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Wasting Time: How to Keep Your Children On Track

by Toni Herrbach

By contributing writer Tabitha

We all have one. Probably more than one.

The time waster. The one who will find anything to do rather than what you have asked him or her to accomplish. It can relate to chores, homeschool assignments, reading, or anything urgent or non-urgent that needs to be done.

Wasting Time: How to Keep Your Children On Track | The Happy Housewife

I have several children who fall into this category, though all for different reasons. One needs to clean his room and instead is found reading a book. An older child gets sidetracked by the younger kids playing. Another cannot stop his art project long enough to finish math. Yet another has several tabs open searching for good music while she is supposed to be watching a lecture online.

You get the picture.

Your scenario may be completely different than mine, but you still have someone wasting time. It may even be you! At times we all choose something other than the best choice when spending our time. It might still be something good, like my child reading a book, but not the best choice for the situation.

How to Keep Your Children On Track

Set a good example!

When our children see us playing games on our phone or spending time on Facebook rather than accomplishing what we need to be doing, they know that time isn’t important. Keep on task yourself. Let them know what you are working on that day, and let them see you working towards that goal.

Minimize distractions.

When you know that no one is going to do any math while the littlest one is watching a movie, limit that activity to a time when everyone is done with math. The same with music, toys, or other activities. This will be different for every family, of course, and sometimes very difficult, but worth it!

Know their limits.

Sometimes kids aren’t willing to ask for help. Whether it is a particularly difficult task or something your child doesn’t know how to do yet (even if you have already helped them with it!) a little help offered at the right time goes a long way. Whether it be when making a bed, cleaning a room, or reviewing algebra.

Take a break.

A change of pace helps everyone.

Bribes.

Yes, rewards for behavior. They do work sometimes. Once I gave M&M’s for each sentence they wrote, and it was a success. All of a sudden those writing skills came back in a hurry, and it was no longer “too hard!”

Remind them of what is important, and what isn’t.

Explain why completing this task is important at this time, and why it may not be another time. Reading that book is important when we are having reading time or when it’s time to relax. Getting your room clean is important now because your baby sister is now mobile and could choke on the toys left on the floor. Getting our science reading done today is important because we’ve made a goal to finish it before May, and we want to go to the zoo on Friday.

Wasting Time: How to Keep Your Children On Track | The Happy Housewife

Be sure there isn’t another reason they are wasting time.

Rule out illness. I will never forget the time I got frustrated with a child for not doing what I asked quickly, only to learn later (as the child got violently ill) that they just hadn’t been feeling well. Lesson learned.

Set real, appropriate consequences.

Sometimes it’s hard to find a natural consequence for not completing a task on time, but the closer it is to what really would happen outside your family if it wasn’t done, the better. If our younger children aren’t done when everyone else is playing outside or gets time with a video game, they do not get to participate. Older kids need to finish work before I have evening tasks to do, or I can’t help them. While I will still help them, I don’t have unlimited time or attention and family needs have to be met.

Set appropriate limits.

I don’t have tasks for my youngest to complete that take longer than is proper for their age or abilities. An example is asking my 3 year old to pick up 20 things, and I can give her a few minutes to do so while I can ask my 16 year old to clean up his room and expect it done today, realistically. The amount of focus also affects the time I ask.

Be there for them.

When they know they can count on you and see you working hard for them, they are more motivated to make sure they are doing their best for your family too. This is a life long lesson. I’ve found that the more time I spend doing things with my children, the more important they realize their family is both to me and to them, and the more we work together.

Time wasting affects everyone. We don’t want to be late to important appointments or engagements, and this seems to be more difficult for my own family to learn as a homeschooling unit. We don’t have school bells, we don’t watch the clock waiting for lunch, and we don’t have tardiness issues. What we do try to teach is respect for others and how being late is rude, and wasting time is a bad use of the limited resources we have been given.

Time is a gift. Use it wisely. We never know when it will be taken away from us. When we (and our children) learn to use our time in the best way possible, it helps us realize we are responsible for our choices, and that is one of the greatest lessons we can learn.

More posts from Tabitha

Comments | 1 comment

Testing for Starch Science Experiment

by Toni Herrbach

Testing for Starch Science Experiment | The Happy Housewife

By contributing writer Marci

Thanksgiving might be the starchiest of holidays. Think mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, rolls, breads, stuffing, even pumpkin pie. Ugh… I’m miserably full just thinking about it.

Why not turn this into a science experiment and freak out all your low-carb eating family and friends?

Testing for Starch

There is an easy indicator test for starch that you can do at home. You might already have the indicator solution in your medicine cabinet – Iodine. When iodine comes into contact with starch, the iodine turns from orange to dark blue, instantly.

To test if your foods contain starch, place several foods that you want to test on a plate and simply add a drop of iodine. (We used iodine tincture from the antiseptic section at Walgreens for $3.99.)

Testing for Starch Science Experiment (results) | The Happy Housewife

If there is no starch, the iodine stays orange/brown. If starch is present, the result is a dark blue color.

What’s Happening?

Starch is made up of two components – amylose and amylopectin. The amylose molecules react with the iodine ions and create the blue color.

This test will not work for sugar, another type of carbohydrate.

Grab your bottle of iodine and test your Thanksgiving feast. You all might be surprised where all the starch is hiding.

More from The Happy Housewife

  • Sink or Float Experiment
  • Salt and Ice Experiments
  • Bird Feeder Experiment
  • More Homeschool Science from Marci

Comments | 1 comment

Gratitude Journals for Kids

by Toni Herrbach

By contributing writer Colleen

November is here, the holiday season is in full swing, and my kids’ attentions have turned toward Christmas. With ads, catalogs, and commercials touting all the latest and greatest items kids need, it’s increasingly difficult to turn their focus to the things they already have.

And it’s next to impossible to get them to express gratitude for those things already filling their shelves and closets.

Gratitude Journals for Kids | The Happy Housewife

One of the best ways to help kids get over that gimme mentality is to help them turn their focus to gratitude. Being thankful for the things with which they’ve been blessed is a fabulous antidote to the wants.

You can start by simply encouraging them to tell you five things about the day for which they are thankful. You can do the same. And, if it’s tough for them to come up with things at first, help them out by offering suggestions:

  • The sun was shining, so we were able to take our first walk of the week.
  • Baby brother napped, so Mom was able to play a board game this afternoon.
  • It’s pizza night — and that’s my favorite food.

Better yet, get your kids in the habit of writing down the things for which they are grateful. Mind to pen to paper…it’ll make it more tangible for them, and they’ll remember those things more readily instead of focusing on what they don’t have.

To make showing gratitude and thinking about it a family activity, try making these easy gratitude journals.

Gratitude Journal Instructions

Supplies Needed

  • Scrapbook paper scraps and extras cut to 4 x 6 inches
  • Ribbon
  • Hole punch
  • Markers
  • Stickers

Instructions

Punch a hole in your paper. Then, thread the ribbon through the holes to bind it into a book.

Gratitude Journals for Kids (collage) | The Happy Housewife

After dinner each night, place the journals, a cup of markers, and a box of stickers on the table. Sit down as a family and open to a page in the journal, write five things that happened that day for which you are grateful (and have everyone do the same in theirs), and decorate your page with stickers.

Take a few minutes for everyone to share their pages. Talk about all of the great things you each noticed and how different everyone’s perspectives are.

Instilling a grateful heart in kids can be a challenge, but it’s so worth it. What are some ways you help your kids see all of the things there are to be grateful for?

More from The Happy Housewife

  • Teach Children Gratitude
  • Raising Content Kids
  • More Posts from Colleen

Comments | 2 comments

Harvest Themed Worksheets: Free Printables

by Toni Herrbach

By contributing writer Lauren

This month’s free printables are harvest themed!  Your Kindergartner or First Grader will enjoy working through this 4-page set.

Harvest Themed Worksheets: Free Printables | The Happy Housewife

In this Harvest Themed Worksheet Set:

  • Harvest Word Search – A simple word search for early learners.
  • Beginning Sounds: Harvest – Determine the beginning sound of each harvest themed picture.
  • Simple Addition with Word Problems – Solve the simple addition equations and Thanksgiving themed word problems.
  • One Doesn’t Belong! – Determine which harvest themed picture does not belong in each row.
Harvest Thanksgiving Printables
Harvest Thanksgiving Printables
Harvest Thanksgiving Printables November 2013.pdf

Date:October 26, 2013
1.0 MiB
Details...

Comments | 1 comment

Thanksgiving Book List: Free Printable Friday

by Toni Herrbach

Free Printable Friday | The Happy Housewife

This Week’s Free Printable

Help your kids learn about and prepare for the holiday with this Thanksgiving Book List.

Thanksgiving Book List | The Happy Housewife

Share Your Free Printables

If you are adding a link to our list, your post must include a free and printable item. Any type or topic is accepted.

Comments | Be the first!

Weather Word Hunt: Free Printable Friday

by Toni Herrbach

Free Printable Friday | The Happy Housewife

This Week’s Free Printable

Your children can learn about weather by using the words in the word bank to match the meanings.

Weather Word Hunt

Weather Word Hunt - Free Printable Friday | The Happy Housewife

Stop by and visit my co-hosts, Meet Penny and Blessed Beyond a Doubt, to see what they are sharing today!

Share Your Free Printables

If you are adding a link to our list, your post must include a free and printable item. Any type or topic is accepted.

Comments | Be the first!

10 Reasons We Don’t Join Co-Ops

by Toni Herrbach

By contributing writer Tabitha

I love the idea of homeschool co-ops. I think it is so great to get kids together and let them learn something from someone other than their parents. It is valuable for them to know how to treat other adults.

When I first started homeschooling, I knew I was going to sign my kids up as soon as I found one. Problem was, when my oldest became was school age, we were in a small town and had no access to a homeschool group, let alone a co-op.

10 Reasons We Don't Join Co-Ops | The Happy Housewife

My own homeschool co-op

I had ideas to form a co-op. I only knew one other homeschooling family within driving distance. They were in a different state with different laws and requirements, and they already had their own groups and schedule, so it didn’t work out.

By the time I moved to Texas and had more than one child being homeschooled, I found a great group, but at first they didn’t have a co-op. The families I knew that homeschooled sent their children to school very soon after we moved in. Again, we couldn’t form a co-op.

Finally, when we did have access to a co-op, we chose not to join. Why? Here are our reasons why we haven’t joined any co-op that we’ve had the opportunity to attend.

  1. When the opportunity finally presented itself, we were firmly established in our homeschooling and knew what we were doing. I no longer felt we needed help or even other people teaching our children beyond what they got at church.
  2. With as many children as we have, the classes offered weren’t a good fit. Either there was nothing that interested some of my children, or the requirements didn’t fit the ages of my children. Even if one class was a perfect fit, what do I do with all my other children?
  3. At times, the fees involved were more than the opportunity was worth. Yes, I know the fees are necessary to run the course, buy materials, make copies, etc, but with 9 children and 7 of them co-op age, we could do similar activities on our own for less.
  4. Some of the co-ops I was invited to join had many of the same features I disagreed with from public schools. I had no say over subject material. The students were still grouped with similar ages in an unnatural environment.
  5. By the time I got all of my children up, dressed, fed, in the van, and drove to co-op, the time spent was more than what we could have covered the material in. The time commitment was not a good investment.
  6. Considering that I’ve been pregnant or nursing most of the time since we started homeschooling, the energy expended was not worth it to either sign up, attend, teach or transport kids to and from co-op.
  7. My 9 children are a co-op on their own. They teach each other. They learn from each other, and it’s not always the older ones helping the younger ones. Plus I learn from them too.
  8. When there is something we need to learn that I cannot teach or even know where to begin to find information for, there are so many ways I can outsource and find resources for my family. ASL with an aunt and uncle. Friends that have a farm. Writing help with a college professor uncle. Help from a member of our church. The library. It never ends, and I offer that same help to others who need it. It works both ways.
  9. Our daily routine changes from day to day as the physical, mental, educational, and emotional needs of 11 different people are met. And with that many people, we can’t always stop everything to attend something external.
  10. Last but not least, it just never fit the particular learning styles of my children. Will it someday? Possibly. My family is still growing.

I know this isn’t true for everyone, but sometimes we need to connect with others who feel the same. There are so many different ways to help our children learn at home, and co-ops don’t always fit our family, just like any one curriculum isn’t right for everyone. Otherwise, the curriculum companies would be out of business! Find what works for you, and everything works out.

More posts from Tabitha

Comments | 4 comments

Creation Based Dinosaur Resources

by Toni Herrbach

Creation Based Dinosaur Resources | The Happy Housewife

By contributing writer Marci

We have lots of dinosaur books in our house. They range from preschool pre-readers with dinosaur caricatures to National Geographic dinosaur encyclopedias. The kids are drawn toward the pictures of the gigantic Tyrannosaurus rex being compared to the average human. They are fascinated by fossil beds and dinosaur skeletons. But, when it comes to the dinosaur timelines in most dinosaur books, they pause and question. Millions of years?

As Christians, we believe in a literal Biblical 6-day creation where land animals and humans were created on the same day. That being said, millions of years doesn’t fit into our timeline. That doesn’t, however, mean that our timeline doesn’t fit into science. In fact, we have found some great dinosaur books and resources written from a creation point of view that are rooted in science. You can believe in creation and science at the same time!

Here are some of our favorite creation science-based dinosaur resources for kids.

Creation Based Dinosaur Resources (Dinosaurs for Kids) | The Happy Housewife

Dinosaurs For Kids – Read our review over at The Homeschool Scientist.

Creation Based Dinosaur Resources (Dry Bones and Other Fossils) | The Happy Housewife

Dry Bones and Other Fossils – This book was written by Dr. Gary Parker as a family fossil hunt adventure that supports creation science.

Creation Based Dinosaur Resources (Chronicles of Dinosauria) | The Happy Housewife

Chronicles of Dinosauria: The History and Mystery of Dinosaurs and Man – This amazing book gives scientific and anthropological evidence of dinosaurs and man co-existing.

Creation Based Dinosaur Resources (Creation Museum) | The Happy Housewife

Plan a family field trip to the Creation Museum.  Learn about how dinosaurs fit into creation in their incredible dinosaur exhibits. Our family loved our trip to the Creation Museum.

Creation Based Dinosaur Resources (Dinosaur Lapbook) | The Happy Housewife

Create a creation based dinosaur lapbook with these free printables from HomeschoolShare.com.

More Homeschool Science from Marci

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Tree Scavenger Hunt: Free Printable Friday

by Toni Herrbach

Free Printable Friday

This Week’s Free Printable

Tree Scavenger Hunt
Tree Scavenger Hunt
tree scavenger hunt.pdf

Platforms:Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7
License:Freeware
Date:October 16, 2013
61.2 KiB
Details...

Stop by and visit my co-hosts, Meet Penny and Blessed Beyond a Doubt, to see what they are sharing today!

Share Your Free Printables

If you are adding a link to our list, your post must include a free and printable item. Any type or topic is accepted.

Comments | Be the first!

Dino Island Play Dough Set

by Toni Herrbach

By contributing writer Colleen

Preschoolers learn best through play and when following their own interests, which is why I currently find myself swimming in dinosaurs for the second year in a row.

My girls are in love with all things dino, and since we’ve already played with cornmeal “digs,” dinosaur play sets, and have done a multitude of coloring sheets and watched countless videos, I needed something new to spark their imagination.

Dino Island Play Dough Set | The Happy Housewife

Inspired by a Google image search which uncovered several creative DIY dinosaur islands, the kids and I decided to make our own Dino Island Play Dough Set.

For the sake of ease (and my sanity), I picked up three 4-packs of Play Dough at the Dollar Tree. I knew we wouldn’t be reusing this dough because it would get wet and mashed around, so I didn’t want to bother with expensive or homemade. Feel free to use whatever you have handy. I’m sure you could make some beautiful, natural island-like colors with homemade dough.

First, I sent the girls around the house to collect small plastic dinosaurs, plants, and trees. We had an assortment of Playmobile, Lego, and Safari Limited toys mixed together.

Then, they got to work.

Dino Island Play Dough Play Set Building

I fashioned a little bowl out of foil, since they decided their dinosaurs needed a watering hole, while the girls smashed blue and yellow dough on an art tray for sand and sea.

My daughter made a volcano by covering a play dough container with orange dough (there wasn’t any brown) complete with red lava flowing down the sides. The girls plan to erupt baking soda and vinegar from their volcano eventually.

Once the play dough island was all set up, the girls added their trees and shrubs, and introduced their dinos to their new habitat.

They played for hours, and my ten year-old son even joined in. In fact, one afternoon of imaginative creation has led to at least an hour of focused, quiet, sensory play for my 4 and 6 year-olds every day for the last two weeks.

I’m not sure why I’m always so surprised by this, but it really is the simple open-ended activities that lead to the most enjoyment for my kids.

Dino Island Play Dough Play Set Playing

Do you have dinosaur lovers? Grab some dough and encourage them to create their own habitat for play dinosaurs.

How else could you use play dough in creative ways?

More Posts from Colleen

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