Do-It-Yourself - Homeschooling Handbook - Library Based Journal and Study Guide For Eclectic High-School Students (Teen Guys) C2, ideal for ages 14-18, (9th-12th grade), even young adults! This is a huge book, almost 500 pages! Your student can make it last from anywhere from 6 weeks-a whole semester by completing 6-12 pages per day. This journal covers Science, History, English/Grammar, Nature Study, Spelling, Creative Writing, Economics and Finance, all you need to add is a math program. Designed to be used along with library books, audio books, tutorials, documentaries, and classical music. Allow your student to take pride in their work and find a love of learning with this beautiful handbook. This plan is perfect for struggling and reluctant learners. Creative students, gifted students, students with ADHD, Dyslexia, Asperger’s or Autism all thrive will this approach. Uses a Dyslexia friendly font to help students with letter confusion and reversal. MH4’s son is thriving with this “I ordered this for my son (14) because he has dyslexia and I was really excited to try the dyslexic font with him. I love how organized it will keep him and the guidance it provides as he works through the subjects in the journal. I was surprised how quickly he came to me with a list of books he wanted and art supplies. My son doesn't like to read regularly and his asking for books was motivation enough for me to continue using The Thinking Tree products.” “This journal has eliminated complaining about school work in our house! My kids are excited to choose what they learn day by day and write it in their journals. Thank you, Sarah!” Amazon Customer(February 12, 2017) 1543079199 978-1543079197This homeschooling journal is great for busy families, unschoolers, eclectic learners, Charlotte Mason inspired, and delight directed learners. Even some textbook moms have found success using this method with their boxed curriculum.This book has a similar interior to the "Just for Teen Guys" High School Homeschooling Handbook. The artwork is slightly different, this book includes more architecture and less weapons.
Sarah Janisse Brown is the inventor of Dyslexia Games, a world traveler, pancake flipper, potty trainer, happy wife and a homeschooling mother of ten.
In her free time, she fills her journals with art, poetry and prayers, paints murals and mindlessly says "yes" to every child that asks to keep a stray kitten.
Sarah's stories have appeared in Old Schoolhouse Magazine, Above Rubies Magazine, Countryside Magazine, Mother Earth News, as well as several small newspapers. Sarah and her husband Joshua met at Calvary Chapel in Cincinnati, Ohio when they were young teens and were married under a bright blue Indiana sky seven years later. The first baby was born ten months later. He was so cute they decided to have nine more.
After several years of competing in the rat race, and adding a new baby to the family every year or two, the couple decided to pack up the kids and follow their childhood dreams. So in 2012 the family opted out of the American Dream, sold everything (or gave it away, because most of it was junk that came from yard sales and thrift shops) and moved to Europe.
Josh sold his computer service business and Sarah resigned from her seat on the Fortville Town Council, where she had been serving as vice president. To survive they started a publishing company (The Thinking Tree, LLC, and began selling selling workbooks for Dyslexic children online. Joshua and Sarah are the developers of creative curriculum and therapy for children with Dyslexia, Asperger's Syndrome and ADHD. They have a heart to help children who struggle with schooling, like Sarah once did, as well as their own dyslexic daughters.
Their online business - www.DyslexiaGames.com, allows them freedom to live and work anywhere on earth... with an internet connection. Recently the family appeared on the reality show House Hunters International, when they moved from Fortville, Indiana to Veneto, Italy. Back in Indiana the Browns were known for the unruly urban homestead, complete with goats and ducks, that they created in their own backyard on Main Street. The Browns now enjoy a life full of love, adventure, serving and learning wherever they may go.
The family now travels the globe together and enjoy a life of mission work, fun-schooling, and travel. They have missed many trains, planes and buses, but they never miss out on the things that matter like love and laughter!
For the rest of the story pick up a copy of Windows to Our World".