Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Supercharged Science Review

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April 7, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

My family reviewed Supercharged Science  with its experiential e-Science program.

All four of my kids got involved which I loved. It’s not often I can work in lessons that a 3 year old, 6 year old, 7 year old, and almost 13 year old can do together and enjoy and learn!

Supercharged Science

If you have questions, you can call or email for help and they’ll get right back to you.

Nine steps the e-Science program provides in their detailed lesson plans:

  1. Unit Description: This answers the “What is it?” and “Why should I care?”
  2. Outcomes/Goals: What do you want the students to learn?
  3. Objectives/Highlights: Detail the key concept and topic into chunks.
  4. Introduction: How will you present the topic to the students?
  5. Development: This stirs up interest and gets students motivated to learn.
  6. Practice: Bringing the key concept to life.
  7. Further Study: Answering questions and gaining momentum.
  8. Evaluation: How well did you teach and how well did they learn the material?
  9. Closure: Before moving on, celebrate your success!

(Note: The e-Science program does not cover creation nor evolution so all families may participate. The focus of the program is on how to launch the rocket, build the robot, use a microscope, take measurements and data, etc.) YAY!

Here’s a screenshot of all the units available. Overwhelming! We watched some of the videos that went along with what Liz has been studying.

escience units

Here’s my littlest scientist ready to explore!

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We watched lots of videos about math. Tori really enjoyed those. She’s our math girl!

We learned about the scientific method with water and pennies. This was review for Elizabeth, but rather new for Tori and Kate, and of course, Alex.

The experiment is titled “Underwater Presidents.”

The girls hypothesized how many drops of water the penny would hold before it spilled over the edges.

I walked them through the process and we read the lesson together. We observed our materials and discussed what could happen and why.

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My kinesthetic learner, Alex, loved this. He was such a big boy!

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Kate repeated her experiment three times to get an average result.

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Alex wanted to do this over and over and over. He loved it. We must do it with other coins to compare our results!

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We wrote up our materials, procedure, drew a picture of what we did and wrote down our results and conclusion. We discussed why the different pennies took different amounts of water: dirt, different size drops, bumps in paper towel slanted the penny, etc.

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Liz has been studying anatomy lately and they offer conversion charts so you can cross-reference their program with one you’re already using. perfect!

Liz and I watched a video together about nerves and that was amazingly entertaining. The narrator was just fun.

We decided to make a working hand model as a family. My husband, Aaron, had to do most of this one without kid help since it involved slicing and hot glue.

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The kids watch the video about how to make the hand model.

I read the text material aloud to the kids and we demonstrated the hand model and explained how it all worked and we looked at our own hands and felt the muscles and tendons and discussed the different bones.

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Liz demonstrates how the hand works. Hers is the one on the left. ha.

one of these things is not like the other

Dad extends the lesson. Kate looks at the insides of a chicken bone. We discussed what blood does and how bones are made.

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What do we think?

Overall, I really like the idea of the program. It got me out of my comfort zone and the videos walk you through the experiments so that’s easy for me to follow. We’ll use it as a supplement to our current science program.

The kids loved watching videos.

I am really horrible at fitting in arts, crafts, experiments…and I really felt convicted that I don’t do more of this with my kids. They LOVED the together time with BOTH parents, so we’re going to try to make it a regular “Science Sunday” at our house whenever possible schedule-wise.

Many of the experiments weren’t feasible for us since we didn’t have some of the materials or they were too dangerous for me to finagle with four kids. Thankfully, my husband is a scientist! He didn’t care to get crafty, but he did it for me. And for science. They offer a shopping guide for each unit so you can glance at that and see what you have already and what you need to acquire so you can be prepared.

The recommended age level for the program we reviewed is K-8. The program offers many choices within the site to choose from based on ability and resources. Some of the more advanced experiments are phenomenal, like building a hovercraft and alternative energy! When the kids get a bit older, I would love to utilize some of the more bizarre and advanced experiments. I can hardly wait. Now that the weather is getting nicer, I want to build rockets and do some of the fun and messy experiments.

There’s a list of recommended resources, like a science gift guide with books and games and equipment for your science lover! There are oodles of experiments for award-winning science fair projects. If we ever choose to participate in one, this is where I’ll look for ideas!

Here’s the purchase info:

Membership benefits:

  • Videos of teaching real science to your kids, just like I do in an actual classroom
  • Text-book type reading to support the material in the videos
  • Hands-on activities and experiments, with videos that guide your kids through them. These activities and experiments are what really ignite a passion for science in most kids.
  • Homework exercises/quizzes so you can see what your kids are really learning, and tips for how to keep track of your progress in a real a science journal
  • A live science class in difference science areas every few weeks where you can connect with me personally
  • Parent resources for helping you give your kids the best science education they can get
  • A place to ask me questions (lots of them!)
  • Recordings of everything so your kids can do the program on whatever schedule AND at whatever pace suits them.
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Margarethe: A Reformation Novel review

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April 5, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

We received the book Margarethe from Salem Ridge Press to review.

Salem Ridge Press
Margarethe

The books from Salem Ridge Press are certainly high quality and have high standards.

They certainly try their best to adhere to this verse:

Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things. ~Philippians 4:8

My eldest daughter loves historical fiction and I thought this selection would please her since we’ve been studying the Reformation in history and she has been fascinated  I had hoped this review could be hers and I would just offer assistance.

It was not to be. Liz attempted to read Margarethe, but did not care for the book at all. At least she tried. I do not fault her.

I admit that the book does begin a rather slow, but after I started reading through several chapters, it did pick up just a little. The language is stilted and old-fashioned (no contractions!). The omniscient narrator does not flow in writing her story as well as I would like. Margarethe’s personal spiritual development is just not very believable to me. It does not make me long to turn the page or stay up late to finish the book.

The characters are all flat and I have no sympathy for any of them. I could not admire the characters much. I find the main character, Margarethe, mighty whiny and prone to tears at the drop of a hat. I do commend her teaching her village about Luther. Her brother is trapped in the common old-fashioned beliefs of the weakness of women.  He is constantly confused by the opposing forces of duty and the changing society he wishes to join. The old aunt is a shadow of a mother who has no power. The father is paralyzed by fear of poverty and the changing times and ineffectual with his children’s rebellions. The sister, Else, has been banished to a convent and is a poor gray loveless version of her old self. I’m sure Else’s condition must symbolize the darkness of the Church at the time while Luther and Zwingli offer the Light of Truth.

The best quote of the book:

“‘The Reformation must begin in our hears and bear fruit in our lives, if ever it is to be real and true,’ she murmured.  ‘But O, what slow progress it makes in me! how proud and angry I am if anyone ventures to cross me…

The freedom and liberty that we need, the freedom the Gospel offers to us, is the conquest of our own passionate hearts. Of course, I shall always be the same Margarethe in one sense; but I want to be a new Margarethe in another – renewed by God’s Spirit; and if I were, I should not have talked in such a passionate, defiant manner as I did today.'”

p. 216-217

I was able to get past all that and relish in the ideals of the time period and how the people might have felt about Luther and Zwingli among the nobility and peasantry. I have dog-eared many pages that explain the Truths that Luther and Zwingli preached that the people were so fearful to accept under the watchful eyes of orthodox and often ignorant Catholic priests.

dog eared quotes

It’s just not a fun read – for my daughter or for me. And we are both prolific readers. It was dry and boring.

From the company:

  • Story Setting:  Germany and Switzerland in 1517 – 1522 A.D.
  • Notable People:  Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwinglius
  • Notable Events: The German Reformation and The Swiss Reformation
  • Originally published in 1879
  • 280 pages
  • For Ages 12 – Adult
  • Softcover $14.95 and hardcover $24.95

You can read the first chapter here.

About the original author:

Emma Leslie (1837-1909), whose actual name was Emma Dixon, was a prolific Victorian children’s author who wrote over 100 books. Emma Leslie brought a strong Christian emphasis into her writing and many of her books were originally published by the Religious Tract Society.

Salem Ridge Press purchases many old books, often using leads from old catalogs, and carefully evaluates each one, republishing only the best of the best.

There are many selections from Salem Ridge Press about Church History, American History, and World History – for younger readers too.

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Computer Science for Kids Review

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April 2, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

Liz reviewed Computer Science for Kids and very much enjoyed learning Beginning Microsoft Small Basic.

There are 11 lessons. They range from 22-109 pages.

The lessons generally consist of

  • Review and preview
  • Small Basic (lessons)
  • Program (application: actual programming)
  • Summary

Liz quickly became very comfortable with the lessons and completed them all by herself and called me {constantly} to come see her fun little creations.

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Dad downloaded and set up and looked through the curriculum to see what needed to be done. This was outta Mom’s comfort zone! Liz was bored with waiting.

Dad teaching computer coding

Then after it was all ready, Dad showed her how to work the program a bit, and she perked up.

Dad coding

Elizabeth loved learning about the history of computers and programming in the first lessons. I was impressed with this narrative.

It shows pictures of the first computers – nifty. And did you know that BASIC is an acronym? (Beginner’s All-Purpose Symbolic Code) From Class 1: “Small Basic starts with a really simple programming language that gathers inspiration from the original BASIC language. It has no more than 15 keywords and is strictly imperative.”

Small-Basic-definition.png

She likes the “games.” She likes the control and learning how changing just one letter or character can change the whole program. Her analytical mind at work! I love that she is learning about computers. I know my dad is proud (it’s what he wanted me to do!).  It’s great help to her in math since she has to calculate the size of shapes or borders within the graphics.

learning to computer program

Then she was on her own. She was all proud of herself and showing me all these little “games” she wrote.

programmer

She self-corrected her code when they didn’t work just the way she wanted. Dad helped her change them and showed her different options. Then she ran with it.

Dad helping code

I am thankful that we can utilize the kids’ desktop computer and my laptop so Liz could have the lessons up and do her code at the same time. It made it less frustrating for her. And that makes me happy.

coding

The true test is that she can explain to me why the shape is filled in or outlined in a certain color and which code is needed to make it do what she wants!

I noticed yesterday that she’s completed all 11 lessons – the whole book…

Me: “If you like it, I will purchase the next book for you.”

Liz: “I thought you already had the whole program for me. I want it all!”

And that’s a good review.

A typical lesson only takes a few minutes (tweaking and playing can take much longer!) so many colors, choices, sizes, codes…it’s like a new toy! She has this last on her daily list as an incentive to complete her other work!

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Purchase options

  1. Paperback Textbook Plus and E-Tutorial E-Book Download with Free Shipping Inside the USA*** $59.95
  2. Instant Internet  “Download Only” Digital E-Book Edition with Single User License*** $59.95 {ON SALE FOR $34.95 – SALE PRICE though July 4th, 2013} 
  3. ANNUAL “UNLIMITED USER” School Site License Teacher Edition Digital E-Book Internet Download Only***Sale Price! $199.95
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Lapbook Review

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April 1, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

We were so excited to review lapbooks from A Journey Through Learning! I received downloads and printed them out myself for 3 of my kids.

I printed out Letters, Numbers and Shapes (recommended for ages 3-5) for Alex, even though he turns three TODAY! He did awesome.

Letters, Numbers and Shapes photo Lettersnumbersandshapes_zps1d7d968f.jpeg
I printed out TWO COPIES of Knights and Castles (recommended for grades 2-7) for the girls. Kate is almost 6 and Tori just turned 7. They’re not quite in 2nd grade yet.

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Luckily, I had lots of file folders lying around and I glued them together as shown in the instructions. Easy peasy! {I recommend gluing the folders together ASAP so they will be dry and ready…ask me how I know this…}

Set up for the 3 lapbooks wasn’t too bad since I printed and cut and assembled after the kids went to bed.  It was quiet alone time for Mama.

Older kids could surely help cutting out the pieces! Other supplies are brads, staples, and of course, glue sticks for putting the completed pieces in the folders.

lapbook folders

Here is Alex’s preschool lapbook all assembled and ready to play!

preschool lapbook pieces

Here are the 2 Middle Ages lapbooks for the girls, assembled and ready to go. I’m really excited about these.

castles lapbook pieces

I got Alex on a really good evening and he completed that whole lapbook in about an hour! He just knocked. it. out. wowsers!

I was impressed that he knew all his colors, shapes, letters, and numbers. And he traced everything for the first time!

I used it as an assessment and I’ll say he did excellently. proud mama moment!

Orange is his favorite color. Can you tell?

coloring train lapbook

Alex loved coloring the shape robot.

coloring lapbook

Fire trucks are ALWAYS cool.

gluing lapbook

And here we have the tongue of concentration.

lapbook preschool

I read the background material on The Middle Ages to Tori and Kate. And I wrote on the board what they needed to put on their various lap book components.

lapbook cards

The girls loved this lapbook to go along with history. We studied castles and knights earlier this year with Tapestry of Grace Year 2.

I decided to use this as an assessment to make sure there were no gaps to that unit we studied. There weren’t many gaps, and the reading was very informative for their level. It was a great review! They begged me to let them do a few pieces each day until all was completed.

That worked out perfectly for our schedule. It took a couple weeks to complete it all that way.

lapbook booklets

And here are the completed lapbooks…

Tori really enjoyed the drawing and learning about medieval weaponry.

Completed Knights and Castles Lapbook

Katie loved learning about armor.

castles lapbook

Alex’s lapbook…so proud of his tracing!

Later, I plan to go through and discuss an animal for each letter. We left off that part since he needs to work on his drawing ability. He just turned three TODAY and this lapbook is recommended for 3+.

preschool lapbook

I especially love the enrichment pages – additional recommended readings, narration forms, and reading logs for further study and extension.

I am very impressed with the organization and effort that go into creating these lapbooks and making my life so easy by having everything printable and laid out so fine for me to assign to my kids and work with them and glue it into place.

Here are the purchase options:

Letters, Numbers, and Shapes

  • Instant Download-$13.00
  • CD-$14.00
  • Printed-$20.00
  • Assembled-$29.00

Knights and Castles

  • Instant Download-$13.00
  • CD-$14.00
  • Printed-$21.00
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Lead Your Family Like Jesus

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March 24, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I am so pleased to be a part of the Launch Team for Lead Your Family Like Jesus: Powerful Parenting Principles from the Creator of Families by Ken Blanchard, Phil Hodges, and Tricia Goyer.

This is a family leadership book.

This is a child-training book. A book on parenting.

And I love how those two things are meshed together and help me to analyze and express how I want my family to look in the future.

It’s all about goals, vision, values, priorities.

You need to see that future picture of success for your family to know what you must do now to get there.

An important question for family leader to ask is, “What do we want to influence?”

The key is specifying what carrying out your priorities looks like.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus p. 67

By examining your future picture, you can make a plan to implement for success. Jesus must be the foundation for your goals.

A wise man noted that it was only in the past century that the word priority went plural. Jesus had one priority: glorify God.

Everything Jesus did was about…Exalting God Only. It was an act of worship…He pointed those around Him to God.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus p. 63, 33, 34

My husband, Aaron, and I have been using this book to teach our Sunday school class for a while now and we’re enjoying it and learning so much about leadership from Jesus! We’ve all had some lively discussions. We’re convicted to “put our egos on the altar” and align our attitudes. I adore having some older couples agree with the book’s teachings and describe how they raised their children.

A parent’s attitude, I realized, is the foundation for how every day is lived out. And those days are the building blocks of childhood memories.

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus p. 93

What memories will your children have? Do you need to make some changes in your attitude to reflect your family goals?

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We’ve all heard “Do what I say, not as I do.” But we are the examples to our children and actions speak so much louder than words. Does what you do and say match what you believe?

Life, family, and leadership are all about choices. What do you stand for? How have you chosen family activities to match?

~Lead Your Family Like Jesus p. 65

The book has four parts – The Four Leadership Domains – that all interact like a flowchart {Indeed, I made one for my Sunday school class}:

  1. The Heart: The character and the values
  2. The Head: Your viewpoint and beliefs
  3. The Hands: What you actually do
  4. The Habits: How you continually refocus your desire
LYFLJ-flowchart.jpg

Throughout the chapters, there are Pause & Reflect sections that invite discussion and real deep down thinking of your motives as a parent.

For example, in the first chapter, we’re asked:

What is Temporary Stuff? What is Important Forever? It encourages us to keep everything in eternal perspective.

Great quotes from other Christian books help drive points home. The authors tell stories of how they dealt with difficult circumstances, how they trained their children, how they modeled Jesus’ upside-down Kingdom values.

At the end of each section are reviews over the Leadership Domain – Points to Ponder. Great summaries!

I believe this book especially appeals to men, to dads. It’s a leadership book. I know my husband’s only reading material is online…or leadership books. This book really targets dads in ways they can understand, especially if they’re not regular readers – with bullets, flow charts, pyramids, headings…all this makes it easier to read and comprehend the material.

It’s a call to action for men to step up and lead. But we wives need to learn to let them and support them, even if we may have a different (not necessarily better!) way. We need to clamp our mouths and listen respectfully to our husbands’ points of view. See Tricia’s video clip below!

Your Big World to Their Small World

Do you help your husband feel comfortable leading your family? Tricia has lots of edifying videos! Subscribe to her YouTube channel so you don’t miss a one.

What’s your family’s vision? It must say who you are (your purpose), where you’re going (your picture of the future), and what will guide your journey (your values). {paraphrased from p.48}

Write it down in your dining room or family room. Get it pretty-fied and frame it!

Rank-ordered values alone won’t accomplish your family’s purpose or turn your picture of the future into reality. You need to translate those values into behaviors.

~Lead Your Family Jesus p.61

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Adventus Piano Review

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March 20, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

We reviewed the piano curriculum MusIQ HomeSchool from Adventus. It’s designed for ages 4-18+. The software requires a MIDI-compatible keyboard and they have great deals if you want a bundle through their site.

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Adventus Piano

“Adventus” means “arrival” in Latin. I just love that bit of trivia. Our whole family has been learning or reviewing piano! So exciting! I love having a musical family.

Kate and Tori are in Children’s Music Journey level 2. Alex can actually do Children’s Music Journey level 1! {Children’s Music Journey is recommended for ages 4-10. Piano Suite is recommended for ages 10+.}

We figure Liz is about one-third of the way through Piano Suite (there are 12 levels!) since she’s taken formal lessons for several years. There are some gaps in her music education that she needs to review and she loves, loves, loves the collection of music that she can search through and practice songs all over the musical map – from classical to current and popular rock n roll!

My husband tried the Ear Training Coach program (years 2&3) and he says it’s really difficult and sensitive. Liz really needs some extra help in this area, so I am pleased it’s included. I am scared to try! I was terrible at sight reading when I was in chorus in middle school! Glad my kids inherited some music talent from their dad.

I tried Piano Suite (and I have trouble playing a digital radio) and it’s really easy! I like it and it doesn’t make me feel musically dumb. I would never pay for formal lessons, so this makes it really simple to just plug and play and get a quick lesson in when I have a few minutes. Food for the brain, ya know? (better than playing on social media!) and I can impress my eldest daughter with something other than Chopsticks or Mary Had a Little Lamb…

Weekly Lesson run-down:

1. Children’s Music Journey – 25 minutes (approx.)

  • Lesson with “composer”
  • Practice Room with Miss Melody
  • Games Room

2. History Time/Rhythm – 10-15 minutes

  • composer study – printable info sheet, discussion, Q&A
  • review note values
  • do music math equations

3. Improvisation – 5-7 minutes

  • listen to assigned music piece
  • dance moves!
  • practice notation
  • optional: record student piece and go listen to it in The Library

4. Closing – 2-5 minutes

  • Tell the student “great Job!” or something like that…
  • Assign practice sheets {due before next lesson~we do them immediately so we don’t forget!}

Tori does her lesson with The Composer. She learns rhythms and notes. We checked out CMJ1, but then realized that CMJ2 does a quick review of CMJ1 and moves on at a better pace for the girls. Tori just turned 7 and Kate is almost 6, so this is a better fit.

video piano learning

Tori does a lesson in CMJ2. She really enjoys the lessons and can complete them on her own. She needs to do finger strengthening exercises!

piano lesson time

Kate is in the Miss Melody section of the program. She reviews the lessons for The Composer. The girls practice with Miss Melody and she’s really cute and fun!

watching and learning

After the lessons and practice…there are games and worksheets and coloring pages. The girls like the interactive MIDI games, but aren’t as thrilled with the worksheets. They just want to play piano!

piano worksheets

Tori loves the theory and history parts of Piano Suite, but she’s not quite ready to begin with those lessons yet. She’s not a fluent reader, so I help her through this right now.

learning about sounds

Liz liked the Senor Semitone Say (like Simon Says), but with the other games she wasn’t interested. She prefers to just play the music at her level.

piano lesson computer

Even little Alex (almost 3) is able to do some of the rhythm exercises (with help and supervision) in CMJ1.

preschool piano time

The Improvisation “room” on the program is fun for the girls to play around with different sounds of instruments – and they can record their creations and listen to them!

What I liked best: I don’t have to really know much about teaching piano to help my kids run these programs. I can look at the lesson plans and there are checklists and supplements on their blog to help my kids succeed. The programs do all the work, from teaching to practicing to games and I just have to plug in my laptop and queue it up for my kids to do their piano each week. They don’t have to leave the house! Wonderful! If you add up what music lessons typically cost (and if you have more than one child, whew!)…these programs are an amazing deal~from preschool through high school!

There are 3 different Adventus programs available (including deals on compatible keyboards):

1. Early learning curriculum (ages 4-10):

Children’s Music Journey Volume 1, 2, and 3 are $89.95 EACH. Included in each volume are the computer software and lesson plans.

2. Multi-Level teaching (10+):

Year 1 is $109.95 (term 1-3)

– Piano Suite Premier
– Level 1 Lesson Plans

Year 2 is $59.95 (term 4-6)

– Ear Training Coach 1&2
– Level 2 Lesson Plans

Year 3 is $59.95 (term 7-9)

– Ear Training Coach 3&4
– Level 3 Lesson Plans

Year 4 is $69.95 (term 10-12)

– MusIQ Challenger Game
– Level 4 Lesson Plans

3. A MusIQ HomeSchool Subscription is just $10.95/month

  • unlimited, full-feature access to all the MusIQ HomeSchool software titles (over $450 retail value)
  • a discount on MIDI piano keyboards

We really enjoy using the programs, but they did require my husband’s help installing the downloads and plugging in the cords correctly and setup within the programs so the keyboard would communicate with the computer. After that learning curve, it was all fun and games for us!

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Discovery of Deduction Review

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March 18, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

We are very impressed with the products from Classical Academic Press. I am pleased to review The Discovery of Deduction: An Introduction to Formal Logic with The Discovery of Deduction Teacher’s Edition. Elizabeth and I are enjoying it immensely. It’s our special time together when the littles play quietly in their rooms or outside now that the weather is getting nice. I love having this one on one time with my eldest and seeing her brilliant mind at work.

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I remember taking a course in my first semester of college called Intro to Logic. I had hoped to sit around like a Beatnik and profoundly discuss Nietzsche and Sartre, but it was rather different than that image. I found it so difficult to decipher all the Venn diagrams and algebraic-looking formulas; I got a C!

This curriculum reminds me of that course, but I’m actually understanding it all now! It’s so well-written and fun to read and offers so much wonderful application to the real world. And my daughter is learning material at age 12, in grade 7/8, that I couldn’t master in college! I am so proud of her.

Philosophy means “love of wisdom.” Yes! We do love wisdom. And all wisdom comes from fear of the Lord.

According to Harvard University:

“Philosophy is a discipline requiring skills in reasoning and writing. Thus, the study of philosophy helps a person to develop the abilities to:

  • Read texts closely
  • Analyze positions critically
  • Uncover tacit presuppositions
  • Construct cogent arguments, and
  • Explain and argue in clear persuasive writing.

These skills are extremely useful in many other disciplines beyond philosophy—and for a range of careers, such as law, computer science, business, medicine, writing, the arts, publishing, and many others. The abilities to write well and to “think outside the box” are in high demand from employers, and will serve students well in their post-college life…”

Discovery of Deduction textDiscovery of Deduction Teacher Edition
We love the history of philosophy in the introduction! Especially the section about the Middle Ages and Renaissance philosophers. That ties into our current history studies perfectly. I love relevant cross-curricular studies. {Be still my thumping heart!} Liz really likes any reference to Latin since she’s studied that language for the past 5 years and isn’t finished yet!

Discovery of Deduction

I enjoy the dialogue these “Deduction in Action” sections generate between my daughter and myself. These are at the end of each chapter and help further tie in the relevance of the philosophy to everyday life or historical studies. It’s Socratic Method at its finest!  It forces encourages my daughter to think. I like that. For instance, I love the one titled “Examining Your Personal Beliefs” in Lesson 5.6. It has a list of suggested topics that promises a lively and educational and spiritual discussion.

1. We’ve discussed the importance of apologetics and how to play devil’s advocate about evolution and young Earth/old Earth ideas.

2. We discussed how learning logic helps with writing persuasive essays. Or “arguing” with her dad.

3. We discussed the importance of learning logic to help with math, science, and technology studies. {At the end of lesson 6.4, it even has web links to discuss logic in math!}

And any curriculum that uses Monty Python and The Holy Grail, Garfield, Sherlock Holmes, and Julius Caesar as examples is just awesome in my book!

In Lesson 1.3, the Monty Python “witch” scene is an example to show the method of deductive logic – and it is hilarious. Form is all that matters, not whether it’s correct! lol

We read Socrates’ Apology by Plato together. I have this lovely collection of books left to me by my uncle and I am so pleased to finally get to use them! {I can’t wait to read Euthyphro and Crito later in the text!}
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So we read through The Apology and Liz made this connection: “Socrates was the wisest man of his time. Sheldon thinks he’s the smartest. I’m smarter than all the kids I know. We should start a club for smart people and no one else can join!” Yes, that’s flawed logic, my dear. but wow. She throws out zingers like these all the time.

What a lesson looks like:

We read through the material in the book together. There are questions at the end of each chapter where students must define vocabulary and answer questions or fill in the blank or matching. There are often dialogues {between Socrates and a boy named Nate, with other characters} or stories that we discuss and apply the exercises which we learned.

Later on, there are translations and the exercises get more difficult, with more application and short answer. Students must create their own logical arguments with those {pesky} Venn diagrams! There are cumulative reviews at the end of each chapter.

The text consists of

  • 4 Units
  • 9 Chapters
  • 2-7 lessons per chapter
  • appendices and glossary

Elizabeth and I are greatly enjoying learning logic together. Would you like to learn too?

The Discovery of Deduction: An Introduction to Formal Logic Student Text is $26.95. You can purchase in Kindle or iBook format too.

The Discovery of Deduction Teacher’s Edition is $29.95. I highly recommend the teacher’s manual.

Check out the free extras (at the bottom of the page): Sample Chapters, Logic FAQ, and Suggested Schedule!

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FaithLeaps Book Review

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March 12, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Do you have a vision?

What are you passionate about? What are you good at? How could you make a profit at it?

Sometimes our dreams require a blind jeté into the unknown. A leap of faith. And those are so scary!

Alyssa Avant encourages moms in her new book FaithLeaps: The Christian Mom’s Guide to Passion, Purpose, and Profits.

Cuz I don’t know about you…but I sometimes feel guilty about pursuing profits for my dreams, my writing, my blog, even my new business of editing, book promotion, and VA work. I know I undersell myself. I doubt. I offer too much of myself for too little. I think that’s the enemy telling us that we’re not worth it or we’re selfish to want honest pay for honest work. We internalize that our place is in the home, taking care of babies and dinner and laundry. Perhaps even homeschooling our children. We shouldn’t have time for our own work. But those are lies!

Alyssa addresses these fears in her book so eloquently and edifies moms, encouraging us to move forward and seek God’s will. Many of us can make time for a business on the side of parenting and housework.

It doesn’t have to be a traditional job. For most of us, a full time daytime job is not a viable option, especially if we homeschool or have small children. I know many moms who have successful home businesses that they juggle while they care for their families, homeschool their children, support their husband’s career and/or ministry.

It’s all about priorities.

Mothers who work at home cannot compartmentalize their lives. Our lives are one big puzzle and all of the puzzle pieces must fit together. If not, the picture of life is distorted and has little to no value. We must give appropriate attention to God, our spouse, children, ourselves, our homes and our businesses. Most people struggle as one area demands more attention than the others.

Where do you struggle with priorities? Do you give “appropriate attention” to all areas of your life or is it off-kilter?

Alyssa offers some great free quizzes to determine interests and spiritual gifts. She discusses the differences between these and talents.

Spiritual gifts are given to us by God for work in His Kingdom. These gifts we receive at the time of our salvation. Talents, though given to us by God, will not necessarily be used for God…A skill is something that we can practice or learn.

What are your interests, gifts, skills, talents? My spiritual gifts are teaching, prophecy, and exhortation.

I am very excited to be part of Alyssa’s launch team and I really feel this book could help so many moms who struggle with doubt and the lies of the enemy. Fulfill your dreams, girl! Find your purpose within God’s will and seek after it. You will be blessed and in turn, bless others.

Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this eBook in exchange for my honest review. I was not required to write a positive review nor was I compensated in any other way. All opinions I have expressed are my own or those of my family. I am disclosing this in accordance with the FTC Regulations.

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So Shines the Night Book Review

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March 11, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

The book of Acts is where our faith begins. The apostle Paul brings the Truth to the Gentiles. Without Paul’s great mission work, would we even know of Jesus?

Join me as we delve into Paul’s world at Ephesus in So Shines the Night, the newest Biblical fiction novel from Tracy Higley.

I am proud to be a member of Tracy’s Caravan, a group of readers, bloggers, lovers of words and Biblical history…

History truly comes alive within these pages.

Freedom has been a theme in my spiritual journey lately. Why shouldn’t God speak to me through a novel too?

This novel is frightening. It shows a very scary world of pure evil – demon possession, sorcerers, spells and hallucinogens to “expand” the mind and open up souls to the enemy. It shows the very real battle of spiritual forces in Ephesus during the time of Paul.

The story is well-wrought and balances the spiritual journeys of the main characters, Daria and Lucas, with their inevitable, but tasteful, love interest. The many mysteries and plot twists add excitement and fun to a very dark topic. The protagonists are believable and lovable and I am immediately sympathetic for them, cheering them on in my heart. The villains are portrayed well and there is little sympathy for them. I can cast actors to play all of them in my head! The flashback frame sets the scene for a powerful lesson in seeking security only in Christ and watching for His return, but never being idle.

I think many of us turn a blind eye to a very real evil that fights for power over all of us. Many of us struggle with strongholds over our spirits and live our lives in bondage without ever truly breaking free and experiencing the completeness of Christ’s love.

We must wake up and fight as God’s army – against the powers of darkness.

I pray that the message of this novel will help many to seek freedom in Christ.

Interview with the author.
I love this about Tracy: she interacts with her fans and we call her friend. She makes time for us. These are my silly questions to her and she answered them! Tracy asked her Caravan to send her our questions and she put a file together with all her answers for us. I included 2 other really good ones from the list. I hope these bless you, readers and writers!

1. How do you start writing a new novel? Do you make an outline, use a gazillion different colored Post-It notes on a big wall grid, just sit at the computer and knock it out, or what?

I am definitely an outliner and a plotter, but most of what I put together is on the computer. For the past few books I’ve been using a program called Scrivener, which I really like. I have notes in my personal “template” file that pertain to all stories – to the structure behind them – and I look them over as I plot through the scenes. For every scene I create a brainstorming worksheet before I write it – something that gives me the high-level look at what’s going to happen in the scene, and contains some of the sensory details I’ve imagined. I print this out and have it next to me as a I write the scene.

2. What advice to you have for someone who wants to write “The Great American novel’ and struggles to even get started? I know that’s broad…

Like any huge, overwhelming project, the best advice is just to start. See what kind of writer you are by getting started. Does an outline and a plot make you feel stunted? Do you fear the blank page and need to think it through first? There are tons of writing helps out there no matter what kind of writer you are. Find some, read and digest them, and then come back and keep writing.

3. What advice do you have for writers launching their first book?

Find your people. It’s tough, but there are folks out there who are very much like you and will love to read what you write. So the first step is truly understanding yourself and your special brand of writing. The second step is to make sure your books, your website, etc all match up to that special brand. And then start spreading the word to find those like-minded people who will be your best fans.

4. Who is your greatest inspiration – as a writer, mom, Christian?…any and all of those criteria.

As a writer, I’m inspired by C.S. Lewis (of course), but also by Stephen Lawhead and Frederick Buechner, both of whom have the ability to pick the reader up and carry them somewhere else. As a mom, it is the awesome friends I have, whose daily interactions with their children I am privileged to witness, that inspire me most. And as a Christian? The lives of those who live big and adventurous for the kingdom – willing to love and risk because they are secure in Christ.

5. What’s the best piece of writing advice you’ve ever received?

Keep writing. If you haven’t finished anything, keep writing. If you’ve finished something and are trying to submit and sell it somewhere, don’t wait for an answer, keep writing. If you’ve gotten some interest and it’s moving through the process, keep writing. The publishing industry can move very slowly, and the best way to be ready for your “big break” is to keep improving through practice, practice, practice.

Tracy L. Higley started her first novel at the age of eight and has been hooked on writing ever since. She has authored nine novels, including Garden of Madness and Isle of Shadows. Tracy is currently pursuing a graduate degree in Ancient History and has traveled through Greece, Turkey, Egypt, Israel, Jordan and Italy, researching her novels and falling into adventures. See her travel journals and more at TracyHigley.com.

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Touchmath Review

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March 11, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

We are pretty excited about TouchMath Second Grade!

logo photo touchlogo_zps5760f524.jpg

This is an innovative math program that serves all learning styles: visual , auditory, digital (writers), and kinesthetic learners. I am so very impressed that they have a division for students with learning differences!

TouchMath 2nd Grade consists of 4 modules. Modules A, B, and C are primarily addition and subtraction. Module D teaches units on time, money, measurement, data, and geometry! Each unit has a progress monitoring chart with each lesson listed. This is a great planning tool!

At the beginning of each module and unit are lists and explanations of Content Overview, State Standards, Objectives, Prerequisites, Vocabulary, Materials, and Instructional Strategies. I love having all this information at my fingertips to help me teach math!

Kate (almost 6) completed her assignments, though she is never as excited about math time as Tori and I are. She did love the computer games (Tutor Software) and playing with the manipulatives during her free time though!

I think this is an example of how the different learning styles prefer different subjects and/or teaching styles. Kate is very visual, verbal, and artistic. Allowed the freedom to explore, she used the manipulatives in her own special way during her free time.

Tori (just turning 7) just loved it! She loved the touching, visual appeal, working with the Base Ten counters and Touch numerals, number cards, the Flipcards…and how it all applied to her math worksheets (which is the real curriculum).

Tori is an auditory/visual, right-brained learner. Being my compliant and cautious child, she completed her assignments during math time but rarely spent her free time exploring the manipulatives on her own.

Why is this math program different?

The student must touch the number card or numeral at certain points that count out its value. They memorize this, but it’s more than just blind memorizing. They really internalize this concept and comprehend what the number means.

Once that touch counting is learned, then addition and subtraction is that much easier to master. You touch count up for adding and down for subtracting. Multiplication is grouping and you have the Base Ten counters to further show the values.

TouchMath appeals to all learners with its multi-sensory approach!

  • visual (the students sees the cards, numerals, counters)
  • auditory (the student speaks the equation aloud and count up or down and repeat equation with the answer)
  • digital (the student reads the equations and write or draw the answers)
  • kinesthetic (the student touches the numerals and/or counts the Base Ten dots)

Why we like TouchMath…

  1. It is traditional in that it has all the necessary mathematical concepts covered in their scope and sequence to give my kids a good maths foundation.
  2. It is fun and colorful and engaging for all types of learners.
  3. It has a good balance of repetition and practice (a spiral approach) with teaching to mastery. My girls didn’t get bored with doing many, many pages on one concept before moving on to the next lesson.

As soon as we opened the box, Kate started with her Touch Points on the Number Cards. She just naturally knew what to do!

These are perforated and can be used like flashcards, but we left it as a poster.

Touchmath poster

Tori practices the TouchMath Tutor with her Number Cards for help. The girls loved the US geography base for the games. They both especially love the Base Ten Place Values game.

Touchmath computer game

Tori practices addition with her Number cards to help her remember where to touch and count. She touches the numbers with the point of her pencil.

Touchmath writing

Tori has her Base Ten and Number Cards to help with this page (addition and subtraction).

Touchmath notebooking page

Kate draws in her Base Ten dots on her page to show the math work (addition and subtraction).

Touchmath page

Even Alex loves the Touch Numerals and Base Ten! We’ll start teaching him with it soon! He’s only almost 3. He used the Base Ten as counters and matched them up to the numbers like the cards!

Touchmath manipulatives

Tori touches and says this subtraction equation on the Flipcard. It’s multi-level learning. She remembers since she must say it and touch it.

Touchmath cards

The 2nd grade curriculum consists of 4 module downloads at $59.95 each.

2nd photo 2nd_zps507a9062.jpg
Optional manipulatives and extras:

  • Number Cards are $24 for a 10-pack.
  • The Flipcard packs are $19 each and there are 12 sets that correspond to 2nd grade.
  • Touch Numerals with Base Ten are $99.
  • TouchMath Tutor is $99.

My kids absolutely love the Touch Numerals and use them with all their math assignments now, and even make up games with them on their own. Check out this post where we’re using the money pages. We’re very excited about how this innovative program helps us succeed with math.

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