Convention Shopping Tips 3

Continued from the past two days, when we talked about Before and At the Convention Shopping Tips.

Today we’ll look at After the Convention.

AFTER the CONVENTION:
1. If you’ve held off your purchases and not bought at the convention, pray (and research more if needed) until you feel sure, then order. If you were unable to see something at the convention, but you still feel it may be best, order it. Don’t choose what you feel is going to be second best just because you haven’t seen what you really wanted to try. Most companies have return policies, on curriculum type things anyhow, and it is better to look and pay a return fee if it isn’t going to work, than to keep trying other things, and always wondering if this other would have been better.

One great advantage we have now over when these posts were originally written 7 years ago, is online discussion groups have really grown in the area of home education. You can talk to a lot of different users and get their opinions and reviews of products. If you belong to groups that have the same philosophy of (beliefs about) education as you do, they can be a great source of product reviews that may work for your family.

2. Realize that mistakes will be made! It is part of learning and growing – and learning and growing involve costs. Don’t throw out an apparent mistake at the first sign of difficulty. Pray about how (if) it can be adapted to fit your goals/methods, or if it is indeed what God wants but is going to require you to stretch and grow. Give it some time, and really try to utilize it, especially if it fits into your “guidelines”.

3. If you truly make a mistake, repent, spend more time – prayer and research – finding the replacement. Don’t beat yourself up. Go back to #2 – Realize that mistakes will be made! Sell the old one on a curriculum swap e-list or local used book fair. Chalk it up to experience. But be careful not to get in the rut of always jumping from one thing to another, and never truly implementing anything, always jumping to the newer, better resource, in looking for the answer. If this is happening, go back to the beginning and spend more time Renewing Your Mind and getting God’s direction.

4. Also realize that as you grow, the “Perfect Resource” that is perfect this year, may not be “perfect” next year or 5 years from now. You will be growing and continually renewing and adapting. Start where you’re at and grow from there. Sell, give or throw away, whatever no longer fits into your philosophy and goals and move on. But try to purchase things you won’t “outgrow”, like the Real Resources/ Living Books things the guidelines in tomorrow’s post suggest.

Check back tomorrow for tips in avoiding curriculum shopping mistakes.

 

Convention Shopping Tips 2

A couple more points – Continued from yesterday’s post. Today pertaining to the seasoned homeschool shopper.

6. This is personal opinion – as in what I do, and therefore carries emotional sentiment and may not fit as “good advise” for everybody.  :- ) If you have been hs-ing a while and you know the direction you’re going, and you already have all your basic resources, buy what you find that will fill-in for the future, even if you may not use it this year. I really don’t need anything for “this year” as often anymore, but I do know what I plan for the future and I enjoy filling in and buying when I find a resource that is just right for what I know is upcoming, when it is something I really feel God’s Peace about – especially if it’s at a great price!

There have been years that I haven’t been able to go to convention or order any resources and I have been grateful for God’s advance promptings that have led me to purchase ahead and provide for future (at the time, but now current) needs. It’s a good feeling when dh says, “Sorry I don’t see how we can squeeze anything out right now,” and I can reply, “We’re OK. We already have all we need for now.” This is especially true because we use “Real Resources” such as timeless Living Books.

We may not be studying Early America this year, but I know it’s coming up and I know we want to read Charles Coffin’s “Sweet Land of Liberty” and William Bradford’s “Plymouth Plantation” when we get there. I know they are living resources that won’t be “not applicable” or out of our philosophy when I get there. Or, perhaps we are collecting G.A. Henty books, or those character classics reprinted by “Lamplighter”, we have the ones we’re going to read this year, but I find others to add to our collection. These are timeless resources that I’d like to have, just to have in our library and read anytime!, not just the year we “study” their topic. If I find them at the convention, and I have the money to buy them, after getting anything I need for this year, I get them.

This could get me on a whole other rabbit trail of building a good and timeless library. I want to have books on our shelves that tempt our children to “read ahead”, meaning they see these books as being valuable to our family, and are intrigued to just pull them off and start reading at anytime, not just because they were “assigned”. That is part of creating a Love for Learning. And, I will save the rest of this rabbit trail for the Environment of Excellence article in our forthcoming “Lifestyle Curriculum” book.

7. Another good question to add for us book junkies that are deviating from “this year’s needs” list to help balance us – is: Do I already have something that teaches/covers this in a way that is do-able for us? Does this new resource do that much better of a job, and fit our qualifications that much better, that I am willing to replace the other one? It’s easy for me to duplicate things, because there’s more than one good thing out there. But since we already have a library of thousands of books, we don’t need to keep adding, just for the sake of adding. A verse that “speaks” to me is “Of the making of books, there is no end.” from Ecclesiastes. And I don’t need to own all of them!!!

Check back tomorrow for Part 3 – After the Convention Shopping.

 

Convention Shopping Tips

Here are some of my money and frustration saving tips for buying resources at a Convention.

BEFORE the Convention:
1. If you’re new to home education, (or haven’t thought through your own beliefs about education,) spend some time renewing your mind in God’s Word and prayer, and reading books or talking with someone about home education, to get a better idea of the right approach for your family. This will help you more than about anything else.

2. Through prayer, make a list of the types of things you think you’ll need. Such as: History resources for 20th century. Hands-on way to teach math, covering all levels. Mom’s “how-to” guide for teaching in a relaxed way. A few interesting read-alouds for character building. A drawing program for Suzy. … This will help keep you from spending a lot of time (and money) looking at (and buying) things that you don’t need this year/ yet.

3. Visit as many websites as you can, so you will have an idea of what you particularly want to browse through at Convention. Make a list under those “types of things” needed, of possible resources to fulfill those needs. There will be plenty of other things at the convention that you haven’t heard of before to choose from, that you may also want to look at, but this pre-looking will at least narrow it down some. You will have, through the websites, eliminated many choices. You can walk right past those booths with no condemnation or questioning for ignoring them.

AT the convention:
1. Go to the booths that carry the resources on your list first. There will be other good things to check out, but going to those pre-determined booths first will help you do some more eliminating.

2. Don’t buy anything on your first round. Make it a “skimming” tour. Make note of any other resources (or booths) that fit into your “types of things needed” that you’d like to check out further.

4. Talk to the vendors about resources that look really interesting. Go to workshops that focus on that resource (if possible) or at least give you an idea of that vendor’s/ author’s view of education (as it determines the philosophy behind the books that vendor carries/ author writes). Small vendors and especially those that have authored the resources are usually the most helpful.

5. Buy only when you have God’s peace about a resource. If you still aren’t sure as the convention nears completion, don’t rush or be pressured into buying anything. It will well be worth any extra you have to pay in shipping to get the right thing. Spend the time you need praying about it and getting God’s direction and peace. Don’t let a vendor (or others there) talk you into something that doesn’t fit your “litmus test” unless you really sense God leading in that new direction. Perhaps it is Him giving clearer revelation, but perhaps it’s an expensive (in money and time) rabbit trail.

More Tips tomorrow, especially for the seasoned homeschool buyer.

 

Home Ed Conventions – Part 2

If you already have an “educational philosophy”, you may lean more toward the specialized conferences (such as the Charlotte Mason conference in Omaha, or our Lifestyle Education through Discipleship™ ~ The Seminar) they encourage and assist you in your way. But general conventions, such as “State” conventions, (like the NCHEA Convention, in Lincoln), are good too, as they open the doors for greater thought, and different perspectives.

If you are new to looking at education through any perspective other than the world’s view that we grew up with, the State conventions just may be the right place for you to start, as they are more general. But do spend some time renewing your mind before going to a convention. The more we have developed our personal philosophy of education, (found God’s direction for our family’s education,) the easier it becomes to make those choices in a place where endless resources are calling “Buy Me!” When we sit at the Lord’s feet and get His direction for our family we will find that many things “out there” just don’t fit us. This makes them much easier to pass up when they (and all your friends) are calling “New! The best! Buy now! Just what you need!” It is so true that we should not buy until after we’ve gotten direction from the Lord.

Don’t feel you have to buy at the convention, especially if you haven’t had a chance to think it through. Just soak up information, that will help you make your decisions later. There are many conflicting voices out there calling for our attention. It is better to make a clear decision, even if it means missing out on the “no shipping” costs or “special deals” given at the convention. Even if you come home with “nothing” but ideas, convention will be worth it!

Tomorrow’s post will be on Tips for Shopping at Convention.

 

Home Ed Conventions – Part 1

It kind of amazes me how quickly home educators can go from the winter mid-year blahs, to excitement in planning for next year. This is the time of year when Home Education Conventions, Conferences, Retreats, Seminars, Workshops and Curriculum Fairs begin. And we begin perusing catalogs and websites more – and making lists.

Making choices as to what resources to buy isn’t nearly as limited as it was when we began teaching our children at home 22 years ago. Back then we could practically count on one hand what was available to home educators. Now, no one could count the options available. As those choices expand yearly – daily! – we could easily fall into being tossed about by every wind of new and great thing out there that “everybody’s” using.

Even though these changes can make Home Education Conventions not only really tempting places, but also very overwhelming places, I don’t think that means we should stay away from them. They are where we can get some of the best information we need to make right resource choices, as well as the help to deepen our philosophy, and improve our methodology of education. In fact, I think every mom (and dad too, if possible) needs to go every year to some type of homeschool retreat, convention, etc. for their own renewal and refreshment. We all need encouragement and support. Sometimes it can seem we’re isolated in our own world of home educating. We need to get out and see the “big picture” for a better perspective. God has given us such great mentors to help us along, we need to utilize the resources He’s provided for us. No homeschool home is an island. Don’t try to make yours one.

…. Continued tomorrow. And the rest of the week we’ll be talking about buying home ed resources, Shopping at Convention.

 

Nature Walks & Talks

This is an area I don’t post on very often. Although I love Creation, and my children love being out in it and wondering in all God has made, and we love reading in awe at his splendor, and watching videos of such things that we don’t have access to in rural Heartland USA, I’m still recovering from “we don’t do science”.

Someone who does do science and probably makes it more accessible for you (I don’t have, so haven’t read, her books yet) is Jeannie Fulbright. She has written the Exploring Creation series science books that are Charlotte Mason method friendly, and “Apologia Jr.” resources (i.e. they are considered pre-Apologia, which is texts for upper level science.)

Anyhow, I love what Jeannie has written about the neccessary relationship between Nature Walks and resources on God’s Creation. Read about it on her blog.

 

Lapbooking Resources with FREE Gift!

Tammy over at Tobin’s Lab has a great Free Gift Offer for you!

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will enhance your curriculum and liven up your learning!

(While Supplies Last)


HisStory Marches On!

What else for a March Special than our HisStory resources! It builds perfectly on Freedom & Simplicity™ of Lifestyle Education through Discipleship™ ~ The Seminar. (You did remember to get that in February, didn’t you?)

Freedom & Simplicity™ in HisStory and PIPEline of HisStory™ remain our customer’s favorite L.E.D. Exclusives, because they do help you put into action the philosophy and principles taught in The Seminar. (See what they’re saying at the book’s links.) Freedom & Simplicity™ in HisStory is a great introduction to learning and teaching based on biblical principles, for the subject that is the backbone of our curriculum. PIPEline of HisStory™ is a common sense, super easy to use, wall timeline (that can also be made into a early learner’s book, or used as dividers in an older child’s PIPEline Journal.) The PIPEline of HisStory™ will help you put all of HisStory into the context of the advancing of God’s Kingdom and Liberty.

For the month of March you can get both of these popular resources for even less! And even add our third HisStory resource, PIPEline™ Book of Remembrance, for half of its sale price. The PIPEline™ Book of Remembrance is a timeline in a book, (based on the PIPEline of HisStory™,) that you and your older students create as you study.

Economies

In addition to Government, there is plenty in current events to teach our children on Economies. Today I’m not going to expand on that, but I did want to let you know I got the Resource links posted on our Stewardship (Economies) Resources & Recommendations page AND point you to a good article.

The primary fallacy of the tooth-fairy economics at the heart of the stimulus is the very idea that economic health is the product of government spending, which is financed either by borrowing (which leaves private businesses with a smaller share of the pool of savings for them to borrow from), printing money out of thin air, or direct seizure from the population. Whatever government spends the money on is necessarily arbitrary — government lacks the profit-and-loss feedback mechanism that keeps the private sector from squandering resources and employing factors of production in ways that do not cater to consumer wants. It can seize its resources from the people without their consent, and it makes no difference to government whether or not people actually want or wind up using the things it produces. Meanwhile, the economy loses the goods that would have been produced by the voluntary sector had the government not seized these resources for its own use.

from Tooth Fairy Economics by Thomas Woods

I can’t resist including this quote. This is where it hits home for many. Surprise, surprise.

For instance, we’re now learning that Starbucks, at least in its one-store-every-ten-feet business model, was a bubble activity. With the housing bubble having burst, people now have a more accurate estimate of their real level of wealth. They’re now less likely to buy a $5 cup of coffee — or, in the case of the ailing Cold Stone Creamery, spend $6 for an ice cream cone. These are resources that need to be freed up so business firms carrying out genuine, non-bubble activities can be strengthened and the recovery accelerated.