Showing posts with label School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label School. Show all posts

Friday, May 4, 2012

may 4: mostly happy school days

FYI: If you aren't interested in childhood education, this will be one of the more boring posts you've read on this blog.

We recently had to re-evaluate our school regime. It was starting to wear all of us down. It wasn't enjoyable anymore, and not just because we are nearing the finish line and just needed to press through. We'll be schooling through the summer to finish up 1st grade for both the older two since we took so many weeks off before and after Eleanor's birth, but that has nothing to do with our newly formulated plans. At the ages of 5 and 6, I'm not really sure a 3-month break from daily reading or basic math is all that good for them.


This seed of discontent had been growing for a while. How could we be spending all morning on school and still not have time to draw, and paint, and memorize poems, and do crafts when the mood struck? I went back to that ever-helpful list by the Bluedorns to remind me what I really want out of these early years: Ten Things to do with Your Child Before Age Ten 

The entire article is worth reading, but here's the quick version:

1. Reading & Writing Intensive Phonics; Copywork; start English Language Notebook
2. Oral Narration  Daily
3. Memorization  Bible; poetry; passages of literature; Greek and/or Hebrew alphabet
4. Hearing & Listening  Read aloud 2 hours per day from a variety of fiction and nonfiction; start History Notebook; timeline
5. Family Worship  Family Bible study morning and evening using grammar level questions
6. Arts & Crafts  Provide the time, space, and materials; develop creativity
7. Field Trips & Library  Start learning elementary library research; investigate the world
8. Work & Service  Schedule for chores; visit nursing home, etc.
9. Discipline  First-time obedience
10. Play & Exploration  Develop the imagination

(I'm not sure we'll get to the Hebrew alphabet this year...)

We started Saxon Math 1 at the beginning of the year. I love Saxon, because it's fairly hands on, and I really appreciate how they've ordered the skills to be taught during the year. Each lesson builds on the next, and we've enjoyed it. What we haven't enjoyed are all the worksheets and math fact drills. I was only having the kids do one of the worksheets and a drill, in addition to the lesson, and it was taking us over an hour to do math each day. Now, we only do a math fact sheet twice a week, and the other days it's all verbal. I do the same thing with their worksheets, putting the questions on the white board, and letting them write it out or we just talk about the answers. It was WAY too much writing for them, and we accomplish the same skills in about 1/4 of the time. Saxon is known for being repetitive, which is an asset at times, but lately I've felt more freedom to skip lessons we really have a handle on. It's probably a newbie homeschooler mistake to feel like you have to do every lesson when clearly, you know exactly what your child knows well and what he needs to practice more.

We are also continuing to plug away with the Phonics Museum, from Veritas. At first I loved it, but after finishing all of Kindergarten, and some of 1st grade...not so much. They teach italics for handwriting, which looks great but I have to say is SO confusing for the kids. I think the theory is that it makes cursive easier to learn. Perhaps, but for now, my kids could hardly tell the difference between a "j" and an "i," and a "t" looks sort of like a "j". Anyway, perhaps for smarter children.

My second complaint is that the readers are almost impossible to understand. Yes, my kids have a much better vocabulary because of the readers. So do I. I've actually had to look words up. Granted, they were short vowel words I probably should have known, but can you define "abet" and use it in a sentence? If I had more time I'd quote a sentence from a reader for a good laugh.

We've plugged away at them, and the kids don't mind the readers (did I mention they are also about 20-30 pages long?), but they were feeling no sense of accomplishment, and their reading skills weren't all that great either. They ARE learning phonics, and as far as an intensive phonics curriculum goes, this fits the bill. I purchased it used, so I will probably keep it. But I've laid aside the readers in favor of the Abeka (gasp!!!) summer readers just to give them a little break. I don't want them to hate reading.

Instead of the handwriting with Phonics Museum, we began to do daily copy work. The quote on the board (in the picture) is from Little Susy Stories, by Elizabeth Prentiss. We read the book earlier in the year. They copied it down every day that week, and by the fourth day of school (we take Fridays off for now), it was beautiful. I was so impressed. Perhaps writing out a quote (which they mostly memorize by the end) is more interesting then rows and rows of letters and short words?

I made them each a Nature Journal, and they've gone out and started looking for bugs, birds, trees, etc., to add to it.

We still read chapter books daily, and we are back into the library habit, which means we are reading fun shorter books every day, too. Thomas will sit for a long time and seems to love the chapter books, but I think the picture books are really good for him, too. 

So we haven't made radical curriculum changes, but everyone is enjoying school more, they seem to be learning more, and we have time to do the things I think are truly important when you are six and under.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

A few days to catch up

Every time I think about blogging I imagine a post filled with jumbled ramblings, due in part to the rarity of my blog entries, and in part to the three little people who seem intent on calling my name every 4.2 seconds. It's hard to keep my train of thought going, let alone write it down. But I have received a little encouragement of late to keep it up, and so here I am. And I do miss you, my bloggy friends!

My kids are sitting at the table having a tea party with pretend food and real tea. The real tea is a result of a full teapot and my resolve to switch to tea vs. coffee. The coffee seems to be tearing up my stomach and while I'm certainly not vowing off coffee for life (I miss it already...I miss the caffeine jolt, too), I'm at the point where it's worth it if I will feel better. We have a great selection of loose leaf teas on hand, so I'm not suffering (much).

So, the tea party will buy me a few minutes to catch up and, if all goes well, I plan to spend the next several days in the same manner. I'm an eternal optimist...

First- family

Next Monday is Coop's 5th birthday, and we are looking forward to a cowboy party. He doesn't know it (despite asking me 10 times a day if I can please tell him what he is getting for his birthday), but he has this to look forward to (they were having a great sale). I'm trying to move more towards the "tools for exploring, not toys for adoring" mode when I think about giving my children more "things." Toys that help them pretend and explore are welcome...we're just trying to avoid more stuff that doesn't have much of a purpose. Coop spends hours with Playmobil, legos, and even more hours outside. Sweet A is all about her dolls and kitchen, and coloring...typical girly stuff. She is less inclined to be outside and even prefers to help me work if it will keep her inside. There is the mandatory outside playtime, but I'm happy to encourage her to work with me if she wants!

Baby T desperately wants to be potty trained; I'm trying to psych myself up for the task. With his eagerness, it probably won't be as much of a drag as I expect, but he is only 21 months and I just don't want to draw out the process. I keep telling myself he's probably not really ready, but that's not true. He has used the potty on multiple occasions and there is no fear and he's all excitement. I need to jump on board, stay home for a few days and just get 'er done.

I finally finished Teaching the Trivium, and to my great pleasure it turned out to be a philosophy of homeschooling with which I readily agree and can easily embrace. It's not the latest greatest in the world of homeschooling ideas, and actually, most of their ideas are old-fashioned (i.e., circa 850-1700). After much reading, and evaluating our own personal homeschooling experiences, WH and I were interested in making intense academics an important part of our curriculum, but not at all in the early years. I wanted to be ordered in my laid back attitude toward the early years, with a clear idea of where I would like to be and what we need to have accomplished by the time we reach that more intense schooling stage. This book gave us just the plan and outline we needed. As with any book or system, there are aspects we will omit and ways we will adjust to fit our family and children, but all in all I was very pleased. Our goal- especially in the early years- is not academic superiority but training our children up in the Lord. We don't want them to be numskulls, either. But if they gain the whole world of knowledge and lose their souls, I hardly think I will have accomplished the work I've been given to do. Here are the 10 Things we plan to focus on during the next few years (read the entire article here):

1. Reading and Writing (phonics, reading, dictation)
2. Oral Narration
3. Memorization
4. Hearing and Listening (with a goal of reading for 2 hours a day)- they include history in this section, keeping a history notebook and a time line and map
5. Family Worship (we also have a separate Bible story time)
6. Arts and crafts
7. Field trips
8. Work and Service
9. Discipline
10. Play and Exploration

Over the last few weeks I've tried to implement a new element of our "school" schedule every few days so we don't have to jump right in and then fall on our faces because we tried to make too many changes at once. I can't say it's been a smashing success, but there have been some extenuating circumstances (we'd better get used to that!) and also some small successes.

Here's Baby Little T working on his new morning chore assignment:


The tea party has long since been abandoned in favor of outside playtime. I'm still finishing my second cup, hoping for the caffeine to eek its way to my brain and give me some energy. Maybe I should down the tea and THEN blog next time.

Tomorrow: House update