Briarwood Hollow Curriculum, Curriculum, Game & Sensory Play, Homeschool, Learning

Real-Life Math Activities: Seventh Grade to Twelveth Grade

Seventh Grade

Household Budgeting

Instructions:

  1. Create a basic monthly household budget.
  2. Calculate income, bills, groceries, and savings.
  3. Adjust categories to stay within budget.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Use simplified, color-coded budgeting forms.
  • Provide visual samples and guided practice.
  • Start with a smaller scale (weekly budgets).

Meal Planning for a Week

Instructions:

  1. Plan three meals per day for a week.
  2. Calculate grocery lists and costs.
  3. Adjust plan to fit budget.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Offer meal templates with pre-filled options.
  • Use pictures for menu choices.
  • Focus on 2-3 meals at a time if needed.

Eighth Grade

Planning a Small Business

Instructions:

  1. Create a plan for a small business (lemonade stand, pet sitting, etc.).
  2. Budget for supplies, advertising, and profits.
  3. Track earnings and expenses.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Use pre-made templates with step-by-step questions.
  • Focus on fewer variables for easier calculations.
  • Provide visual aids like pie charts.

Tracking Household Energy Use

Instructions:

  1. Record daily energy use from utility bills.
  2. Calculate weekly and monthly consumption.
  3. Propose ways to reduce energy costs.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Use visual energy charts.
  • Focus on simple comparisons (before/after changes).
  • Provide guided interpretation of utility bills.

Ninth Grade

Managing a Checking Account

Instructions:

  1. Track deposits, withdrawals, and balances.
  2. Reconcile a monthly bank statement.
  3. Practice using checks and debit registers.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Use mock accounts with visual check registers.
  • Provide step-by-step reconciliation guides.
  • Focus on one transaction type at a time.

Trip Planning with Budgets

Instructions:

  1. Plan a trip to a destination of choice.
  2. Budget travel, lodging, food, and activities.
  3. Calculate total costs and compare travel options.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Provide budget templates.
  • Focus on simplified trip components first.
  • Allow calculator use and visual supports.

Tenth Grade

Tax Preparation Basics

Instructions:

  1. Introduce basic tax forms and concepts.
  2. Complete a mock tax return using provided data.
  3. Discuss gross income, deductions, and net income.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Use color-coded forms with simplified examples.
  • Break the process into single-step lessons.
  • Offer guided practice with immediate feedback.

Comparing Service Providers

Instructions:

  1. Compare prices for internet, phone, or utilities.
  2. Calculate total annual costs and potential savings.
  3. Present findings in chart form.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Provide templates for cost comparison.
  • Use visual supports to compare options.
  • Limit to 2-3 providers initially.

Eleventh Grade

Car Ownership Costs

Instructions:

  1. Calculate purchase price, insurance, fuel, and maintenance costs.
  2. Compare different vehicle options.
  3. Create a monthly budget for ownership.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Provide step-by-step calculation guides.
  • Focus on fewer variables.
  • Use calculators and visual aids.

College Cost Planning

Instructions:

  1. Research tuition, housing, books, and fees.
  2. Calculate total annual and degree costs.
  3. Explore scholarship and financial aid options.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Use simplified college cost worksheets.
  • Limit research to local schools.
  • Provide structured comparison charts.

Twelfth Grade

Apartment Rental Budget

Instructions:

  1. Research rental costs in local areas.
  2. Budget for rent, utilities, food, and transportation.
  3. Create a monthly budget and savings plan.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Use real estate sites with simplified listings.
  • Provide templates for monthly budgeting.
  • Offer guided calculations and visual supports.

Long-Term Financial Planning

Instructions:

  1. Discuss savings, investment basics, and retirement planning.
  2. Create a sample long-term savings goal and timeline.
  3. Use compound interest calculators to explore growth.

Special Needs Adaptations:

  • Use simple savings plans with visual timelines.
  • Provide pre-filled examples.
  • Break concepts into manageable lessons.
Build Your Library, Curriculum, Curriculum Picks, Grammar Galaxy, My Thoughts, The Good and The Beautiful

Gearing Up for the New Homeschool Year

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 🤣

Build Your Library, Curriculum, Curriculum Picks, Fun-School Journals, Homeschool, My Thoughts, Planning Next Year, Wild Math

Curriculum Nightmare!

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.

Curriculum Picks, My Thoughts

Working on Curriculum Picks…

Got the main curriculum for the boys bought, which is BYL for Reading, History (History Quest), and Science (R.E.A.L. Science), plus downloaded PDFs of TGTB for Language Arts and Math( which I’m still not sure if I will keep if doesn’t work with everything else), finally a few Fun-schooling Journals extra curricular subjects for the next school year!

Still need to get WM for outdoor math curriculum. Need to get some books, regular school supplies, might see about getting a projector 🤔

Build Your Library, Curriculum, Easy Peasy All in One Homeschool, Fun-School Journals, History Quest, Wild Math

Curriculum so NOT working…

How I originally started teaching my kiddos was very eclectic. A lot of Unit Studies and child lead curriculum. For the 2021-2022 school year I went the more traditional route. Which you can read about in an earlier post. It worked for the first several months, but now unfortunately has run out of steam.

We are going to change things up and start fresh.

We have decided to go with Wild Math, Fun-schooling Journals(Core Journals, Math, Language Arts and and an elective journal) and Build Your Library (BYL) along with History Quest and R.E.A.L. Science Odyssey (RSO) for our new learning material.

It’s goes along line of how I first started homeschooling them. Which is more of a Charlotte Mason/Unschooling Secular way of homeschooling I used, which was more hands-on and I myself even enjoyed it. I don’t know why I decided to change it! WHAT WAS I THINKING?!

The beginning of 2021-2022 school year I decided to go a traditional route using Easy Peasy All-In-One Homeschool as our main curriculum along with other workbooks I thought they might learn a little more with. I was right, but also wrong at the same time.

The reason for this big change is… My kiddos have recently told me the curriculum is too boring and too easy. It’s basically not a good fit. Especially if they they’re not getting any benefits from it.

So I’m doing a major overhaul of our curriculum and will be reverting back to how I started since they enjoyed(so did I) and seemed to learn better and even more that way.

Curriculum, Curriculum Review, Homeschool, Tuttle Twins

The Golden Rule

This is book 6 in The Tuttle Twins series.

This is a cute little series that brings to life old morals and so much more. Today, we dived into The Golden Rule. Going over the pdf workbook the kiddos today had to make up a team chant. This is what they came up with…

We are the Lava Kids,
Using our smarts to stay strong,
Homeschooling is our way,
Learning, laughing and playing all day long.

The Tuttle Twins books are definitely worth it. They teach a wide variety of lessons that most don’t get in school nowadays

Carson-Dellosa, Curriculum, Easy Peasy All in One Homeschool, Homeschool

Gearing up for Our First Official Year of Homeschooling

Well I’ve narrowed down my curriculum choices. This coming school year we will be using a combination of School Zone, Carson-Dellosa, Story of the World, and Easy Peasy All in One Homeschool for different subjects.

We tried 180 Days curriculum for math this last go around and it just didn’t work out for the boys. Ended up every two weeks buying unit studies and downloading curriculum from TpT, Moby Max, Pinterest and random homeschooling websites, which I’ll still be using for certain assignments and special projects. I think it’s time to buckle down and try a more traditional route.

Regardless this time around I will have back up material in case something doesn’t work out. Now these are just the workbooks and some books. I’m still in the process of gather more books and additional material. My Amazon cart is already filled for next purchase 🤦🏻‍♀️☺️ Can’t wait for July!😍