Showing posts with label First Grade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label First Grade. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Hooked on Phonics Learn to Read - A Review

It's her final week.  After two years, my daughter will have completed the Hooked on Phonics Learn to Read program.
Megan in Kindergarten and now, in second grade

Was it really just over two years ago that she first read the book, CAT?  Today she read The Swish-Smacker Dirt Hacker.  

I wanted to write a review of this product because it worked so wonderfully for my daughter.  I was so NERVOUS about teaching my child to read.  What if I stink at it?  What if my child hated reading?  

Despite having four older daughters, I was quite insecure about teaching my child to read.  My older daughters had primarily learned to read in public school, though a couple struggled due to the lack of phonics.  I knew I wanted to use a solid phonics program, but was surprised at just how many there were from which to choose!

I wanted books... Leveled readers that would build, concept upon concept, with plenty of review.  I wanted to hit as many senses as possible... Seeing, hearing, writing, reading... So that she would retain what she was learning.  For the most part, the Hooked on Phonics Learn to Read program hit every area.  

The program begins with short vowel sounds. I didn't use the pre-K levels of Hooked on Phonics, but Megan had learned her letter sounds through our preschool Heart of Dakota program. This was important for success!  Make sure your child learns the letter sounds!

Each lesson begins with a video on DVD.  The video is an animated lesson, only a couple minutes in length, that teaches the sounds and the words for that week. We would start each day with this video. Then, my child would read the words in the lesson to me. After practicing the words, there was a short story to read.  Every few lessons the story would be an actual book that covered all the sounds learned in that unit.  Also, after every few units, there would be helper words introduced.  Helper words are nothing more than sight words.  Unlike sight word programs, though, the focus is on phonics, not sight words.  There was only three to five sight words introduced every four to five lessons.  Since we did one lesson a week, this was not at all taxing or overwhelming. 

After five days of reviewing the same lesson, it was usually mastered. We wouldn't move on to the next lesson until it was mastered.  Only a couple times did it take longer than a week to master the unit and read the lesson flawlessly.  After every several units there was a review week.  

The units came with a lot of extras if we needed or wanted reinforcement.  When you purchase Hooked on Phonics Learn to Read new, it comes with a code that gives you access to online worksheets you can print out.  There is also a list of supplemental books that many libraries have that your child can read for extra lesson practice.  I used the worksheets often in the first year or two.  The printables often came with mini-books that I printed out and had my daughter put together.  She loved the mini-books!  I loved the mini-books!  Each mini-book was an extra book to read that covered the lesson.

Every level is structured the same way: Hearing, seeing, reading, and some writing.  By the end of first grade my daughter was excelling.  Over this past summer, after we had finished the first grade program, I had Megan check out and read level 2 readers from the library. I tried the level one, but she complained they were too easy. This year, when we began the second grade material, she was able to advance through most of it in a few weeks. The foundation of her Kindergarten and First grade years was enough to set her soaring on her own!

This week she is completing the final lesson. 

I will be honest and admit that I did supplement.  I wanted more writing so I purchased the Explode the Code workbooks.  The levels complemented the Hooked on Phonics program nicely.  A page or two a day of Explode the Code helped cement the lessons.  I also had my daughter reading other phonics readers.  I  purchased Christian ones, like the Learning to Read series from Christian Light Education, but only the readers were used.  I didn't purchase the workbooks (though I hear they are excellent). I made good use of readers at the library.  I also continued to read aloud to my daughter a lot. 

Overall the Hooked on Phonics Learn to Read program is excellent.   Occasionally I would find a book I didn't like, that conflicted with my Christian views, such as one with a witch.  I just substituted the book with one that had the same sound we were working on.  Most of the books, while secular, are very fun.  Plus, with supplementing with Christian materials, I had a lot to choose from.  

My daughter is now an avid reader.  Every night at bedtime she reads for an hour to herself.  We do a lot of reading at home for school.  She is easily a grade ahead in her reading level, and advancing.  I am not joking when I state that I believe this is due to her strong foundation she received from Hooked on Phonics.  Yes, as corny as it sounds, my daughter could easily state, "Hooked on Phonics worked for me!"

Many other phonics programs are top quality.  At fifty dollars a year, with the amount of materials and resources provided, I thought this program was great.  Like I said, I added occasionally... but I probably would have added anyway.  I like to mix and max, allowing my children to come at various subjects from more than one way.  Right now I am using bits and pieces of three to four different math programs, at least three different reading programs, and a variety of resources for science and history.  To me, this is the benefit of homeschooling.  Hooked on Phonics was varied enough that it was not boring, and yet the time involved was short enough that I could add this or that and it not be too much.  

I highly recommend the Hooked on Phonics Learn to Read program for other homeschoolers... or parents that want to help their child learn to read with a solid phonics foundation.




Thursday, August 7, 2014

Our 2013/2014 Reading Lists

Here are the reading lists from last year.  I am positive I am missing some, as we moved in March and things got very hectic and disorganized for a bit.

Jasmine - 10th Grade

1. Star of Light - Patricia St. John
2. Careful Enough? - Dillon Forbes
3. God's Tribesman -  James and Marti Hefle
4.  Amos Fortune, Free Man - Elizabeth Yates
5. The Reb and the Redcoat - Constance Savery
6. Songbird - Nancy Lohr
7. Michael Faraday: Father of Electronics - Charles Ludwig
8. The Secret Wish of Nannerl Mozart
9. John Paul Jones: the Pirate Patriot - Armstrong Sperry
10. George Washington's World - Genevieve Foster
11 The Egyptians - Life in Ancient Egypt - Liz Sonneborn
12. The Cherokee - An Independent Nation - Anne M. Todd
13. Cherokee - Richard M. Gains
14. Sioux - Richard M. Gains
15. Marie's Home - Caroline Austin
16. The Hiding Place - Corrie Ten Boom
17. Traveling Light - Max Lucado
18. A Shepherd looks at Psalm 23 - Phillip Keller
19. The Hiding Place - Corrie Ten Boom
20. Maggie's Dare: The Great Awakening - Norma Jean Lutz
21. Francis Scott Key - David Collins
22.  Albert Einstein Young Thinker - Marie Hammontree
23.  Lizzie and the Redcoat - Susan Martins Miller
24. 50 States Under God - Joy Dean
25. Heroes of the Faith - Evelyn Wheeler
26. The Signers - Dennis Brindell Fradin
27. Who is God and Can I Really Know Him? - John Hay and David Webb
28. Hearts and Hands Volume 4 - Mindy and Brandon Withrow
29. Physical Science - John WR Grunder
30. The Road Less Traveled - Tim Kennedy
31. Four American Inventors - Frances M. Perry
32. The Story of Inventions - Frank P. Bachman
33. American History Stories - Mara L. Pratt
34. Lydia the Patriot: The Boston Massacre - Susan Martins Miller
35. Unwrapping the Pharaohs - John Ashton

Laura - 8th Grade

1. Trouble Times Ten - Dave Lambert
2. Ink on His Fingers - Louise A. Vernon
3. Galen and Goliath - Lee Roddy
4. Leondardo Da Vinci - Diane Stanley
5. Mr. Pipes and Psalms and Hymns of the Reformation - Douglas Bond
6. Good Queen Bess - Diane Stanley and Peter Vennama
7. Gabriel and the Hour Book - Evaleen Stein
8. A Child's Geography: Explore His Earth - Ann Voskamp
9.  The Hidden Treasures in Philippians - Evelyn Wheeler
10. The Mystery of History: Volume III - Linda Lacour Hobar
11. Tales from Shakespeare - Charles and Mary Lamb 
12. Issac Newton - John Hudson Tiner 
13. The Tinker's Daughter - Wendy Lawton
14. Looking at Pictures - Joy Richardson
15. A Piece of the Mountain - Joyce McPherson
16. God's Design for my Body? - Susan Horner
17. From Girl to Woman - Sandi Queen
18. The War Against Germs - Josepha Sherman
19. The Mystery of History Volume 3 - Linda Lacour Hobar
20. Morning Star of the Reformation - Andy Thomson 
21. The War Against Germs = Josepha Sherman
22. The Egyptians - Life in Ancient Egypt - Liz Sonneborn 
23. Traveling Light - Max Lucado
24. A Shepherd looks at Psalm 23 - Phillip Keller
25. Make it Work Weather - Andrew Haslam & Barbara Taylor
26. Arty Facts Weather & Art Activities - Janet Sacks
27. Eyewitness Books Weather- Brian Cosgrove
28. Maggie's Dare: The Great Awakening - Norma Jean Lutz
29.  Francis Scott Key - David Collins
30. Henry Ford Young Man with Idea - Hazel B. Aird and Catherine Ruddiman
31. God's Plan for Growing Up Book #1 From Girl to Woman - Sandi Queen
32. What is God's Design for my Body? - Susan Horner
33. Lizzie and the Redcoat - Susan Martins Miller
34. Who is God and Can I Really Know Him? - John Hay and David Webb
35. The World of Biology - John Hudson Tiner
36. The Road Less Traveled - Tim Kennedy
37. Hearts and Hands Volume 4 - Mindy and Brandon Withrow
38. American History Stories - Mara L. Pratt
39. Lydia the Patriot: The Boston Massacre - Susan Martins Miller
40. Unwrapping the Pharaohs - John Ashton


Megan - First Grade

1. The Adventures of Danny Meadow Mouse*
2. At a Farm - Rick Wagner
3. God Made the Opossum - Mrs. James Swartzentruber*
4. The Egg and the Chick - Mrs. James Swartzentruber*
5. The Squirrel and the Nut - Mrs. James Swartzentruber*
6. God Made Me - Mrs. James Swartzentruber*
7. God Made Us - Mrs. James Swartzentruber*
8. God Made the Firefly - Mrs. James Swartzentruber*
9. Not Dots - Ellen Tarlow
10. Hop In! - Julie Small-Gamby
11. The Hat - Judith Bauer Stamper
12. Jesus Washes Peter's Feet - Glynis Belec*
13. Family-Time Bible in Pictures - Kenneth N. Taylor*
14. Big Kid Day - Janelle Cherrington
15. Me Too! - Linda Ward Beech
16. We Should Be Thankful - Mrs. James Swartzentruber*
17. God Made the Opossum - Mrs. James Swartzentruber*
18. City Colors - Linda Ward Beech
19. The Bus - Joaquim Alvarez
20. A Lot of Dogs - Ellen Tarlow
21. At a Farm - Rick Wagner
22. Slim Sam - Margaret Crocker 
23. The Adventures of Chatterer the Red Squirrel - Thornton W. Burgess*
24. The Adventures of Grandfather Frog - Thornton W. Burgess*
25. The World God Made - Edward J. Shewan* 
26. Family Time Bible - Kenneth Taylor*
27. History Stories for Children - Dr. John Wayland*
28. The Cat in the Hat All About the Human Body - Tish Rabe
29. Would I Trade My Parents? - James Bernardin
30. The World Around Us - Rosemary Wells
31. Look and Learn, A First Book about Bodies - Nicola Tuxworth
32. Babar.s World Tour - Laurent De Brunhoff 
33. Dem Bones - Bob Barner 
34. You are Special - Max Lucado
35. The Pukey Book of Vomit - Connie Colwell Miller
36. The Digestive System - Rebecca Olien
37. The Skeletal System - Rebecca Olien
38. Just In Case You Ever Wonder - Max Lucado 
39. The Respiratory System - Rebecca Olien
40. The Circulatory System - Rebecca Olien
41. Heaven is for Real for Kids - Colton Burpo
42. The Bloody Book of Blood - Kelly Regan Barnhill 
43. The Adventures of Buster Bear - Thornton Burgess
44. Helen Keller - Margaret Davidson
45. The Magic School Bus Insect Invaders - Anne Capeci
46. Ants are Fun - Mildred Myrick
47. Ladybug - Claire Llewellyn 
48. Army Ant Parade - April Pulley Sayre
49. What's it like to be a Dragonfly - Jinny Johnson
50. Ladybugs - Susan Ashley
51. Fireflies - Susan Ashley
52. Spin with Spiders - Karen Latchana Kenny 
53. The Adventures of Buster Bear - Thornton Burgess 
54. We Explore - LuAnne Yeager, Ruth Hobbs, & Dorothy Nisly* 
55. Animal Babies - Harry McNaught
56. Annie and the Wild Animals - Jan Brett
57. Dig, Wait, Listen - April Pulley Sayre
58. I think I need a Pet - Pamela Chanko 
59. I'm Going to be a Vet - Edith Kunhardt
60. Sheep - Hannah Ray
61. Deserts - Neil Morris
62. Zoologists and Ecologists - Ruth Owen
63. Smudge, the Little Lost Lamb
64. Chick-Chick the Ping-Pong Champ - Russell Ginns*
65. The Crippled Lam - Max Lucado
66. The Boxcar Children - Gertrude Chandler Warner 
67. Going to Grandma's - Pamela Chanko
67. The Pepperoni Parade and the Power of Prayer - Barbara Johnson
68. What Will the Weather Be? - Lynda DeWitt
69. Whiteout: A Book about Blizzards - Rick Thomas
70. The Big Snow - Berta and Elmer Hader
71.  The Crippled Lamb - Max Lucado
72. Clifford and the Big Storm - Norman Bridwell
73. Clifford Keeps Cool - Norman Bidwell
74. Sizzle - Rick Thomas
75. Rumble, Boom! - Rick Thomas
76. Wind - Honor Head 
77. George Washington and the General's Dog - Frank Murphy
78. Ben Franklin and the Magic Squares - Frank Murphy
79. The Adventures of Jerry Muskrat - Thornton Burgess 
80. Mummies in the Morning - Mary Pope Osborne
81. Pyramids and Mummies - Seymour Simon
82. Unraveling the History of the Mummies around the World - Slyvia Branzei
83. The Boxcar Children - Surprise Island - Gertrude Chandler Warner 
84. Katie the Caterpillar - Pamela Chanko
85. We Learn - LuAnne D. Yeager, Ruth Hobbs, Dorothy Nisly
86. The Adventures of Jerry Muskrat - Thornton Burgess 
87. Mummies in the Morning - Mary Pope Osborne
88. Unraveling the History of the Mummies around the World - Slyvia Branzei
89. The Boxcar Children Book 2 - Gertrude Chandler Warner




Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Megan Finishes 1st Grade!

Last week's illness might have delayed the start of summer break, but only by one day.  Megan finished all her work today!  We'll be reading like crazy and keeping up with math skills over the summer.  Officially, however, Megan is on summer break!  She is a 2nd grader!

I'm so proud of her. She took off in reading!  She now is devouring books from the library that are way above the level she is supposed to be reading.  

Her math is at level, but I'm really wanting her to keep practicing her facts over the summer.  It's too easy to forget them later. 

It's been a tough year.  Moving in March threw our routine out of whack for weeks.  But we managed to get back on track and successfully finish our homeschool year.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Learning Curves

http://psychcentral.com/lib/famous-people-with-adhd/0002982

My daughter has ADD.  She hasn't been officially diagnosed, but I'm well experienced with the signs.  

When her older sister was in the third grade, the school decided to tell us that she had ADD.  My only thought at the time was, "DUH!"  I had known since she was five years old.  Years and lots of money were spent on tutoring and special classes. When we brought her home to homeschool, it was a great blessing.


My husband is also quite ADD.  He struggled in school so much that he spent many summers grounded because his grades were so low.  At the time the school didn't know why he struggled, and they didn't test for anything except dyslexia.  

The signs have been there in my youngest.  Most, I attributed to her age.  But in the middle of this year everything just spiraled with her.  Easily distracted doesn't even describe her some days.  

I've had to pray a lot.  I've had to remind myself that God created my daughter, and his plan for her is great... Greater than any temporary struggle. While I research natural remedies, and pray for Spring to arrive quickly so I can get my child outside more, using up excess energy, I pray.  

I posted the list above of famous people with ADHD as a reminder that ADHD also brings other talents:  creativity, thinking outside the box, hyper-focus on interests.  My husband is an amazing musician!  He also knows his Bible.  

It may take some alternative methods, some trial and error, and lots of prayer, but I'm choosing to see ADD/ADHD as a gift.  


Monday, January 27, 2014

From Prince to Shepherd

Moses had fled Egypt to Midian.  There,  he meets Jethro, a Medianite  priest, married Jethro's daughter, and transforms his life from a prince in Pharaoh's Kingdom to a shepherd in the desert.

One third of his life was spent in luxury.  He had the best food,  servants, power, the best education.   But  his heart was still with his people,  the Hebrews... The slaves. In a moment of anger,  Moses had killed a man.  Now, he had fled to escape the wrath of Pharaoh.  Can you imagine the closeness he might have once felt with the Pharaoh?  Now gone, had that left Moses feeling sad? Yet Moses knew the authority and decisions of Pharaoh would be carried out without question.  No doubt Moses had witnessed the "justice" of Pharaoh before,  and knew that his life wouldn't be spared just because he had grown up as a prince.   After all,  the Pharaoh was considered a god, not just a king.

Moses ran for his life.  He became a shepherd.  After all,  the Egyptians had no use for shepherds. That is why the Hebrew people were originally given land by a Pharaoh of the past during Joseph's life.  Goshen kept the shepherds separate from the Egyptian people, in a place with grazing for sheep.  As slaves, they now worked for Pharaoh, but Moses would learn the trade of his ancestors after he fled Egypt.   He would become a shepherd.

Moses was a prince, a shepherd, and eventually a savior for his people.  Christ was also all three.

And so, we pause now in the study of Moses' life to study shepherding.  Like studying Egypt to learn more about the Bible,  studying shepherding brings the Bible to life.   We catch glimpses of the forty years of the life of the shepherd Moses.   He was humbled there.  The arrogant prince changed his fine clothes for rough robes.  I'm certain the changes on the inside were just as drastic,  the contrast just as strong. 

The Lord is my shepherd,  I shall not want.

I was blessed to learn that my library has a book on Psalm 23 by Philip Keller.   I am also reading Traveling Light by Max Lucado to my daughters. We will spend the next three and a half weeks engrossed in sheep,  shepherds,  mammals,  deserts,  and maybe even the weather.   The Bible is coming alive for us as we study, read, watch videos,  and learn.  
Psalm 23 was written by David,  but so exemplifies Christ.   I look forward to all that God has in store over the next few weeks! I look forward to blogging about our adventures!

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

We Have Begun Exodus

Our studies have finally finished Joseph and Genesis and begun Moses and Exodus.  A couple of years ago my then preschooler learned a song about Baby Moses.

"Baby in the basket.  Float, float, float."

We are deep into studying Egypt.  Netflix movies, library books, even my Baby Moses Precious Moments plate have helped to get us into the time and place.

Oh, how we are loving learning with the unit study method!  My children are retaining so much!  It seemed a bit strange at first to read about mummies with my six year old.  There are times I have to edit some of the reading so she isn't exposed overly to pagan gods and beliefs.  Obviously Egypt was quite pagan.  But I'm finding that we have some interesting discussions about what the Bible says versus how the Egyptians believed. 

My older girls are grossed out by the mummification process, and yet intrigued too about this time in history.  Even my history hater is getting engrossed in the stories and movies.  It's awesome!

Slavery had been a topic we have talked about lately, considering that Joseph was sold as a slave and that the Hebrews were forced into slavery under the Egyptians rule.  We've talked a bit about Egyptian slavery and slavery in America and slavery today. 

We will take a week or so next week to study shepherding.  I'll be hitting the library for books as we study Psalm 23.  Moses spent 40 years as an Egyptian prince and then 40 years as shepherd in Midian.  What a contrast!  It'll be interesting to see what God will reveal to us in our study!

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Joseph

We have been studying the life of Joseph during our Bible time.  He is absolutely one of my favorite men of the Bible.  He spent years going through all this stuff that wasn't his fault.  Sold into slavery as a teenager, sent to live in a foreign land.  Can you imagine the terror? The confusion? The heartbreak?  Do you think he struggled with hatred and bitterness toward his brothers?  Do you think he ached for home?

Then to be lied about by some cougar lady, put in prison.  I would be screaming and angry.  I would be ticked!

The Bible continually says God was with Joseph.  God blessed Joseph as a slave.  God blessed Joseph as a prisoner. Sitting in jail for years, forgotten even by the ones you helped after they are released.  The temptation to be discouraged must have been overwhelming.

It begs the question, why do we go through such difficult times?  Joseph loved God, and God was with him, but the hard times came anyway. God didn't stop Joseph from being sold into slavery.  God didn't stop Joseph from being lied about and thrown into prison.  God didn't get Joseph's wrongful conviction overturned in a short time.  God blessed Joseph during those hard times, but He didn't get Joseph out of them.

Not until it was time.
 
Not until years passed by.  

Then, suddenly, the day arrived.  Pharaoh dreamed a dream only God could have given, one that only His chosen Hebrew prisoner could interpret.  

God's timing.

The result?  Joseph's family, as well as the nation of Egypt and surrounding areas, were saved from starvation during a severe famine.  

When the very ones that had sold Joseph into slavery, his own brothers, showed up in Egypt for food, Joseph didn't have them sold as slaves in return.  He tested them, to see if God had changed their character.  That doesn't mean he held unforgiveness for his brothers.  He just wanted to take the opportunity, while he was still unrecognized, to see who his brothers had become and how they treated the youngest.  

Somewhere along the many years in Egypt, whether in the hardship of slavery and prison, or in the service of Pharaoh, Joseph had released his brothers' fate to God. 

Have you released that person that hurt you to God?  That person that crushed you?

Joseph could see, after he saved his family from starvation, that God had been the one to send him to Egypt.  His brothers may have physically sold him, but God was in charge.

Can good come out of what appears to be horrible circumstances?  Can our attitude in the midst of struggles and crushing circumstances make a difference?

God wasn't with Joseph because he spent those years angry, bitter, complaining, and cursing his unfair circumstances.  God was with Joseph because of His covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  God was with Joseph because Joseph kept his attitude right and didn't sin...even when it flaunted itself in the form of a seducing woman.  Joseph continued to care for the prisoners in the jail, even after the cup-bearer forgot about him.  He continued to do what was right, even though I am sure he felt wrong!  

Don't you think Joseph struggled with intense feelings of betrayal, abandonment, anger, bitterness, and even hatred?  

He didn't allow those feelings to take hold.  If he had, he wouldn't have kissed his brothers, having forgiven them, after years and years.  

I have pondered these things throughout our study of Joseph.  They have really spoken to my heart during this time in my life.  Joseph's family had a covenant with God.  Joseph was a part of that covenant.  But guess what!  We also have a covenant with God!  It is a Messianic covenant paid for by Jesus Christ!  It is a covenant that can't be broken by our circumstances.  It is a covenant that makes us priests and ambassadors and heirs.  It makes us family with a King!  And that covenant is a sustaining force in the midst of trials.  Whether you are losing your health or losing your home, God is with you.  

It may seem unfair.  It just might be unfair.  But, God is the one in charge. 

Monday, December 2, 2013

Refreshing Change of Plans

I've veered of of original plans for Megan's schooling... AND WE LOVE IT!!!

We have been working through plans of a different curriculum, picking and choosing different points to cover.  There is nothing wrong with our other curriculum, but it was becoming boring, and so routine.  It was becoming overly "schoolish".  I could see the light going out in my daughter's eyes during many of the lessons... And she's only in the first grade!  

Before I continue, let me explain.  First, I believe in a certain amount of structure. Math is one of those subjects where it's important to build precept upon precept.  But doing the same thing, day after day, for all subjects was getting to me.  Change is good at times, right? 

I've begun to suspect that, like her older sister and her father, my first grader is a bit ADD.  Unlike the public schools, I don't feel the need to medicate my child so she'll sit quietly at a desk for hours every day.  I don't care if she sings her math facts while we do flash-cards.  I often have to remind her to focus during certain lessons as she will doodle instead of do math.  However, she's six.  She's supposed to be busy and artistic and dramatic and fun.
 
School shouldn't necessarily force her to fit some mold.  She loves being read to, but also loves music and painting and videos.  

The last two weeks we have been reading about Abraham, studying family, and learning about the human body.  Ironically, it all goes together.  

We've hit the library and checked out book after book.  We are reading Boxcar Children the Beginning and books about different body systems.  I have checked out various Max Lucado children's books.  Today my first grader read a bones book called Dem Bones and then watched the video on YouTube with the song.  She loved it!  Then she watched a Magic School Bus video about bones and muscles.  She was in learning heaven, and it was fun!

She has been working on a homemade book about herself.  In it we are putting facts about Megan...her address, a drawing of her house, her fingerprints, drawings of her family, her favorite things.  She loves it.  We will finish the week with putting why she is special while reading the Max Lucado books, You Are Special and Just in Case You Ever Wonder.  We will also read the book, Heaven is for Real for Kids, as we discuss death.  

Learning this way feels so natural.  Megan seems to be more focused on her phonics and math, which are done first, because she's excited to get to the other subjects.  

Essentially, this is a unit study.  It's a fun way to learn.  After homeschooling for five years, I'm finally growing more comfortable not following a pre-planned curriculum, not following a public school mentality.  It used to scare me, doing things too differently from the norm.  I would have the desire to move away from the norm, and enjoyed using living books and some hands-on studies.  I would dabble in unit studies for the short-term...a project or a brief break from the norm.  I ALWAYS loved it, but that fear would keep me from jumping in TOTALLY & COMPLETELY.

But when everything feels like it has fallen apart, when school feels like trying to run through mud, when mom just can't keep up with three students learning in three totally different levels with three totally different personalities.  Trying to do it all has left me in tears, frustrated, falling behind, not able to keep up.

I don't know how many other homeschooling moms have experienced this, but it's difficult.  I know I'm not alone.  Just Google "homeschool burnout" and you'll get a whole list of articles and advice.  I just know that what I was doing wasn't working, so I'm praying and changing things, one piece at a time.

Calendar Time and Christmas Advent

Megan is studying the calendar this year.  We are using a workbook from Christian Light Education that has a daily activity, including marking the days or checking the weather.  In November, Megan had to check if there was dew or Friday on the ground or if it was dry.  In December we will be writing the low temperatures every day.  I will probably do this program for two years.  It's a cheap workbook, but quite interactive.  I believe going through it twice will be very helpful for Megan to understand all the different concepts.

Yesterday, in her Sunday School class, Megan started an advent calendar.  Published by Gospel Publishing House, it came in the Sunday School curriculum our church orders.  It's a cute addition to calendar time as we prepare and count down to Christmas day.

An advent calendar helps us to remember to keep the focus on Christ this Christmas season, instead of all the things it could focus on, such as gifts or Santa.  For our family, focusing on Christ is important.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Back to Work after Thanksgiving Break

It's late on a Sunday night.  Tomorrow we start back to school after our Thanksgiving break.  I didn't part of yesterday planning out a couple weeks of school work.  Surprisingly, that planning went a different direction than I had originally anticipated. 
I'm tired.  The girls and I did a little bit of Christmas decorating after church today.  Usually my teens are busy with youth group on Sunday evenings.  But since the youth leaders had family plans this week, I had some enthusiastic helpers.  We won't put up a Christmas tree until right before Christmas, after my oldest and her husband are done with college for the semester.
Needless to say, after a very busy few days, I'm grateful to get back to the routine for a few more weeks.  My daughters each spent a couple days with family, giving us all the break from school we needed.  However, our family Bible time stopped over Thanksgiving break.  Over the last few months I have really become addicted to that time in the Word with my daughters. 
It stated out as a way for me to go through the Old Testament with my eighth and tenth graders.  Last year my tenth grader did a New Testament Survey class on her own for credit.  She passed it with flying colors, but didn't get much out of it spiritually or even intellectually.  She learned what she needed to for the test, and then promptly forgot it.
I decided to use a different curriculum and added my eighth grader to the study.  I joined in on the lessons, literally going through each one with them. Besides our study of the Old Testament, we are also spending two days per week going through the book, Who Is God, that we received with our Heart of Dakota curriculum.
Since we began this, God has really dealt with me in some areas.  He had revealed why the "perfect" curriculum was stressing me out and not working at all for one child.  He has deepened my relationship with Him as, even if I miss personal time occasionally, I am still in His Word daily. I have even brought the six year old in to listen to the lessons.  I'm amazed at how much she picks up. I usually read the lesson to her from one of her story Bibles during our individual school time.
Over the weekend I read the ebook, Bible Based Homeschool by Karen Debeus.  I then realized whour Bible time was going so well.

Studying the Bible together is a natural way of learning.  It's discipleship.  It's instructing my children in the way they should go.   It's helping to lay a foundation that my children need on which to build their lives.

A few weeks ago I was really struggling.  One daughter had spent weeks blowimg off some of her work.  I was discouraged and knew that what I was doing wasn't working.  She was very much in trouble, as there are consequences.  But, for me, I dug down deep in prayer.

God showed me that, while independence and self-learning are vital skills, my children need me to be more in charge, more involved in more aspects.  Computer classes and self-led programs are wonderful, but they should be used in moderation.

Of course, it was NEVER my intention to be uninvolved.  As this school year progressed, I found myself overwhelmed with teaching my first grader and keeping up with three children in three different grades studying three different everything.  It stressed me out and, very simply, hasn't been working as I had anticipated at the beginning of the school year.

At this point, as I continue to pray, I have changed some things up.  My youngest is working on basics and various topics.  My tenth grader is continuing most of her studies, but some has been halted as I have assigned her a research project instead.  My eighth grader continues on a normal for now until after Christmas, when she will finish her current curriculum.

Never delude yourself.  Homeschooling is hard work.  Even the most pre-planned, expensive curriculum can (and often does) fail.  

I have a few options on what direction to go from here.  I could combine my oldest two, leaving me only two levels to keep up with on a daily basis. I could switch to a more universal unit study style where studies are arranged by topic and each studies at their level.  I have to carefully and prayerfully consider each step since the oldest is earning high school credit.  

One vital area where God opened my eyes is to how short my time is to impact my daughters for Christ.  Knowing His Word has become vital.  I have an urgency about this that I lacked before.  If I want my daughters to be Biblically literate, it's my responsibility.  Sunday school, youth group, and Sunday morning service will NOT be enough training.  It's the icing on the cake, but not substantial enough to truly feed souls.  They need much more than what my local church offers for a few brief per week.  Besides, as a parent, God places the responsibilities on the shoulders of my husband and me.

Monday, November 4, 2013

About Megan

Megan is starting her first biography for Storytime today.  Her first activity was to find five objects that represent her.  She did really good with this!

She chose a story book her Daddy reads to her at bedtime when he's home.  She chose her favorite doll.  She chose her princess wand, cause she knows she's a princess.  She chose her drawing board, because she loves to draw.  Finally, she chose the sea shells her sister brought her from Florida.  The container has her name, and she LOVES sea shells.

We are beginning the biography, Helen Keller, today.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Starting Christmas Gift Crafts

Is it too early to start getting some Christmas crafts done?  Today, at the store, my daughters and I were looking at craft items.  I was simply looking for materials to handcraft hair bows for my younger daughters for less than what I can buy them for new.  We went from shopping for hair bow supplies to brainstorming Christmas gifts we can make instead of buy.

Megan quietly pulled me aside and asked if she could make a craft too.  We chose little sun catchers she could paint for her sisters.  

It's only October, but hand making gifts takes time.  Plus, buying gifts is expensive.  Making things helps keep expenses low.

I'm looking forward to what other treasures we might create in the next few weeks.

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Homeschool Photo Challenge - Days 3 & 4

Days three and four of Sprittibee's Homeschool Photo-A-Day challenge was interesting.  Day 3 was orange.  Despite it being October, I don't have a lot of "orange" around.  All day I wondered what I could use for Orange that actually represented something from our day.  Then, as I was stirring the chili for dinner, the answer was right under my nose.
Day 3 - #orange





Day four was much easier for me.  We do a LOT of reading, so taking a picture of one of the kids reading, or something we are reading, is a cinch.  I could have taken a dozen photos.  Instead... the one of Megan reading her phonics reader to me was perfect.
Day 4 - #read


Join me as I go through the month of October, taking a photo a day, and recording our memories!  Oh... and of course I take more than one photo a day.  Most days I take many more than that!

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Valentines in October

Megan began Little Hearts for His Glory mid-year last year.  So, finding our lesson on St. Valentine has landed in the beginning in October made me laugh.  Oh well.  Megan enjoyed the craft anyway.
She loves the days when she gets to work on a craft.  I couldn't skip it.  The hands-on, artistic projects are her favorite!  She was bummed yesterday that we had finished Family-Time Bible.  This helped make up for it.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Megan's Math

I went against the recommended selection for Heart of Dakota for first grade math.  First grade is the foundation year, and I was having trouble getting Megan to understand how to take all the games and activities we were doing and transfer them to paper learning.  I decided Megan needed an incremental system where what she is learning in steps with lots of review. I chose Christian Light Education's light unit math.
It's so awesome for my daughter.  She is so proud of herself.  There's an awesome teacher's guide that helps me teach.  Every lesson is reinforced in several ways.  Megan is picking it up quickly compared to last year.

I don't mind adding in extra activities.  I have Megan doing math games from Easy Peasy homeschool.  The videos alone have helped her learn to count to 100, reinforced the days of the week and the months of the year, and is teaching her skip-counting with ease.
 
I love it when I find something that works!  It just thrills my heart to see my children learning, and being excited about their lessons!

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Sister Time

Laura helped me out today.  My computer was having issues, to the point of having to reset it to factory specifications.  While I was dealing with that, Laura stepped up to the plate and did a lot of Megan's school work with her.  They seemed to have a great time doing it together too.  Hopefully my computer is back in proper working order, and I can (after all the hundreds of updates) get back to normal around here.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Megan Starts First Grade

Megan only got a couple of days of school last week, but she did begin.  Her sisters were out of state, so they haven't started school yet.

We picked up where we left off with Little Hearts for His Glory from Heart of Dakota.  I am tweeking Megan's math, but other than that we gave had a great beginning. 

Depriving our Students of the Classics

  In December 27, 2020, an article was published concerning a push to remove the classics from education. Entitled  Even Homer Gets Mobbed ,...