Advent Calendar Activities

Posted on

Advent Calendars come in many shapes and sizes, like Kubla Crafts Stuffed Oh Christmas Tree Fabric Advent Calendar or Wood Advent Tree w/ 24 Storage Drawers -Ready to Paint Unfinished. Homeschoolers love to make their own, too. Sometimes.

This year, I will use this blog post as my Advent Calendar. As we do each activity, I will update this post with a picture or a link. Our Advent Calendar will double as a homeschool record.

Here are our daily Advent Calendar Activities:

1. Put up the Christmas tree.

Daddy and children setting up the Christmas tree

Daddy and children setting up the Christmas tree

2. Decorate the rest of the house.

I bought a simple wreath at the Christmas Store in Pigeon Forge and added things we already had - a bow, a couple of bells and an ornament

I bought a simple wreath at the Christmas Store in Pigeon Forge and added things we already had – a bow, a couple of bells and an ornament.

Wooden Advent Calendar

I had given up on finding the right Advent Calendar for us this year, when I ran into this beauty at Tuesday Morning in Pigeon Forge.

3. Every day sing/learn Christmas carols/hymns. This whole month we sing Christmas hymns at family worship times. My favorite is Adeste Fideles (O, Come, All Ye Faithful). I hope my children can learn it in Latin in a few years.

4. Drive through Gatlinburg at night, to see the lights.

Christmas lights abound in Gatlinburg - Winter Fest is what they call it. It starts in November and ends in March.

Christmas lights abound in Gatlinburg – Winter Fest is what they call it. It starts in November and ends in March.

5. Pick up books about Christmas at the library.

Children reading books on floor

My children got lost in books at the library and just hit the floor.

6. Make Christmas crafts.

LEGO nativity scene - baby Jesus, Joseph, Mary, grazing sheep, a donkey, a camel, and an angel

I asked my son to build a LEGO nativity scene. I gave him instructions from a website, but he came up with his own, as he did not have all the right bricks. Please note the angel on the barn. Also, the donkey, camel and two grazing sheep. I intentionally blurred the Holy Family because, well, they look a bit too modern – especially Joseph. But I did not want to buy the LEGO figures with their robes. I wanted my son to build his own and I think he did a fantastic job. Baby Jesus looked really cute.

Children trimming a craft Christmas tree

My children working on a Christmas tree craft at the library, after Story Time. We live in a small, tourist town, so often we are the only ones attending such programs. It’s a pity. The children’s librarian puts together such meaningful programs.

7. Take a nature walk and note object lessons. Update: the weather was rainy and cold. We stayed in and listened to Pandora’s Classical Christmas Station while working on Christmas crafts.

8. Take a family picture.

9. Bake cookies for neighbors. We bake several batches throughout the month.

10. Learn the 12 Days of Christmas song.

11. Point out the 12 Days of Christmas symbols in Pigeon Forge.

12. Make a gingerbread house.

13. Write Christmas cards.

14. Take a nature walk. If we have snow, make a snow man.

15. Bake cookies for neighbors. We bake several batches throughout the month.

16. Make Christmas crafts.

17. Attend a Christmas concert or watch one on TV/youtube. We attended the Sevier County Choral Society concert at the Presbyterian Church in Gatlinburg. I used to sing with this choir before we had children.

18. Bake cookies for ourselves.

19. Get more Christmas books from the library.

20. Make more Christmas crafts.

21. Take a nature walk and/or play in the snow.

22. Bake cookies for neighbors. We bake several batches throughout the month.

23. Start cooking for the big meal. Find ways to let the kids help.

24. Finish cooking while still letting them help.

Hope this gives you some ideas for your homeschool this December. Please leave me a comment below with your celebrations, activities and resources.


Thanksgiving Unit Study, PreK-K

Posted on

Happy Thanksgiving! I hope you will leave me a comment below about the things you are most thankful for. Among other things, I am thankful for the United States of America – this greatest experiment in the history of human civilization. Without this country, we would not know what life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness mean. In our homeschool, we took three days to study about Thanksgiving.

First, we did some crafts, coloring pages, math unit studies and other activities from this list:

Children doing Thanksgiving crafts at the table

My children doing crafts at the table

Girl cuts a turkey craft for Thanksgiving

My daughter enjoyed the crafts, which gives me energy to bring craft time back more often

Boy cuts a Thanksgiving turkey craft

My son cut lots of feathers, and even helped his sister a bit

Little girl with Thanksgiving turkey crafts

Brother did not have the patience to sit through a photo shoot with the paper roll turkeys, but he made one of these

  • Cute Turkey Buttoning and Matching Color Activity (Preschool) – This will have to wait until next week when I can get supplies. I was going to buy them the day before Thanksgiving, but we got snowed in.
Girl playing with snow

My daughter taking advantage of a snow day

Enjoying our first snow day of the year

My son enjoying our first snow day

  • Even Cuter Turkey Buttoning and Color Matching Activity (Preschool)
  • Cardboard Turkey – This website inspired me to make my own turkey craft. Homeschooling moms are allowed to make their own crafts, aren’t they?
Turkey Craft I made just because I felt inspired. But then, I realized it inspired the kids to see their mom cut and paint.

Turkey Craft I made just because I felt inspired. But then, I realized it inspired the kids to see their mom cut and paint.

Boy making Thanksgiving Craft

This particular Thanksgiving craft personalized the holiday when we wrote what they were thankful for on every feather of the turkey

Small girl cutting paper with pink scissors

More than anything, my daughter loved cutting paper in small bits

Little girl with Thanksgiving turkey craft

She is thankful for Jesus, good food, birthday cakes, her brother, snow and the Titanic

Boy with Thanksgiving turkey craft

Thankful for snow, sun, sister, parents, God’s power, and evergreens

We learned/sang some Thanksgiving songs:

Then, we read these books:

            • Squanto and the Miracle of Thanksgiving
            • Turkey Trouble
            • One Tough Turkey
            • Happy Thanksgiving, Biscuit (still to get)

Finally, the children watched some videos:

  • A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving – 25 minutes. It’s such a classic piece of Americana. They liked the silly parts and how Snoopy set the table. Later that day, when daddy came home, they set a Thanksgiving table with their toy kitchen set, complete with a tablecloth (daddy’s coat) and referenced how Snoopy tied the corners of the tablecloth. One of the characters uses bad language once and I had to explain to the kids we don’t talk that way. Also, that they will meet people who talk that way and we should love them as Jesus does and pray for them and respect them.
  • Plimoth Plantation and Scholastic Virtual Field Trip – 5 minutes of skipping around the video, to see different characters present their lives. It’s a longer documentary, for upper elementary grades, too boring for my kids. The Google Earth presentation of the Mayflower itinerary fascinated them and reminded them of the Titanic’s attempt at crossing the Atlantic. I would have never put the two together. It seems our Titanic visit and its wall map showing the intended itinerary over the ocean is still fresh in their minds.
  • Mayflower movie trailer – 1 minute.
Little girl sweeps the floor

She made most of the mess and was willing to clean it up.

Teaching a Thanksgiving unit study inspires me because I know from experience what it is like to move countries. While growing up in Communist Romania, I used to listen to The Voice of America – a forbidden activity. Their broadcast about Thanksgiving has stayed with me ever since. Who would have thought I would end up in the USA, homeschooling my American children and teaching them about Thanksgiving?


The Old Schoolhouse Magazine Review

Posted on

When it became clear that I would homeschool my children, toward the end of February 2012, I looked for the best homeschool magazine. I found three and could not pick one, so I subscribed to all of them: “Practical Homeschooling Magazine,” “Homeschool Enrichment Magazine” and “The Old Schoolhouse Magazine.”

After almost two years of trying them out, I decided that they all have great content, but:

1. I don’t want to take the time to read three homeschool magazines,

2. Paper magazines clutter my house, and

3. Free is better than paid.

And the winner is – drum roll please – “The Old Schoolhouse Magazine” or TOS for short. Here’s the vendor website where you can sign up for it.

 photo TOSGraphic_zpse554d8dc.jpg
You see, the other two, as great as they are, come in a paper format – like, one must walk to one’s mailbox to get them. Also, one pays for them. So 20th century.

“The Old Schoolhouse Magazine,” on the other hand, is free, digital, and contains 177 pages, chock-full of homeschooling tips (as opposed to 50 pages in the aforementioned paid, paper magazines). I read TOS on my laptop, or on my tablet, or on my smartphone. I get an email when the latest issue is available. I click on the link and voilà: magazine. Did I mention it is free?

Let’s look at “The Old Schoolhouse Magazine” November-December 2013 issue and you will see how many benefits one receives from being subscribed to a free digital homeschooling magazine. For the TOS app, click here.

For starters, the cover of every issue shows an old school building (the old schoolhouse… get it?) from somewhere in the United States. The first page tells the story behind the picture, which a homeschooling mom could easily use for a quick geography and history lesson with the kids.

Different sections of the magazine clearly spell out what each article tackles, which is helpful. “The Informed Homeschooler” covers current events which can affect our homeschooling rights and methods. “The Unit Study Homeschooler” will attract those homeschooling moms who have made unit studies work for them.

“The Classical Homeschooler” caters to those who feel inclined towards a classical education at home. “The Tech Homeschooler” reviews the latest gadgets or educational software. “The Littlest Homeschooler” dishes out advice on how to homeschool with preschoolers underfoot. You get the idea.

Another section of the magazine, peppered throughout for variety, is “Academic Spotlight.” In the November/December 2013 issue of “The Old Schoolhouse Magazine,” they focused on music and phonics/reading.

Personally, I find that I read most of the magazine, but not all of it. For instance, I am not much of a unit study homeschooler, so I will probably not read an article about unit studies. However, I will read about classical education, art, music, legal issues, current events, organizing, and college prep.

I also read most ads. If they made this magazine, those products must be good. Ads also contain hyperlinks which take you straight to their website for more information. How convenient!

Reading the TOS magazine takes me several evenings. After putting the kids to bed, I curl up with my laptop and read whatever fits best. Do I need a little spiritual perspective? I turn to “His Joyful Homeschooler” – a devotional section – or to the Editorial. Do I want a little inspiration from others? “Show and Tell” will do the trick.

I love how interactive reading “The Old Schoolhouse Magazine” feels. Some of the writers are bloggers and one can leave a comment on their blog with a mouse click. Now that’s the 21st century.

For more fun, exciting and, oh yes, useful reviews, please visit the Schoolhouse Review Crew website.

 photo Disclaimer2_zpsff718028.gif


Thanksgiving and Homeschooling

Posted on

This time of the year, I reminisce about how, just before Thanksgiving, when my son was one, my heart told me I would homeschool. I did not understand it right then. Hindsight is 20/20. But I should have seen it coming, this desire to homeschool. I should have known it was going to grow and take over my life like few things have conquered me.

You see, five years ago, I scoured the Internet for “Thanksgiving crafts.” I made a list of supplies and bought them dutifully. My son watched me as I printed, measured, cut and pasted construction paper. Of course he could not help. He was one. I made this:

Pilgrim Boy Thanksgiving Craft

Pilgrim boy Thanksgiving craft I made in 2008

A pilgrim boy. I also printed out two Indian children – a boy and a girl – for him to color. Hopefully, they are in the box of early craft projects I decided to keep. My son grabbed the crayon and scribbled all over the coloring page like only a one-year-old can. I felt so proud.

That should have been my first clue that I wanted to homeschool. No preacher or friend pressured me into it. Alas, I don’t read my own heart-directed actions well. At the time, staying home with my child for a few years seemed like the most I could do before running back into the work force. I grew up thinking that exchanging my skills for money was the only dignified way to live my life. Motherhood fulfilled me, but I was programmed to want a career, too.

I discovered that the more time I spent with my son, the less I wanted to leave him. Then, I felt the desire for a second child. We welcomed our daughter and, by then, the little bud, my desire to teach my own, had grown into a plant I could not ignore. And yet, I did. I pushed it to the side, sleep-deprived and up to my knees in diapers and bibs.

The pilgrim boy graced our Thanksgiving table every year. I protected it from chubby hands by placing it on top of a book shelf the rest of the time. It collected dust. I felt it held a secret message, a prediction for the future, but I was not ready for it.

Two years ago, the plant – my desire to homeschool – had become a small tree. God asked me to stop pretending like it did not exist. I researched homeschooling thoroughly. The pilgrim boy craft, with its enigmatic smile, revealed its secret.

I will always treasure this Thanksgiving craft because it was the first inkling my heart gave me that my children have turned a PDA-wielding professional into a craft-seeking, cut-and-paste project preschool teacher. At home. The other grades will come in due time. Wait. Kindergarten already has. We are still at home. I would not have it any other way. This post has been linked to Blog and Tell with @hsbapost Show us your Orange


French Friday, To Be and To Have

Posted on

Homeschoolers, pay attention! This is by far the most important French lesson you will ever have. Without the present tense for être and avoir, the most used and most irregular verbs in French, you will not go anywhere. Period.

Without these two verbs, you cannot express anything like “I’m hungry” or “I am twelve.” Moreover, you cannot even come close to “I have eaten” or “I have gone.” You see, être and avoir play the role of auxilliary verbs to express le passé composé (the most common French past tense).

Sorry, no shortcuts to greatness. This one must be memorized. Take five minutes in your homeschool schedule and go through these daily.

Avoir et Etre - French Friday

ÊTRE

je suis [zhuh sew-ee]

tu es [tew eh]

il est / elle est [eel eh] / [ehl eh]

nous sommes [nooh sohm]

vous êtes [voohz-eht] – Notice how the s sounds like a z and it connects the two words. Most words ending in s in French will connect audibly as a z sound to the next word, if the latter begins with a vowel.

ils sont / elles sont [eel sohn] / [ehl sohn] In case you don’t know, n is a very nasal n sound.

 

AVOIR

j’ai [jeh]

tu as [tew ah]

il a / elle a [eel ah] / [ehl ah]

nous avons [nooz-avohn]

vous avez [vooz-aveh]

ils ont / elles ont [eelz-ohn] / [ehlz-ohn]

C’est tout. That’s it. Memorize these two verbs until you know them like the back of your hand. They will serve you well for the rest of your French lessons. The more you practice, the easier it will be to build on this foundation.

For other French Friday posts, click here. Happy homeschooling!


Homeschool Blog Awards – I’m a Nominee!

Posted on

Update: November 19, 2013. Voting is now closed. Thank you so much for taking the time to vote for me. We will wait for a few days to see the results of your hard work. 🙂

I am thrilled to let you know that this blog has been nominated for the following awards on the Homeschool Blog Award Post:

1. Favorite Homeschool Mom Blog

3. Best Blog Design

4. Best Photos Blog

5. Best Crafts, Plans and Projects Blog

6. Best Family or Group Blog – This does not really apply. I don’t know how I landed in that category. 🙂 Please don’t vote for me under Category 6.

7. Best Encourager

8. Best Current Events, Opinions or Politics Blog – This does not exactly represent my blog, so please don’t vote for my blog in this category.

18. Best NEW Homeschool Blog – please vote for me in this category

Of course, if you have the time and the inclination, you can give me a vote in all the categories I was nominated for (except 6 and 8 because they just don’t apply). But I would prefer to get recognition under Category 18, Best NEW Homeschool Blog, if I can choose. Thank you for the effort. Time is so precious for everybody.

A note about the voting page. If you click on the blog name, it will take you to my site. That’s not a vote. You must click on the small dot to select the blog and then click the vote button at the bottom of the page  – see the diagram below. The screen will look differently on different devices, too. For instance, the dot may be in the middle of the screen and not to the left of the blog.

HSBA Blog Awards How To Vote

So you can vote daily, November 4-18, 2013. It’s all happening on www.hsbapost.com. Please read the rules first. Make sure you don’t vote more than once a day from the same device (desktop, laptop, iPad, smartphone etc.). It’s against the rules. I had some enthusiastic fans vote for me fifteen times in a row in one day before they read the rules. 🙂

But yes, if you can spare a minute a day for this blog, please vote daily through November 18 under Category 18, Best NEW Homeschool Blog.

HSBA_2013-Nominee-120x260

This may look like a competition, but it’s really meant to be fun and friendly. We are simply trying to help raise awareness about great homeschooling blogs you would otherwise not even know existed.

I have personally visited some of these blogs and voted for them in different categories where I was not nominated. I just don’t want to cancel out a fan’s vote on my behalf, you see. 🙂


Fall Traditions – Canning Applesauce

Posted on

The most important reason I homeschool is that I want to spend time with my children and make lots of memories. Their adulthood will be so much longer than their childhood. I want them to remember I offered them not just quality time, but also quantity time.

This is where fall traditions come in. We could can applesauce any other month of the year. When I called a farmer once to check if they had apples, she almost burst out laughing and informed me the only month they do NOT have apples is February. September and October equal canning to me probably because my own mother canned during the fall.

Applesauce cooking in pot

Applesauce cooking in pot

We got so busy in September, we bumped canning to October. On the 30th, I figured it was that day or never. So all four of us got into the car and headed for the apple orchard.

We bought two bushels of apples because I wanted to produce 24 quarts of applesauce. My recipe is simple, straight out of the Ball Blue Book of Preserving: 3 lbs of apples per quart of applesauce. I do not use sugar at all. Just 2-3 cups of water per pot so the apples do not stick while cooking.

My son helped with the peeler-corer-slicer. Of course, it counted as Home Ec. In fact, that whole day went down in the books as a homeschool day with a field trip and a home ec project (besides Bible and reading books with daddy in English and with mommy in Romanian and French). My daughter helped with washing the apples. She said at one point, “This is so much fun…”

One pot heats up the water for the sealing process. The other cooks the apples down.

Water bath canner next to pot cooking applesauce

Water bath canner next to pot cooking applesauce

I process seven jars at one time, for 20 minutes.

Jars with applesauce before being lowered in a water bath canner

Water bath canner holds 7

And the result of our labor of love…

Applesauce jar on a shelf in our pantry

Applesauce jars on a shelf in our pantry

Homeschooling allows us to spend lots of time together, to make memories and establish traditions of different sorts. Canning applesauce is our fall tradition – more so than playing in a pile of leaves or visiting a pumpkin patch.


The Titanic Museum in Pigeon Forge

Posted on

In our homeschool, we try to incorporate one field trip a month. Ten days ago, we visited the Titanic Museum in Pigeon Forge. I wrote a column for The Mountain Press about it, which you can read here

I realize that light-hearted children and the Titanic story don’t mix well. I watched the Titanic being built and thought I would never visit such a sad place. I would weep throughout. I drove past it on a regular basis on my way home and never gave it a second thought.

Children of Titanic Gallery

Children of Titanic Gallery

As God took me in the direction of homeschooling, I became more aware of possible educational opportunities around us. Before we head over to other states or countries, we want to visit local museums. The Titanic, with its amazing online resources for homeschoolers, made the list. Two things were still missing though:

(1) My children did not even know what death meant and

(2) I needed a new perspective on how to visit a place which recalls human tragedy.

Well, this year, my children became aware of death. I have already answered many questions about death and human tragedies. What’s a few more? Besides, if I don’t talk to my children about what happens after we die, somebody will. And it might be the wrong person.

As to the needed new perspective, one day it just came over me. I realized that remembering the victims is honoring them. So we went. We saw, touched, learned and experienced. We loved the crew’s friendliness and, of course, their uniforms.

We pushed buttons, shoved coals into the furnace, solved 3D puzzles, touched 28F water, and tried to avoid the iceberg in 37 seconds. Their simulator is great! We learned what RMS stands for, how many dogs were aboard, and so much more, as we listened to our headsets.

In the “Titanic, The Movie” room, my daughter and I picked our favorite dresses from Kate Winslet’s wardrobe. The hats took our breath away. Leonardo diCaprio’s drowning scene costume looked small and oh, so dry and clean.

At home, my son decided to build a LEGO Titanic. Here’s what he came up with.

My son built this LEGO Titanic without instructions

My son built this LEGO Titanic without instructions

The kids ran out of patience toward the end of the tour, so we did not get a chance to look our aliases up on the wall of remembrance. These were cards we got in the beginning of the tour, with the names and stories of real passengers. A crew member read to us quickly about their fate, from a book they sell in the gift shop. Whew! We all made it out alright.

I knew that about my character from the very beginning, because they gave me none other than Molly the Unsinkable. I’ve decided that’s my new nickname. By the way, this should be the name of any homeschooling mom out there – we are the Unsinkables of the world. Take heart and enjoy the ride!


Before Five in a Row

Posted on

Last year, my son turned five and my daughter turned three. I did not buy a preschool curriculum-in-a-box. We read a lot of books instead and did living math. Homeschooling gives me that flexibility. Besides, I really like the Charlotte Mason approach which replaces textbooks with living books.

I did not know how to come up with different activities based on what we were reading, so I bought Before Five in a Row (BFIAR) – the Five in a Row (FIAR) volume designed for children ages 2-4. In a different format than the regular FIAR volumes (which are meant for ages 4-8), BFIAR introduced us to a fascinating list of children’s classics and provided suggestions for activities based on the stories and concepts in the books.

This taught me how to put together a unit study – an approach which I could then take to other books we read, not included in BFIAR. That skill right there is worth the money for a new copy. Check out the amazon price below – better than on the FIAR website.

We read most of the BFIAR books from the library. We owned two titles and eventually found a third one at a homeschooling curriculum fair. Honestly, I did not feel the need to own them all. We already have many, many books.

My children loved all the titles and kept asking me to read them again and again and again. I think I read Blueberries for Sal a hundred times. OK, so maybe I read it only 14 times and it felt like a hundred times. When I got really bored, I focused on their enjoyment of the book. It helped.

After reading Blueberries for Sal, my children wanted to drop five frozen blueberries in a metal bowl every day just so they could go, “Kerplink, kerplank, kerplunk.” It’s the kind of memory that will stay with a mom (and her children) forever.

Before Five in a Row will always be the first curriculum (although the FIAR publishers tell you FIAR is not a curriculum) we ever tried and loved. If you love reading to your children and don’t know how to create a unit study based on what you are reading, I suggest you learn from BFIAR.

Some of the activities will go over the head of a two-year-old, so you can either work them with your older preschoolers or skip them altogether. Homeschooling allows for a tailored approach. Every time.


Free Ebook – 21 Days to Jumpstart Your Homeschool

Posted on

Is your homeschool running low on fuel? Do you need to connect to an external Power Source – the One Who called you to homeschool in the first place? Then get your copy of my FREE ebook, 21 Days to Jumpstart Your Homeschool.

Part devotional, part workbook, this step-by-step guide helps you achieve more and stress less. I wrote it to encourage fellow travelers on the homeshooling journey.

Convenient, compelling and clear-cut, 21 Days to Jumpstart Your Homeschool will quickly improve the health of your homeschool through fun, exciting and personalized exercises. Click on the book cover below to download or sign-up from the sidebar menu.

21 Days to Jumpstart Your HomeschoolThe effort it takes to homeschool your children can leave you running on your own juices. Bring new energy into your homeschool by reading and working through this free ebook. Download it now and uncover simple solutions for guaranteed results. (Already subscribed? Look for an email in your inbox later today, with the link to download the book.)