BrimWood Press history and worldview curriculum for homeschool

Annual Evaluation

While we’re not completely finished with our school “year” and our schooling runs through the summer…here I evaluate what worked and what didn’t.

Annual Evaluation

We typically finish up a majority of curricula in springtime, like science, math, history, and many extras. We spend spring and summer doing “light schooling” – we finish reading and complete history projects. We do lots of art and nature study and spend our mornings watching hummingbirds and playing outside in the sun. We spend the too-hot afternoons watching educational DVDs and shows on Netflix or playing educational apps and computer games. Evenings, we’re back outside to work in the garden, enjoy the cooler air, and watch hummingbirds and bats.

So here’s my evaluation of what worked for us and what needs tweaking this past “year.” I think I’ve finally hit my stride and we were pretty successful. My husband is quite pleased that we’re settling down and are more comfortable with our curriculum choices and not wasting time and money on products that don’t fit.

History

We love Tapestry of Grace. I use this primarily with Elizabeth, who loves history and outgrew Story of the World after one cycle through their 4 books in 4 years. We did Ambleside Online that 5th year since it was a survival year for us. I had Alex and we PCS’ed from Hawaii to Utah. We needed simple and free. I had coveted Tapestry of Grace since we began homeschooling and I knew it was time to take the plunge. Liz needed something with more structure than AO and this keeps us well accountable. We love all the choices and some weeks we do too much and other weeks too little, but it will balance out in the end. We are just finishing up Year 2 with TOG.

Tori and Kate are still really young. They would be just beginning the 1st cycle of history, but to keep my sanity, we’ve tagged along with Liz’s schedule. I have to read everything aloud – it’s time-consuming. Some weeks are more interesting than others for them. I plan to do better next year with maintaining their schedule and helping them to keep their notebooks organized. They began really loving the mapwork just about a month ago. Next fall, I plan to really do a full schedule with them for Year 3.

Language Arts

I won a copy of All About Reading Level 2 and Tori and Kate just loved it. We’re almost finished with the lessons and I read that Level 3 doesn’t come out for a few more months. We may wait and just focus on other things until then. We have journals and plenty of literacy games.

I bought AAR pre-level for Alex and he loves it. Ziggy is his bud!

TOG also has a LA component Writing Aids and we incorporate that into our notebooking work. I am excited to review IEW for Liz next month, who needs a structured writing program. We get lots of grammar practice from our Latin studies.

Math

The girls adore Life of Fred and Singapore and we had wild success with both. Liz finished up the Singapore 6B and focused only on Life of Fred. She also enjoys Kahn Academy and I think they’re filling in a lot of gaps for her. We did lots of games and math journaling.

Science

Apologia is perfect for our family. The girls are completing Land Animals and Liz finished up with General. They love the notebooking journals! We did appropriate nature studies, but had a really hard winter and didn’t get outside as much as I would’ve liked.

Music

The girls still love the Musiq Homeschool lessons. Liz plays around with it, but takes formal lessons from a neighbor. She just had her recital last month and it was flawless. We do composer studies as a family with TOG. I hope to start back up with guitar from Schoolhouse Teachers.

Art

We did artist studies along with TOG. We occasionally did extra unit studies if we had time to fit it in or it had extra cross-curricular significance.

Latin

We love Memoria Press Latin. Liz is finishing up Second Form and the girls are beginning with Prima Latina. They love it so much. I love listening to them learning derivatives and grammar. A review is coming up soon!

Practical

Liz is the cupcake queen. She enjoys baking and I hope to encourage her more, but we don’t need all the sweets in our diet. I hope to find an outlet for her creations. Any takers?

Liz has quite a successful babysitting service to our pastor’s preschool-aged grandchildren. Having such a flexible schedule has allowed her to attend them whenever needed. The boy is deaf and autistic and the girl has ADHD from FAS. I am sure this experience will be invaluable in the future. They love her and Liz adores them and works very well with them.

The kids are learning to use essential oils along with me. They are fascinated by how quickly effective they can be to change our feelings or owies.

All the children are learning how to be servant leaders. We’ve been focusing on relationships.

Bible

All the kids and I love The Dig for Kids. Alex is working on Raising Rock Starts Preschool. Tori and Kate read and did copywork with Hero Tales. Liz completed Who Is God? and  Who Am I? from Apologia.

We <3 We Choose Virtues! Use Code: MOMTIME15 for 15% off all orders through the end of MAY and every order comes with a lovely VIRTUE MOM pin.

I can’t begin to tell you how much I’ve grown with God this past year. I am so different than I was even a few months ago. He has changed my heart and our family is so much more successful for the Kingdom and on the righter path.

Other

Tori ran two 5K’s with her Dad. For this last one, she got 3rd place for her age group, after two 10 year olds! She was the youngest female in the race at age 7.

Liz is working towards promotion in Civil Air Patrol. She flew a plane from Provo to Salt Lake City a few weeks ago. She loved it.

Conclusion

When I look back at all we’ve accomplished, I feel good. I see how much progress we’ve made! The bad days {read: weeks, months} seem far away and the overall picture is success. I look forward to some downtime and planning for next year. We’re not changing much. Things are too good right now.

Click to see what others have to say. {linky will be live on Friday}
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Nature Center Day

Mother’s Day weekend is seldom a holiday. For me, it’s race weekend and Kate’s birthday.

On Saturday, we all piled in the van to go up to Ogden Nature Center. Way too early.

Tori ran a 5K with her dad. She’s our athlete.

It’s a statue. Honestly, I stared at it waiting for it to move. sigh.

There’s a great bird sanctuary at the center.

These lovely ladies were cheering on the runners.

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My big boy!

Kate turned 6 years old!

Liz’s attitude has improved tremendously lately. Prayer really works. And we just don’t fall for that whole western tween/teen mentality at all. More on that later.

Tori was hurting and didn’t want to finish the second lap.

Perseverance paid off. She was the youngest female in the 5K and got 3rd place for her age group of 1-12 {after 2 10 year olds}!

And she got the coolest raffle prize – this little binocular, magnifier, compass thing. I was in the gift shop looking at these to buy one for her when I heard her name called for the raffle. God cares even about the little things.

In the nature center, they have a new teaching beehive. Super cool. Scroll really quick if you don’t want to see them up close.

Pretty shiny golden darlings. Making yummy honey.

The coolest nature sensory evarrrr! I want it. I want Aaron to make me one. Imbedded with mirrors and magnifiers.

Alex thought the snakeskins were cool.

It was a lovely day.

and we grabbed a nature camp brochure. Alex is in from when he went last year. aw

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Fun in the Sun

Alex and Kate went to the park with me. It’s not often I get to spend time with my youngest without the older two.

Alex loved this chain bridge and went back and forth. Brave little guy!

Kate is fearless. I loved climbing when I was little.

Alex came running inside to tell me: “I found a holy poly. Come take a picture!”

But he wouldn’t touch it. Nope.

I’m excited to see strawberries soon!

I saw a Pinterest thing about using rotisserie containers as greenhouses. Voilà.

We shall have colorful flowers soon! Dad likes to garden. I like to enjoy the fruits of his labor.

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Fluffy little flower seeds. Dirty hands are sexy.

Showing Alex the tiny seeds that will grow into pretty flowers.

Liz being silly planting my new rosemary plant.

She stole my garden clogs. And who gave her permission to grow so tall all of a sudden?!

Alex helped Dad plant the tomatoes and peppers

Planting radishes. I think one grew and the other seeds were duds.

lots o’ peppers: jalapeño, habanero, Serrano, and several colors of bell. They like the warmth of the cinder blocks and box planter.

Tulips! I love tulips. I think those purple pointed ones are favorites.

And some red tulips on the other side of the yard…

Big brother pulling his sisters around the awesome nursery when we bought the garden plants.

Tori was impressed with all the varieties of thyme and lavender. She also loves the Young Living essential oils we use and cook with.

Tori and Kate argued that it’s more cost-effective to just purchase this Honeycrisp apple tree than to continue to pay almost $4/lb for the apples at the store. Yes, if we could stay put and not rent.

This killdeer limped, displayed his feathers, and squawked at us to get away from his nest!

I wish we’d had these fun printables when we went to the plant nursery last week!

Want to do some research on birds? Check out these notebooking pages: NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS SAMPLE

Join NotebookingPages.com as a FREE Member and receive access to their monthly subscriber freebies, 100s of free notebooking pages, notebooking e-tutorials, discount coupons, and more!

We love to use these printable pages in our nature studies:

or you can create your own customized notebooking pages!

See lots of great Nature lessons:

 

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Also linking up here:

Where He Leads We Follow

Tuesday Garden Party

 

Notebooking Sale-a-bration


Y’all know I love notebooking. It inspires more critical thinking and freedom than worksheets and workbooks. We notebook in every subject; even Alex does preschool notebooking {though he isn’t fond of it yet!}

You might be asking: what is it? I answer that it can be as extravagant or as simple as you wish. It can be elegant scrapbook journals {I could only wish I had the discipline to maintain my nature journal like a Victorian lady} or a binder with printed and filled-in pages relating to a unit study. It also depends on your teaching style and the learning styles of your children. Notebooking is different with each of my kids, but it is not optional.

I recently went through some boxes looking for something and came across all of Elizabeth’s old notebooks from history and language arts. They’re so cute and organized. It inspires me to get better organized with the girls and for them to have ownership of their own notebooks rather than having to do it myself. They’re now of the age Liz was when I began with her!

Next year is the first year that Kate is mandated to be in school and I have to write a letter for her to the county. She turns 6 on Saturday and will be in 2nd grade according to our loose records.

Alex is currently blowing through 4K work and he just turned 3.

Tori is pretty on track for age 7, loving math the most. Her favorite thing is her math journal. {we call i t mathbooking!}

Liz is a voracious reader at age 12. I hope their writing will improve with notebooking. We have oral narration down pat.

I don’t think my kids would be as advanced as they are without the freedom notebooking affords. It forces them to think about what they learn rather than just regurgitate facts. {But we do a lot of memory work too!} Notebooking is great for lists and copywork too. It also encourages creativity since they can embellish as much or as little as they wish on the drawings and lapbook aspects.

Check out my notebooking posts here to see how we use it in our homeschool.

Check out my notebooking Pinterest board here.

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And my favorite notebooking company is having a birthday sale! Happy Birthday!

Become a Notebooking Pages LIFETIME Member during their NotebookingPages.com 7th Birthday Sale-a-Bration Event:

  • Save $25 on your membership
  • Receive access to 150+ current notebooking products
  • Receive ALL future notebooking products
  • Receive up to two years FREE access to their notebooking (& copywork) web-app, The Notebooking Publisher™
  • Receive a $100 e-gift Bonus Bundle from various homeschool publishers
  • Earn a chance to win some great prizes … an iPad mini, $100 Amazon.com gift card, LIFETIME access to The Notebooking Publisher™, and a LIFETIME membership to MomsToolBelt.com.

 

FACEBOOK PARTY

Tomorrow night (Tuesday) we are having a Facebook Party. :)
Lots of FUN and PRIZES!
May 21st from 9-10pm ET.
Come join us here: https://www.facebook.com/events/600204473336778/

Wonder how to use notebooking?

Visit NotebookingPages.com to learn more about their memberships and their new web-app, The Notebooking Publisher™

Make custom copywork pages!

7th Birthday Sale-A-Bration Details:

  • Save $25 on Notebooking Pages LIFETIME Membership (two-payment plan available) ...one time payment of $74.95 or two monthly payments ($50.00/$24.95).

  • New members receive up to 2 Years FREE Access to The Notebooking Publisher™ … purchase by Friday, May 10th to receive 2 years FREE access
    … purchase by Friday, May 17th to receive 18 months FREE access
    … purchase by Friday, May 24th to receive 15 months FREE access
    …purchase by Friday, May 31st to receive 12 months
    FREE access

  • All LIFETIME members (new and current) will receive a $100 Bonus E-Gift Homeschool Package from participating NotebookingPages.com Sponsors …The e-gifts will be delivered to the Member Download Center by May 31st.

  • All LIFETIME members (new and current) may enter a prize drawing for: *an iPad mini (1 winner) *$100 Amazon.com Gift Card (2 winners) *LIFETIME access to The Notebooking Publisher™ (3 winners) *LIFETIME membership to MomsToolBelt.com (5 winners) …details for the drawing will be found in their Member Download Center.

  • New (& improved) features of The Notebooking Publisher™ web-app *Copywork feature … create your own custom copywork pages (print/cursive, regular/primary). *Ability to create templates -and- save your work-in-progress to the web. *Ability to edit selected portions of text within a text frame. *Separate user accounts for mom and kids … password protection coming very soon. …new demo videos will be added to the site each week of the sale.

Don’t know where to begin with notebooking?

Check out this amazing starter guide with bonus notebooking pages.

Click here to view more details!

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Click to download a NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS SAMPLE!

Middle School Art

We listened to Haydn’s Farewell Symphony. It was part of our classical history studies with Tapestry of Grace Year 2 and the book was on the girls’ list of reading, but we read it together as a family and was delighted and then I found the whole symphony on YouTube. It is magnificent.

Liz finally broke out her acrylics and painted this:

middle school art

She loves abstract art. I love her representation of the musicians’ candles. She explained which parts of her painting meant which emotion from the symphony.

Brilliant.

Check out these great Haydn notebooking pages.

We love Notebooking Pages for all our main notebooking needs.

Use discount code = discount5 to save $5 on your $10+ purchase at NotebookingPages.com

Check out this: FAMOUS COMPOSERS SAMPLE

Interested in a comprehensive classical/Charlotte Mason history-based Christian curriculum program? This includes Bible, government, philosophy, language arts, fine arts, and social studies components: geography, history, timelines. It covers different learning levels for lower grammar {1-3}, upper grammar {4-6}, dialectic {7-8}, and rhetoric {9-12}. I can print what I need from their online system. Their reading lists are exquisite.

 

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Delightful Day

Perhaps it’s the lovely spring weather causing a “fever” ‘round here, but today I mixed it up a little.

I’m not very good at schedules anyway. I make lists and calendars schedules and agendas – only to stack them and forget them or decide to do something else. Whatever.

So, today, instead of fighting about staying on track, I did a little experiment.

Delight Directed Learning.

The idea is to let the child lead and learn what is interesting. I had a backup plan if my experiment went south big-time, but it was only a little sketchy after lunch and then it was all good.

Now, Liz does have her own agenda, because she’s in 7th grade and needs to get used to tracking her assignments and course load. {We’re not doing so great with that yet…} But I didn’t nag or hover today. {I only asked about progress a couple times. I was so good!}

As a family, we did Bible together after breakfast. Alex LOVES The Dig. He doesn’t complain or argue. He is excited to stop whatever he’s doing {playing iPad} to sit by me and listen the lesson. He loves the Oasis activities too. I am so happy.The-Dig-3D-600

The three littles found some disposable cameras in a drawer. It was HILARIOUS watching them take pictures and then wind the film. They really don’t understand the concept of film at all. Tori ran in after a while and asked if I’d printed her pictures yet. sigh

Tori and Kate did their piano lessons and played with the guitar.

The girls planned out the garden for Dad. They apparently want lots of watermelon.

Alex played the iPad and played outside lots. He loves the new Jumpstart app.

Kate “discovered” the Kindle app on the iPad. She began reading The Marvelous Land of Oz. I love her.

Liz completed her list and even got ahead for her weekly schedule. She began writing a Revolutionary Times newsletter for history notebooking.

The girls tried to rule the world on this Civics game.

Kate, Tori, and Alex did chores without being asked. Awesome.

I am very pleased with all the activity today. There was a bit of whining after lunch. I tried not to intervene. Tori asked for something to do and I offered suggestions and she eventually found something interesting, if not necessarily delightful.

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We may be evolving into unschoolers! {gasp} Don’t tell Aaron.

Spring Nature Study

Y’all know I love notebooking. And nature. And trees.

IT’S SPRING!

How good can it get?

The warm and sunny weather has found us longing to get outside and soak it all up.

I have stacks of printed notebooking pages on spring but we’ll have to wait for a rainy day to sit at the table and do those!

I love tulips! We have cheerful red and yellow tulips popping up in the flower beds.

Alex helped his daddy build the trellis frame for peas. We have little tiny pea plants shooting up green through the soil.

I was fascinated watching the crow (in the tree) chase the gull (on the ground).

Feeding ducks under the weeping willow tree

Peach blossoms in our yard.

Check out all these notebooking goodies!

Free Gift
Available through April 30th.
Notebooking Pages is giving away the (NEW) Plants & Trees Nature Study Notebooking Pages set to all Free Member Subscribers.

Prize Giveaway
Nature Study Prize Giveaway running April 17 – April 26.

50% off Coupon
Good through April 30th for all nature study notebooking products {Coupon code = nature50.}

Coupon for Nature Study Notebooking Pages

We love Notebooking Pages and the new app, Notebooking Publisher. It lets Liz design her own pages for what she’s studying.


Visit NotebookingPages.com to learn more about their memberships
and their new web-app, The Notebooking Publisher™
 

OHC Blog Carnival

This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through my links, my family and ministry benefit. Thank you! Please read my full disclosure here.

B is for Birthday

Spring is birthday time around these here parts.

2 in March, 1 in April, 1 in May.

Boom, Boom, Ba Da Boom Boom

B is for Birthday

Tori had an ocean theme for her birthday dinner. She requested Kalbi, rice, and stir fired vegetable. My little island girl!

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Tori turned seven years old! wow

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My birthday was next. I am 37. Tori loves it that we both have sevens. Winking smile

So we did birthday printables for fun and watched The Wizard of Oz (in preparation for an amazing Poppins Book Nook unit next month!). We usually go out to eat and make a special dinner here at home.

In honor of me (cuz I can) I had the girls write a biography page about me. Adorable! And they know me so well.

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I love how Kate “decorated” my dress.

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Alex is obsessed with graphing. Obsessed, I tell you! He rolls that little paper die and marks off the colors of cupcakes on the dry erase board. He loves it.

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Alex  giggled so much when we played this hide the cake game! I made him close his eyes and hid a little paper cake under a number and then I told him the cake was “under number 2” or “under a green number” and he did perfectly! Then we just played a guessing game, which was not near as entertaining. He loved the hiding and closing his eyes.

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Tori just loves patterns. She asked me to find her some more and harder ones. I think she can just cut these all up and make her own.

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Want to have a birthday unit of your own?

~Birthday Printables~

Adventus Piano Review

We reviewed the piano curriculum MusIQ HomeSchool from Adventus. It’s designed for ages 4-18+. The software requires a MIDI-compatible keyboard and they have great deals if you want a bundle through their site.

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Adventus Piano

“Adventus” means “arrival” in Latin. I just love that bit of trivia. Our whole family has been learning or reviewing piano! So exciting! I love having a musical family.

Kate and Tori are in Children’s Music Journey level 2. Alex can actually do Children’s Music Journey level 1! {Children’s Music Journey is recommended for ages 4-10. Piano Suite is recommended for ages 10+.}

We figure Liz is about one-third of the way through Piano Suite (there are 12 levels!) since she’s taken formal lessons for several years. There are some gaps in her music education that she needs to review and she loves, loves, loves the collection of music that she can search through and practice songs all over the musical map – from classical to current and popular rock n roll!

My husband tried the Ear Training Coach program (years 2&3) and he says it’s really difficult and sensitive. Liz really needs some extra help in this area, so I am pleased it’s included. I am scared to try! I was terrible at sight reading when I was in chorus in middle school! Glad my kids inherited some music talent from their dad.

I tried Piano Suite (and I have trouble playing a digital radio) and it’s really easy! I like it and it doesn’t make me feel musically dumb. I would never pay for formal lessons, so this makes it really simple to just plug and play and get a quick lesson in when I have a few minutes. Food for the brain, ya know? (better than playing on social media!) and I can impress my eldest daughter with something other than Chopsticks or Mary Had a Little Lamb

Weekly Lesson run-down:

1. Children’s Music Journey – 25 minutes (approx.)

  • Lesson with “composer”
  • Practice Room with Miss Melody
  • Games Room

2. History Time/Rhythm – 10-15 minutes

  • composer study – printable info sheet, discussion, Q&A
  • review note values
  • do music math equations

3. Improvisation – 5-7 minutes

  • listen to assigned music piece
  • dance moves!
  • practice notation
  • optional: record student piece and go listen to it in The Library

4. Closing – 2-5 minutes

  • Tell the student “great Job!” or something like that…
  • Assign practice sheets {due before next lesson~we do them immediately so we don’t forget!}

Tori does her lesson with The Composer. She learns rhythms and notes. We checked out CMJ1, but then realized that CMJ2 does a quick review of CMJ1 and moves on at a better pace for the girls. Tori just turned 7 and Kate is almost 6, so this is a better fit.

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Tori does a lesson in CMJ2. She really enjoys the lessons and can complete them on her own. She needs to do finger strengthening exercises!

 

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Kate is in the Miss Melody section of the program. She reviews the lessons for The Composer. The girls practice with Miss Melody and she’s really cute and fun!

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After the lessons and practice…there are games and worksheets and coloring pages. The girls like the interactive MIDI games, but aren’t as thrilled with the worksheets. They just want to play piano!

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Tori loves the theory and history parts of Piano Suite, but she’s not quite ready to begin with those lessons yet. She’s not a fluent reader, so I help her through this right now.

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Liz liked the Senor Semitone Say (like Simon Says), but with the other games she wasn’t interested. She prefers to just play the music at her level.

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Even little Alex (almost 3) is able to do some of the rhythm exercises (with help and supervision) in CMJ1.

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The Improvisation “room” on the program is fun for the girls to play around with different sounds of instruments – and they can record their creations and listen to them!

What I liked best: I don’t have to really know much about teaching piano to help my kids run these programs. I can look at the lesson plans and there are checklists and supplements on their blog to help my kids succeed. The programs do all the work, from teaching to practicing to games and I just have to plug in my laptop and queue it up for my kids to do their piano each week. They don’t have to leave the house! Wonderful! If you add up what music lessons typically cost (and if you have more than one child, whew!)…these programs are an amazing deal~from preschool through high school!

There are 3 different Adventus programs available (including deals on compatible keyboards):

1. Early learning curriculum (ages 4-10):

Children’s Music Journey Volume 1, 2, and 3 are $89.95 EACH. Included in each volume are the computer software and lesson plans.

2. Multi-Level teaching (10+):

Year 1 is $109.95 (term 1-3)

- Piano Suite Premier
- Level 1 Lesson Plans

Year 2 is $59.95 (term 4-6)

- Ear Training Coach 1&2
- Level 2 Lesson Plans

Year 3 is $59.95 (term 7-9)

- Ear Training Coach 3&4
- Level 3 Lesson Plans

Year 4 is $69.95 (term 10-12)

- MusIQ Challenger Game
- Level 4 Lesson Plans

3. A MusIQ HomeSchool Subscription is just $10.95/month

  • unlimited, full-feature access to all the MusIQ HomeSchool software titles (over $450 retail value)
  • a discount on MIDI piano keyboards

We really enjoy using the programs, but they did require my husband’s help installing the downloads and plugging in the cords correctly and setup within the programs so the keyboard would communicate with the computer. After that learning curve, it was all fun and games for us!

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Geography Sale!

We use Notebooking Pages for all our subjects. I have the Treasury and Publisher so we never have to worry about missing a file download. With 4 kids at different levels, it is our best option.

It certainly makes learning geography a breeze! We use outline maps in our history and state studies. I look at our schedule for the week and print out the maps we need, along with pages for famous people of the time period we’re studying.

And right now, they’re running an awesome sale! You can download some maps for free and there’s a 50% off coupon for the geography bundle!

Free Country Outline Maps

To kick off the fun, we have added a free outline map from each of our currently available Country Study & Canadian Province Study Notebooking Sets to your Free Member Resource Center.
LIFETIME Members, we have included these in your download area as well for “quick” reference.

There are over 60 maps so far!
Click to download your free maps!

50% Coupon for Geography

From now through March 31, 2013, save 50% on any Geography Notebooking Set. This month we have added a new BUNDLE … you can now purchase ALL of our Country & Canadian Province sets for one price, that’s over 60 sets for just $14.98 (with coupon).
{You will also receive ALL future country and province sets!}
Click to get your geography notebooking sets!

Prize Giveaway: March 11th – 15th

We are giving away 3 prize packages … packages include a LIFETIME Treasury Membership, Bundled Country Study Notebooking Sets, Bundled USA State Study Notebooking Sets, and Amazon.com Gift Cards! There are a variety of ways to enter.
Click here to enter!

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