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Sunday, January 9, 2022

Homeschooling in B.C. in a Nutshell

 This post is for everyone who is finding themselves suddenly and unexpectedly homeschooling due to the vaccine mandates in B.C.

Facebook groups to ask questions, or buy/sell curriclum:

Chilliwack & Area Home Learners

BC Homeschoolers and Online Learners

BC Homeschoolers Section 12/13 Registered Option

Greater Vancouver Homeschoolers

BC Gifted Homelearners

Real Life Homeschool Spaces

Morning Baskets and More

In B.C. you have two options when it comes to homeschooling. You can register or enroll.


1. Registering means: you are on your own to come up with an education plan for your child. You can choose any curriculum you want. You are not required to fulfill ministry outcomes. This is the path I would recommend unless you have a student in grade 10-12 who is in the process of getting their Dogwood Diploma. NONE of the outcomes, credits, work, etc. in Kindergarten through grade 9 count towards the BC High School Dogwood Diploma. Only grade 10-12 work counts towards the high school diploma. You can easily register from Kindergarten through Grade 9 and then switch to Enrolling for Grade 10. This is what we have done, and there are a lot of perks to doing it this way. I would highly recommend it. The BC curiculum for Kindergarten to grade 9 has a lot of redundant busywork and reporting to a teacher weekly is time consuming and stressful for most parents. Especially if you have multiple kids in school. Wouldn't you rather spend that time doing something productive and beneficial? Also if you start enrolling in grade 10 you can use prior work that you did as a registered student to get extra credit right off the bat. It's one of the only ways I know of to "skip ahead" if you have a student who wants to do that at some point.


Any school in BC is legally required to offer the registeration option. You can do this with an online or local school. They are all required to do it, though some don’t realize it.  There are 1-2 pages of paperwork to fill out and sign to make it official. It’s basically just to prove BC residency and to have it on file that the student is receiving some kind of educational plan. Some schools even give you a little bit of money with it, as they are given a small administration fee from the government to do the paperwork for you - some schools will pass on this money to the parents. As of right now, the only school still giving parents money is Pacific Spirit school. They are also the most organized and simple when it comes to applying - highly recommend.

You can register at any time of the year, there is no cut off. You need to have a student either registered or enrolled by the end of September of each school year but you can switch to registering from enrolled at any point. 

2. Enrolling means: You are an online student part of the BC school system. You must check off outcomes and report to a teacher weekly. These reports are usually email based but there are also virtual and in person meetings. You may be given suggested assignments and have some flexibility with curriculum, but some schools don't offer any flexibility. This pathway is similar to what many people experienced when they were suddenly doing virtual schooling during the first lockdown, though virtual classes are not required with this option. 

The most flexible enrollment homeschools in B.C are eStreams and Pathways. Both are Christian schools. The most flexible secular schools are often considered to be Ebus or Self Design. TLA also has a good reputation. TLA and Heritage are both Chrisitan schools and can be good for special needs options, they are both bigger schools with bigger special needs budgets. Depending on what kind of special needs you are dealing with though, it may be better to go with a school like eStreams or Pathways instead. Special needs funding is constantly being cut and can be difficult/time consuming to acquire. With a school like eStreams or Pathways you can get the flexibility you need without jumping through extra hoops.


As of this year most students receive approx. $650 in funding (depending on the school) for being enrolled. This is to be used on things like consumable curriculum, some schools let you use it for things like music lessons. Very often if you use it on non-consumable items (like a microscope for example) you will be required to return those to the school as they remain school property. If you want to enroll you have to enquire early. There are often waiting lists and current students have priority. Enrollment usually opens in late February or early March. 

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If you decide you want to homeschool long term, these are my favourite resources for homeschooling in general. If you are only planning on homeschooling temporarily for less than 1-3 years, then these resources are skippable! Skip down to "favourite curriculum" below.

Eclectic Homeschooling: What kind of Homeschooler are you? Quiz

To address that age old "But what about socialization?" question: "Hold On To Your Kids: Why Parents Need to Matter More Than Peers" by Dr. Gordon Neufeld

Homeschooling the Early Years - your 3-8 yr old child

How to Raise an Amazing Child the Montessori Way

"For the Children's Sake" - the WHY behind why homeschooling is wise choice, and the most family friendly way to go about it.

The Well Trained Mind - Susan Wise Bauer is considered by many to be the queen of homeschooling. This book is a great resource though I found it overwhelming as a beginner, I do recommend it anyways because I always find some great resources in it even though we have never followed the progarm as outlined.

Cathy Duffy Reviews - very detailed reviews of most curriclum out there.

Honey for a Child's Heart - book lists

More Charlotte Mason Education by Catherine Levison

Know and Tell : The Art of Narration by Karen Glass

The Living Page - keeping Notebooks with Charlotte Mason

Misdiagnosis: Dual Diagnosis of Gifted Children and Adults (maybe it's not ADHD or Autism?)

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Favourite curriculum:

For a low stress approach to gaining a strong foundation in elementary I recommend going the registered option and then focusing on the "3 R's: Reading, Writing, and Arithmetic - Math. The rest of the subjects are more of a garnish and can be covered in fun ways with read aloud books and hands on manipulatives.


My favourite online planner: homeschoolplanet.com (this planner saves my life every day!!! Well worth it!)

The most difficult curriculum to choose is usually math. I'll start there.

It's normal to cycle through different curricula as a homeschool parent. Ask anyone who has been there, and they will tell you that. It's very rare to pick the right thing right off the bat and stick with it for years. The nice thing is, you can choose things that work the best for both you and your child. 

When it comes to math curriculum, there are two main approaches: Conceptual and Sequential. Conceptual will cover less topics but dive deep with them and focuses heavily on mental math (example: Singapore Math). This is also similar to "Common Core" math which you may have heard of. It can be impressive but not as practical, because... students in high school can use calculators, so those types of mental math skills are not as important. Most of the conceptual curriculum also only covers a few grade levels. For example Singapore Math covers grade 1 through 6, and Beast Academy is grade 3-6. So neither of them are good long term options.

Sequential is more like what most of us grew up learning. It covers a wide variety of topics, and reviews prior topics consistently to help with retention. While both methods have pros and cons, I find that unless you have an extremely mathy child who can't get enough math - then sequential is the way to go. It's more practical for real life, and it's also better preparation for advanced science courses. I find kids really need consistent practice with basic math facts to succeed and be prepared to do well in high school courses. There are no shortcuts to get there.

 I find that the "conceptual" aspects of math come naturally and you don't really need to supplement or teach it in a curriculum. If you want to supplement with conceptual math anyways, I would recommend the Singpore Math Extra Practice books on their own. Do not get the Singapore Kindergarten books, they are nothing like the elementary ones.

All the following math recommendations are from the Sequential math approach.

MATH

CLE - Christian Light Math

pros - very easy to implement, written to the student, independent - even young students as young as Kindergarten can do this on their own, inexpensive. Workbook format, nice for students who have trouble writing as they usually only write the answers.

cons - not grade level. It's about 1.5 - 2 years ahead of BC standards, so it can be hard to figure out if you are are on track. Not a big issue in the early years - you will probably just find yourself ahead. No hands on manipulatives, but you can add your own. Covers Kindergarten through grade 8, for after grade 8 you'll have to transition to something else like Saxon which is similar.


SAXON MATH

pros - time tested as one of the top math curricula. Very thorough, spiral approach where concepts are constantly reviewed and mastered. Hands on manipulatives are available for Kindergarten through grade 3. This is a great option if you want to homeschool long term as Saxon goes all the way through the end of high school. Many different kinds of video lessons are available from different publishers to match the Saxon textbooks. My favourite is Dr. Shormann. Nicole the Math Lady is a popular option for the elementary levels.

cons - time consuming (can skip questions to make it faster), can be a bit "dry" for the early years. Expensive. Involves more writing as students have to write both the questions and answers from the textbook starting at level 5/4 (which is equivalent to BC grade 6). It is slightly less advanced than CLE, but is also 1-2 years ahead of BC standards.


SAXON MATH with DIVE Lectures by Dr. Shormann / Shormann Math

pros - online video lectures make teaching concepts MUCH easier! Dr. Shormann math also includes automatic online grading. Quiz and Test prep set up in such a way to make success inevitable. Very easy to use. Very thorough. Incremental approach with built in review. In my opinion this is the best option for grade 7 and up. Dr. Shormann math also includes ACT and SAT prep for students who want to write the SAT exam or go to college in the USA eventually. Students can also write the SAT instead of getting a high school diploma for college entrance (each college has different requirements but this can be an option).

cons - young earth creationist evangelical viewpoints, if that's an issue. It only comes up now and then. We're not young earth creationist and don't find it to be an issue. He does include theology and mathematical history early on but that is only in one main lesson.


Montessori math equipment

pros: the most easy and efficient to use, expect major progress quickly. This is by far the best curiculum for early math. It is almost completely hands on! No workbooks or textbooks.

cons: can be expensive, not very structured, big initial learning curve as it's very different from standard curriculum. Only for kindergarten - grade 5/6, so you'll have to transition to something else later.


PHONICS

All About Reading - a full program.

pros: uses Orton-Gillingham method for Dyslexia, full colour, fun activities, less sight words in beginning. I would highly recommend getting the APP to use with it, and not bothering with the little magnetic letter tiles.

cons: expensive, not enough practice for some kids - might need to add a supplemental resource to it.


Ordinary Parents Guide to teaching Reading

pros: very easy and efficient to use, less sight words in beginning. Very inexpensive.

cons: not enough practice to be a complete program, would need to use something else like All About Reading with it.


Progressive Phonics

pros: totally free! Great for practice. Great for struggling readers who need to gain confidence.

cons: not a complete program


Explode the Code Workbooks

pros: great for kids who love workbooks, can be done mostly independently. Great for extra practice alongside a full reading program. "Get Set for the Code" workbooks are the best option for beginners.

cons: the illustrations are hard to decipher for some kids, they are dated and can be frustrating for very logical kids.


Note: if you've been doing any research into homeschooling or phonics curriculum you may have come across a book called "Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons". Do not be fooled by this title. It has a reputation of being the MOST resold book in the homeschool universe. It does not work for most people long term. There is nothing "easy" about teaching most kids to read. It is often a time consuming process that takes a lot of time, patience, consistency, and commitment. The above resources I listed are the best I've found after trying out many different things.


SPELLING

All About Spelling - hands down. Just the best. The levels are NOT grade level, just go at a consistent pace with whatever works for your child. Level 1 starts at about a grade 2 level. There are placement tests on the website. I would highly recommend getting the APP to use with it, and not bothering with the little magnetic letter tiles.

Spelling Workout Workbooks - for extra practice, if your child needs it. Can be done independently. These are grade level.

Squeebles Spelling Test App - AWESOME app for quick progress and extra practice on tricky words. You can add in custom words including your own voice recording.


READ ALOUDS

Reading out loud is the most important thing to build a child's IQ. It's been proven by science. You can continue to read out loud every year, kids are never too old for it!

Check out the Mensa Reading in Excellence program and book lists.

Other favourite book lists:

Sonlight (Bookshark, same thing but secular) - these books are my favourite for pre-K, K and grade 1. I would go one grade level below.

Build Your Library - K to 12 secular literature based curriclum based on Charlotte Mason methods

Ambleside Online - K to 12 Christian literature based curriculum based on Charlotte Mason methods


LITERATURE

Memoria Press book studies - these are pretty advanced, I recommend going down 1-2 grade levels. These cover Grade 1 to Grade 12. They can be purchased from Classicaleducationbooks.ca (if you order a teacher guide, they send you the PDF version of the tests and quizzes for free - so that's handy). Can also be purchased from Christianbook.com

Novel Units Book Studies - these are my favourite, you only need the student book. It contains the answers. The teacher book is for classroom use. The activities include vocabulary, comprehension, pre and post reading activities, quizes and a test at the end.

Great Works Instructional Guides - similar to the Novel Units studies, these have a few more open ended project ideas and are available as PDF downloads which is handy if pressed for time.



GRAMMAR

Elementary: First Language Lessons for the Well Trained Mind by Jessie Wise. Student workbooks are available as PDF's.

Middle school/ High school: Grammar for the Well Trained Mind by Susan Wise Bauer

Micheal Clay Thompson Grammar (especially for gifted kids, or for anyone who really struggles with how to see grammar - very visual)  These can be purchased as ebooks from iTunes. Teachers guides are not necessary if you get the leveled guides. They have some interactive features which are interesting. Beautiful and artistic, these are incredibly engaging.

Montessori Grammar Manipulatives - google printable montessori grammar, or shop at Pinkmontessori.com


WRITING

Writing With Ease by Susan Wise Bauer - some people quit too early with this one. It is advanced, not for grade 1 or 2. Try starting it in upper elementary.

Writing with Skill by Susan Wise Bauer - I would start this in grade 8 or 9, then one book each year thereafter (there are 3 books). This is great for college prep.

Micheal Clay Thompson Language Arts - especially Essay Voyage. These can be purchased as ebooks from iTunes. Teachers guides are not necessary if you get the leveled guides. They have some interactive features which are interesting. Beautiful and artistic, these are incredibly engaging.

We don’t do creative writing, but if you wanted to you can check out “The Creative Writer” series by Boris Fisman.

“Just Write” by EpS (at Christianbook.com” is a great set of workbooks to meet writing outcomes for kindergarten through grade 2/3. Easy!


SCIENCE

Kindergarten to grade 2: “Let’s read and find out science” series - LOVE these!

https://elementalscience.com/blogs/news/list-lets-read-and-find-out-books-for-science


DK kids "First" encyclopedias

Mystery Science - online video based, easy to implement, affordable, fun for elementary. Not time consuming and not frustrating. Real science!

Science Wiz kits - fun kits for elementary, can buy at Mastermind Toys or Amazon.

TOPS Science - "Radishes" is a fun month long curriculum based on botany for grade 5/6. Their hands on electricity unit is great for older elementary kids too. You can buy the books at different curriculum suppliers or PDF's from their website.

CPO Science - American textbooks, I bought used on Ebay. Recommended in the Well Trained Mind and I found these perfect for grade 6-8. More advanced than the BC curriculum. The teachers guides are necessary.

Novare Science - best for middle school and high school physics and chemistry. Best prep for college.

Memoria Press Biology - best for grade 11 biology, can do dual credit grade 10 and 11.


SOCIAL STUDIES

I recomend going registered so you can skip mostly redundant social studies outcomes until Grade 10 and do literature and project based history starting around grade 3 instead.

Fave history resources:

A Child's History of the World by Hillyer with workbook set by Calvert (around grade 3-6).

Story of the World - volume 1 is good but in my experience with doing it twice with two kids is that the retention is low. The activity guide has lots of fun activities to make history come alive. GREAT book lists in the activity guide. Would recommend for grade 3 and up. The audio book is worth it. 

A Little History of the World by Gombrich

Genevieve Foster books - these are awesome read alouds. They also have a unique approach in showing what happened over the whole world during the lifetime of a famous historical character. Gives unique insight. For upper elementary or middle school level.

Ambleside History sequence

Oxford University Press series - middle school and high school, with workbooks and teacher guides.

Memoria Press history - geared to homeschoolers, independent

Human Odyssey by K12 - great for middle school, optional workbooks are classroom type assignments though.

Mystery of History - best for middle school and can be used in high school too, Volume 2 has a Christian approach to Middle Ages and muslim issues.


BIBLE

 What's in the Bible?  DVD's - these are a must have

CLE Bible workbooks - go down 1 or 2 grade levels. Grade 7 level is particularly good. Each year has different themes.

Memoria Press - church history for middle school and high school

Drive Thru History - video based for upper elementary and middle school. Learn about Bible lands on location etc.


ART

“Art Lab for kids” series by Susan Shwake

MaryAnn Kohl books for elementary

Janson's Story of Painting for middle school

Art history books by Hillyer for middle school or high school

Middle school and high school art project books: 

“Paint Lab” by Deborah Forman

“Map Art Lab” by Jill Berry

“Drawing Lab” by Carla Sonheim


MUSIC

Music for Little Mozarts - age 6-8 piano

“A Child’s Introduction to the Orchestra”

Opal Wheeler composer biographies - upper elementary

Montessori equipment


GENERAL SHOPPING

Rainbow Resource - is the worlds biggest homeschool store. Expect to pay duty when shipping to Canada. Great place to read reviews and see what kind of options are out there, since they have basically everything.

Christianbook.com  - huge selection and often the cheapest prices, expect shipping to take up to 30 days but no duty.

Learninghouse.ca - general Canadian homeschool curricula

Classical Education Books - Local Canadian shop for Classical curriculum, $10 flat rate shipping, they offer local store pick-up in Abbotsford.






Sunday, April 25, 2021

Grade 7 Curriculum

 


My daughter is Dyslexic but she's made huge progress this year, so much so that I can do grade level literature with her now and she is able to do a lot more of her work independently.


MATH

Saxon


BIBLE

CLE (Christian Light Education)


LANGUAGE ARTS

Micheal Clay Thompson - grammar, writing, vocabulary, poetics

Montessori Sentence Analysis and grammar symbols combined with MCT grammar

Read alouds from Ambleside

All About Spelling

Good and the Beautiful Typing

Good and the Beautful Cursive

Reading a lot... especially horse books! Think we'll go through the Margeurite Henry books.

Writing With Ease series by Susan Wise Bauer



SCIENCE

Leaning towards the  Waldorf Physics units from Pepper and Pine. Potentially some units from Memoria Press or Sonlight.


HISTORY

My own curriculum, based on literature.


GERMAN

Duolingo


LATIN

Memoria Press


GEOGRAPHY

Montessori materials and Halliburton’s books.


ART

Maybe we’ll finally get to wood carving!

Montessori Art History

Map Art Lab

See the Light DVD’s

Meet the Masters curriculum

Grade 10 Curriculum

 


Planning for grade 10 next year has been very different than planning for previous years. For one thing, we decided to finally enroll and get those official credits he needs for the BC Dogwood Diploma. Originally I was planning an alternative route (straight to college without highschool diploma... yes you can do that), and that may still happen, but for now this is what we're doing.

I had been nervous about how the transition would go, and if we had done enough to prepare for it. To my surprise some of the things he had been working on for grade 9 can potentially count for grade 11 and maybe even grade 12 credits. One of the benefits of being registered instead of enrolled for grade 9. I hadn't even considered that a possibility.

So for next year this is what his courses will look like:


ENGLISH COMPOSITION 10

Micheal Clay Thompson, mostly level 5 probably.


ENGLISH LITERARY STUDIES 10

Micheal Clay Thompson and Memoria Press

Reading H.G. Wells, at least one Shakespeare Play, and some classics.


SOCIALS 10

Donna Ward Canada in the 20th Century


MATH 10

Dr. Shormann Math


SCIENCE 10 & LIFE SCIENCES 11

NOVARE Science

General Biology by John Hays

Accelerated Physics and Chemistry by John Hays


ART STUDIO 10

Map Art Lab

See the Light Art DVD class

Drawing Birds by John Muir Laws


CARRER LIFE EDUCATION 10

PHYS ED 10


GERMAN 11

Rosetta Stone

Talk Box German

and some assignments using the book "Fluent Forever"


Potentially also:

RUSSIAN 10

Rosetta Stone


APPLIED DESIGN

Rocket design


INDIVIDUALIZED "ENGLISH" Course including Latin, Classical Studies, Philosophy, the Aenid, and the Greek Plays. (Using Memoria Press curriculum). If we don't do it for credit this year, might do it for credit next year. This could also technically be a SOCIALS 12 credit.


He’s also going to continue with Bible and Church History, but I’m not going to make him do tests or quizzes on most of it so this will likely not count as credit. We plan to use curriculum from Memoria Press, CLE, and some of the devotional books recommended at Ambleside Online.










Monday, August 24, 2020

Grade 9 and Grade 6 Homeschooling Curriculum

(Edited April 25, 2021 to add in what actually ended up working out)

This year my curriculum choices are a mix from various sources. I've picked things from Ambleside Online, Build Your Library, Sonlight, Memoria Press, Christian Light Publications, and The Well Trained Mind.

My kids are in grade 9 and 6 and both of them will do both one-on-one work with me, and independent work. We also do "Together Time" where we cover subjects like poetry, read alouds, music and art apprecation, etc.

I have both advanced work and work modified for Dyslexia here. An ambitious plan but I hope to get to at least 80% of it. I'd rather have a bit extra planned, then to not have enough. I aim for about 50-60 pages of reading per day for my grade 9 student, and 1 hour math. Then just fill in the rest as time allows.


GRADE 9

Scripture Readings:

Proverbs x2, Psalms 1-60, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, Galations, Ephesians.


(Edited April 25, 2021 we did get to most of these)


Biblical Studies:

Memoria Press: "Story of Christianity"

Devotionals by Jim George

Commentaries by NT Wright

Phillip Yancey books

Max Lucado books

AW Tozer

Bruchko - missionary story

"Window to the World" - praying for the world

book about Menno Simons by Louise Vernon

book about William Tyndale


(Edited April 25, 2021 we ended up mostly focusing on the CLE 9 Bible course which was AMAZING. Highly recommend.)


Math:

Saxon, supplement with "Life of Fred".


(Edited April 25, 2021 never did end up using Life of Fred, but we did use Dr. Shormann’s math lectures online which were a bit hit and moving onwards with just Dr. Shormann)


Language Arts:

Micheal Clay Thompson and/or Well Trained Mind


(Edited April 25, 2021 MCT was a huge hit. Best thing ever for retention. Plan on continuing it next year. Doing MCT Grammar together with Montessori symbols and sentence analysis was the PERFECT fit. Wish I could have done it sooner, but any major grammar retention is a big win in my books.)


Nature Studies:

"What the Robin Knows"

"The Lost Art of Reading Nature Signs"


(Edited April 25, 2021 in progress)


Literature & Poetry:

History of English Literature (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

Age of Chivalry (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

"As You Like It" Shakespeare

Anne of Green Gables (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit, he ended up reading the entire series to the end)

Treasure Island

The Yearling (Edited April 25, 2021 not so great, could skip it)

Gulliver's Travels

The Count of Monte Cristo

Poetry and Short Stories in American Literature

Book of the Middle Ages

Beowulf

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

Hound of the Baskervilles

The Swiss Family Robinson

Sherlock Holmes

Audiobook: Father Brown stories

"The Roar on the Other Side" (analyzing poetry) or Memoria Press course


Classical Studies:

The Trojan War by Coolidge (Edited April 25, 2021 ended up skipping this one cause he knew it all already)

The Aenid for Boys and Girls

D'Aulaires Greek Myths (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit, so many connections to astronomy and space history)

Famous Men of Greece (Edited April 25, 2021 very good!)

Famous Men of Rome

The Book of the Ancient World

Memoria Press with video lessons: "The Illiad"


Logic

Orbiting with Logic

Unlocking Analogies

The Basics of Critical Thinking 

Memoria Press course

"How to Read a Book" by Adler


Latin

Memoria Press


World History

My custom rotation including Mystery of History, Trial and Triumph, Oxford University Press history, and "A History of England" by Arnold-Forster.

Time Traveller's Guide to the Medieval Ages


American History

"Before Columbus" by Mann (Edited April 25, 2021 I enjoyed it, kid didn’t think it was that interesting. It’s short, it has great pictures and maps, and covers an obscure part of history you normally don’t learn. I would recommend it.)

CLE American History 8 (Edited April 25, 2021 BIG hit! I wasn’t sure about this one cause out of all the US history I looked at, this one was the most visually appealing but it was also way overboard in terms of depth, and also a bit dry. He learned a ton and retained most of it though, so I would highly recommend.)


Canadian History

"A Little History of Canada" and/or "A History of Canada in 10 Maps" (Edited April 25, 2021 never got to this, which is fine cause it will come in handy in grade 10)


History of Science

"A Brief History of Time" by Stephen Hawking

"Bomb: The Race to Win and Steal the World's Most Dangerous Weapon" (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

"Longitude" by Sobel (Edited April 25, 2021 my son said this is very out of date, an enjoyable read but skippable)

"The Clockwork Universe" (Edited April 25, 2021 a bit too mature for Grade 9... should preread)

"Evolution" by Loxton (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

"The Evolution Book" by Stein (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

"The Story of Earth" by Robert Hazen (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

"The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs" by Brusatte

"The Story of Life in 25 Fossils"

"The Sixth Extinction"

"DK: Prehistory" (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

"DK: Evolution"

"Stuff Matters" by Miodownik

"The Microbe Hunters" by De Kruif (Edited April 25, 2021 son called it “ a bit overdramatic”, wasn’t a huge fan but the parts I read were engaging.)

"The Dissapearing Spoon" (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

"Napoleons Buttons"

"String, Straightedge and Shadow: The History of Geometry"

"BBC's The Story of Science: Power, Proof, Passion"


Extra science reading or save for grade 10:

"I Contain Multitudes" (microbes)

"The Violinists Thumb" (genetics)

"What a Plant Knows" (botany)

"Hidden Life of Trees" (botany)

"Wonderful Life: The Burgess Shale" by Steven Jay Gould (prehistory, evolution)

"Silent Spring" by Rachel Carlson (ecology)

"The Soul of an Octopus" by Sy Montgomery (Naturalist)

"The Curious Naturalist" by Sy Montgomery

"Caesars Last Breath" by Sam Kean


Science

Modern Biology by Holt, with Memoria Press video lessons. (Edited April 25, 2021 nope! This was way too dry and technical. Ended up going with something else)

"The Biological Sciences" by Isaac Asimov


Government and Economics

The Naked Communist

The Naked Socialist

Uncle Eric book series (Finish "Whatever Happened to Justice?" "World War 2 and how it effects you today", :Rome and How it effects you today", "Are you Liberal, Conservative, or Confused?")

Prager U video series

"Capitalism for Kids" by Hess

"Who Runs this Country Anyways?"


Geography

Halliburton's "The Orient"

"Earth from Above"

"A Young People's America" by Hillyer

"How the States Got Their Shapes"

"Finding Gobi" - about a dog wandering the desert in the Middle East

Memoria Press Geography


Music Appreciation

"Hymns for a Kids Heart"

"The Spiritial Lives of the Composers"

Composer biographies by Opal Wheeler


Art Appreciation

"The Story of Painting" by Hanson (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit)

followed by "Hanson's Art History"

Picture Studies (Ambleside, or Living Book Press)


Health

"Facing the Facts"

"The Omnivores Dilemma" Young readers edition

Learn to cook healthy meals


Handicrafts

Learn to build 3 stage rockets.



GRADE 6

Biblical Studies:

Memoria Press Christian Studies


(Edited April 25, 2021 ended up going with CLE Bible instead which was a hit!)


Math

Saxon


(Edited April 25, 2021 still plugging along! I would recommend it.)


Language Arts:

All About Spelling (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit... as a Dyslexic, she made huge progress in spelling this year going up a couple grade levels. This is the best program. Though the indepth phonogram instruction is sometimes redundant.)

Simply Charlotte Mason's Spelling Wisdom

Micheal Clay Thompson and/or Well Trained Mind


Literature:

The Cricket in Times Square (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit... as a read aloud)

The Moffats

My Side of the Mountain

( inc. Various independent readers )


Read Alouds:

"Black Beauty" (Edited April 25, 2021 NOPE. Not even for a horse lover. Kept waiting for it to get better, and eventually gave up.)

"Heidi"

"The Railway Children"

"The Incredible Journey"

"Ginger Pye" by Eleonor Estes

"Misty of Chincoteague" and other Marguerite Henry books

"The Album of Horses" (Edited April 25, 2021 mostly too advanced for this year, will save it for next year.)

"Owls in the Family"


Science/Natural History

The Book of Insects (Edited April 25, 2021 This was not so great.  The writing style was too outdated. Though the kids did learn a few new things.)

The Book of Birds

The Book of Trees

Memoria Press Astronomy


Science

From Sonlight Grade 6:

    - Usborne Understanding Your Brain

    - Blood and Guts

    - Usborne Intro to Genes and DNA

    - Survival Skills

    - Usborne See Inside Your Body

TOPS Radishes (month long botany project)

Biography of George Washington Carver

"Evolution" by Loxton

Documentary series: "Your Inner Fish", "Your Inner Monkey", "Your Inner Reptile" by Neil Shubin


Art Appreciation

Come Look With Me

Montessori Child Size Masterpieces


Canadian Studies

WOW Canada

"The Story of Canada" by George Brown

"The Broken Blade"


World History

"A Child's History of the World" by Hiller

"Number Stories from Long Ago"

"Ox, House, Stick: The Story of our Alphabet"

"The Librarian Who Measured the Earth"

Documentary: The Story of Zero

"Herodotus and the Road to History" by Bendick

"Archimedes and the Door of Science" by Bendick

"Galen and the Gateway to Medicine" by Bendick

"Along Came Galileo" by Bendick

"Who was Albert Einstein?"

Genevieve Foster series: "Columbus and Sons", "The World of Abraham Lincoln", etc.

Sonlight American History Readers from core D & E


Geography

Montessori maps (Edited April 25, 2021 big hit, so worth it.)

Memoria Press

A Child's Introduction to the World

Also added in the “Stack the States 2” App, and “Stack the Countries” App 


Composer Studies

"Paganinni" by Opal Wheeler (Edited April 25, 2021 hard to get into, not as good as the Mozart one)

"Beethoven" by Opal Wheeler

"Tchaikovsky" by Opal Wheeler


Latin

Memoria Press


Classical Studies

Pegasus

King Midas and the Golden Touch

Aesop's Fables


Poetry

"Sing a Song of Seasons: A Nature Poem for each day of the Year"

"Poetry for the Grammar Stage" - Memoria Press


Shakespeare

"Tales from Shakespeare" by Lamb

"The Pop-Up Shakespeare Book"


Custom Unit Study: "Geography, Geology, and Money"

"The 21 Balloons"

"Rocks, Rivers and the Changing Earth"

"A Child's Introduction to the World"

Rock tumbling kit

Dk Rock book

Nat Geo Rock book

"The History of Money: From Bartering to Banking"


Health

"Almost 12" by Kenneth Taylor


Handicrafts

Crochet

Sewing

Wood carving

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Thankgsiving Readings:

Squanto & The Miracle of Thanksgiving

Over the River and Through the Wood


Christmas Readings:

"The Story of the Other Wise Man" by Van Dyke

"Holly and Ivy"

"Journey through Advent" 9780981999043

"The Best Christmas Pageant Ever"

"The Christmas Miracle of Johnathan Toomey"

"Christmas Day in the Morning" 9780688162672

"The 12 Days of Christmas"

"Saint Nicholas the Real Story" 9780758613417

"Why Christmas Trees aren't Perfect" 9781501825835

"Papa Panov's Special Day"

"A Secret Kept" Memoria Press

"Good King Wenceslas"  9780802852090






Wednesday, October 9, 2019

Ambleside Online Curriculum book substitutions

This post is just where I'm oranizing potential substitutions or add-ons for the Ambleside curriculum.



Books that have the potential to be substituted:

AO7 SCIENCE - add "Disappearing Spoon" back in as a free read.

AO 7 BIBLE The Pursuit of Holiness by Jerry Bridges (potentially won't fit with our theology?)

AO 8 SCIENCE Napoleon's Buttons (science is poorly represented, apparently filled with mistakes)... still need to find a sub for this.

AO 9-10-11 LIFE SKILLS Potentially replace "Do I dust or vaccum first?" with "The House that Cleans Itself" or something by Martha Stewart.

AO 9 HISTORY "Founding Brothers" potentially replace with Andrea Wulfs "The Brother Gardeners: Botany, Empire and the Birth of an Obsession"

Replace Francis Schaeffer book in AO9 with Eucebius Early Church History
https://www.christianbook.com/eusebius-church-history-translation-with-commentary/paul-maier/9780825433283/pd/33282


AO 9-10-11-12 LIFE SKILLS Possibly replace "Getting more done in less time" with "Getting things done" by David Allen, also add in "Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less".

AO 10 Health - Alongside "Nutrition and Physical Degeneration", add in the other books from Weston Price Foundation such as "Nourishing Broth" and "Why we need animal fats". Also consider "Good Fats, Bad Fats". "Terrors from the Table: The Curious History of Nutrition" by Walter Gratzer, "Vitamin Discoveries and Disasters".

AO 11 Science - replace "Darwin's Black Box" with "Finding Darwin's God" by Kenneth Miller.

AO 11 Science - replace "Case for a Creator" with "The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief" by Francis Collins.



More books that needed to be added in or used instead of other books:

"The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldts New World" by Andrea Wulf (probably AO11 Science/History/Nature) alongside original works by Charles Darwin "Voyage on the Beagle" etc. (Humboldt was Darwin's mentor and inspired his voyage.)


For Bible (AO 10-12)

  • NT Wright Books:
  • "Simply Christian"
  • "Love Does" by Goff
  • Max Lucado books
  • "The Evolution of Adam" by Peter Enns
  • "How the Bible Actually Works" by Peter Enns

For Literature A11 or A12:
"Gentleman in Moscow" by Amor Towles (potentially instead of Fyodor Dostoyevksy, if that's too hard)
"All the Light We Cannot See" Anthony Doerr

Possible alternative for A11 Geography "Under the Tuscan Sun", could be "Four Seasons in Rome" by Anthony Doerr or "A Year in Provence" by Peter Mayle.

For American history, add in "Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook got wrong" by James Loewen.

Find alternative for "Desiring God" by Piper, possibly something by NT Wright. Possibly the workbook and DVD set "The New Testement You Never Knew: Exploring the context, purpose and meaning of the Story of God"

Find alternative for "The Pleasures of God", possibly something by NT Wright.

Add in AO12 LIFE SKILLS "The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo, and "The Slight Edge" by Jeff Olson.

Potential for girls in AO12 "Real Food for Pregnancy" by Lily Nichols

AO 11 or 12 add in for science or health:
"Missing Microbes"
"I Contain Multitudes: The Microbes Within Us and a Grander View of Life"
"Bechamp or Pasteur?: A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology"
"Dissolving Illusions: Disease, Vaccines, and the Forgotten History"
Forest Marready books
"The Stress of Life" by Selye
"The Magnesium Miracle"
"Why Zebra's Don't Get Ulcers"





Saturday, August 24, 2019

Curriculum Plans for 2019-2020

For anyone following this blog, just wanted to update on what our current plans are.

Last year we did our first "full on" Charlotte Mason year, using mostly Ambleside Online. It was the best homeschool year we've had yet. This year we plan to follow it more closely.

Ambleside Online is a FREE curriculum for all school years. There is plenty information on the site about how to implement it.

I would also recommend reading "For the Children's Sake" by Susan Schaeffer Macaulay and "Know and Tell: the Art of Narration" by Karen Glass.


Saturday, January 26, 2019

Great Big Charlotte Mason Book List for Grade 1


For the younger grades I tend to use a "better late than too early" approach. Many of the choices for grade 1 through 3 can be used with younger ages, depending on the child. For both my kids I found that Kindergarten book lists were more appropriate for grade 1 than for Kindergarten.

School at this age, is mostly focused on good quality literature. Subjects are taught in a hands on manner as much as possible.

For math we like to use Montessori materials at this age. There are discount Montessori suppliers online which provide quality manipulatives useful in a family setting. Other options are DIY Montessori materials, and printable material. Here are some helpful links to get started:

Free Montessori Printables
Montessori Print Shop
Tackle Box Montessori on Facebook
DIY Montessori on Facebook

GRADE 1
Major themes:
Science: Animals, daily changes, life cycles.
History/Social Studies: Occupations, how people lived long ago.


Poetry
Fiction Literature: 


Non-Fiction Literature: 
Theology: 
*These two books are out of print but worth keeping an eye out for at used book sales. They are just so sweet and nostalgic. Perfect books to read over and over again.