Lesson Plans

July 07, 2008

For Younger Kids: A Peek Into Our World

by Brea

For three nights last week, I had no children. John's mom had our two older kids, and my mom had the little one. I had all these projects I was going to do, all this wonderful stuff I was going to accomplish. Notsomuch. I watched a lot of Deadliest Catch on the Discovery Channel. I played on the internet. I talked to friends on the phone. I went to the Farmers' Market with my husband. It was actually pretty great.

One thing we did accomplish, though, was planning the upcoming school year. Yay!! This is something we've been trying to get done for quite a while, but never managed to carve out the time. My dear friend Kristie came over a few months ago, and brought most of her school stuff with her. I love this woman. She's the one who introduced me to Charlotte Mason and Elisabeth Elliot. Anyway, Kristie had made a list of things that she's used, things she wished she had used, and things she used but didn't like.

By the way, have I ever mentioned how valuable a resource your homeschooling friends with older children can be?

So. If you want to see our schedule for what we're doing in the upcoming year, here it goes. We'll be doing school four days a week (my older ones will be 5 and 6 by the time we start in September), with a slightly different schedule on different days.

Days 1 and 3
8-8:30: read aloud during breakfast
8:30-9: brush teeth, get dressed, make beds, clean kitchen, get table ready for school
9-9:15 Grapevine Studies (a chronological Bible course)
9:15-9:30: copy work and writing (using the Grapevine lesson as the writing lesson)
9:30-10: math (I love the Kumon workbooks!)
10-11: break (chores, plan evening's supper, play outside, etc)
11-11:30: science (Eagle's Wings Considering God's Creation, using Nature Journals we've made)
11:30-1: break (lunch, cleanup, free time)
1-1:30: music
1:30-2:30: break (work outside, laundry, older kids spend time with David, etc)
2:30-3: sign language (Signs for His Glory); David takes his nap

Days 2 and 4
8-8:30: read aloud during breakfast
8:30-9: brush teeth, get dressed, make beds, clean kitchen, get table ready for school
9-9:15: Pictures from Proverbs
9:15-9:30: copy work and writing (using the Proverbs lesson as the writing lesson)
9:30-10: math (I love the Kumon workbooks!)
10-11: break (chores, plan evening's supper, play outside, etc)
11-11:30: The Mystery of History*
11:30-1: break (lunch, cleanup, free time)
1-1:30: art
1:30-2:30: break (work outside, laundry, older kids spend time with David, etc)
2:30-3: geography (complimenting the history lesson); David takes his nap

*The Mystery of History is a really neat history course. It is divided (so far) into three courses or volumes. Each volume can be used on different age levels. For example, Volume 1 covers Creation to the Resurrection. So, we'll use this volume this year for Sam and Evie. In four years, when we come back around to it, Sam and Evie (then ages 10 and 9) will be learning on the second level, David (then 6) will be on the first level, and the baby (then 3) will listen along as read aloud. Since it's not required to have learned each volume before moving on to the next, we'll probably just pick up with 'real' lessons when each younger child turns 5 or 6. We'll also be supplementing the history lessons with lots of read alouds, like Henty's books.

Sam will be starting piano lessons this year, and Evie will be doing voice lessons. We also have a short read aloud after nap/rest time each day, and we read before bed each evening. I'll try to keep everyone updated about the books we're currently on, and what we think of each one.

This schedule might seem a little ambitious (and maybe it is!), but if you add up all the times, we'll only be doing about 2.5 hours of actual school each day. I set up the schedule the way I did so that David (he'll be 2 in October) can be with us for most of the school day. He'll probably have playtime in his room while we do math, but other than that, he'll be at the table (or couch) when we are, learning along side his older siblings. We're officially starting at the beginning of September, but we're beginning a modified schedule this week to get into the swing of things. And to keep me from having to strangle my kids because they have nothing better to do than get into trouble and break things. Ahem. Sorry.

This will probably be our schedule through the beginning of February, when the next baby is due. I hope that maybe this can give you a jumping point for your schedule, if this is your first year. Any tips from moms who have been there?

(Also, to said moms: What phonics program did you like? Please help!)

March 24, 2008

Free Online Virtual Fieldtrips

Homeschooling_boy_excited

I found a wonderful site with free virtual field trips!

Here is the list of all the topics-

Art
  • Art Gallery
  • Basilica of the National Shrine
  • Byzantine Art
  • Nobel e-Museum
  • Sistine Chapel
  • The Louvre Visit France!
    Fun
  • Fireworks! Grades 4-12
  • Roller Coasters Online
  • Whale Watching
    Geography
  • Great Buildings Part 1
  • Great Buildings Part 2
  • Oregon Trail
  • Virtual Antarctica: Glacier Invitation
    History
  • American Presidents
  • Ancient Egypt
  • British Monarchy
  • Deep Undercover! The FBI
  • Gold Rush
  • The Pentagon
  • The Pentagon 2
  • The White House
  • Titanic
  • World War II
    Literature
  • American Sign Language
  • Treasure Island
  • William Shakespeare
    Math
  • Bureau of Engraving and Printing
  • Mathematics!
    Music
  • MIDI Classical Music
  • Symphony for Kids!
  • Western Composers
    Science
  • Aeronautics Learning Laboratory
  • Anatomy and Physiology
  • Benjamin Franklin
  • Forces and Weather!
  • How Stuff Works! - Email and The Internet
  • National Zoo
  • Oceans Alive
  • Sea Lions The Inside Story
  • Submarines! Secrets and Spies!!
  • The Human Body!
  • If you need me, I'll be playing on this site for the rest of the day! The boys can play learn tomorrow!

    February 25, 2008

    Hack -Lesson Planning

    "One of the most important things and the hardest for me to accomplish in order to have an organized day is lesson planning.  I finally took a day one weekend and sat down with my children’s curriculum, and filled a calendar with scheduled lessons.  It was amazingly simple once I got past that first step—committing myself to doing it.  For some reason I just thought “I’ve paid for this curriculum, I should just be able to follow the instructions and teach it.”  Not so.  With my children, it became very apparent that I would need a Plan of Attack.  Otherwise, I was Dead in the Water.

    Step One: obtain a daily planner
    Step Two:  set aside a day with nothing to do but plan (probably the most difficult part of the whole thing)
    Step Three:  Review the material; this is like skimming before studying; what are the main parts to the lesson?  What can you reasonably achieve in a day? How do you want to divide this lesson up?
    Step Four:  For each day, write a summary in your planner of what you will teach, and the book and page you can find the lesson in.

    Now every night, I take out my calendar and check on what I’m going to teach tomorrow.  I get the text out, review the lesson more thoroughly, and meditate on how to present it to my child.  Since I started doing this, I have been getting rave reviews.  My 8 year old told his daddy this morning that he wants me to teach him through college!  Who could ask for anything more?"

    -Alicia from Homestate

    Quick note from a very embarrassed Allison- Apparently I posted four times yesterday. ~blushes~ The planets aligned and when my toddler kept pressing buttons, he learned to publish!

    September 05, 2007

    Mini Unit Study in One Amazing Afternoon

    Amazing Afternoons is a new service that offers worksheets providing a complete "afternoon" of special activities designed around a favorite children's book or bible story. Targeted to preschoolers, each worksheet includes an introduction to an excellent book and author or information on the bible story, craft idea, creative snack, a hands-on science project, fun math, games, questions to chat about, and places to find even more resources.

    The worksheets are offered on a subscription basis and are emailed to you weekly. Check out a worksheet sample here!

    I personally love this idea. It's a great way to get preschoolers excited about reading and show them how a book can be a springboard to so much more.

    June 23, 2007

    Current Events are for Kids, Too!

    New Flash Five is a new web site where kids can find age-appropriate updates on current events. Their mission is to "encourage young people to take an interest in news and current events." You'll hear and read timely news, framed in a way that children can relate to. Your child can even "become a correspondent" and submit his or her own stories.

    For parents/teachers, the site offers a useful News & Current Events Primer as well as three lesson plans: Current Events, Get the Scoop, and Making News. I especially enjoyed the section on "Watching News with a Critical Eye."

    January 25, 2007

    Art Education at GeeGuides

    GeeGuides is a web-based animated art curriculum that delivers 16 lessons of art instruction that meet national curriculum standards. The program includes interactive activities, an art gallery and glossary, quizzes, challenges, rewards, assessment tools and a license for the Corel Painter Essentials program. The content is also cross curricular, linking to other subjects such as history and math.

    At $69.95 for a year's subscription, it's not inexpensive. But if you're in the market for an art curriculum, this program looks engaging. The site doesn't specify the age-appropriateness of the lessons, but judging from the free sample lesson, I'd suggest it for ages 6 to 12.

    Also check out the GeeKids section, where children can watch animated video, create their own e-greeting cards, or mix and match colors with the GeeGuides color wheel.

    November 04, 2006

    Teaching Teens About Money

    Have you seen those clever Wendy's advertisements, where Frostys and Chicken Nuggets are substituted for dollar amounts? I hate to admit it, but for my teen & tween, those commercials were the first time in years that they thought about money in a new way. For most, our lessons about money ended in the elementary years, when we packed away the manipulative quarters, dimes, and nickels.

    Teaching money is always one of those fun lessons that easily transcends to the real world. Once the initial values were learned, we went on to mental math. I let them pay IN CHANGE for smaller items at stores with VERY patient clerks. We made savings charts for special items, and practiced banking on a small scale.

    We often played a "coupon savings game" in the grocery store. I would give them coupons for certain items in each row of the store. They would find the item pictured on the coupon, then mentally calculate the coupon savings. Row after row, they would keep adding, and mentally doubling those coupons that could be doubled. At checkout, they would tell me their calculations. If it was within a Frosty (I mean, Dollar) of the actual savings, they got to keep all the money we saved. We would usually head for said Frostys, or the video store, where they proudly bought their own goods with the money.

    But, that was years ago, and I realize the time has come for a different sort of money lesson. They now need to learn about budgets and checking and savings accounts. They need to understand the difference between a "need" and a "want." They need to understand the basic economics of the value of work done, and to realize how much money is needed to maintain the lifestyle they envision.

    I found a great online resource at MoneyInstructor.com They have money lesson plans for all stages, and many diverse topics. Want to teach kids about the Great Depression, and then give a little help in investing? They've gotcha covered. Want to go over practical skills like saving, or even planning the budget for a party? They've got you there, too. Free membership gives you access to a lot of the plans on the site, although a full membership and access to everything is $29.95 annually.

    I am already thinking how I can implement these lessons, and then let the kids apply them to planning our vacations and trips. It will be fun to see where their priorities lie, and how quickly they grow to understand money matters.

    November 02, 2006

    In praise of Character Training

    Character training has unfortunately gotten lumped in with religious teaching, and I find that many don't take the time to consider its' benefits. Yet good character is something that transcends religions and cultures, and is respected universally.

    Character training is most often taught to very young children , in themes like honesty and fairness. Yet, middle school is the time when these traits can really be tested. Tweens and teens suddenly discover there are many grey areas in life. Often times they struggle with the choices they must make, and might feel a little foolish asking for help. These are the times when a few bad choices can turn into a real problem quickly.

    I have found a wonderful on-line teaching guide which focuses on the character issues of middle schoolers. This site has many excellent discussion questions, activities and writing assignments on traits like trustworthiness, courage, citizenship, and fairness, to name a few.

    The folks at Good Character go a step further with their teaching guide for Life Skills. The activities here focus on the "Three R's of Growing Up: Responsibility, Self-Respect, and Doing the Right Thing." The tough questions are asked and brainstormed together on topics which teach them how to enhance self-esteem, control emotions and handle pressures.

    Best of all, these teaching guides are completely secular, and can thus be used by everyone.

    Creativity with Crayola

    There are few brands that are more about childhood creativity than Crayola. Being lucky enough to live within a half hour of the Crayola Factory in Easton, PA, we often spend a day there taking part in their ever-new and interesting activities.

    Crayola's web site offers much more to families than cool markers and fun foam. There are awesome art lesson plans and activities for all ages. Registration is free, and don't forget to sign up for their newsletter that comes monthly to fill your mailbox with creative fun!

    Dig out those crayons and paper... there is no better time to create than fall!

    October 12, 2006

    NYT Learning Network Sparks Discussion

    Alasandra from Home~Schoolers Rule sent in this hack:

    The New York Times on the Web Learning Network offers daily lesson plans. While some of these plans have to be altered for homeschool use, they have provided interesting topics for us to discuss.

    Alasandra discusses how she's used these lesson plans here.

    The Learning Network is targeted to grades 3-12 and provides daily lesson plans tied to current news and events.



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