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TwoToSchool

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Posts posted by TwoToSchool

  1. Elemental science has 2 science programs that work for K - exploring science and intro to science. The download is $15 and books are pretty cheap. I think health would be covered in that science (hygiene, nutrition). For social studies, I would just include your k student with your older ones and look for websites and print out worksheets/activities. Scholastic ebooks will probably go on sale again before fall. Usborne has a "first book" series that has a history volume, or you cold do Time Traveler and Book of History.

     

    Thanks for the suggestion! I'll look into Elemental Science:)

    My older two are going to do a whole year study of US history and US gov. I really feel like they need a strong understanding of our history before we branch out into world history. I certainly do see the ability to include my 5 year old in some lessons with.....coloring pages and such? I admit to not being the most creative person when it comes to creating a curriculum. I am comfortable with piecing together language arts with a different history and science, but actually designing lessons to form a lesson plan is still a reach for me:)

  2. Is any of the material for your other students something the younger child could follow along on? I wouldn't call myself "relaxed" at all, but I'm not using a planned curriculum for those sorts of subjects with my kindergartner for the upcoming year.

     

    I can't imagine a health course for K that would go much beyond covering your mouth when you cough, brushing your teeth, and maybe fire safety.

     

    History should be easy to match to an older child, with a little time spent to find more age appropriate resources. I just moved away from a phenomenal library system, so I understand not being able to use that as a resource. Does your home library include this type of thing, or could you find material online for what your other children are covering? We are using K to continue exposure and familiarity with some names and places before beginning a more systemic study in 1st grade, and I don't think most programs for K cover more than George Washington and people in the community.

     

    I think science would be really easy to do at the K level with a set of encyclopedias and some online videos. Most zoos and museums have information on their exhibits available online. We learn a lot by writing down all of the questions my children come up with and then looking up the answers later, but most of the questions are biology or earth science related.

     

    I'm pretty sure you could cover all three subjects without buying anything, but it might take a little bit more time than you have available?

    Thanks for your reply! My older students will be in 3rd and 5th grade and unfortunately don't have much that could be shared or done in a group. I made the effort of finding more independent materials for them so that I could do a lot of 1 on 1 teaching with my new kindy student:)

    Our home library is really a great collection of story books (lots of Bernstein Bears and Fables and such) This is only our 2nd year home educating so I'm not completely secure in not following some type of 'timeline' or structured guide. As far as videos, I did consider purchasing the "Sid the Science Kid" series and then doing activities revolving around each subject. Ex: Ice Melting and we could do some studies on matter etc.

  3. I have embarrassingly exceeded budget twice over for next school years materials. I really miscalculated for 3 kids materials opposed to two! I have quite a bit more to get for my upcoming kindy student. We still need science, some type of social studies/history and health. I really wanted to do Sonlight for science but it's just not economical right now. What else is available for a kindy student for these subjects that won't break the bank? Also, we don't make it to the library often (we do have a large home library though) so simply checking out books won't meet our needs. Thanks!

  4. Me! Me! Me! I'm saving all of my receipts so I can formally 'add up' this years homeschool investment...I'm nervous! Some how, with 3 students, opposed to 2, my expenses have more than doubled! I have 3 more subjects for each child and I'm easily near 1K. I keep reminding myself that I cannot put a price on my kids' education and in a public school I would have already exceeded this with field trip costs, book fees, lunch costs, material fees and gas to drive them daily:)

  5. I've looked into FIAR for my upcoming kindergardener. Aside from the math and handwriting we've already purchased, I really think it could work for us! How long did each volume last you and your child? I'm unsure of how many to purchase. Is it unrealistic to go through volume 1 and 2 in kindergarden year?

  6. I'm having the hardest time deciding on the spelling part (of language arts) for my kids' curriculum. We already have Wordly Wise 3000 and my kids seem to have done well with it this school year. I really try to push spelling and grammar since my 4th and 2nd grader don't seem to have gotten much from public school. If the choice were up to you, keeping in mind we already plan on continuing WW, which would you choose? Thanks!

  7. World geography can be fun, like with Galloping the Globe. We did Spanish (La Clase Divertida), art, music, science (Sonlight B), world geography/social studies/history (at different points with FIAR, MBtP and SOTW1) and literature. Ambleside, Sonlight, and various others have excellent lists for kindergarten reading.

     

    This is what I need! I've looked on quite a few sites for kindy material, but it seems that so many publishers just kind of graze over kindergarden and start at first grade. I'll definitely check out those you suggested...thank you!

  8. You probably already have this covered but tons of read-alouds! Peter Pan, Wind in the Willows, Little House books, Pinnochio, Moomintroll books, Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, Wizard of Oz, etc. (depending on your tastes and sensibilities, of course).

     

    Yes! I did plan to do a lot of read alouds:) I'll most likely be handling the read alouds while my older kids are doing their silent reading. DO you have any suggestions regarding activities to go along with them? This will be my first homeschooled kindy student, and I'm kind of at a loss as to how much to stuff into one school year (haha)

  9. My future kindy student already has Singapore math 1A & B, Writing Without Tears and the first 3 "Explode the Code" books. I'm also purchasing a book of kindergarden poems, hoping to cover 1 a week with a few projects to go along. I feel like I'm missing so much...but I'm not sure what!

    My kids will be doing art and music together, so that's not a problem....but what about history and science? What did your kindy students cover while home educating?

  10. Thanks for the comments everyone! My main concern was the materials weren't accurate, poorly written or poorly organized. I'm not concerned that they may seem dry or factual or that they are very spiral. While I'd love to make my kids' entire school day colorful, fun and entertaining, in reality with as many children as I have, it just won't be possible. We are christian and while our whole curriculum is a mix of secular and christian, if the materials are solid I am sure we could incorporate them into our school day. Thanks again!

  11. I had a friend recommend using A Beka history and science for my kids next year. I've never looked into A Beka because I've never heard anything positive....never! Upon closer review on their site...everything looks ok! Their history is organized in a way that my kids could still work independently and with reviews and tests...I can monitor their progress. Is there something I'm missing? Are their materials subpar, not user friendly ect? Thanks!

  12. I had a friend recommend using A Beka history and science for my kids next year. I've never looked into A Beka because I've never heard anything positive....never! Upon closer review on their site...everything looks ok! Their history is organized in a way that my kids could still work independently and with reviews and tests...I can monitor their progress. Is there something I'm missing? Are their materials subpar, not user friendly ect? Thanks!

  13. In short, I want my children to be able to grasp a solid understanding of both the Old and New Testament. I want them to understand the teachings in a way that they can relate them to their own personal struggles and lives. I want them to use verses as a way to encourage and develop their own character. Obviously this isn't something that happens overnight, but it's important that it happens before they become adults (atleast to me it is:) I'd like this time in the morning to be similar to their other subjects. I'd like them to read, but also relate, whether it be through copy work or memorization

     

    To add a bit more; my eldest children are familiar with very basic bible stories and verses. My younger kids have little knowledge and we'd need to start in the very beginning. I went to a parochial school and while I am very comfortable with the bible, it's stories, characters and teachings...I wouldn't have a clue where to begin to teach. I've looked at Sonlight, and it seems they have a 'bible' study able to be purchased outside of their core curriculum areas. I just wasnt sure this was the way to go.

  14. I think there are many options and you have to determine what your goals are. Are you looking for an overview? Chronological study? devotional? in depth?

     

    I have not used Long Story Short, but have heard wonderful things about it. I actually just downloaded the Kindle version and plan to look it over and possibly use it for evening family worship.

     

    We have a done several different things that we enjoyed. Last year I put my own together and we did a character study of major people in the Bible. I found some inexpensive coloring/sticker books on major people: Adam and Eve, Noah, Moses, David, Paul, Jonah etc and we took one person a week and studied their life. We had such a great time with it when I ran out of books I just started printing coloring pages for more people and we continued with that. After that we did a few lapbooks on Easter, the 10 Commandments, Psalm 23. Just overview. We had fun, but this year I wanted something a little more systematic and planned out for me.

     

    We are using Bible Study Guide for All ages. I absolutely love it. So simple to use, yet my kids love it and they are retaining TONS. It has application, which I like, but really focuses on the Bible knowledge. There are tons of drills and lists to memorize and I love the foundational knowledge they are getting.

     

    If you do choose to read through the Bible without curriculum, I would choose a good children's Bible (Egermeier's is one we like) and maybe print some coloring pages to go along with it for the little ones.

     

    Hope that helps! :)

    In short, I want my children to be able to grasp a solid understanding of both the Old and New Testament. I want them to understand the teachings in a way that they can relate them to their own personal struggles and lives. I want them to use verses as a way to encourage and develop their own character. Obviously this isn't something that happens overnight, but it's important that it happens before they become adults (atleast to me it is:) I'd like this time in the morning to be similar to their other subjects. I'd like them to read, but also relate, whether it be through copy work or memorization
  15. For our 2nd year home educating, I'd like to introduce a few new subjects, one being a morning bible study. Half of our curriculum is non christian and the other is. We've been doing R&S Spelling, but my children have never had a formal 'bible teaching' so surely small bits and pieces of religious study in other subjects isn't enough (in my own humble opinion) So...my question is; Where do I begin? I have 5th, 3rd and kindy students next year, with a handful of much smaller ones ( 4 smaller ones to be exact) I'm having a hard time either finding a good bible study curriculum or simply reading through the bible ourselves (which I'm not entirely comfortable with seeing as I have nooo clue where to start!) Thanks again:)

  16. I've been a home educating parent for (going on) 2 years now and I'm convinced we will never go back to traditional education. Sure, there have been some bumps and my 10 year old still drags her feet in everything she does, but I can already see the benefits and will never turn back. My family (grandparents, aunts, uncles, etc.) feel differently and make it known. I can barely make conversation anymore, without their concerns about my kids being aired. My mother is convinced my children will fail in life and are already ages behind their piers. My father considers my school day a failure if I'm not sitting, holding each child's hand for 5 or 6 hours a day. Clearly they aren't familiar with what home schoolers are able to accomplish or really what homeschooling is even like. Please tell me I'm not the only one that has encountered this type of resistance among family. I know I'm doing the right thing, but my word...their are days that they come down so hard on me...I too question myself.

  17. Hmm, I would say what Sonlight does the best for us is incorporate literature around history, christianity and world cultures. I like the idea of having readers, read-alouds and history books all planned out for the year for me with notes included. Otherwise, I get too bogged down with details of selection and being too overwhelmed with making everything come together. And I am just a sucker for reading. I adore books and this curriculum is based totally on reading real books. Hope that helps! Sometimes what my mind is thinking does not get articulated as well as I would like.

     

    If you are checking them out make sure you look at the new April 2012 catalog. They have not converted the site over to it yet, because the products are not available until April 2nd. They have made some significant changes to structure as well as to book selections and pricing.

     

    Thanks for explaining! I'm taking a peak now, but i'll be sure to check back in a few weeks:)

  18. We just got home and I was surprised to see my new Sonlight catalog waiting for me. Even with all of the hullabaloo, they sure know how to make we want to buy lots in the catalog. They definitely have the most drool worthy catalog in my book ;)

     

    After your post I had to go and check out their site! I'm not familiar with Sonlight, is there anything in particular that they do really well? I also noticed your 11 yr old DD and my 10 year old DD have a nearly identical 'curriculum' for this year:)

  19. My upcoming 3rd grade son is an average reader. He sounds out unfamiliar words well and seems to enjoy reading, but will only read his expected 30 minutes a day. Most recently he finished reading the "Tin Tin" chapter book. Does anyone have a good list of books a 3rd grade boy might enjoy? I'm hoping to spark his interest with some great books next year!

  20. This sounds a bit far fetched. Here's a problem I see...If a child learns to read at 10-14 yrs of age, how does this child learn well in other areas. I suppose someone 'unschooling' their child would have ways of teaching effectively, but for a child learning in a more traditional way...wouldn't this be difficult to learn the other parts of grammar, spelling. writing...even history?

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