-by Mimi Rothschild
Most households have a digital camera nowadays, in our phones if nowhere else. We don’t have to worry about wasting film, having pictures developed, or any of the other complexities of traditional cameras. So let’s make best use of these handy tools for homeschool learning!
These are just ten of the ways you can use your camera to liven up lessons. Once you start, many more will occur to you. I suggest joining (free) www.gloryLane.com where you can create a personal family profile and upload your photos to share with other members of this Online Christian Community.
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Mimi Rothschild is the Founder of LearningByGrace.org the nation’s leading provider of online PreK-12 online Christian educational programs for homeschoolers.
-by Mimi Rothschild
In today’s life, we spend much of our time in age-segregated situations. Public school is one of the worst examples: not only do kids spend most of the day with people of exactly their own age, but often they are restricted from interacting with kids even just a year or two older. Even in our churches, we may divide the children into grades, have Sunday School classes for kids and adults broken down by age, and separate the old from the young for fellowship times as well. Many families live far from older relatives, and older people may choose to live in retirement communities rather than among noisy young families. Many of today’s kids are uncomfortable with elderly people, because they rarely spend time with them.
Is this God’s intention? Leviticus 19:32 tells us, “Rise in the presence of the aged, show respect for the elderly and revere your God.” That doesn’t suggest that we should avoid our elders. Proverbs 16:31 says, “Gray hair is a crown of glory. It is attained by a life of righteousness.” Job 12:12 teaches us that “Wisdom is with aged men; with long life is understanding.” These verses show that respect for the elderly is not only commanded by God, but deserved.
Still, the general separation of ages that we see in our country today can make it more difficult to help our children get accustomed to interacting with older people. One of the great things about homeschooling (and one of the things we can point out to those who fear that homeschooled kids don’t get “socialized” properly) is that our students often have more interaction with younger children and with adults. Other people may remark on how poised our kids are when they’re with adults, and how tender they are with their younger siblings. Let’s make the extra effort involved in bringing our children into contact with the older generation, too.
It may seem odd at first to set up opportunities for your kids to meet and spend time with their elders, but if those chances don’t come up naturally in their lives, it’s worth arranging. With practice, your students will become comfortable with the elderly and be able to learn from their wisdom.
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Mimi Rothschild is the Founder of LearningByGrace.org the nation’s leading provider of online PreK-12 online Christian educational programs for homeschoolers.
-by Mimi Rothschild
Valentine’s Day is a light-hearted holiday, a time for thinking about the people we love. Bring some hearty fun into your homeschool lessons with these ideas:
• Take leftover candy canes from Christmas (don’t we all have a few squirreled away still?) and make easy heart candies. Put parchment paper or foil onto a cookie sheet. Lay the candy canes in pairs with the curved hooks at the top and both ends touching to form hearts. Bake them in a 200 degree oven for about five minutes, just till they melt together. Let them cool before removing from the parchment paper or foil.
• Fold construction paper in half and cut hearts, discussing basic shapes or symmetry while you do so. Cut lots in different sizes, and lay them out on paper to form bodies, heads, hands, feet, and other parts of people or animals. Draw in details for your heart creatures.
• Study heart health. Learn about heart rates, heart-healthy foods, and how the heart works. Older students can check the details on the rates of heart disease in our nation, combining math and science in a sobering lesson. Move on to plan healthy meals for the family, and an exercise plan with the recommended amount of cardiovascular exercise for the week.
• Send valentines to friends and family, using the lesson as an opportunity to practice handwriting, letter writing, or poetry, depending on the ages of your students. Free ecards are an environmentally responsible possibility, but real physical mail is getting so rare that sending a card in an envelope can be an exciting event for the recipient.
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Mimi Rothschild is the Founder of LearningByGrace.org the nation’s leading provider of online PreK-12 online Christian educational programs for homeschoolers.
-by Mimi Rothschild
So many homeschool families have small family businesses which make it possible for one or both parents to devote plenty of time to homeschooling. We hear about families cheerily practicing math skills by working on small business accounting, gaining practical skills for their futures by working in the family business, or studying happily alongside the home working parents.
But we also hear about children working in the fields instead of studying, being kept out of school to babysit younger siblings while parents work, and being limited in their learning as the needs of the family business take precedence over the needs of the students.
We also hear about moms trying to earn from home and homeschool at the same time, ending up exhausted and unsatisfied with their accomplishments in either area.
Is it possible to combine homeschooling and a family business? Here are some strategies that help:
• Structure your learning – or at least some of it. We have friends who have a family band. Their kids not only perform in the band and learn business skills by assisting with management tasks, they also get to travel all over the country. We know these are valuable, educational experiences. But the kids spend their mornings working with very structured study materials. They make sure to get the basics covered, and then they benefit from the unstructured learning that is their life with the family band. You might choose to have the kids work on simple accounting or inventory tasks during math time, write business letters during writing, or help work out a marketing plan as part of a business skills class, but then make sure that all the other subjects are covered, too.
• Get feedback from the kids. Many kids are excited by the opportunity to take part in a family business, and to do tasks which they know are important and contribute to the family’s welfare. But few kids will really enjoy – or learn much from – hours of filing or packing up orders. While all students have to do some tasks they don’t enjoy, pay extra attention to feedback on work-related tasks to be sure you’re not letting the needs of the business come before the needs of the kids.
• Get help. Running a business takes a lot of work, and it may be necessary to delegate some tasks. Whether that means getting more help with homeschooling or with the business, be realistic about how much help you need. Work with the kids to set up a realistic schedule of times when you’ll work alongside them – you on the business and them on their schoolwork, when you’ll work together on business-related learning opportunities, and when you’ll work together on schoolwork and set the business aside. If all the tasks you need to do won’t fit into that schedule, then it’s time to delegate.
With caution, a family business can be a wonderful learning experience, a good way to increase funds for homeschool costs, and a chance for one or both parents to be available for homeschooling.
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Mimi Rothschild is the Founder of LearningByGrace.org the nation’s leading provider of online PreK-12 online Christian educational programs for homeschoolers.
-by Mimi Rothschild
Sometimes we homeschoolers are so quick to defend our choice that we dismiss some real concerns. One of those is loneliness.
Schoolchildren can face some terrible problems with bullying, inappropriate relationships, or peer pressure, but the child who studies at home alone may truly face loneliness. Even if there are other
children in the neighborhood, they may be closer to one another from spending time together in school, and it can be hard for the homeschooled neighbor to join in and feel like a full part of the group.
Those of us with large families may find it hard to imagine that our children could be lonely. Still, the older sibling who helps care for younger children may not feel that the little ones are friends as
much as chores, however beloved. The young child with plenty of older siblings may not have a playmate who likes the “baby games” that are age-appropriate.
Both of these challenges can be met with homeschool groups and associations, church friendships, and community groups. Yet some parents, determined to make sure that their children don’t lack for peer group interaction, set aside their own needs so much that they end up lonely themselves. A parent who stays at home to teach the children can feel isolated. Mothers of infants often feel
starved of adult companionship, but once their children are older, they return to work or community
service and find themselves making new friends. Homeschool moms, lacking the PTA or the professional organization, can find that this isolation stretches out for many more years.
Some things to think about on this subject:
• Don’t expect loneliness. Sometimes we rush to fill our children’s time with structured
activities, when they actually would enjoy time on their own, or benefit from the opportunity to learn
to entertain themselves. Many of us have found that we have gained spiritual insights and growth from time on our own, and it can encourage creativity as well. If your children feel lonely, address it, but don’t go overboard on preventive measures.
• Don’t be afraid of loneliness. Our life experience as adults tells us that there are times in our lives when we have many friends, and times when we have few. Studying the lives of the people in the Bible shows us that God blesses people in groups and on their own. We even know that we can be in the midst of a group of people and still feel loneliness. Loneliness can be what God has planned for us at
some times in our lives.
• Don’t ignore loneliness. If loneliness is a problem for your child, or for you, talk about ways
to arrange more opportunities to be in fellowship with other people. Joining groups can be a solution.
So can inviting friends to visit, developing online friendships, or spending time in service to others.
Homeschool parents especially need to be sure not to neglect their spouses. Caring for children can
become so completely the focus of your household that your marriage takes a back seat to homeschooling, and that can easily lead to feelings of loneliness. Whether this is a time in your life – or your child’s life – when God has a plan for you that involves something you can learn from loneliness, or those feelings of loneliness are telling you to step out of your home and serve others or enjoy fellowship with others, pray for God’s guidance and follow His direction. Deuteronomy 31:8 reminds us, “And the Lord, He it is that doth go before thee; He will be with thee, He will not fail thee, neither forsake thee: fear not, neither be dismayed.”