Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Unit Study

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March 20, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I’m joining up with some of my geeky friends in an ABCs of Raising Well-Rounded Geeklings blog roundup.

S is for Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

The acronym originally was Supreme Headquarters, International Espionage, Law enforcement Division.

It was changed in 1991 to Strategic Hazard Intervention Espionage Logistics Directorate.

Some agents refer to the acronym as Strategic Homeland Intervention, Enforcement and Logistics Division.

S is for Agents of SHIELD

I must say we’ve only seen season 1 of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

Debating whether to buy season 2 on Agents of SHIELD on Amazon Instant Video or wait for it to come to Netflix.

But we’ve watched all the Avengers movies.

And I totally love watching and discussing all of these shows and movies with my kids and tying in the allegory with what we’re studying in our homeschool.

The kids and I all love the many acronyms associated with S.H.I.E.L.D. and its subsidiary organizations.

I love the theme of PROTECTION throughout season 1.

Agent Coulson protecting his agents. His memories being protected from him. Skye protecting Coulson because she finally trusted someone. And all of S.H.I.E.L.D. protecting Skye from her past.

I can’t wait to see who they all become.

Character Study

Superheroes and villains. Sacrifice and redemption. It’s all there. Some of the quotes from this show and all the Marvel comics and Avengers world are just amazing. How they’re all connected! It’s UNIVERSAL. My kids and I can get lost in research.

I’m using the events and circumstances to have amazing conversations with my children about how different people respond to the same situation. Some get angry and go dark side while others rise above and become heroes.

Who do you become?

Skye

We’re really focusing on Agents Coulson, Skye, and Ward for our character studies.

Thinking Questions:

  1. How do past experiences and relationships affect our current decisions?
  2. Who would you want to be like? Why?
  3. Who would you not want to be like? Why?
  4. How do you trust someone after he betrays you?
  5. How do you maintain faith when there is no evidence or evidence to the contrary?
  6. Is anyone pure evil or pure good?
  7. What role do governments play and how is this good and bad? Should they hold the power they do?
  8. Should secrets be kept from people and who gets to decide? Who makes the rules and who holds the power?
  9. Is the agent level hierarchy good? Do they protect or harm those who aren’t at that pay grade yet?
  10. Why are most agents loners, with few friends or family? Why are they often the chosen ones?

History

I made my kids a Venn diagram for S.H.I.E.L.D. and Hydra. We’ve been studying World War II so this is just perfect timing!

Comparing and Contrasting WWII Nazis with Hydra

Elizabeth is working hard on her chart and is researching all about S.H.I.E.L.D. canon along with her history studies. I love making school fun and relevant. We also have the show Agent Carter to explore!

We’ve compared Wikis:

  • Agents of SHIELD Wikipedia
  • S.H.I.E.L.D. Marvel wikia
  • Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. wikia
  • Marvel Cinematic Universe S.H.I.E.L.D. wikia
  • Marvel Movies S.H.I.E.L.D. wikia

Mythology

Of course, we had to research hydras with Greek mythology and Asgard with Norse mythology. There are many mythologies and archetypes in the Marvel comics! We will discuss this at length in our ancient studies next year.

Science

Lasers, bionic limbs, labs, and blowing stuff up. The kids love the science behind it and researching the how and IS IT ALL POSSIBLE?

We’re studying the progression of weapons from WWI to present day and how times has changed. And in the show, they also incorporate alien technology. This adds some ethical elements to discuss.

We are totally IN LOVE with Fitz Simmons. They are precious and geeky and just darling.

ADORKABLE.

And they’re into Doctor Who!

Of course, Simmons chooses The T.A.R.D.I.S. on her deserted island when questioned!

THE TARDIS

We love how Fitz and Simmons work together and trust each other. We’re excited to see how this develops.

We’ve enjoyed this time together, watching and learning and discussing.

We’re looking forward to the new Avengers movie and other films in the extended series. We love Marvel!

Linking up:  Enchanted Homeschooling Mom, Simple Life of a Fire Wife, B Inspired Mama, The Educators Spin on It, A Life in Balance, Hip Homeschool Moms, The Life of Jennifer Dawn, All Kinds of Things, 

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Building a Better Vocabulary

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March 11, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Having a high schooler means that I have to get real intentional about vocabulary building.

It’s a lot of newness with grades and schedules, and teaching her to budget her time well. We have to make lists and check off the assignments and stay on task. We’re not used to having to be so diligent keeping track and recording.

I am blessed to have four children who love reading and words as much as I do. My husband complains there is never anywhere for him to sit because every surface is covered in books.

I don’t see the problem.

5 Tools for Vocabulary Building

5 Tools for Vocabulary Building

Reading and writing are the best tools to building a strong vocabulary. But sometimes we need a little help.

1. 30 Days to a More Powerful Vocabulary

30 Days to a More Powerful Vocabulary is a great little book that helps with test scores and cramming vocabulary in that style. I used it when I taught study skills and test taking tips and my husband and I used it to refresh for grad school entrance exams.

2. Reader Notebook

Keeping a reading writing notebook makes my daughter own her vocabulary lists. Ideally, she jots down words in the quotes as she reads literature and looks up definitions to keep a running list. Sometimes it’s an archaic word or a term in a new context, but this helps her be responsible for learning. With the Kindle app on her iPad, it’s often instantaneous to learn definitions and she gets lazy, but she’s only cheating herself. She loves adding Notebooking Pages to her reading writing notebook. She uses it for all her literature reading.

3. Reader’s Digest Word Power

My father and I have been competing for decades on the Reader’s Digest Word Power quizzes and I am so pleased that my kids are now joining in the competition.

4. Word of the Day

When I was a teen, my parents bought me a Word of the Day tear-off desk calendar. I loved that thing. My kids now love to check the word of the day app every morning.

5. Spelling Workout

My kids love Spelling Workout for quick and fun vocabulary lessons. I love the various activities in each lesson – prefixes and suffixes, analogies, synonyms and antonyms, dictation, editing, freewriting exercises, puzzles, riddles, and more. Books recommended for grades 1-8.

These are fun vocabulary building tools for the whole family to learn new vocabulary.

It can be a challenge to try to fit those new words into regular conversation throughout the day. We have done copywork in the past, but I think that just focuses on good penmanship. I love to work with my kids and these vocabulary builders have assisted our kids increase their word count. I am blessed that we have strong readers and they all love words and learning how to use them well.

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Raising Readers

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February 16, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

Liz has always been an accelerated reader. It never occurred to me to not let her fly.

She attended day care from six months – and then a Christian preK that used A Beka curriculum.

She complained loudly that they finished their curriculum by April and then watched Veggie Tales movies for the rest of the school year. The program did give her enough to go on for her to teach herself how to read.

So I didn’t have to really toilet train her or teach her how to read. Not sure how I feel about that.

I remember when she read the entire series of Magic Treehouse and Junie B. Jones our first few months of homeschooling – and we carried home stacks of Minnie Moo and early chapter books from the library each week.

I didn’t know that was unusual for a four-year-old.

I chalked it up to early exposure to words and reading. I was an English professor after all.

We had more books than anything else in our house. Books are important.

I very quickly developed some standards for her reading material.

I didn’t really like Junie B. Jones and a lot of that sort of fluff. I discovered Charlotte Mason and Ambleside Online and The Well-Trained Mind and all these amazing works of literature for children. Living books entered my vocabulary.

Somehow, I skipped over a lot of really good reading material when I was a kid.

I suppose I am a product of a school system focused on test scores and workbooks more than critical thinking and quality of reading material.

I actually really loathed reading until I was about 10.

I remember one night, lying to my mom about a homework reading assignment and I couldn’t narrate back to her anything about the text. I still feel ashamed. But it was so boring and I really didn’t care for any of the school assignments.

And I seem to have jumped right into Stephen King and Dean Koontz in late elementary school. I didn’t have the greatest guidance from teachers or parents.

I honestly don’t remember reading anything worthwhile in school until 8th grade with Diary of Anne Frank. We only did maybe 2-3 novels each year of high school. In 11th and 12th grade, I sat in the back of English class, by the window overlooking the teachers’ parking lot, reading the Beat poets and Russian novels that were nowhere on the curriculum lists.

I didn’t know how to write an essay until my sophomore year in college, in my Shakespeare class.

So, of course, it made perfect sense for me to become an English teacher.

My ten years or so of teaching English taught me a great deal about life, kids, parents, and education.

I certainly knew what I didn’t want for my kids when we decided to homeschool.

Thank God all four of our kids love words, books, and writing. Read alouds are an everyday, twice-a-day occurrence – and even the littlest one loves to snuggle while I read aloud from really hard, great books.

I am blessed with curious children, constantly asking the hard questions, demanding to get at the marrow of life, desiring to know what’s really important, trusting in my opinions, striving to learn the righteous path.

It’s a really tough transition into high school. The early teen years are fraught with confusion and making difficult connections and having virtually no life experience from which to draw conclusions.

I’m raising readers.

Raising Readers - Reading literature helps us to learn and understand the nature of man in all its beauty and ugliness. | www.JenniferALambert.com

How to Raise Readers

Read read READ aloud to kids from prebirth until they won’t let you anymore. We read aloud in the mornings and bedtime stories in the evenings.

Buy lots of books. Get lots of books from libraries or used sales or borrow from friends.

Read a lot all the time and let that habit pass like osmosis to the rest of the family.

Find books on topics your kids are interested in. There’s always something for a reluctant reader. But don’t suggest or press or offer it. Just leave it lying around in their path for them to discover.

Audiobooks count. Movies based on books count. Anything to get kids interested in a literary life, to love words and phrases and imagination.

  • The Read-Aloud Family: Making Meaningful and Lasting Connections with Your Kids by Sarah Mackenzie
  • The Read-Aloud Handbook by Jim Trelease
  • Before They Were Authors: Famous Writers as Kids by Elizabeth Haidle
  • Give Your Child the World: Raising Globally Minded Kids One Book at a Time by Jamie C. Martin
  • The Book Whisperer: Awakening the Inner Reader in Every Child by Donalyn Miller
  • Reading in the Wild: The Book Whisperer’s Keys to Cultivating Lifelong Reading Habits by Donalyn Miller

Great literature helps us learn about people and events and the WHY.

This cycle 4 of modern times in our history studies is a really tough year to learn. I skipped most of the subject matter TWICE during our history cycles because I.Can’t.Even.

Modern history is tragic and really hard.

But we need to just jump in and do this.

Sample of a 9th grade reading list:

  • The Call of the Wild and White Fang by Jack London
  • Anne of Green Gables by LM Montgomery
  • The Short Novels by John Steinbeck
  • The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
  • Short Stories by Faulkner
  • The Great Gatsbyby F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
  • The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger
  • The Outsiders by SE Hinton

Plays:

  • Our Town by Thornton Wilder
  • The Glass Menagerie by Tennesee Williams
  • The Crucible by Arthur Miller

Dystopian and Sci-Fi:

  • The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
  • The Invisible Man by HG Wells
  • 1984 and Animal Farm by George Orwell
  • Lord of the Flies by William Golding
  • A Separate Peace by John Knowles
  • Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
  • The Giver by Lois Lowry
  • Have Space Suit – Will Travel by Robert A. Heinlein
  • I, Robot by Isaac Asimov

War:

  • The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank
  • The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
  • Broken by Lauren Hillenbrand
  • Lots of history material from the library and she’s performing in the play KinderTransport.

Civil Rights:

  • Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis
  • Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry by Mildred D. Taylor
  • Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
  • To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
  • The Help by Kathryn Stockett
  • The Watsons Go to Birmingham – 1963 by Christopher Paul Curtis
  • Maya Angelou

We’re also watching many great films that showcase historical events well. Liz and I are having great discussions. She asks amazing questions and understands well. I’m actually not forcing too many assignments. She has a reader notebook and some assignment notebooking pages, but much fewer than usual. I want her to enjoy reading.

I know many parents shy away from the tougher subjects. Modern and contemporary history and events are too close. It’s uncomfortable. We remember lots of it. Our parents and grandparents lived through it. Their views formed our opinions and values. But we must study and review events with new eyes as we teach our children so we can all learn from the mistakes of the past.

We do our children a disservice not to walk through this with them and teach them about horrific events that took place. We must put aside any discomfort to discuss events that affects millions of people. We can’t live in a bubble and pretend that horror didn’t and doesn’t happen every day.

I refuse to send my teens out into the world ill-equipped– without an understanding of the sexual nature of mankind, without a knowledge of war, without being taught discernment, without an awareness of people’s fears.

Reading literature helps us to learn and understand the nature of man in all its beauty and ugliness.

My youngest daughter is disappointed that she can’t join the homeschool book clubs in our area because they have rules and their two clubs are only for certain age groups.

She loudly complained to me, “But Mo-om! I read teen books!” She’s 7. It pains me to see her confusion.

Even in the homeschool community, accelerated students are shunned. I get that there have to be rules, but kids shouldn’t be punished for being smart.

My 5-year-old son is now reading level 3 readers.

I won’t dumb down life for my kids.

Literature Study (or Book Report) Notebooking Pages

The #1 Writing Tool
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A Day in Our Life

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February 11, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Want a peek into our day? I’m always curious about other people’s schedules and how they fit in homeschool, work, chores, and whatever.

I aim at a 2 for 3 kinda day.

I can focus on our homeschool. I can focus on housework and chores. I can focus on my blogging and home business.

On any given day, I can’t get it all done well.

I can successfully get homeschool and chores accomplished or chores and work or homeschool and work. But never all three.

A day in our life.

Here’s a typical Monday for us.

I have a 15 year old girl, two girls almost 9 and 8, and an almost 5 year old boy.

Morning

Alex wakes me up at

6:40.

He demands bacon and eggs. We read his Bible storybook and I do my Bible study. Kate soon comes down. They watch X-Men on Netflix while I make breakfast. I clean up the kitchen from last night’s dishes.

BACON and Sausage

We eat. They demand a sip of coffee. We clear the table. I load and start the dishwasher.

I take my supplements.

I begin a load of laundry.

8:14

Liz comes downstairs and doesn’t want anything to eat. Tori soon follows and also doesn’t want anything to eat yet.

I encourage Tori to eat something. I think she snags some bacon and cereal.

(This is not going at all like I planned! The idyllic family breakfast just isn’t happening.)

Kate and Tori sweep the dining room.

Liz reads her Bible study.

Morning Devotional Time

I give the kids their supplements.

I tell the girls to sweep again and actually move the chairs and sweep the entire dining room area, baseboards and all.

Tori and Kate read their Sword Fighting Bible devotional. They fight over who reads what. I intervene.

I remind Liz to go make her bed and take her supplements. She finally decides to eat a tangerine.

We apply our daily essential oils.

Kate practices piano and Tori practices guitar. They’re doing so well! We just began music lessons this month.

Practicing Piano
Practicing Guitar

School Time

8:50

We start with our read alouds. Today is Anne of Green Gables, Winnie-the-Pooh, Harlem Stomp!, and World Wars.

Halfway through Anne, Tori accidently bumped Alex’s nose. After comforting him and asking her through clenched teeth to sit on the other sofa, we finish a chapter of Anne.

I remind them all to brush their teeth. Why must I remind them to brush their teeth every single day?

Then we finish reading Pooh, World Wars, and Harlem Stomp.

9:42

Alex has a tantrum that he’s starving, but he won’t tell me what he wants to eat. He doesn’t want a banana. He runs to his room in despair.

The girls and I head to our school room.

Alex decides to eat a carrot.

I help Alex with reading printables and Singapore math.

This kid kills me. Apparently, he didn’t feel challenged enough, so he wrote the beginning letter over each picture also:

Phonics Work

Tori and Kate work independently on their Spelling Workout and a winter fun pack.

Liz works on Latin Form 2, VideoText algebra, and Apologia physical science independently. I check those later.

I do some money math with Alex. He refuses to read or be read to. sigh

11:18

I put frozen mini pizzas in the oven for lunch. Because, sometimes, it’s just easier, y’all. I do cut up some and onion, red bell pepper, and pepperoni for toppings. Semi-homemade, right?

Afternoon

12:23

Liz and I watch a couple episodes of Downton Abbey with our lunch. The littles watch the iPad – Wild Kratts.

They stack their plates on the counter and go play.

1:13

I help Liz organize her math notebook and write out her agenda for the week. We discuss history and literature and what she learned last week.

I realize I never finished school with Tori and Kate. sigh

We school year-round, so this isn’t a problem. We usually alternate science and history every day. We’re so ahead in math that it’s not an issue.

3:24

I hang up the laundry to dry. I print out eMeals.com recipes for the week. Liz wants a cool notebook cover for math. I find some funny math eCards and print a collage of those. She’s delighted.

Tori and Kate are playing so nicely with dolls and/or Legos upstairs. Alex watches his shows on his iPad.

3:57

I link up some blog posts and do some research.

We have to leave the house at 5:00 to take Liz to Civil Air Patrol for PT at 6:00. It’s already dark. I drop Liz off at the gym and stop by the library to check out a stack of civil rights leaders’ biographies.

Dinner time

We get back home about 6:15.

I make a quick dinner – sautéed pecan chicken, couscous, and salad. I unload the dishwasher so we can easily load our plates. I tell the kids to go ahead and get in pajamas so it’s an easy night. After dinner, they run to brush their teeth.

Evening

It’s now 7:09 PM.

We have family reading – currently Pollyanna and Bible stories. We put our bedtime essential oils on. We have a prayer circle, holding hands (and the cats always snuggle in too!). I sing lullabies.

8:00

Bedtime!

Liz and Aaron come home about 9:00 or so, eat leftover dinner, clean up, and it’s lights out for all.

I usually stay up until 11 or so, reading and working.

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Silks Play

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February 9, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

We had a break in the wintry weather, and I was all:

GO GO GO!

We rushed to the park to enjoy the sun and warmth after dismal weeks of clouds, snow, and rain.

We brought play silks and played in the woodsy playground, making forts, pretending, and being loud.

This is an advantage to being homeschooled.

We can rush off in the middle of the day whenever the mood strikes, to take advantage of the sunlight, and play at a vacant park in the middle of the day, while many other children are stuck indoors, sitting at desks in classrooms…

We can finish our lessons later, when the clouds roll in.

The wind whipped our silks like flags. The kids loved pretending pirates and fighting on the high seas.

Waving in the Wind

Tori liked feeling the silks blow across her face.

Scarves

Alex liked hiding behind the silks.

silhouette

Kate really just wanted to wear the silks like a cape.

Windy

Even Liz got in on the play a bit. At fourteen, she often thinks it’s beneath her to participate in playtime.

Sun Glow

We noticed the light and wind. We reveled in being outdoors on a warm winter day.

Then they had to run wild in the field. Of course.

Super Bubba

Alex loves his rainbow silk and this little hill.

King of the Mountain

Pretend play is so important.

We greatly encourage imaginative play around here. We read lots and lots and lots of books. I ask many questions, making sure my kids think. I’m trying really hard to allow for more art time and messy play. I know these things are significant for healthy brain development and well-rounded children.

Every day, I try to balance lesson time with free time, to encourage creativity and imagination.

I strive to ensure there is plenty of free play time. And sometimes, I have to encourage my kids in their unstructured play.

The girls love playing with the silk scarves, holing up in their room, hiding from their little brother, making loom jewelry and playing with their dolls.

Bed Fort

The kids made this fort about a month ago, playing games and reading under afghans.

I love the impromptu fort they made on their own.

Sofa Fort

Fort play is a fun break from homeschooling.

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Great Books for Writers

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February 4, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 12 Comments

Many of my friends are writers and bloggers.

My daughter is growing into a writer and artist.

NaNoWriMo is great for kids and young writers! We are including a creative writing credit on her homeschool high school transcript.

It’s sometimes helpful to read from successful writers – a pep talk, how they became successful, or just their fun biography.

Sometimes we suffer from writer’s block and need inspiration to keep going. We never, ever call this procrastinating. It’s research!

I love this Writer’s Prayer:

Oh Lord, let me not be one of those who writes too much;
who spreads himself too thinly with his words,
diluting all the things he has to say,
like butter spread too thinly over toast,
or watered milk in some worn-out hotel;
but let me write the things I have to say,
and then be silent, ’til I need to speak.
Oh Lord, let me not be one of those who writes too little;
a decade-man between each tale, or more,
where every word accrues significance
and dread replaces joy upon the page.
Perfectionists like chasing the horizon;
You kept perfection, gave the rest to us,
so let me earn the wisdom to move on.
But over and above those two mad spectres of parsimony and profligacy,
Lord, let me be brave, and let me, while I craft my tales, be wise:
let me say true things in a voice that is true,
and, with the truth in mind, let me write lies.

~Neil Gaiman (listen to him read it here)

My TOP 10 favorite books for writers:

1. On Writing: A Memoir Of The Craft by Stephen King

I love the humor and real life stories. It’s always fun to know the beginnings of a famour writer and how he came to success.

2. You Are a Writer by Jeff Goins

Great inspirational calls to action. These books make you want to be a better person and not just a better writer.

3. Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life by Anne Lamott

Raw, intelligent, realistic writing advice mingled with poignant stories of her life.

4. The Elements of Style, Annotated and Updated for Present-Day Use by William Strunk, Jr.

Every writer needs to know this stuff. Period.

5. Conversations with a Writing Coach by Susan May Warren

Easy to follow advice with an actionable plan to write a novel.

6. Walking on Water: Reflections on Faith and Art by Madeleine L’Engle

Great thoughts on being a Christian artist.

7. Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within by Natalie Goldberg

Great exercises on writing and how to live life to the fullest, based on her writing courses.

8. On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing by William Zinsser

How to write nonfiction well.

9. Zen in the Art of Writing: Essays on Creativity by Ray Bradbury

It’s by Ray Bradbury. Need I say more?

10. The War of Art: Break Through the Blocks and Win Your Inner Creative Battles by Steven Pressfield (all his books are great!)

Succeed despite all the Resistance.

11. Writing to Change the World: An Inspiring Guide for Transforming the World with Words by Mary Pipher

Words are the most powerful tools at our disposal. With them, writers have saved lives and taken them, brought justice and confounded it, started wars and ended them. Writers can change the way we think and transform our definitions of right and wrong.

Writing to Change the World is a beautiful paean to the transformative power of words. Encapsulating Mary Pipher’s years as a writer and therapist, it features rousing commentary, personal anecdotes, memorable quotations, and stories of writers who have helped reshape society. It is a book that will shake up readers’ beliefs, expand their minds, and possibly even inspire them to make their own mark on the world.

12. The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron

Julia Cameron takes readers on an amazing twelve-week journey to discover the inextricable link between their spiritual and creative selves. This groundbreaking program includes:

– Introductions to two of Cameron’s most vital tools for creative recovery–The Morning Pages and The Artist Date
– Hundreds of highly effective exercises and activities
– Guidance on starting a “Creative Cluster” of fellow artists who will support you in your creative endeavors

Do you have any favorite books or tips about writing?

Check out some great resources for writing: Follow Jennifer Lambert’s board Writing on Pinterest.

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Our Curriculum for 2009-2010

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January 25, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Our last year in Hawaii was super fun. We finally felt familiar with the island and experienced lots of great field trips.

Our Curriculum for 2009-2010

4th Grade:

  • Story of the World Book 3
  • Singapore Math
  • Apologia Science

Liz got to stay overnight on the USS Missouri. It was the same weekend I gave birth to her brother Alex.

Liz took piano lessons, sang in a choir, did soccer, ran track.

The girls started doing some preschool.

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Our Curriculum for 2008-2009

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January 25, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Living in Hawaii was like a dream, but we had to still live in reality. I had to cook, clean, care for the toddlers, and find exciting ways to homeschool my daughter.

Our Curriculum for 2008-2009

  • Story of the World Book 3
  • Singapore Math
  • Apologia Science – Botany

She attended the base school for one month – October/November. She quit before Thanksgiving.

Her teacher yelled and criticized and left her alone during recess in the trailer as punishment. She developed anxiety and stomach pains. She was threatened by another student during a field trip. They did no science, history, or language that month. It was just random worksheet packets.

We met a Tuskegee Airman.

We visited Pearl Harbor memorials.

There were homeschool opera field trips, dress rehearsals that were free for students.

Liz played soccer, tried tennis lessons, and took piano lessons. We went whale watching. We explored the islands. She won Jump Rope for Heart. She won an art contest and writing contest! She began track.

There were times when Liz had to attend events alone or with her dad. I had to stay home with the two toddlers.

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

Our Curriculum for 2007-2008

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January 25, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

We moved to Hawaii after homeschooling for two years in San Antonio, Texas. We continued to homeschool while we lived on Hickam AFB.

It was our third year homeschooling.

We joined a history co-op.

We played in the ocean and explored the islands.

Our Curriculum for 2007-2008

  • Story of the World Book 2
  • Singapore Math
  • Apologia Science – Astronomy

We did a time lapse tide demonstration to show the high and low.

We met the artist Wyland and got an autographed print.

Liz learned to ride her bike.

Liz learned hula, performed in theater, and went to soccer camp.

I tried to provide Liz with lots of variety. Her sisters were babies and came with us almost everywhere. It was an eventful year!

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

Our Dental Unit

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January 20, 2015 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We learned about teeth this week!

I found some really fun science, crafts, games, and activities for us to learn about dental health.

We’re using Exploring Creation with Human Anatomy and Physiology by Apologia as our primary text. We love the fun experiments and learning activities.

Dental Unit

We learned about stained teeth with an egg and cola.

Stained Teeth Experiment

Alex demanded an experiment page like his sisters. And he did awesome!

Little Scientist

The kids made predictions and drew their ideas. Kate drew a time lapse of the egg sinking, changing colors, and then exploding. She’s special like that. Tori drew the egg sinking and turning brown. Alex drew the egg floating.

Drawing Predictions

The egg didn’t explode, much to Kate’s chagrin. It did sink and turn an icky brown.

Stained Egg

We used Thieves toothpaste and baking soda to brush the shell. It cleaned off a lot, but not all.

Brushing the egg

I put the colored egg beside a clean one to show the difference.

egg colors

The girls did a great job on their science experiment pages.

Completing Experiment Pages

We learned about cavities.

I stuck a hole in an apple and we watched it turn brown and get soft and rotten.

apple cavity

After one week, it was disgusting:

apple cavity after one week

We placed a tooth in cola and watched it rot. It turned brown and soft.

Rotten Tooth

Alex made a happy fluffy tooth.

Fluffy Tooth

We visited the dentist.

The kids (and I) all had dentist appointments – and NO CAVITIES!

Spiderman Sunglasses to the Rescue

We practiced flossing with egg cartons and ribbon.

Flossing Teeth Activity

We labeled teeth drawings.

Labeling a Tooth

I found some fun literacy works for the girls – sentences, matching, ABC order.

Literacy Work with a Dental Theme

They played this teeth game with mini marshmallows a gazillion times.

Teeth Games

We learned a poem about dental health. Subscribe to the blog for the free download (and others!)

Follow Jennifer’s board Dental Unit on Pinterest.

February is Dental Health month!

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: anatomy, dental health, February, Science

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