Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Civil War Unit Study

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August 6, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 10 Comments

Growing up in Georgia, I learned the Civil War is important history.

Many museums and historical sites commemorate the Confederate events and battles that took place and they’re all very accessible for day trips or short vacations.

But how they do glorify the Confederacy.

You don’t see any Nazi memorials in Europe except in appropriate museums to show what never to do again…

It’s exciting to see statues and monuments coming down that glorified the Confederacy.

As a child, I attended reenactments of battles at Stately Oaks Plantation, a replica of the house in Gone With the Wind. My family took vacations to visit Andersonville, Fort Sumter, and Chickamauga, along with plantation home tours.

I think every Southern state has a Civil War museum, mostly glorifying the Confederacy and perpetuating the “Magnolia Myth.”

I feel it’s very important to teach my white children real history.

We learn about all sides to the story. I feel my Georgia public school education was rather sloppy and often told incorrectly, even by black teachers who were at the mercy of the curriculum and administrators.

It’s so important to talk about history and to discuss race and current events, cause and effect. 

This book helps me teach better: Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong by James W. Loewen 

We learn about the Civil War with Notebooking, Field Trips, Books, and Movies.

Travel:

  • National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
  • Springboro, OH, Underground Railroad Walking Tour
  • Stone Mountain, Georgia
  • Stately Oaks in Jonesboro, GA

Civil War States Info (most States have a historical site)

  • Ohio Civil War
  • Civil War in Texas
  • The Civil War in Georgia
  • Virginia 150 years
  • North Carolina 150 years
  • Pennsylvania 150 years
  • Battle of Mobile Bay
  • Tennessee Civil War

Topics:

  • Causes of the Civil War
  • Missouri Compromise
  • Foreign aid to Confederacy and Union
  • Dred Scott
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • John Brown
  • Underground Railroad
  • Reconstruction
  • Racism
  • KKK
  • Jim Crow Laws

Resources

  • Adventures in Mommydom American history lessons
  • Lapbooks and notebooking pages
  • Homeschool Share lapbook
  • Stone Mountain and The Cyclorama 
  • Civil War for Kids
  • Battlefields.org
  • PBS The Civil War
  • Slavery Unit from Our Journey Westward
  • Lapbook from Homeschool Share
  • Resources from the Homeschool Mom
  • Addy American Girl Unit from Fields of Daisies
  • War Between the States from Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus
  • Unit Study from Susan Evans
  • Resources from Creekside Learning
  • Pages from Bonnie Rose
  • Lapbook from Jimmie’s Collage
  • Practical Pages
  • Productive Homeschooling $
  • A Journey Through Learning Lapbook $

Movies

(use viewer discretion)

  • Glory
  • Gettysburg
  • North and South
  • Cold Mountain
  • Gone With the Wind
  • Ride with the Devil
  • The Red Badge of Courage
  • The Civil War by Ken Burns
  • Friendly Persuasion
  • The Birth of a Nation
  • An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
  • Shenandoah 
  • Little Women
  • Andersonville
  • Gods and Generals
  • Lincoln
  • Journey to Shiloh
  • North and South
  • The Blue and the Gray
  • Roots
  • The Beguiled 1971 and 2017
  • Ironclads (1991)

Books

  • Civil War for Kids
  • The Patchwork Path: A Quilt Map to Freedom by Bettye Stroud
  • Show Way by Jacqueline Woodson 
  • Follow the Drinking Gourd by Jeanette Winter 
  • Unspoken by Henry Cole
  • The Secret to Freedom
  • Henry’s Freedom Box
  • Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt
  • The Drinking Gourd
  • Under the Quilt of Night
  • The Last Safe House
  • Light in the Darkness
  • Before She Was Harriet
  • Cause: Reconstruction
  • Forty Acres and Maybe a Mule by Harriette Gillem Robinet
  • 40 Acres and No Mule by Janice Holt Giles
  • Freedom School
  • The Monitor
  • Shots Fired at Fort Sumter
  • Across Five Aprils
  • The Red Badge of Courage
  • An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
  • Welcome to Addy’s World
  • The Journal of James Edmond Pease: A Civil War Union Soldier, Virginia, 1863
  • When Will This Cruel War Be Over? The Civil War Diary of Emma Simpson, Gordonsville, Virginia, 1864
  • A Light in the Storm: The Civil War Diary of Amelia Martin
  • My Brother’s Keeper: Virginia’s Civil War Diary Book 1
  • After The Rain, Virginia’s Civil War Diary Book 2
  • A Time To Dance, Virginia’s Civil War Diary Book 3
  • Abraham Lincoln’s World
  • Abraham Lincoln: A Nonfiction Companion
  • Civil War On Sunday
  • Abe Lincoln at Last!
  • The Perilous Road
  • Freedom’s Wings: Corey’s Underground Railroad Diary Book 1
  • Flying Free: Corey’s Underground Railroad Diary Book 2
  • Message In The Sky: Corey’s Underground Railroad Diary Book 3
  • You Wouldn’t Want to Be a Nurse During the American Civil War! A Job That’s Not for the Squeamish
  • You Wouldn’t Want to Be a Civil War Soldier!

How we do history…

History Series:
American Revolutionary War
Civil War
World War I
World War II
Iraq and Afghanistan

We use Tapestry of Grace for our main history studies. You might also like: Raising Readers and How We Study History.

My girls especially love the living books and literature selections. They have a government supplement that is wonderful for high school. Four learning levels means the whole family learns together. Each unit has Internet links to relevant sites (most I’ve never heard of). The Revolutionary War begins at the end of Year 2 (from Byzantium to the New World) and the beginnings of our new nation is in the first unit of Year 3 (from Napoleon to Teddy Roosevelt).

Year 1

Year 2

Year 3

Year 4

Do you have resources or memories to add?

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Revolutionary War Unit Study

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August 5, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 7 Comments

We learned about the Revolutionary War with Books, Notebooking,and Movies.

We plan to make some trips soon!

History Series:
American Revolutionary War
Civil War
World War I
World War II
The Gulf Wars

The military has always been a part of my life. My father is retired Army. My grandfather retired from the Navy. My husband is in the Air Force. I’ve never known a time where the men in my family didn’t go to work without a uniform or I couldn’t go to the commissary. Also, we’ve been at war in the Persian Gulf since I was a kid. It’s a scary world. We are proud to serve.

War is not glamorous, no matter what the movies portray. Long ago, it was a very personal thing to kill a man in battle with bayonets and swords and guns. Now we do it with rockets and bombs from faraway on computer screens and it’s very impersonal.

Revolutionary War

American death toll was about 25,700. Historians estimate 7,200 Americans were killed in battle and approximately 8,500 wounded. About 10,000 others died in military camps from disease or exposure. Another 8,500 died in prison. Another 1,400 MIA. The soldiers received little to no pay during service and most came out of the war penniless.
British military deaths were about 10,000.
Congress was granted power of taxation in 1788 and paid off most of the war debt by the early 1800’s. Britain’s economy was strained. France was nearly bankrupt, which was a catalyst for their own revolution in 1789.

American military forces

The American colonies had no army or navy. Our fighting forces consisted of militia units who were white men from age 16-60.
American leaders such as George Washington along with foreign war veterans: Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette and Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben fought long and hard to beat the disciplined English army and navy.
Congress established the Continental Navy in 1775. Captain John Paul Jones raided the coast of England in 1778. He allegedly coined the phrase, “I have not begun to fight.”

Travel

We went to Savannah on our honeymoon. Fort James Jackson is a restored 19th-century fort located on the Savannah River, two miles east of the city of Savannah in the U.S. state of Georgia. It is a National Historic Landmark and the oldest standing brick fort in Georgia.

Resources

  • Unit study
  • U.S. History unit from Mom’s Mustard Seeds
  • Ultimate Guide to early U.S. History
  • American Revolution Unit Study
  • Lots of history lapbooks and notebooking pages
  • July 4th crafts
  • Johnny Tremain and Scholastic reading guide and unit study from Homeschool Helper (also a great resource for free printables here)
  • Pledge of Allegiance notebooking
  • American History resources and printables from Adventures in Mommydom (it’s pretty amazing!)
  • Homeschool Share lapbook
  • Notebooking Nook Unit
  • Unit and Activities from 123Homeschool4Me
  • The Homeschool Mom resources
  • Tina’s Dynamic  Homeschool Plus resources
  • Earth Mama Lesson Plans
  • Lapbook by Jimmie’s Collage
  • Productive Homeschooling $

Resources for U.S. history and Government

  • iCivics computer game
  • Kids Discover magazine – Revolutionary War
  • Kids Discover magazine – The Constitution
  • Kids Discover magazine – George Washington
  • Kids Discover magazine – 1776
  • TLC July 4 article
  • Junior General
  • Revolutionary War 101

Movies

Use discretion. Everyone has different standards.

  • The Patriot
  • John Adams
  • April Morning
  • The Devil’s Disciple
  • Revolution
  • The Crossing
  • Liberty’s Kids

Trivia

  • 1776 trivia
  • PBS: The Road to Revolution
  • Alpha Trivia

Books

  • The American Revolution for Kids
  • Guts & Glory
  • The Star-Spangled Banner
  • Let it Begin Here!
  • Johnny Tremain
  • George vs. George
  • Revolutionary War on Wednesday
  • Paul Revere: Boston Patriot
  • American Founding Fathers in Color
  • A More Perfect Union
  • We the People
  • If You Were There When They Signed the Constitution
  • Liberty or Death
  • The Winter at Valley Forge
  • America’s Paul Revere
  • Paul Revere’s Ride
  • You Wouldn’t Want to Be at the Boston Tea Party! Wharf Water Tea You’d Rather Not Drink
  • Sam the Minuteman
  • Yankee Doodle Boy
  • The Revolutionary Period

How can you support our military and veterans?

  • Pray. Check out this ministry site.
  • Contribute to the Wounded Warrior Project.
  • List of military charity organizations.

How we do history…

You might also like: Raising Readers and How We Study History

We use Tapestry of Grace for our main history studies.

My girls especially love the living books and literature selections. They have a government supplement that is wonderful for high school. Four learning levels means the whole family learns together. Each unit has Internet links to relevant sites (most I’ve never heard of). The Revolutionary War begins at the end of Year 2 (from Byzantium to the New World) and the beginnings of our new nation is in the first unit of Year 3 (from Napoleon to Teddy Roosevelt).

Year 1

Year 2

Year 3

Year 4

For elementary kids, we like the spine book Story of the World! Year 3 which covers 1600-1850. It’s listed as a core text in Tapestry of Grace.

Follow Jennifer Lambert’s board US History on Pinterest.


Follow Jennifer Lambert’s board Early Modern History on Pinterest.

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Beach Unit Study

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July 29, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

This month for Poppins Book Nook, the theme is Beach and Ocean.

beach-and-ocean-unit.png

It’s kinda hard to teach about beaches in the landlocked state of Utah.

We went to a reservoir camping and they had a rocky beach and the kids had loads of fun. It wasn’t the ocean, but the kids got to play and didn’t notice really.

Liz with her friend in the water.

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I just loved this view!

IMG_8781.jpg

It was too rocky to go barefoot! Alex and Tori loved collecting pretty rocks. Alex put them in his pocket for her!

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Dad got some great portraits of the kids!

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Tori’s eyes are sensitive to the bright light.

IMG_8816.jpg

I got to go kayaking!

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My baby boy

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We read lots of books from the library and our shelves and talked about the ocean.

Alex doesn’t remember when we lived in Hawaii for three years, but the girls do.

Resources:

  • Gift of Curiosity Beach pack
  • 3 Dinosaurs Beach pack
  • 3 Dinosaurs Ocean pack
  • Homeschool Creations ocean pack
  • 1+1+1=1 girly ocean pack
  • Itsy Bitsy Learners Under the Sea
  • 2 Teaching Mommies Ocean unit
  • Hello Ocean lapbook
  • Mr. Seahorse unit
  • Deep Blue Sea Kindergarten Kit
  • Jenny’s Surprise Summer unit (we have Kittens for Keeps)
ProSchool Membership - Productive HomeschoolingVisit the other bloggers in Poppins Book Nook to see how they learned about the beach and ocean this month.
Enchanted Homeschooling Mom – Royal Baloo – 3 Dinosaurs – Monsters Ed – Chestnut Grove Academy – Growing in God’s Grace – Royal Little Lambs – Life with Moore Babies – Teach Beside Me – The Usual Mayhem – Mum Central – Fantastic Fun and Learning – Kathys Cluttered Mind – Play Create Explore – Toddler Approved – Growing Book by Book – Adventures in Mommydom – B-Inspired Mama – The Fairy and The Frog – Edventures with Kids – Learning & Growing the Piwi way – A Gluten Free Journey – Mom to Crazy Monkeys – No Doubt Learning – Preschool Powol Packets – To The Moon and Back – Our Craft ~N~ Things – Farm Fresh Adventures – Proverbial Homemaker – Look Were Learning
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Fish Nature Study

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July 26, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

This month’s outdoor challenge is a fun and easy one for us!

We’ve had lots of experience fishing and eating fish and observing fish these past few months and I reminded the kids and we looked at the pictures and we’re excited to get some more experience next week!

Check out my husband’s post about ice fishing and chowder. My freezer is still stocked with cleaned and ready to cook trout!

Here’s the challenge grid this month. Do you receive the monthly newsletter from Handbook of Nature Study? You should. Go sign up and come back.

fishing notebooking bingo

We went camping and fishing with friends over Memorial Day weekend and we’re about to head out again this weekend. Tori is our fisher girl. She loves it and is good at it!

fishing girl

Alex went on his first fishing trip and caught one!

fishing family

After all that excitement and the rocking and rolling and motor, he was done.

worn out after fishing

We have an aquarium in our school room with live plants and plenty of fun fish to watch. The kids take turns feeding them and we clean it together. Apparently, we need to get on that.

home aquarium

We have a tadpole too. But I wonder if he’s got delayed development since he is barely forming legs and it’s been a couple months.

tadpole

One of Tori’s favorite apps is Flick Fishing and she loves to see what the fish look like. She thinks the Mahi Mahi is yummy, but very ugly. I love listening to her observations about the fish she catches in this game. She knows what kind of water they’re in and what they look like and what they eat. I love it!

One of our best friends is an avid hunter and fisherman and we love to hear his fishing and hunting stories. One of my favorites is of the time he went deep sea fishing in the Florida panhandle and his line snapped from a big ole grouper. The pole popped him in his forehead and he knocked himself out. He almost fell overboard. Good times.

We studied for science a couple years ago and it’s still a wonderful resource to reference.

Resources:

  • Fish notebooking pages from Notebooking Nook
  • Fish and Fishing lapbook from Homeschool Share
  • Fishing Notebooking pages from The Crafty Classroom
  • Zoology 2 Notebooking sample
  • We love Productive Homeschooling for notebooking. Oodles of pages for all of your nature study needs.
Fish Notebooking Pages
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Preschool is Hard to Teach

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July 25, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Preschool is the hardest level for me to teach.

I love the exploration and excitement that comes with this stage.

I miss naptime! My kids all relinquished naps at the ripe age of two. Nooooooo!

It never occurred to me to not have my tots and preschoolers “do school.” They begged to have their own schoolwork and, if left to their own devices, wreaked utter havoc on the house. I’ve had friends who didn’t encourage their preschoolers to do much of anything, and, well, it shows.

Thank God for blogs. They helped me survive those preschool years (and still going strong for Alex, sort of), and now I feel like a preschool pro. Sort of.

But I love teaching older kids. It is what I went to college for, more by default, but still. I could wax philosophic about literature and history all the livelong day. I have a bachelor’s in English literature and a master’s in secondary education.

The problem with preschoolers?

They. are. so. demanding.

You can’t tell them to just go read or play alone for a few minutes like with older kids. They need constant attention. (so do teens for that matter)

It wears on my ever last nerve.

The constant “Mama! Mama! Mama!” The never-getting-to-use-the-bathroom-alone thing.

It wears me down.

I loathe pushing swings. My mind wanders to all the “more important” (read: selfish) things I could be doing.

I know I am selfish. I loathe myself for being selfish.

No one sees when I cry out to God: “Increase You and decrease me. Let me shine for You. Help me to overcome myself.”

I can only run to my Father for comfort and snivel and whine and be a big brat about my own kids who are only being children, themselves, hungry and tired and needing a hug.

I don’t really want them to grow up so fast.

I can barely remember when Elizabeth was a preschooler and all of a sudden, she’s 12 and doing high school work already!

Hello Sunshine

Tori and Kate look half grown and to hear them talk, they already know everything. And Alex doesn’t want to be 3 anymore. He wants to grow quickly so he can drive monster trucks.
preschool Lauri puzzle

I want to make memories with my babies. I want them to remember their childhoods fondly and grow in their relationship with me and their dad, God, and each other. This is, after all, why we are homeschooling.

sisters reading

I want to calm down and sit and watch my son play with his trains. I want to snuggle on the sofa and listen to Tori read – without pressure or tears or correction. I want to let Kate have an improv jam session on the keyboard and guitar without wanting to scream. I want to thoughtfully answer Liz’s never-ending questions about everything without impatience. I don’t want to lose them or their hearts. I want them to still want to ask me questions or say, “Look at me, Mom!” when they’re 15, 20, 30 years old.

The benefit and drawback to having preschoolers with older siblings is that they are constantly challenged. I am amazed at how much they can do and understand. I am too content to let them follow along in the older sibs’ footsteps. With this whole delight-driven schooling thing, I too easily let tot school and preschool fall between the cracks. Is it detrimental to their formative years and early education? Maybe.

Comparison is the thief of joy.

I could waste days beating myself up over how great those preschool blogs and Pinterest pins are while my son just wants to do math and science and writing and art with his sisters instead of putting pipe cleaners into the holes of an empty cheese container.  My favorite is the argument over how he needs the same advanced apps on his iPad mini as his sisters. Sometimes I feel superfluous and other times like there’s not enough of me to go around. But often, the chores get done more quickly with teamwork!

So, I envy all you Pinterest preschool mamas with your messy crafts and darling handmade Montessori toys. I’m up in here having guilt trips while scraping Nutella out of our dining room bench crevices and scouring the art paint out of drinking cups.

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Nature Study Garden Update

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July 24, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

I noticed this pretty little flower bush growing beside our shed.

nightshade

Then it started producing berries.

nightshade flowers

I love yellow and purple together!

nightshade

My husband said it was nightshade. I Googled and found out that he was right!

I created notebooking pages for the girls and we researched the different varieties of nightshade. We have woody nightshade.

Here’s Tori’s completed page after our research.

nightshade notebooking page

Potatoes and tomatoes (among other foods) are in the nightshade family!

tomatoes ripening

Our trumpet vine attracts bees and hummingbirds.

honeybees on trumpet vine

Among the honeybees are black and white bees

honeybee and hornet

and dainty wasps

dainty wasp

Our Concord grapes are coming along nicely. Come October, they’ll be purple and ready for juicing and jelly!

grapes forming

Here’s our little garden. Beans are climbing like crazy and I’ve gotten some lovely eggplant and peppers so far. Our sweet peas last month were scrumptious!

our garden

Tori is our resident gardener. She loves helping Dad outside and me inside. She picked these peas herself and shelled them – all without being asked!

shelling peas

Since we rent, it’s always fun to see what’s going to pop up in the yard. I don’t remember these yellow flowers last year! I love purple and yellow together (didn’t I say that already?). So cheerful.

flowers

We have such a late growing season here. We can’t plant until late May. I want tomatoes and cucumbers from my garden already!

Nature Study Journal Notebooking Pages
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Tot School Summer

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July 10, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Alex helps Dad in the garden.

picking peppers

Alex picked me a pepper.

pepper

He has a stack of papers by his table. He picks and chooses what he wants to do. Some are from past lessons. We’re on H, but he’s doing the cutting page from E.

elephant cutting page

Alex loves these dry erase books that I pulled out from the storage closet. I bought him a new set of Crayola crayons and markers for it!

tracing letters

Alex still loves his shapes and matching math cards. Check out our review.

Wooden geometric shapes and here’s a similar clear plastic 3D volume set

matching shapes

Alex has been listening in while we read Charlotte’s Web. I found these fun printables that are perfect for his ability level! He loves it.

spiderweb puzzle

He would not follow directions on his letter H All About Reading page. Blue! Not red! Booger!

coloring letter H

More dry erase fun! We like The Board Dudes and Priddy Wipe Clean.

drawing loops

Building letters. How to Build an A. He just started liking this activity. The book shows how to use the foam pieces to build letters.

building letter H

Kate and Alex play with magnets and this awesome printable flag page. Check out other patriotic and US History ideas on my Pinterest board.

flag magnets

Alex was thrilled when I came home with this new desk from the thrift store. I loved his excitement and pride in having a big boy desk!

My ABC Bible Verses

Alex is really loving school time lately!

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Geranium Nature Study

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July 8, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

When I take Tori to the store, I never know what she’ll ask for. Usually it’s something I just can’t refuse. The girl asks for purple cabbage most of the time!

So, when they had all these lovely geraniums on the front sidewalk, she fell in love and asked for two in each color.

They were a great price and so healthy-looking, so I said ok.

Dad found these great barrel planters and we lined those with plastic and potting soil.

ready to plant geraniums

The girls went to work! Love the cooperation.

planting geraniums

Proud sweet little gardening sisters.

geraniums planted

I love having these gorgeous pots on either side of my front door!

geraniums

And of course, we have to extend the lesson by learning about geraniums.

We love the challenges on Handbook of Nature Study Blog.

Our favorite notebooking resource (where the geranium page and lots more are):

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Homeschooling as a Lifestyle

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July 6, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 10 Comments

Welcome back to the How to Begin Homeschooling series!

Did you miss anything?

See Part 1: Getting started with homeschool or

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

Part 3: Curriculum planning with multiple kids

Finally! Part 4: Homeschooling as a lifestyle

how-to-begin-homeschooling.jpg

When we began homeschooling Elizabeth, it was a temporary solution to a birthday problem (Liz’s birthday is in October and the Kindergarten cutoff was September 1). I was pregnant with Victoria and couldn’t find a teaching job in our new city. Since Liz would have entered Kindergarten and then turn 6 in about a month, we never enrolled her and never looked back.

Now we know it was God slamming all those doors and pointing us in the right direction!

In my discomfort over such a new concept as home education, I recreated the school model that I had used as a classroom teacher. We sat at the kitchen table and did lessons every morning and afternoons were for rest/naps/quiet play. I compartmentalized our schedule almost to the minute! When Victoria and Katherine joined our family, it became more and more difficult to keep up the schedule and appearances of success. It sorta worked for a while, but eventually God nudged me since He was feeling left out.

My sterile home environment was my idol. All homeschool materials and toys were out of sight when not in use. The house was clean and organized well. When Dad came home from work, everything had to be in its place. Evenings were for adults. Kids went to bed early. It worked for a while, but eventually I broke from the strain of trying to maintain that. Part of it was that I am an only child and my home life growing up was very different from having my own four active kids.

We realized that we had to make our own family environment our own way, with God at the center. We read parenting and homeschooling books and prayed and read the Bible, as a family and separately. We held up church doctrine against the Bible to decide what we felt was right for our family. We detest legalism. We are conservative, but we embrace love as Jesus teaches. We re-evaluated our church.

We want our children to grow up to be radical, world-changing Christians, loving everyone and forgiving everything.

{Tweet this!}

Homeschooling is now our entire lifestyle.

We are constantly and persistently learning and loving. Looking back to those early years, I can see how far we’ve journeyed and I rejoice to see the heart change in myself, my husband, and our four children. We’re now on the right path, with God leading us.

Some of favorite parenting and heart training tools:

  • Shepherding a Child’s Heart
  • Lead Your Family Like Jesus
  • The Ministry of Motherhood
  • Parenting is Heart Work
  • You Can’t Make Me
  • Take Back the Land

See a theme? Heart training is the basis for a healthy, happy relationship with your kids. Check out my Parenting Pinterest board.

Our purpose is to teach our children gratitude and to serve others cheerfully.

So, what about the more practical homeschool lifestyle issues? Sure, we have bad days {weeks…}. Organization and scheduling are key, but don’t let those dictate everything. Leave room for spontaneity, ice cream, playing with bubbles, field trips, fun!

Organizing

Everyone has a different house, a different method, different personalities, learning styles…you have to find what works best for your family! And then the season changes and back to square one.

We really like the idea of workboxes. We use a modified cube system that works for us. Google it for oodles of ideas and free printable labels to make a system that suits your family’s needs. I’ve even seen work folders and files for small spaces or older kids that work well. Ikea apparently has some cool systems too. I wouldn’t know since I’ve never been to an Ikea. I know. Hush.

Since we move every 2-4 years with the military, we have to recreate our organization solutions with each house! Fun. Not really.

Scheduling

I am terrible with lists, checklists, schedules, meal plans, calendars…I love the idea, but the implementation often gets lost in translation. I use a modified Tapestry of Grace planning page that suits us and helps me see what we need to do each week. See how I plan a homeschool year.

Here are some of my favorites for when I am proactive and the pages do work for us!

Some Favorite Homeschooling Printables:

  • Donna Young lesson plans and more!
  • Homeschool Creations editable homeschool planner {not free}
  • Money Saving Mom planner pages
  • planners
  • Notebooking Pages (some free. We have a membership. Love it!)

Meal Planning:

  • eMeals has lots of great plan to choose from!
  • Mom’s Tool Belt – Homemaking planning pages (an amazing resource. not free, but so worth it!)
  • Money Saving Mom meal plan printables
  • Free Homeschool Deals meal plans
  • 100 Days of Real Food plan {one of my favorite food sites!}
  • 140 weeks of meal plans list

Blog Planners:

  • Great Planners
  • My Planning and Printables Pinterest board

A key to a homeschool lifestyle is to have the whole family involved in everything.

All the kids help with the garden and chores and planning and scheduling. I want them to be an active part of it all so they learn what it takes to run a successful household. We try to eliminate entitlement issues and encourage cooperation.

We’re teaching strong, old-fashioned work ethics!

Elizabeth babysits and earns money for her needs and wants. She’s generous to buy little gifts for her siblings. Another example: I brought home an old school desk for Alex that I found at the thrift store and he was ecstatic and he’s so proud of it! The kids express gratitude because they’ve been taught gratitude and values.

God is our center.

Education is our life.

Gratitude is our purpose.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: homeschool, unschooling

Our Curriculum for 2013-2014

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July 2, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

Our Curriculum Choices for 2013-2014…

Elizabeth – 12.5, in 8th-ish grade

  • Bible – Apologia Who is My Neighbor and Why Does He Need Me? and notebooking journal…working our way through this series. She loves it! {Also reviewing Beauty in the Heart. Wonderful!}
  • ELA – IEW Student Writing Intensive B and Tapestry of Grace lit and writing…her writing has improved greatly lately!
  • Math – Life of Fred Pre-Algebra 1 with Biology. Finally. And VideoText Algebra – yay!
  • Science – Apologia Exploring Creation with Physical Science and notebooking journal. We love Apologia science!
  • History/Geography – Tapestry of Grace Year 3. Liz and I both love this comprehensive classical curriculum that covers all social studies, literature, writing, and worldview.
  • Electives – Second Form Latin, Homeschool Programming, piano lessons with our neighbor, Harmony Fine Arts w/ ARTistic Pursuits. We do these once a week or so.

She’s earning high school credits already. wow.

Victoria and Katherine – 7 and 6, respectively, in 2nd-ish grade

  • Bible – The Dig Volume 2, Studying God’s Word B, and Bible Study Guide. The girls love to do all these every day! I try to mix it up a little.
  • ELA – First Language Lessons (1-2), Spelling Workout B, IEW, Logic of English. We don’t do all of this every day.
  • Math – Life of Fred Butterflies and Singapore Math 2. We alternate days with these. Tori prefers LOF and Kate prefers Singapore. Compromise!
  • Science – Apologia Exploring Creation with Human Anatomy and notebooking journals. Kate especially loves experiments.
  • History/Geography – Tapestry of Grace Year 3 with Story of the World, years 3&4. The girls are finally enjoying history and the read alouds, notebooking, maps, narration, projects.  yay
  • Electives – Prima Latina, Song School Spanish, Children’s Music Journey 2 online piano, Harmony Fine Arts w/ ARTistic Pursuits. We do these once a week.

Alexander – 3, in preschool

Alex knows all his letters, their sounds, and he’s starting to put them together to make CVC words! He knows his colors and numbers past 100. I’m taking it slow with him because I can. He is loving his “school work” and it’s great review fun. But I can tell he’s getting a little bored.

  • Letter of the Week
  • Raising Rock Stars Preschool
  • All About Reading pre-level
  • Logic of English Foundation A
  • Poppins Book Nook monthly theme units
  • Children’s Music Journey 1 online piano
  • art along with sisters. He will not be left out!
  • Montessori works in his workboxes

Looking at it all laid out, it looks like so much!

When I went through all of Liz’s papers to organize, I realized how much we did last year. But they get bored if they’re not challenged. And they like to do schoolish activities 7 days a week! It’s exhausting for me and sometimes I have to tell them to just go play or color. Tori will do Kumon math workbooks for fun and Kate reads voraciously!

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

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