BrimWood Press history and worldview curriculum for homeschool

Getting started with preschool

Some lovely readers on Facebook asked me to list my suggestions to beginning homeschool, so here’s a post. I probably need to make it a series so it’s not overwhelming. I have so much to say.

Here’s what the topics will be:

Subscribe so you don’t miss one!

Part 1: Getting started with preschool

Part 2: Determine your teaching method and your kids’ learning styles

Part 3: Curriculum planning with multiple kids

Part 4: Homeschooling as a lifestyle

how to begin homeschooling

Many readers didn’t know where to begin. Let me share my story. I never planned to homeschool.

I was lost when I realized that God was slamming every door in. my. face. and forcing me to homeschool Elizabeth. I had been a public school teacher. All my in-laws were public school teachers.

We moved out-of-state – and I couldn’t find a job – and I couldn’t find a school for Liz – and I was pregnant with Tori -I didn’t know what to do!

Elizabeth has an October birthday. The school wouldn’t accept her for another year for Kindergarten. I knew in the back of my mind that Liz would be turning 6 about a month into that school year. She would be bored out of her mind and be a behavior problem. She had corrected her preschool teacher! I worried about her future success in school.

Since we were both home, I told my husband we would just homeschool for a few years. That sealed the deal and there was no turning back. She was reading and doing work several grade levels ahead in six months. She was tested at the end of that first year and her reading level was above 3rd grade. The family got off my back after that.

So, what did I do that first year?

I gathered all these great materials and we did Kindergarten workbooks and readers and an old math book from my mother-in-law. Liz completed Kindergarten in 6 months.

Now what?

I read The Well-Trained Mind cover to cover. I have no idea how I first came across it. I got Story of the World and followed the plan for 1st grade to the letter. Liz loved First Language Lessons.  She loved all the activities in Story of the World. She loved copywork. She loved recitation and dictation and narration. She was a model homeschool child. She had used A Beka in preschool, so we continued with some of their workbooks since she loved them so much.

I joined all the homeschool groups. In our town, there were many and they had park days on various days of the week. We signed up for amazing art lessons at this little local place. Lessons were completed easily in a couple hours each morning. We went to the library for story time and on field trips. She was just a small 5-year-old, so we blended in with the preschoolers. {until she opened her mouth, that is.}

When Tori came into our lives, we incorporated tot school when she was old enough to do play. Then Kate and Alex joined our family and we continued to do tot school and preschool and Montessori activities.

Next year will be our first official school year with Kate! I plan to go classical style with Tori and Kate, similar to what I did with Liz in the beginning, but some changes, because every child learns differently. {More info on that in the next post.}

So, here are my recommendations about where to begin…

Research. Pray. Ask friends, acquaintances, bloggers {like me!} how they homeschool. Realize they’re not you. Pray with your husband and children for direction. Go to homeschool conventions to see what’s out there. Pray some more. Go to the library and get books on homeschooling and education.

Read some articles on Ambleside Online about beginning school – and great reading lists! They offer an entire K-12 curriculum free on public domain. It’s very advanced.

You can homeschool virtually free – especially in the primary years. Many of the sites listed have free or very inexpensive printables. {More on this in part 3!}

Some of my favorite Tot School and Preschool blogs:

totally tots

They’re taking a break, but you can browse past posts. They are amazing!

Tot School

Great article about where to begin.

Printables all organized in ABC order.

Confessions of a Homeschooler

Mama Jenn

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Living Montessori Now

No Time For Flash Cards

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I love the Story Art!

Great Bible printables at the sites found here: The Crafty Classroom

Preschoolers and Peace

Montessori MOMents

They’re on a blog break, but you can browse for some great Montessori ideas.

Click the apple for the Top 100 Homeschooling Blogs. {I am number 59 out of 176 listed!}

These aren’t homeschooling blogs, but they’re awesome. Great themed printables and activities.

PreKinders

Making Learning Fun

I renew my membership at abcteach every year because the printables are so great. Lots of Montessori and preschool pages. They often have deals through Homeschool Buyers Co-op.

Get a FREE
Homeschool ID Card!

Stay tuned for my next post on determining your teaching style and your kids’ learning styles. It will be paramount to how to have homeschool success.

Linking up here:
Moms Mustard Seeds

http://www.ajoyfulmother.com/
The Homeschool Village

G is for George and Garden

Alex loved Letter G.

There’s an awesome Curious George printable pack here.

He got new scissors. They have this little green catch that bounces them back so he just squeezes.

Loves dot painting the letter m for monkey. Cuz George is a monkey.

Digging in rice for the pictures to match up. These are over at ABC Find It.

I discovered something interesting. Tori’s confidence is off the charts when she can helps Alex with his preschool work. She read his verse with him last week and had him recite it back. She beamed when I complimented her.

Then they played a math game where they picked tulips. Super fun. Notice Alex’s game board had fewer pots than Tori’s. Disappearing Tulips is free here.

We’re also working on a garden pack from here. We have lots of gardening going on right now! Life school.

Here are our little greenhouses with English daisy, bachelor button, and alyssum seeds and our cups from the library full of zinnia sprouts.

G is for George and Garden!

Bubba School: Letter D

Alex has been so good at wanting to do school lately! Although we’ve been having defiance issues.

He finished up an Easter tracing page.

We got this fun balance game from church for Easter and the kids love it.

matching rhyming words with All About Reading pre-level 1

counting dinosaurs…and a little crazy with the glue stick. Dinosaur printables from Letter of the Week at Confessions of a Homeschooler

Tracing D’s with Raising Rock Stars Preschool

Wikki Stix letter cards…I had to help him, but I was so happy he tried to do it himself first!

measuring the verse. and, oh, how this verse was played out this week! {still is}

 

Do all things without complaining and disputing.

Philippians 2:14

And now we measure random things. at random times. randomly.

Adding stickers to the Ziggy board!

Preschool eBook Bundle

 

BundleoftheWeek.com, 5 eBooks for $7.40!

 This week’s bundle includes a collection of ebooks packed full of activities for preschool and beyond! You’ll discover books to read together, educational activities around your home and strategies for making the most of every learning opportunity.

This week only, get all 5 ebooks for just $7.40 (a savings of more than 70%)!

I Can Teach My Child to Read! by Jenae Jacobson In I Can Teach My Child to Read, Jenae provides parents with the fundamentals of teaching a child to read in simple, easy-to-understand language that can be implemented the minute you finish reading it. Whether your children will attend public school, private school, or be homeschooled, this book gives you the tools to give them a valuable head start that will benefit them for years to come.

Fifty Books to Enjoy with Kids by Veronica Getskow Fifty Books to Enjoy with Kids is a reading guide for parents of young children, aged 2 to 8. With 50 must-read book recommendations plus extension activities to take each story farther, to play together, to explore together, and to enjoy the novelty of a great book, this ebook offers a fun reading program for preschool and beyond.

Circle Time by Kendra Fletcher Circle Time isn’t just for preschoolers, and in this ebook, Kendra describes her family’s fabulous, all-ages-are-welcome, group teaching time that allows them to pray together, laugh together, and get to the subjects they often run out of time for otherwise. You’ll discovery strategies for planning circle time and ideas for making it fun for kids as well as resources, activities, ideas and printables for your own circle time!

Flourishing Spring by Michele Augur Make the most of rainy days with over 25 ideas for creating intentional moments with children, including multiple variations, allergy-friendly recipes, and simple resources. With boredom busters, homemade gift ideas, and nourishing meal suggestions, Michele offers plenty of ideas for filling a rainy day!

Finding Educational Activities in the Most Unexpected Places by Angie Kauffman In Finding Educational Activities in the Most Unexpected Places, Angie features ideas for using commonly found objects in and around your home for educational activities with young children. As a former in-home developmental therapist, Angie was inspired to show families that meaningful learning activities don’t have to come from expensive toys and equipment, but can be found in everyday objects at home.

The Preschool Activities bundle is only available through 8am EST on Monday, 4/8.

Get yours today:

BundleoftheWeek.com, 5 eBooks for $7.40!

C is for Cat

We’re a cat family.

Our beloved Seamus passed away too close to Christmas 2010. He was the best kitty ever. He was a bobtail.

And here is our big boy, Rubeus. He claimed me when he jumped in my van and curled up in my lap as his home. I love him. He missed Seamus so we got him Sinead, but it will never be the same.

Here is our newest beauty, Sinead. She’s petite and delicate and we delight in her antics. She’s full grown and still the size of a kitten!

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In honor of cats…

We’re working on this fun Cats Preschool Pack this week!

Check out these fun Pinterest Boards for more inspiration.

A is for Alex!

Alex already knows all his letters, upper and lowercase, their sounds, his numbers 1-13, all colors (even the weird ones)…so we’re beginning preschool a bit early. He turns 3 on April 1. He’s just started showing an interest in tracing, writing, and making words!

We started calendar time back up again. The girls have a cursive notebook and Alex has his tot time notebook: letters, numbers, and shapes to trace. He LOVES it!

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Alex loves to play Starfall with big sister Lizzie. By the time I got the picture, he was already through letter F, oh well.

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Wikki Stix alphabet cards are super fun!

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Here’s one of our favorite alphabet resources. It’s fun and comes with foam pieces to make letters.

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We working through Raising Rock Stars Preschool, but also still loving the Animal ABCs. And of course, I didn’t get any pictures of Alex completing his A work for those! ugh

We ate lots of apples. The kids prefer Honey Crisp, which, of course, are the most expensive! We did an amazing apple unit back in September.

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Tori helps Alex with the Letter A Find It bin. He found the pictures and she found the words.

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Alex loves puzzles and he often takes a break from all our school time to sit quietly and do a puzzle alone.

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And why reinvent the wheel when Carisa does such amazing work? Here are her letter A ideas…and a Letter A Pinterest Board

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Alex loves All About Reading prelevel 1. Liz usually plays with Ziggy for Alex.

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A is for App! Alex loves playing the iPad. {No more momarazzi!} ugh

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Here are some of our favorite apps.

Poppins Book Nook

I am so pleased to announce a new book club: The Poppins Book Nook!

 

Join us each month for a new theme of books and activities will be posted (on the last Monday of each month)…

Check out this fun schedule!

Poppins Book Nook schedule

Here’s the list of participating bloggers:

Enchanted Homeschooling MomRoyal Baloo3 DinosaursMonsters Ed -Chestnut Grove AcademyGrowing in God’s GraceRoyal Little Lambs (me!) -Life with Moore BabiesTeach Beside MeThe Usual MayhemMum Central -Fantastic Fun and LearningKathys Cluttered MindPlay Create ExploreTwo Big Two LittleToddler Approved -Growing Book by Book -Adventures in MommydomB-Inspired MamaThe Fairy and The Frog -Edventures with Kids- Learning & Growing the Piwi wayA Gluten Free JourneyRainy Day MumMom to Crazy Monkeys

~Our first month’s theme is Royalty~

(Knights, Princesses, Castles)

Here’s a sneak peak into my selections…

I hope to maintain this idea of a book for each reading level…

Bubba, The Cowboy Prince…for my Alexander Bubba! He’s 3.

Pocahontas…for my early readers, Tori (7 on Sunday!) and Kate (6 in May).

A Carolyn Meyer Young Royals novel…for Liz (age 12)…she’s read lots of these!

The Bubba Trained Me

Ah, the joys and fun of potty-training. Great memories, yeah?

Nah, not so much for me either.

Day care trained my eldest daughter whilst I was away at work, oblivious, and happily teaching critical thinking, and sometimes literature, grammar, and writing, to middle school students.

My eldest, for the most part, trained her two sisters. I really cannot take much of the credit. She was amazing at it. I don’t think it took more than a couple days of diligence, along with some M&M’s and bubble gum.

And then there is Alex. The Boy. Boys are different, they say.

ca. 2002 --- Motel Room Toilet --- Image by © Royalty-Free/Corbis

Over these last few months, I have read numerous articles and blog posts about potty-training. I’ve pinned some brilliant wisdom on how to boot-camp potty-train toddlers in one day with stickers, candy, junk food, Kool-Aid, nudity, running around and cheering, and pretending with dolls and teddy bears.

One blogger had this nugget which I do agree with whole-heartedly (paraphrased): “Readiness and interest are not the same things. Don’t wait for the child to be ready. Wait for signs of readiness, but make sure it’s before age 3 or he’ll get set in his ways. Then it’s harder.” All this sums up what I now know.

The children don’t necessarily need “training.” The parents are being trained to be absolute clowns.

I thought it was high time that Alex quit wearing Pull-Ups and used the toilet. He turns 3 on April 1.

We experienced fierce resistance. Alex had no desire whatsoever to transition to “big boy” status. When we put the idea to him, he gave an adamant “No.” He did not want to use The Bathroom, The Toilet, The Potty, or any other allusion to That Place under any circumstances. There were tantrums if we even suggested it.

He completely intellectually understood the concept of urinating into a toilet. He had watched me, his father, and all three sisters use the toilet numerous times in almost three years. He “got” it. He could tell anyone who asked where certain bodily functions should take place: The Bathroom. The Toilet. Not The Pants.

But he refused.

When questioned why he wouldn’t use The Toilet…His epic answer: “Cuz I said: I don’t want to.”

And there you have it.

The Bathroom was enemy territory.

Angry Toilet Is Angry

I persevered. I had packs and packs of cute and colorful boy underwear at the ready. He liked those and didn’t want to wear Pull-Ups anymore. But he wouldn’t use The Toilet.

For several weeks (my husband claims an entire month of the ordeal – and it feels like years), Alex just wet himself.

It was like having a puppy.

A puppy who wore Diego and Cars underpants and swishy pants who needed changing 10 times a day. And lots of Kids n Pets carpet cleaner. That created lots of extra laundry.

We have a little plastic Cars toilet seat that’s toddler-butt-sized and fits over a standard toilet seat. We even bought a plastic stand alone urinal.

Yes, you read that right.

It remains unused and is now rather dusty.

We got over the tantrums about The Toilet sometime last week. We have 4 bathrooms. He would only consider using the one near the kitchen. We placed his Cars toilet seat in there. He would occasionally acquiesce and sit on the thing and even released an occasional drop of urine to appease us – or fool us.

Then five minutes later, he would be standing in a puddle. On carpet.

Not even the quip of “Pants are a privilege!” prevailed. Can’t imagine where he gets that stubborn streak…{whistling and looking away}

At about the time his sisters, his father, and I were at our wits’ end…and I was ready to give up and just go back to Pull-Ups, something just “clicked.”

He was playing on the floor in the basement Monday evening and he just looked up at me. He said, very calmly, “I gotta go pee.”

I looked at his father and we both jumped up lightning fast (which we regretted later, being old and decrepit) and rushed Alex excitedly upstairs to where The Toilet was.

Magic.

And there has not been a single accident since. He even woke up this morning at 6:41, dry, and needing to run to The Toilet.

Thank You, God, I say.

Now, #2 is a whole different story.

Bubba School

Alex is almost 3 years old! just a little over a month away…

Alex sorted candy hearts by color. Tori watched for a chance to eat some.

color sorting

He told me here, rather matter of fact: “I won’t color if you take a picture.” Touché.

seriously

Behold the cuteness of this rascal. And that superb tracing before he cut it out!

monkey cutting page

Monkey pattern matching. He’s sure smart and has no trouble with preschool work! He’s not even three yet and I can barely keep him interested in most work that his sisters begged for more at this age. He certainly needs handwriting work. He love to cut and paste and he just started liking coloring pictures. I often can’t tell if he’s bored, frustrated, or just plain ornery.

monkey patterns

groundhog shadow experiment. The girls and Alex loved this one. A flashlight + a groundhog cutout + a dark room=awesome.

shadow

playing his trucks app from Duck Duck Moose. every little boy’s dream!

trucks app

wowsers, the boy is SPELLING already with this Montessori Crossword app.

He loves it!

spelling app

and….drumroll please!

Look who we have here!

Liz even dressed appropriately for the occasion!

Ziggy from All About Reading!

Alex is in love!

He’s loving the program so far. He’s only done a couple lessons from the pre-level, but we have a winner!

Ziggy

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HWT Wet Dry Try app Review

Alex told me: “You do it. I can’t.”

HWOT Wet/Dry App Title page
That pretty much sums up Alex’s portion of the review for the Handwriting Without Tears Wet-Dry-Try app. $4.99

I was so excited to have the opportunity to review this app. I have never used a formal handwriting program and I have heard such great things about this handwriting style. I was thinking this is a great Montessori app that Alex can do to get started on forming his letters.

But it’s so sensitive that he got frustrated and gave up.

Even I got frustrated and told my husband that it was futile to try to make Alex practice more than 3 letters on the app because he and I both were almost to the point of tears.

The narrator demonstrates the letter with a piece of chalk and then the child is supposed to erase the chalk and then wipe it with a wet rag and then write it again himself with chalk.

Sounds fun!

If the child strays from the line even the slightest bit, the narrator instructs him to start over. We were ready to throw the iPad across the room, but it’s an expensive toy to replace over one app.

Here is the rationale behind the sensitivity from the Handwriting Without Tears website:

TRACING AND APP SENSITIVITY

At HWT, we believe in always giving a correct model for a child to copy. Students should not copy from their own writing, because they end up copying from their copy, and then copying from that copy, and so on. Their writing can get worse because they don’t have a good model. Here are a few answers to questions you might have about the sensitivity of the Wet-Dry-Try App:

1)     Why is the app so sensitive?

After testing, we landed on the degree of sensitivity that is most helpful for preparing children to write well. It is a little technical, but here is the reasoning behind our decision:

  • What makes the mark?

When your finger touches the tablet and engages the writing instrument, the app is tracking a center point (imagine a pencil point). The mark left by the sponge, towel, and chalk is much wider than the center point of the mark.

  • Why did it cause a mistake when my “dry” mark was clearly on top of the “wet” mark?

This is the part that makes the teaching tricky. We want to help children with the correct sequence of strokes, but also with steadiness and neatness. The child’s “wet mark” can be wider than the original chalk mark by a little bit and still be “correct.” However, the app is set up to encourage the child the travel on the original chalk mark, not the “wet mark.” Each step off of the original chalk mark could end up further and further away from the correct model, and result in poor formation habits.

As long as the center point of your tool (sponge, towel, chalk) is traveling on the original chalk mark then it is correct. If a student goes too far off three times in a row, Marcy will demonstrate the correct spot again to re-establish it in the child’s perspective.

  • Why did it cause a mistake when I was doing the little curves of the B?

Each stroke has to be completed all the way to the frame of the chalkboard (you’ll hear a hollow ding once you have finished the stroke) to make sure there is no space between strokes. Depending on how the child has made the first stroke, sometimes it will appear he or she has gone far enough but may actually not be tracing the original chalk mark. This is similar to the student copying from their copy rather than copying the original well.

All that “technical stuff” is well and good, but if it’s so frustrating that my child doesn’t want to continue, then that’s not success in my book. I’ve never placed much emphasis on perfect handwriting. The app is recommended for ages 4+ and Alex is only almost 3.

HWT Letter F

Alex was so good to keep trying the letters in the app for Mama. He was so confused that his efforts weren’t good enough. He traced A and B over and over again…and then I looked at the settings to see if I could change the sensitivity. Nope. He’s a busy boy and his fine motor skills do need work, but he wasn’t interested after a few minutes of being told he was wrong, wrong, try again, sorry.

I noticed they have what they term “winning order” which is learning letters in their company’s approved easiest order. It makes sense to write the letters in order their way. I wish the app had lowercase letters too.

We tried F and E. More frustration. Then Alex was done.

A couple days later, Tori came and showed me the app and told me she loves it! She’s 6 years old. We don’t even do manuscript handwriting with her much anymore. She’s beginning cursive already and her handwriting is gorgeous.

She was able to maneuver the chalk, sponge, and wipe on the app rather well because she is such a perfectionist. But she still veered off a bit here and there. And that narrator told her so. Tori didn’t get too frustrated, but she did ask me if she wasn’t doing it right and I could see her confusion. That B is the toughest letter on the app, I think!

HWT app

The idea is awesome, but I wish they gave the option of setting the sensitivity levels, even with all their research saying their way is best. I do respect the research. I wish they included lowercase letters too. Perhaps older preschoolers or even school-age kids would be able to succeed with this handwriting app with less frustration. This app wasn’t right for my almost 3 year old son. Tori liked it, but she’s a little beyond needing to practice handwriting.

Handwriting without Tears Logo

 

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Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this product through the Schoolhouse Review Crew in exchange for my honest review. I was not required to write a positive review nor was I compensated in any other way. All opinions I have expressed are my own or those of my family. I am disclosing this in accordance with the FTC Regulations.

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