Archive for August, 2009
Not Back-to-School Blog Hop: Curriculum Sale
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The final week of Darcy’s NOT Back to School BlogHop, this week’s curriculum sale provides an opportunity to sell or find something you’re in need of or in need of purging - and hopefully, lets us help each other out a little bit, too.
I don’t really have a lot of things to resell at this point, everything the older two use gets saved and passed down, and my youngest is only just now reaching an age to start using some things. However, there will be many other homeschooling bloggers linking up to the Curriculum Sale so if you’re still missing a few things for your new school year, I encourage you to “hop” over and browse the list of participants. (She keeps the list open all week, so check back each day to check for new bloggers on the list.)
As for me, we’re pretty much set except for needing a Volume 1 The Mystery of History and some kind of 4th grade math. So I’m going to be browsing the links in case someone has these things they need to get rid of. I’m torn between Saxon and Switched on Schoolhouse. I grew up with Saxon in public school and am pleased with it, but I am tempted to try a computer based math curriculum since it’s not a strong point for Princess and she seems to learn well on the computer. However, I see on their website that Saxon also has a DVD of video lessons that might help her to have. What say you experienced homeschoolers? Any thoughts?
It’s been fun Hopping through the month of August with you and meeting some new blogging homeschoolers. Don’t forget to stop by Darcy’s to browse the links!
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First Trip to the Lake
(Our first park day of the year with our homeschooling group was a trip to the lake - my kids first trip to the lake ever.)
Wordless Wednesday hosted by 5 Minutes for Mom
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Princess’ Fall ‘09 Reading List

Wow, y’all really came through on all the book suggestions - and I just want to say a BIG thank you to everyone who pitched in when I asked for help. Y’all rock. The best tip was from Juliana who told me about Scholastic’s Teacher Book Wizard which allows you to search by reading level, interest level, genre or subject. Princess and I sat down with my laptop, the book wizard and y’alls suggestions and right now we have 22 saved to our list.
I’ve chosen 10 for her to read during our first school term (September 1st thru November 28th) and if she gets them completed before then she’ll get a reward at the end. I haven’t decided exactly WHAT yet but I have a few good ideas in mind. And lest you think - that’s A LOT of reading for a 9 year old girl!! Bear in mind that she not only loves to read, but our current bedtime routine calls for her sister going to bed in their room first while she stays up to read until Drama Queen is asleep. That’s at least a half hour of reading every night. Also add to that the fact that Big Daddy has instituted a Reading 4 Computer Time system (earning a minute of PC time for every minute of reading) and well, she has all the incentive she needs right there.
Here’s Princess’ Fall ‘09 Reading List:
- 101 Dalmatians by Dodie Smith
- The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
- Aquamarine by Alice Hoffman
- The Bad Beginning (A Series of Unfortunate Events, Book 1) by Lemony Snicket
- The Black Stallion by Walter Farley
- The Borrowers by Mary Norton
- Hound of the Baskervilles Arthur Conan Doyle and Janice Greene
- Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder
- The Secret Garden Francis Hodgson Burnett
- The Secret of the Old Clock by Carolyn Keene
I already have #’s 9 & 10, I’m pretty sure I also have #1 and #5 - all of them in a box of books stored from my youth. Admittedly, most of them are Nancy Drew hardbacks. I devoured Nancy Drew hardbacks. The rest we’ll pick up from our public library if we can and if not, order them from Amazon or ebay. Of the list above, I haven’t read #s 2,3,4,6 and 8 - but all of them are well recommended (except the mermaid book, which she picked out because she likes mermaids.)
Of course, I’m going to make a chart, and of course she gets to choose the order. We’ll see how this first list goes and see if ten proves too many for one nine year old in one 3 month school quarter, but I don’t think it will be. She reads well and fairly quickly so we’ll see. There’s only a week left until school starts and then we’ll get this show on the road!
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School Routines
In my homeschooling, homekeeping dream of dreams,…I’ve got it all together.
Yeah- I don’t. I have it just enough together to keep it going. Sometimes a little better than that. I’ll give myself a little credit. But really I have two problems - I need self-discipline and I’m lazy. (Those are two separate problems right - or are they the same one? Doesn’t matter. Moving on.)
Most days (though not all, because of the aforementioned two problems), we get up around 8, we eat, dress, and do some morning chores. Before lunch we’ll get started on school work. We’ll work on school for a few hours while Little Prince naps for most of it, breaking for lunch and wrapping up with snack time at 3:00. Snack time is the one thing that we do every single day on time without fail. We have issues.
In the past our school day has changed so much to fit our current needs — which is good because that’s one of the benefits of homeschooling, doing school during the baby’s naptime for example. It can be hard (it might be easier if the schedule didn’t change from year to year) but with littles I focus more on regular routines and less on strict schedules.
This year, though,… this year we’re headed for a more strict routine. This year, we have to. This year, we can. Princess’ will have to spend more time on her school work. Little Prince doesn’t take naps anymore. Drama Queen will be doing more school work. This year, we can start earlier in the day because we won’t be waiting until nap time. This year, we’ll have to or we’ll be working on school through suppertime.
There are changes in the wind.
God has been working on me a lot over the last few years and little by little (and I minuscule piece by minuscule piece - I’m apparently very slow to change and set in my ways) God has been training me in self-discipline. I feel like I should be much farther along than I am by now. Still, I am farther along than I was a few years ago. There is progress. Lately I’ve been really convicted so I’m cranking up the effort dial.
So here’s my planned routine for this year.
- This year, I HAVE to be up by seven (I was actually doing this for a while, I just need to get back into the habit. Six-thirty would be even better.)
- This year, I HAVE to get the kids up BEFORE 8, between 7:30 and 7:45, dressed and beds made and ready to eat at 8am.
- This year, we HAVE to start school at 8:30. Every single morning.
- We will break for lunch at 11:30, we’ll have a snack at 3pm. (It always helps to have something on the list you KNOW you can do.)
- This year, we’ll be doing a modified workbox system with all three kids. Every evening I HAVE to prepare for the next day. We’ll spend however long it takes to get it done.
- We also need to make sure that we get a certain amount of picking up done at night so in the morning we have a clean eating and working space to get a good start on our day without delays.
That’s about as strict as I’m making it. There are plenty of new HAVE TO’s in there already. Perhaps next year we can refine it a little more. In the meantime, getting this done will be hard work, but well worth it!
This post happily submitted to Week 4 of the NOT Back to School Bloghop at My 3 Boybarians.
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Lend me your ears.. Or, er, book suggestions?
Some of you may gasp and shriek, avert your eyes from the carelessness and obvious disdain of all things listworthy. You may find this hard to believe, but the none the less… I (the listmaker) have never really made a Reading List for school.
*shrieeeek!*
Before you click away and run to Google Reader or wherever to unsubscribe, allow me a moment of self-defense…Princess loves to read. She checks out tons of books from the library and buys cheap ones at the thrift store. It’s never really been an issue. And it isn’t really an “issue” now either.. I just feel that we’ve reached an age and grade level where I *do* want to assign specific books to read.
Enter the 2009-2010 Reading List:
Oh, it’s blank. You noticed that huh??
Yeah, see, that’s the thing. I haven’t actually MADE the list yet. I need a bit of help with that. You’ll help me won’t you?? I don’t want to pick a bunch of random books, I want to choose good ones that come recommended from other mothers. I want a variety of styles and I wouldn’ t mind if some of them raised questions. In the end I’m going to select 10 (for starters — we’ll see how long it takes her to read that many) and when she gets to the end she’ll earn a reward.
So you see, they need to be good. Oh, and somewhere around 5th/6th grade reading level. Don’t want them to be TOO easy for her. Off the top of my head, it occurs to me that I don’t believe she’s ever read Black Beauty and I recall a friend telling me recently that her same-aged daughter was reading the Diary of Anne Frank.
What titles can you offer up for the list? Which books did your children enjoy? Which ones did you enjoy as a kid? Leave your suggestions in the comments — pretty please? Thanks, y’all!
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ROLL CALL!
Hey, Homeschool Mom…
What About School Pictures?
As a homeschooler, my walls and wallet aren’t loaded down with yearly school photos -which is in a way a blessing, but school photos are a great way to see how much your child has grown and changed from year to year.
I take PLENTY of photos to chronicle the growth of my children on a monthly and even weekly basis. It’s true. The first day of school is no exception. In the end, yearly photos will show a visual timeline of the changes in my children, school room, and probably some of our school practices as well.
This school year begins on September 1st, and we’ll start our school day off with a special breakfast and some “class” photos like this one from last year:
The Roster:
The Princess
- Age - 9.3
- Favorite Subjects - Handwriting, Reading, Science, Art
- Least Favorite Subject - Math - specifically adding/subtracting/multiplication/division - she likes charts, graphs, probability, etc. Until you have to compute something and then she’d rather not.
- Visual/Spatial Intelligence; Naturalist Intelligence. Favorite methods of learning - on the computer and colorful workbooks.
The Drama Queen
- Age - 6.3
- Favorite Subjects - Math, Social Studies
- Least Favorite Subjects - Reading/Phonics, Handwriting
- Logical/Mathematical Intelligence; Naturalist Intelligence. (so says the quiz she took - I always thought she was a Kinesthetic Learner. Maybe she’s always moving because her brain is always going?) Favorite methods of learning - hands on activities and computer games. She does well with worksheets also.
The Little Prince
- Age - 3.7
- Likes - drawing, painting, play-dough, music, stories, games, movies
- Doesn’t like - Following directions, nap time and sitting still
- Naturalist Intelligence;
Bodily Kinesthetic
I was surprised to discover they all three scored the naturalist intelligence. But then, I shouldn’t be. All of my kids love animals and love being outside. Over this past year my kids have tried to help me grow things in our garden, kept the bird feeders stocked and learned to recognize some of the different birds, and received their first aquarium and learned more about the different kinds of fish (including a sea snail and a fiddler crab.) My oldest loves to help my mom and dad plant new flowers in their garden when we go down there, my middle child was fascinated by the live birth of our kittens a couple years ago and my son wants to know what every kind of bug is.
It really makes me think we should go outside more.
This post has been happily submitted to The NOT Back to School Blog Hop!
In this post: Free learning styles quiz is provided by JumpStart, known for their collection of learning games and their new online 3D Learning World.
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Our First Year of Pre-K; How it all began
Once upon a time, many years ago - 7 and some months - our Little Princess was nearly three years old, and of course she was the smartest, happiest, most artistic 2 year old that I knew. But then, I’m a bit biased.
Although, she really was very happy and was very into arts and crafts - but those are none of the reasons that we began homeschooling her at that age. It did help though, her being incredibly smart and artistic and all.
Truth was, my husband had always talked about homeschooling, and I was more than agreeable.. I just knew how lazy and undisciplined I am and I was expecting our second child a month before her 3rd birthday. I felt like I needed to get started in the habit before Drama Queen arrived instead of trying to do it during all the sleepless nights.
I knew a few other people who were homeschooling their kids about the same age or slightly older than Princess; some of them were doing Five in a Row. I talked with all of them and then I came up with our own plan. For our first year of Pre-K, this is what we did, 30 minutes a day, 4 or 5 days a week.
It all ties together.
It’s no secret that I like it when things match. School is no different. I developed a plan where everything went with and supported everything else. Not unique, I know, but I didn’t know that then. We won’t go back in time and tell the 23 yr old me, okay?
We started with a letter of the alphabet, and we focused on one letter of the alphabet a week. Everything we did that week revolved around that letter. We began by writing our letter of the day on a child-height chalkboard. I would write it and then she would write it. We sounded it out and then we read a story, looking and listening for our letter.
I was using an Old Mother Goose book that was mine when I was a young child. Mother Goose rhymes are abundant with alliteration and it’s easy to find a rhyme that uses your letter of the week. I remember that for the letter B, we read Baa, Baa Black Sheep. I read it to her and then we looked for all the upper and lowercase B’s. She would point out each of them and I would sound it out again.
After we did that, we’d do some kind of craft that involved the letter somehow. For the Baa Baa Black Sheep example, I remember cutting out sheep pieces (black heads and legs, black fluffy bodies) and having her glue them on a piece of paper. At the top I wrote “Baa, Baa.” I had her circle the letter B’s and then write her own letter B at the top of the page. While we did our crafts we could count the pieces and identify colors and shapes. She really liked cutting and gluing and coloring. It was her favorite.
At first that was all we would do and then she would be ready to move on. I would let her play with playdough or water paints for a while until she lost interest and then we’d clean up for the day. It wasn’t long before she was interested in doing a little more.
Only ONE Worksheet?
Soon I found myself at the book section at Wal-Mart, looking for some preschool aged workbooks. I found a book of very simple mazes, a nice preschool workbook for letters and numbers, and a Sesame Street coloring book focusing on the alphabet. They weren’t very thick, but they were inexpensive and I figured she’d mostly scribble all over them anyway.
Boy was I wrong.
She loved the worksheets (she still does.) She went through that whole book of mazes in less than two days. I tried to limit her, but really - Why? She was having so much fun, and she was getting them right, too. How could I refuse? The preschool book lasted a bit longer, but she consumed that one quickly, too. And before long, I was back at Wal-Mart again.
Our Very Own Great Big Book of Everything
If you’ve ever watched the cartoon Stanley, you know all about the Great Big Book of Everything. Princess loved Stanley, she enjoyed learning about the animals. (She also enjoyed Zaboomafoo. It’s a shame those two aren’t still on tv.) Going along with our alphabet centered method of learning (I figured reading was central to basically everything else) we decided to make our own Big Book - to reinforce the alphabet and to throw in a bit of animal science, too.
I made a cover and a back out of sturdy cardboard which we covered and decorated, punched holes in the covers, inserted some hole-punched construction paper and bound it together with yarn. Voila - a great big book. We’d pick an animal that started with our letter of the week and I’d go online and print some pictures and facts about the animal. The first one we did was “Ant.” I don’t remember why. I do remember trying to talk her into choosing “Anteater.” But then I went along with it deciding that we might as well put bugs in our book, too. She cut the pictures out. She glued them on. I wrote the facts on next to the pictures and she wrote “ANT” at the top in big, shaky letters. I also remember that the letter C was “Caterpillar” and she had the cutest way of writing her E’s. But that is neither here nor there.
And for the record, “B” was not a bug, it was a “BEAR.”
My 3 Year Old, The Computer Whiz
Somewhere during that year, my mom bought her a couple of computer games. My First Reading Adventure: Now I’m Reading and My First Math Adventure: Adding & Subtracting. They were really for Kindergarten, but I let her try them anyway. Actually she was able to do them on the easiest level - they were very well structured and I was sad when we updated our computer system and couldn’t use them anymore. (I’m digressing again.)
One day, my grandmother (who had returned to college to learn about computers after her mother and husband had passed away - a year and two years before Princess was born) watched as Princess went to the computer, put her disk in and double clicked the icon on the screen. My grandmother was amazed and said, “Wow. This generation sure is going to know so much more about computers at a young age - more than I’ll ever know.”
She had no idea. Look how far we (America, technology, kids, computers) have come in only the last 7 years!
I didn’t want all of her time spent on the computer. I still don’t. But computers are an integral part of our daily lives these days, and even then I could see the benefit of truly educational computer learning games. What she did with those games strengthened and practiced what she learned on the paper. In fact, she even learned how to add and subtract small numbers by playing that math game, well before I ever got to that on pen and paper. (But let that go down in history - for that was the first and the last time that she ever excelled in math over reading and these days is far more likely to choose reading over math!)
If I suddenly time-warped back to 2003…
Would I do anything differently?
Honestly, not much. The only thing that I wish I had done - and it didn’t even occur to me! - would be to incorporate bible verses in our daily lessons. My approach and reasoning for schooling was slightly less developed in the beginning, and has grown and matured as surely as my children have. Otherwise, I’m going to be doing much the same thing with our 3 year old preschool son this year.
We’re going to do a letter of the week, practice writing the letters and learn to write his name. We’re going to do alphabet related coloring pages and crafts. I might even resurrect the great big book of everything, who knows? But this time we’ll be adding the bible verses in. Both of the girls start their day with a scripture to copy down for their handwriting practice. In the same way, Little Prince will begin his day with a scripture from My ABC Bible Verses: Hiding God’s Word In Little Hearts.
So this year, Little Prince begins his first year of Preschool. Our family has grown, we’re in a different house, our schooling needs have changed, our oldest is nine going on 18 and I’m writing up a plan for our son’s first week of alphabet centered learning. It’s funny how as time goes on things change, but how much things also stay the same.
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In this post:
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Our School Room
Ah yes, the school room! After you’ve poured over all the curriculum choices, the bookkeeping methods and determined whether or not you’re going to buy the large box of plain yellow pencils or the smaller, less frugal but definitely more fun package of Disney Character pencils… you’ll need a place to actually, you know, um.. DO.. school.
Our school room looks amazingly like our dining room. In the beginning it was a corner nook in a large dining room (different house), then a desk/table in the living room, then half of Little Prince’s bedroom, and now we’re back to the dining room again. We go with the flow, we do what works! Speaking of,… there may or may not be a new school room in the near future.. more on that in a minute. (I need you to stick around so you can give me your advice!) Anywho…
Last year was our first full year at the table and it really worked well. Often things were done in the living room on the couch, or in their bedroom on the bed. Again, you know, what works. Last year our large dining room wall was big and white and dingy and badly in need of a new coat of paint so I more than happily covered it in a large world map and plenty of posters and a large construction paper letter “sign” with our school name. It was very school-ish and cute, in a cluttered and fun, did-I-mention-this-wall-NEEDED-to-be-covered sort of way.

As far as DOING school at the table, well.. the first twenty minutes or so were a little crazy. I’d sit all three kids down, even the 2/3 yr old and we’d begin with writing a proverb from the bible. Well, the 3 yr old just colored and pretended to write and read and do school until he got bored. After he went off to play in his room things got considerably less crazy (since he wasn’t being distracting or taking their papers) - which is one of the reasons we started with easy stuff like handwriting. After Little Prince ran off to play, I’d have to relay back and forth between helping Drama Queen and Princess until D.Q. was finished with her k/1st grade work. She’s at a very time intensive stage, learning how to read, having most of the phonetic sounds down but struggling with recall, putting it all together and mostly THE CARE TO TRY. Finally, after she we had dredged our way through her lessons, the younger two would lay down for a movie in the other room and I could focus with Princess on the harder stuff - which is for her, MATH. It was a little crazy, but come on, with three kids, at this age, I would expect nothing less. And it did work. So we kept on.
THIS YEAR.. however.. I have repainted that wall a very nice shade of red. And there is currently.. NOTHING.. on it.


So.
I’ve given this much thought, and I’ve come to the following decision. I’m going to hang a large cork board securely to the wall (once I finally pick it up from a friend’s house!) and everything school-related will go inside of that and the rest of the wall will go unharmed and unmutilated. Sounds nice, doesn’t it? I also need to acquire some kind of bookcase to better house our school books and materials because we’ve out grown the one we’re using. That will go in the corner of the dining room and then it will all be contained right there. My goal is “ALL NEAT AND TIDY AND TUCKED AWAY AND PRETTY.”
I know that makes me sound shallow and like I’m missing the point of homeschooling, but let me say this: I seriously am in need of some order around here and in the homeschooling department, too. I’m suffering from Order Deficiency.
Did I mention that I have three kids??
Now at this point, I have to interrupt myself and tell you about this *appearingly* (yes, I know that’s not a word) wonderful management system called the Workbox system. (There are at least a dozen good links that I can share for that and I WILL, but in another post or I’ll NEVER get this one wrapped up! In the meantime, google that phrase and start reading!) With the workbox system I. Just. Might. Be. Able. To. Achieve. Tidy!! I don’t have room to do it with the big racks and bins, but I can adapt it like others have done and use smaller boxes that will fit on the bookshelf. Oh, I can see it all in my mind’s eye!! Again, for another post. Moving on…
All that to say that I’m very excited and I really need to get a taller upright bookcase and put it in the corner of the dining room so I can set up our new system! Close your eyes and imagine it. A black bookcase, against a red wall, with a black and white damask paper lining the back of the bookcase above the shelves, and many tidy little decorative (not clear but decorated and pretty!) boxes all lined up in a row. And on the red wall a black bulletin board, paper-covered cork, with some cute and home made pushpins we are going to have to make ourselves.
Can’t you SEE it? It will be a school room AND it will be a lovely dining room. I. Can’t. Wait.
Now, I’m going to add the twist. The thing that I mentioned at the very beginning. Big Daddy has a one room office outside. Our landlord used it as school room when they lived here. When we moved in, Big Daddy took it for office, because we didn’t have Little Prince yet and thought we could put the girls beds in one room and make the other a school/playroom. And then Little Prince came along. And all last year Big Daddy kept saying that I should do school out THERE…except that it’s his office (and quite frankly half full of stuff that should be up in the attic) and also that I don’t WANT to be out there for 3-5 hours and with a toddler underfoot? Seriously. How is that going to help? Besides.. The BATHROOM is in HERE!
BUT.. now I’m reconsidering it. I’m going to be setting up a workbox system for Little Prince, too. And it will have things in it like coloring pages and maybe even playdough if I’m feeling brave. (He gets a little exuberant with it!) So while he still won’t take as long as his sisters might, I will have a system in place to occupy AND educate him for part of their school time. And he’ll be 4 soon. And GOD KNOWS that 4 is such a big step up from 3. Am I right??? So now I’m thinking.. Maybe I COULD set up a school room out there. Big Daddy can still have a corner for a desk. He’s not home while we school. We don’t school after work when he’s out there. And if there’s a desk and computer out there still, I can set Little Prince up with a movie and some headphones when he has gotten tired of his Workbox stuff. The only catch is that a friend is coming next week and will be sleeping out there for the next 6 weeks while he works a temp job out here. So I can’t have it at least until then. Until then, I haven’t decided. Should I stay or should I go?
Anybody else out there who has ever tried do school with multiple, young, children in a room apart from the house - HOW DID IT GO?? I’m all ears!!
In the meantime, I’m sticking with my previous plan because a.) we still have to do school before the friend is gone and b.) if I do move out to the office, the school room stuff will just move out there, too. And I’ll just find a large picture to hang on the dining room wall where the corkboard hung to cover the two holes in my paint. And all will be right and well and pretty in the dining room, one way or another.
This post is happily submitted to the NOT Back to School Blog Hop!
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Our 2009-2010 Curriculum
The season is upon us. Not the holiday season, the back to school season! The get back on our school schedule, pull out the new school books, stock up on school supplies and no more sleeping in late season.
Not that we ever sleep in late around here. Ahem.
Typically speaking we take the month of August off after having schooled for the whole remainder of the year. This year, however, we’re still going and we’re doing a bit of something during the month of August to help transition into the new school year.
Princess, Age 9.3
We’re using the 4th Grade Brain Quest Workbook to transition from our 3rd grade curriculum last year to the 4th & 5th grade curriculum for this year. At the beginning of September we’ll begin our new year with the following curriculum:
- Language Arts/Science/Bible: 5th Grade Switched on Schoolhouse
- Math: 4th Grade SOS
- History: The Mystery of History Vol 1; Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego, Treasures of Knowledge, Teacher Edition & My America (an A Beka Book similar to this one.)
- Handwriting: Proverbs from the Bible
- Other:
Drama Queen, Age 6.3
We’re using the 1st Grade Brain Quest Workbook to both review some of the first grade concepts she began last year and also, pick up where she left off and practice the new concepts. Once she really gets the hang of reading, she’ll be able to move on:
- Reading: McGuffey’s Eclectic Primer, Storybook Treasury of Dick and Jane and Friends, and various vintage readers and workbooks
- Handwriting: Proverbs from the Bible
- Grammar (as we get to it): First Language Lessons, Grades 1 and 2
- Math: Spectrum Math Grade 1 (Math U See Manipulatives for hands on)
- Science: Discovering God’s World, participate in experiments with Princess
- Other:
- Health, Safety and Manners 1
- History - TMOH, Carmen Sandiego & My America with Princess
- DK Smart Steps First Grade
- Now I’m Reading!
- Dora’s Backpack Adventure and Lost City Adventure
- Health, Safety and Manners 1
Little Prince, Age 3.7
He also has a Brain Quest Workbook, Pre-K, and he’s doing some early pages out of that as his willingness and ability allows. Other than that his schooling will consist mainly of:
- Learning to write some letters and his name.
- Hands on play time with his blocks, animals and trains.
- Watching Sid the Science Kid, SuperWhy and WordWorld. (Yeah, I just put cartoons down as school curriculum - so what?)
- Playing his Caillou Thinking Skills and Caillou Alphabet games. I’d like to also get the Caillou Counting game.
- Trying to play his Blue’s Clues Kingergarten game.
- Keeping him from destroying school work by entertaining him with all of the above.
A lot of these have been given to us over the years, many of them have been passed down from child to child. Some of them I found on sale somewhere and many of them I hunted down specifically trying to find the best deal. I choose things based on how well they meet my goals for the child and often personal recommendations from friends but if it doesn’t work as well as I’d like or if I find something that looks better, we happily try something new next year. We’re very laid back that way. Well, when I say we, I mean “I.” My husband would prefer I was a little less laid back and so I’m working on that.
How is the upcoming year looking for you? How do you find and choose your curriculum? I’m interested to know.
This post is happily submitted to the NOT Back to School Blog Hop: Curriculum Week at Darcy’s My 3 Boybarians.
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