Sunday, September 23, 2012

A Place to Learn

Our official start date is the week of labor day.  I plan to use that week just to celebrate school, do some fun little projects, introduce the books to the kids, and begin a couple of our books that have much needed introductions. I  honestly have a problem!

I have boycotted our cluttered dining room as a schoolroom.  I have demanded above demands for a shed to school in our backyard. Please look, couldn't you just imagine a learning sanctuary in one of these (with AC and electric, of course).


My demands were not given into though.  I have hit a truce with my dh that for this year, we will  convert a bedroom into a schoolroom. Well, I have been pining since June, with a completion date of September.  Although we are only a third of the way into August, the future homeschool room does not look as though it will be move in ready by September.

I do not know what to do.  I know I can make the dining room work in a pinch, but I cannot wrap my brain around it to get things ready.  I am so overwhelmed with the crowded conditions that I am afraid I will not be able to start on time.  I guess all I can do is pray!

I started this post about a month ago.  My dining room is a mess, but we are getting it done.  September is coming to an end, and that bedroom is not close to ready.  My husband made a comment that he has until December to finish the new room for us to even move out of the potential school room.  See "potential" is now sneaking into my vocabulary.  Seriously, He will then have the other room move in ready for school? What January?  Hmmm, I am having a baby in January.  There is no schoolroom set up in January, so what February?  So I am going to set up shop in a room that we can only use until June.  February to June, 5 months.

I think we are stuck at the dining room table eating around all these books. please tell me I am not the only one?
~trish

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Our 2012-2013 School Year - Routine

I feel horrible for not being more interactive and at the same time, I have been extremely careful in controlling my personal distractions.  I just do not want to be a mom that homeschools only to have something to blog about or seem to get  it all. So I have taken to my speech to only air my advise with "in my humble opinion", because seriously, who am I to know.  I might have 4 kids, but I have only been parenting for 8 years.  I have not even completed the task of raising a single child.  So sure, in 10 years, maybe I can speak with a bit more real world experience and a glimpse of the whole picture.  really?  I am not really going to know how it all works out until I am probably 90 years old and seen how the accumulation of all of my efforts and decisions blossomed into reality. Besides, I feel like a dipstick in the pursuit of what works for us.

So we are 3 weeks into our school year and we are just now finding our groove. Our biggest accomplishment is our routine.  I am invoking a little bit of Fly Lady on them.  Each morning they are required to get dressed, make beds, and together sort and put away one basket of laundry, before breakfast.  Sadly as basic as this sounds, this folks is monumental!

The other thing we swapped was when we did our subjects. I tried starting right out in the morning with independent work first.  Well, 2 year old and 4 year old would invoke chaos! Then the 1st and 2nd grader would manage to spread this work out over the entire day, so history and science was a bust.  Now we do our science and history in the morning all together and then during quiet time for the littles, they somehow manage to swiftly get their independent work done.  Also, I am really only doing science and history 1 time a week and on the other days we do random cool, because we stay home kind of things.

Our Basic Weekly Routine
Monday - Well honestly, it is just a free-for-all on the our together homeschooling.  This could be unstructured bike ramp building with dads tools or a mud bath the went bad in the back ditch.  Seriously, it is more of my recovery time from dad junking up my routine all weekend.  Did I mention I am pregnant.

Tuesday - This is our no school day!  HaHA!  We start our morning with a homeschool gymnastics class and follow it up with picking up our books from the library, and then lunch, and on to my chiropractic appointment.  I had a huge sense of guilt over all this car time and no "school time" that I went to Sam's and got the  4 subject grade level workbook for each kid.  I just ask them to do one page of each subject for the day and my bad homeschool mommy guilt subsides.

I don't even check it, but I will say I have had to improve on my  mommy what is this word spelling  coming from the back seat.  Our how about describing in detail how to alphabetize with out sitting side by side with the paper in front of you.

Wednesday - Okay, a sense of get on this hits me first thing in the morning.  So we get our little fly routine done and we sit together and get our Science worked on with a bit of reading out loud, exploring library books, and some sort of something cool.  We might spend about 2 hours total.  We also have AWANAS at church that night too.

Thursday- Trying to keep ourselves moving along, we spend our mornings reading and doing our History lesson.  Usually this is where the mess comes in.  Last week, we learned about what history is and archaeology, then followed it up with making a timeline for each kids.  Plenty of photos and glue sticks.  What a great project to use up extra photos that did not make it into the scrapbook.

Friday - Alright, I am whipped and tired.  I did a Ladies Bible Study the night before.  We move our afternoon independent work to the morning.  Around noon, we should have some friends show up and we all chum around for a play date.  I am thankful to get through another week.  By late Friday night, a sense of guilt once more hits me and I realize I had better reserve the library books I need in 2 weeks or I will never have it in time.

Our afternoons run the same, typically. We eat lunch and then I send my 2 yr old to bed.  We clean up from lunch and get the books out.  The 4 yr old gets the big pre-k book out and at random works on several pages of her choice.  This is her 20 - 30 minutes of school, I give a her a 5 minute warning with this is your last page and then send her off to nap.  During that time the 1st and 2nd grader work independently on math and spelling. The grammar and writing we work on together. The 2nd grader reads alone and the 1st grader and I read together.

I will layout our curriculum next time.  I must continue to say that I am so content with Susan Wise Bauer's techniques and developed path. I probably would not consider myself a highly disciplined homeschool mom. And I am completely aware that I am very relaxed, but I have found that her method is fool proof.  I am astonished at the capacity they are learning and retaining, with minimal prep work on my part. MINIMAL!

Until we meet again.
I do have to share, I am still in the first trimester exhaustion phase, even though I am 6 months along. I look forward to the things I will have the energy to partake in their studies.
~trish


Tuesday, July 31, 2012

plans, plans, plans.

Making a plan is all well, but I have a hard time putting it to paper.  I need something simple and easy.  I came across a few things and found a great one that I love at http://www.mamajennblogs.com/2010/08/my-homeschool-planning-docs.html
Homeschool Planning Pages

I printed out a set and have a set of plans for each kid.  I have them in a 3 ring binder with a tab for each month (we are having a hard time fitting the pages in a 1/2" binder for 2 kids, by next year we will be in a 1").  I am trying to have plans ready to at least the end of December.  I am slowly making headway.  We will not actually be starting until September 11th.

I am thankful for our later than usual start date.  We will run from September to the end of June this year for a total of 36 weeks of actual curriculum.  Of course, everyday is filled with learning.  From now until September, I am finishing collecting our curriculum and organizing it.  Most of all, I hope to finally have a space with a door to designate to our homeschooling.  What a thought!

So we are slowly, preparing away.  I hope by September to be able to show you all of our amazing books and our curriculum choices for this year.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Phonics and the Alphabet

With every success, comes a sense knowing more than you really know.  With every failure, is the opportunity to actually know more.

With that said, I know more today than I knew a year ago.  Reading is easy to teach, as long as you do not make it painful. I do believe with all my hope that Susan wise Bauer (www.welltrainedmind.com) is right, that a toddler learning to identify cat and milk, can just as easily identify A and B if taught to do so.  Just as they learn cats goes meow and cows goes moo, they can learn A goes aaaa.

The eye opening thoughts of this, make me eager to prepare the 4 year old and the 2 year old.  I regret not having this thought years earlier with the other two older kids.

I am now treating reading, not as a subject to learn through the years of schooling, but as a life skill.  Just like learning to feed animals, making beds, and learning to talk.  We will now approach reading as a daily skill building experience and no longer as school.

One thing I have fallen in love with is the direct guide of reading, skill by skill that is provided with Fantastic Phonics.



We just started using the program and it is a hit.  The stories are a hit with the kids.  Quick and easy to print. Each skill building printable book comes with a lesson guide with added activities to reinforce the skills.
I am using this to polish and finish my 2nd grader's phonic skills.  I am at the beginning to help my 1st grader reinforce his use of phonics versus whole word habit.  I also started my 4 year old on it, but anticipate a very slow progress over the next 4-8 months.  By the way, our Bob books fit in really well with this.

To aid in the knowledge of names and sounds of the letters, I printed out several flashcards that I am going to put on a ring to travel around with us.  I am hoping to fortify the 4 year old's comprehension and also be able to begin building my 2 year old's vocabulary.

There are so many wonderful free sites out there.  Here are a few of my favorite.



These are 2in by 2in cards at mr printables.  I also printed the lower case.

free printable alphabet flash cards


I couldn't help but adore these from mr Printables, also.

Then because we just love the letter factory by leapfrog, I had to make these!


Huge thanks to Jessica at one shoe to she!

We will not be kicking off our first day of school until after Labor Day.  By then, we will have of curriculum posted.
~trish

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

MFW - K resource

This is a post I did on my craft blog www.middnightcrafters.blogspot.com some years ago and I still get request for the resources I have used.  So I am sharing the the post and the resources.

The links for the lesson plans and the labels are here;

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1pYZQxVFj8to5Azb9EvdKDQBTtJrLGuQQu43Ggzqq0Q4/edit
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Auw85gsvynTxGjjX9YZtWXpwIwN8zGQrOc1zO9AGL2E/edit
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AnqGTLlrhNmEdGpEaWthOV80YjQtMnZ1RHBnV2prTXc#gid=0



Organizing the MFW-K day

    






We are into our official homeschool year.  We started somewhere in May, right after #4 birth and took until the end of June to finish the first week.  Oh, I was feeling some fear that maybe I was in over my head.  My thought was that even though I have this great passion and desire to homeschool my children, what happens if I never get to it in our day.  well, we are getting better and of course, we still have no real set routine yet.  I hope by Christmas, we will find it or maybe Santa will bring me one.
As we are moving forth in the lessons, I am excited that I am coming together mentally with the planning and physically with keeping it together.  I will say, right now we are homeschooling either on the living room floor or at the coffee table.  I do not have some awesome cool, eat your heart out classroom.  I am going to make a makeshift display area over our tiny dinner table to help us review and gloat over our hard work.  I had hoped to use the bulletin board squares that you tape up, BUT the darn things keep falling down.  SO I am patiently waiting for my husband to make a board to put them on.
Here is our stuff!
DSC06612
Calendar. Part of our morning routine is to put the date on the calendar.  I originally bought a calendar set from the Dollar Tree and had it all together on a poster board.  Having only a few places to hang it and having guest knocking it down, I opted to get rid of it.  I found this little gem at Staples for $3.
A small hiccup it that #3 likes to erase the numbers when no one is looking.
DSC06607
I don’t actually mind, because now #1 is getting a lot of practice writing the numbers. Bad mommy?

I took the example by Melanie at www.treasuresunseen.blogspot.com and set up all my unit lessons like she did.
DSC06608
I love being part of the My Fathers World Kindergarten – Yahoo group.  Group members share files and ideas and help with keeping the mommy’s chin up.  In that group, there is a weekly summary of each unit study.  So I print mine and put the week we are working on attached to a clipboard.  I also clip the pages we will work on behind the summary.
DSC06609  The generous mom who made this, created a somewhat standardized form that she added weekly details.  One thing to note about MFW-K is that it operates like a letter of a week program that is combined into a unit study and submerged into the bible.  For that, I am in bliss to teach my children this program.
Now I never meant to do this but my daily workbox just came to be and is working fine for now. In it I have:
  • tactile numbers
  • teacher manual
  • bible
  • box of crayons
  • box with scissors, glue, pencils
  • letter box (this is the envelope box, plan to make it pretty later)
  • 3-hole punch
  • paper items for the next craft project
  • books from the library that go along with the study
  • a game (cooties mini version from wal-mart) to celebrate the end of our lesson for the day. [I am finding that ending with a game helps motivate us to stay on task and helps me to remember to have fun]










DSC06610

Now I can not forget that I have to keep a portfolio of #1 work.  So here is a 3-ring binder from one of my college courses.
DSC06611




We are moving along.  And I am already amazed at what I am seeing.  #1 is very good at knowing the sounds of letters, so we should be moving into blends rather soon.  #2 is really pleasing me.  We are using this year as his Pre-k, so I plan for him to do a lot of just sitting in.  Well he is very determined to do things perfect.  He is more than happy to do what ever #1 is doing and I believe he would try to take over her work.  I think the most important task for him right now is to just sit back and listen and mimic her. I hope #1 gets just as excited.  She is doing it to please me, she is a pleaser.  But I also know given the chance, she would much rather be doing something else.  I hope as the routine gets more in place, she will come around.
~trish


Friday, July 20, 2012

To Approach The Approach

Sorry for the absence and that's all I have to say about that.

It is another homeschool year to begin.  I feel like an old hat at starting and still a inexperienced fool at finishing.  Sadly, of the 3 years we have begun homeschooling, we have finished in a public institution.  Mostly from the results of self doubt, frustration, and lack of support.  Always while preparing or what I like to call overloading my senses with way too much information, I come across a mission or purpose statement.

Why do this? To put it in writing, because I want to.  I have wanted to and knew I would since the day I was planning my wedding.  This is what my intention was, goal, the envision of my future, prodigy, etc.   I AM that mom.  At the end of each year, I would feel defeated, why am I not.  

I know why we stopped, but the frustrating part is within the public institution even within 2 weeks, there was no sense of satisfaction with their product.  It was just that at least I am not the one failing them, I will allow the institute to fail them, just as it failed me. Yes, they would read better and add better, but the missing part that was not being provided was thinking.

Where was I going wrong? I feel as though I have touched on every type of learning style and approach.  I have tried a few.  I have done workboxes twice now.  I have tried to keep it simple, kept it fun, and have stuck them on the computer.  I have child centered myself to a tizzy.  The reality is I have 4 children in a small house.  I must live and eat and let them play in this space that we school.  The least bit of chaos and disorder sends the world we know of into a tizzy of fret and despair. I have uncluttered and sorted and organized, to the point of enough.  For us this enough is just barely enough for us and way too much for the house.   What is a mom to do!

I can say that, as always, I excitedly started my kids back to school right after I picked them up from their last day.  Well, maybe the following Monday.  Mentally, I knew they needed to be deprogrammed, but in practice I just couldn't do it. Let's say, forethought and planning was at a maximum, Just enough!

I must be eclectic. As summer progressed, I would boast, oh, we are eclectic. The reality was we would do a collection of stuff on Monday and then maybe again 2 more times a week.  Combing the pins, I just knew if I could make a workbox system, everything would really flow together.  Cleverly, I used the milk crates and vinyl folders and cute labels.  Instead of doing school a few times a week, we now accomplished it just on Mondays.  I must not be doing something right!!!!!!!!

As I mentally torture myself through this whole administration aspect and planning portion of homeschooling, I actually got the blessing to overhear a conversation on several topics of reading and writing. The lasting statement I heard from another mom with older elementary children was  I wish I would have read this book before I ever would have taken them out of school. What is this book, I have to know! Invading myself into the conversation, I learned for the first time about Susan Wise Bauer and the well educated mind.  I was given just a name and I went home in a mission.  It was fine, I had plenty of time, I wasn't schooling as it was.

I got home and found http://www.welltrainedmind.com/ and was amazed with the information.  Now, we are expecting #5 at the first of the year and I am just tired on top of it all.  So I printed up a few articles, got a highlighter, and crawled into bed. Immediately, it was like my mind had been on a 2 year celery diet and I was just been given a steak dinner. I had to chew it, but it was remarkable.  It spoke to me, this is what I have been searching for.  I found it.






I have purpose! I homeschool my children through thick and thin, because I want to educate them to think and learn on their own.  I want them to be prepared for any university to continue to explore and discover, without the hurtles of being ill prepared for general education.  I refuse to allow my children to have the substandard education that was available to me and is still available to them.


Focus, now, focus. At first, let just say, the book is complete from birth to senior year on equipping  you with the knowledge of resources and very heavy.  As I read, I was jotting every bit of information down. After 3 days of reading, collecting, and organizing, I realized!  The method is actually very simple. My brain can stay focus.  Focused, because reading material is in lined with history.  Full pictures are being painted, not partial.  Best of all, the book provides listings of references, reading list, etc. to help you narrow your choices that will maintain the method.

By default, I started planning the year's schedule, the weekly layout, all the way to the daily expectation, a first!  For the first time ever, we will begin school at home the Monday after Labor day.  until then, I am preparing them to use their brain in a new way, so we a cutting TV down to 1 hour a week and we are filling them with audio books.  I want their minds to feed off language, not images.  I want them to create their own images.  These next weeks, will give us plenty of time to train in being responsible around the house.

I love you for visiting and commenting.  I look forward to sharing our adventures as always.
~trish