Are you an eclectic home-schooler searching for that elusive "best way to home-school?"  Can't decide amongst classical, unschooling, unit studies, Charlotte Mason, packaged curriculum and all the other methods out there?  Then join me as I explore the childhoods of famous home learners - and consult the sages of pedagogy looking for answers.  ~  Jamie McMillin

Entries in Home Schooling (5)

Thursday
21Jan2010

Learning to Read

New home-schoolers are often intimidated by the idea of teaching their kids to read.  They know it is vitally important and therefore must be complicated to teach properly.  I think it would be complicated to teach to a classroom full of squirmy six-year-olds of varying levels of readiness (my heart goes out to those poor teachers).  But it really isn't that hard to teach your own.  It's actually pretty fun - assuming you like to read yourself.

To begin with, it's wonderful snuggling up on the couch or outside on a blanket, reading piles of delightful children's books.  Every day - not just before bed - read to your kids and enjoy the expressions on their faces and the comments they make.  Don't make them hold still.  They can roll on the floor, play with blocks, draw or do whatever quiet thing they like and still enjoy the stories - but they will usually want a front-row seat to see the illustrations.

Eventually your child will want to know what you are doing when you read.  They may ask questions about letters or words - then you know they are ready to start learning.  Not all kids are ready at the same time and it has nothing to do with intelligence so don't worry about it.  In fact, I am fairly convinced that many of the so-called reading disabilities (apart from genuine dyslexia) are caused by forcing kids to read before they are ready.  For more info on this, read Raymond and Dorothy Moore's excellent book, Better Late Than Early.

When your child is genuinely ready - chomping at the bit to learn how to read - you don't need a complicated series of phonics workbooks and flashcards.  Just start with something simple like, Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons. You could always ramp it up later if necessary.

My first son learned to read at the age of six during his brief few months at school, so I missed it.  My second son Aengus was ready to read by the age of five.  He was already puzzling out road signs and other print in his environment and had somehow learned the alphabet but I don’t remember how (maybe from his older brother).  So when I sat down with him and the 100 Easy Lessons book he was eager to learn.  The sessions were nice and short, with engaging illustrations.  Aengus learned enough in the first 50 lessons to start reading real books.  We stopped the reading lessons there because he figured out the rest all on his own.

My daughter wasn’t ready to read until the age of seven.  Before then, she lived in her own daydreamy world of play and imagination.  She loved to be read to, but had no interest in reading for herself.  Due to feelings of parental anxiety, I started using Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons with her when she was six.  She liked the book and didn’t mind the short sessions so she acquired some very basic phonics skills.  I also introduced her to the BOB books for beginning readers and she LOVED those.  After about Lesson 45 of the “100 Easy Lessons” she asked to drop that book and just read BOB books with me.  That’s what we did.  As her fluency improved I checked out other easy readers from the library.  She stayed in beginner/phonics mode though until she was nine.  That was when she seemed to catch the reading bug and start reading naturally instead of laboring over every word.  I honestly believe that I could have simply waited until she was nine to teach her phonics and she would have learned to read in a matter of months instead of years.  Instead, I was too busy worrying about what the neighbors would say if they knew my eight year old couldn’t read!

Even after your kids have learned the phonics involved with reading on their own, it's still important to snuggle up on the couch with Mom or Dad and a good book.  We plundered the library every other week and came home with stacks of books!  We also checked out every “Book on Tape” we could find and listened to them in the car.  This was an excellent way to introduce the kids to a new author or series they were hesitant to read on their own.  My oldest son loves fantasy stories but I couldn’t interest him in the Redwall series by Brian Jacques.  Then I found the first book of the series on tape – not just read by one narrator, but dramatized with a complete cast of voices.  After listening to that, Jesse was hooked and promptly plowed through the rest of Brian Jacque’s books. 

Books on tape (or CD nowadays) are also good for squeezing classic literature into a busy schedule.  We spent a lot of time driving – to classes, park days, choir and music practice, field trips, sports, errands, etc…  The time flew by when we were listening to “Peter Pan,” “The Railway Children,” “James and the Giant Peach” or “Anne of Green Gables.”  Many times we sat in the driveway with the engine running – not wanting to go inside until the chapter was over.

Listening to good stories builds a taste for literature and an ear for language.  It helps kids want to read more because reading is supposed to be fun - not work.  And teaching reading should be fun too.  If you find that it is too stressful, you're probably over-doing it.  If you fear that your child may have a genuine reading problem then it is perfectly OK to get outside help.  One great book to check out first is A Mind at a Time by Mel Levine, M.D.

Sunday
30Aug2009

Ansel Adams

The future wilderness photographer, Ansel Adams, was an active, curious child who loved to be outdoors running around.  His family lived in a sturdy home above the sand dunes outside of San Francisco.  It was a great place for a hyperactive little boy to grow up - exploring the beaches and nearby Lobos Creek, inspecting everything and collecting insect specimens.

In his autobiography, Ansel had nothing good to say about his early education in dismal institutional settings.  It was depressing, dirty and uninspiring.  He thought the act of memorizing irrelevant facts (such as which states border Nebraska) was useless, saying “Education without either meaning or excitement is impossible.”  One of his teachers, hoping to cure his restless tendencies, would invite him to her house periodically to lecture him on proper behavior.  But all he could think about was getting outdoors.  Finally, when he was twelve he became so bored that one day he simply burst out laughing at the ridiculousness of it all.  The principal escorted him home for a week’s suspension.

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Sunday
16Aug2009

20th Century American History

 "A nation that forgets its past can function no better than an individual with amnesia." ~David McCullough

"People tend to forget that the word "history" contains the word 'story'." ~Ken Burns


Are you a history lover or hater? If you are one of those people who thinks learning history is a waste of time - then I would guess your only exposure to the subject was in a school classroom, with a dull textbook and a harried teacher trying to teach you what names and dates would be on the next test.

Give it another chance!

One of the best things about home schooling is the opportunity to teach yourself all the fascinating things you never knew you didn't know! In fact, if you find history deathly boring I would suggest you not try to teach your kids anything about it. Just read aloud great historical fiction and biographies to them and don't call it history until you're excited about it.

You will find good suggestions for books to read in home schooling manuals or libraries. It's sometimes tricky to tell if a home schooling curriculum provider is suggesting hiqh quality books or just promoting a certain message/idealogy, but I do think the Sonlight Curriculum company chooses great books (there are other good companies too, but I can't think of them at the moment).  And of course the internet is a gold mine of various booklists.  Here's a nifty web site I found: http://www.abookintime.com/americanhistoryreadinglist.html

If you and your older child/teen are ready to learn about America in the last century, check out the new unit study I added to my site:  20th Century American History for Teens.  This study isn't just about past events and people, it's about critical thinking.  History is very different depending on who is telling it, and kids (grown-ups too) need to know the difference between primary sources and secondary sources.  They can also see how the intrepretation of past events changes with new information, and how the past affects them today.

 

Wednesday
12Aug2009

Teddy Roosevelt


One of our most charismatic presidents, Teddy Roosevelt started life as a small, frail and thoughtful little boy. He struggled with asthma but loved to be outdoors. Summers in the country were filled with horseback riding, swimming, running and collecting nature specimens.

Theodore Roosevelt Sr., christened “Greatheart” by his children, built a family gymnasium so that young Teddy might improve his physical condition - which he did. Aware of his weaknesses, the boy was determined to get stronger. He exercised faithfully, took wrestling and boxing lessons and learned about nutrition. Eventually he grew sturdy enough to go on extended backpacking and hunting trips as a teenager, and continued to emphasize vigorous physical activity throughout his life.

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Thursday
30Jul2009

McMillin Family Homeschool - Math

Math is one of those subjects that all but the most devout unschoolers tend to require of their children. Like music or dance, it is usually best learned in sequential steps from basic to advanced. But if the child does not want to learn math, what is the relaxed yet anxious parent to do? I have read stories of unschooled youngsters forgoing textbook math until they decide to take SAT tests, then learning everything they need to know in a matter of months instead of years. I have heard of kids digging into math out of necessity to complete some project such as building a chicken coop or starting a home business. For me, I decided that math was too important to leave to chance (what if my child failed the SATs someday and blamed me for not getting into college?)

I thoroughly researched all the available math programs and let my son choose the one he thought would be best. When the manipulative-based book arrived in the mail, all went well for the first day or so, until my son decided that math was confusing and boring. I tried encouraging words and gentle humor, hot cocoa and soothing music, but after 2 weeks he was in a rage over every page. He simply could not learn anything – REFUSED to learn anything in that frame of mind. I talked to him about the importance of math but he was not impressed. I tried another math program. It made no difference to him because he had already decided that he was no good at math. Finally, in desperation, I found books full of math games and hands-on activities. Success! He enjoyed all games – the more physical and imaginative the better. I also did a lot of research on learning styles that year and found ways to teach him math without him even knowing it.

 

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