PODCAST · education
Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network
by Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network
We help you homeschool better — and podcasts are how we deliver it”
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Summer Movies and Christian Discernment: Teaching Kids to Watch Media Through a Biblical Lens
Summer Movies and Christian Discernment The summer movie season is fast approaching and lots of our kids are will be lining up at the Multiplex for one opening night after another. How do you choose appropriate movies for your family, or give reasonable guidance to your youngsters, or is there a framework for a Christian […] The post Summer Movies and Christian Discernment: Teaching Kids to Watch Media Through a Biblical Lens appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network. Click the icon below to listen.      
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Homeschooling High School Isn’t As Hard As You Think
Does the thought of homeschooling high school make you feel panicked? Maybe you’re wondering: Will my teen be prepared for college? What about transcripts? What if I’m not qualified enough? Will my teen miss out socially? You are not alone. In this episode of The Homeschool Sanity Show, I’m talking with Rachel Kovac, homeschooling mom of six and author of Their Future is Shining Bright, about the fears parents have about homeschooling high school—and why many of those fears simply aren’t true. Rachel shares practical encouragement for parents considering homeschooling through the teen years, including transcripts, dual enrollment, career preparation, relationships, and socialization. This episode sponsored by CTCMath.com   Watch on YouTube Read the transcript Sanity Shortcut Homeschooling high school does not mean recreating school at home. Instead, think of it as creating a customized path for your teen—one that can include: dual enrollment, internships, certification programs, apprenticeships, online classes, entrepreneurship, travel, mentoring, and meaningful family connection. You do not need to have every detail figured out before you begin. You just need to take the next step. In This Episode In our conversation, Rachel and I discuss: The biggest myths parents believe about homeschooling high school Why transcripts are easier than most parents think How to create high school credits from your teen’s interests Preparing students for college and non-college career paths Scholarships, AP courses, and competitive college admissions Why homeschoolers often have more flexibility and opportunities What socialization really looks like for homeschool teens How homeschooling high school can strengthen family relationships Helping teens process worldviews that differ from your family’s values Resources Mentioned 📘 Their Future is Shining Bright by Rachel Kovac 🌐 Rachel’s website: RachelKovac.com 📄 Rachel’s transcript template and homeschool resources 📱 Instagram: @RachelStitchTogether Encouragement for Nervous Parents One thing I especially appreciated in this conversation was Rachel’s reminder that fear doesn’t mean you’re incapable. Many of us who now love homeschooling started out convinced we couldn’t do it. And honestly? Homeschooling high school gave me some of the richest conversations and strongest relationships I’ve had with my kids. If you’re considering homeschooling through high school, I hope this episode gives you both practical help and renewed confidence. Share This Episode If this episode encouraged you, would you share it with a homeschooling friend who’s nervous about the high school years? You might be the reason she takes the next step toward homeschooling with less frustration and more confidence. Other Episodes on High School Homeschooling High School Grammar High School Unschooling High School When You Don’t Know Everything
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Senior Summer Checklist with CJ
This week on Homeschool Highschool Podcast: Senior Summer Checklist with CJ. Senior Summer Checklist with CJ Do you have a rising senior on the horizon? If so, you probably feel the pressure of this eventful time. That’s why we asked our friend, CJ from Homeschool Through High School, to join us. She is walking the […] The post Senior Summer Checklist with CJ appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network. Click the icon below to listen.        
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Backyard Bible Adventures
Faith and fun do go hand-in-hand. In this episode of Vintage Homeschool Moms, your host Felice Gerwitz shares a great way to make Backyard Bible adventures a reality. Complete show notes help you jump-start your own adventure at home. Check out more podcasts on the Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network. Sponsored by CTCMath.com Backyard Bible Adventures for Tweens Episode Low-Cost Outdoor Explorations That Deepen Faith and Connect Kids to God’s Creation As a homeschool mom who has led countless Bible camps and volunteered at summer programs, I often returned home worn out yet inspired. That experience sparked a desire to create something simpler and more meaningful for my own family. I developed a days-of-creation themed curriculum that turned everyday backyard moments into powerful faith lessons. With help from my college-aged daughter, Christina, co-author of the Truth Seeker’s Mystery Series, we designed hands-on activities and a complete supply list. Today, we offer the Creation Camp as printable student workbooks, along with a parent guide and a full supply list, at MediaAngels.com/store. (Limited ready-to-go kits with supplies may be available soon—join our mailing list for first notice!) These outdoor adventures bring Genesis to life through nature, science, and Scripture. They work especially well for tweens, who thrive when they lead activities, mentor younger siblings, and explore God’s world right outside the door. Best of all, everything stays low-cost and screen-free, using items you already have at home or can find cheaply. Why Backyard Bible Adventures Work for Multi-Age Families Tweens crave independence yet still love family connection (for the most part). These backyard Bible adventures let them take charge, while younger children can join in with simpler tasks. My favorite end result is making memories and giving the kids time to think. These goals are a double blessing. I built these ideas on the foundation of our original Creation Camp, giving them a fresh outdoor twist. Your children can journal observations, map their “Bible journeys” using a compass, and help set up and build creation stations with simple experiments that make Genesis feel alive and real. How to Host Your Own Backyard Bible Adventure Camp Run this as a full-week camp or spread it across weekends, whatever fits your family’s schedule. Each day focuses on one or two creation days, with tween-friendly challenges that build observation and problem-solving skills, which foster connections to Scripture. I’ve included a key Bible verse and journal prompt for each session to encourage reflection. Grab your family Bible and dive deeper as the Holy Spirit leads! Feel free to use your favorite version. Day One and Two: Light, Darkness, and the Waters Begin with a simple “Light and Dark Exploration” on a sunny afternoon. Use a magnifying glass for the Sun’s Heat experiment: place a small piece of chocolate on a plate and focus sunlight on it. Watch it melt as you discuss how God created light on Day One and separated it from darkness. (This will lead the children to expand their search for other things to redirect the sun’s light. Warning: leaves and paper may be set on fire. Ask me how I know!) Shift to water with a “Make It Rain” activity or paper boat float-or-sink test. Fill a clear bowl with water, add food coloring and a drop of dish soap to create swirling “storms.” Another fun activity is to create paper boats (experiment with different shapes and sizes) for the float test. My kids were creative and used aluminum foil (because paper gets waterlogged fairly quickly). Allow them to think and be as creative as they can! Kids love predicting outcomes and testing household items. These quick experiments open natural conversations about God’s power over creation. You can also add competition with a boat design that stays afloat the longest. The kids can add pennies or other equal-weight items to test the strength of their design. Bible Verse (Genesis 1:3-7) Journal Prompt: Draw or describe what happened in one of the light or water experiments. Then write: “How does seeing God’s power over light and water help me trust Him more in my own life?” Day Three: Dry Land and Plants Outdoor activity is best in your backyard (or on a small patio). Even if your yard is mostly grass, concrete, or limited in variety, this day still works beautifully with simple adjustments. Give each child a notebook or sheet of paper and send them on a “Creation Collection Hunt.” Challenge them to find as many different examples of God’s “kinds” as possible: rocks, pebbles, twigs, grass blades, leaves, flowers, weeds, or any natural items in the yard. If your backyard is sparse, take a quick 10-minute walk around the block or neighborhood, or bring in a small bag of potting soil, dried beans/lentils from the pantry (as fast-sprouting “seeds”), and a few extra leaves or flowers. Set up a simple “Dry Land Model” using two shallow trays, aluminum pans, or even cookie sheets. Fill one with soil, sand, or dirt from the yard to represent dry land. Fill the other with water. Let the tweens arrange their collected rocks, twigs, and plant items on the “land” side to show how God separated the waters and brought forth dry ground. Next, plant fast-sprouting seeds such as radish, bean, or lentil seeds in clear plastic cups or recycled yogurt containers filled with potting soil or yard dirt. Place them in a sunny spot and have tweens measure the growth and sketch changes in their journals each day. For a hands-on land-and-plant connection, do leaf rubbings or a simple pressed-plant collage: Place leaves or flat flowers under plain paper and rub with the side of a crayon or pencil to reveal beautiful designs. Or glue collected leaves, seeds, and small twigs onto paper to create a “God’s Kinds of Plants” mosaic. Younger children can help sort items by type, water the planted cups, or make their own rubbings. Bible Verse (Genesis 1:9-11) Journal Prompt: Sketch one item collected. Write about how God designed even the smallest details with purpose and what that teaches you about His care for you. Day Four: Sun, Moon, and Stars Build a homemade sundial using a stick and rocks to track shadows through the day. At dusk, create “sparkling stars” with pipe cleaners or poke constellation patterns (like Orion) into Dixie cups and shine a flashlight through them onto a sheet. Try the meteorite impact demo: fill a cookie sheet with flour, sprinkle paprika on top, and drop small rocks from different heights. This leads naturally into a faith-building discussion about comets and the young-earth timeline. Comets are like dirty snowballs of ice, dust, and rock. Each time they pass near the sun, some ice melts, releasing dust that becomes meteors. Scientists note that short-period comets last only about 10,000 years or less before disintegrating. If the solar system were billions of years old, would comets be gone? Yes! Yet we still see them. The “Oort Cloud” theory remains an unproven guess with no direct evidence. Therefore, I trust the Bible’s timeline: God created the heavens and the earth thousands of years ago, which explains why comets and meteors still exist today. End with evening stargazing (use a red light to preserve night vision) and verses about the heavens declaring God’s glory. Bible Verse: (Genesis 1:14-17) Journal Prompt: Draw the sundial shadow or a constellation you observed. Reflect: “How do the sun, moon, and stars remind me that God keeps perfect order in the universe—and in my life?” Day Five: Fish, Birds, and a Scavenger Hunt Adventure Transform your yard into a nature detective zone. Use a scavenger hunt list to find everyday items made from rocks, minerals, coal, or petroleum (pencil, plastic bag, aluminum can). Add a Bible-journey map: draw a simple backyard map, label “stations” inspired by Abraham’s travels or the Israelites’ wilderness wanderings, and hide clues. Use a compass to navigate, read matching Scripture, and journal insights. Younger siblings follow with picture clues or a leaf-and-rock hunt. Bible Verse: “And God said, ‘Let the waters bring forth swarms of living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth across the firmament of the heavens.’ So God created the great sea monsters and every living creature that moves, with which the waters swarm, according to their kinds, and every winged bird according to its kind. And God saw that it was good.” (Genesis 1:20-21) Journal Prompt: List three things you found on your scavenger hunt or map adventure. Write: “How does seeing God’s creativity in fish, birds, and everyday objects increase my wonder for His creation?” Day Six and Seven: Animals, Man, and God’s Gift of Rest Wrap up with animal fun! Press animal-shaped cookies or toy figures into play-dough or a Lorna Doone cookie to make tracks, then discuss Day Six when God created animals and man. Allow the kids to be creative and come up with their own ideas for animals creating tracks. Study God’s creatures; there are many obscure and strange animals. What is their purpose? We may not see it but God doesn’t make mistakes. God’s greatest creation is Man. (After each creation, God said, “…it is good.” But after creating Man, God said, “…it is very good.” On Day Seven, enjoy family rest: picnic in the backyard, read a favorite family book out loud, and share what surprised you or you enjoyed most about this adventure. Bible Verse Day Six (Genesis 1:24-26) Bible Verse Day Seven (RSVCE): “And on the seventh day God finished his work which he had done, and he rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had done. So God blessed the seventh day and hallowed it, because on it God rested from all his work which he had done in creation.” (Genesis 2:2-31) Journal Prompt: Draw or describe one animal activity or the “gator” you created. Reflect: “What does it mean to me that God created me in His image and then rested? How can I rest in Him this week?” Flexible, Faith-Filled Family Memories These backyard Bible adventures carry the same hands-on, activity-driven nature as our Creation Camp, but move it where it belongs—outside! Kids stay engaged as leaders and experimenters, connecting science and enhancing it with Scripture. Younger children feel included, and the whole family grows closer through shared discovery. No fancy supplies needed—just paper, kitchen staples, backyard finds, or dollar-store basics. Keep a family journal or simple check-off sheet to track what everyone tried and what God revealed. If your tweens find some activities too young for them, encourage them to design their own for the family to enjoy. I pray these simple outdoor explorations will strengthen your family’s faith, spark fresh curiosity about God’s world, and create memories far more lasting than any screen. More Listening on the Vintage Homeschool Moms Podcast If you enjoyed these backyard Bible ideas, you may also love these episodes for even more faith-filled homeschool encouragement: Creation Science Podcast – Teaching Creation to Kids Money Saving Field Trips Teaching Kids Problem Solving Skills: A Fun Homeschool Life Skill Best Staycations for Kids Last Minute DIY Entertainment Tips
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Cheap Family Travel Tips for Large Families (Without Breaking the Budget)
Cheap Family Travel Tips for Large Families (Without Breaking the Budget) Looking for affordable family travel ideas that actually work for large families? Whether you’re planning a homeschool field trip, ministry travel, a family vacation, or traveling for work, there are ways to travel well on a budget. In this episode of Making Biblical Family […] The post Cheap Family Travel Tips for Large Families (Without Breaking the Budget) appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network. Click the icon below to listen.      
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Replay: Finding and Using Online Classes for Homeschooling Effectively
This is a rerun of episode 277 – you can find the original show notes here.   The post Replay: Finding and Using Online Classes for Homeschooling Effectively appeared first on Ultimate Homeschool Podcast Network.
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