Home Sweet Home(School)

Nov. 19, 2008

"Homespun Holidays" giveaway -- we have a winner!

And the winner is...

:::drumroll:::

Anna!

Thanks, everyone, for your comments. I wish I had enough of these to give one to everyone!
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Nov. 12, 2008

Review: Help Me 2 Teach

Here's another fun resource that being on the TOS Homeschool Crew brought to my attention.

TOS Crew

Help Me 2 Teach is a reference site of links on a number of subjects. The ever-growing list includes the standard academic areas (social studies, math, science, language arts), electives (foreign language, music, arts and crafts, cooking and sewing, etc.) and teacher helps (quiz generators, flashcards, special needs helps, and more). In the past month, new topics have been added, such as lapbooking links.

I have to confess, I haven't made as much use of the site as I might have. Just a few of the many links have gone a long way in our family. One link took us to a website with oodles of educational games--math, critical thinking, geography, and probably more. Our children have learned the names and placement of all the states in the U.S., I mean really got it down, not just kinda-sorta knowing, through playing these geography games. They've been doing math drills for fun. (Imagine it.) They've been working at problem solving. Talk about constructive play time!

Some of the links are old friends, but many are new to me.

One criticism I've heard of the site is that if you're savvy about using the Internet and search engines you don't need to pay for this service. I played around with this idea a bit, to test it out, and my answer is yes... and no. I've put lots of search terms into search engines and come up with long lists of sites to check out, some of which were appropriate and some of which were probably something I wouldn't want the children to click on. In some cases, I didn't come up with the same links as I found on Help Me 2 Teach's list.

Frankly, it takes time to do web searches, and depending on your filtering software (or lack of it) it can be a nerve-wracking experience.

The Help Me 2 Teach website has the standard disclaimer, that websites can change over time. You knew that already, I hope. In homeschooling circles there's the infamous case of a well-known homeschooling magazine whose site license expired and was bought up by an unsavory company, so that anyone following a link to that formerly helpful site... well, let's just say it wasn't pretty.

The links at Help Me 2 Teach have been carefully selected, and I get the impression that I could sit my child down at the computer to do research through the links at Help Me 2 Teach without the same degree of worry that I have when they use a popular search engine. (Though I still monitor their computer use. It's just common sense.)

Ease of use:
Entries are coded so you can see suggested grade level at a glance (primary, elementary, secondary, and teacher/parent).

There's a search box at the top of the subject list so you can search the Help Me 2 Teach site for a specific topic. When you enter your search terms, "You take potluck," as my mom used to say. You might have to be a little creative to narrow down your search. For example, typing in "forest fires" brought up all sorts of weblinks related to forests and forest creatures but not necessarily what we were looking for. Sometimes you won't find what you're looking for. I've had good results in finding links to most of our current studies (meteorology, for example). On the other hand, I haven't had much success finding out about forest fires. No site can link to every possibility, and yet, the author of Help Me 2 Teach has done her best to cover the basics. (You might even be able to put together an entire curriculum using these links.)

The links that do come up in a search of the site have a nice cross-reference feature, a category link. We typed in "knights" and came up with a site on the Knights Templar, not what we were looking for. The Knights Templar link is categorized under "Social Studies" and a subset "Medieval Times and Middle Ages" -- clicking on that "Medieval Times" category link brought up a whole list of promising links.

If you just want to take a look at Help Me 2 Teach, there's a three-day membership for a nominal cost of $4.95. The pricing structure makes the site more affordable as you increase the term of membership: i.e. you pay nearly five dollars for three days, but for twice that amount you get a whole month, and for about $30 you have access to the site for a year. That works out to about $2.50 a month, which doesn't seem like much, especially if you use the Internet a lot for your schooling.

That one educational software site we found through Help Me 2 Teach was worth the price of a three-month membership, in my eyes! We've gotten so much use out of it! I've barely begun to explore the other links, but I think I'll be getting my money's worth, especially with that buy-one-get-one free offer.

Didn't I mention that yet? Special through the end of the year: Buy one year for $29.95 and get a second year free. That works out to $15 a year, a pretty good subscription price for this product.
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Nov. 11, 2008

Review: The Missing Link: Found

One of the fun things of being a member of this year's TOS Homeschool Crew is being introduced to new resources!

TOS Crew

For example, I don't remember hearing of Media Angels before. Since receiving The Missing Link: Found in my mailbox, I've heard good things about their Creation Science resources, which include:

- Media Angels Science (Creation Science, Creation Geology, Creation Anatomy, Creation Astronomy)
- Creation LapBook
- Literature Study Guides
- An Insider's Guide to Successful Science Fair Projects
- Teaching Science and Having Fun!
- Virtual Field Trips
- Writing and Publishing
- and more, including more in the Truth Seekers Mystery Series (see below)

When you have a voracious reader like I have, you're always on the lookout for a decent book. We have a lot of classic literature under our collective belt, and still that child is thirsting for more. I'm sorry to say she developed a taste for Nancy Drew at friends' houses (though I confess, I had about eighty Nancy Drew books when I was her age, too... that was before I learned about twaddle versus brain candy).

I was happy to discover Max Elliot Anderson's books. His Mountain Cabin Mystery was among the first modern books we read, targeted at 8-12 year olds, that espoused similar values to ours. (No boyfriend-girlfriend stuff, for one thing, as is found in most of what's out there. Including Nancy Drew.)

Middlest has gone through all of the Black Stallion books, the Warriors series, Encyclopedia Brown, all the Nancy Drew we'd allow, Boxcar Children, Bobbsey Twins (do you realize how many were published???), several books by Louisa May Alcott, most of Jane Austen, The Shining Sword, The Happy Hollisters, and more books than I can mention.

When The Missing Link: Found arrived, I was glad to hear the author's intent to provide fun, clean, exciting reading for youth. By "clean" I mean that parents are respected, not the stupidest people in the book, that young teens aren't subjected to boyfriend-girlfriend relationships (it's my opinion that 12yo children don't need to be dating), no occult themes and, while exciting, without graphic violence. Missing Link meets these standards.

What's more, this is the first book in a series written by a homeschooling mother-daughter team! The first book in the series, Missing Link was begun when Christina Gerwitz was a young teen, and wanted to write a mystery novel of her own.

I can relate to this. My voracious reader is embarking on the writing journey herself. After reading so many books, she's got stories in her head, ready to spill out onto paper! I've read the beginnings of her mystery-adventure novel, and it pulled me in! I'm looking forward to reading more...

Anyhow, the Gerwitz mother-and-daughter team didn't know anything about writing novels, but they learned.

The Missing Link: Found is not bad for a first effort. It's packed with action and adventure, and pressing mysteries to be solved by the young heroes, a brother, sister, and their cousin. Some of the author's youth and energy shines through in the cinematic scenes (think helicopter chase, explosions, gun battles, and a close encounter with alligators, just for a few). The story starts out with a homeschooling family on vacation, but soon the action focuses on the heroes, and a good thing, too! With so much happening, it's good to keep a tight focus and not get distracted.

Lots of facts are thrown into the story, with a view to the debate between Evolution and Creation Science. Most of these facts are drawn right from major Creation Science sources, trimmed a bit so as not to slow down the story line, but recognizable by anyone who's been to a seminar put on by Institute for Creation Research or Answers in Genesis.

There was one fuzzy statistic, regarding the number of teeth a shark loses in a lifetime, not really related to the Evolution debate. When we researched the "shark's teeth" issue, because the book spurred an interest in the topic of sharks, we found varying information. This issue will be addressed by the author on the Media Angels website. There's a discussion of carbon dating in the book, as well, that might be oversimplified for the sake of the young reader. There are also some typos, but since you'll find these even in big-name publisher books, I won't put a lot of emphasis on this.

As a whole, Missing Link: Found is entertaining reading for your voracious pre-teen bookworm. Right now the publisher is running a special for the month of November, all three books in the Truth Seekers Mystery Series for $22, about a $5 savings from the price of buying all three individually. I haven't read the other two books, but middlest, when asked if she's interested in reading the rest, gives an emphatic, YES!
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Nov. 8, 2008

Heads up! Contest! Free book!

I've been meaning to mention this on my blog and kept getting interrupted, and now the contest is almost over! (Tomorrow, the 9th, as a matter of fact, so get yourself over and get entered!)

Head on over to Free Book! and follow the directions there to enter. (And sorry about the short notice.)

From the official announcement:

Readers of the popular Terrestria Chronicles allegory series will be thrilled to learn that Ed Dunlop has just released The Quest for Thunder Mountain, the first book in his new Tales from Terrestria series. The Quest tells the story of a young minstrel whose life is shattered when his career comes to an abrupt end. The book was written to help young adult readers experience the wonder of finding and doing the will of the King. You can see the TOS review of the Terrestria Chronicles at: www.TalesOfCastles.com .

There will be 15 winners for this contest. Each of the winners will receive a copy of The Quest for Thunder Mountain.


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Nov. 5, 2008

Schoolhouse Planner: November Module (Amusing Mathematics!)

Pssst. Come closer. Yes, you. Come closer so I can whisper.

Ready?

Math can be fun!

I can see you looking skeptical. If we were back home where I grew up, you'd probably pull one side of your mouth awry, raise an eyebrow, and nod slowly, then say (unconvincingly), "Yah, sure!"

But really!

The November module that complements The Schoolhouse Planner (click on link to see a review) is all about math. Actually, it's forty-eight pages focused on having fun with math!

Even my math-hating 12yo got drawn in, as I was reading a math trick aloud. She started doing the trick as I read each step, and pretty soon she was working out how the trick worked, and then she was looking over my shoulder at the page to see if she'd figured it out right!

One of the math tricks didn't seem to work, the way it was written, but we had fun figuring out how the result was different from what we were expecting, and trying various ways to make it come out right.

Next thing you know, she was reading over the math riddles, no doubt storing them up to quiz her sisters or her dad when he gets home, and while looking at the copywork (one of the items was that old poem about "Monday's Child") she wanted me to look up her birthdate to see what day of the week she was born. (No, I didn't remember. I'm blessed if I can remember what day of the week it is TODAY!)

I discovered how to make small font size today. Isn't it fun?

You'll find a little bit of this, a little bit of that in this November module. There are pages of copywork suited to different ages -- cute rhymes to help little ones remember how to form numbers, longer poems, pithy sayings by famous people. There are riddles, as I mentioned, and mental math tricks. There are games such as Sudoko and a word search, and coloring pages that could double as wall posters in a school corner.

And if you're of the school that says All play and no work/Makes Jack an awful jerk, be reassured that there are also worksheets that you can incorporate into your math lessons: speed drills for addition and multiplication facts, worksheets (multiplication table, shape identification), telling time.

Since this is an e-book, one of the advantages is the built in links! You'll find links to all sorts of math fun -- games, crafts, activities, lessons. (As a matter of fact, I had some difficulty reclaiming the computer from 12yo and her 10yo sister, to write this review, as they were deep in a Lemonade Stand sim game they found by following one of the links.) Also, since this is from The Old Schoolhouse, you'll find a one-page resource list of links to products offered in the Schoolhouse Store.

Let's see, did I forget anything? Tangrams, puzzles, vocabulary... Oh, yes! For the puzzles and worksheets, you'll find a set of answer keys included. There are also a couple of recipes just right for cooler weather. I haven't tried them yet, but all the recipes I've tried from The Old Schoolhouse's publications have been yummy!

The November module to the Schoolhouse Planner can be found at the Schoolhouse Store (click on the link and it'll take you directly to the module). It's a downloadable e-book, in PDF format, for $7.95. Whether you have math fans or mathphobes at your house, you'll find something here for everyone.

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Nov. 4, 2008

Homespun Holidays Giveaway

Remember I recently mentioned The Old Schoolhouse's Homespun Holidays?

The TOS free offer with subscription has expired, but you can still get a free copy of Homespun Holidays right here! I have a copy of this lovely e-book (a $12.45 value) to give away.

Homespun Holidays
    recipes, traditions, fun!

Comment here by Monday, November 17 to be entered in the drawing. Please include your email address (I don't do anything with it but notify the winner). If you comment about the contest on your blog, and give me a link to your post, you'll be entered twice! Youngest will draw the winner's name on Tuesday, November 18. (Youngest loves to draw winners' names!)

Click here to read my review of Homespun Holidays, Fall and Winter.
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Oct. 24, 2008

20th Century reading list for a young and sensitive student

It's not as easy as you'd think. You see, youngest has a tender heart. There's so much in recent history that's disheartening. (Pardon the pun. Couldn't resist.)

So far on my readaloud list I have:

1900 to 1920 or so
The Wright Brothers at Kitty Hawk by Donald? Sobel
All-of-a-kind Family series by Sidney Taylor
Little Britches series by Ralph Moody
Sergeant York? (Might be too graphic at her age)
I think "Cheaper by the Dozen" fits here, too.

1930-1950
James Herriot's books
The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom
(Another book about hiding from the Nazis, I have it on the bookshelf but forget the title)
The Winged Watchman (re-read) by Hilde Stockum
Snow Treasure (re-read)
The von Trapp Family Singers (Maria's autobiography)
Sergeant Donkey (not the whole title, but I forget the rest and it's late)
House of Thirty Fathers (I think that's the title, maybe it's "Sixty") by de Jong
YWAM's Gladys Aylward biography

1960-1990somehing
Space program (Race to the Moon DVD set, perhaps a biography or autobiography to go along with it)
Don't know what else. Some Beverly Cleary books, like the Ramona series or Ellen Tebbits? (shows life in the 60s pretty well, I think)

Other Biographies:
Norman Rockwell? (My parents loved his art, and we have a big coffee-table book of his works they gave us.)
Churchill? (Saw a documentary about him, made by his granddaughter. What an adventurous life he led!)
Bob Hope? (Incredible story of an immigrant who "made it" and then gave generously of himself)
Martin Luther King, Jr.? (um. maybe, or maybe a snippet of his life and achievements, perhaps memorizing passages from his "I have a dream" speech--she'll get awfully upset if the book ends with his assassination. She's young, yet, and doesn't need to have the fact pounded in. She's aware of it, I think, in an abstract way. There's time to revisit the 20th century again when she's older.)

This was all from brainstorming while waiting somewhere today. I'm sure there's more I can add to the list. Got any suggestions?

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Oct. 20, 2008

one2blelieve's "The Nativity" play set

Hey, all!

There's been a flurry of activity at our house, mostly due to the TOS Homeschool Crew. Several boxes have arrived, and we're in the thick of checking out new ideas and curricula. You'll be hearing our family's impressions and experience over the next few months.

The Nativity Play Set

One of the first things to arrive was The Nativity, a play set from the Tales of Glory series available from one2believe.

We have several Nativity sets at our house; I bought my first one when our oldest daughter was very little. It's an elegant, white porcelain set. The figures are realistic in shape, but the only color to the set is a couple of touches of gold on the Magi (a gold crown and a box of gold that one of them carries).

Memories in the Making

There's a funny anecdote about that set. Our minister was walking up and down the church aisle as he gave his sermon, and he asked the church in general what they knew about Jesus. Our daughter (about three at the time) raised her hand eagerly, and he called on her. She confidently said, "Jesus is like a little tiny donut!" (Imagine our consternation. We're thinking, "What do they imagine we teach her about the Bible at home?")

He laughed and turned it into a joke, saying something semi-profound like, "Some people even see our Lord Jesus in a humble donut." Perhaps he thought she was referring to the Donut Man.

Some weeks later I was putting away the Nativity set and turning over the figure of baby Jesus in the manger, I saw that the porcelain figure was hollow inside, and the bottom formed a donut-shaped rim. In her careful fingering of the Nativity set as we'd arranged it the first Sunday in Advent, she'd evidently examined the figures more carefully than I had!

Nowadays our lovely porcelain donkey is missing one ear, and the tips of the angel's wings are broken, for the set is made more to be looked at than handled. Children are drawn to handle the figures--which is why an unbreakable Nativity set can be such a boon.

When I was little, my parent had a wooden Nativity set. Every Christmas, we children played out the Bible stories with that set. Mary and Joseph traveled to Bethlehem with the donkey. Shepherds perched on high places, watching their flocks. An angel announced the Good News to them, and they went to the stable, bringing the littlest lamb along. Meanwhile, Magi were making their way through the long living room to the stable, to find the Holy Child and give Him their gifts. (I'm sad to say that the set disappeared between the time I left for college and several years later, when we helped Dad go through the storage areas in the house after Mom's death, or we'd still be using it.)

Child-friendly

I wanted to do the same with our own children, but I needed a sturdier Nativity than our lovely porcelain set, where I wouldn't be wincing every time a child moved to pick up a figure! I've bought a couple of sets over the years, one a heavy-duty (but still breakable) set, another made of snap-together plastic figures from Playmobil. The sets have had a lot of use over the past few years.

The Nativity from one2believe is well-suited this sort of interacting with the story. There are seventeen pieces in the set, including a stable, two angels, a donkey, a camel, Mary, Joseph, a manger, a bale of hay, a baby Jesus, two shepherds, three Wise Men, and two sheep. The figures are about 2.5 to 3 inches in height.

A small story pamphlet is included for your convenience, in English, Spanish, and French (though we probably won't use it; our children are used to reading the Nativity story from the gospels of Luke and Matthew).

Our impressions:

The colorful figures are made of heavy-duty PVC plastic. They're sturdy. I've stepped on one (by accident) and managed not to break it. However, the box warns that this toy is not for children under age 3. (There are small parts, and PVC is problematic if chewed or mouthed.)

Our 12yo finds the figures "too babyish." This does not preclude her from playing with them, however. Her sisters think the set is "charming" and have spent a lot of time the last few days arranging and rearranging the figures, even playing out scenes and conversations between characters.

The figures are cartoonish in style. Almost every one wears a wide-eyed expression of astonishment. They are designed to be appealing to small children. If you object to cartoonish Bible characters, you might want to look into a more realistic Nativity set. The figures are not in proportion to each other--youngest was both laughing and disappointed that the donkey was much too small to carry Mary, for example, the Wise Men are very large in comparison to their camel, and the baby is huge, nearly as large as the adults. The shepherds are androgynous and can be taken either as girls or beardless boys.

If you were wondering about skin color, just about all the people are very light-skinned. I think one of the shepherds is a little darker than everyone else in the set. Hair color ranges from blond to brown. I didn't see any alternatives at the website.

I like that the baby and manger are separate pieces. We have a custom of setting up the Nativity scene some weeks before Christmas, with the manger empty. We put the baby in place on Christmas eve. Most years the girls still play out the Story, starting with the Magi in the far eastern corner of the house, setting up the stable on the hearth with the shepherds in the "hills" on the mantel above, and Mary and Joseph traveling from the kitchen to the living room in stages, arriving on Christmas eve sometime during the day.

The Tales of Glory Nativity is listed at $24.99 on the http://www.one2believe.com/ website.
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Oct. 10, 2008

New TOS e-book: Homespun Holidays, Fall and Winter

Autumn is here with shorter days and crisp, cool nights. There's a homey smell in the air, combining woodsmoke and fresh air, while leaves blaze overhead and crunch underfoot. There's something about autumn that makes me take deeper breaths, and I often drop whatever I'm doing to watch the wild geese flying overhead, on their way to warmer days further south.

You don't have to be living where the leaves turn bright colors and there's a nip in the air, to get that fall feeling. Just open up Homespun Holidays, Fall and Winter from The Old Schoolhouse, and you'll be transported into autumnal delights. Though Thanksgiving and Christmas are well represented, as you'd expect from the title, you don't have to wait for the latter part of November to start celebrating! Ideas for decorating suited to autumn and harvest will dress up your home to say "Welcome!" There are recipes here just right to greet cooler weather. Mmmm, I can just about taste that hearty soup simmering on the stove, can't you?

A little this, a little that, wrapped up in eighty-some pages and tied up with a bright bow... Homespun Holidays, Fall and Winter is lavishly illustrated with colorful photos, and you'll find here ideas for crafts, homemade gifts, foods, hospitality ...even a few seasonal poems. There are books to read, new traditions to adopt, even a game to play on a long car ride as you head "over the river and through the woods."

The recipes are easy to follow and sound delicious! (A couple that I've tried taste delicious!) Scattered throughout the book, they are also gathered together in the final pages for easy printing and reference. The craft instructions are clear and thoughtfully put together. There are hyperlinks in the text that give you access to additional crafts and holiday ideas. I was glad to find links for making Jesse Tree ornaments, and creative ideas for recycling Christmas cards, just for two examples. The cookie recipes make me think about hosting a cookie exchange!

Homespun Holidays, Fall and Winter is the perfect read for this time of year. Why not heat up a little apple cider with a cinnamon stick and some cloves, sit back with a steaming cup, and start planning to add some spice to the season? Watch for this e-book, coming soon!
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Sep. 18, 2008

TOS Homeschool Crew!

(Cross-posted on my "family life" blog)

Great news! I got an email yesterday announcing that I’ve been selected for the new Focus Group sponsored by The Old Schoolhouse magazine.

However, I’m interrupted by an insistent dog, as well as children looking for breakfast, so I’ll have to tell you more later!
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Sep. 10, 2008

Student Assignment Planning, Part 1

I promised you planning as Jennifer van Atta introduced it to me, and other moms in our local support group. She went on to teach a workshop at a homeschool conference, but that was years ago, and tapes of that workshop are no longer available from the conference host company. I've googled Jennifer and haven't been able to find her; so I'm sharing highlights of her system with full credit to the author.

Jennifer shared this as an approach to encourage students to work independently, especially in times of busyness or high stress, such as taking care of a seriously ill grandparent, or some other family crisis.

I'll be posting this in steps over the next few days, as quickly as I can get it done amidst the many demands of homeschooling life.

Foundation for Success

Here are Jennifer's basic principles underlying the process (adapted from a workshop handout):

1. Pray throughout the process of planning. The Lord knows exactly what you need to accomplish. He also knows you, your strengths, and your limitations.

2. Know your personal goals for the child, and let them influence your planning.

3. "Put on" the mentality and personality of the child whose work you are planning. Your own "teacher" mentality will come thorugh on its own. Remember your child's strengths and weaknesses.

4. Do not even try to plan a subject until you have already obtained the basic material (text, worksheets/activity sheets, tests, etc. -- not supplementary material.) You will only fragment your plans and your brain simultaneously.

5. Tackle the most complicated subjects first. It clears your brain.

6. Finish one subject completely before you move on to another. You need to know that each subject is DONE.

****

More tomorrow, if all goes well! By the way, I'd like to have a copy of the master planning sheet available for download. Can anyone direct me to a safe document-sharing site, something like Photobucket for .rtf or .pdf files? I suppose I can just scan the planning sheet and upload it as a .jpg to Photobucket, but I remember seeing a site where you could upload shared documents, somewhere.
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Sep. 6, 2008

Fun review/facts drill game!

I was just glancing through a few blogs when I ran across this fun game by a Charlotte Mason-inspired homeschool mom. (not that the game is CM-inspired, but the mom!)

The game is based on "Cash Cab" on the Discovery Channel, a show I've never seen, but am assured is fun.

Here's a detailed description of how to adapt the concept for homeschool fun (and learning!).

Have fun!
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Sep. 5, 2008

Just checking in...

...wouldn't want you to think I forgot!

It's been an interesting week. Youngest came down with a nasty fever-sore throat early in the week, and I came down with it Monday night, as I mentioned. Tuesday-Wednesday were bad, Thursday was shaping up to be a day when we'd finally add math for *everybody* (not just youngest) when...

...you guessed it. Life happened.

There was a little mishap during our lunch break, and off we went to the local Urgent Care. Around dinnertime we got home, complete with one of those nine-saving things. (A stitch in time, etc.). But the child who had the mishap is fine, it could have been much, much worse (as in losing an eye, instead of having a stitch in the eyelid), and we are thankful for our many blessings.

Today is "Not Back to School" day at the local amusement park, with discounted ride bracelets for homeschoolers. The girls elected to spend some of their county fair premiums for ride bracelets. So I guess we're not back to school, at least for today.

More on planning soon! I've got a dynamite student assignment sheet to share with you, courtesy of Jennifer van Atta. (Jennifer? You out there?) Jennifer was a member of our homeschool group, but her family moved away years ago and I lost track of her. I am still using her ideas for assignment planning, however. They've stood the test of time!

(If you know Jennifer, let her know I was asking about her?)
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Sep. 3, 2008

The Old Schoolhouse Magazine goes digital!

One of my biggest clutter problems is paper clutter. Our home is graced with stacks of paper clutter: Articles, forms, and worksheets printed from the Internet make up a large part, but homeschooling magazines are *huge* contributors. It's so hard to get rid of these... I'll start to pile old magazines into a paper bag, to share at a homeschool event, only to find myself sitting down and reading an article, or setting the magazine aside because I wanted to try this unit study or that recipe.

Aargh! No wonder I have homeschoolish heaps!

(trumpet fanfare, and an echo of "Here I come to save the day!" -- Mighty Mouse fans, anyone?)

Enter The Old Schoolhouse to the rescue!

The Old Schoolhouse Magazine is now available in digital form, with all the color, content, and convenience of the paper edition -- without the clutter!

Picture this...

The new issue arrives in your email box.

Well, no, not exactly. That would be an enormous email. I mean, if you've held an issue of The Old Schoolhouse in your hand, you know how thick it is, all those glossy colored pages, heavy with promise.

What you get in your email box is the gateway to the new issue. The email contains a list of highlights so that you can go immediately to an article that catches your attention. In addition, there's a master link taking you to the entire online version of the magazine: Start reading at once, or bookmark the link for later reading, or download the magazine for offline reading.

Dynamic, interactive reading

Did I say "download the magazine"? What I meant to say is that you download a dynamic, interactive version of the magazine, where any page is just a click away. The issue opens in your browser. The first page of the magazine is a "getting started" page which explains how to get the most out of your magazine. A navigation menu appears at the top of every screen, allowing you to move around with ease. Choices include:

Arrows:
These allow you to move to the first and last pages instantly, or to page forward and backward just as you'd page through the magazine, turning over a page at a time.

Contents:
Brings up a popup window with the Table of Contents. Just scroll down the list to highlight your choice, click, and you're there!

Pages:
If you're highly visual, you'll appreciate this feature, which gives you thumbnail pictures of every page in the magazine, clear enough to read headlines and see the graphics and layout of each page. It's as if every page is laid out and you're taking an aerial view. Again, click on the page you want, and you are instantly there.

Search:
This is really sweet. Enter a search term in the box. Decide whether you want the program to match the term exactly, or find related terms (for example, "organization" might bring up references to organizing). This is so much faster than paging through a physical magazine, trying to remember where you read about something. The program will generate a list of pages containing your search term(s). You can even use wildcards (? for any letter substitute, * to substitute for a number of letters)!

Links:
This brings up a list of links for the current page view, or a list of all the links in the issue, ordered by page, if you check the "show all pages" box. However (and this is really an incredible convenience), when you are reading a specific page, and there's a website link on that page, you can click on the link and be taken to that website in the blink of an eye. Click on an email address, and a blank email comes up, ready for the writing!

Settings:
Personalize your reading. Look at one page at a time, or a two-page spread. Clicking on a page while going through the magazine will bring you into "magnified mode," zooming in on the page to make it more readable. You can use the scrollbar to scroll down, or click-and-drag your mouse to move around the page. Another simple click zooms you out again. The Settings feature allows you to decide how much magnification you want when you zoom, and how quickly you want to turn pages.

Let me reiterate that this magazine looks exactly like its print version... same bright colors, same informative articles, same resources -- but in a great new format that won't clutter up your living space!

Save Money, Time and Space!


(I've always wanted to be able to say that in a radio announcer's voice!)

The Old Schoolhouse digital version is eco-friendly (no trees will give their lives to bring you the current issue), helps lighten your mail carrier's load, and saves you money, too! Subscribing to the digital version saves you more than 30% of the cost of the printed magazine! Easy to use, convenient, and clutter-free: Check out The Old Schoolhouse digital version today!

p.s. Free giveaway!


I'm giving away a free subscription to the digital version of The Old Schoolhouse. Just comment on this post by September 30th for a chance to win! If you include an announcement of this contest on your blog or website, and leave me a link, I'll enter your name twice! (I don't collect emails or use them for any other purpose. Thanks!)

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Sep. 2, 2008

Best laid plans...

It was a cliche around our house. My mom was a planner. She was such a planner that she had a Plan A, and a backup plan (Plan B), and a backup to the backup (Plan C), etc. I remember one evening when I heard her say to nobody in particular, "Well, we got as far as Plan F, but we made it through..."

Of course, she didn't really have a sheaf of written plans. She did most of this in her head, quickly figuring out what she was going to do if a monkey wrench was tossed into her spokes, reformulating her mental map of her course for the day as many times as unforeseen events required. (There are a lot of unforeseen events when you're a mom, have you noticed? No matter how carefully you plan, too.)

I asked her once what the rest of the saying was. For years, all I'd heard Mom or Dad say was the first part of it. Best laid plans...

Mom looked at me blankly for a moment, as if she'd nearly forgotten it herself, and then smiled and answered, "...gang oft aglee!"

Evidently it's a Scottish cliche. Since I didn't speak the dialect, she translated for me. "...go oft awry."

All this to say, I had my plans laid, but I've had to go to Plan B.

You've got to admit, life is never boring.

Do you ever have your ducks all lined up in a row, only to wake up the next morning and find someone's moved them?

I started coming down with a cold yesterday, all the while hoping that it was just allergies. But nope! I woke up this morning with a fever and sore throat and general aches.

It's the first day of school. Three of us had appointments at the chiropractor this morning. Our Keepers at Home/Contenders club is meeting this afternoon for a BBQ and instruction in decoupage and lawn mower maintenance.

It's okay, though. I've reshuffled the deck and taken out the cards that won't work. (Rescheduled chiropractor for later in the week, called to say we won't be able to come to Keepers meeting.)

The girls are disappointed over the meeting, of course, but one is sick with the same cold I have, so we probably would have ended up staying home anyhow. They've thrown themselves into cheerfully making breakfast and tidying up, and then we're going to have our Bible reading and hymn singing. (Hymn croaking? Um. Let's call it hymn-listening, on the part of the two sickies.)

Since we were going to ease into academics this week, it doesn't hurt our plans too much. We were already planning to do Bible and hymn singing today, along with some homekeeping projects. (Dejunking the younger girls' bedroom, for one.) Youngest asked plaintively if we could *please* do some math today, too. How could I be so hard-hearted as to refuse? So I'll do some math with youngest, too, though math was not on my schedule until tomorrow.

If I'd planned to jump from summer vacation into a full-blown "school day" I'd be feeling quite the failure at the moment. Of course, teachers in institutional schools catch bad colds, too, and I imagine there's at least one of them, somewhere in the world, who had to stay home from school today.

Hey. I'm staying home, too, and feeling like something the cat would have dragged in, if we had a cat. But we're chugging along according to Plan B, and everything's going to be okay.

More on planning soon, I hope.
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Sep. 1, 2008

Homeschool Freebies

"Great Resources for Homeschool Families" -- that's what this website promises, and delivers!

Every day they feature a new "freebie" -- e-books new and old, videos, audio books and plays for the downloading. We've downloaded books on handicrafts and old radio shows, for instance. If you join their newsletter you get advance notice of what will be on offer during the coming week.

Today I stopped by there and saw they're having an End of Summer Bash with a dozen or so free resources from earlier in the year, but only until tonight! So hurry on over--for your convenience I put the link below.

If you happen to read this after Monday, September 1, don't despair! The link is still good for whatever the current freebie might be!
http://homeschoolfreebie.wholesomechildhood.com/
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Aug. 30, 2008

Links!

Hi, all. I haven't figured out yet how to add links to my sidebar here at HSB, so as a temporary measure I want to direct you to the mirror of this blog.

http://homesweethomeschool.wordpress.com/

I just posted a number of links there, including sites about:
- menu planning
- cleaning schedules
- free homeschool and home management forms

The entry URL is:
http://homesweethomeschool.wordpress.com/2008/08/30/links-posted/

and reads:

I spent some time this evening posting links to various helpful sites.

You’ll find links for making a cleaning schedule, menu planning, and lots of free homeschool forms, just for starters.

There is such a wealth of information on the web that this small list barely scratches the surface.

Why not comment with your favorite link or two?

****
Hope your Labor Day weekend goes well!

(Keeping those in Gustav's path in prayer.)
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Aug. 29, 2008

Planning: Keeping the home fires burning

Let’s think about the kinds of things we need to plan.


What needs to go on in the background? Meals, laundry, keeping the dust bunnies at bay? (I admit I’m usually pretty good at getting food on the table and having clean clothes, but those dust bunnies… I am a reforming clutterer. *sigh* “Reforming” means “getting better,” doesn’t it?)


Help!!!


There’s a lot of help available for the domestically challenged. Just do a search on “meal planning” or “cleaning schedule” or even “laundry”.


For starters, you might try:

unclutterer.com
www.organizedhome.com
rocksinmydryer.typepad.com
orgjunkie.com
myblessedhome.blogspot.com
www.hillbillyhousewife.com


(Disclaimer: These sites have been in my bookmarks for a while. I clicked on them to make sure they still exist. I didn’t *see* anything offensive when I looked through them, but my online time is limited and I don’t have time to click on every single page or link. Also, different people find different things offensive. /disclaimer)


Warning: Stone of Stumbling Ahead


Here now seems a good place for a warning: It can be very satisfying for those of us who struggle with organization, to *read* about organizing and planning… so satisfying, in fact, that we never seldom get around to actual organizing and planning. Don’t fall into the trap!


Starting Out

Start simply and build from there. For example, with meal planning, can you write down seven different dinner meals that your family enjoys? (Fourteen would be even better. I find myself re-doing this when I’ve gotten out of the habit of planning meals ahead of time, and notice I’m serving spaghetti for the second time in less than a week.) Just write the dinner meals down and tape the list to the inside door of your cupboard.


Um. It helps if you have the ingredients on hand! (If you don’t, do this the day before your shopping day and add the necessary ingredients to your shopping list! Did you know that having a plan and shopping from a list can save you money?)


For those with character flaws (like mine)


I am a rebel at heart, I’m sorry to confess. I put a menu plan together and put it on a calendar, and I come to the day that I assigned “tacos” and think, “I *don’t* want to make tacos!”


I do better if I write down seven meals for the week in list form, and then I choose from the list, cook it, and cross it off the list.


However, now that we’re getting back into a formal fall schedule, I’m going to have to change my ways and go with a calendar plan. This way my assistant cook can know ahead of time what’s cooking, and I can plan a regular crockpot meal on co-op day. I’ll have to stifle my rebellious ways. It’s probably a good thing for my character.


(A real help in this struggle has been a menu planner I got at this summer’s curriculum extravaganza. It allows you to post your menus for two weeks, but they’re attached with velcro and you can move them around!!! See www.10minutemenu.com)


This has been a lengthy post, and mostly about meal planning! Here it is, Labor Day weekend, and you haven’t got your school plans done!


Getting started, Take 2


…take a deep breath. Breathe out slowly. Another deep breath. Good.


If your house is in chaos, how well do you think you’ll manage academics?


If you’re disorganized, take this weekend to set a few systems in order. Food. Clothes. A basic cleaning plan.


Oh, and go to the library and get the stacks of non-fiction easy readers I mentioned earlier, and a good read-aloud book to read together next week while you’re getting your academics lined up. We’ll be talking about that soon, as the Lord allows!


(If you’re antsy about your children’s education and need a plan just for the peace of mind, a couple of sites that have booklists, links to free e-books, and schedules you can use are www.amblesideonline.org and www.oldfashionededucation.com)


If you have any questions, feel free to ask!


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Aug. 29, 2008

Schoolhouse Planner Winner!

The winner of the Schoolhouse Planner e-book is...

(drum-roll, please)

...Virginia!

So, Virginia, I will be providing your email address to The Old Schoolhouse, and they should send you a link for the download. Let me know if you have any questions.

I'm sorry I couldn't give one to everyone who commented! However, watch for another contest next week!
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Aug. 24, 2008

Book list (to get you started)

Some books we enjoyed reading aloud at the beginning of our homeschool journey:
(I am typing in haste, so please forgive misspellings)

The "Little House" books by Laura Ingalls Wilder
Ginger Pye by Elanor Estes
Pollyanna (I forget the author's name, but the book is *way* better than the movie!)
The Little Princess
James Herriot's books
The "Little Britches" series by Ralph Moody
The Wheel on the School by Meindert de Jong
101 Dalmatians by Dodie Smith
Black Beauty by Anna Sewell (my mom started reading this to me when I was 3!)
Charlotte's Web

For your younger ones:
The story of Ping
Make Way for Ducklings
James Herriot's stories made into picture books, such as "Bonnie's Big Day"
Anything by A.A. Milne, both his "Winnie the Pooh" stories and his books of poetry.

Everybody, even the public-schooled neighbor kids who stopped by to share our blanket and listen, when we read aloud on summer days, loved books by Burgess, like his Animal Book, Bird Book, and "Mother Nature" series. If you're a Christian, you can also talk about the difference between the character "Old Mother West Wind" and the Creator, while you're reading.

Hope that gets you started!

If you have some favorite read-alouds, why not post them in the comments?
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