Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Trident Cyclops iPhone Case Review

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May 19, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert

My husband and I reviewed the Trident Case  for iPhone 5 or iPhone 5S (Cyclops Case).

Trident Case Review
It’s PINK!

Here’s what green looks like:

Trident Case Review
My husband was SO GRACIOUS to put this case on his phone for a few weeks and test it out. I still have the iPhone 4, but we’re getting new phones as soon as we arrive in Germany and this will be my new case.

I am so excited.

I do love Trident cases. We have these cases on all our devices and I am very pleased. Lots of great color choices and amazing protection. I don’t have to worry about the devices getting maimed or broken if they fall or are dropped with their Trident cases on!

We have these: AEGIS CASE FOR APPLE IPAD  and KRAKEN A.M.S. CASE FOR APPLE IPAD MINI 1/2
all the devices

Aaron likes the protection this case offers. He was so sweet to review it for me and loved showing off his pink phone!

pink phone case

Aaron liked this case and wants to upgrade his own case now that he can have any color (the Air Force changed their regs – they used to allow only black phones). It’s very sturdy and offers solid protection. He dropped it on the sidewalk and it was fine. It didn’t even show a mark on the corner of the case. The screen protector keeps the screen free from fingerprints, scratches, dust, and cat hair. It’s still just as as sensitive as it needs to be to get work done. Aaron uses his phone all day every day – for personal and work.

Aaron did mention the port covers are difficult to access for big fingers. But they offer great protection and keep them dust-free when not being used. Headphones and chargers fit well and operate as they should.

I love the little label that says Military Tested (for Drop, Vibration, Dust, Sand and Rain):

  • Drop (Mil-STD-810F, Method 516.5) – 26 drops onto concrete from 4ft.
  • Vibration (Mil-STD-810F, Method 514.5) from 20-2000Hz across 3 different axes for a total of 18 hours.
  • Dust (Mil-STD-810F, Method 510.4) – blow dust for 3 hours at 29 ft / sec.
  • Sand (Mil-STD-810F, Method 510.4) – blow sand for 3 hours at 59 ft / sec.
  • Rain (Mil-STD-810F, Method 506.4) – 7.9 inches per hour of rain at 40 mph wind velocity for 1 hour.

’Cuz I have 4 kids and 2 cats. ’nuff said. I need this level of protection, y’all.

I love the double level protection – especially the built-in screen protector! The Thermo Plastic Elastomer (TPE) and polycarbonate cover and corners keep it safe under most conditions.

Trident covers are the best I’ve ever used. I love how they keep dust out. I’ve never had a case that did a better job keeping out dust. With 6 feisty people in our family, these cases are time-tested and get the job done by protecting our devices well. They’re eco-friendly and offers the most protection of any case I’ve ever seen.

I love, love, love Trident cases. They are at the top of my list when friends and readers ask about child-friendly device cases. I always recommend Trident since all of our devices have been well-protected for years.

They are listed in my Top Ten Homeschool Items! (I’m still using it in 2017!)

The Cylcops iPhone 5 case comes in all these colors: black, blue, gray, red, pink, and white. Price is $39.95.
The Kraken AMS case for iPad mini comes in pink, red, green, and blue. Price is $59.95.

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All About Reading Review

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May 15, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

It was an absolute answer to prayer to be able to review All About Reading Level 1 with my son.

We’d gotten halfway through pre-level 1 and he was getting bored and ornery. I remember the girls going through this limbo stage. He was frustrated with me and wanted to learn more! He wanted to be able to read.

My son was thrilled to participate in this reading review.

He was enthralled with our first lesson. He’s an active boy and likes to touch the letter tiles and make words and cut and paste and play with the paper games in the workbook. 

This learn-to-read program is perfect for a tactile, kinesthetic learner.

Ziggy the puppet helps with our phonogram cards and sight words. He loves this zebra puppet, and it helps with attentiveness.

We both love the ease of the phonogram app, and he touches the phonograms each day for our lesson, and then we practice saying them aloud.

The program teaches:

  • Phonological Awareness
  • Decoding (Phonics and Structural Awareness)
  • Vocabulary
  • Fluency

I love the comprehensive reading curriculum that teaches all the basics of reading that I am certainly not qualified to do. My son knows his letter sounds. Now he’s learning how to put those sounds together to make words. I love that this is laid out for me in the program. Each lesson focuses on 1-3 phonograms, and we play with the letter tiles on the board, making new words together and sounding them out.

Flashcards help reinforce learning, and then the activity page and easy readers drive it home further. He isn’t near fluent yet and got rather frustrated with the reviews that expect him to read an entire page of phrases. We did some together, but mostly I didn’t want him to feel discouraged and we skipped them.

I love that he’s excited and begs to do his school. Every day. Anything that instills a love of learning is A-OK in my book. The vowels have hand motions to help memory. He thought they were a bit silly, but he did them.

My son loves the cutting and pasting activities. He’s getting better at sounding out the words and understanding rhymes.

He’s not interested in writing, tracing, or coloring, so there is no stress! We like to do Montessori style learning and active learning. Of course, he loves to get a sticker at the end of each lesson! Who doesn’t?!

We love the stories in the easy reader and he repeats each word I point to after I read it to him. He’s trying to sound out the words, and I am so proud!

  The story “The Hot Rod” needed props:

We are thoroughly enjoying All About Reading Level 1. I love the ease of the lessons, with little teacher preparation, and how it holds his attention so well. Most lessons only take a few minutes, with the longest being about half an hour. Perfect for a little guy who has to move. I love seeing his progress and when he sounds out words for his dad, my heart swells with pride that he’s learning so well and is enjoying it so much.

All About Reading Level 1 Materials:

All About Reading
  • Teacher’s Manual
  • Activity Book
  • 3 Readers
  • Also needed: Reading Interactive Kit

There’s a placement test on the site to find out which level is right for your child.

All About Reading: Pre-reading, Levels 1, 2, 3, and 4.

All About Reading

Have you tried All About Reading or All About Spelling?

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Golden Prairie Press Review

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May 12, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

The kids and I reviewed Digital Heroes & Heroines of the Past: American History Curriculum by Golden Prairie Press.

Golden Prairie Press Review
 

We enjoyed the books and audio files with this excellent classical/Charlotte Mason homeschool history curriculum.

 
Golden Prairie Press Review

We focused on Book 2 with The Civil War since that’s an extension of the studies we’ve been working on.

I LOVE the format of the reading. I LOVE the age and ability divisions for the reading. I opted for the longer readings and read aloud to all four of my children each morning.

Many of the reading assignments were divided into two sections: 1-3 grades and 4-6 grades. I just read the selections for older kids each day to my 4 kids. They had more detail and repeated the selections for the younger kids and there was no confusion. My kids are 4, 7, 8, and 13 – and the reading was just fine for all, not too difficult but interesting enough.

I LOVE the end of each lesson with all the fun activities – from songs and skits to writing and mapwork. We narrated orally and did some notebooking and drawing. Our printer is in storage while we’re moving and so we just used drawing paper instead of our typical printed and formatted notebooking pages.

My kids delighted in the American folk song musical selections and danced around the room and begged for more! It was the best part of our morning.

Dancing to American Folk Songs

They discovered a fun “stage” in the yard of our TLF (base hotel) under a couple humongous evergreen trees like a big umbrella – and they performed the little skits in the additional materials file for each other and for me. It was darling.

Doing is learning.

This program is perfect for multiple learning styles – kinesthetic, visual, auditory, and anything in between. All of my kids enjoyed this curriculum and learned so much.

Each lesson has a variety of fun activities to choose from – like recipes, songs, writing assignments, timeline work, art study, map work and geography, Bible memory verse, listening to historical documents, experiments, and more!

It’s a classical and Charlotte Mason schooler’s dream.

Civil War Lesson Collage

We spent about ten days in TLF and then went on a weeklong road trip from Salt Lake City to Atlanta. We had to adapt our schooling while cramped in a car!

We read a chapter in the car each morning of our roadtrip. We discussed the readings and review questions and the kids narrated. We listened to the songs and studied the images. All the kids and I practiced our memory verses and looked up the maps and timeline events on our iPads. Even Dad enjoyed listening to the read alouds while he was driving.

Included in the Digital Heroes & Heroines of the Past: American History Curriculum:

  • Heroes and Heroines of the Past: American History Part 1 –
    Lessons for the first half of the year. View the Contents and Introduction. View a sample.
  • Heroes and Heroines of the Past: American History Part 2 –
    Lessons for the second half of the year.
  • Historical Skits View the table of contents and sample pages.
  • Sing Some History Listen to a sample.
  • Listen to Some U.S. History MP3 Listen to a sample.

Literature Books (optional and sold separately for $59.99)

  • Ten Great Adventurers by Kate Dickinson Sweetser, edited by Amy Puetz
  • Ten Girls from History by Kate Dickinson Sweetser, edited by Amy Puetz
  • Heroines of the Past: Bible Study by Amy Puetz
  • Two Little Americans in Spanish California by Frances Margaret Fox
  • Jack and Jill by Louisa May Alcott

Coloring Book: Heroes and Heroines of the Past: American History Coloring Book (optional and sold separately for $9.99)

Digital Heroes & Heroines of the Past: American History Curriculum is $98.99 and recommended for grades 1-6 or even older kids.

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Brinkman Adventures Review

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April 28, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

The kids and I reviewed The Brinkman Adventures Season 2: Episodes 13-24 by Brinkman Adventures.

Run-ins with pirates, Chinese close-calls with the Communist government, French castles, and other fascinating adventures are experienced with this missionary family and their friends.

The little kids tolerated listening to these ok. Liz did not like it at all. And she’s my only aural learner! I think it may be difficult for her to follow the different narration and storylines with her ADHD.

We’ve never had great success with audiobooks or radio shows of any kind.

Brinkman Adventures Review

I think the stories in The Brinkman Adventures are good, well-done audio shows. The actors’ enunciation is great and easy to understand. But I can see why Liz doesn’t care for it. It does sound a bit affected and exaggerated. She said it just sounds like they’re reading a script. I suppose they are, and it’s a bit stilted for her tastes.

The plotlines are great lessons. Musical transitions help us to understand flashbacks or changes in narration. Little ads midway through the stories help break up the “action” and provide other transition. There are stories within the main story – from real missionaries’ experiences.

Little Hope is adorable. Her lines and sweet voice make us giggle.

The main male narrator is more the faithful one who prays and trusts God. Another man is the voice of doubt. The woman provides dialogue, questions, and furthers the narration along. The kids help the family and listeners explore characters’ motives and historical facts. There’s a call to action and summary of the moral at the end of each episode.

And we looked forward to mentions and appearances of Ripcord the Rooster.

We did especially like Episode 14 – Blue Hat & T-Shirt Bible – about Chinese Christians. It was most interesting to us. I love the story behind it.

We were all fascinated by the Chinese pictographs representing Christian symbols.

And, of course the kids wanted to know the symbolism behind the “blue hat lady.” Of course, it’s part of the Communist uniform but they wanted more.

I did some research and found these great symbols and explanations of blue hats:

  • The Chinese called Muslims, Jews, and Christians in ancient times by the same name, “Hui Hui.” Christians were called “Hui who abstain from animals without the cloven foot,” Muslims were called “Hui who abstain from pork,” Jews were called “Hui who extract the sinews.” Hui zi or Hui Hui is presently used almost exclusively for Muslims, but Jews were still called Lan mao Hui zi which means “Blue cap Hui zi.“
  • In A Tale of Two Cities by Dickens, the blue cap worn by the mender of roads represents pre-revolutionary France.
  • China’s State Food and Drug Administration (SFDA). This registration is referred to in English as a “blue hat” because the registration logo visually resembles a blue hat. From China dietary supplement info.
  • Blue Hat is a term used to refer to outside computer security consulting firms that are employed to bug test a system prior to its launch. Hacker security.
  • The blue hat tends to be the outward-looking, leader or trail-blazing hat that attracts the leaders of all groups. Metacognition. From Edward de Bono leadership.

I know we’re in the minority of not absolutely loving Brinkman Adventures. All my friends were shocked when I mentioned we weren’t especially enjoying it. We don’t really like audio books.

I had hoped my kids would enjoy listening to these audios since we put our TV in storage and have limited Internet access as we travel across America.

They balked every time I mentioned listening to an episode. It was hard for them to sit still and quiet and listen.

Kate enjoyed listening the most. She asked for more, to just have a listening marathon. She loves drawing and listening.

Listening to The Brinkman Adventures

Audiobooks and radio shows have never been at the top of my kids’ wishlists and they just don’t hold their interest for long. I’m not that great for it either. We’d rather read I guess. Tori, Alex, and I aren’t aural learners.

I was able to discuss the plots and character lessons with my daughters. They  more obeyed me than enjoyed the time listening. The lessons in the stories are really great, even if the presentation was a bit boring for my kids.

In our conversations, the girls and I used the audio as a starting point to:

  • Focus on the missionary aspect of the stories
  • Discuss how a family can serve together
  • Review good character lessons

The Brinkman Adventures is great for kids to listen to if they feel destined for missionary work or want to learn more about it. I found it interesting that the stories are based on real events with this real missionary family.

I enjoyed reading the background info behind the adventures.

 
Brinkman Adventures Season 2

12 Episodes – 5+ Hours!

  • 4CDs -$25.00
  • MP3 Download – $17.00

Recommended for all ages. Great for background listening while working on seat work, coloring or drawing, completing chores, or during mealtime.

Follow The Brinkman Adventures on Facebook!

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The Wise Woman Review

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April 21, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

just have to say, of all the Home School Adventure Co. products we’ve reviewed, The Wise Woman with Literary Analysis Journal Questions is blessing us the most.

We throughly enjoyed The Wise Woman Review.

We were expected to cover at least one chapter per week during the review period. We covered a chapter a day! We really enjoyed the text and Q&A and discussion time together. It was great mother-daughter bonding.

The text of The Wise Woman is by George MacDonald, a Christian minister, author, and poet (1824-1905). We love the story of a lost princess and only stumbled over a few sentences with difficult syntax. It was delightful and hard to put down to do other work. We read a chapter each day and completed the questions together. It didn’t even feel like work!

I used my comb binder and printed off the books to make things easier for us. The pdf is editable, so students can type their answers right in the file if they choose.

comb binding

Fourteen chapters with 16-24 literary analysis questions after each – and vocabulary pages for language review make this study quite comprehensive.

Who says developing critical thinking skills requires dry and somber study?

Liz sees herself in this too much, to her chagrin. I love it. And she’s really really thinking and learning lots about herself. Thanks, Stacy!

For a question chapter 11, number 7:

If Rosamund made The Shepherdess miserable, why did she cry when she sent her away?

Liz answered: “The Shepherdess cried because she was a bad mother.”

I asked: “So, does that make me a failure as a mother?”

Then Liz stammered and stuttered and realized she had made some progress herself, but still had a long way to go for heart change, similar to Agnes and Rosamund showing external change but internal was more difficult to grasp. Liz quickly backed up and assured me that I am a good mother, unlike the Queen or Shepherdess, who were too indulgent. She told me that I do try to teach and train her and her siblings, and she admitted she doesn’t always listen or try hard enough to learn or obey.

It was an awesome mama moment.

I have been so pleased to see Liz mature over the course of going through this study with me. She was sullen and disagreeable in the beginning and saw herself in the two characters immediately, much to her horror. She has shown great improvement in her behavior and attitude lately and I am so, so happy to see it.

She’s a natural leader and reading this text and doing the analysis together really helped us work through some heart issues and prune our thoughts and attitudes.

Photographer

I love literary lessons. This is a perfect lesson for readers!

We were sad when it ended. And I love the ending, but I won’t tell!

$28.95 for print and $14.95 for Ebook Download (Additional shipping charge for international orders.)

For read aloud and discussion as a family: ages 9-11. For ages 12 and up, also great for family discussion and/or parental/teacher guidance. High schoolers can do this on their own. 

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Agnitus Review and Giveaway

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April 11, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Excited to review Agnitus and offer one reader a year subscription for free!

Agnitus is a learning program for children, ages 2-6, with over 60 games and interactive books, each one progressing at a child’s individual pace.

We love appschooling and this app learning program looks like a great addition for Alex. We’re roadtripping it in a couple weeks and I need something fun and new for him to stay occupied it the car on those long drives.

What is Agnitus?

A learning program for children, ages 2-6, with over 60 games & interactive books, each one progressing at a child’s individual pace.

With over 60 + phonics, math, and language art skills, the program progresses at every individual child’s pace so that each child has a custom learning experience based on his or her current skill level and learning pace. The most powerful part of the program is the data and real-time progress monitoring which allows parents to monitor their child’s performance, current accomplishments, and areas of struggle.

The innovative products combine leading research and technology into curriculum-based, fun learning games. Your child will experience and master a broad variety of skills: recognizing colors and shapes, basic counting and sorting, and peekaboo matching adventures with animals and letters!

Here’s a screenshot of the curriculum map:

Agnitus Interactive Books brings children’s stories to life by transforming classic tales into interactive, learning experiences. In our first release, children can sing along to beautifully animated Mother Goose classics as they build the confidence and vocabulary needed for independent reading.

What Alex and I Think of Agnitus

Alex and I both love that the games are fast-paced and there’s lots of variety!

Agnitus on the iPad mini

After I set up his account, Alex immediately started playing and the game went from color naming, counting shapes, to food where he slurped up drinks and giggled while placing numbers in order.

He loves the plethora of options to choose from.

Of course he found cars. He liked matching games with animals too.

Many of the game really help with fine motor skills.

He even liked the books. The narrators are great.

This is a hit, y’all.

We’ve tried many, many apps and some are just annoying. The sound effects are perfect for Alex and not annoying for Mama! Many apps offer nothing really educational. Others are too challenging and offer little fun.

This seems just the right mix.

After he played for half an hour, Alex looked up at me: “Thank you, Mama, for getting these games for me!”

Check out Agnitus – Click Here!

This post was created in partnership with eAccountable. All opinions are my own.

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Victus Study Skills System Review

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April 7, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Liz and I reviewed the Study Skill System from  Victus Study Skills System. We received both aStudent Workbook and Teacher Edition.

“Victus” means “way of life” in Latin. Kinda stole my heart right there. It’s been a theme lately to make sure everything aligns with our goals and fits our worldview. I like themes.

The V3S teaches 4 concepts:

  1. Zeal with knowledge bears fruit.
  2. Results come from the process.
  3. Any system must have a purpose.
  4. An effective system of study has the greatest likelihood of aiding in success.

The Course Aim:

  • Foundational Cornerstone One: Where am I now?
  • Foundational Cornerstone Two: Where do I want to be?
  • Foundational Cornerstone Three: How do I get there?

Ten lessons (#10 is review) and appendices with flashcards, charts, and extra planning pages teach these core concepts in a way students understand. The website claims five hours for completion. I didn’t log our time, but it didn’t take us long to discuss and complete the exercises. They recommend one or two weeks to complete the lessons. This is not specifically designed for just homeschoolers and some of the script needed to be adapted for our use since we are homeschoolers.

While my daughter scoffed at most of the lessons and made fun of a lot of it, the teachings are sound and align with how we run our family and homeschool. It helped open up conversation about goal-setting and planning by working backwards to know what you must do to read a goal. Listening and reading skills are always great to review.

The lessons themselves were mostly too basic for my daughter, but they were a good review and reinforced what she’s learned from other similar lessons and what they teach in leadership course with Civil Air Patrol. I love that my daughter is surrounded by similar concepts from multiple sources. It helps to hear it and see it, repeatedly, from many different people!

The program is similar information we’ve heard before, but it’s packaged well and in an easy to understand manner. It’s always good to review study skills and note-taking concepts. It helped Liz be metacognitive about learning and paying attention to her Civil Air Patrol commanders and teachers. It sparked some good conversation with me about notes, testing, studying, and leadership.

We can always tweak scheduling and the program offers samples and pages to design a schedule. This helps Liz to possess her own schedule instead of relying on me. If she has a hand in time management and scheduling her lessons and activities, she will be more successful than if I did it for her. She’s getting older now and needs to be more responsible.

I like any program that reinforces what she’s learning in other areas of her education.

The teacher edition has scripts and answers to coincide with the student workbook. I didn’t think the teacher’s manual was all that necessary and it just gave me a summary. I read it aloud to my daughter and helped her fill in the blanks in her workbook. Not sure if that is what I was meant to do with it.
 
We both especially liked the Preview, Question, Read, Self-recite, and Test (PQRST) metacognive reading and learning lesson. They saved the best for last.
 
 
The student edition has fill in the blank pages, examples of schedules, goal-planning info, and samples for note-taking. Also, review and tests at the end of the program. Pages in the appendix include extra planning pages and flashcards.
Victus Study Skills Review
 
 
Teacher Edition: $40
Student Edition: $20

The books are most appropriate for 5th to 12th graders.

Additional products to accompany the Victus Study Skills System:

  • The Student DIY Edition Workbook                                       $25.00
  • Teacher Edition PowerPoint Presentation                           $25.00
  • Classroom Video (DVD)                                                                $30.00
  • Creating & Implementing a Personal Strategic Plan         $5.00

You can find Victus Study Skills System-
Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/VictusStudySkillsSystem
Twitter: @VictusStudy

My daughter is 13 and was able to complete most of it, but needed help with some of the life skills and experiences she wasn’t familiar with.

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Spring Pastel Art

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April 3, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

I love these pastel art books. This is not a review. I bought the whole collection because they’re so well-done and easy for my kids to complete with very little help. They love making pastel drawings!

A Seasonal Start in Spring Chalk Pastels

We drew the field of flowers and learned about perspective.

Alex drew straight lines. He did amazingly well following directions.

drawing straight lines

Tori layers greens for her field.

drawing a field

Kate blends her three greens for the field.

Spring pastel art with Hodgepodge

Tori blends the sky.

skumbling a sky

The kids found a bird’s nest and – perfect timing! We have art and science.

found bird's nest

The kids watched the tutorial through and we plan to complete our drawings next week.

watching the birds nest tutorial

The kids and I love the tutorials in these pastel art books:

Chalk Pastels Through the Seasons
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Linking up: The Life of Jennifer Dawn, We Made That, Crystal and Co, Craft Moms Share, Teach Beside Me, Enchanted Homeschool Mom

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Science DVDs Review

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March 26, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

The kids and I reviewed two Science DVDs from Master Books of New Leaf Publishing Group:

Explore Glacier National Park with Noah Justice and Explore Rocky Mountain National Park with Noah Justice

I couldn’t finish even one of the DVDs. The kids watched both. My younger kids liked them ok. My teen, Liz, really couldn’t stand the narration and I don’t blame her.

It’d be ok if I didn’t have to see him. He enunciates well, but his stilted arm movements and head shakes were so distracting.

The science and geohistory is accurate, complete, and educational. The kids liked the biblical basis in a DVD. They’re too used to other shows with different worldviews that this was refreshing. The imagery and drawings added to their understanding of geological phenomena. They loved the Bible references to The Flood and how it affected the mountains. It reinforced what we’ve been learning in science. And since we live in the Rocky Mountains and visited Yellowstone last fall, we are familiar with the areas mentioned in these DVDs.

And I’m not saying the narrator isn’t smart. I don’t want to insult him. He’s a teen and he’s doing well, but I would prefer to see the nature and not so much the narrator. He could do voice-overs and I’d be happier.

DVDs are $10.00 each at New Leaf Publishing

Check out Moms of Master Books on Facebook for their parties!

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Mango Homeschool Review

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March 14, 2014 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

Our family reviewed Mango Homeschool Edition with Mango Languages.

This is the Beta format right now and we’re happy to work with something new and help them develop an amazing product to market to homeschoolers everywhere! We didn’t experience any real glitches and my kids loves the lessons, learning simple conversations in other languages.

We’ve used Mango for free from our local county public library before, so I wondered what the big deal was with a homeschool version. Public libraries usually only have one level of maybe a dozen languages while Mango Homeschool Edition has all levels and all languages (60 to choose from!) and community features like a forum.

My kids were excited to explore and try out a few different languages.

Tori chose to learn a few lessons of Hawaiian. Kate and I looked at Mandarin Chinese and really, really loved it.

Learning Language Together

Liz and Dad did a few lessons of Arabic.

Learning Arabic Together

Then we studiously practiced the German since we’re moving there in a couple months!

Mango Homeschool Edition

Once you login, the course directory lets you choose a language and join that space:

Once you join a space, you have to verify that you do indeed want to login for the lessons:

The lessons jump right in with conversations:

I was not interested in the Club or forum or having my kids use any chat features so I monitored their lessons closely. This might be fine for older students, but not my wee ones. It just wasn’t necessary. I understand they have excellent security in place to keep this a safe environment.

There are not restrictions on the number of languages a student can learn or be part of at any one time. This is great since we each joined about 5 or 6 and practiced each several times a week.

What I love:

  • Simple conversational lessons with pronunciation and ability to scroll over the words and phrases to see phonetics (good for visual learners)
  • Doesn’t take much time to complete a lesson
  • cultural notes about language and dialects and colloquialisms (a particular term for girl in Mandarin is not a nice word to say in some provinces of China)
  • self-paced. My kids and I could do 1 lesson and walk away or sit and knock out 3-4 lessons. They made it a competition.

What I don’t care for (but I’m sure they’ll improve this soon!):

  • the narrator was annoying at times. I still don’t understand some of her phrasing (“without sounding inappropriate” “isn’t this easy?”). Just keep it simple and don’t make me feel like an idiot if I don’t think it’s easy.
  • chat and forum accessible to my young children (we just wouldn’t ever use this)
  • too much review for advanced language learners. I wanted to see what was ahead. I tested into chapter 2 of German and skipped over lots more of it and drove my husband nuts making the narrator sound like I was channel surfing over her.
  • only very basic conversational and vacation language so far in our lessons (we’re moving to Germany, so we want to learn more in-depth info right now)
  • no printables or real assessment in the system (apparently, they have plans for this). For the price, I want a more comprehensive program with etymology, vocabulary lists, writing, history, and culture that I can print out and use
  • I have to monitor progress and listen in on lessons to check how they’re going. There was no way to assess without asking or listening. My daughters figured out how to use the microphone to test pronunciation, but it doesn’t record for assessment by a teacher.
  • I just can’t imagine that this could count for any high school credit since it’s just not comprehensive enough for me to consider the few journeys offered as 2 years’ worth of foreign language study

Here is the info for German:

Journey 1

  • Greetings, Gratitude, Goodbyes
  • Inquiring About Someone’s Nationality
  • Asking What Languages Someone Speaks
  • Names and Introductions
  • Getting Around
  • Shopping and Payment
  • Drinks and Dining
  • Numbers and Currency
  • Getting Help
  • Asking for Clarification

Journey 2

  • Addressing and Describing People and Animals
  • Describing Surroundings
  • Making Small Talk
  • Accepting and Declining Social Invitations
  • Dating
  • Foods, Cooking and Dining
  • Commenting on the Weather
  • Using the Bank and Post Office
  • Planning leisure activities
  • Sightseeing

Journey 3

  • Culture, Literature and Art
  • Discussing Historical Events
  • Addressing Medical Conditions
  • Expressing Thoughts and Feelings
  • Discussing Schools and Education
  • Names and Their Origins
  • Talking About Food and Dietary Habits
  • Physical Descriptions
  • Making Plans
  • Sports and Exercise

Course guides in pdf format are available.

What is currently available on the site:
Over 60 different languages
Progress Assessments
Built-in journals, discussions, and wikis
Collaborative learning spaces
eNote messaging
/chat rooms
Access to embedded/downloadable content
Support from other community members
Calendars to schedule meetings or study groups
Over the next several months, we’ll be introducing other exciting features like:
Enhanced Tracking and Progress Monitoring – including seat time (for students and parents)
Goals and Personal Lesson Plans (both stand-alone and tied into Mango courses)
Resume and Portfolio Builder

The program is intended for ages 6 through adult. My youngest daughter, Kate, is almost seven and she navigated through this easily on her own.

Introductory pricing for Mango Homeschool:
1 subscription is $18/month or $125/year total
2 subscriptions is $28/month or $175 /year total
3 subscriptions is $38/month or $225/year total
4 subscriptions is $48/month or $275/year total
5 subscriptions is $58/month or $325/year total

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