Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Quarantine Schooling

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

August 10, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

I taught school for about ten years, and always homeschooled my four kids, so I have a bit of a different philosophy towards education than many.

Around March 2020, may families found themselves in awkward situations. Many parents worked from home while children completed their school year online. Teachers scrambled to prepare online lessons for hundreds of students. It was stressful.

Many families and the media call this homeschooling.

Narrator: “This was not, in fact, homeschooling.”

Now the word “homeschooling” has evolved over the years and used to have different connotations than it now does. It’s not such a weighted or negative word as it used to be.

The word often conjured images of denim jumper dress-wearing evangelical fundamentalist Christian families. And that certainly is still a subculture within homeschooling communities.

While it is still difficult to find secular and liberal homeschoolers in many areas, it is becoming more widely acceptable for many families to home educate their children in different ways.

Homeschool choices are almost limitless. Many states and school districts provide online or video lessons. There are secular and Christian curriculum options. Parents can create an eclectic mix of academics and hobbies for kids to explore.

Many families are concerned about safety, continuity, and consistency for this next school year.

Some schools are closed, some offer part time or staggered attendance, some are going completely online. I am not here to judge parents whose choices are impossible during these circumstances. I realize many parents must work outside the home and need childcare. Our society expects schools to provide education and care during working hours.

Teachers are facing impossible situations. Required to teach in person or prepare and teach engaging lessons online, risking their health or their careers. I can’t imagine making these hard choice if I were still a classroom teacher.

I understand that it’s overwhelming to suddenly homeschool kids who expect to attend school. It’s a completely different lifestyle for many families and the unknown is scary.

It took me a few years to adjust as a reluctant homeschooler.

For first time homeschoolers, pandemic/quarantine/crisis homeschoolers, reluctant homeschoolers, even veteran homeschoolers:

Some things to think about school at home:

What is your focus?

Search your heart for what you want this school year to look like for your family. Use this time to learn about your children – their hopes, dreams, preferences. Don’t just think this is about academics. This is about relationship. This is about making memories. What do you want your family to look back on during this time and remember fondly?

Ease into it.

It’s often best to start with the bare bones. Fun, fun, fun. Outside time. Hiking. Nature exploration. Learn about your backyard nature. Fall in love with learning. Maybe just begin with reading, writing, arithmetic. Have story time and talk about the book afterwards or make art. Do kitchen math with delicious recipes. You don’t have to recreate a classroom school environment in your kitchen, dining room, living room, or basement. You don’t have to spend hundreds of dollars on curriculum, books, computer programs.

Keep records.

Records, portfolio, book lists, field trips are handy to have if you plan to send kids back into public or private school attendance at any point. It’s also nice to look back over what was accomplished on the days when you feel like nothing ever got done. I often enlist the kids to help make their notebooks or portfolios. It’s a great family project! Many homeschoolers must submit curriculum lists at the beginning of each school year with their intent letter and provide a portfolio or test score at the end of the year. Keeping records as you go makes this easier than scrambling last minute. It’s good to have a scrapbook or journals for kids to look back on too.

Take it slow.

You will have bad days. Keep your cool as the adult when things fall apart. Don’t think of it as a failure. Think of the unpleasant moments as opportunities to learn how to do better. No one is falling behind. You’re not competing with anyone. You don’t need a strict color-coded schedule for every minute of every day. You don’t have to know how to do everything, teach every subject, or complete every lesson. There is a plethora of resources out there to help. Screentime is ok. Sleeping in is ok. Meal times are arbitrary. Later bedtimes are ok. I realize this is a stressful time for everyone, even veteran homeschoolers who usually participate in lots of activities with others.

Keep in touch.

It’s important to allow kids to keep in touch with friends until it’s safer for in person meetups and play dates and group activities. We live in a brave new world with so much technology allowing us to communicate any time, anywhere, with almost anyone. My kids have iPads and/or smartphones with Discord, messenger apps, social media. We find it difficult to find other kids whose parents trust them to use these services. It makes it more difficult for my kids to keep in touch with their friends.

Start a new tradition.

Breakfast announcements. Morning message before beginning seatwork. Weekly tea time (it doesn’t even have to include tea!) with fun snacks and music or poetry. Friday free days (or afternoons) for playing outside. Friday pizza nights with movies. Saturday dance parties. Sunday hiking.

Resources:

  • NOT Back to School
  • Homeschooling in Quarantine
  • Lessons from Quarantine
  • Quarantine with Kids
  • Prayer for Quarantine
  • Do Not Fear
  • Apocalyptic Media to Binge
  • Secular Curriculum
  • New to Homeschooling?
  • Realistic Homeschool Schedule
  • How I Plan Our Homeschool Year
  • Homeschool for Free
  • Five Languages of Learning
  • Learning Styles and Personality Types
  • How We Learn
  • Top 10 Books for Homeschoolers
  • 12 Things Homeschoolers Don’t Have to Do
  • We Don’t Do a Homeschool Co-op
  • We Don’t Do Testing
  • High School Credits and Transcripts
  • My Thoughts on Socialization
  • Stop Making Everything So Educational

What does this school year look like for your family?

Linking up: Random Musings, April Harris, Marilyn’s Treats, Little Cottage, Kippi at Home, Create with Joy, Mostly Blogging, OMHG, Home Stories, Purposeful Faith, InstaEncouragements, LouLou Girls, Grandma’s Ideas, Welcome Heart, Ducks in a Row, Girlish Whims, Fluster Buster Ginger Snap Crafts, Katherine’s Corner, Penny’s Passion, Debbie Kitterman, Slices of Life, CKK, Imparting Grace, Life Beyond the Kitchen, Ridge Haven Homestead, Simply Sweet Home, Momfessionals, Answer is Choco, Embracing Unexpected, CWJ, Serenity and Harmony, Grammy’s Grid, Anita Ojeda,

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Not Back to School

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Please see my suggested resources.

August 3, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert 24 Comments

Homeschoolers often celebrate “back to school” with fun and different traditions than other families whose children attend school.

Homeschoolers also do many of the same things as school families. We buy new supplies and clothes with all the sales, tax-free days, and coupons. We like the first day photos.

Homeschoolers look forward to the day when school kids go back to classrooms and all the fun places we love to frequent aren’t busy with summer crowds anymore. But even homeschoolers aren’t gathering or doing co-ops or meeting up this fall.

My kids used to wave goodbye to their neighborhood friends who rode the bus to school while we began our homeschool day. They often waited for their bus at the end of the day to greet their friends again.

This school year looks very different for many families. Some school districts are offering options for in person full or part time attendance, or online remote classes.

No matter what kind of school year our kids are beginning, making the first day of the new school year a special day may help ease jitters or disappointments. We need to make great memories with our kids.

Celebrating Not Back to School

  • Night before school party
  • Special breakfast or dinner night before
  • Pictures to commemorate the new year (preferably with their consent to post online)
  • Memory board or interview page
  • Gifts or treats
  • Look through new school materials and books together to get familiar.
  • Set up a work area for each child to complete assignments.
  • Special back to school books. It’s hard to find books celebrating homeschool.
  • New clothes fashion show. It could be new loungewear or pajamas!
  • Schultüte – traditional school cones for 1st graders in Germany. Another Schulüte DIY idea here. DIY auf Deutsch hier.
  • Ice cream!!!
  • Chalk drawings in the driveway or sidewalk
  • Fresh flowers, especially roses for new schoolers! I love the Waldorf rose ceremony.
  • Discuss plans, desires, and dreams for the year
  • Make calm jars with glitter, oil, food coloring, and water.
  • Make tie-dye shirts or bags.
  • Go hiking or do a nature scavenger hunt.
  • Picnic lunch
  • Bowling
  • Pool or lake party
  • Parties with a fun theme, even if it’s just immediate family
  • Movie night

My kids are older now and we still try to do fun things, but we don’t even really have one single official back to school day. We just kind of ease into it sometime the end of August, transferring from one history cycle to the next and new math books and maybe new science and foreign language.

You might also like:

  • New to Homeschooling?
  • Our Top Ten Homeschool Items
  • Top Ten Books for Homeschoolers
  • My Top 40

How do you make the first day of school special?

Linking up: Grammys Grid, Pinch of Joy, Eclectic Red Barn, House on Silverado, Jenerally Informed, Stroll Thru Life, OMHG, CWJ, Shelbee on Edge, LouLou Girls, April Harris, Suburbia, Random Musings, Anita Ojeda, Jeanne Takenaka, InstaEncouragements, Blue Sky at Home, Soaring with Him, Anchored Abode, Ducks in a Row, Fluster Buster, Ridge Haven, Ginger Snap, Try it Like it, Artful Mom, Penny’s Passion, Slices of Life, Simply Beautiful, Modern on Monticello, Everything, Create with Joy, Books and More, Simply Sweet Home, Answer is Choco, Being a Wordsmith, Cottage Market, Oak Hill,

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Our Curriculum for 2020-2021

This blog may contain affiliate links: disclosure.
Please see my suggested resources.

August 3, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

I’ve been homeschooling my four kids for about sixteen years now. My younger three have never attended school. My eldest attended day care, preschool, and one month of third grade at a DoD school.

We learn year-round and love having freedom to learn when and how and what we want. We love being able to take breaks for field trips, extended travel just for fun or educational purposes, sun days, snow days, movie days, game days, park days.

Most of the anxiety I had in the beginning years has faded away and I am mostly in awe of my kids’ abilities and interests. I learn so much from watching and learning with them.

I highly recommend the books by Louise Bates Ames. A good guide to follow are the What Your ?-Grader Needs to Know by E.D. Hirsch, Jr. His books have some problems, but it’s a great jumping off point.

My eldest daughter is taking a break from college and working full time.

6th Grade

My son is starting middle school! It’s a lot more writing and independent work than he’s used to, but we will ease into it. I love this age! It’s so exciting to see all the changes and connections.

  • finishing Apologia Anatomy and journal
  • Apologia General and journal
  • Singapore math 6A and 6B
  • Latina Christiana II
  • Spelling Workout D
  • Studying God’s Word F
  • baseball and ninja training

9th Grade

My two middle girls are officially in high school!

I’m keeping track of their credits in a transcript for their future needs. Our high school goals are four full year credits of English, math, science, social studies, with two full year credits of foreign language, and multiple electives for creative arts and physical activity.

Some electives the girls are pursuing in addition to their sports are cooking/baking, creative writing, drawing/animation, jewelry making.

Ohio doesn’t allow students to work until age 15, and my girls are already looking forward to their first part time job in a year or two – maybe at our Dairy Queen around the corner or a locally owned shop or volunteering with the Red Cross.

  • Astronomy and Microbiology from OpenStax
  • VideoText Algebra
  • Tori is continuing Russian and Greek
  • Tori continues aerial arts and is beginning lyrical dance
  • Katie is continuing German
  • Katie is participating in a virtual Dungeons and Dragons weekly game

Together

We still do lots of morning read alouds together for Bible, church history, natural history, world and American history, and lots of multicultural literature.

We are currently finishing up reading Life of Fred pre-Algebra 2 with Economics. We also have Life of Fred Financial Choices. We will soon start Beginning Algebra. My son may not be quite ready for it yet.

We’re starting over again in our history cycle with Year 1. It will be my last history cycle with my girls and I feel so sad. I will update as we continue to add better book selections to our repertoire. Libraries still aren’t open except for requests by appointment.

Our main text this year is The History of the Ancient World: From the Earliest Accounts to the Fall of Rome by Susan Wise Bauer. I just purchased the Study and Teaching Guide: The History of the Ancient World by Julia Kaziewicz. My girls are completing the critical thinking questions for each chapter.

Also The Philosophy Book: Big Ideas Simply Explained by DK and The Story of Science: Aristotle Leads the Way by Joy Hakim are daily read alouds.

I look forward to studying in depth ancient art history!

See how we do history. Our main curriculum Tapestry of Grace (and the way I supplement it each year) covers all the humanities – history, literature, art, music, philosophy, government.

My kids are very active with skating/roller blading, cycling, hiking, walking, playing the Wii, in addition to their classes and rec sports.

I love seeing my kids get creative with floral arranging, jewelry making, various arts and crafts, cooking, writing, map drawing, herbology and foraging. We will discuss elective transcript credit for various hobbies if they complete enough or do a big, long project.

How is your new homeschool year looking?

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How Aging Changes the Body

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Please see my suggested resources.

July 31, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Aging is a natural process that develops at different rates, depending on both what internal and external factors are present. Internal factors are genetic processes that occur over time. Hormone production decreases and free radicals accumulate as people age. External factors, such as cigarette smoking and physical stress, are based on lifestyle choices. Older people are susceptible to both types of stressors that can cause memory problems and imbalance in mood.

The Cardiovascular System

Managing stress reduces the chance of hypertension and heart attack. Older people should eat a healthy diet of vegetables and fruits and refrain from smoking, which will constrict circulation and increase heart rate and blood pressure. Getting good sleep slows aging, since the heart and blood vessels are given enough time to rest and recover from full activity. Regular physical exercise is one of the best ways to promote heart health.

The Neurological System

Learning about new things and communicating with others are things people should do everyday. A family or friend could play a game with an older family member where they could make crucial decisions to determine their victory. A personal caregiver from adult home care Massachusetts could encourage an introverted older client to be more proactive in their community. Taking up hobbies like gardening or reading a fictional novel also help combat brain disease that could impair an aging person’s sense of belonging in their relationships. 

The Skeletal System

The bones will shrink and lose density with age. Likewise, the muscles that work with bone lose their strength and flexibility. Osteoporosis increases the risk of fracture, making the spinal or pelvic bone more likely to break. To slow natural skeletal aging, people should take huge amounts of Vitamin D, found in tuna, eggs and salmon. They may consult with a physician to get sufficient amounts of calcium by taking supplements to add onto their diet rich in dairy products.

The Reproductive System

Sexual desires typically decrease as people age. As people age, they should discuss concerns they have about stamina and desire with their partner. As an example, older men may have more difficulty keeping an erection. Sexual activity decreases in women after menopause. Sex may become uncomfortable or outright painful for people who are aging. Getting regular exercise promotes hormone production and improves mood and sociability.

Aging changes the body in such a away slows people and make daily living more difficult. Furthermore, aging can reduce the body’s immune response to diseases that undermine the cardiovascular, neurological, skeletal and reproductive systems.

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August Themes

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July 27, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

August is the end of summer and usually back to school time for many of us.

Are you New to Homeschooling?

When my kids were very small, we had monthly themes on our bulletin board, for our homeschool lessons, and to order our daily lives.

As the kids get older, the themes aren’t quite so vivid. I enjoy the liturgical calendar, the natural cycles of the world, and celebrating the flow and small events in our lives.

We loved these themed Calendar Connections.

Fun Stuff: National Days

We love reading about Catholic saints and Celtic Saints and sometimes do spiritual activities. And we also talk about how white saviors and missionaries weren’t the best for indigenous peoples.

Celebrating Lammastide is a great goodbye to summer and welcome to fall.

August is a great month to purge old clothes and toys, minimize, organize for fall.

Here’s a neat list of what is on sale .

Second Saturday in August is National Bowling Day and National Garage Sale Day 

  • Yard Sale Tips
  • Online Yard Sale Tips
  • 5 Tips for Buying Kids Clothes
  • Organizing Recipes

A fun back to school unit.

August is American Artist Appreciation Month. See my art Pinterest board and how we do art in our homeschool.

August is National Eye Exam Month. See my Back to School Eye Health Tips.

2nd: Coloring Book Day, Friendship Day, Sisters Day

3rd: Watermelon Day. We love these fruity icies!

4th: Chocolate Chip Cookie Day! Here’s my favorite chocolate chip cookie recipe.

7th International BEER DAY! Also water balloon day

8th: National Sneak Some Zucchini Into Your Neighbor’s Porch Day!

9th: Book Lover Day (Isn’t that every single day?)

11th: Presidential Joke Day (isn’t that every day since the 2016 election?)

13th: Lefties Day!

14/15: V-J Day

  • Japan Unit Study
  • WWII Unit Study

Third Saturday in August World Honey Bee Day

19th: Aviation Day. See my Wright Brothers Unit Study.

28th: Red Wine Day

Rainbow Bridge Remembrance Day on August 28th sets aside a day to remember the pet companions we’ve lost. We’re a cat family.

On August 30, National Grief Awareness Day recognizes the time it takes to heal from loss doesn’t have a prescribed course and is a reminder closure comes in many forms. When a loved one dies, the void they leave affects everyone differently.

History: Racial Injustice Calendar and The Zinn Education Project.

What’s your favorite activity in August?

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Secular Curriculum

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Please see my suggested resources.

July 26, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

I have come full circle, back to the views I had during our first year of homeschooling.

We began homeschooling for academic reasons.

I got confused, sidetracked, shamed, humiliated, and lost with all the religious homeschool groups, sites, curriculum.

I am a trained English teacher who has taught public, private, middle, high, college, and tutoring – but I questioned my abilities to homeschool my children well.

Homeschoolers, groups, and co-ops are only too happy to jump in to offer advice and help to new homeschoolers. But it seems to come with a catch. Many homeschoolers meetup or co-op through their churches. There is still a large percentage of homeschoolers who are conservative Christian and they feel this is the only way. They ostracize anyone who doesn’t conform.

Do a web search about the origins, beliefs, and requirements for Classical Conversations, HSLDA, many homeschool conferences, and other large homeschool organizations. They’re certainly not secular or even welcoming.

I didn’t even grow up Christian. Not evangelical at all, not going to church except with my Lutheran grandma who visited two-three times a year. I was never confirmed. I had been christened as an infant at the bequest of the grandma and I said meal blessings and bedtime prayers, but that was the extent of my religious upbringing until I met my first husband.

Growing up in the Bible belt of Georgia, I was odd. I always felt out of place. I didn’t understand the Christianese language.

Many homeschoolers don’t identify as evangelical Christians. There are Catholics, Jewish, Muslims, and other faiths (or no religion or faith group) who homeschool their children and would like secular or faith neutral materials and curriculum or something designed just for them. It’s really hard to find.

We started off with The Well-Trained Mind and I found it (and still find it, mostly) to be respectful regarding those other than the evangelical Christian faith. We began with the materials suggested for first grade.

Having four kids, we reuse curriculum each year. It saves us money. So, we own the entire Apologia science curriculum. They have since separated from Dr. Jay Wile and and he wrote and sells new texts while Apologia commissioned another author to recreate their middle and high school science texts. I think their quality has deteriorated, so we continue with what we’ve always done. The science hasn’t greatly changed.

We bought all four years of Tapestry of Grace online. It was great our first couple years, for the most part. As my eldest daughter went through the dialectic stage for high school, we didn’t buy some of the book selections, and very few of the religious texts recommended.

As the kids and I grow, we tend to edit out much of the religion in our curriculum and it can be tiresome. The science books are still solid for the academic lab science and we just skip the weird Bible parts. We don’t read a lot of the religious selections from the Tapestry of Grace humanities book lists. I supplement church and religion history lessons from better books when I feel it’s appropriate.

If I were beginning our homeschool journey now, I would choose more secular materials. I wish there were any complete affordable science lab homeschool curriculum good enough for high school credit, but I have yet to really find any we’re happy using.

I have found many Waldorf sites and curriculum is sometimes secular or very respectfully spiritual.

Secular Curriculum

I haven’t used all or even a lot of these. Some we reviewed when my kids were younger. Some of the materials for middle and high school may or may not meet standards in my opinion. My kids are all 10+ now and we are mostly finished buying curriculum and making do with what we have.

Complete or All in One Curriculum

  • Oak Meadow
  • Torchlight
  • Bookshark (faith neutral claim)
  • Timberdoodle
  • Moving Beyond the Page – Read our review.
  • Time4Learning
  • Khan Academy
  • Blossom and Root
  • Build Your Library
  • Global Village School

Science

See how we do science in our homeschool.

  • The Story of Science: Aristotle Leads the Way by Joy Hakim. Find lesson plans here.
  • The Story of Science: Newton at the Center by Joy Hakim
  • The Story of Science: Einstein Adds a New Dimension by Joy Hakim
  • Little Passports Science Expedition
  • Building Foundations of Scientific Understanding
  • Classic Science
  • Elemental Science
  • REAL Science Odyssey
  • Real Science 4 Kids
  • Home Science Tools
  • Supercharged Science. See our review.
  • Big History Project
  • Miller & Levine texts

English and Language Arts

See how my kids learned to read. I don’t teach English in our homeschool.

  • All About Learning – Reading and Spelling. Read our review.
  • Logic of English – Read our review. Our Foundations review.
  • Writeshop (some)
  • Progressive Phonics
  • Hooked on Phonics
  • LeapFrog games, DVDS, books, and toys
  • Reading Kingdom. See our review.
  • Reading Eggs
  • ABC Mouse
  • Explode the Code
  • Starfall
  • Literary Adventures for Kids
  • The Giggly Guide to Grammar
  • Easy Grammar. I used to use these drills as a classroom teacher.
  • Grammar Galaxy
  • Jack Kris Publishing
  • Barton Reading and Spelling
  • Essentials in Writing

History

See how we do history in our homeschool.

  • A History of US: Ten-Volume Set by Joy Hakim. Find lesson plans here.
  • A People’s History of the United States by Howard Zinn. Also Young People’s History and Zinn Education Project.
  • Little Passports – Early Explorers, World, USA
  • History Odyssey
  • Girls of American History. We reviewed this ages ago, and I imagine it’s improved a lot since it’s quite pricey now.
  • Building Great Minds
  • Story of the World Series by Susan Wise Bauer (for elementary school age)
  • The History of the World Series by Susan Wise Bauer (for high school)

Math

See how we do math in our homeschool.

  • VideoText Interactive See our review.
  • Life of Fred (not entirely secular or faith neutral.) Also reading and English texts.
  • Singapore Math. We’ve always used this K-8th!
  • TouchMath. See our review.
  • Eureka Math
  • RightStart Math
  • Teaching Textbooks
  • Art of Problem Solving
  • CTC Math
  • Math Mammoth
  • Miquon Math
  • Saxon Math
  • Shiller Math. also English.
  • ALEKS
  • Wild Math
  • Thinkwell
  • Mr. D Math

Fine Arts

See how we do art in our homeschool. See how we do music and cinema in our homeschool.

  • ARTistic Pursuits
  • Discovering Great Artists and more. See our review of Global Art.
  • Draw WRITE Now
  • Drawing with Children
  • MusIQHomeschool. See our Adventus piano review.
  • HomeSchoolPiano. See our review.

Foreign Languages

See how we do foreign languages in our homeschool.

  • Memoria Press Latin. (not exactly secular) See our review.
  • Elementary Greek (not exactly secular)
  • The Everything Learning Russian Book with CD
  • German DeMYSTiFieD
  • First Start French
  • Song School Latin
  • Song School Spanish. See our review.
  • Rosetta Stone
  • Mango Languages. See our review.
  • Transparent Language
  • Duolingo
  • Muzzy

Other

See how we do health and PE in our homeschool.

  • KidzType
  • Typing Instructor
  • Kidware Software Computer Science. See our review.
  • CompuScholar Web Design. See our review.

Secular Sites

Some of my favorite secular homeschooling and parenting sites:

  • Secular Homeschooling
  • SEA Homeschoolers
  • Up Above the Rowan Tree
  • Homeschool Unrefined
  • Planet Schooling
  • Parenting Forward
  • Parenting Decolonized
  • Raising Wildflower Kids
  • Happiness is Here
  • Laura Grace Weldon
  • Racheous
  • Look, We’re Learning!
  • Education Possible
  • Middleway Mom
  • Forgetful Momma
  • Starts at Eight
  • My Little Poppies
  • Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus
  • Mama Teaches
  • Teach Beside Me
  • Far From Normal
  • Hustle Homeschool
  • Living Well+Learning Well
  • Royal Baloo
  • Gameschooling

What’s your favorite secular curriculum?

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Parenting Young Adults

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Please see my suggested resources.

July 20, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert 9 Comments

Parenting is a series of mistakes, failures, successes, heartache, pride.

My firstborn is certainly the research subject in all our parenting decisions.
She is also the catalyst for many rules and lots of changes we make in our family.

She was always a dynamo. She never met a stranger. She’s a social butterfly through and through and I am always content to be “Her Mom.”

I’ve watched her grow and fail, learn, and dance to and fro.

We began homeschooling because of her fall birthday. We tried a month of third grade because of her and promptly brought her back home.

I pushed until she pushed back.

I learned boundaries as a parent. I learned how to be me, a mother, a person, and make personal demands based on my own needs from her example.

She’s quite the lawyer in her well-thought-out arguments and I struggle sometimes to be democratic, respectful, gentle.

I was never treated with respect in my own home when I was growing up. I had no privacy. I wasn’t allowed to express emotions or thoughts. I attempted suicide at age 20 and ran away at age 21.

I want to be a better parent than mine were. Navigating this modern world with no role models and no guidance is really hard.

I feel I am in uncharted waters with an almost twenty-year-old.

The Christian parenting and the secular parenting books, blogs, experts all say almost the same things – tough love, harsh consequences, isolation, withdrawing love and affection, removing privileges. We don’t do that with our young kids, so why would we start now?

I never liked the purity or stay at home daughter movements. They remove autonomy from women and open doors for abusive relationships.

Parenting never ends.

As children get older, the parent-child relationship evolves into friendship, hopefully. It becomes a solid relationship with gives and takes. It amazing to watch these little people grow into adults.

Our society does not respect children. Teenagers are viewed with suspicion and young adults are often humiliated and taken advantage of by many adults.

Young people have so much to offer if we allowed them respect and freedom they deserve.

Parenting a Young Adult

Respect

I have always tried to respect my children. It’s sometimes difficult when I feel disrespected and triggered. I often have to walk away and give myself a timeout and think about it.

I have very few rules: no drugs. no porn. no illegal activity.

I require my children to respect each other.

Communication is important. It’s up to me as the adult and parent to model healthy and nonviolent communication. Sometimes, it’s really, really hard. I have had to walk away to think and regroup and calm down many times.

I find myself more and more stating as calmly as possible, “What you said/did is disrespectful and that’s not ok.”

Expectations

We tried to do a contract, but it was worthless with no real consequences. It just has to be an ongoing conversation and it’s exhausting.

I keep going back to respect. If we’ve never done arbitrary consequences, how can I begin now? I don’t want to require her to pay rent because she needs to save for college and her future, even though she hasn’t saved a penny in over two years from her part time job.

Attending college classes and working a part time job is paramount. I feel it teaches responsibility and offers a gradual climb into the adult world of vast responsibility.

While I would love to expect chores to be completed, that isn’t always the priority at this stage when there are assignment deadlines and potentially late shift work schedules.

I have found that if I issue very specific time-sensitive commands, they get done more immediately.

Disappointment

Of course I’ve been disappointed by some of my child’s poor choices.

I had to get over my own issues with piercings, tattoos, and dyed hair. It’s her body.

While tattoos and ear plugs are pretty irreversible, I don’t worry so much about hair anymore.

It’s more worrisome when she’s made poor financial and relationship choices. She has to live and learn from her mistakes.

She hates college and I don’t really blame her. It really is so very different than twenty years ago and I don’t understand why. It should be easier with so much information at our fingertips. She’s taking some time off and looking for full time work.

I’m trying not to project onto her my education values. Sometimes it does feel like a kick in the teeth. All those homeschool years – wasted? It’s her life and her future. But I fear she may have unnecessary struggles without a college degree, certificate, apprenticeship, or training.

One-third of college students drop out at the end of their freshman year. The United States now has the highest college dropout rate in the industrial world.

Thrivers by Michelle Borba

Boundaries

I have to set clear boundaries – with consequences.

It’s really hard when there are few arbitrary consequences that matter with older teens and young adults.

Natural consequences can be scary and dangerous. Risk taking isn’t such a big deal with small kids. They might get a bruise or at worst a broken bone. Older teens and young adults might get in trouble with legal authorities or cause real irreparable harm to themselves and others.

I don’t want to the younger kids exposed to inappropriate media. I don’t want my younger kids exposed to porn, racist or sexist jokes, or violence.

Social media continues to expose the masses to a plethora of information, not all of it good. We use it as education as to boundaries, what’s worthwhile and what is abusive or vile.

I say often why something is inappropriate. Often I feel it shouldn’t be consumed by anyone.

I teach about tone and sarcasm. We need to practice kindness and I must model it for them to be to recognize it.

Why should we exploit others for entertainment?

Preparation

Preparing for the future is most important for young adults.

The goal is that they be successful and independent citizens.

I try to begin young with all my kids, teaching them valuable life skills.

I discuss finances, values, goals frequently about things they understand.

They know when we have struggled financially because of an emergency. They understand when we’re saving or paying off debt. I want them to realize their privilege in financial security also.

They’ve never known adversity. Other than stress and moving frequently as a military family.

I require my kids to purchase their own smartphones. We pay for the monthly family plan.

As soon as their age is in double digits, they call to make their own appointments, with me standing by to assist if needed.

I encourage my kids to talk to clerks and store employees if they need something or to place an order. They need to learn to communicate clearly and respectfully with others.

Of course, kids must learn to do their laundry and make meals for themselves. I provide a cookbook with all our favorite family recipes.

They must help with car maintenance. It’s important to learn and understand the expense of necessary auto upkeep.

We have 529 college plans, but they probably won’t pay for an entire four-year degree. They have to work part time, save, and apply for scholarships. We discourage loans and the lifelong debt that brings.

It’s so hard sometimes to watch the fledglings flounder, fall, fail. I want to rescue them, but that wouldn’t help them learn to be successful.

You might also like:

  • Graduating from Homeschool
  • Parenting Teens
  • 5 Best Life Skills Books for Teens
  • How to Prepare for After High School
  • Homeschool High School
  • Teen Driving Tips
  • Emotional Health
  • Teaching Kids About Healthy Relationships

Resources:

  • You Are Not Special: … And Other Encouragements by David McCullough Jr.
  • Grown and Flown: How to Support Your Teen, Stay Close as a Family, and Raise Independent Adults by Lisa Heffernan and Mary Dell Harrington
  • Doing Life with Your Adult Children: Keep Your Mouth Shut and the Welcome Mat Out by Jim Burns
  • Setting Boundaries® with Your Adult Children: Six Steps to Hope and Healing for Struggling Parents by Allison Bottke
  • How to Raise an Adult by Julie Lythcott-Haims
  • Brainstorm: The Power and Purpose of the Teenage Brain by Daniel J. Siegel M.D.
  • Smart but Scattered–and Stalled: 10 Steps to Help Young Adults Use Their Executive Skills to Set Goals, Make a Plan, and Successfully Leave the Nest by Richard Guare, Colin Guare, Peg Dawson

What’s your relationship like with your adult children?

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Filed Under: Family Tagged With: college, parenting, relationships, teen

I Long for More

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Please see my suggested resources.

July 13, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert 9 Comments

I feel poignant on my evening walk, as I scan the dusky sky for the little brown bats skimming over the pond for bugs. The birds watch me warily as I approach on the turns of the path and flit away to a safer distance at just the last moment.

Fifteen years of being invisible.

Fifteen years of being a military wife.

Fifteen years of being a homeschool mom.

We never had the luxury of family nearby.

We celebrated milestones and holidays long distance – fewer and fewer as the years and miles rolled by and communication lagged and fizzled to nonexistent.

We never had any friends for long since we were transient.

I feel disposable.

Unfriended on social media the moment our van was out of sight towards another life at another military base.

It hurts the same way it hurt to be made fun of in middle school. The way my old neighborhood friends moved on as they found better, cooler friends in their own classes at school and ignored me in the hallways and after school. I learned to just stay inside.

I would cry (I mean sob uncontrollably in a ball on the floor) in my room and ask God why no one liked me, why no one wanted to play with me.

I’m still that lonely seventh grade girl inside my mind.

I never seemed to fit in.

My school acquaintances from high school and college would prick me like a needle with their flippant comments of how I would find people like me someday. I hate being dismissed like that.

It is someday, so where are they?

Some people never grow out of the patterns they learned when they were young. Some people never mature. They continue to throw away people as soon as they are no longer wanted or needed. I’m not important. I’m out of sight and out of mind. No one keeps in touch. I realize I was never desired as a friend. My kids played with their kids or my husband went fishing with their husbands. I was superfluous. They tolerated me because I cooked well as I took their abuse, laughed at their inappropriate jokes, overlooked their snubs. I had nothing in common with them other than proximity.

When was the last time you felt it—your own longing, that is? Your longing for love, your longing for God, your longing to live your life as it is meant to be lived in God? When was the last time you felt a longing for healing and fundamental change groaning within you?

Ruth Haley Barton, Sacred Rhythms

I’m tired of continuous stepping stones to somewhere else, someone else. I want to rest in a lasting friendship.

No one else has access to the world you carry around within yourself; you are its custodian and entrance. No one else can see the world the way you see it. No one else can feel your life the way you feel it. Thus it is impossible to ever compare two people because each stands on such different ground. When you compare yourself to others, you are inviting envy into your consciousness; it can be a dangerous and destructive guest.

John O’Donohue, Anam Ċara

We’ve left churches due to vanilla practices and even outright hatred and exclusion. That greatly narrows our opportunities to make and keep friends.

I continue to seek opportunities for socializing at homeschool events.

So many homeschool families have no qualms spouting off hatred and exclusion – about their worship of Trump and his policies and their intolerance for anyone not white, straight, conservative, evangelical Christian. They live in a bubble.

There is the solitude of suffering, when you go through darkness that is lonely, intense, and terrible. Words become powerless to express your pain; what others hear from your words is so distant and different from what you are actually suffering.

John O’Donohue, Anam Ċara

I bite my tongue and just listen and cringe so my kids can play with some other kids for an hour. I realize we’re never really welcome. I inwardly cry. It hurts.

I never would have imagined I would be so utterly alone at this age.

I keep forging my path and backtracking and learning and changing and improving and seeking, searching, longing.

I learn the flora and fauna of all the new places we moved to – where the deer congregate at dusk, which birds sing at dawn. I’m giddy when I see a heron. I name the raccoons and squirrels. I bark back to the woodpeckers as they cock their heads to see me better. I anticipate the flowers blooming in spring and relish in the surprise of new colors, patterns, patches. I learn the weather patterns, only to realize it’s different every year. I watch for hummingbirds when the temperature gets warm enough and I mourn their progress south in autumn. I always have a favorite critter that comes to my backyard feeders and I worry about her when she doesn’t appear for a few nights.

My family calls me Snow White. But these animals are more my friends than people could ever be. I feel most at home in nature.

It seems we might finally settle down and stay for a while or ten years or whatever.

It’s scary after being a nomad for so long to realize we own a house and develop a community and be a part of something. But where do I begin?

I asked honestly in a social justice online group: how do I find like-minded families? Their only answer was to move. We literally just bought our house. And that’s not an answer. I’ve lived all over and it was next to impossible for me to find anyone I could share my heart with.

Being quarantined is both a curse and a blessing. Yes, I realize our privilege not being affected financially.

My introvert lifestyle hasn’t changed much. I seldom went out before, but now that I know I can’t, it hits different. Sometimes I forget that I only go to the grocery store. We don’t go to parks now that they’ve reopened since they’re too crowded. We certainly don’t go to restaurants, not even to order takeout. Too many restaurant staff are being exposed and coming down with the virus. It’s so scary. We wear masks whenever we leave the house for appointments.

I realize I am on a journey. I try to relish in my solitude. I learn, research, reflect, improve.

Your soul knows the geography of your destiny. Your soul alone has the map of your future, therefore you can trust this indirect, oblique side of yourself. If you do, it will take you where you need to go, but more important it will teach you a kindness of rhythm in your journey.

John O’Donohue, Anam Ċara

It hurts me to see my kids miss their sports, friends, activities. It hurts me to get excited for summer and all the things we can’t do. I worry about autumn and the future.

It hurts me that I am a poor role model for my kids because I don’t have any friends. I have no one to turn to in an emergency. I have no one to list on forms that require an emergency contact.

I don’t know how to help my kids make friends when I don’t have any.

I long for more. I long for better.

May the Lord hear my heart’s cry.

There is a certain real loneliness if you say yes and all your old friends are saying no. So be prepared when your old groups, friendships, and even churches no longer fully speak to you the way they used to. But I promise you that those confusing feelings are far outdistanced by a new ability to be alone—and to be happy alone. One of the great surprises at this point is that you find that the cure for your loneliness is actually solitude!

Richard Rohr, Falling Upward

Resources:

  • Women Rowing North: Navigating Life’s Currents and Flourishing As We Age by Mary Piper
  • Crones Don’t Whine: Concentrated Wisdom for Juicy Women by Jean Shinoda Bolen
  • Rebellious Aging: A Self-help Guide for the Old Hippie at Heart by Margaret Nash
  • Falling Upward: A Spirituality for the Two Halves of Life by Richard Rohr
  • Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking by Susan Cain
  • The Empath’s Survival Guide: Life Strategies for Sensitive People by Judith Orloff
  • The Highly Sensitive Person: How to Thrive When the World Overwhelms You by Elaine N. Aron
  • Motherwhelmed: Challenging Norms, Untangling Truths, and Restoring Our Worth to the World by Beth Berry
  • The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma by Bessel van der Kolk
  • Boundaries: When to Say Yes, How to Say No To Take Control of Your Life by Henry Cloud and John Townsend
  • The Search for Significance: Seeing Your True Worth Through God’s Eyes by Robert S. McGee

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Filed Under: Military Tagged With: introvert, military, milspouse

July Themes

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July 1, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

When my kids were very small, we had monthly themes on our bulletin board, for our homeschool lessons, and to order our daily lives.

As the kids get older, the themes aren’t quite so vivid. I enjoy the liturgical calendar, the natural cycles of the world, and celebrating the flow and small events in our lives.

We loved these themed Calendar Connections.

Here’s a neat list of what’s on sale.

Fun Stuff: National Days

Something for each day of the month – from fun foods to celebrating summer treats to justice issues to historical landmarks.

We love reading about Catholic saints and Celtic saints and sometimes do spiritual activities. And we also talk about how white saviors and missionaries weren’t the best for indigenous peoples.

July is a great month for flowers, berries, foraging, and hiking.

We read lots of summer books and make cool salads and fruit icies.

1st: Canada Day

2nd: UFO day

We don’t really focus on Independence Day/4th of July like I did when the kids were younger. We usually grill food and hang out as a family. We occasionally watch local fireworks. We don’t display the American flag. This is very odd to most Europeans who don’t display their flags except maybe at football matches. We know where we live. We are not nationalists. See my July 4th Unit.

4th: Caesar Salad Day!

5th: Hawaii Day. See our Hawaiian travels when we lived in Hawaii for three years.

6th: Fried chicken day.

9th: Cow Appreciation Day at Chick-Fil-A

10th: Teddy Bears’ Picnic Day

Piña Colada day. I also like the pineapple coconut smoothies with mango or strawberries.

7-11 free Slurpees!

13th: International Rock Day. See our rocks and minerals unit.

14th: Shark Awareness Day. See our shark unit.

Macaroni and Cheese Day. See my easy stove top recipe.

15th: St. Swithin’s Day: If it rains on St. Swithin’s Day, it will rain for 40 days, but if it is fair, 40 days of fair weather will follow. St. Swithin was bishop of Winchester from 852 to 862.

17th: Tattoo day

19th: Ice Cream Day!

22nd: Hot dog day

29th: chicken wing day

30th: cheesecake day

History: Racial Injustice Calendar and The Zinn Education Project.

What’s your favorite activity in July?

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Why Now Is a Great Time To Travel by RV

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Please see my suggested resources.

June 30, 2020 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Summer’s arrival rings in the travel season, but this year, things are a little different. The coronavirus pandemic has many rethinking their plans. Even as economies across the U.S. and around the world are beginning to open, for a lot of people, there is a great deal of uncertainty about how safe it is to take a vacation.

While airlines, trains and cruise lines are still in operation, most are functioning on drastically reduced schedules. Car travel is an option, but it does require frequent stops to use public facilities, potentially in virus hotspots. These modes of transportation might make the idea of a vacation a little less appealing. Never fear, there is another choice.

RV Travels

If you are still itching to get out of town, now is a great time to hit the road in an RV. Sales for recreational vehicles have skyrocketed during the pandemic, as many realize the benefits of owning one at a time when other options feel riskier. Before you buy, however, you might want to consult a financial planner, like Robert Ryerson, who can help you determine if the investment in an RV is right for you.

Safety First  

When you travel in a motorhome or haul a trailer, you carry virtually everything you need with you, including the restroom, your food, and a place to lay your head at night. Traveling across the country in an RV reduces your risks of exposure during your journey. Between home and your destination, the only time you really need to get out is to fuel up.

Staying at a campground is safer than a hotel, especially when you are in a self-contained unit. Unless you opt for a camper van, popup or truck camper, chances are your RV will include a shower and toilet. This means that you and your family will not have to worry about accessing the facilities at the campground. As an added bonus, meeting new people is safer when you are outside and can easily stand six feet apart!

So Many Choices

During the first few months of the coronavirus pandemic, stay-at-home orders left many feeling confined and isolated. If you are ready to burst out of the four walls of your home, an RV offers freedom. While many states saw different levels of campground closures, most are now re-opening, though there still might be restrictions involved. For instance, you can expect pool closures in a majority of locations.

The type of trip you want will help you decide where to park your rig. Whether its the mountains, high plains, desert or coasts calling your name, an RV can take you there. From private resorts to State and National Parks, your options for places to stay are virtually endless. Just be sure to call ahead and reserve your spot, especially at the more popular locations.

The pandemic is changing the way many people live and travel. If you want a vacation but are hesitant to embark on a traditional car trip or cruise, and you are reluctant to fly, an RV is a great choice. For those who aren’t prepared to buy, renting is always an option. Beware, though, you might just get hooked on the freedom you experience when you travel in a house on wheels.  

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