Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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General and Land Animal Science Annual Review

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May 22, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

General Science

Liz completed General Science this year. She has completed the entire elementary series. And now the girls are working through it! I love everything about it.

General science gives a great overview of all the sciences. Liz especially likes physics and can’t wait for that program {in a few more years}! We’re starting physical science after summer break.

I got the journal for Liz to keep all her work together. She has organization issues and there’s a handy little schedule in the front that she would just check off each assignment as she completed it.

Dad’s a scientist. He helped lots this year with Liz and her experiments. He extended some of them to further teach her the concepts well.

density experiment Liz liked the simple experiments. Even when they go wrong {or Mama doesn’t have the correct type of toilet bowl cleaner, sigh}

Learning from Failure

She was much more successful making this DNA strand model out of pipe cleaners.

DNA Strand Craft

We still have this baby taking over my kitchen windowsill, sprouting plenteous roots.

ivy root system

Liz enjoyed the anatomy lessons too. And reading sideways on the floor apparently.

reading

Land Animals Science

The girls are still plugging along with Land Animals and we hope to finish over the summer. I focused more on math and language arts with them since they’re only just turned 6 and 7.

The girls absolutely LOVE these journals. It’s like notebooking and lapbooking all in a great spiral notebook.

We kicked off our school year in science by taking Tori and Kate to the zoo for a special primate event. We had lunch with staff and and special animal guests.

guessing game

We even got to help the primate keeper with enrichment for the lemurs!

drawing for the animals

The lemurs get excited with drawings on the windows of their habitats.

animal art

Here’s the girls’ recent reaction to learning about rumination (chewing cud).

ew!

ew! chewing cud

The girls really enjoyed our map work (learning where the animals live in the world) and learning the animals’ footprints at the end of each chapter.

We played games and completed most of the experiments or crafts.

Kate is rather obsessed with animals and I often find her reading an animal encyclopedia rather than doing what she’s supposed to be doing.

Since they’re studying Latin now, they’re fascinated by learning the proper taxonomy names.

Literature Study (or Book Report) Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Apologia, elementary, middle school, Science

Annual Review 2013

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May 21, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

While we’re not completely finished with our school “year” and our schooling runs through the summer…here I evaluate what worked and what didn’t.

Annual-Evaluation.jpg

We typically finish up a majority of curricula in springtime, like science, math, history, and many extras. We spend spring and summer doing “light schooling” – we finish reading and complete history projects. We do lots of art and nature study and spend our mornings watching hummingbirds and playing outside in the sun. We spend the too-hot afternoons watching educational DVDs and shows on Netflix or playing educational apps and computer games. Evenings, we’re back outside to work in the garden, enjoy the cooler air, and watch hummingbirds and bats.

So here’s my evaluation of what worked for us and what needs tweaking this past “year.” I think I’ve finally hit my stride and we were pretty successful. My husband is quite pleased that we’re settling down and are more comfortable with our curriculum choices and not wasting time and money on products that don’t fit.

History

We love Tapestry of Grace (ToG). I use this primarily with Elizabeth, who loves history and outgrew Story of the World after one cycle through their 4 books in 4 years. We did Ambleside Online that 5th year since it was a survival year for us. I had Alex and we PCS’ed from Hawaii to Utah. We needed simple and free. I had coveted Tapestry of Grace since we began homeschooling and I knew it was time to take the plunge. Liz needed something with more structure than AO and this keeps us well accountable. We love all the choices and some weeks we do too much and other weeks too little, but it will balance out in the end. We are just finishing up Year 2 with TOG.

Tori and Kate are still really young. They would be just beginning the 1st cycle of history, but to keep my sanity, we’ve tagged along with Liz’s schedule. I have to read everything aloud – it’s time-consuming. Some weeks are more interesting than others for them. I plan to do better next year with maintaining their schedule and helping them to keep their notebooks organized. They began really loving the mapwork just about a month ago. Next fall, I plan to really do a full schedule with them for Year 3.

Language Arts

I won a copy of All About Reading Level 2 and Tori and Kate just loved it. We’re almost finished with the lessons and I read that Level 3 doesn’t come out for a few more months. We may wait and just focus on other things until then. We have journals and plenty of literacy games.

I bought AAR pre-level for Alex and he loves it. Ziggy is his bud!

TOG also has a LA component Writing Aids and we incorporate that into our notebooking work. I am excited to review IEW for Liz next month, who needs a structured writing program. We get lots of grammar practice from our Latin studies.

Math

The girls adore Life of Fred and Singapore and we had wild success with both. Liz finished up the Singapore 6B and focused only on Life of Fred. She also enjoys Kahn Academy and I think they’re filling in a lot of gaps for her. We did lots of games and math journaling.

Science

Apologia is perfect for our family. The girls are completing Land Animals and Liz finished up with General. They love the notebooking journals! We did appropriate nature studies, but had a really hard winter and didn’t get outside as much as I would’ve liked.

Music

The girls still love the Musiq Homeschool lessons. Liz plays around with it, but takes formal lessons from a neighbor. She just had her recital last month and it was flawless. We do composer studies as a family with TOG. I hope to start back up with guitar from Schoolhouse Teachers.

Art

We did artist studies along with TOG. We occasionally did extra unit studies if we had time to fit it in or it had extra cross-curricular significance.

Latin

We love Memoria Press Latin. Liz is finishing up Second Form and the girls are beginning with Prima Latina. They love it so much. I love listening to them learning derivatives and grammar. A review is coming up soon!

Practical

Liz is the cupcake queen. She enjoys baking and I hope to encourage her more, but we don’t need all the sweets in our diet. I hope to find an outlet for her creations. Any takers?

Liz has quite a successful babysitting service to our pastor’s preschool-aged grandchildren. Having such a flexible schedule has allowed her to attend them whenever needed. The boy is deaf and autistic and the girl has ADHD from FAS. I am sure this experience will be invaluable in the future. They love her and Liz adores them and works very well with them.

The kids are learning to use essential oils along with me. They are fascinated by how quickly effective they can be to change our feelings or owies.

All the children are learning how to be servant leaders. We’ve been focusing on relationships.

Bible

All the kids and I love The Dig for Kids. Alex is working on Raising Rock Starts Preschool. Tori and Kate read and did great copywork with Hero Tales. Liz completed Who Is God? and  Who Am I? from Apologia.

We <3 We Choose Virtues!

I can’t begin to tell you how much I’ve grown with God this past year. I am so different than I was even a few months ago. He has changed my heart and our family is so much more successful for the Kingdom and on the righter path.

Other

Tori ran two 5K’s with her Dad. For this last one, she got 3rd place for her age group, after two 10 year olds! She was the youngest female in the race at age 7.

Liz is working towards promotion in Civil Air Patrol. She flew a plane from Provo to Salt Lake City a few weeks ago. She loved it.

Conclusion

When I look back at all we’ve accomplished, I feel good. I see how much progress we’ve made! The bad days {read: weeks, months} seem far away and the overall picture is success. I look forward to some downtime and planning for next year. We’re not changing much. Things are too good right now.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: back to school, curriculum, evaluation

Nature Center Day

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May 16, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Mother’s Day weekend is seldom a holiday. For me, it’s race weekend and Kate’s birthday.

On Saturday, we all piled in the van to go up to Ogden Nature Center. Way too early.

Tori ran a 5K with her dad. She’s our athlete.

runners.jpg

It’s a statue. Honestly, I stared at it waiting for it to move. sigh.

heron statue.jpg

There’s a great bird sanctuary at the center.

These lovely ladies were cheering on the runners.

bald eagle.jpg
hawk.jpg

My big boy!

big boy.jpg

Kate turned 6 years old!

6th birthday.jpg

Liz’s attitude has improved tremendously lately. Prayer really works. And we just don’t fall for that whole western tween/teen mentality at all. More on that later.

big sister.jpg

Tori was hurting and didn’t want to finish the second lap.

tired runner.jpg

Perseverance paid off. She was the youngest female in the 5K and got 3rd place for her age group of 1-12 {after two 10 year olds}!

youngest participant 5K medal.jpg

And she got the coolest raffle prize – this little binocular, magnifier, compass thing. I was in the gift shop looking at these to buy one for her when I heard her name called for the raffle. God cares even about the little things.

bino set prize.jpg

In the nature center, they have a new teaching beehive. Super cool. Scroll really quick if you don’t want to see them up close.

beehive.jpg

Pretty shiny golden darlings. Making yummy honey.

honeybees.jpg

The coolest nature sensory evarrrr! I want it. I want Aaron to make me one. Imbedded with mirrors and magnifiers.

sensory table.jpg
Alex thought the snake skins were cool.

snake skins.jpg

It was a lovely day.

and we grabbed a nature camp brochure. Alex is in from when he went last year. aw

ONC brochure
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: 5K, nature study, outdoors, race, running

Getting Started with Homeschool

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May 16, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 10 Comments

How We Homeschool Series

Here are the topics:

Part 1: Getting started with homeschool (preschool)

Part 2: Determine your teaching method and your kids’ learning styles

Part 3: Curriculum planning with multiple kids

Part 4: Homeschooling as a lifestyle

Getting Started with Homeschool Series - Homeschool Preschool

Many readers didn’t know where to begin. Let me share my story.

I never planned to homeschool.

I was lost when I realized that God was slamming every door in. my. face. and forcing me to homeschool Elizabeth. I had been a public school teacher. All my in-laws were public school teachers.

We moved out-of-state – and I couldn’t find a job – and I couldn’t find a school for Liz – and I was pregnant with Tori -I didn’t know what to do!

Elizabeth has an October birthday. The school wouldn’t accept her for another year for Kindergarten. I knew in the back of my mind that Liz would be turning 6 about a month into that school year. She would be bored out of her mind and be a behavior problem. She had corrected her preschool teacher! I worried about her future success in school.

Since we were both home, I told my husband we would just homeschool for a few years. That sealed the deal and there was no turning back. She was reading and doing work several grade levels ahead in six months. She was tested at the end of that first year and her reading level was above 3rd grade. The family got off my back after that.

So, what did I do that first year?

I gathered all these great materials and we did Kindergarten workbooks and readers and an old math book from my mother-in-law. Liz completed Kindergarten in 6 months.

Now what?

apple festival San Antonio

I read The Well-Trained Mind cover to cover.

I have no idea how I first came across it. I got Story of the World and followed the plan for 1st grade to the letter. Liz loved First Language Lessons.  She loved all the activities in Story of the World. She loved copywork. She loved recitation and dictation and narration. She was a model homeschool child. She had used A Beka in preschool, so we continued with some of their workbooks since she loved them so much.

I joined all the homeschool groups. In our town, there were many and they had park days on various days of the week. We signed up for amazing art lessons at this little local place. Lessons were completed easily in a couple hours each morning. We went to the library for story time and on field trips. She was just a small 5-year-old, so we blended in with the preschoolers. {until she opened her mouth, that is.}

When Tori came into our lives, we incorporated tot school when she was old enough to do play. Then Kate and Alex joined our family and we continued to do tot school and preschool and Montessori activities.

Next year will be our first official school year with Kate! I plan to go classical style with Tori and Kate, similar to what I did with Liz in the beginning, but with some changes, because every child learns differently. {More info on that in the next post.}

Here are my recommendations about where to begin…

Research. Pray. Ask friends, acquaintances, bloggers {like me!} how they homeschool. Realize they’re not you. Pray with your husband and children for direction. Go to homeschool conventions to see what’s out there. Pray some more. Go to the library and get books on homeschooling and education.

Read some articles on Ambleside Online about beginning school – and great reading lists! They offer an entire K-12 curriculum free on public domain. It’s very advanced and lots of reading lists.

You can homeschool virtually free – especially in the primary years. Many of the sites listed have free or very inexpensive printables. {More on this in part 3!}

Resources:

Tot school and preschool printables galore at 1+1+1+=1

Loads of fun printables at Homeschool Creations

Love the literacy printables at The Moffatt Girls

Great Bible printables at the sites found here: The Crafty Classroom

Great encouragement here: Preschoolers and Peace

These aren’t homeschooling blogs, but they’re awesome. Great themed printables and activities. PreKinders and Making Learning Fun

I renew my membership at abcteach every year because the printables are so great. Lots of Montessori and preschool pages. They often have great membership deals through Homeschool Buyers Co-op.

I also have a membership at Education.com for printable for all ages.

Stay tuned for my next post on determining your teaching style and your kids’ learning styles. It will be paramount to how to have homeschool success.

See our schedules and our school rooms.

Follow Jennifer’s board Preschool and Kindergarten on Pinterest.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: back to school, homeschool, preschool

A Different Birth Story: Expecting Grace Book Review

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May 14, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Leah A. Highfill writes her testimony of her frightening pregnancy causing a grave illness and her road to recovery in childbirth – and God’s grace throughout.

Expecting Grace:

The Miraculous Survival Story of a

Hyperemesis Gravidarum Pregnancy

by Leah A. Highfill

 

Most of us moms have pregnancy and birth stories we love to share. Others, maybe not so much.

But this isn’t about me or you.

This is Leah’s pregnancy story. It’s unbelievable.

This is an amazing testimony of God’s grace and redemption through childbirth. a mother’s story of loving her children more than herself, even while they’re in the womb, even through life threatening and widely misunderstood illness. This story needs to be read! It needs to be told. It needs to be shouted from the rooftops.

Expecting Grace: The Miraculous Survival Story of a Hyperemesis Gravidarum Pregnancy

I had heard about women with this illness, Hyperemesis gravidarum. I never realized how it must be for a pregnant lady to experience. I know that nausea is the worst feeling in the world and I cannot imagine going through it to that extent for an entire pregnancy – or ever allowing myself to become pregnant again.

I commend Leah for her story of God’s grace and for loving her children so much to struggle through those pregnancies – not once, but twice.

This is an eye-opening testimony of the lack of knowledge of some doctors and how our “conversation” can change lives. I love that Leah’s fortitude and attitude helped that one doctor realize God was with her. She planted a seed in his heart.

This book also helped me to realize that there are needs out there that I didn’t even know existed. I’ve never been one to ask for help. So perhaps I can open my eyes and heart a little more to realize the needs of others, pregnant or not.

Get a glimpse into the miracle here.

Learn more about HG here.

Purchase the book.

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Garden Unit Study

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May 10, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

We had fun in the sun this month!

My son came running inside to tell me: “I found a holy poly. Come take a picture!”

But he wouldn’t touch it. Nope.

looking at bugs

Our home garden is growing.

We’re a military family who has always rented and we are so fortunate to be able to play in this yard and have some freedom to do what we want.

We have a small garden patch for vegetables.

I have herbs in our little front courtyard.

I love flowers and have various bulbs, perennials, and annuals in the yard.

I’m excited to see strawberries soon!

strawberry flower

I saw a Pinterest thing about using rotisserie containers as greenhouses. Voilà.

seeds in little greenhouses
seeds in greenhouses

We shall have colorful flowers soon! Dad likes to garden. I like to enjoy the fruits of his labor.

Fluffy little flower seeds.

seeds

Showing Alex the tiny seeds that will grow into pretty flowers.

looking at seeds

Liz being silly planting my new rosemary plant.

herb garden

She stole my garden clogs. And who gave her permission to grow so tall all of a sudden?!

planting rosemary

Alex helped Dad plant the tomatoes and peppers

digging in the garden

Planting radishes. I think one grew and the other seeds were duds.

radish seeds

lots o’ peppers: jalapeño, habanero, Serrano, and several colors of bell. They like the warmth of the cinder blocks and box planter.

planting peppers

Tulips! I love tulips. I think those purple pointed ones are favorites.

tulips

And some red tulips on the other side of the yard…

red tulip

Little brother pulling his big sisters around the awesome nursery when we bought the garden plants.

at the garden center

Tori was impressed with all the varieties of thyme and lavender. She also loves the essential oils we use.

herbs

Tori and Kate argued that it’s more cost-effective to just purchase this Honeycrisp apple tree than to continue to pay almost $4/lb for the apples at the store. Yes, if we could stay put and not rent.

apple tree

This killdeer limped, displayed his feathers, and squawked at us to get away from his nest!

killdeer

Garden Resources:

  • Grow herbs on a sunny windowsill
  • Visit a community garden
  • Visit a botanical garden
  • Visit a nature center
  • Go hiking and observe the plants you see
  • Learn about different seasons and what grows when
  • My Gardening Pinterest board
  • Learn about Seeds
  • Container Gardening
  • Learn about Canning and Preserving Garden Foods
  • Garden Preschool Pack from Homeschool Creations
  • Garden Planner Pages from Hip Homeschool Moms
  • These fun printables to focus on gardening
  • 123 Homeschool 4Me
  • Homeschooling Hearts and Minds
  • In All You Do
  • Living Montessori Now
  • The Natural Homeschool
  • My Humble Kitchen
  • The Happy Housewife
  • Starts at Eight
  • Homeschool Share
  • Homeschool Den
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How does your garden grow?

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Charlotte Mason, garden, nature study, spring

G is for George and Garden

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May 7, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Alex loved Letter G.

Curious G differentiation page

There’s an awesome Curious George printable pack here.

He got new scissors. They have this little green catch that bounces them back so he just squeezes.

scissors

Loves dot painting the letter m for monkey. Cuz George is a monkey.

stamping letter M

Digging in rice for the pictures to match up. These are over at ABC Find It.

Letter G Scavenger hunt bin

I discovered something interesting. Tori’s confidence is off the charts when she can helps Alex with his preschool work. She read his verse with him last week and had him recite it back. She beamed when I complimented her.

measuring Bible verse

Then they played a math game where they picked tulips. Super fun. Notice Alex’s game board had fewer pots than Tori’s. Disappearing Tulips is free here.

flower FFG

We’re also working on a garden pack from here. We have lots of gardening going on right now! Life school.

Here are our little greenhouses with English daisy, bachelor button, and alyssum seeds and our cups from the library full of zinnia sprouts.

small greenhouses

G is for George and Garden!

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Middle School Art and Music

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May 7, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

Middle school is tough.

Art and music in middle school is really tough.

I like to teach art and music along with history from year 1 and we cycle through every 4 years, digging deeper each cycle.

This unit was our 3rd time through for my eldest.

How I teach art and music:

  • Listening
  • Fundamentals, Theory, Vocabulary
  • History
  • Practicing and/or Performing

We listened to Haydn’s Farewell Symphony.

It was part of our classical history studies with Tapestry of Grace Year 2 and the book was on the girls’ list of reading, but we read it together as a family and was delighted and then I found the whole symphony on YouTube. It is magnificent.


Liz finally broke out her acrylics and painted this as she listened:

middle school art

She loves abstract art.

I love her representation of the musicians’ candles. She explained which parts of her painting meant which emotion from the symphony.

Brilliant.

We often create and complete notebooking pages with music and art.

Check out these great Haydn notebooking pages.

Famous Artists & Picture Study Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: art, Charlotte Mason, classical, history, middle school, Music, notebooking, Tapestry of Grace, teen

Grace

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May 5, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

Do you offer the “grace of presence” to your children?

Are you an intentional parent?

We Christians hear lots about grace, but do we offer it to our children? Do we model Christ’s grace in a way that they understand it?

Grace-filled family leadership is all about turning mistakes into opportunities for growth.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus

I know there are too many times that I am “too busy” for my children. I get frustrated, tired, lazy, overwhelmed. I homeschool all four of them and I feel I deserve a break every now and then.

I must remind myself to rely on His strength.

When the devil baits me with my children’s disobedience {or because of my own lack of diligence and consistency as a parent}, I must respond with grace. I must trust in God to speak the right words and show the right actions.

It takes so much more effort to answer my children {and their behavior} patiently and kindly and seize the teachable moment, but it really pays off in the end.

I am too often reminded by gentle nudgings from my Father…I sometimes try too hard. I sometimes forget. I sometimes stop trusting.

When I stray from His path, then I get tired and lazy and full of self.

By trusting my God for answers in everything, especially parenting – because that is my number one priority – I am modeling for my children to trust me. I want them to trust that I have their best interests at heart, just as Jesus has our best interests in His heart. Children don’t always understand the why’s, and we don’t always understand His will, but we must trust and model that trust for our children.

We also must model grace.

If I am constantly harsh and unyielding, then it’s going to inspire rebellion and not obedience. I have to be a “yes mom” sometimes. I have to offer grace sometimes. I have to realize that sometimes natural consequences are more than sufficient for teaching a lesson. They don’t further need me to heap coals on their heads.

I want to be a fun mom who does the fun things and not the mean mom who always says no.

To extend grace, I must be intentional. I must be present. {Present means undivided attention – not on the computer while in the same room.}

I must know my children. I must know their hearts and desires and likes and dislikes. I must teach by example.

Only Jesus can fill us, but surely parents {more than anyone else} guide the way and help children accept Him. I want to witness my kids’ spiritual growth, as well as their intellectual and physical growth. I want to grow leaders for Jesus.

This is why we homeschool.

Grace.

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: grace, parenting

McGuffey Reading app Review

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May 2, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

My young kids really liked reviewing the iOS app:

McGuffey app

Phonics and Reading with McGuffey by LiteracySoft

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The Phonics and Reading with McGuffey App

It worked out great since Alex is just starting out learning his blends and how it all goes together to make words. Tori needs a bit of review. Helping Alex was great for her and he loved the attention!

spelling on the iPad

It was the cutest thing hearing Alex praise Tori for saying the right sound. She beamed.

spelling iPad

They did the first few lessons together. Then Tori moved on her own as it got into reading and she needed the review. She was able to work at her own pace and it was wonderful.

Kate loved showing off her skills.

McGuffey reader iPad

All three kids think the little animated graphics at the bottom of the screen when an answer is correct are adorable. The dancing banana is a favorite.

And how appropriate this lesson is for this week!?

McGuffey.png

And our Kate is delighted that she’s the “star.”

And, oh my, but lessons 22 and 23 are about cows, Kate’s favorite animal!

iPad together

And maybe you’re wondering what in the world are those lines and dots symbols above and below the letters? Those are phonetic symbols. They tell us about lips, tongue, teeth, and breath placement for the proper pronunciation of the letters.

Kate just mostly ignores them, but Tori uses them to help her remember the “rules.” I love it and teach her what they mean. Everything is science and math to Tori! See them in action. Below is the International Phonetic Alphabet. The Americanist notation is a bit different.

Most lessons consist of 9 components {some later lessons are just reading practice and sight words}:

  1. Letter Sounds
  2. New Words
  3. Phonics Flashcards
  4. Phonics Blender
  5. Lesson Illustration
  6. Reading Practice
  7. Quiz
  8. Spelling Practice
  9. Sight Word Drilling
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Kate and Tori liked building silly words.

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This app includes:

• All 52 McGuffey Primer lessons
• All 44 letter sounds of English and their graphemes
• 60+ letter sound animations
• 400+ practice word vocabulary
• 9000+ nonsense word audio dictionary

You can try Phonics and Reading With McGuffey on PC risk free for an unlimited time. There is a lite version which you can try for free on iOS. The first 10 lessons are free! 

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This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT