Playdough Making Tutorial – Picture This!

December 30, 2008


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Welcome to the first of my “Picture This” posts.  This if for the readers that enjoy ‘seeing’ what I’m talking about.  And sometimes, scanning through a post of pictures is a nice break from all the text.

I did a recent post with recipes for homemade playdough and flubber.  Here’s how easy it is to make your own playdough:

Here’s the recipe I’m doing:

Playdough Recipe #1

(Special Ingredient = Alum – found in ’spices’ section of grocery store)

1 cup flour
1 cup water
1 T oil
1 T powdered alum
1/2 cup salt
2 T vanilla
food coloring

Mix all dry ingredients. Add oil, water, vanilla, and food coloring.  Mix.   Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until reaching the consistency of mashed potatoes. Remove from heat.  Play with it.  Store in plastic bag.

 

1.  Get a pot (you have to start somewhere)

 

2. Assemble ingredients.  There are only 7 of them.  Seriously, this is what takes the longest at my house.  Can you spot three ingredients in my disaster of a slightly unorganized pantry?  (Red arrow = white flour, Blue arrow = oil, Orange arrow = vanilla back there somewhere)

2. Still assembling . . . Here’s a close-up – now can you see the white flour?  We’re a whole wheat family, so I pretty much use this exclusively for playdough and paper mache.

 

2.  Still assembling – Now we’re to my stuffed to the brim well-stocked spice cupboard.  Pretend it’s an I-spy game:  Yellow – Yes!  The salt is easy, Green – a little baggy of food coloring way back there, and Orange – knock over everything looking for that well hidden bottle of Alum (you think it’s hard to find in the store?)

2.  Got it all!  (except the food coloring and the water are not in the picture)

 

3.  Add ingredients – Finally!!  Add one cup flour.  (Check out the action shots!)

 

4.  Add one-half cup salt.

5.  Add one cup water.

6.  Add 1T Alum (Ok, it’s not exact, and I goofed and used 1 teaspoon – a very forgiving recipe!)

7. Add 1 t vanilla (up to 1 T).  It covers up the salty dough smell nicely, but is a bit brown.

8. Add 1 T oil, any kind.  Helps keep the dough moist and pliable.

9.  A few drops of food coloring.  It mixes in much easier at this stage.

10.  Stir.  Stir.  This is the fun part where little helpers are welcome.  Oh, and mix a few colors for an impromptu color on primary and secondary colors.

11.  All mixed up it should look like this and drip thickly off the spoon.

12.  Oops – don’t EVER wait this long to put the cap back on that staining, evil, permanent, spreads everywhere, food coloring!

13.  Adding a little blue to my batch – ooooh, pretty swirls.

14.  Put in on medium heat and stir continuously.  In a few minutes, the dough on the bottom will thicken, darken, and make everything a bit lumpy (see the dark green chunk in the middle).  Keep stirring.

15.  Chunkier, keep stirring.  Almost done now.

16.  No more glistening wet looking stuff and it all pulls away from the pan into a ball – You’re done!  Get it off the heat and out of the pan right away!  Over cooking makes for crumbly dough.  It’s better to undercook than overcook.

17.  Tadah!  Even the playdough thinks it’s easy!

18.  Bag it and suck out the air to make it last.  Or even keep it in the fridge if you have the room.  (My stuffed well-stocked fridge isn’t accepting new items.)

 

Recipe Time = somewhere between 7 and 43 minutes

  1. Assemble Ingredients:  2 – 15 minutes (you know how long it takes at my house)
  2. Mix ingredients: 2 minutes
  3. Cook playdough: 3 – 6 minutes
  4. Extra helper and lesson time:  2 – 20 minutes.
What do you think?  I’d love to read some comments.

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Posted under Homeschool Crafts, Picture This!

Enjoy Christmas and Homeschooling!

December 23, 2008

I hope you’re relaxing, reading holiday stories to the kids, maybe a few scriptures, making a batch or two of fudge and cookies, giving gifts, finding ways as a family to serve others, and all the other great holiday activities we remember best from childhood.

And try not to do too much of the snarling about the 14th pair of scissors you can’t find, the 3rd empty tape dispenser when you’re in the middle of wrapping, the very full cup of sugar your baking ‘helper’ let slip out of his hands, the snowy roads, the crowded stores, the tight budget, etc. 

Sometimes it’s nice to just take a deep breath and remind ourselves that it isn’t just the kids that need to remember the true meaning of the holidays.  Remember to smile and celebrate – after all, there are only TWO days until Christmas!

And if you’re looking for a fun Christmas activity, since homeschooling IS life, check out this great list of Christmas resources collected by:

 

Free homeschool resources

She’s a homeschool mom that has compiled a great set of resources to share with fellow parents.

Have a great Holiday!!

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Posted under Homeschool Websites

$600 Online Shopping Tip – Search for Codes!

December 19, 2008

For my bargain hunting readers out there – here’s a very simple online shopping tip that has saved me hundreds of dollars:  Always do a Google search for discount codes before finalizing an online order!

When you are buying something online, you will often see a box on the check-out screen that says one of the following:

  • Promotion code
  • Coupon code
  • Discount code
  • Etc.

What to do:

  • Before you finalize your order, ALWAYS Google the following:  “(the Merchant’s name)” and the exact code term listed. 
  • For example, I was buying something on Buy.com today, and typed this into Google’s search box:  “Buy.com Promotion Code.”  In a few seconds, I found a code that gave me 5% off my Buy.com order.  It was very easy.
  • This fall, I saved $600 on a 2-week van rental with Advantage Car Rentals by typing in one little code word I found online.

The lesson? 

If there is a box for a code, there is probably a code out there somewhere, and hopefully someone has posted it where it’s easy to find using Google.  Sometimes I can’t find one, but the times I do give me that great bargain hunting experience:  easy money saved!

Share With Us:

Do you have an easy tip to save money online?  For homeschool supplies?  Please take a minute to comment.  Thanks!

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Posted under Homeschool Bargains

LessonSense.com – Christmas Worksheets, Printables, Crafts and More!

December 18, 2008

LessonSense.com - free worksheets, crafts and printables

Check out another great internet resource full of craft projects, worksheets, and lots of printables: LessonSense.com.

If you’re looking for some Christmas craft ideas and printables, see their Christmas craft page for projects to make Christmas trees, stars, and even a cute stable with Mary and Joseph. 

Or check out their Christmas worksheet page which has the following:

Share With Us:

Have you incorporated holiday lessons into your homeschool? (Whichever holidays you celebrate)  Do you have any tips or ideas that might help the rest of us.  Please share by making a comment!

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Posted under Homeschool Crafts, Social Studies Websites

Playdough Recipes and Tips!

December 17, 2008

Making your own playdough is surprisingly easy and a fun kitchen recipe for kids just learning to use the stove.  Throw in some fraction work and kitchen safety rules to ’Make it a Lesson’.  

Here are tips from our kitchen followed by a few of the recipes we like:

Playdough Making Tips:

  • A touch of vanilla does wonders for the smell by covering up the salty flour smell of homemade dough.
  • Food coloring mixes easily in the water at the beginning – once you have dough – not so much :-)
  • Keep in plastic so it doesn’t dry out, or the fridge if you want it to last even longer.
  • Take it off the heat as soon as it pulls away from the edges and starts to form a ball.  Overcooking makes it too dry and crumbly.
  • Don’t make edible playdough and regular playdough on the same day . . . yes, for obvious reasons :-)

Playdough Recipe #1

(Special Ingredient = Alum – found in ‘spices’ section of grocery store)

1 cup flour
1 cup water
1 T oil
1 T powdered alum
1/2 cup salt
2 T vanilla
food coloring

Mix all dry ingredients. Add oil and water. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until reaching the consistency of mashed potatoes. Remove from heat and add vanilla and food coloring. Divide into balls and work in color by kneading.

Recipe #2

(Special Ingredient = Cream of Tartar – also in ‘spices’ section)

1 c. flour
½ c. salt
1 T. vegetable oil
1 t. cream of tartar
1 c. water
1 t. vanilla (opt.)
food coloring

Mix all ingredients into a saucepan. Mix well. Cook over a medium-low heat until the mixture forms a soft ball. Store in an airtight container and it will last for weeks to months.

Recipe #3

- Edible Playdough

3 1/2 cups peanut butter
4 cups confectioners’ sugar
3 1/2 cups honey
4 cups dry milk powder (or powdered soy milk)

In large bowl, cream together peanut butter and confectioners’ sugar, then beat in honey and fold in milk powder. Divide into 15 equal portions and refrigerate or freeze until ready to use.

Share With Us:

Do you have a favorite dough recipe or tips to making play dough?  Would you mind posting them in the comment section?  Thanks!!

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Posted under Homeschool Crafts

Amazon Christmas Toy Deals!

December 11, 2008

 

For the bargain shoppers among you, here’s a quick tip on some great toy deals on Amazon.com you can buy while sitting at your computer in your pajamas.

I did this last year right before Christmas and got a ton of $30 to $60 toys for $5 to $20. I think my average priced toy was around $10. And not only did I get Christmas toys, but the deals were so good, I bought enough to stock my ‘gift closet’ so we had a ready supply of gifts for birthdays all year long.

How I do it:

  1. Check Amazon’s Best Seller Toy List to see the top 100 items selling.  They are usually of two types – the most popular toys, and the best bargains (what you’re looking for).
  2. Check Amazon’s Movers and Shakers list.  This is a great list I just found this year and all the best deals hit this list first.  It includes any product that has suddenly started selling much faster than usual and is moving up the sales ranking.  The most common reason for this is that the price has dropped a TON – like this Panasonic camera that has just droped $90 in price from $239 to $149.
  3. For great toy deals, check the Movers and Shakers Toy List.  Here are some current deals (remember they change FAST!)
  4. One last great page is the December Deals page with all the discounted toy categories.

 And some shopping tips:

  • Prices change daily and even hourly.  Make sure to check back regularly.  Once you’re sure, buy quickly, because the price in your shopping cart is NOT guaranteed until you actually purchase it.
  • Set yourself a sale price that you buy a product at and stick to it.  It’s easy to get sucked into buying too many ‘good deals’.
  • Always buy $25 worth and make sure to check “Free Super Saver Shipping” so you don’t pay shipping.

And if you’re going to buy from Amazon, consider clicking the links in this article since Amazon will give this site a small commission for each purchase.  Thank you and let your friends know!

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Posted under Homeschool Bargains

Want to go to MIT? Check out their Open Course Work online – For Free!

December 11, 2008

Have you ever thought about your kids going to MIT?  Or wanted to go yourself? 

Guess what?  MIT has put TONS of their courses online, free for anyone to use.  It’s called MIT Open Course Ware.  It’s an amazing resource of 1800 courses.  Each course has the course material available which can include a syllabus, images, videos, lecture notes, assignments, and reading lists.

Find full MIT college courses in:

And if you’ve got high school students and want to see what MIT has specifically for them, check out the page dedicated to their offerings most useful to high school students and their teachers. 

What a great chance to throw some high quality college course work into the schedule of your older kids, or pick a topic you’ve always wanted to learn more about.

(If you enjoy this blog, feel free to email this website to friends and spread the word.  I appreciate the feedback!)

Would you like to get the latest from HomeschoolBytes without checking back every day? You can have posts delivered right to your inbox, or subscribe to my RSS feed! Thanks for stopping by!

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Posted under Homeschool Curriculum

Butterflies – A Favorite Unit Study for Preschool.

December 10, 2008

 

Are you looking for a fun unit study for the little ones with lots of science, biology, new vocabulary, and hands-on crafts?  Butterflies are always a favorite.

Check out this course on buttierflies that is designed to take 1 – 2 weeks for younger kids around kindergarten age.  Take about complete!  It comes with lesson plans, cut-out butterfly patterns, vocabulary lists, butterfly math, worksheets, full color life cycle printables, poetry, and even assesment guidelines.  They’ve thought of just about everything. 

This course is presented by the Alma Project funded by the Denver Public Schools.  It is “a program that provides multicultural curriculum for early childhood education (ECE) though twelfth grade.” 

If you like the butterfly course, or are just looking for an excellent unit study, check out the other 85 excellent unit studies available as .PDF documents.

Would you like to get the latest from HomeschoolBytes without checking back every day? You can have posts delivered right to your inbox, or subscribe to my RSS feed! Thanks for stopping by!

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Posted under Homeschool Curriculum, Science Curriculum

PBS isn’t just about TV – Check out these Teacher Resources.

December 9, 2008

Public TV is a great boon to homeschool with its educational programs and generally ‘clean’ content.  But, did you know they have a whole section of their website dedicated to providing resources for teachers?

Pick one of the following topic areas and use the drop-down menus to choose your grade level and topic of interest.  There are lesson plans, videos, links to websites, interactive learning experiences and TONS more.  (And yes, it’s all, once again, FREE!)

So, the next co-op lesson or unit study that you find yourself needing ideas for, check out the PBS teacher resource site.

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Posted under Homeschool Curriculum

Need Some Tips on ACT and SAT Test Prep?

December 7, 2008

 

One thing I learned after going to school all the way through medical school:  Test taking is a learned skill and you get higher scores the more and better you practice.  Looking back, I wish I had know this before taking the SAT and ACT as a high school student.  A few practice tests and some directed technique drills would have easily raised my scores.

If you have a teenager who plans to take these tests for college entrance, start early and integrate a bit of test taking skills into your homeschool curriculum.

Check out MSN Encarta’s site with tips, resources, and links to ACT/SAT test taking strategies

Although the overall picture of your college applying child is important, a few more points on their test scores can only help open more doors.

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Posted under Homeschool Test Taking