Christian Homeschool

Here you'll find news, tips and hints as well as resources for homeschooling!

Thursday, July 13, 2006

A wonderful email newsletter for Christian Homeschoolers

I've been getting the teachinghome.com enewsletter for several years now. It's really chock full of great information.  Each issue has great ideas of projects and curriculum guidance to supplement your homeschooling efforts.  Here's just a list of their recent newsletter archive titles:

#158 - Summer Ideas 11-20

#157 - New Summer Ideas 1-10

#156 - Geography Today and Tomorrow

#155 - Finishing School #154 - The Godly Mother
 
#153 - Integrating Geography

#152 - Achievement Tests, Part 2

#151 - Achievement Tests

Click on this link to visit the newsletter archives for The Teaching Home

Newsletter Archive


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Great resource site!

Always on the lookout for great resources on the web for homeschooling, I stumbled upon this great site today. The Home School Mom has great articles, tips, lesson plan ideas as well as free planning pages for you to download and printout! WOW! What a great resource for organizing your school year! Check it out!

Free homeschool resources

Wednesday, July 12, 2006

Family meal planning

Christine Steendahl is one of my online friends with a FABULOUS service that is great for Christian Homeschoolers.  Here she gives some benefits of family meal planning and at the bottom you can check out her website where she'll send you menus and grocery shopping lists each week.  It's FABULOUS!

Enjoy!

Annette

The Benefits Of Family Meal Planning

Are you ready to save some time, feed your family healthier meals and save some money along the way? These are just some of the benefits of family meal planning. Let’s look at all of them in a little more detail.

Eat Healthier
Planning your family meals will cut down on your trips to your favorite fast food restaurant and the amount of pizza you have delivered to your door. Food you prepare at home tends to be much healthier than hamburgers with fries, fried chicken or pizza. When you plan your meals include some lean protein like chicken breast, as well as some salads and vegetables. Your entire family will benefit from the healthier meals.

Save Time
How much time are you spending now running to the grocery store a few times a week. I used to run to the store at least 3 times a week to buy something to fix for dinner. Planning your meals out for a week at a time and then putting together a grocery list with everything you need to cook those meals will cut your trips to the store down to one a week. This alone will save you a few hours each week. Plus you won’t be standing in front of your fridge and pantry every night trying to come up with something you can fix with what you have at hand.

Save Money
All that eating out and having food delivered can quickly add up. By preparing more meals at home you will save quite a few dollars each week. In addition, you will save on your monthly grocery bill, since you will be making a list of everything you need for the week and won’t end up buying extras that just go to waste. I used to throw out food almost every week before I started meal planning.

Less Stress
You know the routine. It’s 6 pm, everyone in the family is starving and you have no idea what’s for dinner. Trying to come up with something to cook from what you have in the kitchen while your kids are tired, hungry and screaming isn’t one of the most fun family activities. You will be much more relaxed about dinner, when you know exactly what you are going to cook ahead of time and known you have everything you need in the house.

Quality Time Together
Meal Planning also encourages everyone to gather around the dinner table each day. Who could resist the delicious smells coming out of the kitchen? Dinnertime has always been a great time for families to gather and share news and experiences of the day. Parents and children can pay each other undivided attention. Cook some dinner, set the table and don’t forget to turn off the TV. Make dinner a daily family tradition again.

I encourage you to give family meal planning a try. I am sure you and your family will see the benefits within less than a week.

Don’t have the time or patience to plan your family meals? Let us do it for you!

Christine Steendahl Is The Founder Of Dine Without Whine – A Family Friendly Weekly Menu Planner. Eliminate Your Dinner Hour Stress And Re-Discover The Pleasure Of The Dinner Hour! For A Free Sample Menu Visit Dine Without Whine - A Family Friendly Weekly Menu Plan

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Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Another great Blog

Out tooling around finding good resources for moms who homeschool and found this blog! What a gem! By 6 ladies ( I think) that all contribute. Great stuff! Enjoy!





Choosing Home Blog


Here's an excerpt from one of their entries:

radishes



I just had to pop in for a second and exclaim that I LOVE GARDENING! Even when the only thing I seem to be able to REALLY grow is radishes. Well, and potatoes. Lettuce and I seem to have this weird annual problem…I love it, it hates me, I try to grow it, it sees how many ways it can foil my plans. Mine is refusing to grow beyond 2 inches. What, like it doesn’t want me to eat it or something?



What really kills is that Lydia and Lynn’s homes both have LOVELY growing lettuces of all varieties…almost like they are doing it on purpose, just to laugh at me behind my back or something…



ANYways, there is just something about having hands in dirt (and being surrounded by green-smells) that is SO deeply RIGHT. Plus, someday I might even be able to grow something besides radishes. Until then, it’s just delicious to be out there getting bit by mosquitoes (Alaska’s state bird, no joke) and seeing just how much dirt I can get under my formerly clean fingernails.



Delicious isn’t even a wonderful enough word, but I can’t think of a better one. I’ll go back outside and ponder the right word while pulling up chickweed around the raspberries. Did you know that pet lovebirds really enjoy eating chickweed? Supposedly it’s healthy for us peoples, too, but I’m not eating it. Not today. Maybe I can get my 7 year old to try it…



Warmly,

Molly,

Lover of Yahweh, wife to Jeff the Great, mommy of five, and thunker of thinkings.




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Classical Education

Today I stumbled on this really FULL website of information on Classical Home education.  Some really great information here:

Classical Christian Homeschooling: Introduction to Classical Education

Imeneminet and his wife, Tahka

Educational History
Classical Education returns to the time-honored educational theory of the past. The classical method was the only educational theory in pratice in Western Civilization for over two millenia. “Though this system [classical education] did not receive the distinct development connoted by its name until the Middle Ages, still it extends in the history of pedagogy both backwards and forwards; for while, on the one hand, we meet with it among the classical nations, the Greeks and Romans, and even discover analogous forms as forerunners in the educational system of the ancient Orientals, its influence, on the other hand, has lasted far beyond the Middle Ages, up to the present time.” The Seven Liberal Arts by Otto Willmann, The Catholic Encyclopedia

Classical Christian Homeschooling: Introduction to Classical Education


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Monday, July 10, 2006

Helping Kids learn - great article!

This is an excellent article on some easy ways to help improve your child's brain function! And they'll have fun too!

Thanks to MaryJo Wagner for her great insights!

Enjoy-
Annette

Ten Easy Ways to Help Kids Learn: A Brain-based Learning Strategy that Really Works


Ten Easy Ways to Help Kids Learn: A Brain-based Learning Strategy that Really Works by MaryJo Wagner

Susan's a math whiz and Caleb's an artist extraordinaire. That's, great but wouldn't it be better if Caleb could improve in math and Susan could develop some artistic skills? They can and it's easy.



Researchers have recently discovered that whole-brain learning or brain-based learning is an efficient and effective learning strategy that helps kids (parents and teachers, too) learn anything easily without struggling.



One feature of brain-based learning involves using both the right side and the left side of the brain. Although nobody is just left brain or just right brain, most of us have a dominance.



Susan's math aptitude means she is probably left-brain dominant, and Caleb, the artist, has a right-brain dominance.



Learning to read and write requires using both sides of the brain. So does learning math and even doing art. In fact, doing just about anything well, including thinking clearly, and even problem solving, involves using the right and left hemispheres of the front part of the brain.



How do you accomplish this? Easy. Just move across the center mid-line of your body. Every time you move your right arm to your left side or your left arm to your right side, you're crossing the mid-line and improving learning, thinking, and problem solving. Now you're using brain-based learning.



Works for kids. Works for you. Try these parenting tips and teacher resources today.



1. Give yourself a big hug.

2. Tell kids the only rule is to cross the mid-line of the body, right hand to left side, left hand to right side. Now let them invent ways of doing this.

3. Dance the hula. Or twirl a hula hoop.

4. Take a Brain Boosters TeleClass. Sign up at www.brainboostersforyourkids.com Or a Brain Gym class. Sign up at www.BrainGymClasses.com

5. Do the twist. (So you weren't dancing in the 50s and 60s? Ask somebody to show you how to twist or get a dance video.) Twist with the kids while you listen to some old Chubby Checker songs.

6. Rake some leaves with your kids, making sure you're raking off to the side instead of straight in front of you.

7. Play a board game. (Use your right hand to move your piece when it's in the left corner and vice versa.)

8. Practice using your non-dominant hand to reach for things on the opposite side of your body. Even writing and drawing with your non-dominant hand helps. (You'll get better with practice.)

9. Do Yoga and Tai Chi. Lots of moves cross the mid-line.

10. Cross your ankles and arms in front or in back when you're doing jumping jacks. Kids can usually do this. If you can't, try it in a swimming pool.



This brain-based learning strategy really isn't all that complicated. Lots of everyday kinds of activities get the whole brain active. Sitting around watching TV, however, isn't one of them! You and your kids have to move around and cross your mid- line. It's fun.



MaryJo Wagner, Ph.D. The Learning Doctor "Helping You Help Your Kids Learn" mjw@mjwagner.com. Get the complimentary brain-based-learning newsletter, "Brain Boosters for Your Kids," Help your kids learn faster and easier. Sign up Now!



Article Source: www.ladypens.com





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Thursday, July 06, 2006

Alpha Omega Publications | Homeschool View

The July 2006 edition of Alpha Omega's newsletter dropped in my inbox today. Thought you might find it interesting. I particularly liked the article entitled "The Art of Focusing"


Click below to read the entire newsletter and enjoy!



Alpha Omega Publications | Homeschool View

Thanks for another great newsletter AO!

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Another great resource for Homeschoolers

Wow!  The HSLDA came out with this great side site with information on getting started with homeschooling. 

Here's a small snippet from the home page:

As long as there have been parents and children, "homeschooling" has been happening. It was only with the emergence of widespread compulsory public education that this age-old method of instruction was virtually forgotten, but not eradicated.1 Foreign service workers or missionaries who by choice or necessity did not send their children to boarding schools continued the tradition of home education. Children who had illnesses that kept them from attending school were frequently taught at home. And families who lived in the remote areas of Alaska or other isolated regions answered their children's educational needs with homeschooling.

You can homeschool. - Introduction


Enjoy!

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Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Parents Delivering Quality Education

Parents delivering quality education - Washington Times

It's not often you'll find a positive article in a mainstream newspaper... especially in Washington D.c. ... but if you read on, you'll see why it's got a positive slant.  It's written by Michael Farris!  Enjoy!


Parents delivering quality education
Washington Times, DC - Jun 25, 2006
... One athletic event is the National Christian Homeschool Athletic Association Basketball Tournament, which attracts numerous teams from around the country. ...

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Thank you for visiting!

Hello there all you Christian Homeschool families! Visit often for new info/tips/ideas and resources for homeschooling with your family!
:-)
Annette