Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Logic of English Foundations A Review

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September 10, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I love Denise from Logic of English. I met her at Allume last year and learned about her amazing English/Language Arts program. She put amazing research into it! Since I met her, Logic of English has grown leaps and bounds!

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I am so happy to share our review of Foundations A. I love this description: Complete Phonics, Reading, Handwriting & Spelling. It is quite complete.

I received the Foundations Reusable Resources Set ($88) as well as the hardcover teacher’s manual ($38) and student workbook ($18).

Foundations A is recommended for ages 4-7, so Kindergarten-1st graders is the target audience.

Alex is still a bit young and my girls are a bit beyond this right now.

Even though Alex is only three, I thought it was a better progression for him to understand the basics of the English language than what we used with the girls the last couple years. He’s been wanting to learn to read lately. He did love sounding our the letters!

Tori needs a bit of review, so she listens in on many of the lessons and then does her own language work with Essentials.

We all love Doodling Dragons! It’s a fun ABC resource.

Foundations A comes in manuscript or cursive. We chose cursive since it’s more natural. I wish I had started this with the girls!

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Liz did the first lesson with her brother, Alex. He’s feeling her breath and voice. Somehow this reminded me of Anne Sullivan and Helen Keller.

feeling speech

They practiced the different sounds and mouth movements that accompany them. Alex liked learning about the air and tongue placement. They held their noses and tried to say letters. They made silly faces. (Liz loved it too!)

  • Is /b/ Voiced or unvoiced?
  • Is /n/ Nasal or not?
  • What is the difference between /th/ and /TH/?
feeling speech and air

We also have the Phonograms App. Tori really liked reviewing with this. Alex was indifferent to another app. But he’s younger and it just wasn’t fun to him.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/logic-of-english/id604337613?uo=4

Liz used the phonetics flashcards with Tori and the app for review time.

After just a few review sessions, Tori knows all the sounds that all the letters make and examples! I am so pleased.

phonogram flashcards

Alex’s favorite component by far is the dry erase board! He loved practicing his shapes and lines (strokes)!

writing letter shapes

Look at that tongue of concentration!

writing more letter shapes

We talked about the stroke and felt the sandpaper flashcard and traced it with fingers a few times. I drew the first one on the board and Alex traced it. Then he tried to draw a few of his own.

writing even more letter shapes

A favorite activity was connecting the sounds with magnets. The book suggested Legos, but these were handier for us. I used one for each letter/sound and we practiced bringing them closer together and then combining them to make the works. We did this a few times until he “got” it.

building letters with magnets

We did several sessions a week but didn’t get as far as I would like in the book since Alex’s attention span is so short. He cooperates for only some of it. He doesn’t like much of the hands-on stuff like jumping when he hears a sound (I’m so surprised!). I think some of it is embarrassment that his sisters might see, but they’re often on the other side of the school room. He’s just uncooperative lately.

He liked setting up his first reader.

gluing reader booklet

I’m trying to work at Alex’s pace, and when he says he’s done, we’re done. No point in pushing when he’s only three since I want him to love learning and not get discouraged.

Every 5th lesson is a review and I do see progress!

Alex is too young for the phonogram game cards, but Tori, Kate, and I played and it was ok. I think Tori liked it best.

Here’s the price list of the program. They also have package deals.

  • Foundations A Teacher’s Manual – PDF or print (224 pages)   $38.00
  • Foundations A Cursive or Manuscript Workbook – PDF or print Family License (230 pages)   $18.00
  • Basic Phonogram Flash Cards   $16.20
  • Cursive or Manuscript Tactile Cards $25.20
  • Student Whiteboard   $10.80
  • The Rhythm of Handwriting Cursive or Manuscript Chart $9.00
  • Phonograms App $2.99
  • Phonogram Game Cards $10.00

Check out the other Logic of English reviews:

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Beauty in the Heart Review

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August 22, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Elizabeth and I completed this review of Beauty in the Heart: A Study of Godly Beauty for Young Women by Doorposts.

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My daughter is 12 and loved this Bible study on godly beauty.  photo BeautyCover_zpsd1ccc789.jpg

We have often discussed how God looks at our hearts and not our outward appearance. This study is comprehensive and taught great Bible study technique. The study focuses on Sarah, Ruth, and Esther – and what the Bible says about humility, modesty, serving.

It’s a big girl Bible study!

Perfect for her age and aptitude. Just what I’ve been looking for. It fits right into my mother mission of raising servant leaders.

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Boxes in the margins help my daughter learn to use new Bible study methods. She’s learning how to do an Inductive Bible Study. She loves using different colored highlighters.

She’s learning how to use Bible commentary and a concordance – and apps on her iPad mini. One of the margins list online Bibles and apps for use. Super!

My little linguist loves the concordance. She almost got lost in that and had to be reminded to finish the lesson. She’s learning how to look up cross references and really study her Bible well during these lessons.

My baby girl is growing up. I am amazed every day how much she grows in beauty inside and out. I know she looks to me for everything and I must be a godly example to her. She analyzes me – how I mother them, how I treat their father, my husband, my interactions online and in real life. Under that magnifying glass, I strive to live with integrity and to be quick to apologize and ask forgiveness when I fail. Jesus forgives all. I want to respect her and extend her grace and mercy as she seeks her own path with God because I want my daughter to learn to be merciful and full of grace too. Inward beauty is more important, but appearances matter and we should try to look our best. It’s all a balance we must learn.

This Bible study is a step forward for Liz in growing up and learning how to be a godly woman. She has a quick mind and I love the discussion and questions that come from her lessons. I love homeschooling her and knowing that I can teach her God’s way and she’s not away at some government school learning the way of the world.

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What can you expect from this Bible study?

10 chapters of 5-14 days of lessons. {86 days of study plus 49 more suggested studies} The lessons consist of combinations of the following:

  1. Pray Read Memorize
  2. Observations and organizing
  3. Study words
  4. Interpret
  5. Application
  6. Conclusion

Beauty in the Heart is recommended for girls ages 10-12 and up. There’s also a chapter for boys so they “can encourage young women to grow in true, godly beauty.”

Check out my FREE Beauty and Makeup Unit Study.

Also, get my FREE Purim Unit Study.

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Study Skills Review

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August 16, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

We reviewed Honing Your Study Skills from Hands of a Child.

I chose the note pack. What’s a note pack? From the company:

Note Packs are ready-to-go notebooking units.  With our Note Packs your students are able to enjoy the same Research Guide and activities as our lapbooks, but without all of the cutting and pasting! Simply 3-hole punch the fun and interesting pages and add them to any 3-ring binder. Note Packs are available in the same formats as lapbooks.

Also available as a lapbook – eBook, CD, printed, combo, or kit. Prices vary.

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When I saw this, I knew it was just what I was looking for to help my teen with her study skills and note taking. We’ve kinda winged it until now, but her work load is getting too much for her to not have a plan and study skills in place.

I printed the pages out on pretty paper and after she completed them, we 3-hole punched it all and put it in a folder for her to keep in her minioffice file.

I put the file on her iPad mini so she could read the lessons and instructions as she went along. Perfection!

study skills lapbooking

Liz independently completed the note pack in just a couple days.

Then we reviewed what she learned.

I especially liked the pages on time management and reference materials. We try to do it old school and I make sure my kids know how to use dictionaries, thesauruses, and encyclopedias. Then they can search the Internet. I extended the lesson by comparing primary and secondary sources. We discussed plagiarism and the reliability of Wikipedia as a reference source. We discussed research and source citation methods for different subjects. I can’t wait until she’s ready for complex research assignments! I plan to have her complete a small literary analysis this year. I love MLA.

The note taking and study success pages were eye-opening for Liz who has never really had to study before. (I think I went until my 3rd year of college before I had to study…)

Of course, I could have gathered all these materials and taught the lessons, but Liz loved the concept of the notebooking. She read, wrote, and narrated it back to me! All keys to learning well.

The best part? I can reuse many of the pages for any subject. There are biography notebooking pages. A weekly schedule is a great tool for her to learn to manage her time. I’ve been providing her with a schedule, but now I will release that responsibility to her! A mnemonic page is useful. We did the study area evaluation and decided on how to best utilize study and learning spaces.

3 main types of learning:

  1. Auditory
  2. Tactile
  3. Visual

It will also play nicely into another review coming soon!

Honing Your Study Skills contains:

  • 5-day Planning Guide
  • Related Reading List
  • 15 Hands-On Activities
  • 11-page Research Guide
  • Answer Key

Note pack or Lapbook eBook on sale for $5.00 (orig. $12.00)!

Recommended for grades 5-10. Liz is 12.

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Understanding Child Brain Development DVD Review

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August 15, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

I reviewed the DVD Understanding Child Brain Development produced by The Family Hope Center and introduced by Andrew Pudewa of Institute for Excellence in Writing. photo 182266_202676429747109_4948289_n_zpsa1ed36ca.jpg WHERE HOPE COMES FROM.

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My kids don’t have any known special needs but I thought this DVD might help me understand families who struggle with differences. I want to walk alongside them in prayer and learn and help any way I can. I thought it might help me in my ministry of being a natural health advocate. I want to learn about all the research available so I can pass on information to those who need it. God has given us amazing knowledge and resources to heal the human body!

What I learned. And some affirmations.

With the DVD comes a link to download a companion 52-page eBook with copies of the presentation slides. Super helpful!

Mr. Newell stresses the positive. They focus on abilities rather than disabilities. YES!

Their team views a child as a “whole person, not a collection of parts and specialties.” I love that.

I love this quote. Mr. Newell says to replace “society” with “parents.”

brain development dvd

I love that they desire to treat the source of interference, not the symptoms! “The problem is the problem. The parent is not the problem.” So many parents of kids with special needs experience guilt that they did something wrong! We don’t understand God’s will. He is in control. He is driving the car.

It seems the team doesn’t want to rely on allopathic medicine to solve problems but believes that the body can heal itself with proper therapies. A company after my own heart.

Their first level of therapy is nutrition/detox. I think this could solve many health and brain disorders right there. Mr. Newell says about 85% of kids from 17 different countries who come to his center have evidence of heavy metals in their system {which causes an explosion with the CNS}.

Did you know the brain expands and contracts? Most of the kids who come to the center have no brain movement. I don’t know much about cranial-sacral therapy, but I plan to research this now! Don’t wear tight hats. Search for a cranial-sacral therapist near you! The compression of the birth canal and the expansion of birth helps the brain function normally.

He mentions the sensitivity of our olfactory system. I so agree that it’s important! Did I mention we do essential oils?

I agree that understanding and working with the child and proper nutrition and fitness are keys to brain health! He stresses the importance of a regular schedule. Structure and organization! Be consistent.

What you can expect.

The DVD progresses through the stages of brain development from

  • birth-2 weeks
  • 2 weeks-2 months
  • 2 months-8 months
  • 8 months-12 months
  • 12 months – 18 months
  • 18 months – 36 months

The DVD explains the development of critical life skills:

  • seeing and reading
  • hearing and understanding
  • sensation and tactility
  • locomotion and mobility
  • communication and speech
  • manual dexterity and writing
  • emotional and social maturity

Fascinating review of how water reacts to environment. Showed water crystals from pristine locations and how it’s “happy.” Compared water crystals from home cooked food with convenience food. oh my! This affirms our lifestyles choices. I am so happy to see this.

The the slides show water next to a mobile phone. oh dear. Should there be legislation that kids shouldn’t have cell phones due to radiation exposure?

Then we see water near TVs, microwaves, computers. We rarely use our microwave and Mr. Newell recommends not using them because it changes the molecules of food and it is therefore of no value to the human system.

Recommended reading:

I cannot recommend this DVD enough – to ALL parents and care givers. It will help you understand child development.

To order the DVD for $19+shipping, please call 610-397-1737 or you can order Understanding Child Brain Development from IEW.

Also check out their program Your Thriving Child: The Essential Guide to Your Child’s Learning and Development.

Click for their conference schedule!

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Reading Kingdom Review

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August 14, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Tori and I reviewed Reading Kingdom. I knew she needed a little extra help with reading success.

Reading Kingdom logo photo readingkingdomlogo_zps9012735a.jpg

I am very impressed with the comprehensive English Language Arts that Reading Kingdom supports. It’s more than just phonics and whole language that I see with other programs. I love the comprehension, keyboarding, vocabulary building, and grammar! This is great for training ears to listen.

Tori saw, read, heard, and typed the symbols, letters, and words. Complete learning.

Reading Kingdom works with children at multiple levels including preschool, kindergarten, first grade, second grade, and third grade.  Each level teaches all the skills and abilities required to be able to progress to the next level. With Reading Kingdom’s comprehensive 6-skill system children’s eagerness to learn will rise significantly even as they experience the lessons as fun reading games.

When I asked 7 year old Tori to help me review Reading Kingdom, she anxiously asked me if she was the only one doing it because she doesn’t do well in reading. (sister Kate is only 6 and reading is just easy for her.) It broke my heart. I assured her that I especially chose the program for her to review because I thought she’d find it fun and Kate would have other activities.

Tori did get a little frustrated during the placement survey because she’s not that familiar with the keyboard.

The instructions say for the parent or teacher not to help the student, but I did direct her a bit with mouse use and location of keys on the keyboard so she didn’t just shut down and not try anymore.

Tori often completes two or more lessons each day. I get emailed a report of her progress. It’s been slow going since she didn’t do as well as I expected on the eval. But that also means she’s reviewing and will be able to move forward to greater success.

reading on computer


To ease anxiety and help her focus, I diffused brain power essential oil during her survey and lessons. She had a great attitude.

reading program

Tori was tickled by the graphics at the end of exercises and would holler what the different ones were to all of us. The bullseye is a favorite.

Alex and Kate were fascinated with the program. I didn’t request a login for either since Alex isn’t quite ready and Kate is way beyond most of it. But they cheered their sister on!

reading witnesses

Proof of the success.

I found Tori reading to Alex on several occasions.

siblings

On morning, they got up early and I found them on the sofa like this.

silbings

Yay for tutorials to succeed using an unfamiliar program. I adjusted the reaction time and that made it better. It was too slow and cumbersome at first. I do think they waste a lot of code and space though.

Students can use the on screen keyboard or the computer keyboard. We opted for the computer keyboard since that’s more natural.

Here are some screenshots:

Students have to click the keys on the keyboard in order to match the word.

Reading Kingdom screenshot photo readingkingdom4screenshot_zps4c5404a8.jpg

keyboard practice with top line letters

Reading Kingdom screenshot photo readingkingdom3screenshot_zpsc60cb6fc.jpg

letter recognition and discrimination

Reading Kingdom screenshot photo readingkingdom1screenshot_zps12d9dd06.jpg

We haven’t gotten this far in the program yet! I can’t wait!

Reading Kingdom screenshot photo readingkingdom2screenshot_zps523e6256.jpg

See all the great resources. Check out the store for books and supplementary materials.

Levels for preschool through 3rd grade.

Purchase info: $19.99/mo or $199.99 for an annual subscription.

Sign up for Reading Kingdom.

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Laura Ingalls Wilder DVD Review

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August 2, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I was so excited to share with my girls Little House on the Prairie: The Legacy of Laura Ingalls Wilder DVD biography by Dean Butler with Legacy Documentaries. Check out the Walnut Grove Store!

Under his Legacy Documentaries banner, Dean Butler has produced nearly 8 hours of DVD bonus content for the Little House on the Prairie series as well as two original documentaries, Almanzo Wilder: Life Before Laura and Little House on the Prairie: The Legacy of Laura Ingalls Wilder.

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I was quite obsessed with Little House on the Prairie as a girl. I dressed like Laura and wanted to be Laura. I love reading the books with my girls.

This documentary was perfect. I love that it was narrated by the actor who played Almanzo, Dean Butler.

I learned so much about Laura’s life that I never knew! I didn’t know much of anything about Laura’s relationship with her daughter, Rose, or her writing career. I didn’t know she began as a journalist! I didn’t realize the books were originally written as historical nonfiction.

Laura Ingalls Wilder

Of course, the TV show focused more on prairie life and relationships when Laura was a girl and young woman. This documentary focused on Laura’s writing and how she went from a little article about farm women to writing award-winning children’s historical fiction books.

I loved the interviews with experts such as history professors and biography authors. The theme of the documentary is success despite adversity. Such a lesson.

View a sample:

This is a must-have for anyone who loves Little House on the Prairie. It’s definitely for older kids and adults. My younger kids wandered away as Liz and I sat enraptured.

The Legacy of Laura Ingalls Wilder is $24.95.

Also, check out the companion DVD, Almanzo Wilder: Life Before Laura for $21.95

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Insects DVD Review

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July 31, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

We loved watching and reviewing Fascinating World of Insects by BrainFood Learning.

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I put this DVD in our van and we watched it while driving 4 kids to and from nature camp and the library this summer. {kinda hard to take pictures while driving around!}

We loved learning about these insects on the DVD: grasshopper, ladybug, rhino beetle, firefly, mosquito, honey bee, water strider, ant, praying mantis, dragonfly, and butterfly.

The video is very well-done to attract a wide audience. The cinematography is amazing. I love the slow-motion shots of the wings and close-ups of the mouths. My family was very interested and watched it over and over!

ant

Here’s a preview:


Each “chapter” tells about that bug and its special characteristics. The kids learned important vocabulary like antennae and elytra that were in bold orange on the screen so the kids would remember them. They soak up these facts like sponges!

I was fascinated to learn that fireflies (or lighting bugs) don’t light up west of Kansas. So that explains it! I sure miss em.

My kids loved it so much that they wanted to learn more and we picked up books at the library and did some research. It’s a great catalyst to an insects unit study! And the kids have been really noticing the insects outside more now – especially bees, ladybugs, ants, butterflies, dragonflies, and grasshoppers. We had an ant farm in the spring and this was a great addition to studying that. I really think this video helped my preschool son overcome his irrational fear of all bugs. He’s almost ok with them now and will inspect them from a distance while playing outside.

We’ve also been fascinated to read about insects in Christian Liberty Nature Readers. The girls (ages 6 and 7) are quick to tell me what the DVD says and they love the affirmation from the book!

At the end of the DVD, there are two levels of games and quizzes. I was tickled to hear Alex (age 3) answer all the flash card and quiz questions from his seat while driving around! He’s advanced. There are flash cards, and review of the insects, parts, facts, and vocabulary. Love that reinforcement. Check out the printable curriculum to go along with it. We found plenty of insect notebooking online too.

insects review

The Fascinating World of Insects is $14.99 and is appropriate for all ages. Also, check out the other two DVDs in the series: Birds and Mammals. I want em all!

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Global Art Review

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July 29, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

We really enjoyed reviewing Global Art: Activities, Projects, and Inventions from Around the World from Gryphon House.

We love this award-winning art book!

  • Benjamin Franklin Award
  • National Parenting Publications Award
  • Parent’s Guide to Children’s Media
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From the Publisher: An ideal way to start children on an exciting, creative adventure towards global understanding! The fun, easy-to-do art activities in Global Art use collage, painting, drawing, printing, construction and sculpture to help children appreciate people and cultures from all over the world. Each activity is explained in step-by-step detail an accompanied by geographic and cultural background to help you make the most of the teaching possibilities.

In Global Art, there are seven chapters that coincide with seven continents. I love how we can use this with our Montessori continent boxes! At the beginning of each chapter, there are suggested books and a little text about the continent. Great for unit studies.

global art review

I can also tie this in with our American history studies and literature! So many crafts to choose from! I’ve ordered beeswax…

Recommended for K-5. But I think it’s great for all ages. Many are simple enough for toddlers or preschoolers and it holds the interest for my almost high schooler. I enjoy the art too and often do the projects along with my kids.

There are icons for experience level (1-3 stars) and techniques, as well as numbers (1-3) for level of preparation. I tell ya, prep is often the hindering factor for art time!

I let the kids choose the crafts they wanted to make. They loved having that freedom without mom hovering and planning!

They chose to paint rocks. of course. They’d been begging to do this for weeks! perfect. This is a craft from Egypt.

This was a two-part project and it was so hard to be patient, waiting for that first layer of paint to dry!

Tori follows directions so well.

painting scarab stones

Katie is a little more free range.

painting stones

Alex was so super careful and did such a great job!

painting stone

He really enjoyed doing art with his sisters!

painting a stone

Alex used way too much paint, but he did follow directions and it looked like a beetle! Tori’s are perfect and Kate’s are definitely unique. Even big sister Liz wanted in on the action and painted a stone.

painted scarab stones

Liz helped Alex make a necklace out of a paper plate. Super simple and fun! This is a central African craft.

paper plate necklace craft

He did color with crayons, but he didn’t bear down very hard. I would recommend using markers and gluing jewels or sequins on it to look like a collar.

paper plate necklace

Buy Global Art for $16.95

I can’t wait to incorporate more of these art projects into our studies this year!

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Homeschool Programming Review

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July 22, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Liz and I reviewed KidCoder Web Series from Homeschool Programming.

I have a little web designer!

Homeschool Programming Review

Liz is 12 and the series is recommended for grades 4-12.

From the company: “Our KidCoder Series is geared for 4th-8th grade students who have an interest in computer programming. These courses are lighter, easier and are great for elementary and middle-school students.”

You know your kid’s abilities. There are other advanced options for high schoolers or kids with design experience.

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There are two books: beginning and advanced. 2 semesters. But Liz flew through the lessons in book 1 in a couple of days!

KidCoder: Beginning Web Design – First semester course (introduction to HTML and CSS)

Topics Covered in this Beginning Course:

  • Mark-up concepts
  • Website layouts and files
  • Backing up projects
  • Essential HTML symbols
  • Styling of text
  • Using symbols and lists
  • Internal and external hyperlinks
  • Navigation bars and footers
  • Simple CSS effects
  • Spacing and positioning
  • Graphics and image editing
  • Tables

KidCoder: Advanced Web Design – Second semester course (HTML5, CSS3, JavaScript)

Topics Covered in this Advanced Course:

  • Using Komodo Edit
  • HTML5
  • Presentation layers
  • Essential HTML symbols
  • Document Object Model (DOM)
  • Using borders
  • Introductory JavaScript
  • Cascading Style Sheets (CSS3)
  • jQuery
  • Animations and video
  • Using forms
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Instructional DVDs:

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Liz worked through 13 chapters in book 1. She’s more comfortable now with computers and I let her at it. She loved it. We didn’t even need the DVD’s. She just followed the eBook.

computer coding

So blessed to have a laptop and a desktop so she could read the eBook instructions or watch the DVDs and then do the lessons on the laptop. Worked great! No printing. {But then she figured out she could copy/paste the code and just used the laptop for the rest of the lessons.}

coding

Liz kept calling me over to look at all the little code changes she kept making.

learning to code

She loves the logic in coding. And played with tweaking it and learning what the littlest code changes could do.

learning coding

Cute! Liz was so excited to see that first code turn into this.

Kid Coder

After we set up Notepad to open correctly in a webpage and as text, she was good to go!

Liz got a little confused because some of the lessons showed different code examples than she had written. Below, it shows <div id=“navigation” and we’d never plugged that in during earlier lessons. We worried we had skipped steps. It worked on her page. I think it’s just showing that different words can be used in code to do similar functions.

Kid Coder screenshot

I helped Liz understand the difference between an ordered list and unordered list. And she saw it on screen (visual/kinesthetic learner):

Kid Coding

Liz really enjoyed playing with the fonts and colors – and I loved the CSS and Tables tutorials! Pretty soon, I’ll have my own personal VA! I’m excited for this aspect of Liz’s education.

I look forward to going through the advanced lessons with Liz and updating my sites and learning alongside her! Liz has a good eye and great ideas. She’s so creative! It’s a great beginner’s or refresher course in web design.

I’m very impressed with Homeschool Programming products and the easy to follow instructions. Liz and I are enjoying it immensely. We highly recommend it.

$70.00 KidCoder: Beginning Web Design (Course Only)

$85.00   KidCoder: Beginning Web Design (Course & Video)

$70.00   KidCoder: Advanced Web Design (Course Only) Coming in August!

$85.00   KidCoder: Advanced Web Design (Course & Video) Coming in August!

~Or get the year pack at a discount!~

$120.00   KidCoder: Web Year Pack – (Courses Only) Coming in August!

$145.00   KidCoder: Web Year Pack – (Courses & Videos) Coming in August!

Save $15 through July 31st, 2013, with the coupon code HSB4015.

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Filed Under: Schoolhouse Review Crew Tagged With: coding, review, technology

Prescripts Cursive Review

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July 6, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Tori and Kate are loving learning to write cursive!

These workbooks from Classical Conversations are perfect!

Logo photo classicalconversationslogo_zps461acbc8.jpg

We like the copywork and drawing in PreScripts Cursive Words and Drawing.

You can use these independent of a Classical Conversations co-op. And they also coincide with Cycle 2 Memory Work.

Introduces children to the building blocks of cursive writing: letters, then words, then simple sentences. This book focuses on lessons from Proverbs and the book of James as well as drawing lessons using basic shapes.

I love the Bible verses that this book focuses on. It’s good practice for us and we do it every morning as part of our Bible lessons.

Words and Drawing photo classicalconversationswordsanddrawing_zpsc37d2110.gif

There are three parts:

  1. Letters, Words, and Scriptures
  2. Writing Numbers in Cursive
  3. Tricky Letter Combinations in the First Chapter of James

Tori traces the A page with the Bible verse. We love the reinforcement of the copywork and memory work.

cursive copywork
The first couple pages are the alphabet. It’s a good reference.

cursive letter copywork

Kate traces the D page. The girls learned that some letters are easier than others!

cursive letter tracing

Here is a completed B page. I went back with the girls and had them practice the letters and words in between the tracing and that really helped.

cursive review

We really like the little drawing pages that progress from lines, angles, curves, squiggles to boats, spiders, turtles, patterns, symmetry (mirror). It’s just extra fun and fine motor practice.

free angle drawing

According to the intro pages, they utilize methods from and recommend Drawing With Children by Mona Brookes.

PreScripts Cursive Words and Drawing is $12.99.

Recommended for ages 5-10.

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{I did purchase an extra workbook since I have two daughters on the same learning level.}

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