30 days

While watching Ted talks the other night with my husband, one of the speakers said, “you can do anything for 30 days”.

He was talking about trying something new for 30 days.

I have been missing the pictures from my 365 project, blog post’s here, flickr photos here.

I mostly miss the growth that happened in my photography while doing the project and the pictures with my boys.

After hearing the whole 30 days talk I decided to do a 30 day self portrait project.

Day 1

I was still making the decision on this day.

Day 2

I mixed my “going to miss this” and my self portrait.

My little guys will not always beg me to let them help me bake.

Knowing that it is not forever makes it even sweeter.

Day 3

I’m going to miss this.

I made the decision last week to take a picture everyday of my boys doing something they will grow out of.

This was not meant to be a sad thing. I just wanted those things documented.

Like them using the stool in the kitchen (I am constantly having to push it out my way so this helped me see it in a different light).

I will not always have a cowboy superhero riding a bike in my driveway.

One day they will be too old for dress up and tall to use a stool to reach the counter top.

Now I will always be able to look back and remember it.

What moment did your child do today that they will grow out of?

Did you stop and take a moment to remember it?

Learning how to read

I am in no way an expert when it comes to teaching children to read.

I just know how overwhelming all the materials can be in the homeschooling community so I thought I would share what I have liked best.

First off, are these books.

I found “Teach your child to read” used on Amazon.com.

The little readers are A beka little owl books, found here.

I bought Teach your child to read because of this.

I thought it might help my oldest remember his letters and sounds.

It did help a lot but I have been using it for the word list and stories more.

I spent months teaching my oldest sounds with flashcards and then finally this book.

I had another Mom tell me about the leapfrog movie “Letter Factory” so I bought that for my youngest when he was three.

He learned his sounds in a week!

I recommend this movie to every Mom I know. It has cute little stories that go with each letter and sound they make.

For “A” a cute monster jumps out and makes the A say, “ahhh!”

My oldest (then four) was having trouble putting the sounds together until I got him the Owl books.

He loved how all the words were easy three letter words or less.

He also loved to play SuperWhy reading games on pbs.org.

My youngest (then 3) was proving to be a little more difficult to teach.

He had all the sounds down (thanks to the Letter Factory) but had memorized the Owl books while his brother read them.

He memorized faster then I could get him to sound out (I teach phonics).

So for him the break through finally happened when I would sit with him, grabbed a blank piece of paper, and wrote out word families.

We started with “at”, then added “c” for “cat” and so forth.

He did not have a book with pictures to help him remember what it said so he finally started reading.

He and my oldest both love Starfall.com, it has animated books, printable books, and phonic games.

That being said, I use everything around me to mix it up and keep them interested.

Blocks

Signs (My oldest read his first word on a STOP sign)

Writing in the dirt

Flash Cards (I spell out words)

My friend just made my youngest these awesome rocks for his birthday!

She was inspired from this.

So now we can spell bigger words.

Like Batman, Robin, and Joker.

We are full on into superheros right now.

I try to keep it interesting because the thought of my boys not loving to read breaks my heart.

They see me with a book in my hands every chance I get.

They know I can’t say no to “one more” book at the library.

I find good literature to read to them, not just picture books, chapter books.

We also sign up for the Summer Reading program at our local library.

I do not want my boys to just know how to read.

I want them to hunger for words like they hunger for food.