Showing posts with label Elementary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elementary. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

Little Passports Space Quest Subscription Box



My kids got their first Little Passports subscription boxes TEN YEARS AGO! My then-10-year-old son got the United States box and it came with a disposable camera, a file pouch, a scratch book, a map, a passport, etc. My then-5-year-old daughter wanted to try it, too, so I got her one and it arrived quickly. The one she got was more of a world traveler box but had the same characters, Sam and Sophia. Hers had a map, a passport, a photo, and a booklet, all in a medium-sized cardboard suitcase. And, yes, then my youngest wanted his own suitcase of goodies. 

And they still have their little suitcases full of crafts, trinkets, maps, information, coins, and more. 

Little Passports is an award-winning subscription box service that ignites curiosity and celebrates cultures with globally inspired experiences, hands-on art and science activities, and stories for kids ages 3-10. And these days they have tons of different options, like the Little Passports Space Quest Subscription, which I plan to sign up for when I teach Astronomy to elementary-age kids at one of the homeschool co-ops!

Can't wait to launch a space adventure with cosmic activity kits, stories, and out-of-this-world posters!

Friday, June 11, 2021

Table of Contents: What Your First Grader Needs to Know

 

Never fear! I will be typing this up soon so you can grab it and print it out from Google Docs, just like I did with the Home Learning Year by Year benchmarks!


Thursday, April 1, 2021

Junior Great Books Table of Contents and Overlap in Stories


We discovered Junior Great Books when my daughter Callie took a homeschool co-op course around 5th grade. Now I'm in love with them and try to buy up all of them. Some of them we consume and are not in love with, so we pass them on. Some we save and I hope to teach my own Junior Great Books class at the co-op someday :-) Here you can find the Table of Contents for the books we have read:

Series 2, First Semester (1992) (selling in upcoming homeschool used book sale)

The Happy Lion by Louise Fatio

The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin by Beatrix Potter

How the Camel Got His Hump by Rudyard Kipling

Kanga and Baby Roo Come to the Forest, and Piglet Has a Bath by A.A. Milne

Arap Sang and the Cranes (African folktale as told by Humphrey Harman)

Blue Moose by Daniel Manus Pinkwater

Friday, March 5, 2021

Current Read-Alouds and Independent Reading Winter 2021

Welcome to the Winter 2021 edition of Current Read-Alouds. If you're not familiar with Read-Aloud Revival or Pam Barnhill (morning basket) or Brave Writer, simply click on the links 😉 I also read to the kids from our Afternoon Basket (because we can't all get going early enough to call it a Morning Basket 😂), which currently includes Story of the World Volume 1, The Gift of the Magi (oh, the vocab words!), and Reading 7 for Young Catholics, among a few other things, like this one:



Scroll down to find out who is hearing which book!

Sunday, January 31, 2021

Kindergarten Benchmarks (Scope and Sequence)



So I've typed up in Excel all the Kindergarten benchmarks from the book by Rebecca Rupp called "Home Learning Year by Year". Benchmarks are things a typical kindergartener "needs to know." But you be the judge of that.

Saturday, March 14, 2020

Homeschooling during Coronavirus? Help for the Non-Homeschooler!

Worried about working from home or just being home for weeks on end (akin to summer break) WHILE educating them? I've been doing it for almost 19 years and, yeah, it's a lot to handle!

Thankfully, Rage Against the Minivan has help for you in the form of this awesome blog post and checklist called COVID-19 School Closure Homeschool Checklist!

When it was shared on Facebook, there were some rude comments, like "good luck with that" and "don't be disappointed when it doesn't work out," but I chose the high road of encouragement:

"I homeschool 5 kids ages 10-18 and have from the beginning. This is a great schedule! I think the 2-page paper is a lot for some kids, but the rest seems reasonable to me! You go, girl! Plus for a lot of kids who are in school 7 hours a day plus homework, this is going to be a walk in the park but they will still be learning!"

You can also check out my article titled Bust Indoor Boredom over here at Calgary's Child if you need more ideas for how to keep kids occupied while home!

And if things get too stressful during this already-crazy time, just toss it all out the window and PLAY, watch movies and documentaries, read to your kids (check out Read-Aloud Revival), bake together, snuggle up and eat popcorn. Have fun!




Or your life right now might more closely resemble this every now and then (shrug):


Thursday, November 21, 2019

#Time4Learning First Grade Demo Language Arts #Homeschooling



If you like what you see, please use my referral code to sign up and come back here to tell me how much your kids love this program! (originally posted April 24, 2016)

Update: 11/22/19 just signed up my high schoolers again because I am in love with the English program!

Thursday, August 29, 2019

Education.com and Teaching States


I've really been enjoying Education.com! I got the annual subscription pro edition for just $47.95 (you can also do a monthly subscription). It's great for kids preschool through 5th grade. Yes, I'm close to aging out of that teaching range, but I still teach at our local homeschool co-op, and this site has such great resources that it's entirely worth it to keep it going for the wonderful and fun teaching resources!

I was super excited to receive my lemon ice cardstock today from Amazon (one-day delivery!) so I could start copying the Education.com state postcards onto it for our classes which start next week. The kids are going to love coloring their postcards and writing on the back of them! I'll figure out a way to organize them after I cut them out, probably writing somewhere on the postcard a number for each card so they can put them in order of when each became a state.

Kids can also do activities and play games on the site in addition to the zillions of great resources you can print out for teaching/helping them learn!

Here's my review of Education.com from April 15, 2013. Hard to believe I have been using this site for over 6 years!

Enjoy!

Monday, August 19, 2019

First Day of School Signs

I love the first day of school pictures on Facebook! Why not also for homeschooling?

Here is one of ours from 2018-2019. You can't really see what the signs say so I plan to do more of a close-up this year, but I love how they are all together and by the pool, no less, on the first day of official homeshooling! They were first day of 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, and 11th.


Here's how to get the free printables.

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

7 Things I'm Doing This Year to Make My Homeschooling Work Better with 5 Kids 2018-2019

I'm that slacker homeschool mom. The one who takes a half day off no problem, convinced that it will just be one half day and no more. Then it turns into another and another and soon we're like, "Uh, why don't we know cursive handwriting and multiplication tables?"

So after 11 full years of homeschooling, I'm learning. We are all settled in our new home in the country and we have a lovely little routine that won't likely be broken up by fixing up a house, moving, vacationing, a new baby, etc. It appears to be a smooth-sailing year up ahead. (yes, I know ... the best-laid plans!!!!)

1. Six weeks on, then a break
Teaching for 6 weeks at a time then taking a 1-week break. We'll still get a Christmas break, of course, and one of our 1-week breaks will count as Spring Break. We'll need to go until the end of June, but then we get 8 full weeks off after that (July and August).

2. Teach more than one at a time
Combining them. Brave Writer Help for High School will be done this year with both Michael and Joel (freshman and junior). They'll learn the material together as I read it to them so I make sure I know what's going on as well. They'll write papers and assignments at the same pace.

3. Make them accountable and independent
Emailing links for the week to the high schoolers with videos I want them to watch (e.g., Crash Course Biology, Crash Course History, cool documentaries on Amazon Prime, Netflix or Hulu, etc.) Copying their workbook pages for Easy Grammar and giving them the entire week's worth at once so they can do it all Monday or do it all Friday or throughout the week, working at their own pace and being able to deal with other things they have going on at the same time. I think learning how to manage their course load is important. For the younger kids, letting them know which pages need to be done by Friday in Explode the Code (such a fun workbook series for Language Arts).

4. Make things special
Making things special more often, like we planned to do last year. Today we have Back-to-School Little Debbie snack cakes with a battery-powered candle and some picture books. Yes, I make my older kids sit through picture book time. And I also make my younger kids sit through some things which may or may not be currently over their heads. It all works out in the end. Take time for fun field trips like we've always done, with our friends and on our own.

5. Lunch-n-Learn versus Morning Basket
Instead of a Morning Basket, which is a fabulous concept, I am doing a Lunch-n-Learn since the kids all wake up at different times, which is fine by me. We eat lunch, I read to them a selection of things covering all subject areas, and they are free to create art during this time as well. I don't need their eyes on me at all. They can paint or draw while they listen.

6. Be prepared
Before the kids even wake up, I pull off the main homeschool bookshelf anything I'm hoping to use that day. That way, I can SEE my "workload" for the day and so can the kids. Over the summer, I cleared the entire shelf off so now it's organized like this, and I don't have anything on there that will distract me from the current set of 6 weeks of homeschooling.

7. Check myself before I wreck our entire year
I must have rules for myself, which is something I always rebelled against. This year they include things I can handle: I can do my paid work in the morning after prepping for the homeschool day. I can only check my phone to handle immediate things like if my husband texts, a friend wants to come and play, etc. Otherwise, STAY OFF FACEBOOK and other social media is the number one rule for myself from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Don't go on a 2-hour field trip and call that an entire homeschool day. Oh, and make sure I'm logging their homeschool stuff every single day. I like to look back on it and it's helpful to have records just in case.

Check out our first official day of homeschool, day after Labor Day.



Here's to a fabulous school year! And click here to see how we're starting out with the 2019-2020 school year, starting with my senior!

Monday, April 4, 2016

Time4Learning $12 for up to FIVE KIDS in Same Family Through April 30, 2016

YES YES YES! Okay, so we already made the decision to switch over to Time4Learning instead of virtual school for 2016/2017 and supplement with some Teaching Textbooks for Math.

Anyway, it would be $90 for all 5 of my kids per month. But they give a discount for big families and it was going to be $70 per month, which I was cool with.

Then I logged in today to find some things out just for fun and saw that if you sign up by April 30, your FIRST MONTH IS ONLY $12 for up to five kids!

BAM! SOLD! Why not sign up now and get it going? I can pause the membership over the summer if we want to (I've heard some kids still dig doing it in the summer) and start back up end of August or early September.

I'll be back to let you know how it goes for our family. We only really have two computers and one is mine for work purposes most of the time, so I'm going to have to relinquish it for hours at a time ... which is no big deal because I wasn't using it when homeschooling usually anyway. So my plan is to get two kids going at a time on Time4Learning while the others play or read. Then the next two can go, then the final kiddo. Maybe that "final kiddo" will be Callie, who loves to homeschool at night anyway. Probably do half hour increments or so many lessons or whatever but we'll see how it works best for our family!

Here are some screenshots from the site:





Here's my referral code!



Monday, May 11, 2015

Parenting Challenge: Learning to be Consistent in my #Homeschool

Come on over to my other blog, The Kerrie Show, to see how I'm struggling with being consistent in my homeschool methods and madness!


Friday, April 10, 2015

Figuring Out My Daughter's Homeschooling Style


My other kids come to me to do their schoolwork pretty willingly. My daughter I have to practically chase down and beg and plead with to get her to do anything. I made the mistake once of saying she learns better at night and she has run with that and refuses to do any schoolwork in the mornings. So I gave up because I have other kids to fry. I mean, fish to homeschool?

Yesterday I popped her on CTCMath.com and she did so many lessons I was shocked. She would freak out if she got a 90% instead of 100% and go into a drama-filled soliloquy fit for a girl on a Disney show, but she did the work. She has quite a bit of match catching-up to do so this is terrific! I feel hopeful for the summer and for next year!

Then it hit me. She likes to work independently. My older son and I like to work side-by-side and my next son is somewhere in between but this girl likes to do it herself with VERY minimal help from me.

Since she still struggles with reading a bit but did well with a program we tried a year or so ago called Reading Eggs, I am going to order that program for her today. If my kids can play games and have fun and still learn something, I'm happy.

There are all kinds of helpful things on the Internet about how to figure out your kid's learning style. But just observing them without the busy chaos of daily life is so important and is something I had not taken the time to do, I am ashamed to admit. Then we took a trip to Houston to be with my husband while he worked and I had some time away from our normal life to just observe my kids instead of manage them. I'm finding out some pretty cool things and have since dropped some things off my Life Plate so I can focus on homeschooling as much as I should be.

How's your homeschooling journey going?

Monday, March 9, 2015

Unboxing Our #Calvert Curriculum Goodies! Michael, Fifth Grade #Homeschool

I wanted to share our unboxing posts and pictures and am FINALLY getting around to posting my third and fifth graders!

Michael, Fifth Grade







Unboxing Our #Calvert Curriculum Goodies! Callie, Third Grade #Homeschool

I wanted to share our unboxing posts and pictures and am FINALLY doing Callie's!!!!!

Callie, Third Grade







Our homeschool bookshelf now. Just waiting on Michael's shelf to fill up!


Friday, February 20, 2015

Homeschooling Kindergarten Today: Chicken Soup with Rice

So today Eva and I are reading Chicken Soup with Rice, a book I read in school, which means it's an antique. I had trouble NOT singing the dang book, so I just read it to her, printed out a months of the year chart and then made her suffer through the end of Really Rosie, which I found on YouTube. It was fun for me to be a little kid again watching this song and hearing Carole King's gorgeous voice. Are there things you do with your kids that you did as a kid that they either love or are not interested in? I'd love to hear!

Friday, January 30, 2015

What is a Homeschool Sandwich?

What is a homeschool sandwich? Well, we used to do a little school in the morning and then leave the house for the afternoon, then come home for dinner and mess around at night. Now we homeschool in the mornings, take a break for recess and lunch, then maybe go do something to get out of the house for a bit, and then back at homeschooling. Or else I am homeschooling my daughter some at night because she specifically says she does better at night and I have seen it to be true … except I’m tired then, but if that is when she learns best and her brain is on fire, then I am all in. So the sandwich is homeschool bread, break meat then more homeschool bread. Enjoy.



Saturday, September 6, 2014

Unboxing Our #Calvert Curriculum Goodies! Eva, Kindergarten and Samuel, PreK #Homeschooling

I wanted to share our unboxing posts and pictures!

The other day we got another large box from Calvert. Each kid’s curriculum is coming at a different time and I am glad about that so I can focus on each kid and take pictures and we can put the goodies away. I have to say it again: this cost us $45 for a box worth about $700-1,000 if we bought it alone. And we get a facilitator. The downside is we are on a school district’s timeline but I’ll take that trade-off to save hours upon hours of time in lesson planning.
There are So Many Books and resources and then even more online fun stuff like streaming Discovery Channel and BrainPop and other things.
We are all set for everything my kindergartner Eva needs for this year. Lots of fun books and activities and we are looking forward to getting started. We’re easing into it! Eva is super excited because we have never done “formal” school and she is wanting to read.

Eva, Kindergarten






Samuel, Pre-K
Samuel was not going to be left out so I went to WalMart and got him a Pre-K workbook and some supplies to try to match what Eva got!



Unboxing Our #Calvert Curriculum Goodies! Joel, Seventh Grade #Homeschool

I wanted to share our unboxing posts and pictures! Check labels for Fifth Grade, Third Grade and Kindergarten (also, preschool) for the rest of the kids!

We got back from our vacation with +Mr.Kerrie’s family on Labor Day evening. When we got home there was a large box in the kitchen that my stepdad had brought in for us over the weekend. It was my oldest kid’s curriculum for the year. I have to say it again: this cost us $45 for a box worth about $700-1,000 if we bought it alone. And we get a facilitator. The downside is we are on a school district’s timeline but I’ll take that trade-off to save hours upon hours of time in lesson planning.
There are So Many Books and resources and then even more online fun stuff like streaming Discovery Channel and BrainPop and other things.
We are all set for Math, Composition, Grammar, Spelling, Writing, History, Science, Art History, Reading, Geography and Computer Skills. Lots of fun books and activities and we are looking forward to getting started. We’re easing into it! My son is not thrilled because I let things go a bit over the years but he is super bright and I’m not worried that he is going to be a rock star at this (all the kids will rock this!).
Joel, Seventh Grade