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Grace Blossoms

The Case For Year-Round Homeschool

When I was a public school teacher, I longed for year-round school.

Other teachers told me I was crazy…they loved their summers off.

But I knew in my gut I could make it amazing.

I’ve been blessed in our homeschool setting to prove just that.

In this article, I want to share six reasons we’re grateful for year-round homeschool.

I hope it gives you hope in your schooling situation, wherever you may be.

1. Mental Break

We school four weeks, then take a week-long break.

With this schedule, we school many more days than the typically schooled child.

But it feels like so much less.

That fifth week is amazing for the kids and for mama.

It’s like a fresh start every time!

The mental break is beyond helpful.

However, the overall mindset shift might be my favorite part.

Waiting until the next extended break while I was teaching was such a drag. We don’t experience that anymore!

2. Travel Year Round

Hiking, mini-trips, or even exploring our surrounding area has been so fun.

Especially when we’re not confined to the school year.

I had no idea how much there was to do out there in the other 3 seasons!

We’ve had a blast.

No long lines, and we can bring all the homeschooling friends we want?

Win!

We also get homeschool discounts in lots of places, too.

How and why we love year-round homeschool as a fun, easy-going, and enjoyable school option in all seasons of the year and in life.

3. Nix the Summer Gap

The one thing I hated most as a teacher was how it never seemed like anything stuck after summer vacation.

My new students sat there in August, year after year, with a whole lotta nothing in their heads.

That summer gap is for real, y’all.

We don’t have to experience that anymore with year-round homeschool.

I see their skills and building blocks growing stronger in every four week session, and it’s so exciting!

They’re much more confident.

We waste no time reviewing because everything is always fresh.

Best of all, their excitement for learning doesn’t fade.

4. What About Schooling While Friends are Off?

People ask me this all the time.

But they forget one important little detail: homeschooling is flexible!

We’re at the pool, out back with the neighborhood kids, and spraying each other with the hose just as much as all the other kids.

There is one thing we don’t have though: summer boredom!

Schooling is what happens around life.

This means when everyone is tired of the heat, thirsty, or hungry, they’re inside learning!

We also really enjoy schooling outside. The trampoline, swings, treehouse, and a blanket in the grass are some of our favorite spots.

Our days are so full and fun all summer long!

5. Our Kids are Invested

It was harder when we knew our next extended break time wasn’t for another two or three months.

Especially when you’re little…everything takes forever!

It’s amazing to see their ability to jump right back in after a nice week-long rest.

We said goodbye to the drag of waiting for the next break.

6. The Children Make SUCH Fun Plans!

It’s exciting to encourage and assist in our boys’ fifth week plans.

Where will we go?

What will we do?

Do we need rest and relaxation doing a whole lot of nothing?

Or would we enjoy lots of outside time or a quick trip somewhere?

They can help us budget, map out hikes, and pack the essentials.

It’s an amazing way to train up adults who are cognizant of the balance between work and rest .

Final Thoughts

I pray this finds you excited or at least interested.

This has added such an element of fun to our homeschool experience.

Would you try homeschooling year round?

Have you done it before with a different schedule?

I’d love to hear what you think of this in the comments below!

How and why we love year-round homeschool as a fun, easy-going, and enjoyable school option in all seasons of the year and in life.

Filed in: Schooling • by Andrea •

[jetpack-related-posts]

Let ’em Fly!

In response to sickness and the Ohio weather shifting from mid 70s to upper 30s overnight, we present to you some indoor fun…

**drumroll please**

Read more

Filed in: Uncategorized • by Andrea •

[jetpack-related-posts]

This Math Card Game is Rubbish!

This Math Card Game is Rubbish!

We have played the math card game Rubbish approximately one billion times, and I’ll play it 1 billion and one if it means our boys practice the skills this game sharpens.

My five-year-old loves it, my three-year-old wants in, and we all enjoy the time together.

It’s quick, and super simple, too!

The Rules

1.) Lay out two rows of five cards, horizontally for each player. The rest of the cards are for the draw pile.

2.) Choose the first player. We rock-paper-scissors for it. 🙂

3.) The first player chooses a card. Each of the cards you laid face down represent a number (left-to-right) Ace-5 in the top row; 6-10 on the bottom row.

4.) If the card drawn is Ace-10, pick up the face-down card in the corresponding spot, and replace it with the card drawn (lay it facing up).

5.) The face-down card you pulled to replace with the drawn card is now the next card you play. If it fits in to what’s left, you pick that spot’s card up and lay the one in your hand down in its place. Your turn continues until you don’t have any more spots available for the switch out.

Example: I draw a 5. I pick up the card face down that’s in the 5 spot (top row last card on the right) and lay the 5 I just drew where it was. The card that was face down was an Ace. I pick up the first card on the top row and lay the Ace down in its place…keep going until you run out of spots to fill.

A math card game called Rubbish teaches your child base ten, numbers, and strategy with a bit of luck thrown in for lots of laughs.

The first to fill all his or her spots is the winner!

Other Handy Rules:

1.) If you pick up a Jack or Queen, you automatically discard into a discard pile next to the Rubbish draw pile.

2.) If you  pick up a number you already have face up, discard.

3.) If you pick up a King, it’s wild and can be used as any number Ace-10!

4.) When you run through the entire deck of draw cards, shuffle the discard into a new draw pile and keep going until you get a winner.

The Best Part

The best part about Rubbish is that it looks exactly like the ten-frames my oldest is learning in Kindergarten math!

He works with numbers, placement, and I was really surprised by how quickly he learned the numbers associated with the face-down cards.

For our three-year-old, this has been great to help drive home learning his numbers.

Final Thoughts

I love this silly game called Rubbish and how it helped the boys’ skills grow so quickly, how it’s teaching and reteaching number sense, and most of all how it always brings us together.

A bowl of popcorn, a game of Rubbish, and our two boys makes for a great time in our homeschool day!

A math card game called Rubbish teaches your child base ten, numbers, and strategy with a bit of luck thrown in for lots of laughs.

Filed in: Schooling • by Andrea •

[jetpack-related-posts]

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