Showing posts with label Parenting & Teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parenting & Teaching. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

4 Small and Simple Ways to Make a Big Difference With Your Children

Morning Messages
Are your mornings as chaotic as mine?  Everyone running around trying to get ready in time to go here or there?  Seems like that is much of today's society in general.  However, there is one time that can be an eye of the storm to your mornings...breakfast!  It's more than just the most important meal of the day.  It can be one of the most important moments as well!  Add a little Morning Message and it's become a chance to set a positive tone for everyone's day before they enter the chaos of the world!

I used to read while I ate my breakfast.  As a kid it was the comics from the newspaper or of course the riveting text on the back of the cereal boxes.  When I grew older I used the time to study the scriptures since it was one of the few solitary, peaceful times of my day where I could really concentrate and contemplate.  Then, I had children...At first it was easy to keep that routine since I only had one baby and she was usually nursing or sleeping while I ate breakfast.  Then, she grew older and I felt kind of guilty for ignoring her while I read and ate.  She wasn't old enough to converse with either, so I was no longer sure what to fill the breakfast conversation/study void with.

Then, one day I realized that just because she wasn't old enough to converse, didn't mean she wasn't old enough to listen.  So, I ordered my first copy of the inspirational children's magazine, The Friend, and began reading an article a day with her.  Little did I realize that she was ACTUALLY listening and learning from these articles at a very young age!  It was amazing to me, and continues to be as we've added more children to my home.

Thus the birth of our Morning Messages.  Each morning we read a message from The Friend Magazine, sing a song to align with it (which I usually choose on the spot--no prep here! and the songs can be listened to and downloaded for free HERE!), and have a mini-discussion about the topic of the day (which is based on whatever the next article is--again no prep!).  It's become our morning ritual and daily devotional.  Something I plan to continue as my children get older, just with messages then from The New Era youth magazine.  Even my little toddler who can't fully utter the words, begs for Morning Messages, pointing to the magazine when I forget!

Scripture Stories
 
Anyone with toddlers and pre-schoolers at home understands the struggle to get a few moments of peace while you take a shower and get ready for the day.  At the same time, I'm always looking for ways to instill values while my children are still young and largely influenced by home life and teachings.  At our house we kill two birds with one stone because of the awesome radio program I found called Scripture Stories!  It is basically an audio-recording of a book-club done by children where they read and discuss scripture stories from the New Testament, Book of Mormon, Doctrine & Covenants, and Old Testament (yet to come).

You can find them on the Mormon Channel links HERE!
The pictures on this page that do not say Mormon Channel are the links for the picture stories that they are studying in their "book club."

As a mother, I love this program for the spiritual development it helps to produce in my children.  As a former elementary school & college teacher I love it because of the comprehension skills it develops as well!  It's exactly the kind of discussion I used to do with my students and has innumerable lessons in communication skills and reading comprehension development!  

Most of the programs are anywhere from 20-30 minutes long, and afterwards my children watch the video of the scripture story that goes along with the discussion they just listened to.  If your children struggle with the auditory, you can have them follow along in their own copy of the scripture stories books (for visual learners), or play something like blocks while they listen (for your kinesthetic learners).

Family History Friday



Since there are only so many articles in the Friend Magazine, and we didn't have enough for every weekday of the month, I decided to supplement with stories from our ancestors on Fridays, or show my kids some things from familysearch.org.  It has already become a favorite as they love looking at pictures and hearing stories from their ancestors!  When it is the week of a grandparent or great-grandparent’s birthday then I make sure we study them that week and incorporate their favorite foods and activities throughout that Friday!  It’s a work in progress but I love it already!  This last week we studied my grandma since it was her birthday and we played dolls, board games, and sewed just like she loved to do.  I forgot to get her favorite foods, but it was a fun day for all of us and brought back some great memories for me!

Family Home Evenings
If you don't already, set aside one night a week (we do Mondays) to have a little spiritual thought or lesson followed by a family activity and of course a tasty treat (my children's favorite part...okay maybe mine too! :)) This Website has some incredible resources for teaching your children just about any topic you can imagine.  You can search by topic to find lessons, activities (both on and off the computer), videos, images, you name it!

These four things are so simple and basic, but they can make a world of difference in the spirit and feeling that permeates your home!  Try them out and let me know how it goes for you!

© 2015 Leaflet Radiance All Rights Reserved

Monday, February 2, 2015

Church Teacher Training Lessons & Handouts

I was recently released from serving in the Primary Presidency in my ward at church. (For those of you who aren't Mormon, that means I helped lead and organize the teachers of the children who met in our church building.)  Over the three years that I served, I was primarily in charge of leading the teacher training sessions we had once a year.  I saved my lessons and handouts and felt maybe I should make them available for anyone who may find them useful in training teachers in other churches and wards as well!  Hope it's helpful!  I'll also be sharing more activities that we did, so look for those coming soon!

Lighting the Fire Within & Put Out Fires While Doing It! (Primary Management Lesson)
Primary Management Lesson Handout

Incentives & Positive Reinforcements for Teaching Primary

Becoming A Shepherd of God's Children

Savor the Sweetness of the Spirit Through Quality Teaching (Lesson & Handout)

© 2015 Leaflet Radiance All Rights Reserved

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Planting Patriotism into the Hearts of Our Children


"Freedom must be purchased anew by each generation."
-(Declaration of Dependence: Teaching Patriotism in the Home, Robert K. Thomas and Shirley Wilkes Thomas, 1976).

I have spent a fair amount of time thinking about and studying freedom and patriotism lately with the upcoming Fourth of July.  In fact we have spent the whole last month learning about it in Mommy School to prepare for the holiday!  My kids love it!  

Our decorations began to go up on Memorial Day (a tradition I've decided to begin this year) and won't go down until the end of July!  I want my children to be prepared to celebrate the Independence Day of the United States of America with understanding, knowledge, appreciation, and excitement!  Thus, this blog post to help others do the same!  I hope many of you will find it useful!

(A note to my international readers, I believe many of these concepts apply to people all over the world regardless of the nation in which you live, so read on and apply to your own home and nation!  It is my prayer that you may find these helpful as well!)

"Citizenship may be more than a matter of birth or formal naturalization. For unless one truly promotes the common welfare of his country, he is an alien in the oldest sense of that term—that is, estranged from his fellows. Citizenship is a declaration of dependence upon one another, a recognition that only in unity is there strength and a security that is moral as well as physical. The natural expression of that identification and that security is patriotism."
-(Declaration of Dependence: Teaching Patriotism in the Home, Robert K. Thomas and Shirley Wilkes Thomas, 1976). 

Six Ways to Teach Patriotism to Your Children

1. Teach by Example
I owe so much of the patriotism that I feel within my heart to my Father, who has a deeper love and appreciation for his country and constitution than anyone I have ever met.  The loyalty in his heart and the tears in his eyes when we speaks of the freedoms we enjoy, and the patriots of the past who sacrificed so much for us to have those great gifts, have moved me many times throughout my life.  As a college student, I had the opportunity to visit Washington D.C. with my parents, and learning from my dad there is an experience I will treasure my whole life through.  I only wish he could have accompanied me on the two-week Patriots and Pioneers tour I did a few years after that!!  I am deeply thankful to him for the love and appreciation he has given me for the freedoms I enjoy and the blood that was shed, and continues to be lost, for me and my family to maintain the way of life to which I have become accustomed.  I only hope and pray that I can distill that love and those blessings upon my own children and the generations to come.



2. Put Family First
So often we think we have to go looking for projects or a great cause to make the world a better place.  However, in reality, as the poet William Ross Wallace so beautifully wrote, "...the hand that rocks the cradle, is the hand that rules the world!"  And as many of us know, "No other success can compensate for failure in the home!" --David O. McKay







"The heart of patriotism...lies in attitudes that are rooted in family relationships, for the family unit, in microcosm, undergoes most of the stresses which test the larger societies that make up a nation. The qualities that distinguish patriotism are all of the “homely” variety: respect, integrity, loyalty, self-sacrifice, consideration, fairness, appreciation, and devotion. No exhortation to respect his country’s flag can mean much to the youngster whose casual, permissive upbringing has left him with little respect for anything. And the child who equates freedom with indulgence may never understand the consideration for others that is fundamental to a workable democracy."
-(Declaration of Dependence: Teaching Patriotism in the Home, Robert K. Thomas and Shirley Wilkes Thomas, 1976).


3. Practice Values that Define Patriots...
At Home!
How can we ever expect to raise patriotic children who are good citizens of the community, if they don't learn and practice values at home?  The home and family are the foundation of our nation.  This is what our Founding Fathers gave their all for.  Lives have been lost and sacrifices have been made time and time again, not to preserve gold and silver, but to protect and enrich the family and thus the community at large!  That's where it all begins and what it's  really all about!
"When we are able to make each family member feel equally loved and equally important—and we do this by acknowledging the smallest contribution and honoring the greatest need—we all develop a concept of loyalty and concern that will transfer easily from home to country. If, in the family, we have learned to be tolerant of difference and generous in judgment, we find it easier to work with others outside the family circle in democratic goodwill. Research in child development suggests that cooperation and concern for others are usually learned before children begin the first grade. If they are not learned in the home, they will be hard to find in the school yard, on the campus, or on the job."
-(Declaration of Dependence: Teaching Patriotism in the Home, Robert K. Thomas and Shirley Wilkes Thomas, 1976).


4. Serve Together
“Patriotism is more than flag-waving and fireworks. If we ask only, ‘What’s in this proposal for me?—What do I get out of it?’—we are not patriotic and we are not good citizens. But if we ask, ‘Is this right?—is it good for the … people?—would it preserve and strengthen our freedom?’—then we deserve to stand in the company of [great patriots]. Patriotism is trying always to give more to the Nation than we receive. It is selfless service” (Ezra Taft Benson, 1962).

Telling our children to help others is not enough.  Ideals are not enough.  We must work right alongside them, showing them that we practice what we preach!  There are a million ways to serve both inside and outside the home, and it is this selflessness that supports the ideals of America.  The Founding Fathers did not create this nation for themselves, but for their posterity!  These great men who could have been kings of a new land, chose instead to think of the future and sacrificed so much, not for themselves, but for us!


5. Take Them "There"
Not everyone is blessed to stand on Plymouth Rock, walk the battlegrounds of Gettysburg, pace the halls of the Capital Building, or to walk the trek of the pioneers to the west.  However, we can take our children to these places so easily through books, family history stories, videos, and the Internet!  The possibilities for virtual field trips are endless these days in our world of technology!  We cannot expect our children to appreciate the gift of freedom if they don't understand the cost.  They need to experience the sacrifices that have been made for them.  Let those great people of the past and the stories that shaped our nation come to life in your home!  Their love and appreciation for this great land will sink deep into their hearts in a way that no lecture can ever truly do.


In addition to the Mommy School unit mentioned above for toddlers, here are some great lessons and fun activities to celebrate with your kids at most any age:

6. Sing Songs of Patriotism
There is a power in music that research has proven over and over again.  Aside from research, think of the lessons you learned as a child that you still remember.  Chances are you probably learned most of them through song!  The emotion that patriotic music invokes is hard to describe, especially when combined with the aforementioned teachings!  Additionally, teach ALL the verses to the National Anthem and other patriotic songs.  Who ever said that we should only sing the first verse anyways?  All it asks is a question...which you have to sing the other verses to get the answer to.  However, the last verse is the one with the message all Americans should remember!

Oh! thus be it ever, when freemen shall stand
Between their loved home and the war's desolation!
Blest with victory and peace, may the heav'n rescued land
Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: "In God is our trust."
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!

When I taught elementary school, I felt it VERY important to share these concepts with my students and practice them in our classroom.  I created the video below for us to watch every patriotic holiday I could think of!  Now, I feel greatly blessed to do the same, only at an even deeper level now with my own children. How very thankful I am to live in this beautiful land and enjoy the freedoms and blessings that have come because of our forefathers!  Let us always remember and honor them through our actions each and every day!  Please enjoy this video with your family as you celebrate this great nation.  

Here is the link to the amazing talk I got many of these quotes and ideas from as well:

Happy Independence Day!


AMERICAN PRESIDENTS ON PATRIOTISM
CALVIN COOLIDGE: “Patriotism is easy to understand in America; it means looking out for yourself by looking out for your country.”
TEDDY ROOSEVELT: “This country will not be a good place for any of us to live in unless we make it a good place for all of us to live in.”
JFK: “My fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.”
RICHARD NIXON: “We must always remember that America is a great nation today not because of what government did for people but because of what people did for …. one another.”  This is patriotism.
GEORGE H.W. BUSH: “Use power to help people. For we are given power not to advance our own purposes…..but ….to serve people.”

© Leaflet Radiance 2014 All Rights Reserved

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Schedule Task Cards for Toddlers and Kids!


If your children are like mine (and all that I taught over the years) they CRAVE schedules and structure.  There's something about knowing what is coming next (and having a say in it now and then) that helps to soothe their little minds and prevent extra behavior issues and tantrums. (This is especially good for children with various forms of autism!) Well, I like to change things up now and then, so I don't like to keep too strict of a schedule.  However, I have been noticing lately how much my little three-year-old was in desperate need of one that she could see.  I searched Pinterest and found a plethora of options, but none that fit what I was looking for, with pictures I liked.  So, here is my version! 

I keep it set up on a wall outside the bedrooms with all the routine cards always in the same place.  We really only have a couple of places that change on a daily basis and I try to involve my kids in choosing one or two activities every day so that they feel ownership.  We call them "The Task Cards" and they have been lifesavers for us!  Instead of having to say "It's time to get ready for bed" we just say "What's next on your task cards?" and it gets done without crying and whining!  I even have it set up so that our three-year-old gets up, uses the potty, says her prayers, makes her bed, and plays in her room until we get up! (It works most of the time at least! :))  Magical!!!


I bought my pocket chart from Amazon which turned out to be the perfect size for it!  It's more square than most you find, and cheaper, so I highly recommend ordering this one!  
If you'd rather do something smaller, you can always print the cards at 50% of their size and put them on magnets or something.  I'm just a stickler for things staying straight so I know that would drive me crazy! :)



I hope this is useful for some of you out there!
Please leave a comment if you use them.  I'd love to hear from you!  Feel free to send me suggestions of other cards you'd like to see added since it's always a work in progress!

Also, if you'd like the word version that you can alter or add to, then just leave a comment with your email and I will send you the Word file.

Enjoy!

© 2014 LeafletRadiance All Rights Reserved



The Silly, The Sappy, and The Spiritual...A Tribute to DADS!

This post is of course dedicated to the two most amazing dads I've been blessed to know--My dad and my husband!!!  I love them both with all my heart and am so thankful for their love, examples, and sacrifice on a daily basis on my behalf and on the behalf of my children! 

Although I'm a little late for Father's Day (I was busy trying to get things ready for the dad in our house :))  I still thought it important to do a post dedicated to all those amazing dad's out there, and those yet to be!  After all, I think far too often the good men in this world are so overlooked!!!  Like Mother's Day, I know this is a day that brings a mix of emotions for many.  It can be a day of joy, celebration, and gratitude for the wonderful men in your life, but it can also be a day of great sadness for those who have experienced heartache and pain at the hands of those less than worthy to be called men.  Whatever your circumstance or feelings, please watch the first video in this post, if nothing else, and remember that EVERYONE has a FATHER above who loves them no matter what and who will be there for them through the good and the bad of life!

Enjoy this collection of some of my favorite videos about Fathers!

Happy (belated) Father's Day!


The Spiritual...




The Sappy...








The Silly...

  

Happy Father's Day!

© 2014 LeafletRadiance All Rights Reserved

Monday, June 2, 2014

Picket Fence Display Board


A while ago my friend asked me how I display visuals to teach my children who are visual learners, around the home.  It was a good question, that to be honest, I hadn’t thought a lot about previously.  As a teacher, I loved to study and apply different learning styles, so it made sense that I should do the same in my own home, I just hadn’t given it much thought since my kids are still little.  My oldest is a very auditory learner so it’s been easy there.  However, I can tell already that my younger daughter is going to be more of a visual learner, so it was a question that got the wheels churning in my head.  I always have visuals when I teach lessons whether they are academic, moral, or spiritual, but I never really thought about putting them up for review during the week or month.  
For birthdays in our family we always string up a ribbon with paper clips and hang pictures on it of that person over the years, so I thought I could do that to display visuals from lessons as well.  However, as I did, I decided I wanted something a little more.  Then I was out shopping at Real Deals where they were clearancing a bunch of their inventory.  I saw a white picket fence that was part of a display that caught my eye, and an idea was born!  I’m a sucker for symbolism in any way I can find it (I even had yellow flowers with red tips at my wedding to symbolize friendship growing into love!).  So, I thought ‘what if I used the concept of the white picket fence (sign of the American dream and “perfect” home) as my way to display visuals from my Family Home Evening, Mommy School, Joy School, and Church lessons?’  The more I thought about it, the more excited I got!


So, for Mother’s Day my husband got to work on creating my picket fence and I’m happy to say that it’s finally complete!  I told him once it was finally on the wall that we were now officially a happy family, since you have to have a white picket fence to become that right?!  I love it!  I will also be using it to do holiday displays and pictures of our family, and it will be our new birthday board to show off pictures of the birthday person!  My husband couldn’t help but laugh at how giddy I was about it! 
It cost less than $15 at Home Depot to do it all!!! Here's what you need if you want to make your own:
*7 fence posts 
        (We bought 9/16X3-3/8X41-1/2 in. cedar)
*2 back pieces (fence slats)
        (Buy one and cut it in half--54 in. long)
        (We bought 5/8"X5-1/2"X6')
*1 1/8" Phillips Bugle Head self drilling screws
        (Part #50254 at Home Depot)
*Screws to attach to your studs in the drywall or use anchors if not attaching to studs
*21 Clothespins (You can choose to space these however you like, I staggered mine but didn't really measure this part--just put them on the way I liked them!)
*Nail gun & small nails with wood glue to attach clothespins, or you can use a hot glue gun if you'd rather.
*Slightly off white paint (I did about three coats).  If you want to make it look a little more rustic you can paint it black or brown first and then white, then sand parts here and there to give it more of an antiqued look.  Or go for a fun different color like red or sage!  I debated but opted for the white not only for symbolism, but someday I want to paint the wall behind it a fun color so it really pops out!

To assemble the back pieces, measure 13 in. down from the top of your fence posts and 10 in. up from the bottom if you want your back slats spaced like mine.  The slats are spaced 5 in. apart.

Let me know if you have any questions about how we made it and please send me a note or even a picture if you make your own!  I'd love to see it!

© 2014 LeafletRadiance All Rights Reserved

Sunday, June 1, 2014

The Measurement Wall



Growing up I always remember having a wall in our home completely dedicated to pencil marks with names beside them.  Although we moved a few times in my childhood, each home would have a new measurement wall.  We all loved comparing ourselves to each other, and marking our own growth.  My brothers especially enjoyed comparing and trash talking about who really was the "big" brother in the family when my youngest brother outgrew the rest of them!


Naturally, I wanted something similar in my house, but I wanted something I could take with me when I moved, as well as incorporate pictures since I'm a picture taking addict!  So, a few ideas from Pinterist combined with a few of my own brought the birth of our measurement wall!


I used small canvases for the pictures, just painted them black and then Mod Podged the picture right on!  I did about three coats of Mod Podge on top after doing one coat underneath the picture. (Let it dry between coats.)  Don't freak out, it won't ruin your pictures!





The canvases are hung on the wall with small velcro strips that you buy from Walmart or Target, which I cut in half so they would be thick enough for the back of the canvas.


Let me know if you do your own!  I'd love to see it!


© 2014 LeafletRadiance All Rights Reserved

Saturday, May 10, 2014

The Silly, The Sappy, and The Spiritual...A tribute to MOMS!

I'd like to dedicate this post to the greatest woman alive...MY MOM!  Words cannot express the gratitude I have for her and all that she has done and continues to do for me.

However, I hope it will be an uplifting message to all mothers out there as we prepare to celebrate Mother's Day.  For some it is a day of rest and celebration, of gratitude and happiness.  To others, I know it's a day of heartbreak and sadness for what once was, what is lost, what hasn't yet been, or what is still yet to be in their lives.  Perhaps for some it is a day of regrets and remorse or of guilt and fatigue.  Whatever your circumstance in life may be, remember this...that the sacrifice of your mother brought you in to this world, and the sacrifice of another mother, even Mary of old, is what can make all that is, has been, or will be wrong, right again.  Today I want to share with you some of my favorite MOM videos of all time!  I'll start with the lighthearted and end with the most meaningful to me!  I hope you enjoy a little time watching, laughing, smiling, and crying as you remember what this day is truly about!

First check out this link for some awesome insights on Motherhood as well as another great video!

Oh, and if you haven't already, check out this post on The Perfect Mother for when you just don't feel like YOU measure up as a mother!

Happy Mother's Day!


The Silly--None Other Than Mr. T!




The Sappy--You're Doing Okay Mom!



The Spiritual--Motherhood: An Eternal Partnership With God



Because She Is A Mother (The Full Address of the previous video if you want to hear the whole thing!)



The One Who Sacrificed it all for us--Mary, The Mother of Jesus



Happy Mother's Day!


© 2014 LeafletRadiance All Rights Reserved

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Parenting: Touching the Hearts of Our Youth

How many times are we in the same room as our children and yet we aren't really "there"?  Especially in this age of technology with smart phones, ipods, laptops, etc.  This video is inspiring and humbling as we listen and apply the message to become the parents our children desire and deserve us to be!
I know it's one I need to watch over and over again to remind myself what's most important!



Thursday, March 20, 2014

The Perfect Mother

If you have ever had "one of those days" as a mother, you have to check out: 
We all have our strengths and weaknesses.  The idea is to share them with each other and celebrate them together, not compare and tear ourselves or each other down!  We each have an important place in this world and in our families to fulfill.  As Sheri Dew put it so well, 
"No one can take your place!"

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Toy Roundup!


Okay, if you have kids then you know that the word "stuff" takes on a whole new meaning!  There is STUFF everywhere!  It's that whole concept of plowing snow while it's still snowing...a job that never seems to be done.  Especially if you live in a small space, then that stuff begins to feel like it's literally taking over your house, and your life!  

Toys So, here was my solution...I had heard of people putting toys into labeled bins with pictures so even the kids could put things away.  I loved the idea, but how to implement in my house?  We don't have a lot of room for extra bins, plus the amount of each type of toy changes after each birthday, Christmas, etc. and since I like to reorganize about as often as I change my clothes :), I needed a flexible system!  

I'm kind of a dork about wanting things to be cute and as much as I wanted to use someone's idea that was already done, I couldn't find any pre-made labels with pictures that I liked.  So, I put Google Images to work and made these labels.  Feel free to use and change them for personal use as fits your needs! 
Get pdf for labels here
If you would like the Word document to alter, please comment with your email and I will send it to you directly (googledocs alters the file so that's why it's not posted as a word doc.)

Then I laminated them, backed them with velcro and put them on my freshly purchased matching Target bins (yep, I'm a nerd about things matching too!  Surprised? :))  Voila!  Now I can move the labels around at will and even change them to something entirely different than toys if I want to!  Velcro has become one of my new best friends!  I use it to hang a lot of my pictures now as well.  It's fabulous!

I put a shelf in the kids' closet and put the bins in there.  It was kind of amazing how many toys we fit into such a small space.  The best part is that they know where to put things when they're done playing with them, so they can clean up all on their own.  It also helps when friends come over so everything doesn't end up in as many random places!

 There wasn't quite enough room in the closet for everything so we also have toys in bins all around under the bed, and some in the bookshelf drawers of the baby's room.  Additionally, we have a laundry basket for dress ups.  As I mentioned in my post 15 Tricks to Making Most of Small Spaces, we also made our TV stand and ottoman into toy storage units.  So, there is no shortage of toys at our house, but at least you can't see them all everywhere now...well, most of the time! :)


 

 
For smaller toys I use a lot of old Hot Cocoa cans!  I am a sucker for Stephen's Hot Chocolate in the winter, so we always keep the cans and use them for storage.  They are very sturdy and silver underneath the label so even if you don't cover them with a label, they still look descent!  I just used scrapbook paper, alphabet stickers, and packing tape to cover mine...I had a few issues with the tape so don't look too closely! :)



Books

Since I taught second grade for nine years, I have A TON of books that I purchased over the years which are now all around my house (plus boxes in the garage for when my kids get older!)  I merely transferred my system from teaching to home, so I'll share it with you.  I have books that I use to teach certain lessons labeled in magazine boxes in my office bookshelves. 


Holiday books are in their own separate labeled magazine boxes put up where the kids can't get to them so that I can bring a new box down for each holiday.  My daughter is like a kid in a candy store when we bring out the books for this month's holiday!  It makes them fun and new all over again.  Another benefit of the magazine holders is that it's harder to get the books out of them.  So, if you have a baby crawling around and your books are down low, they can't get them out and throw them all over or destroy them quite as easily!

Material books we put down low for the baby to get to whenever she wants, and board books are all in the nursery for baby-story time.  We also have a separate basket for our library books so they don't get mixed in with the others.  I figure you can never have too many books and having them organized in a way that works for you makes them more accessible and fun for everyone to read!


© 2014 Leaflet Radiance All Rights Reserved