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Category: Homeschool For Success
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Transcript Maker
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You will find sample transcripts in a variety of forms in the appendix of The Ultimate Guide to Homeschooling Teens.
An entrepreneurial homeschool grad has created this elegant online tool that will produce a sufficient transcript for all your needs for free. For a modest price, you can add more detail.
Aim Academy provides students with a transcript of coursework upon request.
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Meet the Teachers: Susan Spivey
This is our second installment in our series of teacher interviews. Susan Spivey currently teaches British Literature and will be adding American Literature for the 2016-2016 school year. In this video she describes her teaching style and many of the projects in her class.
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3 Things to Know About the Redesigned SAT
From Kathryn Gomes, AIM Academy math teacher
- The new test launches March 2016.
The PSAT aligned with the new SAT this fall. Students can take the current version of the SAT until March (and if you are a senior, it might be wise to take your last SAT exam before then). Beginning with the March test dates, the SAT returns to the 1600 point scale and the essay becomes optional. The change is major—the content and the format will change so educate yourself now and start making a plan. - You have to complete one math test without a calculator.
The test is short with only two math sections; however, one of them prohibits the use of a calculator. This section is no joke. . . I was shocked when I took the practice test. The test makers didn’t shy away from fractions, decimals, and really large numbers on this section. Don’t sit for this exam without brushing up on your basic arithmetic skills. - It is an exam you can prepare for.
The College Board hasn’t just revamped the test; they’re reshaping the way we think about test preparation and college-ready assessment. With their twitter campaign #skilledit, they repeatedly emphasize that anyone can succeed on the test if they put in the time and the hard work. There are practice problems, full length tests, and details on the College Board’s website. If you sign up through Khan Academy, you will be given videos to watch and practice problems to work through that are tailored to your needs. And all of this is now free.
My redesigned SAT math prep course, which incorporates all the changes, begins January 4, 2016. Registration is open now. After a pretest, students receive a customized study plan for the course. In addition to the helpful tools at Khan Academy, my students have access to more than twenty of my own videos that address all math topics in depth and review foundational skills students may be lacking. Additionally, the weekly live sessions provide students with immediate feedback and help them pinpoint their weaknesses. With 7 weeks of accountability and guided study my students are confident when they sit for the test. For more information and student reviews visit my site:
https://www.kathryngomes.com/sat-math-prep/
- The new test launches March 2016.
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Q&A with Debra: handling doldrums and feeling behind
Is it spring yet? Today, I address some of the most common and pressing quandaries of springtime homeschooling…
Q: Everyone around here is either burned out or has spring fever, myself included. How do you find motivation this time of year?
A: Do something new. Decide to take a week and totally break the routine. Brainstorm for ideas with your kids; ask them “what can we do to break the monotony?” You can do a unit study or a service project in your neighborhood. Study the history of your town or go on a field trip. Your break can be as simple as putting aside the regular stuff and just reading a really good book together.
Or tell your kids that you’re taking a break to become experts on something new. And then all of you (mom included) choose a topic and check out books from the library. After learning about your topics, everyone gives a lecture, pretending to be a professor and teaching the others about your topic.
Whatever you do, just make a memorable moment. Those are the things kids remember anyway — exceptions! And then after you’ve had a break, go back to the grind. But you’ll find that those breaks really do energize you.
Q: Help! I just realized my kid is behind in our curriculum. What should I do?
A: When parents tell me a child is behind, I first want to know why the parent thinks so. Is it possible the child is just not developmentally ready for the task at hand? While children go through the same developmental steps in the same order, the pace at which they proceed can vary dramatically. Oh boy — I wish I could convince parents to get comfortable with this truth. God did not design our kids to do the same exact things by 8 years and 2 months. Standardization is a man-centered invention because we are trying to mass educate kids. They aren’t built that way. They are designed for an individualized education. Ask yourself, is my child developmentally ready for this task or subject? What indication do I see that he/she is?
But let’s say a child is behind but is cognitively capable of catching up or doing better.
First, don’t rush to catch up. The initial steps in any new endeavor — i.e. learning to read, Algebra 1, whatever the challenge — should be slow and measured. Let the fundamentals really sink in. You will find the child will be able to pick up speed if he or she really understands the basics.
Second, we have to motivate our children. They are the ones who really have to provide the brain power behind learning. Our job is to give them good reasons for doing so. I found that talking through the importance of a subject or assignment was a necessary step I couldn’t skip if I wanted my kids to be motivated. I needed to learn to listen to what my child thought, and to help each one build his or her own reasons for putting effort into schooling.
Third — and I guess I should have said this first — we have to build faith in our kids. When I would remember to pray with my child before we began a tough subject, everything really changed. Then the focus was on God and how we were asking Him to help us. It took pressure off my child to measure up. It was less a problem my child had, and more an opportunity for God to show Himself faithful and able on our behalf.
Q: Okay, I’ve done all of that. We aren’t going to rush and my child seems willing to put in effort to catch up. How do we do this practically?
A: Here are some ideas:
1. Use the summer for intensive remediation.
2. Find a tutor.
3. Clear the schedule and just focus on the area needing attention.
4. Do it first thing in the morning or when your child is most attentive.
5. Find a competition, such as Math Olympiad or writing contest, to give a child a reason to work hard.
6. Make an incentive chart with a reward at the end that the child values.
7. Make it a team effort, with everyone in the family devoting two weeks to improving in a specific area. Quiz each other at dinner.
8. Find a game that helps kids practice the skills or content in context. We used 24 (a card game) a lot to practice arithmetic and then algebra.
There are more suggestions in the chapter entitled “Motivating the Reluctant Learner” in my book, The Ultimate Guide to Homeschooling.
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Homeschool Teacher Appreciation Week
Hi Everyone! It is Homeschool Teacher Appreciation Week and to celebrate we have several free resources and a giveaway.
Our Spanish teacher David Nance has written a book on learning a language and it is free on Amazon now thru Sunday. In this short but insightful e-book David talks about what it really means to be proficient in another language and how to attain that.
SAT Math instructor Kathryn Gomes is offering this free graph paper printable. This surprisingly simple resource can make a world of a difference for an algebra students. She developed and designed it while working with struggling math students in the public schools. Additionally, if you are wrapping up math for the year you can find a great end-of year project also created by Kathryn Gomes here. Student use their knowledge of systems of equations to determine whether it is cheaper to fly or drive to a destination.
Finally, for English students (and their parents) Debra Bell has created this helpful writing rubric. The rubric is based on the six traits of writing that she used to develop the Writers in Residence curriculum.
Traits-of-Great-Writing-for-Teens-Download
Last but certainly not least we are giving away a free Ultimate Homeschool Planner and student planner this week. Click here to enter. Keep in mind that you get 3 additional entries every time you share the giveaway with others.
And Happy Homeschool Teacher Appreciation Week!
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Those Lazy Carefree Days of Childhood
…a prolonged season of carefree, open-ended learning when children are young lays a foundation for diligent and directed studies during high school.
During high school the school days of our four teens consisted of challenging courses such as pre-calculus, French III, molecular biology, and Advanced Placement history. For the most part, they cracked the books from early in the morning until sometimes late at night. The evidence of their efforts was scattered about in almost every room of our house: college-level texts highlighted extensively, notebooks scrawled with study notes and complex math problems, graphing calculators and protractors, drafts of analytical essays-in-progress, and stacks of video lectures.
How did they stay motivated and focused (for the most part) and not buckle under pressure or revolt? Let me roll back the clock for you. Here’s what the early elementary days looked like at our house:
Leisurely mornings, frequent field trips to nature parks, museums, and science centers…long afternoons curled up in a favorite chair with a book, uninterrupted time for puppet shows, imaginative play and art project…lots of trips to the library, lots of time for thinking, lots of time outdoors.
In short, I’m convinced the prolonged season of carefree, open-ended learning when our children were young laid the foundation for diligent and directed studies during high school. Why? Because they weren’t burnt out by years and years of formalized, structured learning already. When it came time to confine much of the day to seatwork, to evaluate learning with tests and grades, to plow through rigorous and foreign matters; we were ready for the challenge. It was something new, something different, a signal of new responsibility and maturity on our part. It was time to apply ourselves in a disciplined, focused way because this was going to count towards our future.
Further, I believe that a less formalized approach to the elementary years was a critical preparation for this future learning. Here’s why:
Kids who bring broad background knowledge to a challenging subject such as biology have a much easier time processing and categorizing new information. The child who has spent hours exploring the stream that runs through the woods and has seen the mayflies, speckled trout, and tadpoles turning into frogs; or has noted the variations in leaves scattered about the ground and tracks of various animals fresh in the mud early each morning has a treasure trove of firsthand knowledge to draw upon. When you show this kid the complex system of taxonomy field biologists have developed for categorizing living things, she isn’t thrown for a loop by all these Latinate names: she’s been categorizing living things unconsciously for years. She knows the distinguishing characteristics of many plants, animals and insects. She’s caught and collected a lot of them. The only thing she has to master in this scenario is the difficult names. Whereas, the child who has only had days filled with reading about them in his elementary science textbook is trying to memorize the scientific name of something he’s never seen, let alone handled. He doesn’t have the framework in place to do it.
Have you seen this phenomenon at work in your home? What areas have your children taken to like a duck to water? What role do leisure and exploration play in their education?