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    Thick, Chewy Gingersnaps

    Sunday, November 2nd, 2008
    balance-homeschool-bliss Thick, Chewy Gingersnaps

    In our house love means cookies. Bad day? I’ll make you some oatmeal cookies. Going on a trip? You’ll find some chocolate chip cookies in your carry on. Crisp fall day? Let’s make some gingersnaps!

    Things to keep in mind when baking cookies with little ones:

    • I usually try to find a recipe that uses oil or melted butter rather than having to cream butter with sugar with an electric mixer. It goes faster, it’s easy for the kids to stir, and I don’t have the danger of a whirling beater around little fingers.
    • I have great affection for my cookie scoop. It’s basically a small (about 1 Tbsp) ice cream scoop, but it makes shaping cookies so much quicker and easy enough for about a three year old to help with. It also handily makes evenly sized pancakes and kid-sized scoops of ice cream.
    • Kids are capable of cracking eggs at around four years old. Have them crack them into a separate bowl (so you can fish out the errant bits of shell) and wash their hands afterward.
    • Don’t let the kids (or yourself!) taste the batter once you’ve added eggs. Eggs sometimes carry salmonella and that could really ruin a day of cookie-baking!

    Big, Soft, Chewy Gingersnap Cookies

    1/2 cup melted butter
    scant 1 cup sugar
    1 egg
    1/2 cup molasses
    2 cups flour
    1 teaspoon baking soda
    1 teaspoon ginger
    1 teaspoon cinnamon
    1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper (optional, but makes them extra-snappy!)
    1/2 teaspoon salt
    Sugar, for rolling

    Instructions:

    1. Stir butter and sugar together; add egg. Beat well. Stir in molasses. Add dry ingredients and stir until combined.
    2. Shape 1-inch balls and roll in sugar. Place on a lightly greased or non-stick cookie sheet.
    3. Bake at 350 degrees for 8-10 minutes or until done.

    For a spicier cookie feel free to double the spices (it’s not that snappy to begin with). I let the children scoop the dough into the sugar, roll the balls, and place them on the cookie sheet (for even redistribution by me). It’s a great recipe to get your family into the kitchen for a bit of fun!

    Amanda grew up on a strict diet of macaroni and cheese, spaghetti-o’s, and cream cheese sandwiches. She has somehow managed to raise three children who will eat darn near anything. She shares her adventures in the kitchen and craft room at Kiddio.

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    Summer Day Camp- Homeschool Style

    Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

    Follow these step by step instructions for creating a summer day camp- homeschool style.

    Get Other Families Involved
    Pick four favorite families for a grand total of five families involved in your day camp.  Five families= five weekdays.  It’s an important connection that allows you to get 3 or 4 “days off.”

    Have a Planning Meeting
    Start the Planning with a Meeting.  Group decisions can be tricky, so the goal of this meeting is really just to chat over coffee and declare that each family must be wholly responsible for one day.   Your schedule might look like this;

    Monday- Jones Family
    Tuesday- Kennedy Family
    Wednesday- Adams family
    Thursday- Simmons Family
    Friday- Osborne Family

    Planning Activities
    The planning of activities should be kept as simple as possible.  The best way to do that is to have each family do their planning independently of each other.  So what if activities are repeated over the week?  There can be no agenda in the name of summer fun.  You’d have to change the name to Summer School if you wanted to plan something like that.

    Gathering Supplies
    Each family is also responsible for the gathering of supplies for their designated day.  See how easy this is?  Even for food.  If you plan to serve pizza on your day then you pay the delivery boy.  Similarly, if Mrs Jones (she always pulls stunts like this) wants to have the kids hand-toss their pizza she can pay to have the pizzeria send a chef to teach the kids how to do it. Who gave her Monday?

    Additional Help
    Let’s assume Mrs Adams only has two children and all of the other families has three or more.  Mrs Adams could get overwhelmed at the prospect of being responsible for 18 or more children.   You can decide, at your planning meeting, to have each family choose a “helping day” so that your schedule looks more like this;

    Monday- Jones house, Osborne helping
    Tuesday- Kennedy house, Jones helping
    Wednesday- Adams house, Kennedy helping
    Thursday- Simmons house, Adams helping
    Friday- Osborne house, Simmons helping

    Bonus Freebies
    Did you notice that each family “worked” two days in a row (Except for the Osbornes, 2 days in a row would just be too much to ask)  That means that the other days were completely “Off”  If you’re the one setting up the camp I’d recommend a strategic positioning of your days off and book a day at the spa or schedule a long nap.  For heaven’s sake, don’t use this time to clean the house.

    End-Of-Camp BBQ

    Try to plan a family BBQ for everyone involved.  To make it easier, have the Osbornes host it on Friday (since the kids will be there anyway) and have everyone else bring the Potluck foods.  The end-of-camp party is great fun and gives Dads a chance to mingle (because we know men love that, right?)  If Friday doesn’t work, perhaps a Saturday pool party or even overnight camp-out somewhere local.

    Be creative.  Have Fun.  And most of all, relax and enjoy the summer.

    by Lisa
    DIY Cheap Summer Camp Co-op

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    For younger kids: don’t stress!!!

    Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

    by Brea

    Ok, so y’all know I’m a Charlotte Mason fan. Teach your children through books, books, and more books. And then read them a book or two. And when you’re done, why not find a new great book? (Am I getting a tad repetitive here? Sorry.)

    Homeschooling can be expensive!! And there’s so many options! I’ve got a little tip for you, something I’ve heard from almost every mom of older children I know, and something I’m seeing from my own experience. If you do nothing but character training and reading out loud to your kids before they’re six or seven, you’ll have given them a vast head start over their peers. Seriously. Your kids can pick up ‘the essentials’ like reading and writing when they’re a little older, and they will be just fine for it! A close friend of mine has a daughter I’m crazy about. ‘A’ is 14, and she and I love to talk books. She’s borrowed some favs from me, and we’re not talking teen lit here. Big, heavy, wonderful books. She’s an amazing reader, devouring almost anything she can get her hands on. Want to know a secret? She didn’t learn to read until after she turned nine. A’s mom realized something: if she pushed her daughter to read before she was ready, she could possibly end up making her daughter hate reading. So she waited. She did other things with her. And now A is one of the most well-read 14-year-olds I know.

    Let your kids learn from life. Don’t start formal school with them until they’re in the first grade, and even then, keep it light! There are so many ways your kids can learn from everyday things that happen around them. My oldest, Sam, is almost 6. He’s starting to learn about money. Every Friday, we head down to our local Farmers’ Market. (Sam’s mom over here has a big ole’ crush on homegrown veggies and grass-fed beef. Mmmm …) In the last few months, Sam has become my ‘money man.’ For the most part, he and his sister Evie (4) pick out the veggies we’ll be buying for the week. Sam knows that we start each Friday off with $20 or $25. They’re each allowed to buy a treat, which costs a dollar. All prices at the market are rounded the the nearest quarter, and Sam is the one who carries the money and pays for everything. (I use ones and fives, to make it easier on him.) So if we get down to the last $5, and each of them still want to buy a treat, that’s $3 left. Evie wants to buy spinach, while Sam wants broccoli. But a bag of spinach is $2.50, and four heads of broccoli cost $3.00. Hmm, dilemma! I let the two of them figure out what to do. Sam won out with the broccoli last time, because he logically pointed out to his sister that our spinach at home is getting big enough to eat, so we didn’t need to buy any.

    Wait, what just happened here? Let me go into this. Sam is learning math skills. Sam and Evie are learning how to interact with other grown-ups in a real-world setting (and people say homeschoolers aren’t socialized!!), and they’re learning where our food comes from. They’re both learning logic and problem-solving skills (broccoli or spinach? It’s a tough life, I tell ya!), and they’re learning financial responsibility. All that from a 10 minute visit to the market. Oh, and remember the part about growing spinach at home? We have several gardens. There’s my nature, science, and ecology classes for the next several years.

    Do you have cheerios at home? What about skittles, raisins, or chocolate chips? A few years ago, I bought a bag of 15-bean soup. It’s just a bunch of dried beans. There’s our math class. We can learn grouping, patterns, addition, subtraction, and later multiplication and division. And it cost me a whopping $.79. Do your youngsters cook with you? My kids are learning fraction without even knowing it, because I can’t ever find my measuring cups, so we have to measure out 1 1/2 cups of flour with the 1/2 cup scoop. Evie can tell you that there’s three teaspoons in a tablespoon, and Sam knows that you can’t leave sugar when it’s cooking or ‘it turns stinky and yucky.’ (We make lots of candy around Christmas time!)

    We’ve been reading The Chronicles of Narnia, and my kids just eat it up. They know the difference between a broadsword and a rapier, and why a ship would have sails and oars. And battle strategy. And the difference between port and starboard.

    I’m not writing this to brag on my children, although I’m certainly not above that. :) I’m writing this as an encouragement. It can be really
    overwhelming
    when you start looking at curriculum, and what to buy, and when to start, and  what homeschooling method to follow. And then we start looking at the world, and what and when public schools do things. Remember that each child is different, and that’s a great thing about homeschooling!! It’s much easier for kids to catch up on something they’re a little behind on, as opposed to trying to get them to like something that’s been forced on them too early. God gave your children to you, not to me, or your mother, or your neighbor, or your friends at church. You. You are better qualified to teach them, for that reason alone, than any other person in the world.

    So if you’re a little stressed right now, take a deep breath. Now one more. And one more. Get up and go on a walk with your young’ens. Talk about some flowers. Look at the clouds. Why did God make bees? What do they do? Why do round things roll better than things with flat sides? Read this post and the wonderful comments, then take a trip to the library and find Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and some of the other great books. Spend 15 minutes reading, then snuggle for 10 minutes and talk about what you just read. Congratulations, you just did school for the day!! You really can do this!

    Moms with older kids, what did y’all do when yours were little? Can you offer any advice?

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    Daily Links You Will Love

    Monday, April 14th, 2008

    Funny_granny_ironing_from_drb

    Hopeful Spirit is hosting a wonderful Carnival of Family Life.

    A wonderful article from the Washington Post last week is here!

    Principled Discovery has the best graphic in this one.

    If you have any great articles you would like highlighted please email me- homeschoolhacks@gmail.com

    Have a wonderful Monday!

    Blessings, Alli

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    Bullying in the School System

    Friday, March 28th, 2008

    Summer at Mom is Teaching wrote a brilliant article on bullying. Go read it!

    Pk_boy_bumming

    From her article-

    "I don

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