Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Summer Reading

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July 9, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I am blessed that I don’t have to bribe or coerce my kids to read at any time of year. All four of my kids love books and love to read and be read to. We are raising readers.

We’ve always had lots of books and we go to the library weekly and come home with bags full. We maxed out the prizes at our summer reading program and there’s nothing more to do but continue reading. The prizes were awful anyway.

It’s becoming increasingly difficult for me to straddle a fence of popular fiction and classical literature with my teen daughter, Liz.

I remember the trash I read at her age and I don’t want to just give her free reign to read whatever she sets her eyes on.

When lessons slow down or we take a summer break, teens have more free time to read for fun…and I struggle to find appropriate reading material for my teen that doesn’t feel like school.

Summer Reading for Teens

Luckily, my kids are kinda nerdy and love reading schoolish books for fun. They have lots of freedom during summer and school breaks to read what they like and I am so thankful that they choose educational reading. I have few worries.

I love the reading lists at Ambleside Online. I enjoy the reading assignments with Tapestry of Grace and Story of the World. I feel that Shakespeare, poetry, naturalist reading, and biographies are very important. Living books are so much better than textbooks or dry non-fictional accounts.

I love discussing the books Liz reads. I try to preview everything she reads, but sometimes I go on reviews and pray it’s ok since I can’t keep up with her! She keeps a reader notebook and we discuss topics and themes together. Reading helps with vocabulary building.

The library teen reading lists have nothing worthwhile and the covers of the books are disturbing. Men kissing girls with torn shirts. It’s no better than Harlequin and there is no place for that in our house. And we don’t subscribe to Oprah’s reading list or any other celebrity-sanctioned books.

I worry about Liz’s peers who are obsessed with vampires and the occult and how they devour all these dystopian books about teens in a post-Apocalytpic world.

I love it that Liz enjoys Dickens (especially since I do not). I’m encouraging her to read Anne of Green Gables and Little Women as part of our history studies. Her tastes are different than mine and I love to hear what she likes and dislikes, her favorite parts and characters, what makes her angry or sad. I pray to keep conversations going through the teen years and books offer great discussion jumping-off points for life topics.

Liz is a great example to her younger siblings. They see her reading and love to read too. They beg her to read to them and she’s really great at doing voices and sound effects.

My life is easier than most since I have a degree in English literature and taught middle school, high school, and college English for almost ten years.

We still do family read-alouds every morning and evening. School books are in the mornings and a fun family classic is before bed. Alex even reminds me if our evenings get crazy and I forget or try to skip it!

I look forward to our reading assignments this year as we move into year 4 of our history cycle. We’ve never worked through year 4 completely before. I couldn’t bear to teach World War II when Liz was so little. I couldn’t expose her to all that yet. But now that we’re living here in Germany, it’s so much more important.

Did you know that swastikas and raising a right hand in the “Heil” are illegal in Germany? They don’t tolerate hatred or intolerance here.

I look forward to having discussions with Liz about our brave new world. This is the era when science fiction became popular and I love that I can raise geeky kids.

See what our homeschool high school looks like.

Check out other Crew members writing about teen reading:

Summer Reading for High School Students
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: reading, summer

Homeschool for Free

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July 2, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

You don’t have to spend lots of money to homeschool your kids.

You can homeschool for FREE.

I wasted so much money and time in the beginning on manipulatives, curriculum, books, toys, mostly from insecurity.

I was trained as a high school English teacher. Having preschoolers was terrifying! Homeschooling was scary.

So I spent money on curriculum, lessons, extracurricular activities, anything to get that responsibility off myself and onto others.

It took me several years of trial and error to gain confidence in our homeschool. We purged many unneeded items. We do still have lots of books and manipulatives that we’ve collected, but we’re so much more liberated in our education now than in the beginning.

So where can you get resources to homeschool for free?

Preschool

Enjoy life with your babies. Just include your preschoolers with everything you normally do as a parent. Cooking, cleaning, playing. None of it has to cost a thing beyond what you would normally do. Babies and preschoolers don’t need any formal education. They need a family to love and guide them. Let them play. Go outside a lot. Read a lot. Check out my preschool resources.

Follow Jennifer’s board Preschool on Pinterest.

Elementary

There are oodles of free courses online, books on public domain, and printables (we love notebooking.) I love how unschoolers learn and love life. Let your kids explore what they’re passionate about. I don’t stress about writing or much formal seat work. I want my kids to love learning. See how we homeschool.

Follow Jennifer’s board Notebooking on Pinterest.

Upper Grades

High school homeschool for free? Sure, just get creative! Use the library for literature, science, and history. Enter blog giveaways, do blog reviews for awesome curriculum, join a homeschool co-op and pool your teaching resources with other parents. Even do sports and PE at the YMCA or with other homeschooling families for course credits. I am so excited that my daughters are reaching the high school years and since we school year-round, she has so much freedom to learn what she likes and opportunities to do so many interesting things like Civil Air Patrol, theatre, Red Cross volunteering, and extracurricular activities.

Follow Jennifer’s board High School on Pinterest.

FREE Home Learning Ideas:

  • Amazing Educational Resources Google doc
  • Princess Awesome and Boy Wonder Google doc
  • Homeschool for Free Series from Only Passionate Curiosity
  • How to Homeschool for Free website
  • Pioneer Woman Free Homeschool resources
  • Easy Peasy All in One Homeschool – 1st through high school!
  • Ambleside Online – a great Charlotte Mason free education
  • An Old-Fashioned Education – with some Canadian resources!
  • Free Homeschool Deals
  • Homeschool.com Free Homeschool Curriculum and Resources
  • Under the Willow Tree Nature Notebooking Printables
  • Resources from Money Saving Mom
  • Resources from The Happy Housewife
  • Virtual Museums
  • Virtual Berlin Symphony
  • Classics for Kids
  • SQUILT Music
  • Masterpiece Society online art lessons
  • Chalk Pastel
  • Art for Kids Hub
  • Khan Academy videos online
  • Homeschool Math Worksheets
  • Education.com has freebies and a membership site
  • abcteach.com has free printables and a membership site
  • Confessions of  Homeschooler Printables
  • Homeschool Creations Printables
  • Starfall Reading and More Online
  • Currclick has freebies and newsletter sends a free product weekly
  • Ask for museum memberships and educational subscription boxes for birthdays and other gift-giving holidays.

Don’t confuse virtual schools that are run by your county or school district with homeschooling. While it may not cost you much or any money, you’re at the beck and call of the public schools and their standardized testing and regulations. If you like that idea, great, but be aware. I prefer freedom.

Don’t fear homeschooling your kids and being confident in your education choices.

Do you have any great free learning tools?

Check out the other Crew members and their free homeschool ideas.

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

Nature Trail

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June 25, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

I discovered a trail that circles our German village. It’s about 3 miles at its shortest. It meanders through the forest, with wild strawberry and blackberry patches offering up their fruit to hungry hikers.

Wild Strawberries

The canopy of trees overhead all but blocks out the bright sun and makes the temperature feel much cooler.

Wooded Path

Horses and riders, cyclists, runners, and walkers share the wide path. A few couples must have thought I am that crazy American taking pictures of every odd wildflower and lizard I came across.

Apparently, everyone in the village knows who we are, what our names are, that we live over the GetränkeShop.

So, I don’t want the villagers to think ill of us. With all the windows open all the time, I constantly urge the kids to be quieter. I know their squeals and singing carries down the street.

In the woods, it was quiet except for birdsong and bees and the occasional squirrel running along branches or lizard scurrying through the underbrush.

I love the views from the trail of the village rooftops.

I was taken with the various wildflowers.

I absolutely love these!

purple foxglove

These little black beetles are everywhere.

Purple Thistle

I caressed the mossy old trees.

Mossy Old Logs

I felt like I was in a fairy tale. Magic could happen in this forest.

Cobbled Walkway

Towards the end of the trail there is a little babbling brook.

Babbling Brook

I look forward to the changing seasons here. Early summer is gorgeous, cool and sweet in the morning and warm in the afternoon sunshine, and promising to bring wild blackberries soon!

Nature Study Journal Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Germany, nature study

New Routine

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June 18, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Our first Monday in our new house in Germany.

I have the school room unpacked but not organized.

I have no desk. My desk items are in a pile in the corner.

For breakfast, I made French toast with the cool griddle we got Aaron for Father’s Day.

Griddle French Toast

Homeschooling is legal for us in Germany because we are an American family on SOFA status since my husband works for the Air Force. He works at Landstuhl Hospital.

We began with Bible reading in my sitting room. Then the kids went off to their desks to complete their Bible notebooking.

They got distracted and had to play an art game. Of course.

I herded them back. We completed our other read alouds.

They completed their math lessons.

We had ham sandwiches and fruit for lunch. The ham is from the backerei on the corner. And somehow, there was Nutella too. Because I think Nutella is mandatory in all of Europe.

Liz set up The Lion King as recommended from our Bible lesson. We watched up to the point when Rafiki exclaims “Simba is alive!”

Then the kids walked down to the darling village park with all their sand toys. They met two new friends – one German boy and one American boy.

It’s a cool, cloudy day. The birds sing. We live in the middle of a forest.

So far, I am pleased with our lifestyle changes.

How is it different?

The kids have no closets. The bathrooms have no cabinets. There is nowhere to put coats. There is no storage!

Luckily, we get seven wardrobes allotted and they will be delivered this week with our washer and dryer. Just to find the space to put them…

We have no microwave (I chose not to have one and well I did since there is no counter space). I am eliminating our use of plastic in the kitchen (the kids are desperately hanging onto a few cups).

We have no crackers or junk food or American snacky things. The money I save from buying those things makes up for the higher cost of the amazingly better quality food I want to buy for meals.

Even though we have a German refrigerator in the kitchen and honking huge American fridge/freezer combo in the dining room, I am loving shopping and eating like the locals do. Every couple days, we go to the store to shop for the next couple days. We eat everything fresh. There’s no room to stockpile or store extra anything! On the odd days, we eat leftovers or the few items I have in the freezer “just in case.”

On Saturdays, we have a little farmers market directly across the street – year round! We bought grapes, a watermelon, fresh peas, and white asparagus. I could have bought so much more, but there was no way we could eat it all in a couple days.

Saturday Market

The kids were ecstatic to get fresh peas.

shelling peas

Just look at that pork chop. I am so loving the food.

pork chops

Every afternoon during the week and on Saturday mornings, there is a little drink shop open by our house, in our same building.

The shop owner is kind and gave my kids Italian ices the day we moved in.

I baked muffins our first morning and took the shopkeeper and our downstairs neighbor some with our names on a card.

I love the simplicity of no waste and everything in its place.

So, what do I dislike?

The tile floors (while super easy to keep clean) bruise my feet so I must wear slippers for padding. And they’re cold.

The lack of storage. We don’t have a garage or carport, just two parking spaces across the street. We have a cellar and shed that we piled all our stuff into.

No garden! We have no front yard, just a courtyard shared with the shopkeeper and the house next door – that is vacant and for sale. Our back yard is teeny tiny.

The garbage situation is confusing. There is a book to help us make sense of it. A BOOK. We must separate paper and glass from other recyclables that go in the gold bags. Organic compost waste from rubbish. Paper is picked up monthly. Rubbish is every two weeks. And they’re picky. We could be fined for making a mistake. We get Euro credit for most bottle returns. Non-exchange bottles go in marked containers depending on the color of the glass: green, brown, or white. We’re lucky that we have a compartmented garbage can built in under the kitchen sink. And all the waste cans are in a little shed across the street.

But these are small inconveniences for the lovely experience of living here.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Germany, schedule

New Nature Studies

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June 12, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

The kids and I are excited to explore our new home and the huge forest we’re going to live in.

We have hats (ticks) and homemade bug spray (with essential oils) and we’re anxious to get settled and go hiking. I hear there’s a gorgeous lake not too far from our village. We shall find it.

We stopped at one of the makeshift parking spots by the roadside and had a snack and saw some lovely flowers and critters.

I’m thinking this is Queen Anne’s Lace or some wild parsley.

Queen Anne's lace

These lavender flowers (probably common speedwell) are by the roadside everywhere. And red-orange poppies. Gorgeous. And the dog roses and clover smell so sweet.

lavender flowers

I’ve been trying to identify the birds around here. We have sparrows, crows, blackbirds, starlings, swallows darting all over – and some darling black and white tufted guys (I think it’s a crested tit).

I do loved the blackbirds when they chatter. They sound like an old typewriter.

This one is a type of robin, probably a redstart.

bird on a branch

We stood watching this guy on a blade of grass for quite some time.

red beetle

We are enraptured by the red tufted squirrels. They are the cutest things! I need to snap a photo. They’re not real shy but I haven’t had my camera on our walks around base.

Luckily, the base library has some nifty nature guides to tide us over for a while.

The kids are loving collecting the seedpods from all the trees around here. Sweetgum, maples, beech, oaks…and all the magnificent evergreens.

German Nature Study

I can’t wait to print some notebooking pages for our new studies and for all our art supplies and notebooks to arrive this week!

Nature Study Journal Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Germany, nature study, notebooking

Star Wars Angry Birds Craft

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May 3, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 20 Comments

May the 4th Be With You.

I’m discipling my kids to be Star Wars fans. It’s only right to raise geeky children who appreciate the finer things in geekdom.

Since we’re in limbo this month, all our possessions packed for a cruise across the galaxy ocean, I had to go kinda lame with my Star Wars craft.

We’re living in temporary base housing (TLF) and have very little room or supplies in the way of arts and crafts. My son is obsessed with Angry Birds Star Wars. My husband loves watching Clone Wars on Netflix. The girls have seen all the Star Wars movies.

We don’t really have any Star Wars toys. I had the Ewok village as a kid and lots of the original figures. My husband had some fun stuff too. We have empty egg cartons.

I bought some paint and paintbrushes at the BX (base exchange – like a little department store). I cut up the egg cartons and the kids painted the little bumps to look like the Angry Birds Star Wars characters. I helped with the details.

Angry Birds Star Wars Egg Carton Crafts

I cut up the egg cartons and ended up with all sorts of shapes and sizes of roundish and squarish cardboard pieces.

Egg Carton Craft

We viewed the game and characters to get familiar and study the details. I had the kids paint base colors on the cardboard.

Painting is Hard Work

Dad helped Alex with painting.

Craft Time with Daddy

Tori concentrated to get hers just right.

Painting R2D2

Alex did great to not get paint all over himself.Painting Egg Cartons

We let the base coat dry.Painted Egg Cartons

The kids had loads of fun adding the details with markers and more paint. We let them choose which characters they wanted.

We ended up with Jaba, Han Solo, a couple Princess Leias, Padme, Count Dooku, Mace Windu, Yoda, a couple Imperial Guards, a tie fighter, Darth Vader, Darth Maul, an ewok, Chewbacca, R2D2, C3PO (in gold and silver), a youngling Jedi, and Obi Wan Kenobi.

Painting Angry Birds Star Wars

Then, of course, we recreated the Angry Birds app games and Star Wars movies and had lots of pretend play time! It was a great way to pass a cold and rainy weekend in TLF.

When the sun shone again, we took them outside to play!

There’s an abandoned skate park next to our building and the kids had fun rolling cars down the ramps and destroying the pyramids of figures.

skate park

Then, we had to slide down at the playground like aerial attacks.

It was awesome.

Sliding

I had fun photographing the figures in appropriate surroundings.

C3PO and R2D2 in the desert:C3PO and R2D2

The ewok:Ewok

Check out our Geek Moms Pinterest board for great geeky educational fun!

6 bloggers are participating with educational or crafty Star Wars ideas:

  • Amy at Milk and Cookies
  • Colleen at Raising Lifelong Learners
  • Jamie at See Jamie Blog
  • Jennifer at Jennifer Lambert
  • Marci at the The Homeschool Scientist
  • Stef at Educating Laytons
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Angry Birds, geek, may, MayThe4thBeWithYou, MaytheFourthBeWithYou, Star Wars

Kindergarten Boy Fun

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April 22, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

Alex has been loving school lately.

I make sure I set aside at least an hour of uninterrupted one-on-one time with him every day.

We play trucks.

IMG_1718

And we have to have an audience!

trucks in line

He recently announced that he wanted to do math.

So I got out the Unifix and Cuisenaire and we counted and colored blocks.

unifix color

He loves All About Reading and we reinforce his learning with blend ladders and our movable alphabet.

letter matching

I made this with Lauri letters and phonograms tiles similar to these letter tiles. I got the case at Walmart, similar to a scrapbook organizer case.

Lauri Letters

These ladders are fun for reinforcement of the sounds.

blend ladders

I love the time we spend together, learning and exploring.

Recently, Alex has started saying to me: “When I was a boy…”

I asked him what he meant. What is he now if not a boy?

“Mama, when I was three, I was just a boy. I’m a big boy now.”

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Montessori, preschool

Elementary Chemistry and Physics Experiments

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April 2, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We’ve been loving science with Apologia Exploring Creation with Chemistry and Physics .

Science Experiment #1: Separating a Homogeneous Mixture

  • 4 Crayola markers (purple, brown, black, green)
  • 4 pieces white chalk
  • 4 plastic cups
  • water

Draw a ring of color around each chalk stick with a different color marker on each chalk.

Set each chalk stick in a cup of water (no more than half-full).

The water will creep up the chalk. It’s pretty cool!

Tori draws her ring of color on a piece of chalk.

coloring chalk

Alex did super following direction and drawing his ring.

drawing on chalk

Kate concentrated to get her circle just right.

chalk painting

We set the chalk sticks in cups.

chalk experiment

After I poured in some water, Alex wanted something immediate and amazing to happen. He was kinda disappointed.

waiting for chalk to bleed

After the water got to the ring, it bled the color. Brown was the neatest, separating all the colors.

rainbow chalk

Here is the completed experiment.

ombre chalk

Experiment #2: Making Butter from Cream

Making Butter From Cream

Fill a small jar half-full with whole cream.

And shake.

shake 1

shake

shake 2

shake

shake 3

shake

shake 4

until it become mostly solid. You can drain the buttermilk or use it (there’s very little). Add a little salt and refrigerate to solidify more.

The kids loved having *their* very own butter!

buttermilk to butter

So of course, I made biscuits for dinner. For the butter.

For science.

Biscuits

Tori loves biscuits.

Buttered Biscuits

Kate just recently began liking butter. So happy she’s normal.

Buttery Biscuits

What fun science have you done lately?

Linking up: The Jenny Evolution, 123Homeschool4Me, Happy and Blessed Home, Little Bins for Little Hands, Kids Activities Blog

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Signs of Spring at Last

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March 25, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

It’s always fun to see new flowers in spring every time we move.

Tori and Alex were thrilled to see this pretty lil guy in the garden!

They giggled at the name “Crocus.”

crocus

hyacinths are my favorite!

hyacinths

lamb’s ears

Lambs Ears

yellowbells, or forsythia for y’all other folks

forsythia

the hedges all have buds on them

Budding Hedge

also, the lilacs are budding and I see tulips and daffodils sprouting up all over the yard.


We made pinecone seed gifts for the birds and they’re just now becoming really popular. The birds are all aflutter, and tease my cats who sit on windowsills chattering in anticipation, dreaming of chasing.

We’ve had woodpeckers and finches, sparrows and starlings enjoy our feeders lately.

Northern Flicker

This must be a juvenile or female Northern Flicker.

This one came and enjoyed some lard and seeds in our feeders on the maple tree.

Peek a Boo!

Peek a Boo Northern Flicker

This bird had stunning red feather under the tail and wings and little red rings around the eyes.

Everyday we get new buds and flowers.

Flowers are poking green leaves and buds through the grass and trees are beginning to flower.

Crocuses

The Lenten rose twists and turns and bursts into mauve blooms, almost disguised as lovely leaves.

Lenten Rose

The primroses peek through the leafs, and stretch towards the sunrays.

Primrose

Hyacinths are my ultimate favorite flower. Their scent is intoxicating.

White hyacinth

I love forsythia and the birds are all twitterpated, jumping from branch to branch.

Yellow Bells

The mint returns, creeping, breaking free from its hibernation to be crushed underfoot and scent the cold spring air with its sharpness.

Mint

Every day, my girls inspect our buds, excited to report on the progress of each flower and tree in their springing forth.

It’s so exciting to run barefoot in the cool grass and soak up the sunshine after a long winter. They report to me on the clouds. Even little Alex is watching the sky and learning the different cloud shapes and purposes. While many of my friends in other parts of the US are experiencing snow still, we are blessed to have an early springtime. The temps have been in the 50s.

We’ve been reading poetry by Seamus Heaney and Emily Dickinson with our tea, listening to Brinkman Adventures or Vivaldi’s Spring.

We love the pastel art lessons by Hodgepodge and I am so impressed by my talented kids!

They know hyacinths are my favorite. This hyacinth is just barely being kissed by a sunbeam.

Purple Hyacinth

The cherry trees are riotously bursting forth, a surprise around a corner, bringing happy smiles to our faces.

Cherry Tree

We love and recommend Notebooking Pages for nature study (and pretty much everything else!)

Nature Study Journal Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: birds, nature study, spring, Utah

Tips for Read Alouds

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February 27, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 19 Comments

Do you struggle with getting the kids to

  • sit still
  • stay quiet
  • not touching!
  • not playing with the cat/dog/hamster/guinea pig/mouse/snake/lizard/insertwhateverpethere
  • stop making noises with body parts
  • stop making faces

or anything like that?

Read aloud time can be a challenge for sure.

20 Tips for Read Alouds

Good readers make it interesting by changing:

  • pitch
  • rhythm
  • volume
  • tone

It’s important to know context, show emotion, inflection, enunciate. Be a storyteller when you read!

What reading aloud to your child can do:

  1. Improve vocabulary.
  2. Grow the neurons in his brain.
  3. Help her become a lifelong learner and reader.
  4. Improve behaviors.
  5. Create strong bonds in family.
  6. Increase kindness and empathy.

Here’s a list of 20 tips to help your kids to focus, comprehend the words that are coming outta your mouth, and be respectful of read aloud time.

  1. Practice. It’s hard when they’re little and antsy. Keep going, mama! It’s great to teach respect and when and how to be quiet. Be intentional and gentle. They’re little and this is new and unpopular. They’ll get it eventually.
  2. Start with only a few minutes each day. Work up to more. We limit it to an hour. Then my voice gets tired.
  3. Mix it up. We read aloud from the Bible. Later, we do science. We do history on a different day. And we make time for fun reads too.
  4. Take breaks. Let em stretch or run around the house or do something to get the wiggles out. Attention spans are only about 15 minutes, tops.
  5. Let the kids take turns reading. Even if it’s a sentence or two. Great practice and they love it.
  6. Great excuse for snuggle time on the couch! Make sure you have a rotation schedule for who sits next to on Mama or there will be fights. How do I know? sigh.
  7. Get outside and worship God in creation while reading Bible stories or inspirational poetry or fiction. Yes, they might get distracted by birds or squirrels, but they’ll hear some too.
  8. Allow for questions and conversation time. It’s about relationship! Have fun.
  9. Give littles something to do with their hands quietly – like Legos, cars, mini animals (Toobs are great!), puzzles, blocks, Better Builders, Wedgits, or something quiet
  10. Give coloring pages that coincide with your reading materials – get Notebooking Pages here! Get US history coloring pages and other history pages here!
  11. Get books on CD or tape or Audible and listen to give your voice a break. Also check the library!
  12. Give each child her own rug, cushion, or spot to sit on during reading time
  13. Make sure they know they will be narrating this to Daddy so they should pay attention!
  14. Have the kids draw pictures of their favorite scenes as narration after reading time
  15. Inform them they will be acting out the narration afterwards. Let em make it a skit with props! Perform it for Daddy or grandparents or neighbors that night. Or video it!
  16. Let em have snacks or read during breakfast or tea time. Their mouths are full and they can’t talk!
  17. My eldest likes to crochet during reading time. She even balances a book or her iPad mini on her knee during her quiet time
  18. Give littles tracing pages or a dry erase board to play with with colored markers or crayons
  19. Provide matching cards or 3-part cards or some other manipulatives that pertain to the read alouds
  20. Read at a park, or Starbuck’s, or somewhere public. They’re less likely to embarrass you in public. They’ll be super good if the incentive is playtime or a treat after. They’ll want to hurry through it and go!
  21. BONUS! Read alouds after dinner include snuggle time with Dad. He loves listening to me read history and science. :)

It’s all worth it when you find your kids like this:

Sisters Reading Together

I still read aloud to my kids and they’re tweens and teens now!

Do you have any strategies that help your kids (and you) during read aloud time?

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: Charlotte Mason, read alouds, reading, tips

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