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Our Simple Morning Basket

The start of our homeschool day matters.  

Beginning each homeschool day with planned time together matters.

And, most importantly, beginning each homeschool day with BEAUTY matters. 

As my children have gotten older this time is even more important.

Even though our studies and interests vary, we still come together to begin our day in a positive, productive way.  When moods change and emotions are all over the map during the middle and high school years, it's even MORE important to keep this time at the beginning of our days a PRIORITY.  

Morning time isn't just a ritual for families with young children. It needs to be done in a homeschool with older children, too! 

Our morning basket reflects the ideals of TRUTH, BEAUTY and GOODNESS in our homeschool. 

And - hopefully it reflects a little bit of silliness and fun, too! 

 

Our Simple Morning Basket

What is Morning Time?

If you've heard all the buzz about morning time, but aren't sure what it is, I encourage you to read what my friend Pam Barnhill has to say on the subject. Pam has created resources for the homeschool community that equip us to have successful morning times - no matter our children's ages. 

Your Morning Basket Guide

In our homeschool, morning time usually happens between 8:00-8:45. We come together at the breakfast table to review memory work, take in fine arts, play math games, and have devotions.

Because I have a 10th grader and a 6th grader, the activities go a bit deeper and can last slightly longer than if I had little ones. But, the beauty of our morning basket is that it could be scaled back to work PERFECTLY for little ones, too!  

I love that morning time is a great way for families with multiple ages of children to begin the day together - and to begin it WELL. 


Contents of Our Morning Basket

This year I really wanted to make our morning basket FUN!  

My daughter's Challenge II year is intense, and my son's year is more intense than last year, so I want to keep some of the fun and wonder alive. The morning basket is a perfect way to do just that! 

I envision each morning time going like this:

  • Devotions
  • Memory Work Review
  • SHORT Latin Lesson
  • Math Games
  • Music or Art Appreciation (Listening, playing, observing, creating)
  • CNN Student News

Obviously we won't be able to get to each of these things each morning, but I could see a core of devotions, memory work, Latin, and student news - with music, art, and math games done on alternating days (or as it strikes my kids' fancies, know what I mean?).

Contents of Our Morning Basket

Devotions:

This year we will be using Best-Loved Passages of the Bible.  I am looking forward to this because it will be good for all of us - including mom and dad.

Memory Work Review:

Using a Cycle 2 memory work review flip chart (I print mine from CC Connected), we will use the memory work review system from My Homeschool Story.

Last year we used this same system, and by the end of the year I had a Memory Master on my hands! I love the simple, methodical review this provides.

And yes, my Challenge student benefits from reviewing the memory work with us. 

Latin:

The goal this year is to prepare my son for his full blown Latin curriculum next year.  My daughter is in her second year of Henle Latin and will be able to teach these simple Latin lessons from Getting Started With Latin each day. 

(I can't wait to get started with this book. It is such a gentle introduction to Latin!)

Math Games:

Confidence with math facts and the ability to play with numbers is the goal for this year. Hopefully we can spend 5-10 minutes playing 24 (this will get adult brains thinking, too!) and also playing with Math Dice

Music Appreciation:

Of course we are including this!  SQUILT Volumes 2 and 3 are on the schedule for this year. In both Foundations AND Challenge II my children will have exposure to great orchestral works. 

Super Quiet UnInterrupted Listening Time is PERFECT for a morning basket because it involves short, scripted music appreciation lessons that set the stage for a peaceful day - and for older children it involves some intricate learning about music.

(Don't worry if you aren't musically inclined, I wrote SQUILT for parents with little to no musical ability - it is 100% scripted and EASY!) 

I cannot imagine starting our days without music! 

We will learn about works by Mozart, Haydn, Brahms, Beethoven, and more! 

(Learn about how to incorporate music into your morning time.)

My children both play the piano, and I will encourage them to each play something to get our days started, as well.

Art Appreciation

On days when we are not doing music appreciation, we will do art appreciation - I'm not exactly sure what this will look like. 

My daughter is doing quite a bit of art appreciation this year in Challenge II, so I want to incorporate works she is studying. 

We have also had a lot of success with the 13 Artists Children Should Know series - and will be working our way through this book. 

Something FUN for Art!

This year I wanted to try something new!  

When my kids were little they loved Ed Emberley's drawing books

Well.... this is so much fun! I've pulled out my old Ed Emberley book and we'll be having fun drawing animals with Sharpies every now and again during morning time!  I think this will keep my kids "little" and allows all of us to have some fun!  

I think these drawings will also go along quite well with the drawing we do in the first semester of Foundations, too!  

Current Events

My kids insist  CNN Student News be a part of our morning time. 

This is a 10 minute program geared towards middle and high school students.  I love the non partisan current events reporting and my kids love the host, Carl Azuz. 

Good stuff. 


I'll keep you posted as we make our way through the year how our Morning Time is coming along.  Obviously all of this in one morning time is ambitious to say the least - so we'll be picking and choosing and hopefully coming up with a good rotation of subjects. 

This 30-45 time chunk at the beginning of our day is the BEST INVESTMENT I could ever make! 

 

I'd love to know if you have a morning time/morning basket in your homeschool and what that looks like!  Leave me a comment below and let me know! 

Our Simple Morning Basket

 

 

Audio Adventures With Jonathan Park

Do you use audio books and adventures in your homeschool?

I'm pleased to be able to share with you one of our very favorite audio series - one that we have been falling in love with this summer (as we've been spending LOADS of time in the car!). 

If you read this blog often you will know that I'm not a huge product endorsement person - we have to use something and truly LOVE IT if I will recommend it to my readers.

Well, the following audio adventures have made the cut!  I hope you enjoy our review, and make sure to read all the way to end for a very special discount code. 


About Jonathan Park Audio Adventures

We've long been fans of audio BOOKS in our homeschool, but Jonathan Park Audio ADVENTURES aren't books at all - they are truly ADVENTURES!

Unlike audio books, the adventures are full fledged dramas - complete with sound effects, music, and  dynamic characters. All of this leads to a vivid picture in your imagination, which you sometimes don't get with audio books. 

We were pleased to receive The Adventure Begins Series Pack.

 

This includes four albums of the first adventure: The Secret of the Hidden Cave, African Safari, Art Heist Adventure, and Mystery at Dead Man's Curve.  Each adventure is broken into three 20-25 minute sections, which makes for manageable listening. 

(Jonathan Park has SEVEN adventures series total - so there is plenty of listening still to be done!)

In my opinion, these dramas are best geared towards elementary and middle grades students. 

Each adventure series pack is $59.99 and is available in digital or physical CD format. 

Jonathan Park action-packed audio adventures are for kids and families. The stories are full of faith-building and educational evidence for a Creator. If your family enjoys imaginative and immersive stories packed with biblical truth, then Jonathan Park is for you!

If your kids have never experienced Jonathan Park faith-building audio adventures, we want to highly encourage you to try these stories. We guarantee that they will ignite their imagination and equip them to defend their faith!
— Jonathan Park website

 

Listen to this short sample and hear for yourself the high quality of these audio adventures: 


Why We Like Jonathan Park Audio Adventures

This summer we have spent A LOT of time in the car. We love to use this time to LEARN rather than to play on devices or just listen to the radio. I am always searching for worthwhile audios to keep my children engaged and learning.

With the Jonathan Park Audio Adventures our time was put to excellent use as my children learned about science concepts:

  • The Evolutionary Tree
  • Convergent Evolution
  • The Laws of Energy
  • Design of the Water Cycle

These science concepts were interwoven with Biblical truths:

  • Returning Good for Evil
  • Showing Kindness
  • Consequences of Sin


More reasons we enjoyed the audio adventures: 

  • The adventures were just that - ADVENTURES!  They kept my 11 year old son interested and engaged - each segment was approximately 20-25 minutes which was the perfect length for our attention span.
  • The adventures equipped my children to defend their faith.  Each adventure presents evidence for Creation. It gives us solid arguments to make when defending our faith and view points. 
  • The adventures taught us a lot about science and how it relates to our faith.  As my children get older I am finding that this is especially important - yes, you can be a person of faith and science at the same time.  They aren't mutually exclusive.
  • The adventures include supplemental activities, found on the Jonathan Park site.  Once we were at home and had some down time, I printed out the coloring pages and word searches for my son to complete. We sat and talked about the adventures while he was working - a casual way to learn and dialog. 

Do you listen to audio dramas in your homeschool?  Does this series look intriguing to you?  I hope so!