Monday, August 12, 2013

We have been busy sorting, cleaning, decluttering, rearranging, and brainstorming as we have begun preparing our learning environment. We are taking a portion of the unfinished part of our basement and transforming it into our school. For our family, and my sanity, it is important to have a designated learning space. While I have no doubt that projects will ultimately take place all over the house, it is crucial for us to have a space designated just for schooling. 

Over the last week we have been consolidating boxes and moving furniture in hopes of creating an environment that will be cheerfully conducive to learning for all four kiddos. John and Madi are each looking forward to their own space and I am looking forward to creating a toddler corner for the munchkins.

As soon as the dry erase boards are hung, the maps are on the walls and the last crate is in place I will try and snap a couple of pictures. I'm now off to the basement! 

Wednesday, August 7, 2013


The boxes have arrived...
Let the fun begin!!!

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Time to Get Organized!

I absolutely adore this time of year, all of the planning and preparing in anticipation of a new school year makes me giddy. My kiddos think I'm nuts, but I just love it. Almost everything is already done with the Calvert curriculum, but there are a few things that I will be adding to round out our experience. Today I will tell you about just one of our additions.

One of the reasons I love homeschooling is because it provides me an opportunity to teach my children the gospel in more depth than I am often otherwise able to. I have found that if I plan out and prepare each child's gospel study course first, everything else seems to fall into place. I want the kiddos to know that the gospel comes first, no matter what. That's why I plan it first, we study it first in our day etc. Hopefully somewhere along the way the message will stick.

John, who will be a new deacon in a few weeks, will be using the new Book of Mormon seminary home study course. I picked up the new Seminary Teacher manual and am excited to work through it with him. Some of you may be thinking that I am jumping the gun on this, but I have come to the conclusion that this gospel is a gospel of repetition and what he picks up this time around will be far different from what he will experience when he starts seminary in a few years.

I just finished putting together a Book of Mormon curriculum for Madison. It is a combination of the Primary Book of Mormon manual, scripture journaling and some fun correlating activities from Sunday Savers. I am pretty excited about this one as I am hoping Madi will run with it.

The babies will be continuing their nursery lessons and Book of Mormon stories as we head into the school year.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Reality Check

We just got back from a 12 day vacation to Colorado and Utah. Maybe visit is a better word because with two very nearly two year old toddlers, there really wasn't any thing vacationy about it. For some reason the babies had a really hard time on this trip and it took the joint efforts of my husband and myself to keep them slightly grumpy (which was apparently the happiest they were able to get). This coupled with our post vacation detox has caused me to panic a little about how in the world I am going to give my children the intense, rigorous education we are planning as well as keep two almost two year old toddlers happy. I have a little less than two months to figure it out. Thank goodness for inspiration and revelation. I am counting on it.  


Monday, June 24, 2013

Book of Mormon Stories for Toddlers



We LOVE Book of Mormon Stories for Toddlers! I came across these via Pinterest (how I love my Pinterest) and was intrigued. It was just what I had been looking for! So many of the resources I all ready had (flannel people, books, etc.) were just a little too grown up for my littles. They needed something short and sweet for their short and sweet attention spans. I downloaded set one (very reasonable price), printed the stories, laminated and put magnetic strips on the back of the figures and we were ready to go. The babies love playing with them after we go through the story twice. We are excited to download the next set this week and are even happier to see that set three is in the making!

"...our individual responsibility is to learn what we should learn, to live as we know we should live, and to become what the Master would have us become...The overarching purpose of Heavenly Father's great plan of happiness is to provide His spirit children with opportunities to learn. The moral agency afforded to all of Father's children through the plan of salvation and the Atonement of Jesus Christ is divinely designed to facilitate our learning... The Holy Ghost is the teacher who kindles within us an abiding love of and for learning."

Elder David A. Bednar

Monday, June 17, 2013

Classical Education



I am a die hard classical educationist. Is that even a word? I wholeheartedly believe in the classical education model as described by Susan Wise Bauer in The Well Trained Mind. I have read and reread our copy so many times there are portions I could recite from memory - almost. 

In a perfect world I would follow The Well Trained Mind model exactly, crossing every T and dotting every I. Unfortunately my world is not perfect and for this upcoming academic year I will be unable to do so.

Why? 

We simply don't have the funding. 

While the classical education outlined in The Well Trained Mind isn't outrageously expensive per say, we are at a point in our family life (nearing the end of my husband's residency after almost 13 years of training, only two left!) where money is tighter than ever before. Sigh. 

So when my husband and I both felt the prompting that our children needed to be homeschooled, we struggled at first, not knowing how we were going to afford this endeavor. We were serendipitously led to the point we are at now. 

Our school district works in conjunction with a charter school that offers the Calvert Homeschool curriculum and all other necessary supplies (computer, printer, internet, etc) at no cost to those enrolled. Yep, that's right, free. And the beauty of this virtual charter school is that my kids can still go to their public schools for their electives if they so choose. John will be able to continue his beloved orchestra and Madi will be able to choose which electives she would like to do. There was much rejoicing in the land when the kids realized they would still be seeing their friends at school. Not that they haven't spent almost every second of this summer running around with their neighborhood friends already, but apparently seeing their friends at school is important to them. :)

While it isn't the Well Trained Mind, I do like the Calvert curriculum. It follows the classical model and is so far above and beyond what my children were being asked to do in public school, how could I not be pleased? After researching what Calvert has to offer, I am very excited for John and Madi to begin this journey.

And, frankly, I am also thrilled that there will be very little prep work on my part. Our two little whirlwinds keep me so busy I'm not sure I would be able to prepare adequately enough for the older kids. 

So that's our plan, we'll see how it goes!