Hello all,
I've seen multiple homeschooling threads here and I wanted to start another one. Why you may ask? I am a homeschooling father, I think my wife and I are pretty good at what we do, and I so rarely have a chance to share thoughts with non-homeschoolers.
One thing I would like to find here is folk who can help expose any gaps in our education plan so that we can improve it. Several posters on other threads here are P.S. teachers whom I hope will jump at the chance I'm offering!
Background:
Beth and I have one 8 yr old daughter named Anna who is in 2nd grade (birthday is late in the year) and no other children. I have a B.A. in Biblical Studies with a history minor and my my wife has only a high school diploma. She has a few college classes in nursing and I am half way through my masters degree in software systems. In case someone would ask, we are practicing Roman Catholics. We live in the Twin Cities, MN.
Who Teaches
Beth teaches the reading, phoenics, spelling, writing, and penmanship although I frequently assist. She also takes Anna to karate, music school, and co-op classes. I teach all the math, geography, most of the science, and tend to much of the history. I've also been teaching Anna French. Some year in the future, Beth will teach Anna German.
Curriculum
Math - Singapore Math
Phonenics - Explode the Code
Reading Comprehension - Beyond the Code
For most other subjects we tend to have a unschooling philosophy.
Anna's Status
I'll start with Math. Anna has completed book 2A (1st semester 2nd grade) of the Math and book 2B will start in January. We school year round (with periodic breaks) and I expect book 3A will begin in May.
Anna has mastered addition of 3 digit numbers with carrying and can often add 2 digit numbers in her head (with carrying). She can subtract 3 digit numbers with borrowing. However, if she goes too fast and doesn't think, she tends to subtract backwards instead of borrowing (example 382-283 - Anna might subtract 2 from 3 in the ones place instead of borrowing like she should). If she slows down she does fine.
Anna has also mastered the concepts of < and >, has had lessons on measuring both length and weight (using both metric and english units), and has had basic lessons in geometry and franctions. She has mastered the 2's, 3,s, 5's, and 10's times tables and can perform simple division by 2's and 3's.
Book 2B will just about close out the rest of the times table, will teach analog time down to 5 min. increments, touch upon more geometry and fractions, and most importantly will hit upon mental math techniques.
Now for phoenics and reading. Anna is currently in book 4 1/2 of Explode the Code and book 3 of Beyond the Code. I expect she'll be done these books by the end of December or early January and we'll then go on to the next volumes. She reads extremely well, and I think beyond grade level. I think this because we challenge her with a lot of complex reading material. However, because English is such a phoenetically incorrect language at times, her spelling is very weak (beyond simple rudimentary words). We have a curriculum (can't think of the name) to assist us in spelling and we're focusing more attention to this now.
Anna has a great love of geography and a fascination with maps. She has memorized the names and locations of the 7 continents and 4 oceans (some say there are 5 oceans but we're going with the traditional 4). She knows the names of the 5 Great Lakes and has memorized 20+ states and capitals. She can find 40 or so states on the map (with little to no hesitation) as well as 6 or so countries, the Gulf of Mexico, and a couple of major mountain chains.
Regarding other social studies, we have taught her some about the Pilgrims and the voyages of Columbus. She has learned quite a bit about Marco Polo's trip to China and read quite a bit on ancient Egypt, complete with a visit to King Tut's relics when they were in Chicago in July. We like to read to her stories that illustrate life in different times (Little House books, American Girl stories, A Bride For Anna's Papa, etc.).
Twice a month, Anna attends a co-op class where she studies a country and culture in detail. Last year (1st grade) she studied the Phillipines and Germany. This semester she has studied Italy and next semester China.
Science is something that we haven't focused on. Our wish has been to get her to read and read well so that she can then delve into science related books, websites, etc. Having said that, Anna has learned the 9 planets pretty well, has mastered understanding the oxygen cycle, and has made many trips to the Science Center. There she has seen the following OMNI exhibits: Climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro, Volcanoes and Earthquakes, Underwater Caving, the sealife off the coast of Baja California, and traveling the Nile River. She has also learned the names and functions of various organs of the body and has learned what a virus is and how it may infect (prompted by an annoying viral infection). She and I are also starting to study energy, focusing on electricity generation, oil and natural gas pumping, and the like.
Anna has attained the rank of Advanced Red Belt in karate, taking classes at USA Karate. For the curious, the ranks are white, gold, green, purple, blue, adv. blue, red, adv. red, brown, adv. brown, black belt candidate, and lastly black. Karate is her physical education class.
Anna attends a music school one night per week and sings in the school choir. As for visual art, drawing, painting, and clay are normal activities in our house. We do make periodic visits to the art museum and do have a few art books in our home.
Motivating Anna
We keep a large (2 poster boards in size) wall chart to which we affix star stickers under the various subject headings. Anna gets 1 star for every lesson completed in Singapore Math, Explode the Code, or Beyond the Code. She gets 3 stars for reading a 30 page book (# of pages depends on complexity) herself, 1 star for every five states/capitals memorized, etc. If she reaches 500 stars by the end of June, she gets a stupendous reward (haven't figured out what). Right now she's at 175 or so stars and should be close to 200 by the end of December.
The chart is full of things Anna can learn or do to earn stars.
Testing
We try to give Anna a test the last Saturday of every month, covering each and every subject. I usually give her a time limit to help her be prepared for the Iowa Tests which she'll take every spring, starting in 2007. Verbal pop quizzes are fairly routine and common.
School Year
We school year round with 4-5 wks off in the summer, 1 wk at Thanksgiving, 2 wks at Christmas, and 1 wk at Easter. Anna works about 1 hr a day with Beth and 1 hr or so with me 2-3 nights a week and an hour on Saturday morning. It is not unusual to miss a day of homeschooling for whatever reason and then we just ratch it up another day.
Cost
We spend $500-$700 each year for curriculum and books to fill our home library. We especially love the books from Usbourne.
I've seen multiple homeschooling threads here and I wanted to start another one. Why you may ask? I am a homeschooling father, I think my wife and I are pretty good at what we do, and I so rarely have a chance to share thoughts with non-homeschoolers.
One thing I would like to find here is folk who can help expose any gaps in our education plan so that we can improve it. Several posters on other threads here are P.S. teachers whom I hope will jump at the chance I'm offering!
Background:
Beth and I have one 8 yr old daughter named Anna who is in 2nd grade (birthday is late in the year) and no other children. I have a B.A. in Biblical Studies with a history minor and my my wife has only a high school diploma. She has a few college classes in nursing and I am half way through my masters degree in software systems. In case someone would ask, we are practicing Roman Catholics. We live in the Twin Cities, MN.
Who Teaches
Beth teaches the reading, phoenics, spelling, writing, and penmanship although I frequently assist. She also takes Anna to karate, music school, and co-op classes. I teach all the math, geography, most of the science, and tend to much of the history. I've also been teaching Anna French. Some year in the future, Beth will teach Anna German.
Curriculum
Math - Singapore Math
Phonenics - Explode the Code
Reading Comprehension - Beyond the Code
For most other subjects we tend to have a unschooling philosophy.
Anna's Status
I'll start with Math. Anna has completed book 2A (1st semester 2nd grade) of the Math and book 2B will start in January. We school year round (with periodic breaks) and I expect book 3A will begin in May.
Anna has mastered addition of 3 digit numbers with carrying and can often add 2 digit numbers in her head (with carrying). She can subtract 3 digit numbers with borrowing. However, if she goes too fast and doesn't think, she tends to subtract backwards instead of borrowing (example 382-283 - Anna might subtract 2 from 3 in the ones place instead of borrowing like she should). If she slows down she does fine.
Anna has also mastered the concepts of < and >, has had lessons on measuring both length and weight (using both metric and english units), and has had basic lessons in geometry and franctions. She has mastered the 2's, 3,s, 5's, and 10's times tables and can perform simple division by 2's and 3's.
Book 2B will just about close out the rest of the times table, will teach analog time down to 5 min. increments, touch upon more geometry and fractions, and most importantly will hit upon mental math techniques.
Now for phoenics and reading. Anna is currently in book 4 1/2 of Explode the Code and book 3 of Beyond the Code. I expect she'll be done these books by the end of December or early January and we'll then go on to the next volumes. She reads extremely well, and I think beyond grade level. I think this because we challenge her with a lot of complex reading material. However, because English is such a phoenetically incorrect language at times, her spelling is very weak (beyond simple rudimentary words). We have a curriculum (can't think of the name) to assist us in spelling and we're focusing more attention to this now.
Anna has a great love of geography and a fascination with maps. She has memorized the names and locations of the 7 continents and 4 oceans (some say there are 5 oceans but we're going with the traditional 4). She knows the names of the 5 Great Lakes and has memorized 20+ states and capitals. She can find 40 or so states on the map (with little to no hesitation) as well as 6 or so countries, the Gulf of Mexico, and a couple of major mountain chains.
Regarding other social studies, we have taught her some about the Pilgrims and the voyages of Columbus. She has learned quite a bit about Marco Polo's trip to China and read quite a bit on ancient Egypt, complete with a visit to King Tut's relics when they were in Chicago in July. We like to read to her stories that illustrate life in different times (Little House books, American Girl stories, A Bride For Anna's Papa, etc.).
Twice a month, Anna attends a co-op class where she studies a country and culture in detail. Last year (1st grade) she studied the Phillipines and Germany. This semester she has studied Italy and next semester China.
Science is something that we haven't focused on. Our wish has been to get her to read and read well so that she can then delve into science related books, websites, etc. Having said that, Anna has learned the 9 planets pretty well, has mastered understanding the oxygen cycle, and has made many trips to the Science Center. There she has seen the following OMNI exhibits: Climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro, Volcanoes and Earthquakes, Underwater Caving, the sealife off the coast of Baja California, and traveling the Nile River. She has also learned the names and functions of various organs of the body and has learned what a virus is and how it may infect (prompted by an annoying viral infection). She and I are also starting to study energy, focusing on electricity generation, oil and natural gas pumping, and the like.
Anna has attained the rank of Advanced Red Belt in karate, taking classes at USA Karate. For the curious, the ranks are white, gold, green, purple, blue, adv. blue, red, adv. red, brown, adv. brown, black belt candidate, and lastly black. Karate is her physical education class.
Anna attends a music school one night per week and sings in the school choir. As for visual art, drawing, painting, and clay are normal activities in our house. We do make periodic visits to the art museum and do have a few art books in our home.
Motivating Anna
We keep a large (2 poster boards in size) wall chart to which we affix star stickers under the various subject headings. Anna gets 1 star for every lesson completed in Singapore Math, Explode the Code, or Beyond the Code. She gets 3 stars for reading a 30 page book (# of pages depends on complexity) herself, 1 star for every five states/capitals memorized, etc. If she reaches 500 stars by the end of June, she gets a stupendous reward (haven't figured out what). Right now she's at 175 or so stars and should be close to 200 by the end of December.
The chart is full of things Anna can learn or do to earn stars.
Testing
We try to give Anna a test the last Saturday of every month, covering each and every subject. I usually give her a time limit to help her be prepared for the Iowa Tests which she'll take every spring, starting in 2007. Verbal pop quizzes are fairly routine and common.
School Year
We school year round with 4-5 wks off in the summer, 1 wk at Thanksgiving, 2 wks at Christmas, and 1 wk at Easter. Anna works about 1 hr a day with Beth and 1 hr or so with me 2-3 nights a week and an hour on Saturday morning. It is not unusual to miss a day of homeschooling for whatever reason and then we just ratch it up another day.
Cost
We spend $500-$700 each year for curriculum and books to fill our home library. We especially love the books from Usbourne.
.