Tag Archives: homeschooling with a toddler

Homeschooling With Kids of Diverse Ages, Part 2

a sassy lookOkay. So your hands are strapped and you are going about bat-crazy. You vacillate among laughter, yelling, and tears. On the one hand, you realize you’re ridiculous for taking this all so seriously. I mean, come on! It’s just homeschooling! It’s just kids! It’s just a messy house. So you chill and smile. “Oh, they’re so dog-gone awesome. They’re growing up so fast. I need to savor these moments.” Then–nothing gets done. You panic. Why aren’t they doing their school? You yell. One bristles. One cries. You cry. Then you laugh; it’ll be okay. And it starts all over again.

(This post is continued from part 1.)

The Dilemma

Here is the dilemma I found myself in last year. I had three kids at three levels in school and a toddler. The toddler bombed the school, no matter what we all tried. The older two kids are old enough that it’s time for school work to move into real. As far as their abilities and personalities will allow, I’d like this homeschool to provide my children an exceptional science and math education aimed at completing calculus and physics, fluency in one foreign language, and solid composition skills. I keep the pressure light on my kids, but the need to move along is there.

I read all the homeschooling sites for advice on managing a homeschool with kids from toddlers to tweens. Their answers just didn’t satisfy me based on my homeschool goals. I could not “give up” my math curriculum for the three years it would take my toddler to grow up. My kids, although responsible and helpful, didn’t enter this world to be their siblings’ babysitters. Cleaning toilets and folding laundry does not come before school. I had to find a way to keep all of my kids engaged, learning, and content again; provide real food for meals; and find a path through the laundry.

The Attempted Solutions

1. Get help.  Any help will help! 

When I found someone to come babysit in the mornings, I seized them. (They often told me to let go of their neck so they could breathe.)  Then, the older girls and I could at least get some good, solid math instruction in.  Even if this was only a couple of mornings a week, it helped immensely.  My older girls appreciated it so much when I could help them “like a teacher” with school!  (And that’s why I homeschooled!)

This ended up being my best solution, and I therefore found a very good friend who keeps the toddler every morning this year and is just helpful and gracious in every way imaginable. This was what we needed.

2. Remember Abe Lincoln would not have had math every day.

Abe had hunting and log splitting to do before reading and math. His education would have come in spurts.  I’ve got the cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-most idea of school in my head, and sometimes I just need to spit it out.  Learning doesn’t make it school.  And school does not make it learning. Learning is learning, and it is everywhere!

This attitude is still helpful, but luckily, we’re getting some good, solid school in each morning now! This attitude was easier for me to adopt for my younger elementary kids, but I’m not so flexible with my older ones. Perhaps I should be, but I am not.

3. Make like a real teacher and do lesson plans. 

I didn’t lesson plan. I have good books in each school subject, and we had heretofore progressed through them nicely. If I had good vibes from the kids, I made them do 20 pages of grammar a day; if a brick wall had more vibes than their little pinkie, I knew to skip it entirely. Same with math. How much were they capable of that day? That’s how much we did!

But, this required a very close teacher-student relationship daily. I wasn’t close to anything except losing my temper hourly last year. Ha! So I finally broke down, did what legitimate teachers do, and wrote up a rigid, daily assignment sheet. Bummer. I couldn’t trick them into doing more work or give them the luxury of skipping math anymore.

This helped a lot. We’ve kept it, but it is a little more fluid.

4. Home 101: Remember that I choose to raise real citizens here.

Laundry, dishes, cooking, cleaning, diapers, getting along, being independent–that’s the real deal, people! Every society on earth has needed these skills, so of course I know it’s wise to call that a part of the educational process, Home 101. I’m considering making it an e-book, with lessons like “The Best Way to Load the Dishwasher” and “The Best Way to Put the Toddler in Time-Out” and “How Moms Get Through the Day on Not Enough Sleep.” Yes, my kids did learn a lot about managing kids and a house. A lot. They really learned to pick up the slack. I’m glad. But I’m also glad now that it isn’t at the expense of learning how to do math and write a report anymore.

5. Give up the curriculum.

Latin verb declension, Dickinson and Yeats poetry recitation, Shakespeare play-acting, Spanish, German, French, debate, music theory, philosophy, religion, and, and, and. . . Oh, my homeschooling ideas were glorious! Well, reality check. I had to accept that this was and is not all going to happen. I let go of my disappointment about it.

However, being a science-minded and science-trained woman, I can’t completely give up my curriculum. I can give it up in some areas, sure! But not in the core areas. I have a feeling that my kids would make up for it later, but I refuse to take that chance. But I have defined my top, necessary priorities for our homeschool curriculum and will keep those in focus. For my youngest student, yes, curriculum is kept to bare minimum.

6. What about a substitute teacher? Enter The Computer. 

True to form, our substitute teacher (a.k.a. “The Computer”) stint was a fiasco. The WiFi was down. The computer was updating. The website was not connecting. The printer wouldn’t connect.  The laptop had a virus. The CD wouldn’t load. We couldn’t find the charger. If I wanted to depend on a computer to teach our homeschooling, I was going to have to find a full-time computer support specialist.

Needless to say, the computer didn’t work for us. Too many technical glitches, and the lesson planning required that I be on the computer too much. I’m personally on the computer too much already, my family says.

So, this year, I scrapped the internet, except for my oldest, who uses it for an on-line, live, interactive Latin class, which has gone very well. I think that when I do use the internet for school classes, it will be as they get older and enrolled in live classes that I can’t teach.

7. Anyone? Anyone? Emotional sharing. 

Has anyone else noticed a paucity of homeschooling moms with high school kids in their local homeschooling groups? I think they’re like, “Whoa. Made it through the toddler days and elementary stages, I’m outta’ here. Kid can drive himself.” That means I look around, and it’s me and other moms just like me. We shrug our shoulders, give each other high fives and coffee, and hope for the best. Their encouragement and support is a tremendous help. I highly suggest opening up and sharing with your comrades in boot camp. You’ll learn you’re not alone! Which may not help math and grammar, but it will help your smile.

8. Don’t get attached to a schedule.

Always, once it starts feeling right, something is guaranteed to change. In general, I learned that no two days are the same. Ever. Even now with help with the toddler.

9. Meet with your students several times a week.

I used to sit with my kids during school. During the toughest part of the toddler period, there was no-way, no-how that was possible, but I did try to meet with each of them one-on-one for a little block of time. I liked to do it when I “graded” their papers, then I’d just point out suggestions and errors on the spot right.

Closing:

Well, that’s how we muddled through last year and have worked to make this year better and more gracefully productive! I don’t think it’s fair to be flippant about it and say that it will all work out. Maybe it will. But I have talked to grown homeschoolers who were disappointed in their parents and their home education, particularly in the math and science realms. I’d say it took us all last year to find our groove and decide what we really needed to get school rolling again this year. However, I don’t think it would have been fair to my middle school kids to wait two more years for the toddler to quit pestering and hollering!

Wishing you the best! No two homeschools are the same! Good luck!

Terri

Homeschooling With Different Ages and a Toddler

a sassy lookAbout a year ago, every single day–I’m pretty sure it had something to do with the toddler screaming from atop the piano while the oldest was glaring at me for help with math factoring while my third was wistfully saying, “Read to me, Mommy. Will you read to me?” while I was running to turn the timer off from the second’s timed test — there was this point I would reach where I’d say, “I can’t do this!”

Ha! Why did I say this? Who I was talking to? I mean, I couldn’t tell you what I thought my option was. Seriously, there’s never been a Plan B in sight. I’ll wake up tomorrow, next month, next year, next ten years—and I’ll still be homeschooling! (But thank you, Sweet Jesus–not in 20 years! Wee-haw!)

At this time, I homeschooled with four kids in the house, a sixth grader (12), a fourth grader (10), a first grader (7), and an 18 month-old toddler, Little Tank, who liked to stick her finger in the electric pencil sharpener when I wasn’t looking. (Pointer fingers fit nicely.) Our homeschool days felt like a free-for-all, holy mess! Chaos is not my chosen style, but I swear Little Tank, who stops at nothing and fires at will, invited Curly and Mo over to wreck my orderly home and homeschool every day.  Tank disrupted school worse than a fire drill.  I could have locked her in the basement, and she would still have found a way to disrupt school!

The Family Makes the Homeschool

I really felt like I needed some moral support for homeschooling with diverse ages–yet with the oldest children not yet being old enough to teach themselves. So I turned to some experienced homeschoolers’ blogs.  Others have traveled this path before me! Here’s the gist of the encouraging words I found on most blogs (well, it seemed like most blogs):

“Don’t worry about it.  You’re building family relationships and teaching housekeeping skills.”

Grrrr-eat! But unless every one of my girls aspired to be a housekeeper or nanny, I had to get my act together, because, unfortunately, those didn’t seem to be my kids’ answers when asked, “What do you want to be when you grow up?”! The intended encouraging words didn’t help cheer me up, so I kept “looking for love in all the wrong places” and searching the internet for some cheerleading.

Next words up: The quality of a homeschool education depends almost entirely on the parent…

Uh.  Oh.  That’s me.  Parent. I am TOAST. I guess since I like a good spank every now and then, I kept reading:

…Homeschooling is a large responsibility and may overwhelm a homeschool parent, even though they have the best intentions, because things like illness and the demands of a large family may arise.  Hmm.  That could be me too, if four kids equates with large.  (Somehow going from three kids to four felt like three kids plus A HUNDRED.)

My reading finished with the discussion: Older kids may have to put their education on the back burner as they are called to help with housework, childcare, or educating siblings.

Hello, no!  THAT is NOT what I had in mind for my daughters’ education.  No.  No.  No. And no. Back burner?

Dang.  If I needed hope and encouragement, it looked like I was going to have to turn to my inner-coach. Grand.  Get out the bun-huggers and pom-poms.

Tomorrow I Will Loosen Up

Each day was frustrating.  No matter that I went to bed feeding my subconscious positive affirmations:  “I am loose.  I laugh at chaos.  Tomorrow I will entertain the toddler so she doesn’t keep the older kids from doing Spanish and long division.  Tomorrow will be a new, shiny, bright day!”  The sad truth was, even if I had gotten that positivity-schmivity stuff down and smiled like Cinderella every day, that still didn’t mean that our school days would go any better.

Couldn’t I acquire both a positive attitude AND a decent day’s worth of homeschooling?

Well, I tried a lot of things. I don’t give up till I find the path that fits. We have finally found that path, and our school days and home life are wonderful again. What we finally arranged will not work or even be feasible for everyone. But for us, it’s just the ticket. I want to share with you all the things I can remember that we tried and the thoughts I thought, so maybe you can find your way too. Or at least know someone has the same concerns you do.

Tips for Homeschooling With Many Kids of Diverse Ages

Get help.  Any help will help!  When I could find someone to come babysit in the mornings, I seized them. (They often told me to let go of their neck so they could breathe.)  Then, the older girls and I could at least get some good, solid math instruction in.  Even if this was only a couple of mornings a week, it helped immensely.  My older girls appreciated it so much when I helped them “like a teacher” with school!  (And that’s why I homeschooled!)

Abe Lincoln would not have had math every day.  Abe had hunting and log splitting to do before reading and math. His education would have come in spurts.  I’ve got the cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-most idea of school in my head, and sometimes I just need to spit it out.  Learning doesn’t make it school.  And school does not make it learning. Learning is learning, and it is everywhere! Remember a lot of brilliant men and women throughout history didn’t have the privilege of sitting in school for eight hours a day. (Probably a good thing, too!)

To be continued…

 

When Homeschooling Goes Bad

sign_slow_15_mph_000_0080Is your homeschool havin’ a bad, bad day? Every day? I’m not going to say it’s okay or that you should just be calm and relax about it. I don’t relax much about anything. Ha! No way! I’m a constant problem solver.

But I am going to say, “You’re not alone!” Oooh, doesn’t that feel nice? You’re not alone! I’ve had my share of bad homeschooling days. All of last year was a bad homeschooling dream. I remember Googling homeschooling blogs to see what other moms did when they had a toddler underfoot. What I walked away with was, “It’s okay, Sugar. Your kids will learn. Being together, happily singing, babysitting, and doing housework is more important than fretting.”

Just like I can’t sit with too many bad homeschooling days, neither can I chill like that. Here’s my top five suggestions for dealing with a homeschool gone bad.

1. Change up the curriculum: It’s not “the best” curriculum, but it works for us.

Who has TIME to use Susan Wise Bauer’s First Language Lessons? Or Charlotte Mason’s “living books” idea to teach?  I think it was another life (the vision is cloudy, but more like ten lives ago, actually) when I cozied up on the couch with two little angels (er, maybe it was another universe) flanking me on either side to read aloud. Twenty lives ago we used to cut and paste crafts and lapbooks. Maybe that wasn’t me at all! Maybe that was some pretty dream I had thirty lives ago!

With four kids, our curriculum needs have changed. Whether I like it or not, whether the kids like it or not, we have to move towards each child, young ones included (you should see our baby clean toilets!), doing more independent work. I feel like some of my homeschooling ideals have been compromised because I teach less, but since my top ideal is a lifelong love of learning, we’re safe. That’s intact.

I’ve had to mostly ditch my self-designed, teacher led spelling curriculum for my third daughter, who is an exceptionally motivated young student. My choice? An Evan Moore spelling workbook. Is it “the best” workbook? No. Is it “the best” spelling program? No. Will she be a fine speller? Yes. And I don’t have time to do all that spelling jazz, nor does she need me to.

We’ve ditched Institute for Excellence in Writing for a time, maybe a very long time. I just couldn’t get read up on the lessons anymore to assign them their work. So I found some journal writing prompts on-line and now they write these several times a week, while I check it for grammar. It’s my Institute for Sanity in Writing.  (Interestingly enough, this has been lots of fun! Their creativity has taken off, and they often let me be privy to some very deep, personal thoughts and dreams!)

Other things I’ve done in our curriculum include: not trying to do too much grammar and writing at the same time, taking breaks from Saxon math for focused worksheets, covering less subjects at a time.

2. Put your third hand down: The phone. The phone. The phone is on fire.

The phone. The phone. The phone. You know it. I know it. We’re both looking sheepish. The phone must go. Set it on “do not disturb” and check it at set times each day. Yes, it feels good to be needed. It is fun to get hot news off the press. Heart lifting to hear from an old friend. But I’m pretty sure the phone has killed more grooving homeschool lessons than there are dust mites in my pillow. (That’s a lot. Since we have allergies, we use dust mite protective cases, wash them on sanitize, and dry them on hot. Unrelated. Sorry. My husband says I always share too much information…but maybe it will help you?)

3. Schedule appointments in the afternoon: “No. I can’t come to that appointment! Do you have a three o’clock?”

I’ve finally accepted that any appointments need to be in the afternoon. That was bitter for me to swallow, because I like to get the early appointments when the doctor may still be on schedule. I thought by getting the appointment in the morning, we’d get it over with and school would rock on. It never happened that way. I’ve found it best to keep our morning schedule (that’s when we do “the hard stuff”) the same and fiddle with the afternoon schedule. School goes well that way, and we get our appointments in.

4. Find some childcare or housework help: “Get the baby off the top of the refrigerator!”

Last year, I struggled through the year with a toddler. It was not a new experience for me. I have four kids; I’ve taught with a toddler underfoot before! Of course, I didn’t like it then either, BUT at least then I was not trying to teach algebra, long division, and more advanced writing skills.

My toddler can be so loud and obstinate when she knows what she wants. And she wanted her sisters! This didn’t work well for my distractible child, who couldn’t focus with the toddler’s screaming, or my bleeding heart child, who hated to hear the screaming from the pack-and-play (where the toddler goes when she won’t stop fussing). I just couldn’t win.

It wasn’t working. Not for me. Not for the kids. Not for the toddler. So I got help this school year. I know we can’t all afford help, but any help will do. If you can find a way for someone to keep the toddler busy so you can teach the others for even an hour without an interruption, you’ll feel so much better! A woman from church? Another homeschooling pre-teen? Swapping kids back and forth with a homeschooling friend; she takes your littles one day so you can teach the bigs and vice versa. Or even having someone come in and do a load of laundry for you or prep some meals.

With the help, our school is feeling nice again. I actually have time to print off some worksheets from the internet. I have time to write down a lesson plan. I have time to drill flashcards. If you can, get help. Then, you can breathe. Breathing helps. Breathing is good. Trust me. (And here you’ve been wondering why you’d been feeling so bad… 🙂 )

5. Get some real help: You can’t do it alone and there’s a lot at stake!

Sometimes, more than you need help with laundry or impetuous, climbing, dangerous-to-themselves toddlers, you need help understanding and relating to one of your emerging older children. The anger outbursts, the seemingly laziness, the insolence–it’s overwhelming you and completely impeding learning. (Read here and here and here for my take on dealing with adolescents. Oh, and here when they say they hate you…)

Sure, sending them away to school is an option. It’s the option of least resistance, which does NOTHING to change coping mechanisms that are being set FOR LIFE.  Or does nothing to change your mechanisms which have been set and need changed so your family can live harmoniously together. As much as we like our friends and we need them, it is the family unit which all so much crave to have intact and at peace.

Don’t be afraid to get professional counsel. Alcoholics, borderlines, depressives, manic depressives, abusive adults—they don’t happen overnight. They happen with the pressures of life. Give yourself and your kids a chance to learn new coping skills when you see they’re needed. Ask a pastor or counselor for professional help!

Conclusion

You can do it! I ran out of time for more, but leave your best tips in the comments for others to learn from!

And also, if you decide you simply can’t do it, then don’t be silly and beat yourself up! There are tons of things you can do that I can’t! It’s what makes life fun! Do your best and learn when to let go! Now, go hug your kids today. Mine are milling in the kitchen, so I’m off this box!

Terri

Image credit: This work has been released into the public domain by its author, Betacommand. Found on Wikipedia.

I’m Not Going to Make It!

I apologize in advance…the formatting isn’t what I desired.  But I tried typing into Word and then uploading to WordPress and got left with formatting that didn’t like to be messed with.  So I’ll make do and let it go…

Ping.  Pong.  A ping-pong ball.  That’s how I felt when I started homeschooling my daughter four years ago with a 3-year-old and a newborn in tow.  Ping.  Pong.  Ping.  Pong. 

Surely somebody had the answer for how to successfully and sanely homeschool with toddlers and babies underfoot!  Ping.  Pong. 

How were we ever going to get school done?  Ping.  Pong. 

I frantically (and unsuccessfully) pushed to get my oldest reading early so she could do worksheets on her own.  Ping.  Pong.

Ugh. 

How are we going to do this?  Why does every other mom look so calm?

Those days, now, are close to behind us!  My youngest of three just turned 4 years old.  She sits on my lap a lot during school, plays with her toys in the living room, or watches some television.  In the afternoon, she loves to go see her friends at her Montessori school.

Our local homeschool group’s moms are meeting on Saturday, and the first topic of our first Homeschooling Mom’s Coffee is “How to Survive Homeschooling with Toddlers Underfoot.”  In preparation for that meeting, here is the list I have put together to share.

 1.  Prepare for

  • LOWERING YOUR EXPECTATIONS
  • The MESS that allows you to buy time to teach
  • SHORT learning segments
  • GUILT for not tending your toddler and guilt for not teaching your older children “better”
  • LESS FREE TIME
  • LESS CREATIVE SCHOOL

2.  Keep the toddler entertained with hands-on activities that help their learning skills, either in a high chair, at a toddler table, or at a the big kids’ table, whichever works best.  The Montessori method calls these activities “children’s work”:

Fill a spray bottle with water, hand them a drying rag, and put them in front of a window, mirror, or refrigerator that   needs “cleaned”

Fill the kitchen sink with soapy water, non-breakable dishes and silverware, and a dishcloth and see how long that entertains them or fill a small tub with water and put it on the floor if you’re worried about them falling from a chair.

Fill a plastic container with dry beans or other such dry food item.  Give them a few containers and show them how to transfer the beans from bowl to bowl to bowl.

Give the toddler a cup of water and a few empty cups/containers and show them how transfer the water back and forth.  My daughter’s school uses small pitchers!  So cute!

 Fill a large Ziploc bag with 1-2 cups of shaving cream.  Push out the air, seal the bag and show the child how to “write” on the baggie.  Then smoosh it up to clear the design and make a new ones.

 Put a piece of wax paper down or a large jelly roll pan.  Put yogurt on it and show them how to write in the yogurt.

Give pipe cleaners and something to thread onto them, like buttons or macaroni noodles.

Give them a medicine dropper and some plastic bowls of water and show them how to transfer water from bowl to bowl with the dropper.

3.  Prepare toys and play items for them:

         Have special toys that can strictly only be brought out during school.  Legos, matchbox cars, special magnetic dolls, etc.

         Put half or more of the toys that are currently out away.  Then rotate the toys every couple of weeks or so to keep the toys “fresh” and novel to the child.

         Give them markers, finger paint, lots of paper, glue, stickers and even child scissors to play with during school.

         Play dough is great.

         Make “craft bags” that you can bring out with a color page, stickers, Oriental Trading Post crafts.

         Spoons, pots, and pans

         Give a purse filled with child-proof items for them to pull out and play with.

         Large child-safe magnets and a metal cookie sheet

         Hole punch and paper

         Hide puzzle pieces, cotton balls, or raisins in a Tupperware bowl of beans or rice.

4.  Give them naps or quiet time

        Some people are very firm on having the young ones take quiet time in their crib, playpen, or on a blanket at set times.  Sometimes just even in the pack-n-play sitting in the same room as school with a special “school-time” toy or lovey.

5.  Involve them in your activities or make it look like they’re involved:

         Save unused worksheets from sibling’s workbooks to hand to the toddler at the same time the older student is    doing the same worksheet type.

  We had lots of extra Saxon Math sheets I’d give to my daughter when the other girls were doing Saxon math.  And I made copies of the History of the World color pages for her that matched her sisters’ pages during history.

         Let them play in the math manipulative set with the tangrams, plastic clock, plastic bears, dominoes, laminated hundred number chart, etc.

         Tape player with headset playing books on tape.

         Consider lapbooks and give them file folders, papers, and scissors like the big kids.

6.  Rearrange your schedule:

         If naptime is in the afternoon, then homeschool in the afternoon.

         Do some homeschooling in the evening while Dad is home

  Utilize weekends when Dad is home or family available to help.  My kids don’t mind doing a subject or two on weekends.

         Consider doing some schooling spread through the summer to give you more time to do school.

7.  Have the older kids alternate back and forth and play with the younger sibling(s).

         I have a friend who took this a step further!  She has three children:  12, 9, and 4.  She found it worked better if she actually alternated DAYS back and forth.  One day the 12-year-old had to entertain the 4-year-old.  The next day it was the 9-year-old’s job.

         Have the older siblings read books to the young toddler.

8.  Capitalize on activities of daily living:

         Snack time:  Give the toddler a snack and continue teaching the others while the toddler eats.

         Bath time:  Read history or a read-aloud to the others in the bathroom while the toddler bathes.

         Nap time

   One year, we homeschooled in the afternoon while my toddler took a three-hour nap.  It was a bit of a bummer because other families were schooling in the morning so we felt left out of playdates sometimes.  We survived.

9.  Television:

         Decide what your limit is.

         Put it in a foreign language

  •    I have a Romanian friend who speaks Romanian, Italian, French, Spanish, and English.  When I asked her about her acquisition of language, she said as a child she would watch television in French so speaking French came pretty easy to her.

   If my youngest watches TV during school time, it is in Spanish.

10.  Teach older children to be able to start their school day with at least one topic/activity

         Not as easy as it sounds!  But still an endeavor I try for!

11.  Take time for the toddler first

         Recommended by many sources online—however, if I tried to do this, my kids will then continue to follow me around, haranguing me!  “Play with me mommy.  Play with me.”  Aaah!

12.  Rest assured that once you find a schedule you like and works well for you, guaranteed—it will change.

         Be flexible.  Not my forte.

13.  Say “no” to outside stuff and keep life simple for a few years.

         One day it will be you teaching a homeschool class for the co-op or Sunday school or hosting a coffee or planning the baby shower for someone.

14.  Don’t talk to other homeschooling moms—oops, I mean don’t compare yourself to other homeschooling moms and what they do!

         Your strength is their weakness.  And your weakness may be their strength.

15.  Really safety proof the house so the child may safely wander in the house and you won’t have a mess all over

         Child-proof drawers that repeatedly get pulled out and require you to pick up all of the time.

         Baby gates to keep them in the same room or out of rooms.

         Safety handles on door knobs, particularly to bathrooms!

16.  Have dad teach some subjects.

17.  Take it outside.

18.  Use videos and books on tape for older kids. 

         Some curriculums have books on tape you can borrow from the library.  History of the World does.

19.  Outsource if you can:

         Preschool and mom’s morning out can accommodate your youngest ones while you focus on the older ones and get them started well—so they can be independent earlier and set a great example for the up and coming!

         Hire a babysitter (maybe another homeschooler you know or an older woman) to sit a morning or two a week while you tackle the nitty-gritty of math and reading

         Find house help to do laundry, clean bathrooms, or chop onions for the evening meal so you have more time to devote to the kids’ education

         “Kid-share” with a homeschooling family who may be in the same situation you are.

         Arrange play dates during school if you know another mom with a toddler

20.   IT GETS EASIERYOU CAN DO IT!