Jenna started homeschooling in
early October. She’s been doing well too. She is nearly through Chapter 3 in
her “Go Math!” book. Chapter 2 dealt with fractions and we had to wade through
that in detail because Jenna didn’t have a good grasp of it. She is a math whiz
when it comes to fractions now! That’s what good old 1 on 1 can do for a child!
It also was a nice refresher for me.
Chapter 3 deals with absolute value and
introduces her to negative numbers. It’s a cinch at this point, but will get
trickier when we start using negative numbers in math problems. We should have
chapter 3 wrapped up by Thanksgiving.
Jenna is also working on her autobiography. It
has been slow going but it’s rather lengthy. Look for it on her blog in the
next few weeks. You can find her blog here: www.jenna.durnanfamily.com
Sean started homeschooling in
late October and we have had to throw the books away for him. He obviously has
been allowed to pass through the grades without having mastered basic math. No
more number lines for him! It’s all standard algorithm from here on out as
that’s what he seems to understand best. I have him doing large addition and
large subtraction where he has to borrow and carry. I am also having him do
math drills in basic addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. His
skills are slowly sharpening. I am very proud of the progress that he is
making. I also have him doing 1st grade math right along-side Karen. It’s good
review for him and in some cases, he is having difficulty with some of it! I am
not going to teach Sean any new math until he gets the basics mastered. End of
story. This is what should have happened with him in the public school. Maybe
they couldn’t have done it there, but I have that freedom here to home.Jenna is doing science from the Spectrum series. Next year I’ll start with biology, earth science, and chemistry. Not all at once though! Each year we’ll pick a new subject. Karen and Sean are doing the same science from the Spectrum series. They just learned about magnetism together and this week are working on learning about weather. We took a break from the planets right now and we’ll return to them after Thanksgiving.
All three kids are doing language arts. Jenna and Karen are doing the Treasures series that they were doing in school. We’re doing one story per week. Sean was not up to snuff with his grammar so I am only using the Treasures series for his spelling. His grammar is coming from a different book that I found on Amazon. It is used for homeschooling and is taking Sean back through the basics. Right now we’re dealing with nouns. Sean couldn’t even tell you what a noun was when I started home schooling him. He can tell you what they are now, but he’s still struggling. The beauty of home schooling is that I can keep working with him until he gets it. He doesn’t advance until he does.
Sean is doing American History. He is reading about Christopher Columbus right now. I’ve timed it so that we’ll be reading about the pilgrims next week! He is enjoying it. Karen isn’t doing history yet and neither is Jenna. Jenna is next up for Sean’s American History book, followed by Karen. I’ll be adding more History and Geography lessons soon.
There’s so much more to add, but suffice to say, the kids are thriving in the homeschool environment. I’ll describe our typical school day. We wake up at 7 a.m. This is later than what we were waking up when the kids attended public school. Normally they’d have to catch a bus at 7:20. There isn’t this mass chaos in the morning anymore and that’s been a blessing. We wake up and have breakfast. Our school day starts at 9 a.m. We school until Noon. We take a break from Noon to 1 for dinner and then school from about 1 until 3. That’s a typical day. Of course, we have the luxury of tweaking that schedule should we need to. I’ve been schooling as late as 8 P.M. on days where I’ve had to. I try and get my kids to get their work done in 4 days and on Friday, we can watch television or do other fun things. If not, then it’s schooling on Friday too! We pack a lot into the 5 hours of schooling per day. The kids also get library time and they also get to go for walks with my wife for exercise.
My kids don’t have to ride that bus for half an hour each way anymore. They don’t have all that “fluff” that goes along with a public school education. My kids are learning and they’re doing damned good if I do say so myself. If you ask them about what they’re learning, they’ll tell you. Karen can already tell time to the nearest 5 minutes, and if she has a clock that she can read the minutes on in front of her, she can tell you to the minute! She can identify numbers up to a million and she can add 5 digit numbers over top 5 digit numbers! She knows her addition and subtraction facts up to 20 and she can tell you measurements on a ruler to the nearest half inch. It’s only November and she can do this! She can read at nearly a fourth grade level, and she’s just flying through this stuff. I’m so proud of her! This wouldn't be the case if she had stayed in public school. I’m so glad that I’ve made this move.
I've also been having the kids read a lot too. I am using Pizza Hut's Book It program where the kids can earn a free personal pan pizza for meeting their monthly goals. Their calendars are up and they write down how much they read a day. Karen's monthly goal is 400 minutes. Sean's is 600 minutes and Jenna's is 800 minutes. Karen and Sean struggle as they don't like to read alone the way Jenna does. I enjoyed having that program as a kid and so far, Jenna has been the only one who earned a pizza. She met her goal last month and looks to be on target to meet it this month as well. The other two have their work cut out for them!
Stop and visit with my kids if you want to see what they’re up to. I keep the work that they’re doing and can show anyone the progress that they’re making. They enjoy showing off what they know!
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