle your emotions by submitting them to the Lord.

- Never decide to quit doing something based on how you feel.  Pray about it!

- You need to have a friendship with your child(ren).  You are a team that God has called together.

- When you are a Christian that God has "called" to homeschool, all you have to do is look in Scripture to see what happened to other people that God "called" ... it wasn't always pretty and it wasn't always easy.

- Remember the fruit of your efforts (homeschooling) is eternal.

 

** Don't count everything as a grade as to whether or not you have been successful.

 

** Remember we do what we do to see our children following the calling God has placed on their lives.

 

** When you face trials (financial, illness, etc.), don't give up on homeschooling.  God will give you the grace to do it.  Ask God to give you the grace to continue.

 

** Don't get so taken up with the nuts and bolts and academics of homeschooling that you miss God.

 

** You have to readjust your focus from time to time. 

 

** God has a plan for your child(ren).  He's had a plan since before you decided to homeschool.  It's His plan!  You are merely a tool in the plan.  Put your focus on Him and His plan.  Stick to the plan that God has given you for your child(ren).  Don't focus on what your neighbors or friends are doing.  Put your focus back on the Lord (Psalm 139).  When you fail, He will make sure He provides a means of success for your childI(ren) in spite of your failure.

 

** Seek Spiritual and practical solutions, but be guided by peace.

- Adjustment of a situation or approach.

- Adjustment of outside obligations.

- Adjustment of expectations.

- Adjustment of managerial style.

- Adjustment of personal steardship.

 

** We get busy meeting other people's expectations and end up setting our own children aside.  Make sure your obligations aren't causing you to put them low on your priority list.

 

** The most important part of personal stewardship is taking care of yourself!

 

** When you feel confused, step back and pray about it.  Feel the peace of the Lord about it.

 

** Pray for your friends who are struggling (and the ones who aren't).  Pray for the Lord to give us strength to finish the race.

 

** Let your children know the important things and pray and trust the Lord for the rest.

 

Seminar presented by  Debbie Strayer.

 

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23 May 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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We can all use some great craft sites, right?  Here you go.......

 

Sunday School Crafts

 

MSSS Crafts and Resources for Bible Stories

 

DLTK's Crafts for Kids

 

Danielle's Place of Crafts and Activities

 

Homeschool Views Crafts

 

A to Z Home's Cool: Arts & Crafts

 

AllCrafts

 

Family Fun Arts and Crafts

 

Kaboose Crafts

 

Hands On Crafts for Kids

 

Activity Village

 

As with any website, please check for any inappropriate content before allowing your children on the site!

 

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9 May 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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More notes from a seminar I attended at my state homeschool convention a few years ago.......

 

The Organized Homeschooler

** Start by writing down your greatest organizational need.

** Five categories of organization we're all struggling with:

1.) Time

2.) Papers (paperwork)

3.) Supplies & materials

4.) Space (rooms and how to store things)

5.) Family

(The Organized Homeschooler deals with this.  It's not a step-by-step system, however, because every family is different.  It's about the heart of the matter ... do you really want to impove?)

** Why do you want to become more organized?  CHAOS possibly? ... Can't Have Anyone Over Syndrome

** Where do you fit?...

- The organizationally challenged person (tries, but it doesn't work).

- Wannabes (people at home amongst chaos but feel they shouldn't be).

- Well-intentioned organized (life got in the way).

- Already well organized (always on the hunt for a better way to do things)

** The first thing you need to do is set goals (before you even buy a bookcase, closet system, etc.).

** 3 Kinds of Goals...

1.) Academic

2.) Process (goals that talk about how we do what we do ... use adverbs in this statement ... example: Doing schoolwork neatly.  In a timely manner.)

3.) Personal or Spiritual (character issues you're going to work on)

Set these for each of your children, but do it with them.  If you enlist your children in this, it becomes their vision too.  Then, do it for yourself!  Where do you need to improve?  Let your children see you do this because you are modeling it for them.

** Everything you do should have something to do with meeting your goals or you are wasting your time.

** Don't let schedules control you.  You are supposed to control them.

** Be smart about what you buy and why you buy it.

** Be intentional and think about what you believe.  Are you doing what you believe?  Everything is our choice.  You have to do what is right for your family.  Our time is precious.

** Our children need to learn responsibility.  They need to work and help around the house.  They need to know this for raising their own families.  You need to take care of your home as a family.

Seminar presented by Vicki Caruana.

Again, I apologize for all this being run together.  I don't know why my entries are posting this way.  Very frustrating.......

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2 May 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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I had a great response to my Teaching Tidbits entry last Friday when I shared notes from a past seminar I attended at my state homeschool convention.  Thank you for all your wonderful comments that it was just what you needed to hear ... I needed it myself as well!

 

I'm sharing my notes from another great seminar today.......

 

Secrets Teachers Never Tell

** You can't come back in the fall expecting your children to remember everything from the prior school year.  You have to start off with a review.  If you take a summer break, you should probably plan on a couple of weeks of review.  You can adjust the length of review according to the needs of your child(ren).

** Think about why you do what you do.  Example: Why do you take a summer break?  Take some time and think about why or if you need to do something.  Don't do it just because someone else does.  When you establish new ways and new thoughts, please tell your children why you are doing it that way.  Each one of us is unique.  One of the problems for those of us that attended public school is that is what we know (as far as how to teach).

** Some months are better than others.  December is usually a very hard month to teach.  Make your school tie together with your life in December and schooling will be easier ... do math while baking cookies, have your children write notes to relatives and address Christmas cards.  Adjust your schedule to fit your needs.  If you live in a warm climate, you may find it works better for you to school during the summer when it's too hot to enjoy the outdoors and take time off during the winter months.  You are the administrator of your homeschool and make your school schedule.  Make it fit your family.

** Children learn in spurts and plateaus.  Our goal is to transport the child ... educate the child ... teach the child.  Take all the time you child needs to master a skill!  You can't do what the book (teacher's manual for any given subject) says day by day if your child isn't learning the material.  Reading through a textbook chapter by chapter and taking a test doesn't necessarily teach your children.

** Assimilation takes time.  You have to have a period of "brainless activity" to compute the things you've learned.  Children need this!  Let them play and climb trees.  They need "mindless" time to assimilate the concepts we're teaching.

** You don't have to grade every paper.  Keep one paper per subject, per child, per week and you can get a good idea if they are grasping the material.  It's okay to be good in some things and not so good in others!

** Learning involves doing.  Do what you and your children enjoy.  If they aren't laughing and giggling on a daily basis, they aren't learning as much as you think.  Make it fun! 

** Shame on you if you think you must finish the text each year.  You don't even have to follow the text in order - there is no rule that says you must do day on on day one and day two on day two.  Know your child!  Knowing your child's heart and skills plus their weaknesses is prime to teaching them.

** On days when "the natives are restless" ... do all the wonderful projects you wanted to do but didn't have time for or spend time on unfinished projects.  Play educational games - children learn from games and need games.

** Children can't learn in an atmosphere of fear, anxiety, depression, etc.

** Ever have those days when you just want to pull your hair out?  Do something to win your heart back to your children ... have a picnic or make some popcorn and watch a good movie.

Seminar presented by Joyce Herzog.

I apologize that all this is run together rather than separated in paragraph fashion.  I typed it out that way, but it won't post that way.  I had this problem with yesterday's entry as well.

 

 

 

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25 April 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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Today I'm sharing my notes from a seminar I attended a few years ago at my state homeschool convention.......

 

Myths And Realities of Homeschooling

The Myths

1.  We can all be "supermoms".

 

** We don't think of homeschooling as a job - it's so much more than that.

** We need to lighten up about everything.  Sometimes we get too serious about it.  Laugh at yourself.  You don't have to do it all - you have to make choices and let some things go by the wayside.

 

 

2.  We can keep our homes just as clean and beautiful with kids at home all day as when they are gone.

 

** Housework can't be a mom only job.  Dad and the kids have to help!

** It's important that we train our children from the time they are very young.  Our children need to feel they have an important purpose in the family.  How they grow up forms who they are as an adult.

 

 

3.  When we choose to homeschool, our family relationships will automatically be wonderful.

 

** We need to replace contempt with love and understanding.

** You don't solve problems by pushing them away.

** Family relationships might be tough during the younger years, but it really pays off during the teen years.

 

 

4.  All homeschooled children are above average.

 

** We all have normal children - some are struggling.

** Our egos are wrapped up in our kids.  We have a hard time accepting their limitations.

** We don't need to compare our kids with other kids (test scores, grades, etc.).

** All of our children have strengths and weaknesses.

 

 

5.  Homeschooling is automatically going to make our children Spiritual giants.

 

** We cannot guarantee that the absence of evil will produce good behavior or Spiritual growth.

** We have to give them a strong foundation.

** The Old Testament is full of stories of parents being honored for their faithfulness.

** Help your children spend time walking with the wise instead of the foolish.

** Have your kids hang out with older and younger kids rather than peers all the time.

** Homeschooling won't guarantee freedom from peer pressure.

** It's important to spend time with families/people who have the same values as you.

 

 

6.  Homeschooling dads should be active participants in all aspects of homeschooling.

 

** Time: Dads have limited time and priorities.

** Interest: Moms eat and breathe homeschooling - dads don't.  Dads have other concerns.

** It's great when dads can be involved, but just don't "count" on it.

** Dads should be the Spiritual leaders in the home.

** Dad's can read with the kids.  This is great for bonding.

** Dads can do special classes and activities with the kids.

** One of the best things dads can do is give moms time off.

 

 

7.  There's some magic formula as to the best way to home educate.

 

** You think you have it all figured out and then something happens and you have to shift gears to go in another direction.

** Don't let someone who sounds "authoritative" put pressure on you.  Make your own choices and decisions!  No one else knows your children the way you do.

** One of the best things you can do is pray for inspiration.

 

 

When you get rid of all these myths, what do you have left?

 

** You understand that you have limitations.

** You understand that you can't do everything perfectly.

** You gain in some areas and lose in others.

** You understand that a lot of homeschooled children don't fit in very well with peer groups, but they do extremely well with older and younger people.

** You understand that you have to let go of the things that don't matter.

** You understand that you need to set realistic goals for yourself and your family.

 

Seminar presented by Cathy Duffy

 

 

 

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11 April 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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BOOKS:

More wonderful books we've enjoyed over the years (variety of ages)...

 

Library Lion by Michelle Knudsen

The Family Under The Bridge by Natalie Savage Carlson

Who Was King Tut? by Roberta Edwards

Who Was Sacagawea? by Judith Bloom Fradin

The Dragon of Lonely Island by Rebecca Rupp

The Return of the Dragon by Rebecca Rupp

Who Was Harriet Tubman? by Yona Zeldis McDonough

Who Was Daniel Boone? by Sydelle Kramer

Who Was Ben Franklin? by Dennis Brindell Fradin

Who Was Thomas Jefferson? by Dennis Brindell Fradin

How Do Our Ears Hear? by Carol Ballard

The Magic School Bus books

 

SCIENCE:

All About Birds

 

 

ART:

Mr. PicassoHead

 

 

WORKSHEETS:

RHL School free worksheets

 

 

PRESCHOOLERS:

The Idea Box (crafts, recipes, games, and more)

 

 

ONLINE EDUCATIONAL GAMES:

Funbrain

 

 

MATH:

AAA Math (grades K-8)

 

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4 April 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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BOOKS (VARIOUS AGES):

More favorite books that have been enjoyed over the years.......

 

A Bear Named Trouble by Marion Dane Bauer

Ginger Pye by Eleanor Estes

The Goodnight Gecko by Gill McBarnet

Moki and the Magic Surfboard by Bruce Hale

Tikki Turtle's Quest by Gill McBarnet

Sarah, Plain and Tall by Patricia MacLachlan

The Chronicles of Narnia by C. S. Lewis

Star in the Storm by Joan Hiatt Harlow

Billy and Blaze books by C.W. Anderson

The Hundred Dresses by Eleanor Estes

 

 

PRINTABLE FORMS:

Donna Young's Printables and Resources

 

 

ART:

Incredible Art Lessons

 

 

SCIENCE:

Cool Science for Curious Kids

 

 

HISTORY/GEOGRAPHY:

The Fifty Nifty United States (a couple of typos on the printables, but nice nonetheless)

 

 

GENERAL CURRICULUM REQUIREMENTS:

World Book's Typical Course of Study

 

 

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28 March 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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 I must confess that I am currently plagued by some major sinus issues with plenty of pounding discomfort.  So ... that means I'm not up to making a ton of effort for this week's Teaching Tidbits entry (sorry!).  This week it's all about books.

 

FAVORITES:

I asked my ds1 to name for me seven books or series he has found thoroughly enjoyable over the years.  Here's his list.......

 

Dragon Rider by Cornelia Funke

My Father's Dragon, Elmer and the Dragon, and The Dragons of Blueland by Ruth Stiles Gannett

The Tiger Rising by Kate DiCamillo

The Judy Moody and Stink series of books by Megan McDonald

The Tale of Despereaux by Kate DiCamillo

Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo

The Sign Of The Beaver by Elizabeth George Speare

 

 

HISTORY:

The You Wouldn't Want to Be....... series of books by various authors  (As with any book, preview and use your own judgment)

 

 

SCIENCE:

The Look Once, Look Again books by David M. Schwartz

 

 

PRESCHOOLERS:

We're Going on a Bear Hunt by Michael Rosen

 

 

MATH:

The Sir Cumference books by Cindy Neuschwander

 

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21 March 2008

Teaching Tidbits

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Welcome to the kickoff of what I'm choosing to call "Teaching Tidbits" - a small tour each Friday of resources we've enjoyed or found valuable during our homeschool journey.  I hope new and veteran homeschoolers alike will find something helpful each week.

 

BOOKS: 

The Magic Tree House series by Mary Pope Osborne

This was our introduction into the world of chapter books when ds1 was 5.  He's now 9 and still loves the series.  We've enjoyed many of the accompanying research guides as well, although I do not care for the information in some and have chosen to not use those in our studies/free-time reading.  As with any book, review the contents and make your own decision if it's right for your family or not.

 

ART & MUSIC:

Check out these free printable art and music notebooking pages.  Don't feel that you have to use them in a "notebooking" capacity.  I personally love the layout of some of the artist biography pages and picture study pages and will be using them individually starting next school year as we dig deeper into fine art studies.

 

 

PRINTABLE FORMS:

Highland Heritage Forms offers over 800 free printable forms covering an array of topics ... reading, planning & organization, Bible, portfolio, field trips, science, awards, music, history, language arts, spelling, math, and so on.

 

 

HOMESCHOOL PRESCHOOL:

Everything Preschool has changed a lot in appearance since I utilized it many years ago when doing preschool with our oldest.  I'll definitely be visiting it again ... quite often ... to use with our youngest.  Browse the site's themes, lesson plans, project recipes, coloring pages, and alphabet ideas for use with all the special little people in your life.

 

 

GEOGRAPHY:

An assortment of printable maps can be found here.

 

 

SCIENCE:

Visit Astronomy Picture of the Day for stunning photos and written explanations daily.  Be sure to enjoy the archive - it goes back to June 1995!  The index offers many more learning opportunities covering the cosmos, solar system, space technology, scientists, astronauts, and the sky.

 

 

HEALTH:

These printable human anatomy pages can be used as coloring pages or for labeling.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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