Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Snowy Preschool

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January 5, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

We got a bit of snow last week. Almost up to Dad’s knees!

Survival Mode

Helping Dad remove the hideous pink and blue flowered wallpaper!

Cleaning Wall

rolling the winter clothing die and putting stickers on the chart is a favorite!

Graphing Game

Alex really liked using Bananagrams to spell winter clothing words.

from Winter Fun Tot Pack

Letter Matching

I tried to make it simple and lay out one card and the letters for that card.

He wanted all the cards and all the letters all out. I was super impressed.

Bananagrams

Cutting out his jellyfish for letter J – from Animals ABCs

Cutting

pasting on his jellyfish for the letter J craft – from Animal ABCs

Gluing Jellyfish

To the right of our calendar is Alex’s theme board for the letter J.

Letter J Board

He likes his Lauri ABC puzzles. He usually hammers in the letters.

Lauri Alphabet Puzzles

Dad took Alex to the local nature center for a preschool winter class. They made snow paint with salt. They colored snowflake pictures.

snow-class-2.jpg

And….

Oh my, just look at him in his little snowshoes!

snow-class.jpg

Tonight before bed, Alex got so excited that it was essential oil time: “Ya gonna rub the oils on my foots?!” as I rubbed his “foots” with Thieves oil, he sighed like it was heaven: “Aaaaah!”

He is precious. and hilarious.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: LOTW, Montessori, preschool, snow

New Year Homeschool Goals

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January 3, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

It’s back to work. Here are our new year school goals.

We worked on a nursery rhyme unit with our Tapestry of Grace studies this week. We practiced rhyming and picking out the main character in the poems. These notebooking pages come with the TOG lower grammar printable pack. I have a Mother Goose book that my uncle gave me when I was 3 and the girls loved seeing his inscription on the title page to me.

nursery rhyme notebooking
Mother Goose notebooking

We started some new copywork to go along with our Hero Tales Bible study. The girls love the missionary stories so far. We read the story each morning and the girls recite our character trait and verse. They copy the message and they draw something meaningful from the story. They love the drawing element.

character study
character notebooking

We’re on lesson 21 of All About Reading, Level 2. They’re coming right along. Almost fluent readers! Tori likes the hands on stuff more than Kate. And she needs the lessons more. Kate is almost bored, but it’s good review.

All About Reading

Kate is putting story cards in chronological order.

story cards

Our January poem. I made this on Publisher. Kate already has it memorized. She recited it for me today! She remembers it from last year. I guess I should find a new one, but I love this one. I plan to make a Montessori poetry basket to go with our snow unit this month. Stay tuned!

January Poem

Mama’s favorite: Katie reading the Tacky the Penguin books while she waits on Tori and Mama to transition to the next thing.

reading

Happy New Year!

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New Year Memories Cards

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December 30, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

The New Year is a great time to reflect on the past year and plan for the next.

New Year Memories Cards

I made these for you!

New Year Resolutions Cards

FREE printable download!

I want to make holidays meaningful for my kids. The new year is a time of reflection and goal-setting.

Lots of people make resolutions. We prefer to set goals. We love to celebrate the year as a family with snacks and mocktails and discuss our favorite memories over the last year.

This is a great time for my husband and I to reflect and discuss changes for the next year as we raise servant leaders.

Our family has some fun NYE traditions. We make lots of healthy snacks and mocktails and always watch a Muppet movie.

I made these New Year Memory Cards for my kids – and yours.

Now that they’re older, they enjoy ringing in the new year and playing games and talking about our favorite memories from the last year. It’s fun to remember and contemplate our experiences over last year together.

And I’m sharing them with you! I’ve included a blank one so you can write in your own idea too. They’re in duplicate for however you wish to use them – for two kids or print a set and share with a friend! I know you can get creative.

Enjoy!

Click below to subscribe by email and download your

{UPDATED to welcome 2021!} memories cards FREE:

Happy New Year!

May it be even more abundant than the last.

May God shower you with more goodness than you can imagine.

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Narration with Technology

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December 26, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Notebooking was getting monotonous and boring for my tween daughter.

Lightbulb.

I had been fighting threatening negotiating with Liz to get her history narration//writing/accountability questions/thinking questions completed. Tapestry of Grace can be overwhelming without a little planning here and there. Picky Choosy. We sure can’t do it all.

I threw an outline together on PowerPoint and told her to fill it in with the information.

She loved it. No more battle. Why didn’t I think of it before? When I taught public school, I often had my students use PowerPoint and Publisher for assessment. And Liz is now of the age those students were. Perfect.

We will do more technology narrating each week now.

And it’s good to show Dad that she accomplished something. Since all she wants to do is lay around and read and talk about it. He wants to see a product. Win/win/win.

Narrating with PowerPoint
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How do you make notebooking fun for your older kids?

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: computer, narration, notebooking, technology

Christmas Tot School

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December 13, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Tot School Activities for December

My son excelled on his wreath letter assessment. He knows all his letters and only got a bit confused between K, X, and R, and wanted to switch M and W. Proud mama moment!
letter assessment
Big sister helped with Christmas tangrams. She collected all the right shapes and colors for him to place on the cards.
Tangrams
His attention span lasted for three matches with these puzzle cards.
puzzle matching letters
He matched 4 shadow cookies before he was done.
matching shadow "cookies"
He did love gluing the animals and people. He tried to be silly and test me. He knew the difference!
people or animals?
He loved playing with these 3D geometric shapes, wooden and plastic.
3D geometric blocks
I brought out this Lauri letter puzzle and hammer and he thought this was the greatest thing ever!
hammering letters
Mama’s favorite. Just look at that tongue! His dad and sister Tori do the tongue concentration thing. I think it’s the funniest thing! He’s getting so much more control with his tracing lately.
And he loves his camo hoodie. LOVES.
concentration
He is so non-compliant compared to his sisters. He doesn’t really enjoy “doing school.” His attention span is non-existent. He prefers to play the iPad all day long, or cook, or go play on his scooter in the driveway.
He yelled at me this morning that he wanted to wear these pants! He threw the ones I held out back in his closet and handed me another pair, saying, “Silly Mommy.” Since when did he start making clothing decisions? And he wasn’t being disrespectful. He is always loud.

Our favorite holiday tot and preschool packs and crafts:

  • Tot Crafts
  • Christmas Fun from 1+1+1=1
  • More Christmas from 1+1+1=1
  • Christmas Trees from 2 Teaching Mommies
  • Candy Canes from 2 Teaching Mommies
  • Christmas Printables from Confessions of a Homeschooler
  • Christmas Cookies Pack Our Little Monkeys
  • Several Fun Ones from 3 Dinosaurs
  • Christmas Tree Pack 123 Homeschool 4 Me
  • Nativity Pack from Over the Big Moon
  • Book Packs from Homeschool Creations
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Math Monday: Music

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December 10, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

It’s Math (and Music) Monday

We completed Life of Fred Apples. Our Singapore Math unit is about telling time.

I found some supplemental materials for them. The pack we worked on the last couple days is from School Express. You can sign up for emails and get a unit each week. I rarely use them, but this one seemed fun. They’re mostly puzzles and busy work.

wow, I think Katie was excited to do this time pack!
Exploring Time
A fun fact sheet about time. We all giggled about the statement: “You can’t hear or smell time.” We tried!
Notebooking Time
Katie filling in our school day schedule. I wrote the items on our board after we discussed the order of our day and the girls copied it at the appropriate times on their pages.
Setting a Schedule
Tori’s copy of our general school day schedule. Look how much free time if they complete their work!
Daily Schedule
Cross curricular activity: decoding letters for Tapestry of Grace Year 2, Unit 2 history.

We read a Max Lucado story and completed the puzzle for the symbolic Bible verse represented in the story.

Decoding
The girls really enjoyed the puzzle and begged me to find more code games for them!
Decoding Puzzle
Then we read Musicians of the Sun for history and had to dance and make music. Music is math.

Just look at the gorgeous colors and fun shapes in this book! Art is math too.
Musicians of the Sun
The girls pretended they were characters from the book, making a rainbow.
Making Music
Alex heard the cacophony and ran to join us!
Musical Kids
It was loud, obnoxious, gave me a momentary headache, but the kids loved it and will certainly remember this book!

Famous Composers Notebooking Pages
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Thanksgiving Tot Packs

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December 9, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Yes, I know this is old news, but I just want to share it with you. I forgot to post it! Perhaps you can use it next year or something…better late than never.

Alex loved this Mash the Monster ABC game.

The sisters or I would call out a letter and Alex whacked it with the fly swatter. He was a whole lot gentler than I expected!

Monster Mash Letters

Turkey Printables

He cut out cards and “fed” them to a paper turkey. He does love cutting paper.

Cutting Turkey Food

He cut out turkeys and matched them and glued them. All favorite activities!

Matching Turkeys

He’s starting to like the bottle cap letters activities.

Bottle Cap Spelling

He loves tracing the lines. And these lines were orange (his favorite color!). How much better could it get?

He just wanted to start at the bottom of the page and work up for some reason.

Turkey Tracing

He tried cutting this practice page, but gave up when he thought it was too hard.

Cutting is Hard

Thanksgiving Tot Packs:

  • 1+1+1=1
  • Thanksgiving Pack
  • Turkey Pack
  • 3 Dinosaurs
  • Homeschool Creations
  • Mama’s Monkeys
  • A Little Pinch of Perfect
  • Royal Baloo
  • Gift of Curiosity
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: fall, preschool, thanksgiving, tot school

5 Things I’ve Learned as a Veteran Home Educator

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December 4, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 13 Comments

It occurred to me the other day that I’ve been home educating for almost 10 years. I think that puts me in the “veteran” category. I’ve apparently learned a lot in those years since people starting out on their homeschooling journey seek me to answer questions about methods, teaching styles, curriculum, learning, and parenting. I feel honored and a little bit unworthy. And then I think, maybe, I should start a consulting business?

So, in my arrogance, here is my list of things I’ve learned about homeschooling life: some negative and some positive, all random.

5 Things I’ve Learned as a Veteran Home Educator

5 Things I’ve Learned as a Veteran Home Educator

1. Bloggers generally show their best side.

We rarely see the real. Her home in her perfectly edited photos on her professionally designed blog certainly looks nothing like mine on its best day! And I have no clue how she has time (or money) to dress her 15 children in cute Gymboree and Gap clothes (and do their hair), plan out their school lessons (and keep to the schedule), create and publish darling printables, design a healthy menu and actually stick to it, with a coupon-clipping budget of $159.35 a week, all while commemorating it brilliantly on her mega-money-generating blog with 4.2 gazillion followers.

Just in case you are mistaken that I am in that fantasy blogger/homeschooler world, here’s my typical school day:

I just try to remember to floss my teeth and get my kids to flush the darn toilet. That is success to me. Never mind the dishes in the sink from 3 days ago yesterday or the cat hair on my Rubeus’ recliner. I rarely make breakfast for myself. I have coffee. The kids eat sometimes eat dry cereal or instant oatmeal. School often begins as late as 10 in the morning. We take over an hour for lunch and watch BBC TV on Netflix (cuz it’s educational!) with our salami and cheese and crackers. Sometimes we resume school in the afternoons, but not always. I often forget to thaw out anything for dinner or don’t make it to the store and we have to scavenge for dinner. or get take out. There went the budget again. On bad days, I snap at my husband as soon as he walks in the door (because of course it’s his fault I was with the kids all day long, right?) Good days find us having tea with a sparkling kitchen at 3 PM, listening to classical music and reading poetry, all academic work completed. Do you think those kind of good days happen often? Nope.

2. Pinterest is the bane of my existence.

I really loathe crafts. Glitter is Evil. I don’t like gluing and sewing and all that. Pinterest is craft porn. I’m sure it has a purpose beyond making me feel teeny tiny and worthless and sucking all useful time away into the time vortex, but I’m not sure what that may be. I have no idea who all you people are following me on Pinterest as I collect Doctor Who quotes and pictures of VW Bugs. Get a life! If you are one of those who actually does those projects all over Pinterest, maybe I could pay you to send me one so I can fake it in a blog post. I will never have a handmade brick fire pit in my backyard because we rent shabby houses that I have no desire to spend time and money on. We will never have the painted shabby chic barn doors to an exquisite white and beige living room…because we still live there. White? With actual real people? Are you insane? And IKEA sucks.

3. My curriculum is better than your curriculum.

Seriously, I dread the beginning of the school year posts about My Homeschool Room and My Curriculum and My Perfect Life. I suppose their purpose is to show new homeschooling moms what the options are, but the reality for me is “I’ll never have that kind of homeschool room in a military base or shabby rental house.” Your curriculum is best for you. My curriculum is best for me. There are reasons I chose it. I shall not judge thee for having those boring boxed curriculum that resembles a strict classroom environment at home or even that k12 crap that is actually public school mafia at home. Don’t judge me for my unschooling-classical-Charlotte Mason-eclectic-Montessori curriculum that I have painstakingly put together myself through trial and error and much wasted expense over 10 years. I am now (mostly) confident that it is the best fit for our children’s learning styles and my teaching style.

4. I’m not as Christian as you are.

Apparently, there is a contest among Christian denominations to see who is the best. I am outta that race. You win. I can only do so much. I can’t keep up. I can’t even keep track of the points I’ve lost. We’ve left churches because their leadership didn’t allow us to think for ourselves or make decisions for our own family. We trick or treat and play Santa. We have never bought a goat for anyone. We have never gone on a mission trip. My husband and I never pray together. He doesn’t pray with the kids before work: they’re still asleep. We may skip Bible some mornings if the day starts off badly. We may or may not pick it up in the afternoon. We don’t have family devotions at every meal because WE EAT FOOD. Or every night at bedtime. I’m sometimes too tired to read my Bible or I get interrupted by some child’s need and forget to go back to it. If I had cleavage, I have some shirts that might show it. I wear skinny jeans. I rarely wear skirts or dresses. I haven’t had a pedicure in over a year. Sometimes, I dread going to church because I have to smile and socialize. We’re terrible at hospitality. We have four kids and that’s all we want or will ever have. We’re not into adoption. I say bad words. I watch rated R movies. I drink wine with dinner, beer with chicken wings, and cocktails at special occasions or on those evenings when I need a mama moment and lock myself in the bathroom. I yell. Deep down inside, I despise that Proverbs 31 woman. I have heard criticism for so many lifestyle choices and man-created rules. I don’t think God ever intended us to attack each other this way in His name. I listen if I am convicted by God. I make changes if He says so. I don’t like people trying to be my Holy Spirit.

5. It’s not about money. It’s about relationship.

I don’t have an income. My blog makes mere pennies. I would love to see otherwise, but I just don’t think that’s what God has in mind for me right now. I have removed many of my ads. I will still use affiliate links in posts when they are relevant. But I will not kill myself over trying to market products. I am trying to focus on doing what I love. I write. I educate. It’s fun and easy and natural for me, so why not? I’m am so over the wraps, nails, Usborne books, makeup, weight loss products that everyone is selling on social media. I’m a distributor for an essential oils company. I can only represent a company or product if I love it, use it, and can believe in it. I’m not a salesman. If God sends any money my way, it’s blessing bonus. I am just following His lead.

Blogging is my scrapbook for my children, my life. Blogging is reaching out to you, readers, and helping you on your journey any way I can. I am an educator, first; I have always been an educator. I am a mother to four amazing children. I am a military wife. I am a communicator. I crave real relationship with my family. I don’t just want surface-level living, adjacent to each other. I want the messy with the brilliant, shining excellence of unconditional love between siblings and parents. I yearn to reach out to you. I long to create community with you. Homeschoolers. Mothers. Wives. We’re in this together. Most days, we’re stuck in the house all day long with little ones and no adult interaction. We can’t even use the bathroom with the door shut. Let’s learn from each other and travel on this journey together. It’s about relationships. Community.

 
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Multiplication Unit

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December 4, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

We got some fun living math books from the library.
We really enjoyed this mathy art book about all the things a square can be turned into. It reminds me of the Brown Bear books at the end. It combines art and math and creativity! We loved it. Happy Square.

A math mystery. All the numbers disappeared and the detective had to find them so we could count, tell time, pay for things, know when our birthday is, etc. We need numbers everywhere!

We’re working along in our Life of Fred Apples book. I can’t even begin to tell you how much we love Fred. We’re on fractions and time in our Singapore 1B math workbooks.

We made our own flashcards on note cards. The kids filled in a multiplication chart. They use those to help with their work for years.

The girls love skip counting. Doing math charts outside is fun.

Popsicle Multiplication

We reviewed a few multiplication facts. I think these pages helped them grasp the concept. Food always helps us do that. Many of the themes were ice cream or cake! Also look for flashcards at the same link. We’re starting those soon.

Multiplication Popsicles

Katie was rockin her Disney princess Snuggie during school time.

At first, they thought they needed their skip counting cards to help. Then it clicked! We just started.

Skip Counting and Multiplication

The girls are in 1st grade. I printed the 1’s, 2’s, 5’s and 10’s. I think we’ll move on to the others next week!

Multiplication Page

Tori wanted to show me her page when she got excited by that light bulb moment!

The girls love math and fight over which book or activity to do first. They want to do Singapore, Life of Fred, and math notebooking every day. I love it.

Multiplication Help

  • Times Tables.com
  • Multiplication.com
  • Prodigy Game
  • Homeschool Math
  • Math is Fun
  • We Are Teachers
  • Homeschool Creations
  • Meet Penny
  • Times Tables the Fun Way Book for Kids
  • Learning Wrap-Ups Multiplication Keys
  • Triangle Flash Cards
  • Confessions of a Homeschooler
  • Homeschool Share Multiplication Lapbook
  • Every Star is Different Multiplication Montessori
  • Carrots are Orange Bead Stairs

How do you help your kids learn multiplication?

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Geography Notebooking

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November 18, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

I used our Geography A-Z book for definitions of the bodies of water.
Geography Narration
Liz and I wrote the definitions on the board for Tori and Katie to copy.
Geography Copywork
It was a practice in patience. Katie hates copying sentences. or definitions. or anything really.
Geography Writing
Elizabeth’s completed page:
Completed Notebook Page
I plan to review some geography terms and the bodies of water this week as we go over the story of Thanksgiving in detail. It fits well with our history studies of exploration during the Renaissance.

Country Study Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: classical, geography, history, notebooking

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