Showing posts with label Homeschool Planners. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homeschool Planners. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Homeschooling and Lists

A Mom's Quest to Teach logo: Homeschooling and Lists on blue background

This post contains affiliate links. For more information, please see my Terms of Use and Disclosure Policy page. Thank you.

How do you organize your homeschool journey? Do you use planners? Are they print or digital? What about creating lists to help you organize the tasks in your homeschool days? From writing down the materials we will be using daily to writing down the tasks that need to be completed on specific days of the week, I find lists very helpful in organizing my homeschool day. 

In addition to using the planner from SchoolhouseTeachers.com to help organize our homeschool, I rely upon lists to help me. In fact, I have multiple lists to organize my daily, weekly, and monthly tasks for work, my blog, and our homeschool lessons. Another way I create lists is through the use of post-it notes. I love being able to throw away the post-it note when I have accomplished the task. 


A Mom's Quest to Teach logo: Homeschooling and Lists; calendar; family clipart


Homeschool Daily Lists 


For our younger son, I create lists within a daily planner. Each day of the week lists out the material that I would like him to complete Monday through Friday. While most of his homeschool assignments are listed for specific days of the week, I do keep a running list of items he can complete on any day - even over the weekend. This list usually contains books to read both offline and online or his online assignments on EdAlive, I Know It, or Reading Eggs. (links) 

Our daughter has her daily homeschool assignments organized using the My Father's World curriculum. Everything is laid out very neatly in the Teacher's Manual. I merely have to get the materials together and follow the plan. I do occasionally add in other homeschool work, but they don't get listed out unless I want her to complete it independently. 

On those occasions when I am sick or need to be in a meeting while they complete some of their homeschooling tasks, I write out lists on either a whiteboard or on sticky notes for them. I write down two or three things they can complete on their own, and off they go. 

Our son's list usually consists of completing a CTCMath lesson on his brother's computer, reading a chapter in the latest book that is part of our history curriculum, practicing his cursive, and sometimes working on his science (Memoria Press Mammals Set). For our daughter, her list consists of working on a page in a social studies workbook, practicing handwriting, and maybe having a math worksheet.

These smaller lists ensure that our children complete some of their homeschool tasks independently. They are working their way to being self-sufficient little by little as they grow older. And I know that by completing the items on these homeschool lists, they are still learning even when I am busy or sick. 


A Mom's Quest to Teach logo; days of the week written on a whiteboard; family clipart


Work Lists 


How do I organize my own lists? I purchased a small version of the same planner our son uses. In it, I write down the times of meetings, specific tasks that I want to accomplish each day, and general blogging notes for this blog. 

I also find that I work really well with keeping things organized using spreadsheets. For work, I have several spreadsheets where I track what needs to be shared on specific days. As I go through and share those links, graphics, and copies, I shade in the box on the spreadsheet. I love seeing the spreadsheet change color from white to purple. It leads to a sort of accomplishment and lets me (and anyone else who may fill in for me) know what is completed.


Household Lists 


For the entire family, we have a few lists on our large whiteboard in our kitchen. We list out a weekly schedule so my husband and I can write down the times of our meetings as we both work from home. I also write down a list of leftovers in the fridge, short lists of things we need to remember to do (like unusual cleaning tasks or shopping trips we need to make), and a list of things for our oldest son to accomplish, too.


What About Your Lists? 


How would you organize your homeschool? Do you use lists, a specific planner or calendar, or something else? One of the most wonderful things about homeschooling is that it allows us to find the method that works best for our organization and use it (or change it when it no longer works). 

Thursday, May 14, 2020

Homeschool Planning for Year Round Homeschoolers

Text: Homeschool Planning for Year Round Homeschoolers; A Mom's Quest to Teach Logo; background image of school supplies

This post contains affiliate links. For more information, please see my Terms of Use and Disclosure Policy page. Thank you.

Do you homeschool year-round? Does it feel like you never celebrate the end of the homeschool year but just move from one curriculum to the next? For the most part, our family homeschools year-round for a number of reasons. Our homeschooling high schooler gets a significant break from most courses while his younger brother and sister continue their studies through the summer.

Evaluate Materials 


Text: Homeschool Planning for Year Round Homeschoolers; Evaluate what works for your homeschooling family; background image of colored pencilsIf you homeschool year-round, it becomes very important to take regular breaks and evaluate the materials you are using to teach your children in your homeschool. If something is not working, you should feel free to replace it. Yes, even if you spent a lot of money on it. I know I feel great regret if we have to put curriculum or materials away that were costly, but I have found the homeschooling environment becomes too disrupted when our children are not learning well. (And you can always look to gift that material to another homeschooling family either by reselling it or just passing it along.)

Even if you homeschool year-round, you can still take advantage of traditional homeschool sales. There is no rule that says just because you purchase your new curriculum in July, that you need to start using it in September. In fact, I purchased a history curriculum for our upcoming second-grader from Notgrass History in March and we won't be using it till mid-summer at the earliest.


Planners 


While many traditional school planners run from September to June, there are also a great number of ones that allow you to organize the months, weeks, and days yourself by either printing or purchasing blank pages. This way you can completely customize your planner to meet the needs of your year-round homeschool. With technology today, you could even keep a planner entirely online. Scheduling ones' homeschool year is so easy with all the resources available.

Organizing and Cleaning 


When you are evaluating your curriculum materials, it is a good time to organize or reorganize your homeschool area(s). Clean out all your books, manipulatives, resources, etc. and decide if your previous set up was working for your homeschooling family. I have found this is also a great way to see just exactly what materials one needs to purchase as you might find things you forgot you had for your homeschool.

If you are looking for some new organizational ideas, check out this post: Top 5 Suggestions for Best Organizing Your Homeschool Materials.

bookshelf photograph


At the End of the Day...


Every homeschooling family needs to do what is best for their family. Whether that means you homeschool year-round or use a schedule that follows a more traditional school calendar, we can all follow the same basic planning tips:

  • Evaluate Curriculum and Materials
  • Look for Sales and Discounts 
  • Find the Planner that Works for You
  • Organize and Clean your Homeschool Area 

So whether you purchase a full curriculum from a company like Timberdoodle, you are a member of SchoolhouseTeachers.com, or you purchase your materials from many different companies and locations, you can plan with ease as long as you keep your family homeschooling goals in mind. Think about your goals—maybe they need to be reevaluated—and get planning!

19 gifts sale from SchoolhouseTeachers.com

Treat yourself to a mini-convention in a bag when you sign up for SchoolhouseTeachers.com’s Ultimate (PreK–12) Annual Membership. Use code: 19GIFTS before June 1 to lock in the annual price of only $139 (reg. $224.97) and receive $527.71 worth of gifts from IEW, Writing with Sharon Watson, The Brinkman Adventures, Chess House, Learn to Play Publishers, and more! With your SchoolhouseTeachers.com membership, you will receive access to 450+ courses. One low price covers the entire family! (Non-refundable. U.S. only.)

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Planning Out Your Homeschool Year: A Review of Hey, Mama! Schoolhouse Planner for 2019-2020



I have not used a paper planner in a number of years, so I was very excited for the chance to review the Hey, Mama! Schoolhouse Planner for 2019-2020 from The Old Schoolhouse ®. It is a beautiful 188-page spiral bound planner which starts with July 2019 and runs through June 2020. Included in the planner are devotionals written by Gena Suarez which will be sure to inspire and motivate you during the homeschool year.

Please note: The Hey, Mama! Schoolhouse Planner for 2019-2020 is almost sold out! More will not be printed until next year's planner releases, so if you are interested in purchasing it – do so now. It is about 98% sold out - Wow!


What does the Planner Look Like? 


The planner contains several important but very different parts to help you plan your homeschooling year on paper. The Table of Contents divides the planner into forms and "Hey, Mama!" devotionals from Gena Suarez.

In the beginning of the planner, you will gain advice on how to create an academic transcript as well as some useful forms to help you create one. There is also a yearly one-page calendar for 2019, 2020, and 2021. The Planner then brings us to the first of twenty-one "Hey, Mama!" devotionals from Suarez. This one reminds us to think about our homeschool purpose and reminds the reader to teach their family the ways of God. A great start for the school year!

Each month is spread across two pages and has a third page for notes.

The blocks are large enough to write multiple things in and the side column for notes is great for jotting down online program information or what you would like to accomplish that month.


After June 2020, the planner changes to a 36-week weekly planner with room to write out lesson information or curriculum details for 5 children and a blank column which you use for days of the week or subject information.

I started writing some of our teen's assignments on post-it notes so I can shift them
around if need be when the school year starts for him in September.


At the end of the planner, there are five sets of pages for five different children. These are the pages I have already started filling out. I was so excited to put in the details for my kids for the 2019-2020 homeschooling year.

On this page, I included information regarding online programs and their expiration dates.


I began filling out the curriculum planning page with the course from SchoolhouseTeachers.com that we be will using. The attendance page is waiting for July 1 and I plan on penciling in the books that he will be reading as part of his English Curriculum. At the end of the month of June 2019, we will sit down with our teen and discuss yearly goals. I will then split these into the two pages for semester goals.

For our younger two children – our son and daughter – I have started filling in a lot of the details for next homeschooling year. Our younger son will be in first grade. So his curriculum planning pages, yearly goals, and first and second semester goals will be a bit more detailed than those of his sister who will be in preschool. For our daughter, I will not concern myself with a concrete plan. But I am very excited that I will get to write down her first book she will have read on her "Books Read This Year" page.


My Thoughts 


I really like this planner. It lays flat on my table, sofa, or bed – wherever I am planning and working on my homeschool days.

I can lay it out so I can see both pages at the same time:



Or have the planner so it uses the spiral bound feature and doesn't take up as much table space.



And you know what else is cool? I can use my new felt-tip pens to color code homeschooling plans and the ink doesn't bleed through to the other side. Nice, thick pages for this planner!

These are the pens I am using...felt tip ones

I can underline and write on the pages and the ink does not bleed through to the other side


I recommend the Hey, Mama! Schoolhouse Planner for 2019-2020 from The Old Schoolhouse ® with devotionals written by Gena Suarez. Homeschool moms who are searching for more organization in their planning time will find it to be very beneficial!


If you would like to learn more about The Old Schoolhouse ® please visit the following sites:


Please visit the other members of the Homeschool Review Crew to see how they are going to use their planners this year in their homeschool.



Friday, April 6, 2018

Top 5 Suggestions for Best Organizing Your Homeschool Materials

text: Top 5 Suggestions for Best Organizing Your Homeschool Materials; background image of books; A Mom's Quest to Teach Logo

This post contains affiliate links. For more information, please see my Terms of Use and Disclosure Policy page. Thank you.

binders, file folders, laptop, bins, bookshelves

People enjoy being organized. It makes us feel prepared. We are ready to meet any new obstacles more easily when we know where the things we need are located.

Sometimes being organized helps alleviate the stresses of the day. We have planners we carry with us, calendar apps on our cell phones, or meal plans hanging in the kitchen.

How do you organize your life? Do you find yourself more organized in one area than another? Perhaps you have a cleaning schedule but are perplexed as to what to do with all those wonderful worksheets and lessons you prepared for your children. Or maybe you need to figure out how to organize your files so you can find what you need on your computer for next years' curriculum.

Everyone has tips and tricks to organize their materials. Here are the top five things that work in our household.






Top 5 Suggestions for Best Organizing your Homeschool Materials 


Accordion File Holder 


accordion file folder

I put our son's homeschool papers in file folders based upon different subjects, lessons, or days of the week and organize them to meet our needs. For example, I am currently organizing his material by subject as we work on spelling, social studies, and art. In the past, I have organized them by days. (I still keep folders hanging near our calendar that are organized by days of the week for his sister to complete while we are 'schooling'.) 

binders, file folders, laptop, bins, bookshelves

Three-ring Binders




I LOVE binders. I do not think I could stress that fact enough. When I was a teacher, I had a binder for each unit (or chapter) we were studying in the different history classes I taught at the high school.  Within each binder I organized them further by sections, quizzes, reviews, and tests. I  kept a clean copy for photocopying and an answer key. (I also organized my files on my laptop in a similar fashion.)

I have a section set aside for each month with appropriate worksheets, stickers, and other materials for my young children.





Bookshelf 


binders, file folders, laptop, bins, bookshelves

Our son's workbooks, coloring books, binders, and current reading material is located here along with games. We can also store shoe boxes for toys that he and his sister can play with together to work on building friendship, sharing, etc. 

Bins 


binders, file folders, laptop, bins, bookshelves

Canvas storage bins are a great place to store individual boxes, bags, etc of items that are needed daily for Homeschooling. And you can rotate them based on days of the week (if you want to have 5 bins) or just put everything into one or two. 

Laptop 


I like to have all my PDF files organized by suggested grade, subject, or activity-theme. I find it so much easier to find what I am looking for when I can go to one or two folders and do a quick search. I also try to rename files so that I can more easily search for them. So instead of just Easter Puzzles, the name might be Easter Puzzles Math Questions to Answer 1st Gr. 

What are some of the ways you and your family organize? Do you have any tips or suggestions to help make life work more smoothly? 






Homeschool Review Crew Link Up

I also linked up with Timberdoodle's Home Organization Blog Hop

Home Organization Blog Hop



Monday, January 8, 2018

An All-in-One Curriculum: A SchoolhouseTeachers.com Yearly Membership Review


This post contains affiliate links. For more information, please see my Terms of Use and Disclosure Policy page. Thank you.
SchoolhouseTeachers.com Logo
Sensory activity
Sensory Activity from Small World Sensory Science

A Yearly Membership to SchoolhouseTeachers.com provides homeschooling families with over 300 courses, PK through 12th grade, "grounded in a Biblical worldview." My family is very excited to be able to review the Yearly Membership, in particular the preschool classes, from SchoolhouseTeachers.com. Parents and children can pick from subjects such as art, foreign languages, mathematics, history, and science to name just a few. Once you have reviewed the courses and made your selection, you can use their schedule builder to prepare for the year.  There are no textbooks to buy; you can download all the course PDF files or queue the videos to screen and start learning at your own pace.

Besides having quite helpful tabs that allow one to browse by grade and subject, there is also a course directory that breaks down every course by subject for easy comparison.

Our youngest children (aged 2 and 4) are those that we are planning to homeschool but I also love that I am able to access materials for our high school son to review with him as needed.  And since he is attending a public school, we can provide him access to a variety of Bible courses to complement his secular education.

SchoolhouseTeachers.com Bible courses

I have been able to include lessons from several Preschool classes (Small World Sensory Science, ABC: What Will I Be?, Schoolhouse Spelling, and Preschool Playground: Numbers, Patterns, and Cognitive Skills) in our daily activities as well as examine the Preschool Playground part of SchoolhouseTeachers.com.

Preschool Playground provides resources for studying the Bible; Language Arts; Numbers, Patterns, and Cognitive Skills; Manners and Healthy Habits; Arts, Crafts, and Music; Science; Social Studies; and Multi-Subjects resources such as Getting Around videos on the World Book Early World of Learning site and a World eBook Tough Trucks.  The Getting Started page provides information for parents on how to set up binders to store and organize your lessons and ideas for homeschooling your preschooler.  As a former teacher, I am very pleased to see that they are recommending a very similar set up to the one I used while I was teaching high school. That is, keep a master parent binder separated by topic and a child binder with the child's daily work (changed each day as your child completes the work).

preschool playground

There is a Scope and Sequence document which provides you with the age appropriate objectives for your preschooler.  I find this to be valuable because it helps one see how each subject is really connected.  For example, learning shapes falls under language arts and arts and crafts.  It can also be applied to discussing patterns with your preschooler. When your child has completed the work you have chosen for them, there are colorful certificates of achievement you can print for writing the letters of the alphabet and counting all the way to 10, among others.

There are also articles for parents to help encourage you on your journey to homeschool your preschooler. In “Preschool Education” by Juliebeth Lamb, tips are provided for organizing your home and setting a schedule. Donna Conner writes about “Preschooling with One” and offers this piece of great advice: “I think I wouldn’t be as concerned with messes.  They’re only messes, and your child is only that age once in his life – once in your life!”

Early World Learning World Book resource

In World Book: Early World of Learning, there are a number of activities for younger children to complete (both online and offline).  For example, there are series of Print and Do Activities that can be used as part of Preschool Playground.  There are matching pages, color by number, and location worksheets as well as activities for shapes, sizes, and time -- to name a few. There are also videos to view with your youngster.  My only complaint is that the videos are extremely short (some only 15 seconds).  As soon as the video starts, it is over (which my four-year-old doesn’t really like). 

World Book Online resources

In 2017, my preschooler and I started using the lessons in ABC: What Will I Be?  We completed B is for Baker and recently completed our study of C is for Construction Worker. Each letter in the course focuses upon different jobs and includes book suggestions and a series of five activities for the week.  For C is for Construction Worker, activities including building a skyscraper, acting out the work completed by equipment (for example, spin like a cement mixer), and working on writing the letter C.  Both my four-year-old and my two-year-old thoroughly enjoyed the activities and I love being able to have things that both can do together. 

practicing writing letter cPracticing writing letter c


Beyond being able to use World Book with younger children, it also provides a number of other excellent resources.  While I have been writing a history curriculum for SchoolhouseTeachers.com, I have used the World Book Advanced to provide future students with articles to read on the United States and its history, such as biographies of presidents and leading citizens.


World Book Online

There is also a World Book Kids that provides many resources including such science lessons as "Do plants like salt?" where children will test out if plants can survive with or without salt.  The lesson includes materials needed, procedures and discussion, and links to online articles explaining topics in the experiment.

And if your family really enjoys eBooks, there is a great selection of educational ones as well as classic stories like J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan, Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility, and non-fiction such as Edward Gibbon's History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. For younger children studying animals, there is a series of Animal Lives and Animals of the World eBooks.  Those interested in mythology, legends, and folklore will find tales from places like Ancient Greece, the early Americas, and Ancient Egypt, among others.

There are so many great resources to SchoolhouseTeachers.com.  Part of the video collection available for members are the following Drive Thru History videos: American History and Ancient History. Accompanying the videos are worksheets that your child can answer during the viewing or afterwards for a review.  We have started watching these together as a family. As a student of history, I always enjoy videos best where the presenter's interest in the topic is evident and Dave Stotts' enjoyment of the subject matter is evident. 

Drive Thru History

Please be sure to take a look at other reviews for SchoolhouseTeachers.com.  There are many wonderful aspects to the site for the entire family.  I am looking forward to continuing to use SchoolhouseTeachers.com for my family's homeschooling needs as well as checking out some of the other resources I have recently discovered like the Monthly Menu (I am always on the look out for new dinner ideas for my picky eaters.).



 Join SchoolhouseTeachers.com today!



New members can start their homeschooling journey at SchoolhouseTeachers.com


Please be sure to visit the rest of the crew's reviews!

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