Showing posts with label Home Schooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Schooling. Show all posts

Sunday, April 3, 2016

A Homeschool Hangout Day



Can't we all use a little more encouragement as moms? Sure thing!

On Saturday, my friend Hannah hosted her first Homeschool Hangout at her home. Our mutual friend Jennifer and I agreed to come share about different topics. We didn't really advertise much, other than on Facebook, and weren't sure how many ladies to expect. Two other women, Angie and Colleen, joined us.

Jenn (seated on the right) shared about taking field trips in Florida. She blogs at Jenn on Safari and recommends these sites for getting the best travel deals:



I talked about my home schooling and mothering journey, discernment of issues in the larger home schooling movement, gentle mothering, and flexible education (especially the Charlotte Mason approach). 

You can see some of my previous posts on these topics here:

I also showed them my vision board and gratitude journal. (More on those in an upcoming post, I promise!)



I had two extra vision boards to give away, as well as a basket full of goodies to pass along like the new Third Day worship CD Lead Us Back, journals, art supplies, emoji cups, a mug, and more. I still have some left over for next time!


Hannah finished out the day talking about nature study while we enjoyed tea and treats.




~ a child's nature journal ~

~ show and tell ~

~ nature tote for their car ~

art supplies, binoculars,
field guides, clip boards,
so much more!

Jenn got so excited about all
of the vintage and new books
which Hannah showed us,
that she started ordering them
online immediately with her phone!

Wild Orange Spice tea,
just right for me!

We all had an amazing day. Jenn and Hannah and I are already plotting another Hangout for summertime at Jenn's house, which is larger and more centrally located. We loved having such a small group for our first Hangout, but we'll be sure to advertise more next time. We love to encourage others toward excellence and wholeness as moms!

Blessings,
Virginia Knowles

Friday, March 25, 2016

Our Seaside School Room


After 25 years of home schooling, now that we're down to one child doing school, I finally consolidated all of our educational stuff in one room.

I started this just before our school began in August. On the advice of one of my adult daughters, I cleared out several massive bookcases in our dining room so it could be... just a dining room. (See Reclaiming Our Real Dining Room.) I sold and gave away hundreds of books, and moved the rest onto one huge bookcase in what we called our computer room. And that room became a bona fide junk room. It was horribly messy, with piles of boxes and stuff overflowing. We also had an over-sized desk and an air hockey table with a large dog crate under it. Oy.

After Christmas, I decided to make a push, clean it all up, and start actual school work in there with my youngest daughter.

I originally bought the blue curtains for the living room, but I needed something for the sliding glass doors so I moved them last year. Then I found the blue love seat at Salvation Army a couple of months ago and it seemed like a good color match. It has sea shell designs on the cushions, so I decided to theme the room around that. I am generally not into tropical beach decor with flip flops and palm trees, so I tried to make it more quaint northern seaside with muted blue and tan tones.



I got rid of the bulky cruddy old desk and asked my son if he wanted to trade this desk below for a more minimalist one that I got for free from a friend of a friend. He agreed. The blue trash basket and supply bin came from the Ross store, about $5 each. I found the seaside painting for $20 at Christmas Tree Shoppe.



This is our one big book case after I did another huge book purge. That blue bin at the left is just one of three containers filled with books to sell at an upcoming used curriculum sale. I don't need primary grade or high school books, so those were pretty simple to cull out. I don't have any other place to stash the bin for now, so I put the floor fan on it. It can get pretty hot in that room!  We already had the white board with black board on the back side. I got it at IKEA on clearance for $7.50 last year, and we use it nearly every day for math. There is also a small bookcase for DVDs off to the left. Our school room is adjacent to the living room where our TV is.



I bought the small round table at Christmas Tree Shoppe on clearance for about $25. One of my kids threw it down on the floor (in a big grump) and the top broke off. I fixed it with copious amounts of duct tape on the underside. Yay me. My daughter does her workbooks on this table as we sit side by side on the love seat. I like how the bottom tucks under the love seat. The base can be pushed all the way under the edge of the couch when we're not using it.


The printer is on the antique side table to the very left of the picture since there isn't room on the desk.

The school room is also adjacent to the kitchen. Our lovely doggy Persephone sometimes scatters trash in the doorway so there were some stains on the carpet that I wanted to cover. I found this throw rug at Ross for under $10 after wandering around and around at Old Time Pottery for one that I liked. I love it! Well, apparently so does Sephie. It's a good things its reversible and washable, but I do have to flatten it down every day since she plays with it and sometimes sleeps on it.


This inspirational sign also came from Ross. Good for educational motivation!




Here's our big basket holding books for our current unit study, this one on Africa. I have to say that Mary Slessor is one lad who imagined life's possibilities - a Scottish mill hand who ventured to untamed Africa as a missionary in the late 1800's and transformed the darker aspects of village culture. She had to beg the tribal chief for a school building.


I found this seashell ornament on our day trip to St. Augustine this week and tied it on with brown raffia.



Also from St. Augustine, I found a light house and a seashell with the Lord's Prayer written on it.



I am glad we set up our new seaside school room. It gives focus and beauty and organization to our educational efforts. Now if I can just find the pile of workbooks that got misplaced elsewhere in the house when I was sick? They've got to be around here somewhere!

To read more about our elementary home schooling check out this blog: Start Well Home School.

Blessings,
Virginia


Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Reclaiming Our Real Dining Room



It looks like a real dining room, doesn't it?

It didn't two weeks ago.

We moved into this house 22 years ago, a busy home schooling family with four kids. At our peak there were 10 kids living here. 

That wall there in the picture? You couldn't even see much of it because it was lined with three full size bookcases and a blue plastic organizer thingy. Not so beautiful. Oh, the hundreds of books weren't so bad. That's a status symbol for home school moms, you know? After all, I had kids from preschool up through college. 

But then all of the other stuff gets set on the shelves "just for now" - band aids, hair brushes, Happy Meal toys from yard sales, school papers, last season's decorations, and who knows what else. Another humongous bookcase across the room was filled from floor to ceiling with bins of school supplies, art supplies, yarn, games, puzzles, and miscellany. Add in two other half-height bookcases, a sewing machine tucked in the corner on the floor, all of the laundry baskets with clean clothes spilling out, and a bunch of other junk laying around. Perpetual mess is an understatement. I just took it as par for the course.

But life changes. Now I'm down to 5 kids and a dog at home. I am only home schooling my youngest (fourth grade) and only for another two years. I don't need early grade, middle school, or high school books. Every year I try to purge at least a hundred books. Last year I gave away or sold two or three hundred. 

I mentioned this to one of my adult daughters a few weeks ago, and she gently suggested that if I was going to go through the books again, I might consider getting radical and removing all of the bookcases to make it a real dining room. "It will be so relaxing, Mom! I promise!"

Something clicked. I could do that. It was time, especially since school was starting the following week. I tackled it a few days later, pretty much a 10 hour marathon to get that one room cleared out and in order. I got brutal with the books. "Do I NEED this for home schooling in the next two years? Or is it something I personally love so much that I want to keep it anyway?" No? Out it goes! Someone else will appreciate them more than I will! I had several boxes and bins with hundreds of books. I made $150 in store credit at the local used bookstore. I gave a huge pile to a friend, and donated boxes of them to Salvation Army and to our old home school co-op. I still have a big bin to sell or give somewhere or other. Yowza. I was a mom on a mission and I did it. (Let me mention here - ironically - that I had been planning to sleep that particular day away. I had just come home from a medical test for which I was under full anesthesia. I managed to stay in bed only about 20 minutes. But hey, I was alert and motivated and not allowed to drive that day, so why not? Just saying.) Never mind that there is still an air hockey table in our computer room full of bins of assorted odds and ends that I need to put away. I'll get to it. Or not.

In the end, I cleared out three full size bookcases and a large wall unit in the computer room. I gave away two of the bookcases to daughters in college. I still have one in my front hallway waiting to go somewhere. (Do you live in my area and need one? Come get it!) I moved the humongous supply shelf to our computer room and filled it with all of the remaining school books except for what we're using this semester. Those I kept in the small bookcase next to my little girl's desk in the picture below. She keeps her own school and art supplies in her drawers and in the white cabinet on top. There is also another small bookcase behind the table with my cook books, some art books, and a few decorative items.


See the light green container on top of the shelf in the picture above? That is the easily accessible family supply of sharpened pencils, pens, tape, and scissors. They are organized into three flower pots that I bought especially to fit into the green container. (IKEA, baby!) There are more supplies in a file cabinet in our storage room.


Here is the room as seen from right next to my daughter's desk. I like to have her work in the dining room so I can putter in the kitchen or use my laptop at the table. She is still transitioning into more independent assignments and likes me nearby.



OK, so I purged and organized. Then I decorated with what I had on hand.

The large waterfall painting, a wedding gift nearly 30 years ago, came in from the front hallway. The long side table with the flower arrangements and white porcelain potpourri containers came from my bedroom.

After we returned from North Carolina last month, I created and ordered six photo collage posters on the Walmart web site and framed them. I chose to hang them on a newly empty wall next to the kitchen. What a warm reminder of our mountain adventures! The collages with frames cost me about $50 total. They go nicely with the mountain waterfall theme in the big painting. You can see most of these photos in my NC trip blog series.


Side note: We had the wood-look ceramic tile installed over 10 years ago, and I have to say it was the best flooring investment we ever made. So durable, attractive, and comfortable for my bare feet! We've had the huge conference table since we moved in, but even seating 10, it's not big enough if everyone in the family comes over. We already have several grandchildren, so I set up a card table and chairs as necessary. 

I loved the opportunity to invite our family over for a dinner party last week. The table is all set with a crystal bread bowl, candles, and the beautiful blue stoneware plates I've been collecting from the dollar store.

 

The cloth napkins (lacy ones by Laura Ashley) belonged to a sweet friend who passed away last year, and I inherited the garden place mats from my late mother.



The trick now is keeping this room clean and tidy. I'm being vigilant against people leaving junk on the shelves and floor, but I confess the table was pretty messy there for several days. I cleared and cleaned it this morning for one last picture of it. And now, after dinner, I need to go finish it up again. That's life, isn't it?


My final photo - a chalkboard inspiration to adorn the entry to the dining room from the front hallway. 

This dining room transformation signals a shift in my thinking and approach to home life. I don't want extra chaos or complication. I want simple and soothing. I know I have a long way to go, but I so want to make my home a haven for my family and a place for hospitality toward others.

I love the new light, airy, and streamlined look in our dining room. I wish I had done this years ago.

If you would like to see what I have done in our other rooms, you can visit these posts:


God bless!

Virginia

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Super Summer #7: Back to School!



Dear friends,

School starts a week from tomorrow for my four youngest kids! We're in the middle of our typical back to school frenzy of shopping and organizing. Summer as we know it is almost over! This is always a transition for me, whether they are going to public school (because I won't be seeing them all day and I have to communicate with their teachers) or staying home with me for school (because I have to get us back on a tighter daily schedule and TEACH). I'm learning, too. More on that later in the post.

Two of my teens will be at the same high school this year, my son as a junior and my daughter as a freshman. Their chorus classes had a camp in the evenings all this past week with a concert at the end. 


I also have a son going into 7th grade in public school. :-)


My youngest daughter is doing 4th grade at home with me. She loves to sing and ask a bazillion questions. We had 3rd grade home school evaluation last week and she did just fine! I had to compile a notebook of her work and a lengthy reading log. I also showed the evaluating teachers my goals and curriculum for this next school year, and they were quite pleased. I think I'll do a post on my Start Well Home School blog about what we're doing for school this year.

While I was cleaning out our storage room a couple of weeks ago, I found a box of high school and middle school math books. I don't home school at those grade levels any more, so it was time to sell them. I also rounded up some others books I didn't need. The local used bookstore, Brightlight, gave me $50 in store credit for this pile, and I'm getting another batch ready to take in this week. I used part of the store credit to buy some ancient history books for home schooling this year.

What about me? I'm still learning, too! I spend a lot of time waiting for my kids away from home, so I wanted a secure place to take notes on what I'm reading without everything falling out or getting mashed up in my tote bag. Last week I bought this
full-featured zippered padfolio at Walmart, thinking it was $20. After I got home and started using it, I discovered that the handle had a frayed edge. I also figured out that it was cumbersome for a left-hander like me to use on my lap. When I returned it, I realized had paid $30 for it. Not worth it!

So with the cash I got back, I bought a simple zippered notebook for $5 there. Much better! I got one for my youngest daughter, too, along with a reading lamp and an alarm clock to start her new school year off right. Oh, and some all cotton white T-shirts since the two of us are doing a tie dye project to celebrate the first day of school. In our state, there was no sales tax on school supplies or clothes this weekend. Little bits add up.

I bought most of our school supplies and a new backpack for one son at Staples when they were offering 40% teacher rewards. Since I spent $100, that means I will get $40 back in store credit, which will come in handy for printer ink. We also return our empty ink cartridges for store credit.

So that's where we're at. What are you doing to get ready for the new school year? How do you save money on school expenses?  I'd love to hear, so leave a comment and/or a link!

Grace and peace,
Virginia Knowles

P.S. The EDUCATION stained glass at the top of this post is from the Washington Memorial Chapel which is surrounded by Valley Forge National Historical Park in Pennsylvania.


Monday, July 6, 2015

Super Summer #2: Smile. Focus. Begin.




Dear friends,

We just got back from vacation on Friday, and the next day was our American Independence Day. I had so much to do: unpack, put away all the odds and ends from our trip, do laundry, go grocery shopping, make meals, and think about how various members of the family wanted to celebrate the holiday.

Overwhelming? Like yeah! Did I mention I was already tired? Let me back up a bit.

We'd spent the week in Boone, North Carolina at a mountain cabin, which was wonderful, of course. But we'd gone a lot of places, and then scurried to get everything cleaned up again before we left. I woke on Friday morning after extremely fitful sleep (my nine year old rolling around in the bed next to me half the night before I kicked her out, plus a whole parade of bizarre dreams, plus back pain from my accident). We were supposed to leave at 8 AM! What?!? 

When I tried to get out of bed, my joints didn't want to move and I had a headache. I was hungry, but we'd been planning to get breakfast at a drive through on the way out of town so we wouldn't mess up the kitchen again. The kids were grouchy and I was double grouchy and snapping at everyone in sight. Watch out! 

I was driving one of the two vehicles for most of our 12 hour trip home? Yeah, right! Since two of the other adults drove home early, my mini-van would be completely packed with 6 cranky passengers (me, my two teen sons, my nine year old daughter, my very pregnant daughter and her toddler son), luggage, and my grandson's baby equipment? Yow! This was not looking good!

Something needed to change fast!

This is what I did:

Smile. 
Focus. 
Begin.

And it worked.

Despite the fact that my grandson shrieked and fussed for hours, I somehow stayed calm and cheerful for the whole trip. So did my kids, for the most part. Sorta kinda amazing to me. Because I know how we can get. I chose to change my mood when I climbed in the van, and once I got in that groove, it was easy enough to stay that way. I think that helped my kids keep sane. Oh, and ibuprofen, caffeine, a Chick-Fil-A chicken biscuit, and lots of good music on my Playlist helped me too! I didn't even fall to pieces when I got home!

So that next day, when I had so much to do and no energy to do it? How did I do it? I remembered the way I did it the day before.

Smile. Focus. Begin.



You can too.

Smile. Start with the attitude. Choose cheerful. Or at least calm. Or at least clamping your mouth firmly shut to keep the negative words from escaping. Still too hard? Think of an attitude of gratitude. There must be something good about the day!

Focus. What needs to get done? Top priority? Next? Then next? Just wanna do it just because? Make your list. Choose the order. Maybe alternate the work-y stuff with some relaxation or play here and there. Just know the plan and work it. You might need to adjust, but do it with purpose.

Begin. That means actually get started. Do something and keep going. Get on a roll. It doesn't mean you need to finish everything you start today. But you begin. You make the most of the moments.

So how did it go on Saturday?

  • I got two loads of my own laundry done.
  • I put a bunch of trip stuff away, but not nearly as much as I wanted.
  • I went grocery shopping at two stores.
  • I did a load of dishes.
  • I drove one teen across town to spend the night with a friend, then stopped at a store in that area on the way home.
  • I sat down for a family meal that one of my daughters had kindly offered to prepare.
  • I watched street fireworks outside with a few of the kids and some neighbors.
  • I wrote one blog post about our trip, and started another.

The house was still a big mess, but after church on Sunday, I slept most of the day. I think I earned it. I certainly needed it even if there was still so much to do. Sabbath rest!

Today? I had a chiropractor appointment and then went to my son's orthodontist consultation. I did more laundry. I put more stuff away. I took my daughter to speech therapy. I picked up another son from summer school. I worked on the financial record keeping and budget. I did the dishes and tried to clean up in the kitchen. I made a real dinner. I started another Evernote file for home school planning since we start in about six weeks. I rested several times today. Sometimes that's what it takes to keep going. And there is always tomorrow! We'll get back on track eventually.

Again: Smile. Focus. Begin.

What works for you?

More posts for you:

Our trip to North Carolina (more posts to come when I have time):


Getting stuff done:




God bless!
Virginia Knowles

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Simply Spring Series Recap and Links

Hello friends!

It's almost the official start of summer, and I just finished out my weekly Simply Spring blog series! Now for your clicking pleasure, I've got a recap, photo, and links for all 14 posts.

#1: Pretty and Practical at Home

This post introduced the Simply Spring series, as well as the Pretty and Practical theme within the series. It's everything like home decorating, chalk art, encouraging my kids to be responsible, keeping the van clean, keeping my garden alive, and more.

Like the previous post, this one is another smorgasbord of little things decorating and organizing, with lots of links to other related posts, and even a music video.

Round three of the little household stuff! Dishes, carpet care, my word stones, decorating, gardening, and lots more!

I got the living room decorated just in time for Easter, but that doesn't mean we had a picture perfect holiday. I tried to keep things simple, but there can always still be a lot of stress, right? It's a good things Easter isn't about perfection, but the hope of redemption!

More chalkboard art, a little inspiration, and how I'm using Google Calendar and doing finances on Mint.

Photos and inspiration from a ladies' retreat in scenic Mt. Dora, a peek at compassionate entrepreneurship, and another music video!

#7: Even More Pretty and Practical


Reaching out to our homeless friends, getting inspired by biographies, exercising my injured back, culling my book collection, storing my stuff, solving problems, and most of all, not comparing my house to someone else's!

#8: The Merry, Merry Month of May


Family news, kids' chores, and more!


#9: Mother's Day and Meltdowns


More real life confessions, a family picture of all 18 of us, as well as a lot of encouraging motherhood links for when times get rough and my favorite 1950's motherhood essay. Enjoy!

#10: Pretty and Practical Continues


I'm still dreaming of living in a simple little cottage someday! But in the meantime, it's real life daily stuff like birthday parties, preparing to sell used books, switching out curtains, and trying to keep my current home pretty and practical!

#11: Americana and Bird Decor


I decorated my hallway in Americana and my living room with a bird theme. It's all about being creative, looking for deals, making do with what I already have - and enjoying my liberty!

#12: Trades of Hope


What is a Compassionate Entrepreneur? How can we truly help families living in Third World poverty? Click over and find out!

#13: My Butterfly Kitchen


Back to decorating! I've got the butterfly thing going on in my kitchen now! And I've got some purely practical kitchen organizing and cleaning stuff to share, too.

#14: My Bedroom and Bathroom



My final Simply Spring post! I close out the series with a bit about decorating and organizing my bedroom and bathroom. It started with the curtains, but it certainly didn't end there! Take a peek!

There you go!
Have fun!

Grace and peace,

Virginia