Hi Betsy!
I am a homeschooling Mom, and I really want to
learn notebooking. How do I start? How do you
choose what/ how/ when to notebook? HELP!!!
Debbie in Oregon
Hi Debbie,
When I started notebooking I began with history,
but this was just me. I love to notebook history
because there
is so much you can put into a history notebook. . .
historical maps of the civilization, event, empire.
. . quotes
from whomever you are studying, there's always
great images you can find online. We love the
Usborne
Internet Linked World History Encyclopedia! Along
with the links, which enhance what you are
studying, they also have maps and clipart you can
add to your pages.
I like to print most of my pages onto 24 lb. paper,
but you could use 18 lb. no problem. I print cover
pages onto
card stock. If the kids are going to be doing a lot
of gluing we might also use card stock. When I find
scrapbook
material on sale I pick up a few things here and
there. We like to use "fancy" paper behind some of
the images
as borders, mostly black and white, to dress up the
page a bit. It's also fun to punch out shapes to
dress up. This
is not the most important part to notebooking but
once the research is done and the pages are mostly
put
together you can add all the “frills".
At the moment, we are working on the dinosaur
packet available on my website. We spent a couple
days last
week reading about dinosaurs. . . types of
dinosaurs, how they fit into creation, what they
left us (fossil fuels)
and the kids have been looking through and reading
books from the library. Today we filled out the
fact sheet
for one of the dinosaurs and then from that wrote
up a brief narration about the dinosaur. They
colored them,
marked on the map where fossil evidence has been
found and that was about it. They have done 2
dinosaurs so far this week.
Another really easy way to start is to begin a
nature notebook. Just spend some time outside and
have the kids
look for something interesting to write about. It
might be a cluster of lady bugs in a bush or an ant
hill. They
can take pictures and then go inside and try to
find what it is they found. Add the picture to
their notebook
along with whatever information they were able to
find.
My best advice would be to just start, don't wait
until everything "looks" a certain way or you think
you have
everything you "need". I think your kids will
surprise you with their creativity.
I'm often asked questions about notebooking,
how it works, narration, copywork questions and so
forth. A member of a my
Notebooking Nook Yahoo!
group
and good friend
Melissa
put together this list of questions that have
been asked on my group. I thought I'd add them here
to help those of you just starting out with
notebooking. I will add more as the questions
arise. Thanks Melissa!
Hey Betsy,
I have wanted to start copy work with Kelsey. Can
you tell me a little bit more about copy work and
how you notebook it.
Jeannie
Jeannie,
Basically, copywork is meant to show your child the
correct way a piece of literature should look and
be
written. When your child does copywork it is
important that they not look at a word and copy one
letter a
time but look at the whole word and write it. This
really helps a lot with spelling. I've been doing
copywork
for about 4 years now with my kids and the kids
that started with copywork seem to be better
spellers
earlier.
Seeing the proper way to punctuate and the usage
the different parts of speech is also a key to
copywork.
Your child can't help but do better in their
writing if they are daily see great works of
literature and copying
them.
Copywork can very easily be brought into
notebooking. I keep a bookshelf in my schoolroom
with books of
poetry, fables and quotes. They also take their
copywork from their literature. I have a binder I
am always
adding quotes and scripture verses for them to
copy. I still have young children who copy and so I
make
sure to find very short verses for them. However,
they are so used to copywork that I can give them a
piece
to copy and they might spend a week, copying one or
two lines a day. I couldn't do this with my older
kids
when we first started out because it would
overwhelm them.
All you need is a basic notebook page for these
notebooks. If your child enjoys illustrating make
sure there
is an illustration box for them to add a drawing
to. I like to look for coloring pages for my
younger ones and
shrink them down to fit onto their pages. I copy it
to my desktop, drag it into my drawing program and
create a page for them. This way the page is all
ready for them to write and color. One of my
younger kids
enjoys drawing his own pictures and my other likes
coloring in a picture already provided for her. I
do have
a primary copywork packet available on my website.
Over the years I've done different things to get
the kids motivated about doing their copywork . . .
I used to
keep separate jars with scripture verses, quotes,
and poems and they would pull them out and that was
their
copywork for the day. We still alternate days doing
a verse, quote, poem, literature and their choice
for each
day of the week. Although, like I mentioned before
some selections take more then one day.
Hi everyone,
After attending my daughter's college preview this
weekend I learned a lot that might be helpful for
some of you coming up on this stage in your life
soon. The university my daughter will be attending
has a leadership scholarship which she can apply
for. They look closely at service hours in
community work. They want an essay for service she
has provided. Which got my "notebooking brain"
thinking . . . she will need to keep a journal in
order to keep track of all her service projects, so
we are going to be making up service notebooks. My
kids all contribute in different ways to the
community and I think starting now, even with the
younger kids, will be a great way for them to be
more prepared when it comes time to write those
dreaded college essays.
Betsy,
What kind of services would you document? Examples?
. . . I am listening while dangling.
LOL,
Dawn
Dawn,
My daughter is a black belt in Hwa Rang Do and she
has been teaching for about a year for no pay. She
has
also taught several free self defence classes.
Here's a list of other things we might add . . .
this also includes
some things my son has done in Boy Scouts. . .
- service with the Salvation Army (collecting &
making toys for children)
- made baby blankets for children in need
- made ABC books for children in need
- reading to the elderly & young children
- planting trees in a park & at the community
college
- yard work for elderly or ill
- organize and assist in food drives
- organizing a Thanksgiving dinner for seniors
- visit with and assist a senior who is ill
- assist a new mother with house cleaning, meals,
and younger children
- organize youth activities (service projects, game
day, dances)
- donate time at a pet store, library, doctors
office, day care, etc.
- youth leader at church
These are a few things my kids have done over the
years. I know many things have slipped my mind but
I
think you get the idea.
Betsy,
What is the difference between a lapbook and a
notebook?
Thanks,
Kim
Hi Kim,
A lapbook is a learning tool created by taking a
file folder and folding it in such a way as to look
like a shutter.
Inside the lapbook your child would create
mini-books, folds, and flaps that would focus on
different subtopics of a certain subject. For
example, if you were studying the solar system you
might have mini-books, flaps or folds for planets,
galaxies, constellations and so on. Here are some
examples of lapbooks for you to look at more
closely . . .
Lapbook samples
There is also a
lapbooking yahoo group
if you are interested.
A notebook is similar in that you could use
mini-books, flaps and folds on your pages, however
you would store them in a notebook or bind your own
book. Notebooks could consists of narrations from
your child's reading, copywork, maps, quotes,
scripture, illustrations, really anything that
assist in helping your child remember what they've
learned. Your child would create several pages
while studying different subjects. We enjoy
notebooking a bit more then lapbooking because for
us lapbooking takes more time than we have to put
into it. I have 6 kids and 3 are in high school.
Notebooking seems to be a better fit for our
family. Here's more information about
notebooking
from my website.
At your kids ages, I have found a good place to
start is reading literature aloud to them and
having them narrate back to you what they remember.
I have an 8 year old son and a 10 year old daughter
and we are currently reading Charlotte's Web. We
read a chapter or two every day and then my son
narrates to me what we read while my daughter
writes her own narration. I write down what he
tells me about the chapter and we add it to his
notebook. I do write a small portion of his
narration with a fine point highlighter on a
primary-lined page for him to trace over. He then
illustrates a picture. Some children enjoy coloring
a picture already
provided, while others enjoy illustrating their
own. At times my son does a bit of comparing with
his older
sister and feels a bit insecure about his picture
so he often will trace a picture from a book and
then color it.
This actually has been good for steadying his hand.
I'm planning on having the kids write letters to
each of the characters and adding them to their
notebooks. We
do copywork daily and when we copy from our
literature it gets added to that notebook as well.
If we do a
project which can not be added we take pictures,
create a notebook page and add it to the notebook.
We are
planning on making a diorama of the barn, maybe. My
kids enjoy dioramas a lot. So basically, you add
everything you do from that subject to that
particular notebook. The same would go for your
history, science, or
whatever other notebooks you are working on.
Betsy,
I want to notebook science and history with my
oldest child next year. I already bought the book
on
inventors and the notebook pages from you. . . BUT
what do I do with them. How do we study the
subject?
What is my part and what is my son's part??? Where
do I get material for the education side or do I
already
have it from what I mentioned???
Valerie
Hi Valerie,
Welcome! Great to have you join us. I think once
you get started with notebooking you are going to
really
love it. Much of what you will do with notebooking
is having your kids narrate back what you all read
that
day. The inventors package you purchased will
provide nice pages for him copy his narration on
to. Use the fact sheet to fill in the facts as you
come to them or have him research the answers
during a few days time if need be. Once that is
filled in he could use it to write up another paper
on the subject, if you choose to.
If you have the inventors book you could just read
through one or two sections a day and have him
write
about what you read. You can also do further study
by checking out books from the library and
utilizing the
internet. I really like
wikipedia.
But, you could do a Google search on whatever
you're studying and find lots of great sites.
You can also ask the group for links and
resources and there is often someone who can
send you in the right direction.
The empty boxes provided on some pages are for
illustrations, such as diagrams. The boxes could
also be
used to add quotes, maps of where the invention was
introduced or maybe the inventors birthplace. You
might find a picture of a monument in his honor. If
he enjoys making models he could put something
together that relates to what you are studying and
add a picture of it to his page.
One other thing about narration . . . I have an 8
year old son who narrates to me as I write it on a
separate piece of paper. I still have him use
primary lines (he's a bit messy) and often use
a highlighter, writing in the narration for him to
trace over. If his narration is long, we decide
together what
the most important part of the narration was, and
he writes it on the paper. I still add his whole
narration to
his notebook, but because writing is something of a
struggle for him I don't push writing too much. I
usually
type it out for him. Although, he really enjoys
typing and will sometimes type part of them out
himself.