Friday, March 28, 2008
Green Hour #7
We've set up our tree identification book differently then Barb-Harmony Art Mom suggest in Green Hour Challenge #7. We have a 2 page spread with seasonal pictures of our trees on the left and pictures of the bark, leaves and any defining characteristics such as cones, nuts, or flowers on the right. This is our first entry and I forgot to take pictures of the needles of our Loblolly pine! I have also started a nature blog that will correspond to our identification books that we will be making.....mainly to help me organize our pictures before we put it all together. The little kids have been impressing their dad with their vocabulary when talking about their trees.
We decided to let the perimeter of our property get a bit wild to see what would grow...much to the liking of my oldest son who dislikes edging the yard. Already wildflowers are taking over and Charlotte is overjoyed with all the possibilities.
Friday, March 21, 2008
Green Hour #6
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
My Language Arts History
I've already discussed reading here so I won't re-cover that area.
I honestly don't recall what we did during the first few years in regards to language arts. It seems strange to have completely forgotten those first few years and any records I had were lost in a flood about 8 years ago. I don't recall studying grammar or spelling using any type of program. I know we read, used a handwriting program and narrated.
When the kids were about 8 or so we spent a few years using Learning Language Arts Through Literature. I actually liked these books and I can't say that I won't use them for a few years with the younger kids. We did not do everything in them because it would have become tedious. We used the examples as copywork and dictations and I used the exercises for ideas for teaching grammar....meaning we didn't do every exercise or fill in every blank. We continued to narrate and I encourage them to write their narrations during this time.
Around 11 or so I felt that I really needed to "buckle down" with the writing and we tried and discarded a plethora of writing programs. Out of desperation we enrolled in a creative writing class at a local homeschool store. This is the point that the kids decided they were bad writers. Although they made good grades their hearts were not in the process and they became increasingly discouraged.
The years that I encouraged and expected written narrations and used dictations from great works were the years they progressed the most as writers. Ironically the more that I focused on a CM styled writing program the more creative the kids were in their writing during their free time. When writing poems and stories became something to do for fun and not an assignment they felt free to explore and write. Writing has 2 components.....how to write and having something to write about. Written narration eliminates the need to be creative and think of something to write about and the kids could focus on the "how" to write it down. Then they could use their creative energy to write during their free time and not have to worry about it fitting a formula or meeting the objectives of an assignment.
At the highschool age we did follow my suggestions on my CM LA framework and they have also participated in some outside literature classes....primarily for the social aspect of the class.
I did not use a spelling program with either child .....except the spelling ideas from LLATL. My oldest child is very natural speller and required little to no spelling instruction. My oldest daughter is not a natural speller and we attempted several popular spelling programs without any noticeable improvement in her spelling. Sequential Spelling was the program that had the biggest impact in her spelling and will be my first choice if spelling help is needed with the younger kids.
Grammar- we used the ideas from LLATL when we used that resource. When we were trying and discarding writing programs we were also trying and discarding grammar resources. I have found that studying grammar in a low key way in the context of good examples that are being used for copywork and dictation is the absolute best way to study grammar. If I find I cannot do this effectively without direction I will use LLATL as a resource followed by Simply Grammar.
At the highschool level we did work through Jenson's Grammar. The oldest son finished JG in about a year and my oldest dd in about 2 years. I had planned to work through Jenson's Punctuation but it was clear that it was going to be busy work for my son so we skipped it. I will decide if my dd would benefit from this resource in the next few months.
I expect that I will be reviewing this post often as the younger kids get older to remind myself of why I created My CM Language Arts Framework.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Green Hour #5
While Sam slept and Charlotte played I read the sections in HONS regarding trees....it is quite a long section. There were nine poems that could be used for copywork or memorizing, a vocabulary list, and many ideas for projects. I have been inspired by reading all the other green hour experiences and really enjoyed Melissa-Sparrow Nest's bird poster. There is park close by that a variety of native trees that are labeled (makes it identification dummy proof!) and I want us to create our own tree identification booklet. We'll try to make it out there this week if we all continue on the mend and then visit seasonally when we finish our tree study.
So to enhance our tree study these next few weeks....
I picked a poem from HONS to work on memorizing and include in our nature notebook.
WOOD-GRAIN
This is the way that the sap-river ran
From the root to the top of the tree
Working a wonderful plan
That the leaves never know,
And the branches that grow
On the brink of the tide never see.
I made a list of the vocabulary on pg. 623 so that I include those terms while talking about our trees.
Our main project will be long term in the creation of our own tree identification book
We will date our trees as the leaves appear and study each particular tree in our backyard in detail as the leaves start to bloom.
Friday, March 14, 2008
My CM Language Arts Framework
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Thoughts on Science
The Burgess Bird Book for Children by Thornton Burgess
The Burgess Animal Book for Children by Thornton Burgess
The Stories Mother Nature Told Her Children by Jane Andrews
Parables from Nature by Margaret S. Gatty
James Herriot's Treasury for Children by James Herriot
Various books from Usborne/ DK
Various science kits
Ages 9-12+
Secrets of the Woods by William J. Long
A Little Brother to the Bear by William J. Long
Great Inventors and Their Inventions by Frank P. Bachman
The Story of Inventions by Michael J. McHugh and Frank P. Bachman
School of the Woods by William J. Long
The Story Book of Science by Jean Henri Fabre
Madam How and Lady Why by Charles Kingsley
Wild Animals I Have Known by Ernest Thompson Seton
The Fairy-Land of Science by Arabella Buckley
It Couldn't Just Happen by Lawrence Richards
The Sea Around Us by Rachael Carson
The New Way Things Work by David Macaulay
Archimedes and the Door of Science by Jeanne Bendick
The Story of Thomas Alva Edison by Margaret Cousins
Albert Einstein Young Thinker by Marie Hammontree
Marie Curie’s Search for Radium by Beverly Birch and Christian Birminham
Ben Franklin of Old Philadelphia by Margaret Cousins
Pasteur’s Fight Against Microbes by Beverly Birch
Blood & Guts: A Working Guide to Your Own Insides by Linda Allison
The History of Medicine by John Hudson Tiner
Other scientist biographies as available
Various books from Usborne/ DK
Various science kits as available.
What every homeschool mama needs.
Homeschool teens are a wonderful thing to have in your family-they are chefs, mom's helpers, child-sitters, curriculum reviewers, teachers,and above all friends.
Last week I needed to take a trip to the clinic with a sick kiddo and while rushing home I was stressed out over what to fix the rest of the family for dinner. Big Sis' not only babysat Charlotte....she also picked up the house AND cooked dinner!
Thank you my darling daughter!
What's in a name?
It does seem a tad bizarre to have a name for what we do around here.
It never occurred to me to name our homeschool. Even using the term our homeschool seems a bit strange. Sure the kids are educated at home and according to the state of Texas we are a private school but it seems weird to let it have it's own separate identity. So much of what we do is just part of life as a family....there aren't many clear demarcations between "school" and just hanging out with the kids. After all, our kitchen isn't " The Family Diner"- it's just our kitchen. Why should our homeschool be any different?
High school proved to be a bit different. I got more organized with record keeping ( not that anybody cared to look at any of that information) and we got more organized with our studies ( not that, that proved to be necessary) and we created a transcript ( that wasn't as important as I thought). The diploma represents all the extra work that we did these past 4 years in regards to paperwork and it satisifies a need for closure for family. I'm not sure if it really means anything else..... Are the kids going to stop learning just because they graduated? Of course not. Even if they were to never step foot in a college or any type of school they won't stop learning. It something we just do....like breathing.... like living.
So we shall remain unnamed until the diploma arrives for each child.
Monday, March 10, 2008
Green Hour #4
I really wish I had taken a picture of this tree and not just the contrast of the blooms against the sky. I think this is a Texas Redbud but will need to see the leaves in summer to make sure.
Firecracker Plant in the foreground and the old brush being removed for the new growth. I need to remember the picnic table so we can bring our notebooks and draw next time we visit.
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
I don't do long range planning....
I did find a copy of an early attempt of my long range planning. The older kids were probably about 6 & 7 at the time. Resources that I listed as being top-notched were sub-par by the time they reached the age to use them. It is a source of humility for me. I know I spent a great deal of time on it but it was useless within a year or two. I could've spent the time with my kids instead of researching and plotting out a defunct homeschool plan.
What I found that really works is keeping a notebook that I keep a running tally of what we have done, what we could do and what we should do. I don't have tabs for those labels....it's just more of a notation. I see a resource that might be interesting- I note it in the notebook. I keep a copy of various booklist that I come across. I might print off an idea from the various email groups that I'm on. I keep a list of science topics that I want to make sure they cover. Design-A-Study's Science Scope and Guides to History are resources that I keep accessible and whenever I wonder if I'm doing enough or if they are learning enough I can pull these out and check off items that we have covered. If I see any "gaps" I can adjust my curriculum next quarter. There have been very few times I felt there were any major "gaps" that I needed to address.
This time, planning is going to be so easy. First of all, I've been there and done that. I'm no longer lured by all the newest and greatest homeschool products on the market. I have no idea how a new homeschooler in 2008 sifts through all that information and comes out with a workable plan that didn't cost them a fortune. So much of the newest and greatest products are complete marketing junk but it would be so very easy to be lured in.
Second and more importantly I know what works for my family. The perfect curriculum for me is the one I create myself. I'm not writing up detailed lesson plans- ugh! -too tedious. I have a foundation that I work with and a year ahead of time I consult my notebook and start laying out a rough framework. Each season I do a quarterly review then I work out a day to day plan 3-6 months at a time. This allows me to customize and tweak as I go along. The only times during the past 13 years that I needed to make a major change during these quarterly reviews were the times I strayed from my CM foundation. Occasionally I did have moments of insanity and let myself get lured into using a resource that claimed to be the greatest.....sigh. But no longer- I have my foundation and I will not sacrifice the present moment with my children to overly plan the future.
Saturday, March 1, 2008
Kindergarten- Charlotte Mason Style
"Home the best Growing-ground for Young Children.––All the same, whatever be the advantages of Kindergarten or other schools for little children, the home schoolroom ought to be the best growing-ground for them." Home Education pg. 171
A look at a typical week in the life of a CM Kindergartner as examined by Charlotte Mason's Six Points (Home Education pgs. 178-179)
"(a) That the knowledge most valuable to the child is that which he gets with his own eyes and ears and fingers (under direction) in the open air."
Kindergarten is a continuation of all the activities that he started in our preschool program. It continues to be important that he experience the world using all of his senses in the great outdoors.
"(b) That the claims of the schoolroom should not be allowed to encroach on the child's right to long hours daily for exercise and investigation."
We spend less that 4 hours a week on the types of activities that many associate with kindergarten work. It seems like a shocking small amount of time to spend on his education doesn't it? But that 4 hours a week over a course of a year he will complete our phonics program and be reading 2nd grade level books.....although he could easily start this at age 6 if it caused stress. He will complete a math program designed for 5 yo ....although he could easily start this math program next year and cover the material faster. Five years olds are usually ready for a bit more than previous years but it is foolish to think they need to spend hours a day satisfying that desire. The trick is to find that balance that satisfies his need to learn but is not a burden.
"Again, the child in the Kindergarten is set to such tasks only as he is competent to perform, and then, whatever he has to do, he is expected to do perfectly." Home Education. pg. 181
"(c) That the child should be taken daily, if possible, to scenes––moor or meadow, park, common, or shore––where he may find new things to examine, and so add to his store of real knowledge. That the child's observation should be directed to flower or boulder, bird or tree; that, in fact, he should be employed in gathering the common information which is the basis of scientific knowledge."
His observation on this excursion.....
"This pine cone is smaller than those from my pine tree and the needles are different from my pine tree. They are similar but different, why? "
My job is to find the answers to his questions, supply the names of these trees and not make it into a lecture that spoils the fun.
I cannot imagine him spending the day sitting in a classroom. I wonder how many "naughty" boys are sitting in a classroom wishing they could just run and play a bit.
"(e) That the child, though under supervision, should be left much to himself––both that he may go to work in his own way on the ideas that he receives, and also that he may be the more open to natural influences. "
If you listen to a 5 year play you will hear them reenact all the stories that you have read to them. Choose wisely.....
"(f) That the happiness of the child is the condition of his progress; that his lessons should be joyous, and that occasions of friction in the schoolroom are greatly to be deprecated."
Kindergarten is the foundation of your child's future school years. Lessons should be enjoyable and not a burden-there is nothing that cannot be learned next year if it becomes a source of conflict so structure your day so you see lots of smiles. You will be thankful you did in the years to come.
Habits-
Although not one of Charlotte Mason's Six Points, I notice that the 5th year is the year the habits that I work on with my children really become ... well...Habits. Requests that a few months ago would have resulted in a meltdown are now answered with a cheerful ," Yes, Ma'am." We still have more work to do but progress is being made...
"Education is the formation of habits." Home Education pg. 98
A Charlotte Mason Preschool
That pretty much sums up our preschool program. Everything covered in a typical preschool curriculum can be covered in such a natural way. I usually print this out and take a look at it every few months. There are very few items that I need to plan to cover during these years -most learning just happens informally during our day. No need for lesson plans, flashcards, or workbooks.
A typical day with Charlotte our current preschooler.....
"Some children are born naturalists, with a bent inherited, perhaps, from an unknown ancestor; but every child has a natural interest in the living things about him which it is the business of his parents to encourage; for, but few children are equal to holding their own in the face of public opinion; and if they see that the things which interest them are indifferent or disgusting to you, their pleasure in them vanishes, and that chapter in the book of Nature is closed to them." Home Education pg. 59
Now is the time to really start working on the habits that will make the future years of school proceed cheerfully.
"The mother who takes pains to endow her children with good habits secures for herself smooth and easy days; while she who lets their habits take care of themselves has a weary life of endless friction with the children. "Home Education pg. 137