9 Comments

  1. Wow, that sounds really exciting! Just the thought of all those new books makes me a little giddy. 🙂 The dots are a great idea.

    I started doing a binder with my daughter last year for 2nd grade (I remember you mentioning it quite awhile ago and I flied it away in my mind as something I wanted to do later… and then I even managed to remember!) and it worked wonderfully. No more drifts of paper, no more piles. And it is fun to look over all her work of the last year – and she has such a pride of ownership about it too. We’ll definitely be doing it again this year. Thanks so much for mentioning it!

  2. Can’t take credit for the dot idea… Sonlight does it, and my next-door neighbor showed me last year. Like you, I filed it in my brain as a “good idea for next year!”

    I’m glad the binder works for you as well! For our accountability group here, we have to provide samples of work for each subject, and it just made sense to me to put the children’s work in binders to begin with, to save me the agony of scrounging around at the last minute.

    Marie, my youngest in school, is soooo excited about having her OWN binder this year!

  3. Ouiz – I hope your days (nights?) of multi-hour tasking are behind you 🙂 I was always impressed that you dedicated so much time to co-ordinating your kids’ work so it all ‘fit together.’ I wanted to do that, but I knew I wouldn’t give the time to it. I’m satisfied with how it’s been going with my hs. LOVING RC History as my tie-together. I also know that MODG will work VERY WELL at helping your older ones develop the habit / ability to work independently!

    You rock on, girl! AND good luck as you get started and have a baby! 😉

    love ya!

  4. THANK YOU, SCG!

    It worked while I was able to do it, but I know my limitations, and with nursing a newborn and the amazing lack of sleep I’ll be getting, I won’t be able to put two sentences together, let alone try to coordinate 6 different grade levels so we all learn about (said subject) at the same time.

    I admire that you can do RC History. It looks like a great program, and I’ve always been impressed with how your kids work independently so well. You are light years ahead of us!

    You know, the more I look at that picture of the man in the bunny suit, the more I have to admit that you’re right… his face does look a lot like my dad… *grin*

  5. I hope you have a smooth year. I’ve been back and forth about homeschooling for just about 2 years now and have researched the subject and curricula to the point of inaction at times. I’ve looked into the virtual public schools, putting together a curriculum myself, or buying a packaged curriculum. It’s just all so overwhelming.

    I do have to say that my youngest (3 1/2) has done preschool at home with me and we used a binder as well, though I think it was a 3 inch. We went over a letter each week and did all sorts of activities and coloring sheets and kept those things in her binder so that at the end she has a big binder with all the letters of the alphabet and pictures of all the fun things we did learning them. We tried to go on a “field trip” that had something to do with the letter and put photos in there, small lapbooks and a book list for each letter or books that went with the letters, she will spend HOURS looking at her binder and giggling at her pictures.

  6. Casey, it sounds like you and your daughter had a GREAT year doing the alphabet projects! I love how she looks at her book often and remembers all that you did together. When my three oldest were little ( 3 and under) I put together a binder called “our trip to the zoo,” and wrote this silly poem and scrapbooked pictures from our adventure. They LOVED it!! We read that thing so many times…

    I pray that God gives you wisdom and peace as you consider homeschooling. I know I researched the topic to death when I was trying to decide what to do! I still do… I have friends who use public schools, parochial schools, co-ops, pre-packaged curricula, do-it-yourself curricula, etc, and all of them have smart, well adjusted kids!

  7. Wow! This sounds FANTASTIC!

    Jesus really has the best ideas, doesn’t he?

    I’m expecting a new baby in late August and have spent many months worrying about how a newborn will ‘disrupt” the home-school thing. I finally turned it over to God. It’s amazing!

    I actually flipped Summer and Fall around this year, (we’re working hard this summer and then will take a long Fall break for the baby). My husband and I have also taken a totally new approach to teaching reading. Things are really working well.

    It’s so nice to think of the new baby as bringing extra grace and help to the home-schooling experiences of her older siblings rather than thinking “Oh no, I’m a teacher whose life is suddenly turned upside down.”

    Lots of prayers,

    Abigail’s Alcove

  8. Congratulations on your new arrival as well! I love the way you put it: that the new baby brings extra graces, rather than extra burdens!

    We ended late this year (mid May! Good grief!), so I had to give the kids… and myself… a well-deserved break before starting again. I’m not sure how long we are going to take after the baby comes, but I’m sure it will be several weeks at least!

    He knows what’s best for each of our children, and He knows best how to teach them… and I love how there’s no one solution that applies to all. For you, it was flip flopping summer and fall; for me, it was (hopefully) teaching them separately; who knows what others will be told what to do!

    Many, many blessings to you and your family!

  9. You asked where abouts we were, I’ll post it here instead of on my own blog. We’re in the Lowcountry, near Charleston. Close enough that I have a front row seat for the Cooper River Bridge Run every year.

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