Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Years 1-4 Discussion & Discovery Studies plan

The terms Discussion (humanities) and Discovery (science & creative arts) studies are borrowed from Educating the Whole-hearted Child by Clay and Sally Clarkson.


World History
~ 1 chapter per week
Story of the World+ activity book
Library books on weekly topics

American History
~ 1 per quarter
d-Aulaire Titles- aproximately 1 per quarter
Benjamin Franklin
Pocahontas
Leif the Lucky
George Washington
Abraham Lincoln
Buffalo Bill
Columbus
The Star- Spangled Banner

Childhood of Famous American series as readers

Poetry
1 per day + 1-2 per quarter for memory work
A Child's Garden of Verses by Robert Louis Stevenson
Now We Are Six/When We Were Very Young by A.A. Milne
Random House Book of Poetry for Children

Geography
1-2 Chapters per week
Holling C. Holling books
Paddle-to-the-Sea
Seabird
Minn of the Mississippi
Pagoo
Tree in the Trail
Geography from A to Z by Jack Knowlton
+ Map study with SOTW activity books.

Natural History/Science
1-2 Chapters per week
Handbook of Nature Study by Anna Botsford Comstock
James Herriot's Treasury for Children by James Herriot
The Burgess Bird Book for Children by Thornton Burgess
The Burgess Seashore Book for Children By Thornton Burgess
Among the ….. People by Clara Dillingham
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
Weekly Nature Study
Various books from Usborne/ DK
Various science kits

Literature
1-2 chapters per week
The Aesop for Children by Milo Winter
The Blue Fairy Book by Andrew Lang
Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling
d'Aulaires Book of Greek Myths
d'Aulaires Book of Norse Myths
Black Ships Before Troy by Rosemary Sutcliff
The Wanderings of Odysseus by Rosemay Sutcliff
The Orhard Book of Roman Myths by Geraldine McCaughrean
In Search of the Homeland by Penelope Lively and Ian Andrew
Tales from Shakespeare by Charles and Mary Lamb

pacing and selection to be determined by child's interest
The Boxcar Children Gertrude Chandler Warner
Little House on the Prairie series, by Laura Ingalls Wilder
The Railway Children by E. Nesbit
The Random House Book of Fairy Tales by Amy Ehrlich
The Velveteen Rabbit by Marjery Williams
Caddie Woodlawn by Carol Ryrie Brink
Charlotte's Web by E.B. White
Misty of Chincoteague by Marguerite Henry
Owls in the Family by Farley Mowat
Paul Bunyan by Steven Kellogg
Pollyanna by Eleanor H. Porter
Sarah, Plain and Tall by Patricia MacLachlan
Squanto, Friend of the Pilgrims by Clyde Robert Bulla
Story of Dr. Doolittle by Hugh Lofting
Stuart Little by E.B.
WhiteTrumpet of the Swan by E.B. White
Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
King Arthur by Roger Lancelyn Green
A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett
Little Lord Fauntleroy by Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster
Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi
The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood by Howard Pyle
The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
Story of Rolf and the Viking Bow by Allen French
The Sword in the Stone by T.H. White
Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
Twenty-One Balloons by William Pene du Bois
Redwall by Brian Jacques
The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame

Friday, March 13, 2009

What's working and what is not....

It's a rainy Friday with nothing to do so it seems like a good time to plan for next year. Wait a minute....I don't do long range planning. I've already have a science list and a CM LA framework. So why aren't I sticking to it? Probably because I decided to make a Year 1 booklist and tie it all nice and neat into a Yearly Plan. The problem with a Yearly Plan is that you feel that you need to complete everything in the plan .....and nothing more and nothing less .....in a year. Blogging today about our Winter Quarter and I realized that we were reading the "wrong" D-Aulaire title. Lief the Lucky wasn't on the list....Yikes. I guess I should have consulted the list before I pulled it off the shelf to read it. It made me remember why I had such a hard time with programs like Sonlight....I couldn't seem to make myself follow the daily plan in the TM! Today read pages 6-18 in this book......well what if you wanted to read a little more or a little less......I made such a mess of those TM for the weeks ( never a full year! Ha!) that I tried to follow them. My self-made TM are much easier to use.....and much less messy!

Back to planning....or not planning as the case may be.

First Q. What is working really well this year?

Math- Math-U-See
Spelling- All About Spelling
History- Story of the World
Science- Nature Reader, science experiments, Nature study
Reading- 100 EZ lessons with a few adjustments
Geography- Paddle with A-Z Geography.
Poetry/Art
HWT

Second Q. Can I meet these goals with the above resources if I continue using the above for the next few years?

MUS- Yes
AAS/100 EZ lessons-Yes
SOTW-Yes
Science-Yes. Books from my science list + weekly science experiments+ Nature Study
Geography-Yes. Holling C. Holling titles + a general Geography resource each year
Poetry/art-yes.
HWT-yes.

That was easy enough. The above resources will be continued until complete or they are not longer useful to us.

That leaves Language Arts. FLL and WWE are working for us at the moment. They are easy to use and not time consuming. Yet..... yet.... UGH! I've been staring at that yet for awhile now and I can't put my finger on what my issue is with FLL other than I'm totally ambivalent to teaching grammar to a 6 yo. I will continue using this resource this next quarter but I am unsure if I will finish the series. WWE does fit nicely into my CM LA framework-copywork, narration, & dictation- so perhaps the answer is to drop FLL until age 8-10 or so.

Wow that's an Eureka moment......I need to quit thinking of FLL and WWE as a whole.

Back to Q 1 & 2. What is working well and can I meet goals with those resource?

Writing- WWE - yes & yes. We will continue this through the series.

So the only LA component not specifically addressed is grammar which I don't feel is necessarily at this age. I will continue FLL because it really isn't a burden but I will drop it when it becomes one.

Literature/American History- I feel that I limited ourselves by making a yearly list. I will not do this in the future. I will make a list of titles by ages ....like my science reading list.... and we will read through those one at a time as we see fit.

Winter Quarter Update 2009

We are a few weeks late completing the Winter Quarter since we were sidetracked with illness.
Sam


Reading- We are making excellent progress with reading! I suspect it has more to do with his age ( 6 1/2 ) then any adjustments that I have made with our approach. We are working through 100 EZ lessons at a pace of 2 lessons per week. I have been writing out the stories and a separate piece of paper and he reads them throughout the day. This has helped his speed and accuracy. He has started enjoying reading! Cheers!


Spelling- AAS is back! He loves using this resource. It isn't a big surprised since he has always liked using letter tiles and manipulating words in such a manner. I have been enjoying using this resource as well. It is well laid out and the pieces are conveniently keep in place with magnets. We just completed Step 10.


Language Arts- We have completed FLL lesson 58 and WWE week 14. He has memorized 2 more poems. FLL introduced pronouns prior to verbs which I found odd. The concept of pronouns has proven elusive to Sam. I think that my ambilivance to teaching grammar to a 6 yo is clouding my judgement with this resource because I grow weary of using it. We will keep plugging ahead with this resource for the next quarter.


Math- currently starting lesson 25 of MUS Alpha.


History- SOTW 1 is going well. We have just finished Chapter 13 and are working through a chapter per week.


Geography- We are almost compete with Paddle to the Sea. We will miss him! This next quarter we will spend some time with Geography A-Z before moving on to a new Holling C. Holling title.


Natural History/Science- Going well. We are almost done with CLNR book 1. Sam loves his science experiments! We do one weekly using our science kit. Our homeschool group might be starting a weekly nature study that we will definitely try out. I want to start blogging about our nature study again.


Poetry- We completed A Child's Garden of Verses but did not start Now we are Six by A.A. Milne. Instead we are reading The Random House Book of Poetry for Children which should keep us busy for years.


Literature/American History- We have read through Just so Stories, Lang's Blue Fairy book, Among the Meadow People, and Aesop. We are currently using our Literature reading time to read through our American History selections. D-Aulaire's Leif the Lucky didn't make my list for this year but that is the book that we are currently reading. Our other American History selections will be added to next years booklist.


Art- We started attending a Art Class with our local homeschool group and it has been a big hit!

Extras- Sam earned his Tiger! He is playing T-ball in a homeschool baseball league which he thinks is AWESOME! Charlotte

She is still enjoying the AO year 0 selections but is starting to insist on doing her "schoolwork." I have been able to keep her satisfied with Mighty Minds, Wedgits, Pattern Blocks and painting but I need to have something tangible ready for her by her 4th birthday.

Plans for the Spring Quarter-

--Get consistent with Nature Study. I think blogging about it really helps me to stay focused on this. I don't even know where my Handbook of Nature Study is at the moment!


-- Get a plan for Charlotte. I prefer to not start any type of "formal" schoolwork until age 5 but she is not going to tolerate much more of this informal learning.