I thought today I might write something a little more
descriptive about what homeschooling looks like in our family. I’ve come to learn that for each family
homeschooling means something very different and very few families do it
exactly the same way. I think a
lot of “how” a family homeschools has a lot to do with “why” a family
homeschools. For us, specifically, we home school because Light has very
different academic needs than most other 6 year olds. Along with those
different academic needs, he also has some asynchrony in his development,
meaning that he is not at the same level across the board. In some ways, he is
6 going on 4, especially when he is upset, anxious, nervous, mad, scared or
with large groups of people. But, in some areas, he is 6 going on 25. It just
did not seem possible to find a school that could accommodate his asynchrony —
challenge him where he needs it and have patience with him when he needs
it. So, we’ve decided the best
place to meet his needs is at home.
Light is also a kid who doesn’t like to be told what to
learn, how to learn it or when to learn it. He has insatiable curiosity in some
areas, yet in some very basic academic areas, he has very little interest. It
is nearly impossible to motivate him to practice something that he doesn’t find
meaningful. This has an impact on how we handle homeschooling as well. We can’t
push him to do things that are not inherently interesting to him without having
a huge amount of things available to him that he wants to do.
So, we don’t have a boxed curriculum that is Grade 1 or 2 or
whatever. We have pieced together a variety of things from a variety of places
and have put together a program that seems to be working for us for now. Here is the nitty gritty of what we
have:
·
Scholastic Grade 4 workbook
·
Spectrum Math Grade 2
·
Spectrum Science Grade 3
·
Spectrum Language Arts Grade 3
·
Science Fusion Curriculum Grade 2
·
Geometry Text Grade 10
·
The Story of the World and Activity Books
·
Chester Comix for primarily American
History/Government
·
The Cartoon History of the Universe
·
A chemistry activity set for up to age 10
·
Too many novels and non-fiction books to count.
All of various reading levels.
·
Online games: DragonBox+ for some math work, BBC
typing game
·
Many games and puzzles
·
Arts and Crafts
·
Piano lessons
·
Karate class
·
Tennis lessons
·
Cub scouts
·
Private tutor/educational specialist 2 hours per
week
·
Various documentaries on his current interests
We don’t do all of these things everyday. We don’t assign
days for Language Arts/Math/History, etc.
We don’t do “school” from 9-3. We are working on a rhythm to our day. I
would say, though, that on average, we spend about 3 hours per day actively
doing structured school. 1-2 of those hours are during naptime for Happiness.
The rest of the structured school happens in smaller sections throughout the
day, or when Rob gets home from work.
In the car, we do a lot of talking. Yesterday we talked
about synonyms, homonyms, antonyms, palindromes, etc. We do math equations in the car. When we
grocery shop, we talk about nutrition. We live learning. Or, we learn living. Either way.
For Light, learning is a critical component to his day, well
his life actually, but it can’t be all structured or all my idea. So, I suggest
ideas and provide interesting outings, activities, books and games. He is involved in daily tasks and
helping to run the house. He loves to cook for himself and to bake. We need to
do more of that.
I resonate with the ideas of unschooling very much.
And, I love the educational ideas of Sir Ken Robinson
and
But, my need to be in control or have some sort of way to
assess learning prevents me from embracing it whole-heartedly. So, we may go a
few days without any type of structured school and then I get panicked, so we
have to get out a workbook! I am hoping to let go of more of that need to
control and really follow the interests of my children and see where that takes
us. I think as long as I can make sure that Light has mastered grade level
standards for his age, I can relax and go with his flow. But, sometimes he
needs a little push to get motivated.
Unschooling to me is maintaining that intrinsic desire to
learn. That innate curiosity that babies have, young children have, that we as
adults had and hopefully still have. It is not grounded in extrinsic rewards or
validation. The satisfaction comes from the learning itself. These ideas are
wonderful and I try to embrace them when it comes to homeschooling. That’s why
it pained me so very much to implement a “reward sticker chart” for Light to
use to earn Dungeons and Dragons figures. Remember when I wrote that it was
hard for him to do anything that wasn’t his idea? It was hard for him to care
to take the time to learn the basics? Well, he got a sticker for each workbook page
of “basics” he did. Once he reached 15 he earned a figure. It pains me even
more to report that it worked. Yep. He cruised through 30 pages of 4th
grade work in order to earn a figure. Well, he cruised through the first 15
pages. Then 10 pages and the last 5 pages were less motivating. I’m curious to
see if the stickers continue to work.
My primary concern right now is finding social outlets for
him. He is going through a major separation anxiety phase and so dropping him
off for classes or leaving him with friends is very difficult. He is with
friends during karate and cub scouts, but we are having very few play dates. He
doesn’t get invited places; he wouldn’t go anyway. He likes people. He gets
overwhelmed with more than one friend at a time. He just started talking about
his birthday party this year. He says he just wants a family party. I can
understand that, but it also makes me sad for him. He was completely stressed
out at his birthday party last year. All of the kids from his kindergarten
class came, plus siblings and more friends. I’m finding this to be a tricky
area for us. He’s very content to stay home or go to a museum and then come
home. He doesn’t seem to miss the after school play times, but it’s so
important. Anyway, I’m working on
that. His academics will be fine no matter what. But, we need to focus on his
heart and his social well-being.
So, our week looks something like this:
Monday: Tennis
Tuesday: Piano and Cub Scouts
Wednesday: Karate
Thursday: Educational Specialist
Friday: Open
Friday: Open
We have something scheduled everyday except Friday. Rob and I go to a SENG parent group on
Tuesday mornings for the next 6 weeks.
On Thursday morning we see an educational specialist, for
lack of a better term. He deserves his very own post. That will come next. But, on those days, I don’t ask for much
more structured time from him because he is pretty tired afterward.
Both Light and Happiness have a lot of freedom and
flexibility in their days. I ask for piano practice a few times during the
week. Happiness isn’t in any classes, yet, but dance is in her near future.
Light spends his free time organizing books, reading,
talking about roller coasters and playing with his Dungeons and Dragons
figures. Or doing geometry and hanging out with me.
Happiness spends her free time playing princess, reading
books, talking, painting her body and hanging out with me.
I spend my free time… Oops, that was some wishful thinking.