Who Is Terrie?
Professional Bio (See below that for the LDS bio)
Biography of Terrie Lynn Bittner
Terrie Lynn Bittner is a freelance writer living in the Philadelphia area of Pennsylvania. Growing up in a house which had books falling from shelves, poking out from under sofas, and stacked in every odd corner, Terrie naturally became curious about the people who wrote her books. Her mother taught her how to create her own stories and was Terrie’s personal creative writing coach. Her father helped her learn to explore the world as an independent scholar.
She married Lincoln Bittner in 1980 and is the mother of three children. When she is not writing, she enjoys computers, reading, family history and teaching. Together, she and her husband own TML Business Services.
Terrie has published in various educational, religious, historical and family publications both online and off. Her publishing credits include LD Online, Education World, Homeschool Horizons Magazine, Ensign, New Era, Liahona, Feminista, Teach at Home, Canada5.com, and Heroines in History, She has written online columns for several sites and currently writes a weekly column on family life at BellaOnline.com, where she is the training manager.
Terrie began formally homeschooling her children thirteen years ago, although she had preschooled them and supplemented their educations all their lives. Early in her homeschooling career, Terrie became frustrated by the unrealistic portrayal of homeschooling she found in most books, and later on the Internet. When she began her web page, now called Treasured Time, she was challenged by a reader to tell the truth about homeschooling. She continued that mission when she wrote a homeschooling column. Her goal has been to show parents how they can successfully teach their children regardless of disability, organizational skills, lack of education or other challenges that might seem to stand in the way. She believes that successful homeschooling requires little more than love and desire and her first homeschooling book promotes this ideal.
Coming next year : Home a Little Longer: Preschool and Kindergarten at Home
Reviews:
Publishers Weekly, November 22, 2004
Calls the book “down-to-earth and practical” and says, “Designed to empower the novice toward home-schooling success, this book is friendly, reassuring and endlessly supportive, and, like a very well-informed neighbor”
Read full review on my publisher’s page
Booklist (American Library Association)Booklist, November 15, 2004 p. 536
calls the book “honest and commonsensical…This is an encouraging and helpful resource for parents considering homeschooling their children.”
“What a wonderful resource! This book could have saved me buckets of frustration had it been around when I began homeschooling. What a gift to any parent who doesn’t feel they’re up to the task of homeschooling. Instead of sharing yet more ‘Super Mom’ stories, Terrie addresses real concerns in a way that disarms the fear and boosts the confidence. It is like sharing a cup of tea with the successful, resourceful ‘homeschooling friend’ you always wished you had.”
—Carol Barnier, author of How To Get Your Child Off the Refrigerator and on to Learning and If I’m Diapering A Watermelon Then Where’d I Put the Baby?
Terrie’s book is a great help for parents who doubt their ability to homeschool. She’s right—you CAN do this! Even if you are perfectly ordinary parents with foibles, strengths and weaknesses. As she points out, you really need only two traits: mostly patience with children and a willingness to be flexible, and not to throw in the towel, sending the kids back to school the first time there are tears when something doesn’t go right. And your homeschool days won’t always be ideal. Terrie knows that some days, especially around holidays, kids will feel they are missing out on school parties. She talks to you like a friend who has gone the way before, giving you encouragement, whether you are homeschooling one child or several, or trying to teach older children while there is still a baby in the home. Some planning is key to success, but don’t feel you have to adhere to a minute-by-minute plan. A daily and weekly routine will do. Best of all, Terrie points out that it is easy for homeschoolers to plan in plenty of activity into our days! No need to sit for hours each day! Learning can be fun and sort of silly at times. Relax! You CAN do this!”
—Ann Zeise
Creator of the Web site: A to Z Home’s Cool, one of the internet’s largest homeschool web sites, http://homeschooling.gomilpitas.com
Religious Bio
I am, of course, a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I joined the church when I was seventeen, after searching many years for the one true church I knew had to exist somewhere. My parents belonged to different religions and left us free to make our own choices about religion rather than try to figure out which religion to give us. This is always dangerous, of course, since I’m the only one who did choose, and I didn’t choose either of their faiths. But they gave me permission and were happy with my choice in time.
I’ve served just about everywhere, but my passion has always been Primary. I am happiest in a classroom that requires flannelboards and puppets, and I have been known to use both when teaching adults. Currently, besides teaching five year olds, and temporarily also teaching an entire Primary in an inner-city branch until they get enough people in the branch to call a teacher (only a small number of children), I am the literacy leader for my own ward and teach English as a second language at church. I am equally passionate about this calling. I never expected I could teach English, for a variety of reasons, and discovering I’m somewhat good at it reminded me why callings are, in my mind, a sign of the true church. They send us places we’d never go alone and show us we’re more than we thought we were.
I have an LDS website with the same name as this blog, and I hope you’ll stop by. It has a great many practical resources including my ESL lessons, Primary and callings advice, family advice, and family home evening lessons.