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10 Conference Tips to Improve Your Homeschool Experience

by Honey Rowland 5 Comments

A homeschool conference is probably the one time a year you’ll see everything related to home education.  You’ll find new and used curriculum, games for learning and discovery, enrichment opportunities and other companies with a finger or hand in the homeschool cookie jar.
Top 10 Conference Tips for Homeschoolers

Ten Tips I learned from attending the Cincinnati Homeschool Convention

 

1.  You don’t have a lot of time between your workshops so efficiency is the key.  Walk down the middle of the aisle so you see both sides.  I recommend slings, wraps and backpacks if you have little ones otherwise I would choose a side and flow with ‘traffic.’

2.  Bring a small cart or buggy for all your flyers, catalogs, freebies and bought goodies.  Thursday we received goody bags and by the time I left it weighed 7.6lbs and I had weeded through it.  PLEASE recycle your paper.

3.  Use your phone and snap pictures of vendor’s and products you’re interested in.  Not only will this keep paper clutter at bay but it’ll make your inner tree hugger happy.  Be sure you bring your charger otherwise you’re walking around realizing how much technology has simplified your life.
4.  Snacks and drinks are NOT just for kids. Bring your water bottle and snacks you can eat one handed while looking through flyers.
5.  Convention food does not support fresh breath.  Bring mints.
6.  Record inspiration as it happens. A notepad or Evernote will help with thoughts and ideas when inspiration strikes.
7.  Research the vendors and speakers before hand.  Check everyone out BEFORE you get there so you know who you want to see and hear.  Be sure to double check the schedule as last minute changes on speakers, locations and topics do happen.  Having a second choice will also help if a workshop is full.
8.  Check the definitions of buzzwords and that they match your definition.  I noticed as I went around the hall that multi-sensory learning was used on many products.  Imagine my disappointment to discover their definition did not match mine.
9.  Sometimes the vendor hall isn’t the cheapest option…even with shipping.  When you’re there be sure to check online. Sometimes the vendor’s site, Amazon or even Ebay can’t be beat and you’re not lugging a bunch of items home.

10.  The early bird saves you money on tickets but not on product display deals. Be sure to purchase your tickets early but hang out as you can often receive further discounts on displayed products.

Do you have any tips?  How do you organize your conference plans and purchases?~Honey

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Filed Under: Homeschool

About Honey Rowland

Organic since it was a dirty hippie word is an easy way to understand me. With 3 kiddos (7, 14, and 16) and one bearded hubby I raise chickens, ducks, turkeys, goats, rabbits and Great Pyrenees livestock guardians on our organically ran mini farm in Ohio. A bull calf and heritage breed pigs have recently been added, along with an impending move into our less than 600 sq ft tiny home that's more and more off grid with each solar panel we buy.

Homeschooling, green living, self-sufficiency and natural parenting (but with yelling) is the norm here. Any skipping through the tulips tends to end with a face plant in chicken or duck poo but being a "glass half full" kind of gal I can smile 'cause the poo is organic and non-gmo! Stop by and see more at HoneysLife.com

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Kelly R says

    at

    These are great tips, Thank you for sharing.

    Reply
  2. Liz Copeland says

    at

    Thanks for sharing these tips. I’ve been contemplating attending a conference.

    Reply
    • Honey says

      at

      It really was amazing to go! If you go to the Cincy Homeschool Conference holler at me. I’ll be attending it again and I’m also going to the Titus 2 to 1 conference too. 🙂

      ~Honey

      Reply
  3. Colleen (@F5th and @pinterestmama on Twitter) says

    at

    Your new blog looks very nice! Love the header and such:)

    Reply
  4. Dollie @ Teachers of Good Things says

    at

    Great tips! I haven’t used Evernote, but I will look into it!

    Reply

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