Posts in School Organization
I've Found A Measure of Peace...

And guess how?  That's right- I took my own advice.  Good idea, dontcha think?  Seems I can dish it out but I'm not always so great about following it.  Christina reminded me of this: "In the short time I’ve read your blog, my biggest take away has been FLEXIBILITY- Be ready to be flexible with your children’s schedule and make changes based on changes in the family." Christina is not even homeschooling yet and already she has a better grasp than I do.  You go! I have to make good use of the times when the two babies don't need me.  Much as I would like a go-with-the-flow, loosy goosy day, I know that all the thinking on my feet would do me in.  I also badly needed time with each child that would allow me to focus on their academic needs, even if the time was brief. We implemented the new routine on Wednesday and immediately the day was peaceful.  Enjoyable.  And I wasn't utterly exhausted by noon.  Thursday and Friday followed suit, and now I'm not stressed about the coming week. -------------------------------------- Morning Stuff Breakfast and Clean Up Circle Time Chores Read Aloud (currently it's Men of Iron) Lunch and Clean Up **Babies Go Down for Nap** Quiet Hour 30 Minutes with 8th Grader 30 Minutes with 6th Grader 30 Minutes with 2nd Grader 15 Minutes with Kindergartner 30 Minutes with 4th Grader 30 Minutes with 10th Grader (because he asked for time with me- mostly he reads me his legal briefs and other stuff and we just chat.  Nice way to end the academic day!) ---------------------------------------- The day is long, and yes I'm ready for Dad to come home at night.  But it's what is working in this season of our lives (flexibility!) and it has been very, very good. During the time with each child individually, the others are working on other school work, practicing instruments, working on projects, or watching a short video (the little girls).  If the 19-month-old wakes up, someone grabs him and takes him outside to play. It's working!  We have both preschoolers and peace :)
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Schedules and Running Around Like a Chicken

These are actually our chickens.  They are typically as befuddled as I am.

That's what I do.  I run around like a chicken with my head cut off.  Something's gotta change around here! Today as I blearally stared at the piece of lined paper before me on the school room table, thoughts of how to possibly tweak my schedule so as to curtail some of that headless chicken feeling overtook me.  I've been ruminating all evening, so much so that I haven't much else to offer you, poor reader, until I get this mess all figured out. I'm toying with going back to a schedule that makes the most of the afternoon hours while baby and toddler are sleeping.  I did that once before with success, but something about letting go of our current craziness unsettles me, as if perhaps the unfamiliar must somehow be scarier than the familiar, which really isn't working at all.  Goofy. In the meantime, go enter that contest if you haven't already.  And on the 16th, the Bluedorns at Trivium Pursuit have a special offer for you that will be posted right here as well.

I'm off to play with my Excel Spreadsheet.  The life I lead!

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Fall Circle Time
Summer is over, our vacation was wonderful, and now it’s time to buckle down and get back to school.  This year we are doing the bulk of our school subjects all together during our Circle Time, with the oldest two guys (15 and 13) popping in for our prayer time and the book we’re currently reading- Practical Happiness: A Young Man's Guide to a Contented Life. I recently read When People Are Big and God is Small and it made a huge impact on me.  We decided to make Isaiah 33:6 our theme verse for the year, and so we begin today by making a banner to hang with that verse reminding us Whom we are to fear.  Our Scripture memory for the fall also reflects the fear of God. -Fall 2008-
  • Theme: Isaiah 33:6
"Wisdom and knowledge will be the stability of your times, And the strength of salvation; The fear of the LORD is His treasure."
  • Prayer
  • Song, currently working on several Psalms
  • Scripture Memory:
Is 40:25 Ps 34:9-11 Ps 77:13 Hos 11:9 Is 57:15 Lev 26:12 Heb 13:5 Jn 15:14 Col 1:27
  • Ruth Heller Grammar books: the younger ones illustrate the words while the older ones illustrate, define, and create sentences.
  • Grammar Ace: Sonlight’s sole grammar curriculum, we’ll use this one to reinforce concepts and to shake things up a bit.
  • Word of the Day: the younger ones illustrate the words while the older ones illustrate, define, and create sentences.
  • Science Units (Wednesdays and Thursdays) (see Elizabeth Foss's beautiful Serendipity blog for unit studies)
Ponds & Frogs Bees Apples Electricity Dinosaurs Rocks and Minerals
  • Gratitude Journals- we'll be journaling all we're thankful for... more on these later...
It looks like a ton of stuff, doesn’t it?  I’m calculating 2 hours when I look at it all, and I’ve allowed for 2 hours and 15 minutes on our flow chart.  We need the extra cushion because we pretty much never do things exactly as the schedule plans.  The schedule is there to serve me, and I refuse to be run by it.  Still, if I didn’t have Circle Time written down, all of these ideas would never leave my head.  I just can’t think on my feet anymore.  Hmmm, I wonder why?
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Beginning a Classical Education
Bear with me; this is an extra long post... Misty recently wrote in the comments: I am so encouraged by your blog. We are actually due with our 3rd little girl on May 14th. I am preparing to plan for homeschool preschool. My hubby bought Teaching the Trivium for me today because we want to do classical education. I know the overall thought is to not push education too early, but my 4 yr old is so excited about doing “school” this next year. Do you have any suggestions? What would a typical day look like for your 4 yr old? What and how did you teach your children to read? What phonics program do you use? These are such good questions. Misty, I was once in your shoes. Really! I know it probably seems hard to imagine, but eleven years ago I, too, had a four-year-old, a two-year-old, and a newborn (but mine were three boys!) I had never intended to homeschool. Ironic, isn’t it? My best friend was going to homeschool, so I bought her homeschooling magazines I found at the Christian bookstore, handed them to her and said with a snicker, “Have fun!” But the Lord, in His wisdom, whispered in my ear, “Don’t close that door”. My husband and I looked at our four-year-old who lacked self control and realized that we had too much work to do in that little life to release him to a classroom yet. So I said, “What do you think about the idea of homeschooling for preschool?” To my surprise, he immediately said, “I think it’s a good idea”. We set forth with a reading book and some simple preschool things (none of which we use now, so I won’t even mention them), and lo and behold by the time May rolled around, the boy was reading. This posed a huge dilemma: Whatever would a boy with no self control who already knew how to read DO in a kindergarten classroom? There was no question—we were going to homeschool kindergarten, too. Round about this time, a friend of ours was a principal of a local Lutheran school. We were sharing dinner together one night with him and his family when he said, “I’ve been looking into classical education. Ever heard of it?” And thus began our journey. Shortly after our dive into classical education, Harvey and Laurie Bluedorn (authors of Teaching the Trivium) came to town and gave an evening workshop on Christian classical education. One of the aspects of education they proposed was, “Better late than early”. That’s not a direct quote, but it is definitely their approach to the grammar years. You can read their article "Ten Things to do Before Age Ten" to get a grasp of what they purport. We were shocked. Delay math? Why? My husband has his doctorate (he’s a dentist) and I have a bachelor’s—we’re both educated and the idea of delaying math seemed anti-education to us. But who were we to argue? Harvey and Laurie are no academic slouches, and they had graduated five students in their home. Experience is often the best teacher. After seeing our own students grasp the basics of math without any problem, we realized that the best approach would be to ground them solidly in the non-abstract facts of math: money recognition and denomination, basic measurement using common household items they would encounter daily (rulers, measuring cups, etc.), addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. And until they had a solid understanding of these things, we wouldn’t move on to higher, abstract math. Interestingly, we now believe in this approach. We believe in it so strongly that we are ditching math altogether for our first grader who has been crying everyday over her inability to grasp mathematical concepts. I know it probably seems obvious—she’s six. Let it go. But were she in a classroom setting where one size fits all, she would already, at the ripe old age of six, be labeled “bad” at math. I know because that was me. It was a stigma I carried all the way into college where I sat in the math lab day after day convinced I just couldn’t do higher math. Pish posh! But you didn’t ask about math, did you? And I am taking a really long route to answering your questions because I am hoping to give you the hindsight that is impossible to obtain until you have, well, hindsight. Here’s the thing: at four years old, what you want to begin to give your child is a love of learning. William Butler Yeats said, “Education is not filling a bucket, but lighting a fire.” So the question should be, How do I light a fire for my firstborn and first student? My four-year-old’s day mimics everyone else’s, because she is the sixth child. Every one of our children beyond the firstborn already had a “fire” lit because they wanted to do what the bigger kids were doing. They wanted to “do school”. So she does Circle Time right along with us, although I’m certain she retains not a lot. She does chores, she pulls out puzzles, she counts carrot sticks to put on each lunch plate. She “reads” books during her quiet hour, she listens to our read-alouds, she participates in P.E. She studies nature, she watches the educational videos we watch, and she falls into bed exhausted every night. Her fire is just beginning to burn, and I’m not about to put it out by sitting her down with a workbook and a phonics program unless I know she’ll enjoy it immensely. That may sound like we don’t expect any guided learning to occur, but that’s not the case. In kindergarten we begin to learn phonics sounds, but we go about it in a leisurely, un-pressured way. We learn to write our letters, spell our name, and count and sort. It is just the beginning. On the other end of the spectrum, we have a 15-year-old who has read more great literature than my husband and I combined (and we’re both serious readers), is poised to finish his high school work a year early, has three years of Latin under his belt, writes novels in his spare time, plays on a competitive water polo team, and just last week earned six college coursework units. Beginning slowly doesn’t mean finishing slowly. I am happy to tell you which phonics program we use (TATRAS), which kindergarten workbooks (Rod and Staff), and other favorites (Art With a Purpose, Veritas Press). But the bottom line is, if I could give you any tiny bit of wisdom I might possess in this arena, it would be: concentrate on what matters most. Ground your little one in the Word of God. Help her to become a godly young girl. Light a fire in all aspects of learning. And go slowly. Before you know it, she will be 15. I promise.
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Science in the Early Years

Our Turtle Guy Studies a Friend

When we began homeschooling, we looked carefully at curriculum across the spectrum. And admittedly, science isn't my first love, so I leaned even more heavily on elementary science curriculum than anything else.

One fortuitous night several years ago, I was reading an issue of The Old Schoolhouse magazine. An interview with Apologia author and nuclear chemist Jay Wile revealed to me that science in the early years isn't really science-- it's nature study. Aha! This rang so true with me and allowed me to breathe a sigh of relief. Suddenly the pressure was off.

Now we have two sons studying their way through Apologia junior high and high school texts, and we are seeing that they will be more than sufficiently educated in the sciences, from physics to chemistry to biology and beyond. There was no need to try and attempt such subjects in the elementary years, so now we focus on lighting a fire of discovery for the younger kids, helping them develop a love for nature and the universe God created.

I choose a subject as a theme for the year and then we check out every good book our local library has to offer on our current science (or nature, if you will) focus. Last year it was astronomy and this year it's oceans. We view DVDs, take nature walks, draw in our nature notebooks, and take relevant field trips. We take advantage of free sources on the web. Some of our favorites have been:

Classical Astronomy

Monterey Bay Aquarium Teacher Resources

The Great Turtle Race

Nature Study Online

Free Lapbooks

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Making Reading Lists for Kids
As mentioned before, we make reading lists each year for our elementary-aged kids. Usually we choose books that correlate with what we're studying in other areas (history, science), books we want them to leave our home having read (classics), and books we think they need to read for personal growth. We split them into four categories, and they must read a chapter in their current book from each category each day. I am happy to admit that they seem to learn far more from their readings than from the subjects I actually take the time to teach. Here are the lists from the 2007/2008 school year: 5th Grade Boy I History • The Egyptian News • The Roman News • The Riddle of the Rosetta Stone • Archimedes and the Door of Science • Augustus Caesar’s World • History Detectives: Ancient Greece • History Detectives: Ancient Rome II Science • Unlocking the Mysteries of Creation • Science in Ancient Egypt • Science in Ancient Greece • Science in Ancient Rome • Dinosaur Mystery Solved! • The Great Alaskan Dinosaur Adventure • A Day in the Life of a Veterinarian III Biography • Alexander the Great • 12 Youthful Martyrs • Exploring the Himalaya • Ghengis Khan • Catching Their Talk in a Box IV Literature • Peter Pan • Treasures of the Snow • Wonder Book for Boys and Girls • The Bronze Bow • Old Yeller • Around the World in Eighty Days • Where the Red Fern Grows • Star of LightCricket in Times Square • Lad: A Dog • Gentle Ben 3rd Grade Girl I History • Dinosaurs of Eden • What Really Happened to the Dinosaurs • Life in the Great Ice Age • Growing Up in Ancient Egypt • Tut’s Mummy: Lost and Found • Trojan Horse • Growing Up in Ancient China • Growing Up in Ancient Rome • Roman Numerals I to MM • Who Were the First North Americans? II Science • Christian Liberty Science Reader Book 1 • Adventures on Lilac Hill • Christian Liberty Science Reader Book 2 • WHY? Series • Christian Liberty Science Reader Book 3 • How We Learned the Earth is Round • Caterpillar Green III Biography • New Toes for Tia • Granny Han’s Breakfast • A Question of Yams • From Abeku to Zapotec • Ten Girls books IV Literature • Eyes for Benny • The Missing Popcorn • Homer Price • McBroom’s Wonderful One Acre Farm • In Grandma’s Attic • Misty of Chincoteague • More Stories from Grandma’s Attic • Owls in the Family The first grader is reading through the Veritas Press readers and various other books I pull for her. She's a strong reader, but others haven't been so we do customize the lists each year according to the child. After 6th grade, our kids begin Veritas Press Omnibus, so their reading lists are set for them, although we add to their reading to fill in where we think it might be necessary. The 7th grader's extra list includes: Teknon Boyhood and Beyond Robinson Crusoe Thoughts for Young Men Little Men The Letters of John Quincy Adams for His Son
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