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5 Simple Ways to Enhance Learning With Creativity

One of the biggest benefits of homeschooling is the creativity we are able to include in our children’s learning.

For some parents this is exciting. For others, however, it is daunting.

Some of us are hard-wired for creativity (that would be me - sometimes almost to my detriment!). Others of us are much more straightforward thinkers who need some encouragement in the creativity department (this describes my husband).

No matter your own personal level of creativity, it is a fact that creativity infuses our lives (and our children’s lives) with depth and richness.

When we left the public schools to homeschool it was such a treat that I could exercise limitless creativity in my children’s education.

Today I’d like to share some very simple ways that you can get creative, too.

Creative #Homeschooling - 5 Simple Ways to Enhance Learning Through Creativity

5 Simple Ways to Get Creative in Your Homeschool

For the sake of this post, let’s take a history subject (it seems that history has always been the spine of our homeschool) - let’s pretend we are studying The Civil War.

Now, I’d like to show you 5 ways to get creative studying this particular area, and you can apply these principles to any historical subject.

(Don’t feel like you need to limit yourself to these 5 areas - there are many more, and you will find yourself getting more creative with practice! Include nature study, geography, field trips - the sky is the limit!)

5 Ways to Get Creative in Your #Homeschool

Living Books

Look for a few quality living books about The Civil War to get your children engaged. (After a while you will become a pro at this - I’m always on the lookout for living books at books sales, thrift stores, the library, etc… It’s great to build up a library so your children can feast on the books!)

Keep a basket or shelf full of the books you will be using for your study so your children can grab them when the mood strikes.

To help you locate Living Books:

(For the Civil War, I love Follow the Drinking Gourd (picture book) and Gettysburg (chapter book). There are SO MANY to choose from - but hopefully this gives you the general idea.)

Music

As a music teacher, I am always looking for ways to incorporate music appreciation and history! Music speaks LOUDLY to many children - it might be just the hook you need to get one of your children excited about a subject.

  • Research music/composers from The Civil War - who was writing music in the mid-late 1800s, both in America and abroad? What if you search “Civil War and music”? You will be amazed at what comes up!

  • I just finished a book - Civil War Drummer Boy - a true story about a 9-year-old Union drummer.

  • Use a chronological music resource to help - my curriculum, SQUILT Music, is organized by era to go along with history studies! Members of SQUILT LIVE! also have access to all of our lessons that are archived by era to make designing your own music appreciation curriculum EASY! We are currently learning about The Spirit of America in our lessons - using a song from The Civil War!

  • Can you use a service like Spotify to find a playlist of music from The Civil War? Use this as the backdrop of your days!

Art/Hands-On

Art is another simple way to get creative in your homeschool. And don’t worry - YOU don’t have to be artistic to accomplish this with your children.

Going back to the Civil War, I would start thinking about ways you can help your children learn about The Civil War with art.

Ideas:

Are you starting to get a feel for how to get creative with learning?

Games

Games are probably the most FUN way to get creative with homeschooling - and your kids will think you’re simply amazing.

  • What about games children played during the Civil War? Do some research and learn a few with your own children.

  • Here’s a free printable Civil War game for kids.

  • How about a family game night where kids share their learning with dad or grandma & grandpa and play games?


Are you feeling more creative yet?


Food

This one is super popular in my house!

What type of cooking activity or meal can you plan that coincides with the Civil War?


Once you start incorporating creativity into your homeschool, I think you’ll find it comes more naturally. You will also find that children are the most creative of all - let them design their own learning and see what fun it will be!


Go forth and homeschool creatively!


Way to #Homeschool Creatively

August 2020 Reading Recap

Raise your hand if you hide from your family so you can finish a book!

(I don’t actually “hide” - but sometimes folding the laundry or cleaning up in a specific room might take me a bit longer than usual.)

I feel strongly about homeschool parents reading - reading widely and well. It’s fun to keep track of the books I’ve read and now start to look at patterns - which genres I choose and why - and how those patterns coincide with current events and the events going on in my own life.

Reading also helps me become well-educated - it assists me in my quest to figure out what I think is important for my children to know.

 Reading is everything. Reading makes me feel like I’ve accomplished something, learned something, become a better person. Reading makes me smarter. Reading gives me something to talk about later on. Reading is the unbelievably healthy way my attention deficit disorder medicates itself. Reading is escape, and the opposite of escape; it’s a way to make contact with reality after a day of making things up, and it’s a way of making contact with someone else’s imagination after a day that’s all too real. Reading is grist. Reading is bliss.— Nora Ephron

I read for all of the same reasons as Nora Ephron - “Reading is bliss!".

August Reading Recap at Homegrown Learners

I accomplished a lot of reading in August thanks to audiobooks. This has been a huge change for me in the past year, and when people tell me they just can’t pay attention long enough for an audiobook I tell them I had to TRAIN myself to listen.

Whether it is my son reading aloud to me (and I’m modeling listening) or I’m listening to an audiobook, listening is a SKILL that you are never too old to cultivate. I believe this skill of listening is translating to more than just books, too.


Books Read in August

August’s books were a mix of historical fiction (my favorite genre), homeschool development, memoir, and fiction. Intentionally I also pulled in a cozy mystery and fantasy, too.

Historical Fiction

I would recommend every book in this category! Each taught me something about a particular time period in history and added to my body of knowledge.

When We Were Young & Brave was probably my favorite - it is a story I knew NOTHING about - the internment teachers and children in a British run missionary school in Japan during WWII.

Homeschool Development

Memoir

  • The Beauty in Breaking

    I never go wrong with a Book of the Month Club selection. I love my membership in BOTM because I’m always guaranteed a good read that many other readers will be discussing, too. This memoir, by an African American doctor working in Emergency Room medicine, opened my eyes to a problem in our health care system that desperately needs to be fixed. It also addressed issues of racism and inequality in our healthcare system.

    (If you use my BOTM Club link you can get a discount on your first order.)

Fiction

Genres I Wouldn’t Normally Read

Both of these books were a pleasant surprise for me.

The first is a fantasy and the second is a cozy mystery.

I found 7 of the Maisie Dobbs books at a thrift store for $.50 each and I will definitely be reading all of them! (Apparently, this was quite the find because a lot of avid readers have been telling me how jealous they are.)

The House in the Cerulean Sea was one of my favorite audios of all time - it was just so whimsical and magical! Normally I don’t enjoy reading those types of books on my own, but I’m thinking maybe I’m wrong about that!


“Bookish” Necessities

A lot of followers on my bookish Instagram account requested I share about some of my book accessories.

Sigh. Yes, I have “bookish” accessories and my family thinks I’ve gone round the bend.

  • My favorite book light - this light keeps my marriage intact because it allows me to read late into the night while I’m in bed without disturbing my husband. I love it.

  • The iBeani - this is a great little beanbag for my iPad or Kindle - I can prop either device in it while I’m reading in bed or sitting on the sofa. There is also a pocket for your phone. I can see this being a GREAT gift for a college student! (see the carousel below for a picture of mine - I got the cute forest animals print that you see in the picture and it’s ADORABLE!)

Do you have a favorite book right now?

Tell me about it in the comments below!

August 2020 Reading Recap at Homegrown Learners