Category: Homeschool For Success

  • Math for the 21st Century

    Math for the 21st Century

    Why do we use the University of Chicago’s School Mathematics Project (Chicago Math) at Aim Academy Online? Our math teachers have concluded, it’s the best program we’ve found to prepare students for 21st century, college-level mathematics—whether students are heading into the humanities, social sciences, or hard sciences (e.g., engineering and chemistry).

    Developed by one of the nation’s highest ranked mathematics department, the program is backed by decades of research and has undergone rigorous field testing and refinement.

    • Some of the advantages we’ve found in the Chicago Math program include:
    • A focus on teaching students to solve real world problems through mathematics.
    • Students learning to think logically and defend their reasoning.
    • A foundation for algebra is laid in middle school, giving students a leg up before starting a formal algebra course.
    • Statistics is incorporated throughout the curriculum (a must have skill missing from older math programs.)
    • Use of current technologies incorporated throughout, including graphing calculators and Internet applications.

    AAO now offers all of the University of Chicago School Mathematics Project (UCSMP) math courses starting with middle school. Additionally, Delta Math is included in the cost of all Aim Academy math classes. This highly rated online math practice solution gives students unlimited practice problems, immediate feedback, and an individualized progression based on their strengths and weaknesses.

    After completing this sequence of courses, students will be well-prepared for our AP Statistics and the math portions of the ACT and SAT college entrance exams.

    See all AAO math classes.

  • Collegebound? What to Do in 8th Grade

    Collegebound? What to Do in 8th Grade

    The best way to avoid a pile-up senior year is to start planning your child’s high school course of study in 8th grade. You can start earlier, but I found I really didn’t have a good bead on my kids until they were finishing up middle school.

    They’ll be fine if you start later—I only know now what is mission-critical in 8th grade because my four kids are grown. I have enough distance to have some perspective and to pass those insights onto you. We missed the boat in multiple ways, and everyone at my end still turned out to be employable. So, kids do recover from our mess-ups. It’s good for their souls—helps them develop grit.

    However, for those of you who don’t want to intentionally make mistakes, here’s an essential tip for that 8th grade year:

    1. Academically, the most important question to answer at the beginning of 8th grade is How far do I think this child should get in math by the end of high school? The more advanced math courses your child completes, the more doors will open. Kids interested in engineering, science, medicine, or tech all should push to complete introductory calculus, (AP Calculus, ideally). Kids likely to head into the humanities or social sciences; English, pre-law, political science, history, teaching, etc. don’t have to get as far in math. Anything beyond Algebra 2 will work, though having advanced math on the transcript doesn’t hurt. It shows admissions offices that your kid is willing to challenge him or herself—colleges like that. (Try Statistics with the humanities loving kid instead.)
    2. To fit calculus into the high school schedule, Algebra 1 should be completed and mastered then by the end of 8th grade. Find a solid course and make time for your child to prioritize doing well, as Algebra 1 is the foundation of all other math classes. We took two years (7th and 8th) to finish Algebra 1 at our house. Nothing wrong with that. I’d put math first thing in the morning (if that is when your child is most alert) and make sure the time is protected. Have a plan ready for getting help when it is needed. If nothing else goes well in 8th grade other than Algebra 1, I’d consider that a big win.
    3.  Choose a math program you can stick with throughout. While the topics covered in an algebra, geometry, or calculus course are reasonably similar from program to program, the approach to teaching math varies widely and most kids are confused by this. We use University of Chicago Math at Aim Academy because it has so many real-world problems embedded into the program. This can take some getting used to for students coming from math curricula that take a more traditional approach.  Aim Academy math teachers, who are also homeschool parents, did a thorough review of popular math programs for homeschoolers and Chicago Math just makes the most sense for collegebound students. Kids are expected to complete a lot more math now in college than you probably did. And, it is taught more in line with the Chicago approach than a traditional one.

    What to Do in 8th Grade, Part 2

    Algebra 1: Not Just How But Why by Kathryn Gomes, M.Ed.

    Math at Aim Academy

  • Collegebound? What to Do in 8th Grade, Part 2

    Collegebound? What to Do in 8th Grade, Part 2

    Part 2 (You can find Part 1 here.)

    In Part 1, I made the case for math as the most important decision you will make with your collegebound 8th grader. If your child might be heading into a science, technology, engineering, or math (STEM) field, then completing one year of calculus by the end of high school is important. To get that far, Algebra 1 should be completed in 8th grade. Kids more likely to choose a field in the humanities or social sciences will be fine if they only complete Algebra 2 and some trigonometry, which can be covered in a geometry course (though, more math is always advantageous—and statistics for non-STEM minded kids is ideal).

    There is another decision to make in 8th grade that will pay huge benefits down the road: What foreign language your child will study in high school. Most colleges expect to see two years of the same foreign language on the high school transcript as an admissions requirement, and many states require this for high school graduation (Homeschool laws from state to state vary. Even if foreign language is not required where you live, it may be required by the college your child hopes to attend.) My kids all went to different schools, obtained different degrees, and all had a foreign language requirement.

    Most colleges now make a foreign language part of their degree requirements. Students can often place out of this requirement if they have four years of the same foreign language in high school or they score high enough on a placement test. Your child will never regret any college credits or requirements he or she can knock off during high school. This is an essential strategy for graduating from college on time and controlling college costs. (My son Mike completed his final credits in French by hiring a tutor while studying abroad in Thailand by special permission from his university. It made for an interesting story but was stressful to figure out. Word to the wise: get those credits completed early.)

    Fulfilling the foreign language requirement in high school is an easy place to save on college costs and time. The goal is to score high on that placement test, and that’s why starting the four-year sequence of a foreign language in 8th grade is smart—there are so many other things to fit into the high school schedule. Completing the first year of the same foreign language by the end of 8th grade relieves pressure down the line.

    At Aim Academy, our teaching strategy is to give students a longer and slower approach to mastering essential skills and content—an excellent place to see this strategy is in our foreign language department. We have both Spanish and French classes starting in elementary. French 1 and Spanish 1 can both be completed in middle school, and students can take two years to complete the course material if they like. Just like with Algebra 1, taking time to master the introductory material for a foreign language makes all the higher-level courses so much easier!

    We’ve also added American Sign Language recently and now offer ASL 1 and ASL 2. In the past, American Sign Language was not always accepted as fulfillment of the language requirement, but most schools have changed their policy. Here is a list of schools that accept American Sign Language.

    One language that may not be accepted is Latin. Check the website of the schools your child might be interested in attending. The rationale is that Latin is not a modern language–no one is speaking it these days. The rise in foreign language requirements is because our kids are entering a global marketplace–the ability to speak a second (or even third) modern language adds versatility to your child’s resume. While Latin has many benefits, it doesn’t help in this regard. That’s why we chose a romance language–French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, and Romanian–these all have Latin as their base but have the added benefit of being living languages, which my kids used then in their world travels and to differentiate themselves in the job market.

    What to Do in 9th Grade, Part 1

    Three BIG Reasons Kids Need to Learn a Foreign Language

    Foreign Language Classes at Aim Academy

  • Collegebound? What to Do in 9th Grade

    Collegebound? What to Do in 9th Grade

    Read Part 1 and Part 2 here. Get your high school planning grid here.

    Presuming you have committed to a high school math program and foreign language in 8th grade, then here’s what I’d like to suggest as your no. 1 decision for 9th grade:

    Choose a class or curriculum that will teach your child to write well—even if your kid is possibly heading into a STEM-related field.

    Collegebound kids will do a lot of writing as part of the admissions process and even more writing once they hit campus. AP exams require a lot of writing too, and those will be critical to earning college credits during high school (something your child will never regret.) Finally, writing well will set your child apart from most applicants—it’s not a common strength, unfortunately, among American teens.

    Why start this early in high school? Because writing well takes practice and maturity. A writing-intensive program should be sustained throughout high school, and 9th grade is when the groundwork is laid (if not sooner).

    The first step is to learn the mechanics of writing well, followed by learning to think deeply and broadly as your teen matures (FYI, a reading-intensive program helps with the latter).

    The target for your collegebound student?

    By the beginning of the senior year, your teen can write compelling, thoughtful, and original essays that show his or her intellectual promise. Not only is this important for writing admissions essays, but more so, because writing well is a by-product of thinking well.

    If you want to send your child out the door confident that she or he knows how to think critically and reflectively about ideas and issues, then run a writing-intensive program throughout high school. What’s the connection? Writing is a powerful learning tool. It forces us to perform complex cognitive tasks as we decide what to say and how to say it. Composing requires deep processing and that reinforces learning and triggers insights and connections. I’d so much rather ask students to write essays as a measure of what they know than take a test. Briefly recapping in a writing journal every day—here’s what I learned, for example—is also more powerful and enduring than traditional outlining. You want your kids to be mixing what they learn from others with what they think and ponder. We’re raising independent learners who will change the world, right? Not parrots.

    What to Do in 9th Grade, Part 2

    You might also like: How to Evaluate What Your Kids Write

    Check out these writing-intensive classes for 9th graders:

  • Collegebound? What to Do in 9th Grade, Part 2

    Collegebound? What to Do in 9th Grade, Part 2

    This is the fourth in a series of decisions to make for the collegebound student. See the previous mission-critical decisions here, here, and here. Grab your planning grid here.

    The best advice I have for teens who want to get into the college of their choice and earn the maximum amount of scholarship money is this: Approach high school like an athlete in training. Begin with the end in mind. Be strategic and intentional. Focus on the essentials. Don’t sweat the little stuff. Give yourself as much time as possible to get into the best academic shape of your life.

    Every decision you make about your academics, your extra-curriculars, your summer break, and where you work should set you up to attain the goals you have for yourself post high school.

    Mom’s and Dad’s job: To support your ambitions, not determine them.

    And what about the teen who just isn’t sure, or focused, or motivated? (Certainly a large portion, especially early in high school!) Parents, you can best help by assuming the role of a coach who inspires, who disciplines, who provides the training, schedule, and equipment, and who red shirts an athlete who is just on her or his own timeline. (That might mean taking 5 years for high school or a gap year between graduation and college entrance.)

    One thing a good coach doesn’t do is play the game for the team or drag a reluctant player through the motions.

    With that framework in mind, let’s look at the second most important decision to make in 9th grade (or whenever your child is ready to start assuming responsibilities for her or his high school career.)

    As early as possible, determine the Advance Placement (AP) or College-Level Examination Program (CLEP) exams your collegebound teen should start preparing for. Scoring high on these exams earns your child college credit at the lowest price possible and ticks off credits toward a degree early. Almost all universities and colleges in the U.S. award credit (without charging you for this). The score your child must earn, and the amount of credit received, will be listed on the school’s website.

    Because top scores are so valuable in terms of college admissions, college credit, and scholarship consideration, the astute student will give herself or himself several years to master the content and skills on the target exams. That means taking classes or using curriculum in 9th and 10th grade that lay a solid foundation for the content and skills on the intended CLEP or AP exam.

    For example, if your child might eventually sit for the AP U.S. History exam, complete a solid high school-level American history course in 9th or 10th grade, then take an AP U.S. History course in 11th or 12th, followed by the AP U.S. History exam. Use materials in both the high school history course and the AP course aligned with the AP U.S. History course description available on the CollegeBoard’s AP Central website.

    You might also want to invest in a few study aids or a vocabulary program aligned with the exams your child is targeting—nothing too intense, just some fun resources that get your kid familiar with the terms and key concepts in a particular subject area—long, slow training is better than a short, fast (cramming) approach to mastering material. Quizlet or Brainscape Academy both provide online AP flashcards or you can purchase print versions from Barron’s on Amazon, as examples. Documentaries are another excellent resource for laying down fundamental understanding in a subject area—it’s always advantageous to get a broad global view of a subject before diving into the specifics.

    CLEP exams are shorter and easier than AP exams—most are simply a computer-based series of multiple-choice questions—so any collegebound student can succeed on these. Students can retake the CLEP exams until they get their desired score, and exams are taken at your convenience at a local test center. You register online for the exam (bypassing negotiating with a local school official as you must to sit for an AP exam). CLEP exams can also be taken during college (that’s when my sons used them). So they are a great option if the goal is merely to earn college credit. Course descriptions for CLEP exams can be found here.

    The AP exams are a much better choice for students seeking scholarship money. (Because they are more rigorous, decision-makers regard them as a better measure of a student’s academic promise.)

    How many AP or CLEP exams should your teen take in high school? That number should be driven by your teen’s interest in the subject matter and her or his willingness to prepare for the exam. It is better to take a few and score high than a lot and score middling (the exception is CLEP exams taken to earn credit and not intended to be reported for college admissions.)

    I highly recommend the AP English Language exam for ALL collegebound teens because preparing for that will help your child learn to write well (the no. 1 goal for 9th grade). And that skill is going to come in handy in multiple places during the college admissions process! AP English Language will also help your child learn to read critically and expand her or his vocabulary—all skills measured on the SAT and ACT entrance exams, so prepping for this one exam covers several essential bases for you.

    What to Do in 10th Grade, Part 1

    Take a look at these foundational courses at Aim Academy for 9th and 10th graders and their corresponding AP course:

    U.S. HISTORY AP US HISTORY
    INTRO TO US GOVERNMENT AP US GOVERNMENT
    INTRO TO ECONOMICS AP MICROECONOMICS
    PHYSICS AP PHYSICS 1
    PRE-CALCULUS W STATISTICS AP CALCULUS
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AP ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
    INTRO TO LITERATURE AND ACADEMIC WRITING AP ENGLISH LANGUAGE
    AMERICAN LITERATURE
    BRITISH LITERATURE
    AP ENGLISH LITERATURE