November 20, 2009
A Day Of Thanksgiving
From 1951, the Homemade Homeschoolers Podcast presents: A Day of Thanksgiving.
Like many, the family in this film is unable to afford a turkey for their Thanksgiving meal, but use the opportunity of the holiday to focus on the things that they have been blessed with. After all, that is what a day of Thanksgiving is really about, just as the chorus of the beloved hymn encourages us to do every day: “Count your blessings, name them one by one; Count you blessings, see what God hath done”.
Use this film in a discussion of the true meaning behind the 1st Thanksgiving holiday with your children.

Well, after a vacation to visit family and friends out in California we’re back with a new installment of HMHS Vintage Video. And just in time for the holiday season!

From 1951, the Homemade Homeschoolers Podcast presents: A Day of Thanksgiving.

Like many, the family in this film is unable to afford a turkey for their Thanksgiving meal, but use the opportunity of the holiday to focus on the things that they have been blessed with. After all, that is what a day of Thanksgiving is really about, just as the chorus of the beloved hymn encourages us to do every day: “Count your blessings, name them one by one; Count you blessings, see what God hath done”.

Use this film in a discussion of the true meaning behind the 1st Thanksgiving holiday with your children.

We would also encourage you to read our Thanksgiving post from last year titled “Thankfulness”. And as we enter this time of the year you may also want to consider our PDF download lesson on writing a proper Thank You letter. The file includes stationary with designs for use all year long.

How have you taught your children the true meaning of Thanksgiving? We would love to hear from you. Use our comment section below; it is both easy and convenient.

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August 20, 2009
Our 2009-10 Homeschool Plan

We officially embarked on another glorious year in the Hansen Homeschool on Monday!  I was ready, as were the kids (in my opinion).  They were desperately needing something to DO…know what I mean?  So, after a couple weeks of planning and messing with schedules, I have come up with a loose plan.

Social Studies: We are finishing up Time Travelers: The American Revolution by Homeschool in the Woods.  This is a wonderful unit study that I would highly recommend.  We supplement with lots of library books, episodes of Liberty’s Kids from Netflix, and Lessons from History-Art Part.  I also throw in the study of various countries related to whichever artist or musician we are currently studying, plenty of map work, and GeoScribe lessons.  My son has also specifically requested a unit study on Vikings, so we may fit that in before we advance to the 19th century.

Science: We have been using (for the last year plus) Considering God’s Creation.  I like it very much, but do supplement quite extensively.  This is MY subject, so it is easy for me to add to the lessons on the fly.  We are studying scientific classification, which is a bit of review from our previous study of Carolus Linnaeus last year.  After a couple more classes of vertebrates, we will delve into anatomy and physiology.  This will be interesting since it is my absolute favorite subject, but my son has bemoaned “I’m going to faint a lot this year!”  I will have to be wary of how in depth I get with him around!

Art: All three of my kids are avid artists.  They spend a good amount of their own free time every day drawing.  This being so, my art instruction is pretty relaxed.  What we spend our time in school doing is biographies of famous artists and studies of their major works of art.  This can and does spill over into other subjects as we study their countries and cultures as well.  A great book that kick started us on this is Discovering Great Artists.  You learn about the artist, his techniques, and try to imitate their style.  Great book.  Next up will be Thomas Gainsborough.

Music: Since daddy is a musician, it will fall to him to teach piano, guitar, harmonica, and/or drums as needed.  We also use our church songbook and learn a new song each week, singing it nightly as a family.  Since daddy is also a recording engineer, I have been nudging (strongly) to have him record the girls singing and work with them to perfect the songs.  Finally, we study classical musicians in the same way that we study artists, getting in about one each month (sometimes more).  We listen to their music throughout the month, learn about their lives, countries, cultures, and influences.  Next up is Franz Schubert.

Bible:  We read the bible every morning.  It is a good time to have the kids stand individually and read aloud as well.  I have found this helps them greatly with public speaking.  We have been reading through the New Testament.  This year we have joined a Community Bible Study group that meets once a week with homework to be completed through the week.  They have a class specifically for the homeschool kids and one for me as well!  The kids have also joined AWANAS for the first time and have started their own prayer journals.

Life Skills: My goal is to have each of the older kids be able to prepare one of our common weekly meals on their own by the end of the semester.  Micah is working on tacos and Hailey on spaghetti.  This will include planning, shopping, prep, cooking, and serving.  This is, of course, in addition to their standard chores and everyday helping/learning that comes with being a homeschooled kid!

Math: We use Math U See.  Although I have come close to considering a different curriculum in the past, I am now seeing the benefits of a strong foundation.  We will be sticking with MUS.  I have them in Beta, Gamma, and Delta this year.  We will also supplement with online drills, Addition the Fun Way, Times Alive, Mathmania, Calculadder, Math Mammoth, wrap ups, and lots of games.

Language Arts

Grammar: We use Easy Grammarand love it.  Simple to use, easy to understand, and the kids are doing well.

Spelling: We have struggled a LOT with this subject and although we do address it in their daily writing, I was not seeing improvement.  We tried several different programs with no great success.  I am currently using Sequential Spelling and feel it is the best fit.  No more tears and frustration!  I am seeing slow but steady improvement in their free writing with this program as well, so we’ll keep with it this year.  We also have a vocabulary word of the week with periodic review of these words in crosswords and flashcards.  These are words they come across in their reading and wonder what they mean; big words like portentous and epiphany.

Foreign Language: We will continue to use Rosetta Stone for Latin American Spanish and English from the Roots Up for Latin and Greek root words.

Reading: We will read, read, read, and read!  Each kid has a novel they are working on at all times.  We take 30 minutes during schooltime, but they also read in their free time and always at bedtime.  I always have a book I read aloud to them while they illustrate pictures for it as I read.  I am currently reading Redwall.  The older two read aloud during bible time and my youngest reads library books aloud to me as well as books from the online resource Reading A-Z which has evaluations available.

Writing: We will write whenever we can.  I incorporate it into all our other studies.  For example, if we are studying the Revolutionary War, I will read aloud about Nathan Hale then ask them to write me a paragraph about him.  They always know they will write a rough draft, I will correct it with editing notation, and then they will write a final draft.  We do this for anything I want them to write about:  reptiles, Mozart, Japan, etc.  Each of them has a reading log in which they write about whatever book they finish during their individual reading.  On days that I do not have a writing plan, they write in journals.  Usually these are fictional stories.  I also have them write book reports on stories I read aloud.  I try to make these fun.  For example:  after The Tale of Despereaux they wrote different sections of their book reports on the arms, legs, and body of their favorite character, then decorated the face to look like them.  Finally, we do plenty of copywork along with our various unit studies.

And of course we will do each and every one of these planned activities every single day….HA!!  In reality, I will allow it to be very fluid, with group work in the morning hours and individual work following that.  If we can get even a decent percentage of what I have planned done within a month, I will be happy.

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July 13, 2009
Poll: Your Family and Television Usage

We’re conducting a quick poll about Homeschooling families and Television. Please select the answer that best describes your family’s TV usage, and feel free to expound in the comments section.

Which answer best describes your family's use of television

View Results

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January 6, 2009
A New Year and A Giveaway

Well, the Holidays are over and we thoroughly enjoyed the time off.  We gave the kids two whole weeks free of “official” school.  Although there was plenty of baking, music, socialization, and shopping thrown in!  My very favorite thing about this time of year is having the luxury of just relaxing with family.  Not many other times of the year can I do this and not have the nagging, guilty feeling that I should be doing something more industrious.  I allow myself to just sit and talk without worrying about laundry or dusting or lesson plans.  I love it.

All this relaxing being done now, I hit a bump when it comes to getting back to daily “normal” life.  It is a difficult thing for me to return to a proper schedule or routine  (Not to mention getting back into blogging and the daily operation of this website)!  Being about halfway through the school year should be a good time to reevaluate our educational plans and what has been working or not working.  But, for some reason this is difficult for me to do.  I need advice.  Sooo, that being said, we have a little contest for our homeschooling friends.  In return for your help and advice, we are having a giveaway of our “Thank You Notes” lesson and stationary.  Here’s what you do before January 13:

  • Leave a comment here on this post sharing your experiences and sage advice on how to make the best transition from holiday mode to school mode!  How do you plan, how far in advance to you prepare, how do you prepare the kids to start, or do you even allow your kids time off?  Let us know!
  • Sign up for our email subscription in the sidebar.

Any new email addresses added within that week, will be entered into a drawing to receive our “Thank You Notes” set for free.  We will put all the email addresses in a hat and have the kids draw a winner!  We will contact the winner Wednesday, January 14 with your free download!  So, leave those comments to help me and the community as a whole.  There’s plenty of others in the same conundrum!  Tell all your friends!

Happy New Year from Homemade Homeschoolers!

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October 22, 2008
Kids Can Cook in the L.A. Times

In the Los Angeles Times newspaper today, there is a wonderful article on cooking with kids!  They have some good recipes and tips on making pasta with your homeschool helpers.  I remember when I was a kid and my mom would make homemade chicken noodle soup.  We would have noodles hanging everywhere drying.  Not to mention how wonderful it tasted when I had contributed in making it.  Projects like these can become lifelong memories in your child!  Enjoy.

Homemade Pasta in the L.A. Tmes.

To discuss cooking, daily life, or any other homeschooling topic, please visit the HMHS Discussion Forum.

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October 20, 2008
A Day in the Life…Part 2

I promised I would finish writing about our day.  By the way, Jane Austen was wonderful; Persuasion is absolutely my favorite story!  Okay, I left off at free reading time following lunch.

1:30pm:  After reading time (about 30 minutes), we gathered together again; this time at the computer.  I have a list of questions written out that they need to find the answers to online.  Questions like “Who did Madison campaign against?”, “What are the three branches of government?”, and “What are the seven duties of a President of the United States?”.  They find the answers (with some help) and write them down in their notebooks.  Any information that they do not understand, we discuss further.

2:00pm:  We head down to the school room for an art project.  We have been studying lines (horizontal, vertical, diagonal, and curved).  So, today we combine curved and straight lines to make a picture.  They are given two lines on a 3.5″ by 5″ paper, either two straight or one straight and one curved line.  They then imagine a picture involving those lines and draw it.  Some of their results are pictured below.  I got this idea from Evan Moor’s Teach Art to Children.  We have been enjoying this book as a way to cover all the elements of art: line, shape, color, etc. without a lot of preparation and research by me.  We also make cards weekly to send out for birthdays, get wells, holidays, and just thinking about yous.  In that way, we keep in touch with everyone and still get art in our lessons for the day!

Hailey's Line Drawings

Hailey's Line Drawings

Micah's Line Drawings

Micah's Line Drawings

3:00pm:  Time for science.  We are using Considering God’s Creation and are on the Plant Kingdom.  Today we reviewed photosynthesis, vocabulary words, and plant structure.  Then we collected plant specimens to draw.  The kids do remarkably well at drawing plants by sight.  Even my 5 year old can produce a very good botanical drawing for her age!

3:30 – 5:00pm:  Clean up time and free time.  After cleaning up all school-related items, the kids usually just play outside.  Today, my son and younger daughter are fascinated by harmonica because Daddy has been playing it off and on all day.  So, he spends a good hour teaching the two of them to play some rhythm and  melodies like “Dirty Dog” and “Chugga Chugga”.  I am very pleased because my husband is a life long musician, but up till now has not really sparked an interest in the kids.  (As I write this, my son can now play harmonica along with my husband playing guitar and they sound great!  We will hopefully get that onto a podcast very soon here. :) )  During this time, I am cleaning, vacuuming, doing laundry, reading, checking email, etc.  They get a warning at about 4:30 to get all toys cleaned up outside and inside.

5:00pm:  Meal time.  I have the kids assigned weekly to help prepare dinner, set the table, or clear the table.  Today, my eldest daughter is kitchen helper.  We make tacos, burritos, fresh veggies with dip, and chips and salsa.  This is a weekly repeat dinner enjoyed by everyone.  The littlest one sets the table and my son clears.  All get showers before dinner if at all possible.  Today we actually accomplish that!

7:00pm:  Dessert is hot chocolate with marshmallows.  Teeth are brushed, dishes done, and jammies on.  Now is the time they all settle down to listen to Daddy reading Lord of the Rings.  They have been doing this most of the summer, starting with The Hobbit.  We are getting so close to the end!  The kids are absolutely enthralled with it!  See my blog entitled Hobbit Mania for more on that.

8:15pm:  The kids are finally in bed.  However, I allow them reading time at bedtime (I can’t deny them time to read – they found my weak spot!)  So, they aren’t usually asleep until about 9:00.  Except the little one, who falls asleep with the first book!  After their bedtime, my husband and I have quiet time together or (as I am doing now) blogging time!  I am usually in bed by 10:00 on a good night!

Hope you have enjoyed hearing about our day!  To discuss daily life or any homeschooling topics, please visit our HMHS Discussion Forum!

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October 16, 2008
A Day in the Life…Part 1

I am always curious how other homeschoolers spend their days.  So, I decided to post a typical day in our household for anyone else as curious as I.  Here was our day today.

7:09am:  I am woken by 5 year old daughter, as usual.  She follows me to the bathroom and sings me songs while I shower, with me shushing her every few seconds not to wake up Daddy.  She watches me get ready, asking me a thousand questions of which she already knows the answer.  (I love this time in a child’s life and I know it will be gone much too soon.)

7:30am:  We head out to the kitchen.  She gets chocolate milk and I get coffee.  I make banana bread and she chit chats some more.  Then I get to check my emails and print off anything I need for the day while the other kids wander out.  Once awake, they dress up like Hobbits and head outside to play Lord of the Rings.  This is very typical each day.

8:00am:  I call in the Hobbits and we all sit down for Bible Time.  We decided last year that our Bible Time needs to involve consistent reading.  So, we read a chapter each morning from the New Testament.  Today we started Luke 1, each of us takes a turn reading aloud, including my 5 year old.  They greatly enjoyed today’s reading.  As part of Bible Time I will generally pick a song from our hymnal to work on each week.  In this way, they get used to following sheet music and become very familiar with songs we sing at church.  However, recently we have been learning the books of the bible in song.  I am using Wee Sing Bible Songs.

8:30am:  Breakfast is ready.  After we all eat, the kids clean their beds, return books to the school room, brush teeth, and complete morning chores.

9:00am:  We all gather in the school room.  We begin the day with what we call Basics.  Math, Grammar, Spelling, and Copywork.  Generally we include writing as well, but the unit study we are in the midst of requires lots of writing in itself.  Most of this can be completed on their own, with the exception of Spelling.  My 10 year old daughter is much faster than her siblings.  If she finishes ahead, which she did today, she reads her selected novel and/or works on 4H activities until everyone else is caught up.  My 5 year old does Math, Copywork, and reads me a story.  Today she is pretty fussy about completing her work, but on average is very interested in school.

10:45am:  Short break time to ride bikes and jump on the trampoline.

11:00ish am:  Return to the school room for group work.  We are studying elections using Amanda Bennett’s Elections Unit Study.  We watch a program on James Madison from the library and read his biography in our Scholastic Encyclopedia of Presidents, then the two eldest write a paragraph about him.  They complete a rough draft, which I correct in proofreading marks, then they write a final draft on Notebooking paper with Madison’s portrait.  While they work on this, little one is on the computer and I am folding laundry.

12:00:  I begin lunch preparation and they get a break.  They ride bikes for a while until it starts raining, then come in to eat lunch.  Today it’s Dad’s World Famous Sandwiches, crackers, cucumbers, and sugar free lemonade.  After lunch, they get a little more break time, then read independently.  My 10 year old is reading the second Harry Potter (I know there will be some frowns because of that, but she just finished Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm and likes variety), 8 year old son is reading Wishbone: Be A Wolf, and 5 year old is reading Boomer Goes to School.

Okay, I truly intended to finish the whole day in one post.  But, it is now 9:00 pm, I am only halfway through the day, the kids are finally in bed, and I really want to watch Jane Austen’s Persuasion that I just got from Netflix today.  Soooo, I will give you the second half of the day next time, I promise :)

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