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3 Keys to a Successful Homeschool

Everyone wants their homeschool to be successful. 

We want our children to be excited and eager learners, learning things of value, and for our families to be happy and healthy through it all.  (I'll tell you a secret, though - you may have this some of the time, but some of the time it might just be plain old HARD WORK.)

As we've dabbled in different curricula, methods, and schedules, I've learned that there really are just THREE key ingredients to a {mostly} successful homeschool.

3 Keys to a Successful Homeschool

 

Beauty

Beauty is so often overlooked as we are planning our children's education. We become so busy checking off boxes and forget to nurture a love and appreciation for beauty in our children's lives - as well as our own. 

The object of education is to teach us to love what is beautiful.
— Plato, The Republic

 

Questions to ponder:

  • Are you constantly pointing your children to the Creator, the source of all beauty?
  • Are you including an appreciation of fine arts in your children's days?
  • Are you asking your children to recognize and document things of beauty (nature sketchbooks, art & music journals, etc...)?
  • Is your home full of beautiful things? Do you have prints of fine art hanging on the walls? Do you take time to cut fresh flowers and bring them indoors? Are you listening to Classical music?

Consistency

Children thrive on routine and structure. They crave predictability and safety. 

Homeschool requires CONSISTENCY! 

Consistency is a LIFE SKILL to be modeled for and taught to our children. Consistency is our daily tasks of living as well as in our homeschool methods is important.

Most often we need only look in the mirror to find the root of INCONSISTENCY in our homeschool. 

Questions to ponder:

  • Do you have a daily routine?  Some families (including mine!) don't do well with a strict schedule, but we have always had routine.
  • Do you start your day with Morning Time? (or some other way to gather your children and ground them for the day)
  • If you start a particular math or spelling program, do you stick with it long enough to see results - or do you jump ship the minute someone complains?
  • Are YOU exhibiting consistency in your own life so your children can model that? 

Minimalism

Not to be trite, but it is SO true: Less is More!

Do not let the endless succession of small things crowd great ideals out of sight and out of mind.
— Charlotte Mason

I once heard from a homeschool mom that she made ONE subject each year a priority. 

For example, if math was the priority for the year she made sure math was always done FIRST and that any enrichment first focused on math. Another year she chose Latin as the focus. Each year she achieved a laser focus in her homeschool by this singular focus.

Intriguing, yes?

I also believe minimalism should be followed in our homeschool environment. Are you materials organized neatly and only a few quality resources placed front and center? Sometimes too much choices causes children (and MAMAS) a lot of frustration.

When we decided to deepen our homeschool through simplification it was the beginning of a new era for us!

Questions to ponder:

  • When your children begin a school day, do they know where to find things? Is your homeschool area organized?
  • Do you challenge your children to focus on doing a few things well, rather than many things half-heartedly?
  • Do you have a few clear, achievable goals for your homeschool?

Celebrate National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day

Want to win the fun mom award?

Make a BIG memory for your children with just a little bit of effort.

Take a plain old ordinary day and turn it into a celebration! 

August 4th is National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day. Here's what I'm thinking...

Don't let your kids know it's coming - just wake them up in the morning, cancel homeschool for the day, and tell them you are going to make cookies, eat cookies, read books, play games, and anything else that might strike your fancy along the way.

(I did this once and declared a boring Thursday Angry Birds Day and my kids STILL talk about it.)

Celebrate National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day

I'm going to throw out a bunch of ideas in this post... Feel free to use as many or as few as you would like.

Just have fun with your kids and make some memories.  (I'm thinking memories with cookies are pretty good, right?)

 

Five Chocolate Chip Cookie Facts

  • Americans eat an average of 18,928 cookies in their lifetime

  • The chocolate chip cookie was invented by Ruth Graves Wakefield in 1938. Her husband ran the Tool House Inn - do "Toll House" cookies sound familiar? Nestle's bought the rights to the name. And you know the rest of the story!

  • Chocolate chip cookies were first called "Butterdrop Do Cookies".

  • The world's biggest chocolate chip cookie weighed 40,000 pounds and had a diameter of 101 feet. It was created in 2003 by The Immaculate Baking Company in Flat Rock, North Carolina.

  • It's America's favorite cookie. 53% of American adults prefer chocolate chip cookies over peanut butter cookies (16 %), oatmeal cookies (15%, and any other variety.

 

Best Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipes

We use two of the very BEST chocolate chip cookie recipes in our house - and they come from both of my children's grandmothers. I love it that these cookies have memories attached to them - the time spent and the love shown through these cookies made an impact on my children. 

 

Grandma Jane's Chocolate Chip Crispies

These cookies are just different - and everyone wonders why they are so crispy.

If you look at the recipe, you'll see the secret ingredient that adds just the right crunch - and here's a tip: these cookies freeze well and are actually super yummy straight out of the freezer!

Grandma Jane's Chocolate Chip Crispies
Yield: 3 dozen cookies

Grandma Jane's Chocolate Chip Crispies

ingredients:

  • 1 tsp. Vanilla Extract
  • 1 1/4 cups all purpose flour
  • 1/2 tsp. baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 stick butter, softened
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 2 cups Crisped Rice Cereal (Rice Krispies)
  • 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips

instructions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F.
  2. In small bowl, combine flour, baking soda and salt. In large bowl, beat butter and sugar with electric mixer until light and fluffy. Add egg and vanilla; mix well. Add flour mixture, mixing until just combined. Stir in cereal and chocolate chips. Drop tablespoonfuls of cookie dough onto parchment-lined cookie sheets, about 2 in. apart.
  3. Bake 10-12 minutes or until golden brown around edges. Cool cookies on cookie sheet 3 minutes. Transfer to cooling rack; cool completely.
Created using The Recipes Generator

Grammy Ruth's Chocolate Chippers

These cookies are made with shortening, which makes them very light and crunchy. 

Look out, I remember these literally VANISHING one Christmas holiday when my mother-in-law made them. 

I made these for a birthday party one year - with vanilla ice cream in the middle. All of the kids loved the ice cream cookie sandwiches! 

Grammy Ruth's Chocolate Chippers
Yield: 3 dozen cookies

Grammy Ruth's Chocolate Chippers

ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup shortening
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tsp. Vanilla Extract
  • 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour
  • 3/4 tsp. salt
  • 1/2 tsp. baking soda
  • 1 6 oz. package semi-sweet chocolate chips

instructions:

  1. Cream shortening, sugars, egg, and vanilla till light and fluffy. Sift together dry ingredients; stir into creamed mixture; blend well. Add chocolate chips. Drop from teaspoon 2 inches apart on a greased cookie sheet. Bake in moderate oven (375 degrees) 10-12 minutes. Remove cookies from sheet immediately. 
Created using The Recipes Generator

Read Books About Chocolate Chip Cookies

From learning about the inventor of the chocolate chip cookie to having fun with the classic rhyme "Who Stole The Cookies From the Cookie Jar?", these books will set the stage for your baking adventures (or fill some time while you're waiting for your cookies to bake!).

Or, you might want to bake your cookies, serve them with a glass of milk, and have read aloud time while you are enjoying your delicacies!

If You Give a Mouse a Cookie (If You Give...)The Cookie Loved 'round the World: The Story of the Chocolate Chip CookieThe Chocolate Chip Cookie Queen: Ruth Wakefield and Her Yummy Invention (Inventors at Work!)Mimi's Adventures in Baking Chocolate Chip CookiesThe Last Chocolate Chip CookieWho Stole the Cookie from the Cookie Jar?

 

Serve Others With Cookies

Once your children have baked their cookies, it would be a lovely idea to share them with others.

  • Deliver several dozen to your local fire and police departments.

  • Deliver to neighbors

  • Visit a local nursing home and deliver your cookies

  • Invite friends over for a chocolate chip cookies & milk social

  • Freeze batches of cookies to have on hand when you think someone needs a pick-me-up

 

Chocolate Chip Cookie Math Games

We can always sneak in some learning, yes? 

 

And, I'm happy to offer you this adorable Chocolate Chip Memory Game: 17 pairs of matching cards for your children to learn from and enjoy! 

Download Your Matching Cards Now

 

 

I hope you have OODLES of fun on National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day! (and remember, you can celebrate this day any old time - it doesn't have to be August 4. Any day with our children is cause for a celebration, don't you agree?)