Home Ed Kindergarten?

The question came up recently on an elist I’m on about Kindergarten. Below is my reply. (BTW, everything here doubly applies to “homeschool pre-school”.)

We don’t “do” Kindergarten,* but continue informal learning, with no “planning and scheduling” until they are about age 6-8. If they are interested in something, we work on learning it.

They are involved in our Family Worship, Bible Study and Recitation, and Character studies time.** If they want to draw a picture or other notebooking page, they can. They usually ask for their own “Notebook” binder when they are about 3. They are also a part of Family read-aloud times, as well as individual times of reading with them.

They learn letter sounds along the way as we are reading, and start writing when they want to learn. I teach them proper letter formation (and pencil hold,) but they do most of their early writing “in the air” (finger writing) or in a salt tray. When they know many letter sounds, and are ready, they start blending and spelling.

They also pick up quantity solving just around the house, as we go about our day. We talk about “calendar” and “time” things, as well as money and measuring things.

They narrate informally on their own.

And I think that’s about it. It covers all the “subjects” but isn’t following any curriculum or structured formal study. (Our state requires “filing” when they are 7, but we can cover all the subjects they want us to do, informally through real life, even if we don’t start structured studies then.) Lots of games and play, exploring and family time. Lots of helping and beginning household responsibilities.

See Sorting it Out Pulling it Together (soon to be Freedom & Simplicity™ for Beginners) or our other resources for young learners if you need more information to give you the confidence to do this. You really do NOT need, not do I recommend, curriculum for a 5 year old.

*Note: Kindergarten – For a highly enlightening research project, look up the source, origin, and intent/purpose for this modern, progressive idea.

** Note: You don’t need a packaged curriculum for these things.

Countdown – 10-9 – iMindMap

9 more days until the release of iMindMap 4! On April 30, Buzan will release v4 of iMindMap. But you don’t have to wait until then. Buy version 3 today and you will get a FREE UPGRADE to version 4 when it is released.

iMindMap is the computer app we use to make our Learning Maps™ for Lifestyle Education through Discipleship™.  “A Learning Map™ is an AWESOME and POWERFUL tool for learning, for gaining and retaining understanding! It is a natural with biblical principles learning because it shows relationships!”

iMindMap is my favorite computer mind mapping app. (I should know I’ve tried all of them I know about, and own 4 different “not-free” programs.) If you want to know more about Learning Maps™, read our article here and follow the links there back to posts on this blog, for even more info.

iMindMap - Free Download

Special Offer for ALL new users: Buy iMindMap V3.1 (any Edition – Elements, Professional or Ultimate) before end of April and receive iMindMap V4 (same Edition) for FREE upon release! Download v3 today to give it a try for FREE!

 

He is Risen!

We serve a Risen Savior, who suffered and died for our sins, but rose
to life victorious over sin, death, and hell, that we who believe in
Him would also have eternal life.
Halleluia!

Why seek ye the living among the dead? He is not here, but is risen:
Luke 24:5-6

May you all have a Blessed Resurrection Day!

If you haven’t been by our Clear Vision [update: Amazing Grace] blog for a while, check out our last four posts on What is the Gospel?

 

Ultimate Lapbooking

Lapbooking is one of our favorite activities for documenting our studies. Especially with our younger children, but the older ones enjoy it too. We prefer to design our own Lapbooks, to document our own studies. Lapbooks then become a creative “narration” of what the child personally learned from our studies, and the unique, creative design is part of the child’s learning process also. But just because we enjoy designing our own instead of buying prepackaged lapbook kits, doesn’t mean I don’t like to get other ideas for incorporating in our lapbooks.

862001: The Ultimate Lap Book HandbookRecently I read Tammy Duby’s (from Tobin’s Lab) Ultimate Lap Book™ Handbook and watched the companion DVD, Tammy Teaches Lap Books™. Have you been holding back on lapbooking? Just not sure how to begin? In Tammy’s Ultimate Handbook she teaches you a few basic folds, (the ones you will use most often,) and then gives you a lot of practical ideas for applying them. But, what makes this book ULTIMATE is that it includes not only Lap Book™ instructions and ideas, but other unique book making ideas also. Plenty of practical applications for Pizza books, Peek-a-Boo books, Stick books, and more are also included, as well as instructions for making them. Need creative ideas for studies and subjects? They’re in there. In the DVD Tammy shows you plenty of ideas put to use in real lapbooks – from a pile of kid-produced lapbooks.

I really enjoyed these resources and recommend them to anyone wanting to know more about producing their own lapbooks.

Learning to Write – Wrong

Time to put those convention tips I’ve been writing to use! Our state Home School Convention starts tomorrow.

123620: Teaching Writing: Structure and Style--10 DVD"s and WorkbookToday I attended an excellent writing class with Andrew Pudewa of
Institute for Excellence in Writing
. If you aren’t familiar with Mr. Pudewa or IEW, you’ve got to check them out. He is a fantastic teacher and speaker.

The class had a focus on writing for the SAT Essay. The way to write an SAT Essay, to get a good score, goes against most of what is done in real world writing, which made it hard for me to do. Good thing I don’t plan to take the SAT.

We didn’t just learn to write wrong though. Mr. Pudewa shared much on writing right also. DD said it was too much to take in in one day and then actually start applying. But we had a great full day learning, and she has much she can take home and gradually put into practice.

Click to check out writing resources from
Institute for Excellence in Writing
.

 

Beginning Reading

In this series, we’ll follow the steps to learning to read. Where to start? Reading really good books to your child, talking with your child, and teaching your child to listen. Today let’s take a look at a couple of ways we can work on the listening part of this.

Teach your child to listen.  Listen to sounds, wherever you are; what do you hear?  “Can you repeat the sound?” (Have him try to mimic animal sounds, machine sounds, weather sounds, etc.)  “Can you describe the sounds?” (What does it sound like?) Teach him to repeat patterns or sequences (clapping or saying words or numbers, etc.)

©  – from Freedom & Simplicity™ in Reading

In addition to general sounds around him, you can help him begin to listen for sounds in words.

Auditory Recognition:
In Phase One the child learns to recognize various sounds auditorily. In other words, he learns to listen for the sounds in words, and can tell when 2 sounds are the same or are different.  It is a game that can be started when the child is quite young, if it is kept a game.  This Phase is for learning the single consonant sounds, but of course it is OK if your child learns to recognize other, not as easy to distinguish sounds.  There are over 40 sounds in our English language.  This auditory recognition is taught before letter recognition.  After the child is able to distinguish the sounds he hears, you will begin teaching him the letters that represent those sounds, in Phase Two.

©  – from Freedom & Simplicity™ in Reading

Watch our L.E.D. Store for Freedom & Simplicity™ in Reading – Learning and Teaching Reading Through Biblical Principles – Book 1.


Convention Shopping Tips 5

This post concludes our 7 part series on “Homeschool Conventions.” Go to the first post here.

Many home educator’s have one thing in mind when they begin looking for resources – cheap! Most even have a good excuse for doing so. Many homeschoolers have a limited single income, and a larger than average family, and they have learned that those funds have to really stretch. But I want to challenge your thinking – as God has not called us to be cheap, but to be good stewards; and they are not one and the same thing. He also has given us a higher calling, to integrity.

Stewardship is glorifying God with our money and possessions. It is being wise in our purchases. It is not just getting the “cheapest price” (or selling at the highest dollar we can get) while allowing our integrity to wane.

Over the years I’ve seen and heard lack of Christian ethics when it comes to purchasing home ed resources – sadly, many more times than it should be for “Christians.” It might be as a seller, in “masking” the poor quality/condition or important information, such as version, of a resource, they are trying to sell used. Or it might be as a buyer, in not giving the “workman” his “due wages”. Here are a couple tips to help you maintain your integrity in buying and selling home ed resources.

1. As a seller of your used materials, fairly represent and fairly price your items. This doesn’t mean you have to give them away or under-price them. Just be fair. Too many times I hear from people who were “ripped off” by “Christian” sellers. The bottom line is always to bless. As a seller bless others as you have been blessed – and if you have made a mistake or were ripped off yourself, humbly accept the lesson learned, and still bless.
2. As a buyer, purchase from those who have invested their time and money in you, especially in giving you personal information. The web has provided a way of finding out a lot about home ed resources without taking someone’s time. You can browse and read what many have to say about a resource. You can browse a curriculum hall that way too. If you need no more information, purchase where you can get the best price.

But when your decision requires a “bit more info”, take into consideration who has given you “free” information and their time to help you decide what to purchase. Did you spend time at a convention booth or workshop asking questions,  or email them questions which they answered? If so, that vendor is the one that has earned your sale, even if they don’t have the cheapest price. They have invested in you, now you should invest in them. It isn’t “good stewardship” to get info from one company then buy from a cheaper company. It is robbing the seller of the wages they have earned, and acting without integrity. Again, as a buyer, bless those who bless you. Purchase from those who provide you with the info you need to make your decision, especially personal info.
Whether you’re buying or selling, make integrity more than the monetary bottom line your primary factor.

Now, go browse those internet sites – including ours! Find the resources you’re interested in. Then, at convention or through email, ask the seller that you will buy from any further questions you have. Then spend those hard earned, sometimes hard to take from other budget needs, dollars in a wise way, by being both fair and a good steward.

Have a great time at convention – and get some great resources! And I hope you’ve found the information here worthy, and will consider purchasing through us.

 

Convention Shopping Tips 4

Avoiding Mistakes

As I said yesterday, expect to make shopping mistakes. They are pretty much inevitable. But today I want to give you some tips to help reduce those mistakes as much as possible.

Renewing our Mind to God’s purposes and plans for our family’s education is the primary factor in determining what resources will work for us. Having a well developed personal Philosophy of Education – which is just another way of saying, knowing how God wants you to teach your children – will keep you from making mistakes more than anything else. We have developed a set of guidelines that help us stay within our philosophy. There are so many tempting things out there that sound soooo good, we can easily get distracted and buy things that don’t “fit” our family.

We try to follow each of these resource qualifications for every learning resource purchase, although #3 and #4 don’t always apply, #1, 2, and 5 are musts! We use almost all Real Resources – Living Books (great literature) as well as Skills Resources for teaching “how to” (whether that be math, sewing, phonics, cooking, writing, car repair, etc.) Only resources that fit these guidelines are worth spending our hard earned, many times hard-to-come-by, dollars on.

Other things – such as an occasional “fluff” or extra resource/book “just for fun” must come out of extra money (a rare thing) or from the library. I really don’t like spending money on something that isn’t worth keeping in our own family library. They aren’t worth the money or space they take up, let alone the time wasted on them. We do all really need to be watchful that we Redeem that Time that the Lord has given us, and not waste it on vanity.

Here’s the qualifications I think through when deciding what resources to buy. They are a part (the 5th principle) of the “8 Principles of L.E.D.” (which you can order on audio from us). They should be applicable for anyone following a Lifestyle Education through Discipleship™.
5 Qualifications for L.E.D. Resources:

1. Relational & Relative – (individualized vs. canned) It must be something that speaks into our lives, not just the “latest, greatest everyone is raving about it” resource. Does it further the goals God has given us for our family’s education? (not just what someone else says we should be learning.) Is it based on premises we believe in? (Biblical worldview.) Does it follow the way we believe teaching and learning are best accomplished? (not textbooks/ workbooks.) Does it promote adaptation to individual circumstances? (or is it written to be used in a lock-step way – daily, scripted lessons, etc.?) Does it fit our lifestyle?

2. Multi-level – Is it something that can be used by many different ages? (or is it “grade leveled”?) Most Living Books fit into this. A timeless, living book can be enjoyed by everyone in the family, but even Skills Resources should cover all aspects of the topic, not just 1st grade, 2nd grade. We don’t use grade levels in our family’s education and don’t care for resources that are written as such. Some resources may contain only “Introductory” level information, etc. but this isn’t the same as “grade level” resources.

3. Multi-disciplinary – Is it something that crosses the “subject” lines? (or does it only cover one “subject”?) Many Real Resources are topical, they only cover one topic, but that doesn’t mean they only cover one “school subject”. Obviously all “Living Books” fit into this category. Even resources like dictionaries and such will be used in all of learning. Most non-textbook resources don’t have to be pegged into a “subject” hole. But, just as obvious, things like a Math book will only cover Math.

4. Multi-sensory – Does it teach through more than one sense? If it’s a Skill-learning Resource or teaching guide, does it give ideas for presenting material in more than one way, to reach learners of various types?

5. Re-usable – Will it be able to be re-used by others, as well as the original student? (or will it be consumed and thrown away when done with?) Real resources are ones that will be used over and over and are worth saving and using again. Even better yet, they will promote the student producing something worth saving. I once heard a quote, from ages gone by, that any book worth reading once is worth reading 3 times. And, that we need to read them (or listen, if it’s an audio – in these modern times) at least 3 times before we really “get” it. I really believe it. I don’t think a resource is a good one, if it’s something I’m going to turn around and get rid of as soon as we’ve “gone
through it”. It should be worth saving for future reading and reference.

Tomorrow we will finish up this series by discussing Homeschool Stewardship and Ethics in Curriculum Shopping.

 

Convention Shopping Tips 3

Continued from the past two days, when we talked about Before and At the Convention Shopping Tips.

Today we’ll look at After the Convention.

AFTER the CONVENTION:
1. If you’ve held off your purchases and not bought at the convention, pray (and research more if needed) until you feel sure, then order. If you were unable to see something at the convention, but you still feel it may be best, order it. Don’t choose what you feel is going to be second best just because you haven’t seen what you really wanted to try. Most companies have return policies, on curriculum type things anyhow, and it is better to look and pay a return fee if it isn’t going to work, than to keep trying other things, and always wondering if this other would have been better.

One great advantage we have now over when these posts were originally written 7 years ago, is online discussion groups have really grown in the area of home education. You can talk to a lot of different users and get their opinions and reviews of products. If you belong to groups that have the same philosophy of (beliefs about) education as you do, they can be a great source of product reviews that may work for your family.

2. Realize that mistakes will be made! It is part of learning and growing – and learning and growing involve costs. Don’t throw out an apparent mistake at the first sign of difficulty. Pray about how (if) it can be adapted to fit your goals/methods, or if it is indeed what God wants but is going to require you to stretch and grow. Give it some time, and really try to utilize it, especially if it fits into your “guidelines”.

3. If you truly make a mistake, repent, spend more time – prayer and research – finding the replacement. Don’t beat yourself up. Go back to #2 – Realize that mistakes will be made! Sell the old one on a curriculum swap e-list or local used book fair. Chalk it up to experience. But be careful not to get in the rut of always jumping from one thing to another, and never truly implementing anything, always jumping to the newer, better resource, in looking for the answer. If this is happening, go back to the beginning and spend more time Renewing Your Mind and getting God’s direction.

4. Also realize that as you grow, the “Perfect Resource” that is perfect this year, may not be “perfect” next year or 5 years from now. You will be growing and continually renewing and adapting. Start where you’re at and grow from there. Sell, give or throw away, whatever no longer fits into your philosophy and goals and move on. But try to purchase things you won’t “outgrow”, like the Real Resources/ Living Books things the guidelines in tomorrow’s post suggest.

Check back tomorrow for tips in avoiding curriculum shopping mistakes.