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- Board games
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- Games that can fill a lot of time (ie. Monopoly/ Chess)
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- Games that can be quickly set up (Bananagrams / UNO/ backgammon etc) ps. the Bananagrams website also has a great catalogue of word game resources, free to download, that are fantastic word-fun games to include in a weekly home-ed folder.
- Stacks of workbooks homeschoolers can work through in their own time. These workbooks are separate from school resource workbooks; completed as and when they want to.
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- Board games
Giving free access to workbooks, without any pressure to complete the books or the exercises inside them is a good way to encourage learners to tackle topics independently.
Colouring Books
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- can help improve concentration
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- work well as a keep-the-hands-busy side activity to a listening exercise,
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- are calming activity for stressful days
and, as a grab-and-go lesson resource, is easy to set up and put away.
Puzzle books
Like workbooks, puzzle books are no-pressure, relaxing activities. Mazes, sudoku, word searches etc. Puzzlemania have a great selection of mixed-puzzle books that work well for multiple age groups.
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- Escape rooms are always fun and there are many ways to present an escape room activity as a lesson.
Jigsaws
Jigsaws are a great activity to keep homeschoolers (of all ages) occupied and are also a useful tool to use in the classroom. Jigsaw puzzles help with hand-eye co-ordination, are good practice for pattern recognition, and require focus. Jigsaws can be combined with listening activities and extended into written lessons (describe the image on (the finished) puzzle/’write an instruction guide to jigsaws’) or used for art class (copy the picture).
(There are an awful lot of ‘jigsaws’ in that paragraph…sorry.)
Interacty Puzzle Maker is simple to use and great fun for home-ed pupils to make and solve their own jigsaws. What’s good about using an online jigsaw as a home-ed filler lesson is that the jigsaw can be completed on the go on a mobile device – great for ‘life admin’ days.
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Trying to balance screen time when home educating can be a tricky thing. You want to make sure they’re not online all day but it would be foolish to ignore the incredible access the internet gives to learning tools and materials. We (try to) alternate offline and online activities and make sure our homeschoolers know which sites they’re allowed to access independently to ensure unsupervised web surfing is safe.
The sites below are ‘safe’ sites and have lesson-fillers for every age-range.
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- BBC Bitesize is great for home educators because you can customise a learning plan for your children on the website itself. Add lessons to ‘My Bitesize’ for each child and let them work at their own pace.
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- Maths is Fun don’t be fooled by the simplistic design of the website – the content is, indeed, fun and covers primary school & secondary school mathematics. Likewise, Math Playground has fun, educational games.
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- Brilliant.org is an academic resource that is fun to explore. If your homeschooler likes science or maths, this site will entertain them for hours. (N.B this might feel like an expensive outlay but it’s really worth the money – the improvement in scientific comprehension after using it for a few weeks is impressive.)
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- Newspaper puzzle sections. Crosswords, logic, spelling, sudoku..all educational, challenging and fun. (Including a daily puzzle in a homeschool routine is a simple way to switch from ‘home’ to ‘school’.)
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- Historiana is brilliant for randomly diving into history
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- Great museums is a fantastic site that lets you explore and learn from museums and exhibits within those museums. The site has over forty documentaries to watch and even more resources to explore. It’s a great site to discover what it is that interests your homeschooler.
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- A Skillshare membership is a subscription that literally offers an alternative teacher for a home-ed classroom.
Add suggested courses to a list that homeschoolers then have free access to. Let them choose to follow a course in its entirety, or just individual lessons from a course, and give them the freedom to jump between subject courses as they choose. Read more about Skillshare for home-ed here.
This type of grab-and-go easy to set up lesson works well as intro-exit activities when transitioning from ‘home’ into the home-ed classroom. It’s not always realistic to expect home learners to fully immerse themselves in the lessons on their desk when the desk was, five minutes ago, the breakfast table. If you don’t have a dedicated home-ed classroom in your home (we don’t and don’t plan to create one), giving home learners a signal that it’s time to switch from ‘home mode’ to ‘school mode’ can make the day run smoother. Music is good for this but using a short, no pressure activity that introduces the skill or the topic the lesson will cover eases them in gently and gets their brain thinking around the topic before the lesson begins.
Ps. Because this style of activity is by default chosen to be hands-off from a teaching perspective, simple intro activities give you time to adjust into teacher mode too – and perhaps finish drinking your coffee?