Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Homemade Play Dough

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December 16, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

We’ve been having lots of fun with Christmas activities this week…

Tori’s gingerbread play dough reindeer…
Gingerbread Playdough Reindeer
Santa paper plate packing popcorn craft. I used googly eyes, a pink pom pom for the nose, and a shaped pipe cleaner for the mouth
Santa Plate Craft
Tori and Katie pretend to eat their gingerbread babies…
Pretending to Eat Gingerbread Cookies
Gingerbread Baby
They pasted their eaten gingerbread babies in their booklets.
Gingerbread Baby Booklets

We made homemade play dough!

Homemade Play Dough
I made gingerbread play dough (with spices smells great!) and snow play dough (plain with sparkly glitter).
 
We broke out the cookie cutters and played with play dough for quite a long time this morning.
 
Preschool girls loved playing with the yummy smelling playdough.
Katie did not like to be interrupted for a picture.
Gingerbread Play Dough
Toddler Alex thought all this was just awesome.
Toddler Play Dough Time
Even the Big Girl Elizabeth had to play with the play dough!
She showed off her “cookies.”
Big Girl Play Dough Time

Super easy play dough recipe:

Print

Play Dough

Ingredients

  • 2 cups AP flour
  • 2 cups warm water
  • 1 cup salt
  • 2 T vegetable oil
  • 1 T cream of tartar

Instructions

  1. Mix ingredients gently, folding all the flour in, over low/medium heat in a nonstick pan until formed into a ball.

    Knead carefully (it’s hot!) until desired elasticity.

Add stuff:

Spices. Sprinkle in some cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg, and ginger for gingerbread play dough – or apple pie spice or pumpkin pie spice – or whatever you love.

Essential Oil. We love using Citrus, Peppermint, or Lavender.

Glitter or Food Coloring. Sparkle and color just add to the fun!

My kids like to play with the play dough while it’s still warm.

How to Use:

We use all sorts of fun tools like real cookie cutters (love these alphabet and numbers cookie cutters!), rolling pins, dough tools that extrude, squish, and cut it.

We have two Activity Centers that provide stencils and working surfaces to keep my floor clean.

Store in an airtight container or zipper bag. We keep ours in the fridge to stay fresh longer.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Montessori, preschool, recipe

Sledding

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December 16, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Finally, we have snow!

We went to a neighborhood park while Elizabeth was at her music lessons. Tori was proud of her snowball. She wanted to bring it home and put it in the freezer. That reminds me of an Arthur episode where DW does that…

Snowball
Snow Girl

Alex and Katie pelted me with snow!

Snowball Boy
Aiming with Snowballs

Alex does not like sledding downhill, but he loved being pulled around on level ground.

Sledding Boy

Katie is the daredevil who loved sliding downhill. She wants to find a really BIG hill…

Daredevil

Tori was crazy too. Surprised she stayed on her knees and didn’t fall over!

Knee Boarding
 We had lots of fun in just an hour, waiting for big sister!
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: snow, Utah, winter

Christmas Sensory Bin

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December 12, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

My husband created a sensory table for us!

I put a Christmas sensory bin in there and Alex LOVES it! (So does Tori!)

Christmas Sensory Bin
Christmas Sensory Bin Play

I have glittery pom poms, red and white beans, green glass rocks, glitter tree stickers, 12 Days of Christmas and Nativity printables (scaled down and laminated), a tree ice cube tray, two Santa candy holders, jingle bells…

Resources:

  • Red spoons
  • Glass Flat Marble Beads
  • Plastic theme cups
  • Measuring Cups & Spoons
  • Jingle Bells
  • Craft Pom Poms
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First Snow

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November 28, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

We’ve added calendar notebooks to our morning time.
I’ve just been waiting for my little girlies to be ready for this!
We’ve pulled ideas from Mama Jenn and 1+1+1=1.
Kindergarten Circle Time

Our first snow…This is the Snow Bunny with Tori.

Snow Bunny

 
Katie was getting a snowball ready and I hurried on outta there.
Snowball Fight
We’ve been busy with You Can Read and RRSK.
 
We were sick all last week, which made for a not so fun Thanksgiving. We had dinner on Saturday because that was the final day we could cook that bird before it ruined. We are ready for the Advent season!
 
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New Light Table

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November 28, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Here is Katie playing Toca Boca Tea Party app with Alex. He is rather possessive of his Tea Party.

Toca Boca Tea Party App

We’ve been continuing with out letter of the week with Tot School printables, but Alex isn’t really into all that  too much yet. He is learning his letters and colors though.

He loves to cook and play kitchen.

Daddy made us a new light box!

(All it is a plastic bin with rope lights. Daddy cut a hole in the side for the cord.)
DIY Light Table

Sorting Christmas tree branches by their colored tips. I love Alex’s expression here. I don’t know why he looked so mad, but he’s so cute!

Setting Up the Christmas Tree
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Imagination Station Books Review

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November 8, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert

This book could not have arrived with better timing! We’ve been reading about Saul and David with Tapestry of Grace and this tied in perfectly with our studies. My three girls loved it!
Showdown with the Shepherd by Marianne Hering


It was so exciting to hear my 4- and 5-year-olds exclaim, “Mom, it has God in it!” They quickly compared this book to another popular series, but with a Christian theme. We were able to speculate what could have happened during that time with David. It was a great discussion.

My eldest, at 11 years, recognized the characters from Adventures in Odyssey. All in all, this is a fun and educational series.

Connections, connections.

The younger two listened with rapt attention as I took turns with my eldest, reading aloud . I really enjoyed the book and couldn’t wait to find out what happened next. So glad it’s a series!

The girls read Problems at Plymouth and assured me they loved it. They summarized the story and told me all about it so excitedly. Perfect with Thanksgiving just around the corner! It certainly went with our theme this month.

The characters are sweet and believable. The drawings are well-done and help my little ones follow along. The reading level is aimed at 7+. It was too easy for my 11-year-old, and my 5- and 4-year olds couldn’t quite read it yet. We all were captivated though!

AIO Imagination Station Books are a great addition to our homeschool library.

For more information, visit the Imagination Station website.

About the Books
In Showdown with the Shepherd, Patrick and Beth go to the Holy Land in the tenth century BC. Their goal is to get back the ring Hugh stole and return him to 1450s England where he belongs. But troubles await them as soon as they step out of the Imagination Station. First they meet an angry bear and later an angry giant. Set against the backdrop of the David and Goliath story, the cousins learn that having a giant faith is more important than having a giant on your side.
Patrick and Beth’s next adventure leads them to Plymouth Plantation in 1621. There they meet William Bradford, Miles Standish, and Squanto who are trying to establish peace between the Pilgrims and the Indians. Things are anything but peaceful, however, when a musket is stolen and the Pilgrims conclude the Indians are planning war. Only Patrick and Beth know who the real thief is—the traitor Hugh—and it’s up to the cousins to find him and stop him from causing trouble. When the cousins hear a gunshot during the first Thanksgiving feast, their worst fears are realized.

About the Giveaway
This giveaway is for the whole series of 6 books!
First, head over to the Imagination Station website and leave a comment on this post. Tell me which book looks most interesting to you and your kids and why! Deadline 7 December 2011. Winner announced 10 December. Make sure to leave a separate post for each entry. Winner will be selected at random.
For extra entries:
  • Subscribe via email or RSS
  • Follow on Twitter
  • Like on Facebook

Please note that this prize can only be shipped to a U.S. or Canadian address.

Thanks to Tyndale House Publishing for providing the giveaway prize and for providing my review samples! I received no other compensation and all views expressed are my own.
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Kindergarten Fall Update

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November 4, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

A Kindergarten update before the holidays.

Tori and Katie so graciously allow Bubba to “write” in their clay like ancient Hittites with a “stylus” (chopstick).

All the kids really enjoyed this activity from Tapestry of Grace.

History Project with Clay and Stylus

The end of the soccer season. Awards ceremony tonight.

Soccer Girl

Tori loved scooping out her jack o’lantern.

Jack O Lantern

Katie did not.

Icky Pumpkin

Tori as a lovely Chinese princess for a Halloween party with Daddy. (I found THREE Chinese dresses at a thrift store for the girls! Amazing!)

Chinese Princess

Katie and Alex sharing a sucker moment.

Lollipops

We’re loving the You Can Read program and the Raising Rock Stars Kindergarten printables from 1+1+1=1. My only issue is that the girls complete their pages super fast!

We’ve also enjoyed some activity packs about fall and firefighters and monsters and pumpkins (oh my!) from Homeschool Creations and 1+1+1=1. The girls’ favorite activity is the graphing with printable dice.

We completed some experiments from our Apologia Swimming Creatures book. The girls have this class at our homeschool co-op, but they’ve been doing other activities.

We’re reviewing the Imagination Station book series. Stay tuned for a giveaway!

 
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Pumpkin Streusel Muffins

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October 31, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Pumpkin streusel muffins are a great fall breakfast or treat!

Recipe adapted from Williams Sonoma The Cookbook for Kids.

Pumpkin Streusel Muffins

 Kid and neighbor approved!

Muffins and Broccoli Soup
Yummy Fall Lunch
Muffin Boy
We also had yummy Broccoli Soup.
Print

Pumpkin Streusel Muffins

Course Breakfast
Cuisine Holiday

Ingredients

Streusel Topping

  • 3 T brown sugar
  • 2 T AP flour
  • 1/4 t cinnamon
  • 1/4 t nutmeg
  • 1/4 c chopped nuts (pecans or walnuts)
  • 1 T butter

Dry ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 c AP flour
  • 1 t baking soda
  • 1/2 t baking powder
  • 1/2 t kosher or sea salt
  • 1/2 t cinnamon
  • 1/2 t cloves
  • 1/2 t nutmeg

Wet ingredients

  • 1 c pumpkin puree
  • 1 c sugar
  • 1/2 c oil I use EVOO
  • 2 large eggs room temperature
  • 1/2 t vanilla

Instructions

  1. Mix streusel topping together in small bowl and set aside.
  2. Preheat oven. Prepare muffin tin, cups, liners, etc. Mix dry ingredients in one bowl. Mix wet ingredients in another bowl. Combine.
  3. Scoop into muffin tin, cups, liners, etc. and sprinkle on streusel topping. Bake at 350* for 20-25 minutes. Rest for 5 minutes, if you can stand it!
Linking up: Sunny Day Family, Eats Amazing, Life of Faith, Curly Crafty Mom, The Resourceful Mama, A Life in Balance, Your Homebased Mom, Crafty Moms Share, Rich Faith Rising, Time Warp Wife, F Dean Hackett, , A Little R&R, A Wise Woman Builds Her Home, Pat and Candy, Raising Homemakers, The Stay at Home Mom Survival Guide, Teaching Mama, Adventures of Mel, True Aim Education, Crystal and Company, Simple Life of a Fire Wife, Home Stories A to Z, A Bowl Full of Lemons, The Educators Spin on It, Organized 31, A Kreative Whim, I Choose Joy, Frogs Lilypad, Life with Lorelai, Happy Blessed Home, The Jenny Evolution, The 36th Avenue, Design Dining and Diapers, AKA Design, Olives and Okra,
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Black Island Farms

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October 24, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We had a blast on our Black Island Farms pumpkin patch field trip.

Daddy even took off work to experience the fun with us (and help me wrangle the young uns!) This farm does agro-tourism to help stay afloat in this economy. We learned about their irrigation system and saw a harrow plow in action.

Tractor

Alex really was fascinated by the tractor during the wagon ride. So glad we got a seat up front!
Big Carrot
Cabbage Snack
Trying Cabbage

The kids got to see, feel, and test out the carrots and cabbage that they grow. Gimme some coleslaw!

(Did you know that those baby carrots are actually carrot pellets? They’re not quite so thrilling now…)

Picking Out Pumpkins

Everyone got to pick out a pie pumpkin (even I did!) and we’re going to try our hand at making homemade pumpkin pie and some other delectable pumpkin-y recipes this week.

Silly Scarecrows

Of course, we couldn’t resist the cheesy scarecrow picture!

Feeding a Llama

We got feed animals too! Katie loved the baby cows, but they were sleepy. Pigs, goats, turkeys, and chickens were in their zoo too. This llama was super friendly and hungry.

Tractor Train

Katie and Alex got to ride the tractor train! I was so proud of Katie holding tight her little brother! He didn’t want to get off, but they were closing the ride for the day!

Big Slide
Bumpy Slide
Tube Slide

They had some amazing slides made from straw bales.

Corn Maze

The corn “maize” was super fun for all of us.

They offered maps, and it’s pretty obvious that even I need to work on my map-reading skills. sigh

Black Island Farms is one of our favorite fall traditions! Also a great place to buy farm fresh fall produce and decorations.

Black Island Farms has been a family business for over 50 years!

Opening Hours During Most of September and October

Mon-Thurs 4pm – 10pm

Fri 4pm – Midnight

Sat 10am – Midnight

Sun 11am – 5pm

Corn Maze and Courtyard

Adults $11

Kids (Ages 12-2)$9

Corn Maze and Courtyard + Hayride

Adults $16

Kids (Ages 12-2) $11

Corn Maze and Courtyard + Nightmare Acres

Adults $20

Kids $20

Nightmare Acres

Adults $16

Kids $16

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Filed Under: Utah Tagged With: fall, farm, field trip, Pumpkin, Utah

Casual Jesus

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October 17, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

My 11-year-old daughter commented on a Christian singer with tiny plain gold earrings in both his ears: “He’s a boy. He can’t have earrings. And he can’t be Christian.”

My four- and five-year-old daughters chimed in, “Yeah, and boys can’t have long hair!” (The singer had a shaved head, praise God, so I guess he’s half saved?).

After resuscitation from my husband and a crying jag on both our parts, I barely recovered enough to query, “Wha-?! Why can’t he be a Christian?”  She could offer no explanation other than boys shouldn’t have earrings or long hair. I think she couldn’t really refute the irrational logic behind the earring/Christian analogy.

This conversation scares me.

And also sorta made me want to go out and get a punk makeover…What are my kids learning (and where are they learning it?)  – about image and etiquette and society and Christianity?

I’m sure I’m failing as a mom and as a Christian.

Lord, help me counter this bigotry that my children have been taught by ignorant people. Help me to not judge others by their appearances and not to raise my eyebrows when I see that dude at Target who has real horns growing out of his head and an actual metal zipper in his tongue (we smile at him, but he may try to eat us).

Oh, and what about club clothes in church? If you feel the need to purchase stripper shoes and miniskirts, that’s between you and God. Maybe you’ve been out all night and came direct to church. If you wear your red patent leather platform stilettos with your black pleather silver studded halter mini dress to church so my kids can stare, it makes me uncomfortable. It’s inappropriate in a teenager and I wonder what your mother would say, unless of course, she’s sitting beside you in a matching ensemble. And when my four year old tells me she thinks your shoes are pretty and she wants a pair just like them, I just threw up a little in my mouth.

But I can see why she thinks they’re pretty.

Some churches stare at newcomers who aren’t dressed “right.” And other churches claim, “come as you are.” It shouldn’t be about numbers or a secret handshake to get in. We’re teaching church and not Christ.

Do we want people to follow rules or show love?

Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better. ~Maya Angelou

Our society has gotten so casual. While appearances shouldn’t matter, they do matter. Perhaps too much. Or perhaps, people are just concerned about the wrong things.

Casual Fridays, casual relationships, casual dining, casual décor, casual church…

I think we’ve missed the mark. This whole casual attitude has distorted what’s really important.

It’s all about respect. There just ain’t no respect no more.

Is Jesus casual?

I don’t think so.

casual Jesus

I know the Bible says that appearances shouldn’t matter as much as the heart, and I agree, but surely there must be a line drawn somewhere. (And I desperately search for that line when my 4-year-old wants stripper shoes and my 11-year-old thinks all earring-wearing boys aren’t Christian.)

Do we imagine Jesus, wearing surfer shorts and a ball cap, sitting in a teal and orange restaurant playing raucous rock and roll music through its speakers, eating his cheesy garlic biscuit while discussing how we should pray to Daddy God or explaining the parable of the sowers to the Hot Topic-clad apostles?

Maybe.

Can we imagine Jesus wearing distressed jeans and biker boots and a silk shirt unbuttoned to there with a blinged-out cross necklace (bigger than the medallion the French maî·tre d’ wears at that trendy bistro downtown), preaching to the thousands in a church café stadium with laser lights with a chai vanilla skinny double shot no foam latte in one hand and a PowerPoint clicker in the other, and a pricey mike headset on his perfectly styled hair?

Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

And what about Paul? I wonder if he wasn’t so casual. I’ll bet he was so uptight. He probably wore conservative clothes and all that. He was respected (except when that one dude fell asleep and out the window from boredom…and all that persecution he dealt and received…) And he and Peter didn’t get along at all.

But we live in a society where image is everything.

Did you want Madagascar cinnamon or organic molasses syrup on that latte?

John the Baptist wouldn’t fit in so well, I don’t think, as far as images go.

I think the whole image thing may even be worse in Utah (perhaps it’s a certain subculture here). And often, I just don’t have the energy to braid up three girls’ hair with flowers and ribbons while dressing my 18 month old boy like a Gap ad. Is it really worth it just to go to the grocery store or library? I’m always the last one to get ready and it’s haphazard, at best. I’ve gone out with my hair unwashed in a ponytail and different socks on and no jewelry (gasp! seriously, without the wedding ring, what will people think?!) while my 4 kiddos look like little Land’s End angels…for about 5 minutes. And my husband has on his 5 year old jorts and torn up tennis shoes with a holey T shirt he’s had since before we were married. And he still manages to look ok. I always feel judged whenever we go anywhere. No one cares what guys look like. At least my husband can’t wear earrings or long hair. He’s in the Air Force. whew! Should we just wear family uniforms like that weird family over there (khakis and matching polos)? It’d be SO much easier, and cheaper!

Jesus called the Pharisees vipers and hypocrites. What would he call the girl at church in the stripper shoes? What would he call the Pottery Barn indebted people or the moms who stress over their daughter’s braids being ruler perfect? What would he call the preacher in his trendy clothes with his latte? Of course, their hearts may be in the right place, but if they’re so concerned about their image, then I wonder.

And what are they portraying to my kids or anyone else? I’m working to learn myself and how best to teach my kids about love and respect.

And why does the Christian singer have to look like every other emo rock star? Why do the lyrics have to be so suggestive? Is Jesus supposed to be my boyfriend or my Savior?

What would we think if we saw Jesus or Paul or John, right now? How would we judge them by their appearances?

I think we should dress for success and be respectful. Church is a place of respect because it is the house of God. As Christians, we should honor Jesus however we can. As Christians, we are called to be separate from the world. If all you own are T shirts and jeans, or stripper shoes,  then wear your best T shirt and shoes to church to show respect to God.

And who cares what others think?

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Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: faith, Jesus, worldview

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