Homeschooling For Dummies. Jennifer Kaufeld

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or laugh over them — depending whether they recall the warm breeze flowing over them as they read Lorna Doone aloud or the ant hill they mistakenly sat on.

      You can also plan ahead and take two days off through the winter holidays instead of two weeks. That gives you eight days to play with when you need to take time off later. Drop those days into your planning schedule when you suddenly need time off or incorporate them into the infant arrival period. Those eight days give you almost two “free” weeks that you don’t have to make up for later because the children already did the work.

      Grab some hot chocolate, take a deep breath, and hold on for the ride. Although the toddler years aren’t the time to begin that far-reaching toothpick project you promised to your 8-year-old child, you can still keep enough hold on your schedule and your sanity to make it through the year and know that everyone came close to meeting their educational goals. Who knows? You may even surpass your wildest expectations.

      Teaching with a toddler

      Teaching a group of other children (or even one or two) with a toddler in the mix guarantees some interesting days for the whole group, but it can be done. Many homeschooling families survive toddlerhood each time and even go on to teach that youngest person at home when she becomes ready.

      

Forget the super-parent mentality. This may come as a shock — or a huge stress reliever, depending on your current state of mind — but with young children in the house, you can’t do it all. Even if you could do it all before the youngster made his appearance on the scene, little ones require too much time, effort, and love to allow you to homeschool, lead Girl Scouts, become the head volunteer at the Humane Society, and provide a four-course home-cooked meal every night. Enjoy the toddler years while you have them. The Humane Society will still be there next year, and I bet they’d love a new volunteer.

      

Whew! That much said, here are some ideas to streamline your life while you live with a toddler:

       Use videos for those times when you must have 24½ uninterrupted minutes with an older child. If your toddler loves Blue’s Clues or Winnie the Pooh, those are the videos to keep back from general family usage for the sacred teaching hour. Pop one of the most-loved videos into the player and work with the other children to the sound of the Winnie the Pooh theme song.

       Keep a stash of special toys in your school area. Maintaining a small crate of “school time only” toddler toys gives your little person something to play with that he doesn’t generally have in his hands. When my kids were toddlers, I rotated toys every couple of months; with a box on the floor and a box in the closet, the kids thought they got “new” toys quite often.

       Use naptime to its fullest. Most toddlers still need to nap. If you resist the urge to crash along with her, the toddler naptime can function as your main teaching time with the other children. You can get a good one-on-one instruction period into each day if you concentrate on teaching new skills while the toddler happily snoozes. Then, when your recharged ball of energy reenters the scene, you can work on memorization skills, reading time, or other tasks that require less interactive attention.

       Play “pass the toddler.” This may make your school days longer, but if everybody takes a turn playing with the toddler until naptime, you can work with the students who are left. Taking turns gives your other children a break from school time, and it keeps the toddler occupied.

       Hold and cuddle if you have a lovey dove. Some babies and toddlers love to be cuddled. Nothing says you can’t hold your toddler on your lap while you teach. A little bounce once in a while and a nice warm hug may be enough to keep them occupied as they watch the siblings do their thing from the comfort of a parent’s arms.

       Go to bed early once in a while. No one will report you to the Stay Up Late Police if you turn in at 8:30 every now and then. Putting the toddler to bed and leaving the other children in the care of Parent Number Two makes total sense if you’re exhausted or simply need an hour or two by yourself.

      Teaching your toddler

      If you have more than one child, you know how much younger siblings pick up from their older counterparts. Much of it, thankfully, is even positive! Wonder what you can teach your first toddling homeschooler? You’re probably doing just fine already.

      Toddlers learn best as they bounce around their world. Exploring life, getting into the mud after a rain, hiding stuffed animals in your best plants, and crashing for a nap after a hard morning’s play — these are the things toddlers do best. They play hard, learn a great deal, and generally sleep pretty well (as long as you’re willing to scoot over in your bed in the wee morning hours once in a while).

      Incorporating your toddler into your day provides some of the best pre-homeschooling training she could receive. Talking to a little person increases her vocabulary when she’s ready to use it. Letting a toddler watch you spread peanut butter onto crackers or pour the daily apple juice shows him how the world works. You teach things like beginning cause and effect (what happens to the empty glass when we tip the apple juice jar over it?) simply by living through your day.

Here are some simple ways to incorporate learning into your toddler’s day:

       Announce the colors of clothing and objects as you come across them. Not too many months will pass before your toddler knows the difference between the red jacket and the blue one.

       Talk about clothing as you dress your toddler. Snapping, tying, buttoning, and Velcro may be old hat to you, but to your toddler it’s a whole new fastener-filled world out there.

       Listen to different styles of music and talk about them with your toddler. While discussing musical motifs is probably more than your toddler has in mind, saying something like “Let’s listen to some Beethoven,” “Want to hear some Russian folk music?” or “How about some Fleetwood Mac?” fits right into the flow of things.

       Talk about the people who come to your house regularly. “Here’s the mail carrier!” not only identifies that person who brings such cool stuff on a daily basis, but it also gives your toddler language that helps her identify that part of her day. By the time my children were preschoolers, they could identify UPS, FedEx, DHL, and U.S. Postal carriers on sight simply because they came to our house nearly every day.

       If you know a second language, begin identifying objects in both languages. The younger a child learns a second (or third) language, the easier it is for her to assimilate that tongue. Of course, teaching a toddler or preschooler a second language guarantees some

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