Morning Routine
Family School
Devotional
Outdoor Hour/Nature Study
The Nature Table (shelf)
Exploring Creation - Science
Herb Fairies
Art and Composer Study
Patterns of Liberty and Family History

It is that time of year again when I put all of my school plans together and get ready for another great year of home school! I always begin with a prayer for each individual child and what their needs my be. I also review my home school education books or study something knew. This past summer I read a great book called, Leadership Education: The Phases of Learning by Oliver Demille, a companion book to A Thomas Jefferson Education by Oliver Demille. These phases rang true for me and I felt I needed to incorporate them into my family and I am excited to see what will happen this year. I highly recommend this reading for everyone, homeschooler or not. With that in mind here is the plan for our 2014/2015 school year
Morning Routine
After morning chores each child and Mom sit around the table for personal scripture study. Each child will have his/her list of age appropriate resources for scripture study. Mom has the following:
We study by ourselves for about 15-20 minutes every morning before breakfast. This is quiet time where no talking is allowed and then during breakfast, right after study time, we can discuss what we learned together. After breakfast we start what I call, Family School, which are subjects we learn about together as a family before separating into individual study. Devotional and outdoor hour are the only ones we do every single day, the others we may do some one day and some another.
Family SchoolDevotional
Devotional consists of a song or hymn, prayer, pledge of allegiance, memorization scripture, article of faith and Family Proclamation. We then have a short lesson given by either Mom or one of the children. Each person is assigned a day of the week and they are in charge of putting together a thought or lesson. These are some of the resources we use in addition to our personal scripture study materials. The Little's teach from Behold Your Little Ones and use the activity folders or they teach us what they learned at church that week since they usually come home with handouts or activities.
Outdoor Hour/Nature Study
We love outdoor hour around here, even in the winter. I like to print out the monthly challenge from the Handbook of Nature Study blog and we use that as a "guide". The children are really free to explore and observe whatever their hearts desire. We then come in and if they choose, draw or write about what they observed in their nature journals or nature notebooking pages. Big Man is the only one that does not like to use his nature journal, but I do require him to have at least one entry during the month. We also have a nature table that was Little Man's project last winter and everyone has enjoyed it, especially the Little's, they are always bringing in some treasure to display and continue to observe and play with. We also have lots of nature books in this area and we use the Handbook of Nature Study as our resource and guidebook.
The Nature Table (shelf)
We set up a small bookshelf in a little part of our living room to house all of our nature study materials. We post the outdoor hour challenge right above the shelf and have that wall for drawings the children may have, posters of what we may be studying and our weather chart. The shelf itself has a book bin that keeps our garden journals, the outdoor hour monthly newsletter, our weather lapbooks, the Ranger Rick magazines and any seasonal books we are using a lot. There are also baskets to house the "treasures" brought in by the children and this is changed from season to season as we retire old treasures and bring in the new. All of our field guides and nature books are on the shelf as well as the nature journals, binoculars and magnifying glass. Little Man helped put the shelf together and organize all of the contents in and on it, this is his love so he was the one in charge. His prize possession is a snake skin given to him by a neighbor with a corral snake, he has to show this to everyone that comes to the house and since the shelf is located right next to the front door, literally everyone gets a peek.
The children love science and we love the Exploring Creation Series by Jeannie Fulbright. This year we are going to study the last two in the series we haven't yet covered, Astronomy and Anatomy. We also use notebooking pages for each section in the book we cover. The children still look back in their notebooks from past years as a reference guide. Because we do this as a family I also use books on the same subject for the Little's but more for their level of learning and exploration.
Exploring Creation - ScienceHerb Fairies
We study an herb every month and because we love it so much, this usually happens everyday. This spring I came across Herb Fairies and it quickly became my children's favorite part of the day. They love the stories (if you aren't into fairy tales though this is not for you) and it gets them so excited to learn more about the herb of the month. We keep an herb journal, do some herbal crafting with the herb and observe it up close and personal for those that are in the yard or around the neighborhood. I also love to use Herbal Roots Zine and of course my herbal library.
Art and Composer Study
I think it is important to study the arts but we keep it pretty loosey, goosey around here. I usually have a piece of artwork displayed for a 2 week period in the main school area and we talk about it here and there. I like to use the Ambleside Online schedule of artist and composer because they have done all the work for me, complete with a PDF picture to print and post. We also just listen to classical music in the background rather than an actual period of listening. If you want an actual program to follow Harmony Fine Arts has some great lesson plans and study materials. Homeschool in the Woods also has a fun Activity-Pak for bothartists and composers that we have used and loved.
Patterns of Liberty and Family History![]()
I mentioned before that Patterns of Liberty was the basis for Patriot Camp this year and I am excited to have it available to use in our school this year. I will be reading a story and doing activities based around that story or person once a week. I also will be telling stories from our family history and encouraging the older children to get involved in researching their ancestors and helping in uploading pictures and histories to FamilySearch.com, where this information can be viewed by others. FamilySearch is a free resource available for everyone to use not just those of us that are LDS, I encourage everyone to utilize this amazing resource for bringing us closer to our family members and ancestors.
Read Aloud Book List
I like to have a book we are always listening to as a family. This may be one we borrowed from the library on cd that we listen to in the car or while doing chores. It may also be one I sit and read to the children while they work on quiet activities, needle work, quiet play for the Little's or whittling for Big Man. I let this go last year because I allowed myself to get too busy but we all loved it and it is something I will put on my priority list this year. These are just a few of the books I have in mind for our read alouds this year. I may also pick some off the first grade and fourth grade free reading lists.
Personal Study Time
Once we finish our family school the children go off to do their personal studies and I get to read some more with my Littles and guide and help them where needed (and wanted). They will mostly explore and play on their own both indoors and out and I will be available to all for guidance.
Phases For My Children This YearNotebooking
Just a quick note about notebooking. As I post the plans for each child for the year you will notice many links to different notebooking pages from notebookingpages.com. At first I would purchase one set here and one set there but realized I would be much better off joining the notebooking pages treasury. That has been one of my best purchases! With the treasury you have access to all of their notebooking pages, with more to be released each year. You also have access to the notebooking web-app, which allows the child to design his own page online and then print it out for his notebook. These have been a big part of our homeschool, something the children enjoy making and a way for them to write, narrate and be creative in expressing what they are learning.
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We had our annual Utah Patriot Camp this week and had a ton of fun learning about the patterns of liberty throughout history. Patriot Camp is designed for ages 4-11 to learn about our freedom, liberty, our founding, and most importantly our constitution. They learn through stories, crafts, games, history, and song. There are many teen and adult volunteers that make this camp possible. Big man is excited to be a volunteer next year since this was his last year attending as a "camper". I was over the craft station and was so amazed at how much the children were able to tell me what they were taught in the learning stations. We have some amazing "little patriots" that I can't wait to become "big patriots". Several visitors came to camp this year including: Joan of Arc, a Mountain Man, a Frontiersman, a soldier from Washington's continental army, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and George Washington himself! These children are the future of our country. It is so important for them to know the true principles of freedom and liberty and to understand our constitution. It is even more important for them to learn the patterns of liberty throughout history so we can copy the patterns that lead to freedom and prosperity and not repeat those that lead to captivity and misery. Patriot camp was based on the teachings in this book called Patterns of Liberty. This book was written to use as families to teach these principles and also how to apply them, in an easy to understand way. I will have this as part of my homeschool curriculum next year and I am so excited to use it. Tenna Hartman, the author, was our "Joan of Arc" here at patriot camp, she will be coming out with a follow up book and an activity book to have a hands on experience with implementing these principles. You can purchase your own copy and find out more about this inspired book, here.
I love the Thanksgiving season as we focus on our blessings and all the Lord has done for us. These are some ways we focus on the giving season in our home and homeschool. Give Thanks My favorite resource for this season is Gives Thanks: A Study of Gratitude and Thanksgiving from Discover the Scriptures. I use this every year during the entire month of November, some years I do it all and some years I only use bits and pieces. We always use this for our poetry, copywork, and memory verses during the month as well as coloring pages and activities for the Littles. You can check out this wonderful resource, as well as download some sample pages here. Gratitude Poster One of the children's favorite traditions is our thankful poster. Every year I write I Am Thankful For... at the top of a posterboard and we tape it to the wall in our living room (I use painters tape so it can be removed easily). Every day (and sometimes several times a day:)) family members draw a picture or write something they are grateful for. On Thanksgiving we read the poster, admire all the artwork and give thanks for all we have been blessed with. Gratitude Journal After reading an article in our monthly church magazine called,Recognize, Remember and Give Thanks, we decided to start a family gratitude journal. Every evening before we read scriptures together, we pull out our family gratitude journal and every person names something they are grateful for that day. This is an ongoing journal we keep all year long and really helps us to focus on all that we have, rather than what we don't have. Our Favorite Thanksgiving Books I keep a basket on top of our children's bookshelf that houses seasonal books. These are just of few of our favorites, along with books we read for school time. Other Ideas
Pray Most importantly we must thank our Father in Heaven for the blessings we have and express our gratitude through daily and family prayer. Have a great Thanksgiving Season! Shared On: Encourage One Another,
As we commemorate the signing of our great constitution (here in the United States of America), I wanted to share with you some of my favorite resources for teaching our founding documents to my children and family.
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A free pdf booklet from the 1987 Bicentennial of the Constitution. This includes 3 lessons for families to learn together the importance of the constitution. I have broken it down further into 7 lessons that I teach over a 12 week period for my third grade curriculum.
Lesson 1 The Hand of God: Plan of America Revealed to Nephi Lesson 2 The Hand of God: The Lord Guided the Preparation of the Constitution Lesson 3 In Order to Form a More Perfect Union: Preamble to Constitution Preamble Cards 1 and 2 Lesson 4 In Order to Form a More Perfect Union: Branches of Government Lesson 5 In Order to Form a More Perfect Union: Bill of Rights Lesson 6 May Those Principles...Be Established Forever: Protect Our Liberties Lesson 7 May Those Principles...Be Established Forever: Obedience = Freedom ![]()
Take Your Hat Off When the Flag Goes By: A musical introduction to the constitution. My children love this cd! I am amazed at how much little ones can be taught by singing along to songs that teach about our founding fathers, the revolution, and our founding documents.
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Proclaim Liberty: Discussion Guide. This is the newest study guide in my constitution collection and I am reading it along with my 11 year old as part of his school curriculum. So far we are both enjoying it and learning a lot. I highly recommend this one, and actually anything the NCCS puts out.
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Great American Documents for Latter-Day Saint Families. This book has 18 different documents along with commentary and study helps with each document.
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The Great Prologue by Mark E. Petersen: This book chronicles the hand of God in establishing our great nation, the constitution and eventually the restoration of the gospel, which would not have been possible without the constitution.
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What could be more important than the Constitution itself. I make sure each person in my family has a pocket constitution and knows the preamble by heart. With the older children we actually open these up, read from them and mark them. Even the little ones that don't understand know that this document is important!
For those that are local here in Utah there are two events we attend or volunteer to help with each year. Patriot Camp, which is a week long camp that takes place in the summer and teaches elementary aged children about our founding fathers, the constitution and freedom and liberty. The other is Freedom's Light: A Celebration of the Constitution of the United States of America. This takes place during the week of constitution day. It is an event for the entire family where there are interactive events, food, entertainment and visits from prominent people of the past that have influenced America's independence.
Shared on: Teach Me Tuesday,
![]() For sixth grade I will be using a lot of the book suggestions from Ambleside Online Year 6. He will be joining us for family school subjects as well as a study of the constitution. Twice monthly he will meet with his Knights of Freedom group, they are learning about the history of flight this year so that will have a separate book list, along with field trips and activities. Here is the curriculum plan for my sixth grader this year. Personal Scripture StudyLanguage Arts This is my child that has struggled with spelling, writing and grammar from the beginning. It was through him that we have been through so many programs and finally found what worked for our family. I love First Language Lessons because they don't go by an age they go by what level the child is capable of. For this year my sixth grader will be working on level four of both Language Lessons and Writing with Ease. He will also be doing daily personal journal entries, notebooking pages for his reading narrations and All About Spelling levels 4 and 5. Copywork will come from Discover the Scriptures Old Testament and the Homes School in the Woods history curriculum below. Math I have used and loved MathUSee since I first began homeschooling. This year Big Man will be finishing up Delta and moving on to Epsilon. As I mentioned in my third grade post, the child only moves on when he has mastered the skills from the lesson/book. Sometimes he may move ahead quickly and sometimes he may be stuck on a lesson for a couple of weeks. Moving at the child's pace will help him be confident and successful. Poetry These are the poets of interest for year 6. I like to have the child research each poet at the beginning of the term and fill out a notebooking page on each one. We keep a running notebook of each poet they have studied throughout the years. ![]() Literature After each reading or listening from these literature books Big Man will be giving me a narration. It may be by notebooking page, orally, or using some of these narration ideas. History History is this child's love, along with math. If he could sit and study the past all day, he would be in heaven. In fact he asks all the time if he could skip language arts and just read and do history and science all the time (who wouldn't). This is a transition year where he will be going from finishing up modern times and move back to the beginning with the Old Testament and Ancient Rome and Greece. It should be an exciting year for him. I also like to start a good study on the constitution at this age so we will be using the Proclaim Liberty study guide and work on it together. Geography Along with the family school country study, my sixth grader will be reading and tracking, through maps and notebooking pages, these living geography books. Science In addition to the family study of Exploring Creation with Botany, my sixth grader will be reading these living books on Science. Reading Book List This is my sixth grader's list of books he needs to read or listen to before the next school year. The numbers next to the book indicate what term the book will go along with the time period he is learning in history and the L indicates I can get it from my library. All of the classics are available online to read or listen to. Where the Red Fern Grows – Wilson Rawks (1) L The Endless Steppe: Growing Up in Siberia – Esther Hautzig (1) L The Winged Watchman – Hilda Van Stockham (1) Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry – Mildred D. Taylor (1 racism in th 30’s) L Blue Willow – Doris Gates (1 dust bowl story) L Miracles on Maple Hill (1 depression era) L Letters from Rifka – Karen Hesse (1 jewish immigrant post WWII) L Jungle Pilot: The Life and Witness of Nate Saint, Martyred Missionary to Ecuador – Russel T. Hilt (1) The Von Trapp Family Singers – Maria VonTrapp (1) Snow Treasure – Marie McSwigan (1 Norwegian during WWII) L Number the Stars – Lois Lowry (1 WWII Danish efforts to save Jews) The Ark – Margot Benary-Isbert (1 WWII refugee family) Rob Roy – Sir Walter Scott Adventures of Huckleberry Fin – Mark Twain Little Men – Louisa May Alcott Jack and Jill – Louisa May Alcott The Cricket on the Hearth – Charles Dickens The Swiss Family Robinson – Johann Wyss Call of the Wild – Jack London Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – Jules Verne Robinson Crusoe Penrod – Booth Tarkington A Little Brother to the Bear – William J. Long The Bronze Bow – Elizabeth Speare (3) L God’s Smuggler – Brother Andrew and John Sherrill L Ben Hur – Lew Wallace (2 and 3) Now that I have planned what each child will be learning, the tricky part is in the scheduling it all together.
![]() For Third Grade I will be following the Year 3 Ambleside Online Schedule, give or a take some suggestions. I always look over the schedule, pray about the child for that year and then decide what book or subject suggestions I will be using and what I need to find as a replacement if needs be. This is the curriculum plan for my third grader this year. Personal Scripture StudyLanguage Arts My children do most of their book narrations with note booking pages. I love to use notebookingpages.com. Last year I purchased a treasury membership, giving me lifetime access to thousands of notebooking pages, along with the web publisher. The publisher allows the student to create an online notebooking page, she can type her narration, upload a picture, find one on the internet or print out the page without a picture and draw one of their own. It is so cool! I also use notebooking pages for the children's personal daily journal entries. For spelling we will be using All About Spelling 3 and I love First Language Lessons for grammar, my third grader is ready for level 3 this year. For writing I useWriting with Ease level 3 and I will also have her do a daily journal entry, as mentioned above. Math We use MathUSee for our math curriculum. I love it because math is not my area and this program has a DVD where the teacher explains the concept and then I have a book that lays out each problem for me so I can help my student (although they are the ones that are usually helping me:)) Another great thing about MathUSee is they go at their own pace. Last year my little woman made it half way through the Beta book so this year we will be finishing up that book and moving on to Gamma when she is ready. Poetry We focus on one or two poets a term. These are the poets for the year, along with the poems. I like to have the child research each poet at the beginning of the term and fill out a notebooking page on each one. We keep a running notebook of each poet they have studied throughout the years. Literature The great thing about using classic literature is that most of it is in the public domain. This means you don't have to purchase a book if you are on a tight budget. I also find that a child this age still needs many books read to them so I will have them listen to a story online while doing a notebooking/coloring page or drawing a picture about what they are listening to. The important thing for them is to hear the way language is spoken and be able to narrate the story back to you. Here is the literature book list for the year along with links to the online reading of it. History/Geography/Science While these are all history books, many are also living books that teach about geography, science, and even art. We love the hands on activities in the Times Travelers and Project Passport series which makes history our favorite subject around here. I love that they include copy work, writing projects, and note booking pages so the child can use her skills she is learning in the language arts program. We start using a Century Book in the first grade and will carry it over through each grade. I use the timeline figures from Homeschool In The Woods, I love her artwork and the captions are already printed with the figures. I purchased the full collection on cd when my oldest was in first grade and we have well gotten our moneys worth from it. I like the timeline and history notebooking pages here. Reading List This is the list of books my third grader is required to read or listen to before the next school year begins. She can choose to read these before bed, on her own time, or before she goes out to play for the day, it is up to her. On the Banks of Plum Creek - Laura Ingalls Wilder A Little Princess - Frances Hodgson Burnett The Water Babies - Charles Kingsley Alices Adventures in Wonderland - Lewis Carrol Through the Looking Glass - Lewis Carrol At the Back of the North Wind - George MacDonald Men of Iron - Howard Pyle The Bears of Blue River - Charles Major Swallows and Amazons - Arthur Ransome Caddie Woodlawn - Carol Ryrie Brink The Little White Horse - Elizabeth Goudge The Saturdays - Elizabeth Enright English Fairy Tales and more - Joseph Jacobs King of the Wind - Marguerite Henry The Four Story Mistake - Elizabeth Enright Then There Were Five - Elizabeth Enright The Wheel on the School - Meindert De Jon Unknown to History: Captivity of Mary of Scotland - Charlotte Yonge She will also be participating in the family school subjects that include Nature Study, Geography, Science, Art and Composer Study. This should be another exciting year for my eager learner!
![]() Mayor of Kaysville, Steven Hiatt, gave our prayer this morning. We had rain on and off throughout the morning and the kids enjoyed the cooler weather today. Activities Grand plans were laid out today to have a visit by George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson but life happens and a little improvisation was called for. We were still able to learn their stories and have a great time doing it. Craft Station: Liberty Bell Key ChainsClosing of Camp: Parent Presentation It was a great week for all involved and a big thank you to those who made it possible. My kids asked if they could do patriot camp every week! What Next? There are still three patriot camps left to go here in Utah. Check the the Day 1 post for the places and times. You can also check out the Patriot Camp website here. 2014 Davis County Patriot Camp is scheduled for July 7-11th if you want to mark your calenders now.
Freedom's Light Constitution Celebration is coming up in September to commemorate the signing of the Constitution in 1787. It will run September 16th -18th at Bountiful City Park in Bountiful, Utah. We look forward to this every year and it makes a great family night activity. I will post on my facebook page more information as it gets closer. ![]() Today began with a prayer by Senator Jerry Stevenson, followed by the pledge of allegiance and a review of all the patriotic songs the children have been learning. They learned a new song called: Freedom Isn't Free. I'm excited for tomorrow when they will be performing all of the songs they have learned at the end of camp. For anyone interested here is a link for the cd with the songs they have been learning. Activities of the Day Tomorrow is the last day of Patriot Camp. I hope you have enjoyed following along with us as we have learned more about our founding and the principles of freedom.
![]() The day began with prayer by Louenda Downs, a Davis County Commissioner. Sons of the Revolution Post the Colors for the PledgeCannon in the Camp TodayLexington Learning: Revolutionary War SoldiersYorktown Learning: Our FlagBoston Learning: George Washington's Rules of CivilityConcord Snack Station and Philadelphia CraftsThis will be a tough day to top!
Philadelphia Craft StationLexington Learning: Preamble to the ConstitutionValley Forge Game StationYorktown Learning: Unalienable RightsBoston Learning: State Militia and the 2nd AmendmentConcord Snack Station: Patriot Stories
![]() At the end of camp they sang their songs they have been learning and recited the preamble to the constitution with the signs they had learned earlier. Thanks everyone for another fantastic day! |
![]() Hi, I’m Annie, a child of God, Mother of Influence and Herbalist. Welcome to my place where I share what I have learned of natural and frugal living, healthy eating and living, gardening, homeschooling, herbal crafting, preparing temporally and spiritually, and love for God and Country.
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January 2023
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