Creative thinking and creative activities are key when teaching special needs children and those with dyslexia. Making supplies, such as these, available to them can go a long way towards helping them retain what they learn. By using artistic means to enhance the school work in your homeschool, you help to engage both the left and right brain activity in your students.
Learn more about how this can make a difference in teaching - especially those with dyslexia and other special needs. There are many (limitless) supplies you can choose from - these are a few of our favorite. Top Ten Unusual Lapbooking Supplies:
Stephanie says: “I have a son with SPD and Reflex non-integration disorder. Fine motor skills are really tough. Often I have the whole lapbook assembled before we start the unit. From there he can glue in answers where appropriate whether they are supplied or I type them up. He feels very proud of his lapbooks because they express his knowledge without stressing the fine motor issues he faces.”
Heather says: My slower learner and my child with memory problems are better able to remember and tell others about information we have learned by lapbooking. The act of crafting while learning and remembering gets both sides of the brain working! :) Love lapbooks!
Carol says: My son learns information so much more quickly when putting together a lapbook because it isn't just something I am telling him to remember, but it is something he can see and feel and interact with. And, if he needs a quick refresher, he can go back and look at it again. We just started using them over the summer and I am looking forward to incorporating them into school this year.
Jen says: Lapbooks are perfect for the tactile learner, totally hands on and the children feel ownership of their learning when they put the items on the folders in such an artistic way using them over the summer and I am looking forward to incorporating them into school this year. Nicole wrote: "Yes! My children require repetition, different presentation of materials, as well as hands-on experience for a full learning experience. Using lap books helps us achieve this." Jennifer wrote: "My children love it. It gives them something to do with their hands while I read to them. Plus they love going through them again and they need that repetition."Are you using lapbooks with your special needs children? What are the benefits you have seen?]]>
Below are a few of the ideas I had submitted when I asked on Facebook what other do to store their lapbooking supplies.
Missy wrote: "I have a small tote that has pockets going around it. Each pocket has things like glue, crayons, pencils, brads, glitter etc. And in the middle are our two bigger items - stapler and pencil sharpener. I also use a hard pencil case for stickers. And to store our in progress lapbooks I use a plastic 12x12 scrapbook envelope to hold the folders and any loose items (I bought these at the craft store for $1)."
Patty wrote: "We use binders with cardstock to hold our lapbooks instead of the folded file folders. It stores better for us. I store the uncut minibooks in clear page protectors, sometimes we cut them out as we go, Normally I'll cut out a set at at time. To keep all the completed mini-books together I use a zippered "Pencil Pouch" that fits right in the binder. Then when we are ready to assemble, all are right there--nothing is ever lost!"
Paula of AJTL wrote: “one neat thing we do for storing the lapbooks themselves is to use the duct tape on the sides and put in a notebook.”
]]>By adding a creative element to your family homeschool, you’ll be surprised at how much more fun and enjoyment the whole family will get out of it. Assign different jobs according to the ability of each child. Have older children read aloud from the study guides or curriculum. Younger students and those who need to work on fine motor skills will benefit greatly from cutting out the mini-books for each section of the lapbook.
*Tip: On larger lapbooks – don’t get overwhelmed by trying to cut out the entire lapbook at once. Try doing one section at a time & label the backs of the mini-books with a light touch of a pencil as you go along to keep up with what goes where. Follow the simple instructions on each page and the diagram layout for the big picture.
Your students will be so proud of their finished product and will look forward to showing it off to parents and grandparents alike!
As mentioned above, lapbooking with AJTL uses all three of the main learning techniques in the educational process. As children hear, see, and interact with the material – they are using both the left and right sides of their brain which results in more brain power and better success in homeschooling.
Ultimately, kids have better retention levels because they have heard it, seen it, and interacted with it. It works!
]]>We LOVE to hear that Lucinda! Thank you for sharing! Producing curriculum that holds valuable information, is relevant to students ages, and is easy to use - are just a few of our main goals at AJTL. Lapbooking will add a layer of creativity to your studies (even if you are not a "crafty" or "artistic" person) and will help your students not only learn to pull out the most relevant information, but also will help them retain what they learn. When they are finished with each lapbook or unit study project - they will have something to be proud of, and a terrific review tool!I just wanted you to know how much I love your lapbooks! This is my first year homeschooling my three children, and our first experience using lapbooks.
Of the lapbooks I have seen, these are by far superior.
Even when I can get some products for free, I would still prefer to purchase A Journey Through Learning.
They are easy to follow, have clear instructions and great curriculum matter.
~Lucinda Douglas - a homeschool mom
Martina Bump is a homeschool mom, like you, and she had these things to say about our lapbooks . . . "My children and I love A Journey Through Learning Lapbooks and study guides!!! We have done several of them and my girls retain more by being able to write,cut and glue and put together a lapbook that is fun and engaging to look at over and over again. With your student wanting to go back and look at what they have created over and over they are reinforcing what you have taught them.In addition to it being fun it works on fine motor skills such as cutting ,writing and also on following step by step directions.
Upon finishing one of the lapbooks my daughter took it to show her speech and OT therapist and they were very impressed by what she had accomplished and how much she had retained from schooling with the lapbook. The therapist agreed that this was the PERFECT fit for my struggling learners.
One of our science courses we are working through this spring/summer is Dr. Jay Wile's new Science in the Beginning.
Science in the Beginning is the first book in a hands-on, multilevel elementary science series that introduces scientific concepts using history as its guide. Because each lesson is built around an activity or experiment, it is engaging for all K-6 students. In addition, there are three levels of review for each lesson, so the parent/teacher can choose the depth at which each student is expected to grasp the material. The course contains roughly 90 hours of instruction, 35 of which are composed of hands-on activities. The beginning of history is given in the Bible's creation account, and this book uses the days of creation as a way of introducing a wide range of scientific concepts including the nature of light, energy conservation, the properties of air and water, introductory botany, our solar system, basic zoology, and some aspects of human anatomy and physiology. As the students learn about these scientific concepts, they are constantly reminded of the Creator who fashioned the marvels they are studying.
As we work through this course, we are using the Science in the Beginning Binder-Builder from A Journey Through Learning to create a record of our learning activities. Each Binder-Builder is made up of approximately 32 sheets of cardstock in each 3-ring binder. The cardstock pages provide space to place the mini-booklets for the lapbooking components for each lesson. Writing prompts are given to correspond with the text to comprise a written component. The Binder-Builder is further organized with tabbed dividers to keep notebooking pages on specific topics. These topics for the tabbed sections include:
Key Person - This form is used to research famous scientists, inventors, and inventions.
Vocabulary Words - This form is used to log vocabulary terms from each lesson.
Experiment Sheet - This form is used to log experiments conducted in the lessons.
Memory Work - This form is used to copy the memory verse.
Book List - This form is used to log additional books read for the lessons.
The Binder-Builder helps our daughter have a method to document all of the various items she studies in the Science in the Beginning text. It is a streamlined and organized resource which results in an impressive portfolio at the culmination of the course. Do your students enjoy the creativity of lapbooking and notebooking?
]]>Regular file folders are used as a base to create this fantastic homeschool resource. Additional “mini-books” are then added throughout the base to organize and present the information on any topic.
Lapbooks are an educational scrapbook of your studies.
]]>Lapbooks are an educational scrapbook of your studies.
Lapbooking trains students to process, assimilate and share important information.
The mini-books that are put together throughout the lapbooking process provide a terrific visual method of “chunking” information in appropriate sections. This skill not only helps students retain what they are learning, but is a skill that will continue to be useful to them long after their lapbooking days have passed!
Lapbooks also make great tools for review and for recording all that you have studied in your homeschool journey.
Using lapbooking as an educational tool in your family homeschool can change the whole atmosphere in your school day. A few of the added benefits include the following:
A Journey Through Learning Lapbooks has Stand-Alone lapbooks that need no other curriculum. We also have Curriculum lapbooks to accompany your studies for many of your favorite homeschool companies, such as Classical Conversations, Jeannie Fulbright/Apologia, Jay Wile's science, A History of Us, and many others.
]]>Our Learning Activity Book for Cycle 3 of Classical Conversations provides a place for students to practice, review, and record memory work. This helpful tool covers memory work for the entire 24 week term of Classical Conversations.
Each week contains the follow pages:
Memory Sentence Fill-In Page for English, Latin, Science, and Math- This page can be used for 4 days of practicing the memory sentences and here’s how! Simply cut off the left side of ONE page protector. Slip it over the page. Now, your student can use a write-on marker to do the page each day without actually writing on the page. Then, on the last day, your student uses a pencil to write on the actual page. Move the same page protector to Week 2 and start over.
History Sentence Copywork Page-Student uses this page to write out the History Sentence.
History Notebooking Page- Student uses this page to take notes about the History lesson.
Science Notebooking Page-Student uses this page to take notes about Science lesson.
Fine Arts Page- This page will have the art lesson for the week.
Geography Page- Student uses this page to practice drawing the maps.
At the end of the school year, your child will have a wonderful resource showcasing the lessons from his/her Classical Conversations Cycle 3 program!
*** You will need to own the Classical Conversations Foundations guide to complete this Learning Activity Book. Check out Classical Conversations for more information and to join a community near you! We are not affiliated with Classical Conversations in any way. However, we do love their resources and our CC community! Give CC a try today! ]]>My point is that children learn BY doing! I think we have become a society that is so scared of the ugly world around us that we are bringing that fear into our private homes. Yes, our country is at war. Yes, bad people kidnap children, and yes, there are very weird people in our neighborhoods that send their little darlings off to something called school every day. As parents, we cannot impose these fears onto our children. We cannot keep them under our wing forever. Playing in the mud filled with nasty germs will not kill them. It just makes them dirty! Yet, with that first feeling of dirt, the adventures begin.
Giving them their "own" tools so that dad's stay in the garage is learning responsibility, correct way to use and take care of things that belong to him and the safety. They learn that you have to nail three boards together to make a hut because two will blow over with the wind. They learn to tie off the tree they are cutting down for the second story on the treehouse, or it will fall the wrong way. While digging out the moat, they learn how to remove roots, and at what level water can be sprung from the ground. They also discover while digging that all types of critters live in the dirt. Some, like crawfish you can even bait and catch with pieces of ham! Now, a completely new adventure begins. Once they have build fishing poles out of whittled sticks and string, where will they cook them? So, another adventure begins. They build a cart out of trees, woods, and nails to haul the old forty-five pound Chiminea out of the garage so they can build a fire! I could go on and on.
In each of these adventures, he is learning, thinking, growing. Yes, there are dangers. He could fall out of a tree, drown in the 3 foot moat, or be burned my fire; or, nothing will happen, and he will grow up with amazing adventures to tell his children. I choose to experience the latter! Our children have a lifetime to worry! So, for the few creative years where is not afraid to try and fail at life, I will keep the kool-aid pouring and the first-aid kit filled.
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]]>Being creative IS needed by EVERYONE! Children learn BY doing. Somewhere we have given the message to older kids that learning can no longer be fun. The simple truth is, as homeschooling moms of “older” kids, sometimes we just want to get it done.
]]>Being creative IS needed by EVERYONE! Children learn BY doing. Somewhere we have given the message to older kids that learning can no longer be fun. The simple truth is, as homeschooling moms of “older” kids, sometimes we just want to get it done.
We see items like paper, glue, scraps, brads, scissors and crayons as THINGS we used in elementary teaching. In reality, these are brilliant tools that open true thinking and imagination in our kids!
Now, I will be the first to admit that my son (13) DID NOT LIKE file folders. So, I got creative. I started creating what we now call “Binder-Builders.” By taking a 3-ring binder and filling it with colored three hole punch paper and eight tabs (labeled Maps, Notebooking, Reading Books, Reports, Research, Timeline, Vocabulary, Writing), I turned an already packed lapbook into a MEGA binder of learning!
My son was given a sheet of card stock for each booklet. The instructions were simple- cut out and glue the booklet ANYWHERE on this page. You MUST provide (on this piece of cardstock) what is being asked on the booklet. You must also fill the REST of the page with the information you have learned in the study guide.
It always amazed me how he would come up with creative ways of remembering the study guides; army men with bubble words coming out of their mouths, snakes eating the answer, answer written down the side of a mountain – But, see, the learning and being creative part was STILL there!
The next day, he took the SAME study guide and had to looked up five NEW words from the study guide. Those were placed behind the “Vocabulary Tab.” Depending on the study guide, I would assign reports, writing, research, timelines, and/or require extra reading. All of these were then added behind the tabs. Now, I had taken a very informative lapbook and with a little imagination created a complete curriculum portfolio for my older child.
I pray that these simple changes will help you to see that kids are NEVER too old for paper and glue!
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