I love every aspect of homeschooling. Not just the teaching, but planning the year of curriculum, researching the curriculum and then learning with my kiddos. It’s surprises me how much I didn’t know and was never taught in public school. It’s a very eye opening experience that I will cherish always.
Ok got everything minus about 25 books I just need to mesh things together. I decided to create a more well round language arts and math curriculum by piecing a mixture of modern secular and late 19th century/early 20th century (modernized) text and living books. The same will be going for literature, poetry, art, geography, history, government, science and health. I’m also creating a speech class for the kiddos to help them with their pronunciation of words and letters. All I need to do is finish creating my lesson plan 🥴
The reason I’m going this route is simple. The newer curriculum likes bounce around or loop instead of focusing on mastering the skills. So I found some wonderful old education books for elementary through highschool when the education was rigorous and straight to the point. Later, I will update on how I piece everything together and give links to material if anyone is interested.
Thank you Sherry, Marissa, and Emily for all your help and direction.
Ok I’m a crappy blogger 😔 It happens… I’m going to try and do better for the upcoming homeschool year. As it stands we only have a few weeks left. So I’ll keep you posted as I plan for the 2023-2024 homeschool year.
Let’s just say my homeschool brain is working overtime. Like I have everything lined up, I’m still tweaking it. Why? Because I’m not sure it’s going to be a good fit or unsure if it will work for the kiddos. Gah! I’m going crazy here😅 No seriously 😒 Ok, so I know I said I had everything worked out. Here’s my thing… I found some new curriculum so I’m researching and now questioning whether this would be a better fit. I don’t know maybe I’ll just stick with what I have planned and use these as back ups. There are so many possibilities! Better yet I just tested the kiddos to see what level I could put them in with what I had planned. Someone tell the curriculum fairies to quit dangling new sources of curricula for me to go crazy. Anyways, I’ll probably update sometime around June if not before for my final picks for the 2023/2024 homeschool year’s curriculum. I might even break it down into levels not sure yet 🤷🏻♀️
Interesting conversation with my 10 year old this morning…
My 10 year old was telling me how he would like to find a way to harvest the molecular energy of trees or plants in general. Then figure a way to transfer and store it in batteries to produce another self-reliant power.
Today I will be printing off new material for three of my kiddos 🙂 Here’s the rundown on how this occurred…
This past week my kiddos admitted they overheard conversations of other adults saying they need to get back into public school. So two of them decided they wanted to return to school. Not because they really wanted to, but because they thought other people’s opinions mattered. They thought longer hours of education would help them catch up and close the gap at where they’re supposed to be at. Instead of taking the time to master the material at their pace and understanding.
So we’ve been discussing this all week and not just with the two that thought this. I have also discovered that another kiddo along with the other two would like to move up a level because it was becoming too easy. I don’t have a problem with it at all. That’s the whole point of homeschooling! To meet the kiddos where they’re at and encourage them to learn more and set them up for their career and life.
I’m so glad my kiddos can come to me and express their opinions and open discussions. So thanks for giving my kiddos the initiative to approach me with the conversation so we can level up and continue to move forward with our homeschool journey and life.
Progress is progress no matter what form it takes or how they get there. That’s all I want for these boys. Did I learn a few things today after our family discussion? Sure did! Do I think they are prepared? No… Not because I didn’t do my job, but simply the system failed them and their mother constantly changing schools and not wanting to send them to school didn’t help matters.
Before we pulled the kiddos from public school they were already at a disadvantage. My 13 year old was already a year behind(with needing speech class and separate help in math) and due to the accident which has caused some severe memory issues (which we are still working on) has pushed him even further behind. My 12 year old on the other hand was behind from teachers not wanting to take the time to offer help and only wanting to dish out repeat work so they didn’t have to deal with him. He also needed speech classes and extra help in math and reading.
While it was all good that the public school was offering help it took forever to get and yet didn’t put any effort into it. With the exception of the Special Ed math teacher actually trying, the Special Ed reading teacher and speech teacher were either bored with or almost threatening in their tone when talking to them. I have nothing against public schools. I myself went to catholic school and public schools plus nearly homeschooled for all of last year of highschool. I even went to college!
Regardless, these kiddos are making progress! My 13 year old, when we started had just barely completed 5th grade and just starting 6th grade. Yet when handed 6th grade work, he couldn’t master it above a 3rd grade level. It has taken nearly 3 years to get him to be able to now do 6th grade level language arts and soon to be 5th grade level math. My 12 year old, when we started just completed 3rd grade and starting 4th grade. Though he was only performing on a kindergarten to 1st grade level. He is able to now complete on his own language arts and math material at a 3rd grade level. My 10 and 9 year olds are the only ones that are on level with the exception of still having difficulty reading, but they are getting better.
Anyways, the 13 and 12 year olds would like more advanced work now. So starting next week, I will be giving them more of their supposed grade level material. Just to give them a taste. I can only hope this doesn’t dampen their progress or spirit when they discover how difficult it will be.
Lawd, I’ve been dragging my feet in getting ready for this coming homeschool year. I’m fully ready now! I’ve made lots of switches trying to find things that will enrich and brighten these kiddos minds and encourage their curiosity of learning.
Our main curriculum we will be using BYL(Build Your Library) for literature, geography, science, poetry, music, art and writing. For language arts we will be using Grammar Galaxy. Also I will be combining TL(Torchlight) with BYL to expand on their writing, spelling and vocabulary. Math we will be using TGTB(The Good and The Beautiful) and alternate with WM(Wild Math) which is an outdoor based curriculum. Now for history we will continue with History Quest. We also have Fun-Schooling Journals for extra language arts, math, life skills and cooking to help break up the monotony of school. Which I believe played a part last homeschool year as to why it was so bad. Thankfully we can put that behind us and learn from it.
Super excited to dive into this year’s curriculum! To start out we are going to be learning about the world around us which has such amazing books. I can’t wait for them to arrive 😁 Anyways this will give us a good start with BYL before dive further in to different levels of BYL with a combination of TL in a few months. So I will post more as books arrive 😃 Unfortunately I need to get my butt in gear and start printing the rest 🤣
I’ve been debating on how to approach this topic… It can be a touchy subject for some. This is our full scoop on a few various learning methods we have gone through.
We have tried virtual learning through the school the first few months after schools were reopened during the pandemic that they were attending at the time. I have to say that I was completely disappointed with the program and the teachers.
The program they used was Schoology and it was either glitching or not loading work once the kids completed. The teachers were a completely different matter. The teachers wanted no distractions and siblings to be quiet. Distractions I understand… Siblings not so much since they all attended the same school they also had work to complete. Not to mention they were 11, 10, 7 and 5 plus they had never used a computer before so I had to be there. The zoom class was a joke, especially when they schedule multiple grades in the same hour. So I would have to chose which child got to zoom with their teacher so the other zoom meetings wouldn’t over talk the others. Not to mention there was a teacher or two that wouldn’t post work until the day of or forget all together to even post it. Then the teachers would email and complain that the work is not being finished. I wonder why?
The final straw to say the least was when I overheard the second oldest’s special education teacher for reading tell him, “that you know this and you wouldn’t be acting like this if you were here.” Now if you know this child, you know he hates cameras, videos and anything that puts him in the spotlight because it sends his anxiety through the roof. What the heck do I know?! I just raise them and live with them. So that was the end of their public schooling via virtual learning or brick and mortar learning experience.
When we finally switched over to homeschooling. I initially started after deschooling for a few months… We did school, but it was literally just the core subjects and nothing to heavy to ease them into the homeschooling process. Then I began to try different methods. Worksheets, unit studies, researching any topic one of them wanted for the week, read alouds and so on. Things were going great, but I thought they were getting enough and falling further behind than what public school had already put a few of them.
So what did I do… I tried to recreate school and teach them traditionally. Boy, after six months of it the kiddos and I were completely burnt out. It was a complete failure that taught me so much. Change my style of teaching and got new curriculum. Since then there has been little to no complaints and hardly any struggles to get through daily lessons.
You got to be flexible! I can’t stress that enough. If it doesn’t work take it out and try something else. Add games, movies, YouTube videos, field trips and so on to cut the mundane out of lessons. I can say without a doubt I wouldn’t change the way we school now.
Curriculum nightmare! Have you ever looked at how much curriculum is out there? It’s even harder to sift through to find a secular curriculum.
Thought I had everything figured out 😂 Wrong! Have to make a few changes since certain curriculum doesn’t coincide with the main curriculum I will be teaching 🤦🏻♀️🤷🏻♀️ Certain curriculum picks were either to advanced or I had already covered it this year. So it’s been back to the drawing board 😩
I’m still sticking with BYL(Build Your Library) and some Fun-schooling Journals (some additional outdoor and extra curricular curriculum). I’m not going to do the TGTB(The Good and The Beautiful) for math or language arts (at least not right now) 😩 What I will be doing is adding TL(Torchlight) and Beowulf Grammar (not completely sure on the Beowulf Grammar or use something else) to expand on their language arts for spelling and grammar. So far I’m excited with my picks and so are the kiddos!
As for math, I’m still planning on getting WM(Wild Math) for their outdoor curriculum. Then the kiddos told me they would like to continue with EP Math(Easy Peasy All in One Homeschool) 🙄 I on the other hand, is thinking of using IXL Math for when the weather is not cooperating. So I’m undecided there so far 🤷🏻♀️😅
Scooter, step-mom asked is if my teacher brain ever stops for a moment 🤣 Apparently it’s a side effect of homeschooling that my brain doesn’t shut down so.