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Showing posts with label Homeschool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homeschool. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 9, 2024

Learning Cursive with The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe

 

Learning Cursive in The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe

Follow Lucy inside the wardrobe while practicing your cursive! I am so excited to announce that I am creating cursive and print resources for every book in the Chronicles of Narnia series! 

Learning Cursive in The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe is a curriculum designed to give meaningful cursive handwriting practice through copywork of words and quotes from the first book in the Chronicles of Narnia, C.S Lewis' The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe.

Skills are scaffolded upon each other, as the the child progresses from letters, to words, to quote copywork.


Workbook Includes:

Cursive Alphabet Reference Chart (D'nealian Script)

Part One-Letter Practice 


Part Two- Words Practice 

Part Three- Quote Copywork 








For younger students, check our my PRINT handwriting workbook, 

Writing in the Wardrobe

Narnia Print Workbook






Thursday, May 16, 2024

10th Grade Curriculum

 




Bible

  • Bible Study Fellowship The Gospel of John
  • Sonlight 200 Bible with 100 American History  I rented this from a friend for a fraction of the cost.  For more budget saving homeschool tips, see here.

English

  • Sonlight 230 Classic Literature- We LOVED the books picked for this year and the discussion questions were great, but I wasn't a big fan of the writing assignments.  They didn't give a lot of direct instruction and not specific grading rubrics. I rented this from a friend for a fraction of the cost.  For more budget saving homeschool tips, see here.
  • Multicultural Living Book Basket


History

  • Sonlight 100 American History  We switched our history spine from MFW to Sonlight for 10th grade We really enjoyed the older version, with the spine of History of US by Joy Hakim. I will not recommend the new edition of Sonlight 120 with the new History Spine, America. The Last Best Hope. The title alone , America: The Last Best Hope, gives me the pause, but after reading the reviews, the table of contents, his introduction, and excerpts from this book I am so thankful my boys were able to use this curriculum the Hakim History Spine. I rented this from a friend for a fraction of the cost.  For more budget saving homeschool tips, see here.
  • Current events 


Science


Math


Spanish


Electives


12th Grade Curriculum

 


Twelfth grade will be our first year going fully eclectic.  

I have always supplemented our curriculum, dropping off books I don't like and adding ones I do, but I have always had a history spine to follow.  In Kindergarten through 8th is was My Father's World.  In High School we chose Sonlight.  

After many of our readings/videos below I will have my boys reflect, either in written or in oral form, answering these questions:

REFLECTION

  • How has the material affected me? 
  • What have I learned? 
  • How does the material catch the reader’s attention? 
  • Are there unsolved questions or critical issues? 
  • How will the material affect my future thinking? 

My sons work independently all week, then we have a meeting on Fridays to discuss their readings, track progress, and look at the next week's work. I'm more of a manager than a teacher at this point. A good manager assigns works and checks in often and gives suggestions for time management, but also expects initiative and working to a deadline.

Bible & Government Supplemental Reading

  • Bible Study Fellowship Revelation
  • Ballot and the Bible by Kaitlin Schiess (11 weeks) Concurrent with U.S Government class at community college and election. We used Study Guide from her website for weekly discussion)
  • Compassion and Conviction by Justin Giboney (8 weeks) We used Reflection questions to discuss weekly.
  • Strength to Love by Martin Luther King (15 weeks) Read second semester beginning in January, one chapter a week. Use Reflection questions to discuss weekly.

English


Health


Economics


Government and Politics  


Science

  • Dual Enrollment Physics at community college 

Math

  • Dual Enrollment Trigonometry at community college (first semester)
  • Khan Academy Differential Calculus (after completing Trig)

Electives



11th Grade Curriculum


 
Bible


English

  • Dual Enrollment English 101 Written Communication
  • Dual Enrollment Fundamentals of Public Speaking
  • 7 Sisters Writing- We loved these no busy work writing assignments.  I added them whenever my boys were not taking a Dual Enrollment English class
  • Sonlight 20th Century Literature- We just read the books this year and skipped the writing assignments due to workload from Dual Enrollment English Courses .  I also didn't feel like the writing assignments in 10th were that great.  They didn't give a lot of direct instruction and not specific grading rubrics. I rented this from a friend for a fraction of the cost.  For more budget saving homeschool tips, see here.
  • Multicultural Living Book Basket


History


Science


Math


Spanish


Electives

Friday, May 10, 2024

Should I give grades in my homeschool?

 


If you're scared that not grading like the public school will hurt your kids in college, let that go. I never gave grades in elementary or junior high. We worked until they mastered something, then moved on. If they were struggling, we found new resources and stayed on the topic. I was ok being "stuck" because it was better than being left behind.

I had to start giving grades in high school for transcripts. I have never given given a grade on an English paper that wasn't an A, but not because I am an easy grader. After they took a few outside classes I learned I am their toughest grader. But I always allowed them to turn in a rough draft, then we reworked it together until we were both satisfied. Through this process they learned how to improve their writing and rewrite. My motto is most of writing is rewriting.

I knew there would be a learning curve to how they viewed rough drafts and time management when they began taking classes at our local community college. We discussed often that in college they can not submit a first draft as your final draft. I reminded and prayed they used their rewriting skills BEFORE turning it into the professor. 

Flash forward to today. It's a Friday and their final paper for their dual enrollment class, Introduction to Literature, is due Sunday at midnight. I was already proud that they both set a goal of getting their final paper done before the weekend, but now I'm doubly proud they finished it yesterday so they could spend today reviewing and rewriting before submission. 

Keep going homeschool mom, there is a light at the end of the tunnel. When you feel discouraged that your child has to do something AGAIN, see it as an opportunity! They don't get a grade then we move on. It is so much better to be stuck than left behind.


Friday, December 1, 2023

TEACHER TO MANAGER: HOMESCHOOLING HIGH SCHOOLERS




 TEACHER TO MANAGER: 

HOMESCHOOLING HIGH SCHOOLERS

Homeschooling in High School is so different from the younger grades. I love that high school is so much more independent, especially when they are taking a few Dual Enrollment classes at our local community college. My teens are learning adult soft skills as they manage their time using checklists I and their professors give them.

That said, I am more of a manager than a teacher at this stage. I have to be so much more intentional about meeting with them and staying involved.

We have instituted a weekly meeting with mom. It was through our weekly meeting that I realized in high school homeschool I've gone from being their day to day teacher to essentially their manager. A good manager checks in often to monitor quality of work and maintain good relationships. A good manager doesn't do the work for you, but they give you tools and encouragement to do your work well.

This meeting is to make space for them to learn how to discuss and summarize what they are studying. I have caught items they forgot to do or didn't schedule correctly. I encourage them to look ahead and start planning for the next thing.

The transition of homeschooling high schoolers is a hard one at times. The first few years of high school were actually a little heartbreaking. I miss the snuggling on the couch and reading picture books together. I miss being THE teacher they came to with questions. I had to mourn that stage of homeschooling before I could move on. But they grow up, and this is the natural next step. Now, they teach ME about what they are studying. We have even deeper discussions about history and the Bible. They are also taking math class that is way beyond what I took in high school.

My job isn't to help with the content but the context. How do they communicate with their professor? How are they feeling about the workload and dealing with the stress?

It is ok and even healthy to mourn what was, but now I am thankful and prayerful of how to be a good manager of my homeschooling high schoolers.

Monday, September 25, 2023

Financial Reality Check: Personal Finance and Budgeting Workbook for Beginners/Teens



Financial Reality Check:
Personal Finance and Budgeting Work for Beginners/Teens

 Financial Reality Check is the practical personal finance book I wanted for my own sons and couldn't find, so I created it!

This finance curriculum gives junior and senior high school students the opportunity to experience some of the financial challenges they will face with independent living. The goal of this eye-opening personal finance experience is to give students a glimpse into what costs they can expect and to help them learn to take responsibility for personal financial decisions with the use of a Monthly Budget.


Students begin the book by taking personal inventories to help them chose from a list of entry level positions in 16 career fields. Job options also include information regarding the education level needed to obtain that position and if health benefits are provided. 


Students will then identify their tax bracket and calculate their monthly take home pay. 

Using their monthly take home pay students will work through several Expense Chapters where they make decisions about how to live independently while staying within their budget. For example, at the Housing Chapter they will be given several options including renting or buying, then must weigh the pros and cons of each. 



The reality check helps students become more aware of the true costs of living, including the many hidden costs they may not have considered, like renter’s insurance, mortgage rates, and utilities. They'll complete similar exercises in domains such as food, transportation, pets, maintenance, etc.



Some Skills Learned:

  • Identify how personal strengths and interests determine career choice
  • Identify how career choice, education, skills, entrepreneurship, and unexpected life events affect income
  • Identify tax bracket, gross versus net income, and employee health benefits
  • Calculating single and multi digit fractions, along with addition/subtraction needed in monthly budgeting
  • Responsibility for personal financial decisions with the use of a Monthly Budget
  • Identify the relationship between spending practices and achieving financial goals.



Friday, August 18, 2023

Discussing Current Events With Your Teen



Our High School History curriculum (Sonlight) asks the student learn about 2 to 3 current events a week.

Before we begin that process we must learn about bias and credibility. 

Today we went over AllSides Media Bias Chart (below), then Ad Fontes Media Bia (which also rates credibility, bias doesn’t dictate credibility, but is important to be aware of).


I have asked my sons to look up one U.S event and one World Event each week. They will read an online article in a center, left leaning, and right leaning reliable news source about that event. After reading about the event in three different sources they talk to me about the event.

I hope this will not only broaden their perspective of what is happening outside of the United States, but also make them more critical thinkers when consuming news.

Below I have typed their instructions for each week.


CURRENT EVENT 
WEEKLY ASSIGNMENT

1. Use Ad Fontes Media Bias to find credible sources


2. Pick an event from a Center Reliable News Source 

*One from U.S.A

*One from the World News


3.Using the All Sides Media Bias Chart: Read an ONLINE WRITTEN article about the event from: 

*Center Credible Source  

*Left Leaning Credible  Source

*Right Leaning Credible Source


>All Sides Media chart does not rate accuracy or credibility. A publication can be accurate, yet biased. Unless otherwise noted, these bias ratings are based on online written content, not TV, radio, or broadcast content.<

Note that sometimes different sources will not cover all events, which can also reveal bias.  


4. Talk to Parent at weekly meeting about what you learned


Thursday, May 25, 2023

Sonlight High School Classic Literature230



 Review of Sonlight 220 Classical Literature

 High School Language Arts Homeschool Curriculum 


"Stories set mostly chronologically through history, mostly by British authors, you’ll travel from first-century Israel to World War II and beyond in this 36-week program."

 Summary of Review:

 So many wonderful Classic books! Do not get this curriculum if your children are not readers!!! For my bookworms is was absolutely perfect!  We covered all the classics that I would want them to read, but the writing program fell short to meet our needs.


 We used My Father's World from K-9th grade.  I would still usually recommend MFW for K-8th if you have multiple children, but their high school curriculum was not working for our family. We were able to switch to Sonlight for 10th grade. 

Even though my twins are 10th graders, we still had to complete a year of American History so we did Sonlight American History 120 alongside the 230 Classical literature.  (We will be skipping Sonlight 220 Church History)

We will be revisiting American Literature again in 430 so I am ok skipping it and focusing on some of my favorite pieces of literature, like Dickens, Shakespeare, and Austen. 




PRO- LITERATURE

1. Great choice of entry level classic literature.

The choices of classic literature were just right for this age.  Hugely popular books, but also easy to access for a 10th grader. As a fan of classic literature, I was thankful they chose to introduce them to my favorite authors through books that the child might already have a small frame of reference for, like Jane Austen through the her most humorous book Pride and Prejudice.  As they read a few chapters we would slowly watch an episode of BBC 1995 Pride and Prejudice Mini-Series for them to understand the humor a little better. 

Sonlight introduces Charles Dickens through Christmas Carol and Shakespeare through Romeo and Juliet.  And yes of course this 90s loving girls did watch the 1996 Romeo and Juliet with her kids that week!


2.  In depth reading comprehension questions

I am really thankful for the discussion questions in the student guides so we can talk about what they are reading in a more meaningful way.  In My Father's World I was suppose to meet with them and just ask them about what stood out to them, but Sonlight really engages the student and parent daily to discuss what is being read.  The parent guide is helpful because it also provides answers. While I am looking forward to discussing some of the my favorites, I haven't ALL the books on the syllabus and need those answers!




CON- WRITING PROGRAM

1. Lack of step by step instructions in writing 

There is so much presumption on prior learning about formatting.  We know how to format paragraphs and they learned how to write a 5 paragraph essay last year, but the jump to this longer research paper seems very lacking on practically outlining and formatting instructions.   I literally had to buy a teaching guide from Teacher Pay Teachers on beginning research papers to help us. 

At one point they are to 'write a bibliography" with no instructions on how to do that.  They tell them how to find good research sources, but no MLA or APA formatting is given. The length is suggested of 12-20 pages, but no real outline of formatting is given, other than telling them to make a "working outline" in just a few paragraphs.  

Another example of lack of step by step instruction is in Wek 11 you are to write a character study on The Outlaws of Sherwood. It  just says "write a character study" with no explanation of what an actually character study was.  We had to supplement with other sources to help us understand some of the writing structures asked for in Creative Expressions  

I asked in several Sonlight groups to see if I was missing something and the resounding answer was that Sonlight High School does lack on those specific step by step instructions. Eventually we dropped the research paper all together because my sons will be taking a Dual Enrollment Class this summer that covers a research paper.  


2. No grading rubrics for writing

This is similar to the lack of step by step instructions.  This curriculum assumes the teachers has prior knowledge of grammar, formatting, and writing skills.  English is my strength, but I would never recommend this as the sole writing curriculum for many of my friends. 


3.  Overlapping next book before done processing or writing from last book 

In Week 9 and 10 we skipped The Shining Company because the boys were suppose to write a compare/contract essay about Jane Eyre, the book the had just read. I skipped MANY creative expressions, but I didn't want to skip this one.  Unless the essays was expected to be written in one day, it didn't make sense to end Jane Eyre on Monday and start a new book on Tuesday. I wanted them to sit in the book they were writing about before moving on. I let them have a full week to write their paper, turn in drafts, and work on revisions. 



TWEAKS FOR NEXT YEAR


1. Adding a different writing curriculum

I will still use Sonlight Literature next year, but we will be skipping the majority, if not all of Creative Expressions. I have found great step by step writing curriculum, with grading rubrics, from 7sisterhomeschool.  A friend recommend them and I love their price and selection. 

I bought their High School Writing Bundle 3: Advanced Guide to High School Writing  for only $35,  to go alongside our literature study.  I have opened up the PDF and I am truly excited about the easy instructions for my kids and grading rubrics for me.   I will write a full review of them next year after we use them for a longer period of time.


2. Adding a Book Basket for more diverse perspectives and more historical fiction/non fiction

Sonlight provides so many great books for high school, but I did miss having good quality books for their non-school hours.  Both of my boys read ALL day when they are done with school, so they filled our book basket with fantasy novels from the library.  There is nothing wrong with this, but I want to go back to MFW roots of ALSO filling the basket with picture and fiction  and non fiction books that relate to the time period we are studying.  

This will also give me an opportunity to add non European focused fiction and non fiction to our reading. 


3. Friday Meeting with Mom, instead of daily

The one downside to ALL the daily discussion questions if we didn't always meet EVERY day and sometimes I fell behind for several weeks.   It was a very big switch to go from almost completely independent My Father's World to daily meetings with Sonlight. I also began a part time job outside the house this year so it became almost impossible for me to meet with hem daily.  I plan to schedule a more doable week-end meeting, similar to MFW, but use the Sonlight parent guide to talk about the reading more in depth.




Monday, February 27, 2023

Teaching Soft Skills to Homeschoolers



Teaching Soft Skills to Homeschoolers


Homeschooling is a challenge as we balance to teaching hard and soft skills. Hard skills are specific abilities, or capabilities, that an individual can possess and demonstrate in a measured way.

Soft skills are non-technical skills that are how you work and interact with others. Unlike hard skills, they are not necessarily something you'll learn in a course, like literary analysis or coding. Instead, they reflect your communication style, work ethic, and work style.

My 15-year-old son loves Tinker CAD, which is the younger version of CAD (Computer Aided Design). He wants to go into a job that includes this type of design. He is learning the hard skills of CAD that will most likely be useless in his future employment.  I value this learning time highly, and yet he is grounded from it for two weeks. Let me explain:

He turned in an English paper that was almost unreadable, I would even call it lazy writing. Before you say lazy is an objective word, remember that I know what he is capable of in regard to writing. He has had three weeks to complete the paper or ask questions about anything confused him. I have years of evidence what his writing work looks like when he makes it priority. It is the laziest writing he has ever turned in, written in an hour. This wasn't an instruction problem; it was a problem work ethic and work style.  

After initial frustrations, I wasn't sure how to give him a consequence other than just a bad grade.  Upon further investigation I discovered he was rushing through writing to get to Tinker CAD. 

I know my son will most likely use the hard skills he learns in CAD is his future career more than hard skills of writing research papers, BUT time management is a skill he will need in his future. The soft skills of work ethic will keep in in good graces of his future employer. Learning to communicate that you might need extra support when an assignment is confusing and putting his best effort even into something he doesn't value are skills we must all learn to be successful in life.

Soft skills are just as important, sometimes more important, than the hard skills we are teaching through homeschool assignments. We have done a disservice to our children when we only focus on hard skills they enjoy at the expense of the soft skills of work ethic, communication, and problem-solving.

Homeschool teachers, don't get so focused on teaching hard skills that we forget the soft skills our kids are learning, or not learning.






Thursday, February 9, 2023

We Are Responsible



Some parents hesitate to pursue homeschooling because of the fear of taking on all the responsibility of their child's education. The problem with that thinking is as parents we never really do handoff responsibility for our children’s education, we just hand off control.

Parents are ultimately always responsible for our children's education no matter what educational choice they make. 

This fact is why I tell parents that a student can do well in public school, private school, or homeschool as long as the parent is advocating and involved. There will always be educational gaps and bad experiences with curriculum or teachers, but an involved parent helps the child navigate the situation and learn skills from the hardship.

I have seen public AND homeschool moms do this well. You don't necessarily have to homeschool to gain the control back over your children's education, but you do need to get involved. Ask questions. Establish line of communication with their teacher. Keep in the process.  

I also see public AND homeschool moms do this poorly. Homeschool moms, you can't outsource the end result to a screen or software. You can use these as the wonderful tools they are, but you still have to be checked in to where your child is and what they are struggling with. We help find tutors and resources instead of blaming the curriculum or excusing bad habits.

If you want to homeschool but don't want the responsibility, too late. Having children makes you responsible.  

This is a great responsibility that I do not take lightly.







Saturday, November 5, 2022

High School Computer Programming Free Online Course

 


My sons are enjoying their elective of Computer Programming!  We are using Khan Academy's Computer Programming Course.  

The lessons are easy to follow, with video trials and fun animation as an introduction  to programming. I have added the Drawing & Animation Programming as an elective to be done after their core subjects twice a week.


There are three intro course:

  1. Intro to JS: Drawing & Animation
  2. Intro to HTML/CSS: Making webpages
  3. Intro to SQL: Querying and managing data 


If your student enjoys the Introduction course they can try an advanced course:

  1. Advanced JS: Games & Visualizations
  2. Advanced JS: Natural Simulations

  3. HTML/JS: Making webpages interactive

  4. HTML/JS: Making webpages interactive with jQuery

 






Monday, August 15, 2022

First Day of 10th Grade, Scavenger Hunt

 



We have begin our tenth grade, new school year and and we have stopped using the curriculum we have used since Kindergarten! 

As we get used to our new HIGH SCHOOL CURRICLUM, I wanted to start our school year with the same Back to HOMESchool Traditions we have done since Kindergarten!

After a special breakfast of cinnamon rolls, we have our annual First Day of School Scavenger Hunt! The prize at the end is always inexpensive.  It only take maybe FIVE minutes at most, so there is no worry about derailing your schedule for the day. It is OK that the clues are easy because the object of the game is NOT problem-solving hard riddles.  The object is to start the school year with fun!


CLUE #1

The hunt was started by me handing them this clue:

Poke around the Pale Pachyderm



CLUE #2

Second Clue was found on my white elephant statue:

Find the panda food near the pooper. 




CLUE #3

Third Clue was found behind the bamboo plant in the bathroom:

Pop can plinkers. 




CLUE #4

Fourth Clue was found on their BB Gun ammunition:

Partake in a snack prohibited to people with braces.


 


CLUE #5

Fifth Clue was found inside our Whirley Pop popcorn maker.  This one almost tripped them up, they looked int he cabinets at the popcorn kernels and in the snack cabinet. It was fun watching them figure it out:  

Move to the machine that removes moisture.



PRIZE

The Prize was in the dryer!  Tis year the prize was just a ton of SNACKS! 

Name brand snacks are a luxury in our house, so I filled a bag with half a dozen random foods I knew my bottomless-pit teenagers would love to snack on during school.



For more First Day Scavenger Hunt Examples: