Showing posts with label homeschooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeschooling. Show all posts

Monday, July 20, 2015

Playing pretend driving

I was at the thrift store the other day, and I picked up a few good toddler activity idea books.  I've been sifting through them and jotting notes down about things we could do.  Lily is not at all the kind of baby who can play by herself or play with a toy for a long time.  I realized recently that if I plan out our day, it will help us both manage expectations.

One of the ideas was to take a big box and make a car.  We're at the point right now where she can't wait long for me to gather materials, so instead of making it complicated, I just took a marker and drew on the box.  We both get in (my feet hanging over) and she drives.  She beeps the horn, hits the gas peddle, and puts the blinker on.  She even changes the radio to put on Taylor Swift, though she is also nice enough to let me listen to the news.

Some liquid was spilled on the dashboard, and Lily got upset last night when she saw it. 

"Oh no! It's dirty!  Look, it's dirty!"  Lily said.

"No worries, baby," Mommy said.  "It's just like in our car when mommy spills coffee all over the place."

"Is it red?" She asked.

"No, it's green.  GO! GO! GO!"

Target homeschool dollar bin finds

This month, I ransacked the dollar bins at Target (I was looking for a watering can for the toddler who loves to water the plants), and I came away with a lot of great educational items.


We struck gold with this.  The month marker at top we already picked up from the dollar store.  What I found at Target was this yesterday/today/tomorrow wall poster.  We can change the days and talk about it every day.  It's easy to skip over topics when it's hard to explain them to a toddler, but this really helped us bring the days of the week into our regular rotation.


This is a great activity we've already been doing.  Spin the arrow and then find something of that color or the shape, depending on what it says.


This came in a pack of 4-5.  I'm sure we'll find lots of uses for it!


This clock is shown front and back here.  I bought two, because I knew we'd use it.  I was going to make on of these with a paper plate, but this is great!


These map activities are neat, though probably more for teachers.  It is a pack of 32 of the same worksheet (front and back).  One is a US map, one is the world map.  The US map will be useful, because we can practice filling them in over and over, and the back lists the state capitals and we can fill those in over and over.  The world map we might just use a few times, because it's just continents and the same word find game.  


From the upper left: I picked up a kiddie lanyard, because she loves her daddy's work badge!  Then, there is a pack of travel dry erase letter writing cards!  OMG!  In the center, there are flash cards with rhyming words, because I have a hard time thinking of words that rhyme.  Then, these box games take a skill like multiplication or money and make it into a game!  Those will be great to bust out at some point in the future as just another fun, learning thing to do.

Monday, July 6, 2015

We took our first paddle boat ride!

Daddy had a four-day weekend for the Fourth of July, so we went to the Reston Zoo on Friday.  We took our first paddle boat ride.  With Lily being so intense and kicking/writhing when she doesn't want to do something, I thought it would be a long while before we got to this point where we could have her in a water craft without ending up in the water!  It was a lot of fun.





Sunday, October 13, 2013

Old Maryland Farm

Yesterday, we were far from home and had to stop and hop in the car because Lily needed a nap.  We passed around the idea of heading somewhere cool.  Anywhere.  The cool, autumn air was delicious.  Maybe we should frollick around Old Town Alexandria and look at the ducks in the rain.  Maybe we should head to Annapolis or Baltimore.  We finally decided to head to the Old Maryland Farm at Watkins Regional Park.

What a trip.  I half expected the farm to be closed, us to have needed a reservation, or something else that really restricted us from getting up close to some animals.  What we found were lots of animals that we could get up close and personal with.  There were rabbits, chickens, peacocks, ducks, geese, llamas, sheep, goats, BABY goats, cows, a pig, horses, and a donkey.  She got to pet a bunny!

There is a good sized playground at this park.  And, during the summer, there is a carousel and a good sized trained ride.  Definitely some place of which we're going to make a whole day.  And, in thinking about a homeschooling future, it is most certainly a place to keep in the haystack.  Get it.  Haystack.  Hahahaha. 












Friday, May 31, 2013

Baby Homeschooling


When looking through the archive of the local mom forum, homeschooling for preschool and earlier was met with some contention.  Several posters asked, "Isn't this just parenting at that age?"  Yes.  Yes, it is.  It is parenting with the intention to educate and parenting with a child's potential in mind.  Even if parents don't consider themselves homeschooling their child this early, they may in fact still be approaching life at home with education in mind.  Parents can actually do nothing extra, and children will naturally develop and learn what they need to learn right now.  There's no pressure at this age.  But, the goal is to already be in a routine by the time it matters.  That we might already know some of our options and we're not going into homeschooling from scratch.  That we don't miss opportunities for growth when she wants them.  We will know our child's likes and dislikes better.  We will know how she learns the most effectively.

My nephew spent a lot of time with my mom, who used that time to teach him the basics.  He went into kindergarten knowing so much that the teacher set him up with first grade materials at home so that he wouldn't get bored.  His parents decided to not skip him ahead, because they were worried about his overall maturity level. Since we already know we are going to homeschool, it will only take a little extra effort to get started at this age.

How do you homeschool a baby, you ask? Simple! By exposing him/her to different things, such as different music, stories, poems, nursery rhymes, people, places, textures, games, sights, sounds, foreign languages, sign language, etc. Brightly Beaming Baby has a mock up curriculum for year one and year two, from which I pulled some ideas into our own.

Here are some ideas for this age:
  1. Show baby hand signs
  2. Play different music
  3. Dance to different music with her and for her
  4. Create time for her to spend on her tummy, sitting up assisted and unassisted, and standing assisted
  5. Play games, such as peek a boo, itsy bitsy spider, and others.
  6. Read stories to her
  7. Read nursery rhymes to her
  8. Read poems to her
  9. Gymboree class
  10. Baby yoga class
  11. Swimming class
  12. Music class
  13. Play dates
  14. Sing songs, especially educational songs that she can eventually sing with us (such as ABC's, the 50 state song, etc)
  15. Provide something with different textures on it
  16. Play music or speak in a foreign language often
  17. Story time at the library
  18. Name and describe things for her 
  19. Get baby outside as much as possible by taking walks, sitting on the porch, and laying on a blanket at the park or in the backyard
Something like reading to her can be done every day, but we're staggering out the various class options.  Right now, we're just doing two classes/activities outside the house beyond the occasional play date. I also have a plan to put the alphabet, numbers, and maps on the walls of one of the rooms in the house shortly.   My mom said that my nephew, Isaiah, loved to play with the magnetic letters on the fridge, too.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Why Homeschool?


There are many reasons to homeschool, and the reasons vary from family to family.  Sean and I knew we wanted to homeschool not long after I became pregnant. He was adamant about it, and I got on board after researching the answer to the socialization question. Do homeschooled kids socialize less? Not if parents put effort into connecting their kids with other kids through activities and play dates. With this in mind, Lily has had more opportunities to socialize at 7 months than most.

We have many reasons to homeschool:

1. Her potential is limitless. We can start teaching her now.   Instead of being limited by her age/grade, she is only limited by time and her interests. At 5 years old, she could have kindergarten social skills, read at a second grade level, but be at a third grade level for math. This is her program, and as long as she learns the required basics, she can explore what interests her next. 

2. We can pick up and go on vacation whenever we want.  And, we can incorporate educational elements into those trips.

3. Learning is fun and school often makes it a chore. Forget busy work. Let's go on a field trip or cuddle and read a book! 

4. Learning does not have to take place in a classroom. We can learn anywhere and everywhere. Anything has the potential to become a learning opportunity. We can visit Mount Vernon to learn about the life of George Washington.  We can visit the Museum of the American Indian to learn about Native Americans.  We can fly to France (or any country) to learn about another culture.  We can read a book to explore the Wild West.  We can go to the grocery store to learn about math.  We can watch a video to learn about the color yellow.  We can play a game to learn Spanish.  There are so many options.

5. Traditional schooling does not prepare people for adulthood. There are so many missing, poorly covered, or controversial topics that are not taught how we would like to see them taught. Finance, business, people skills, manners, self-defense, sex education, street smarts, body image, work ethic, running a household, and nutrition are just the ones off the top of my head.

6. We should be spending every day helping her with her homework anyway. Why not skip the stuff other people assign and teach her instead?  And, if she was able to do homework on her own, we could be spending that time together.

7. There is potential for kids to finish some college courses before graduating high school.  I finished a whole year of college before I graduated high school.

8. Many kids have big dreams.  And, if Lily has big dreams, we want to set her up to be successful.  What if she wants to be a dancer, a singer, a painter, a musician, or something else that is usually considered impractical?  We would rather give her the tools to be successful than to tell her to forget her dreams and be practical.   In some of these instances, you have to know how to run a business or at least know the basics of branding and marketing to be successful.  If she decides later that it's not working for her, she'll come out of it with business experience.

9. Minority religions are often SOL in traditional schooling. We don't automatically get school days off on our holidays.  In some jurisdictions, that could turn into a legal battle, especially if we wanted to plan a family trip around one of our holidays.   We might have to deal with secular prayer. We might have to deal with other kids and their families discriminating against us and not being able to just cut out contact with those people without changing schools. 

10. This layer of online social media and the danger it brings to kids is just ridiculous.  I was one of the first kids in school to be online with our computer.  I had no idea the risks of trusting people online, and it is scary to think about the danger I put myself in at times.  Now, I know the danger, and that's something I don't think the next generation is prepared to handle either.  I read a Huffington Post article about one mom's take and the balance between privacy and protection for her 13 year-old daughter online.  Children are more easily manipulated by people they think they can trust, and homeschooling will allow us to help her learn when to trust people and when to be more cautious.

11. We greatly decrease the number of situations in which a trusted adult or other kid has the opportunity to abuse our child.

12. Bullying in school is bad, and it is now worse with its migration to social media.  She will still encounter bullies outside of school, but we can identify them and help her deal with them appropriately. We can also cut ties with bullies more easily without changing an entire school, if it gets that bad.

13. We will avoid the possibility of a school shooting, though this does not lessen other dangers.  We could have very well been at Costco during the day when a crazy person threatening people with a knife was shot by police.  Or, we could be home during the day when someone tries to break in.

14. We want Lily to have as much access possible to healthy foods and snacks.  Organic, whole foods are important to us.  Food options in schools are sub par via cafeteria, vending machines, and candy sales. 

15. We don't believe the world is accurately represented in traditional schooling, and many truths about the world are not revealed until college.  On top of that, some form of critical thinking is stressed in school, but as they get older, students should be taught to think critically about everything they are taught, told, read, or hear.  We are not taught that the textbooks, teachers, government, and companies that sell us products have reasons to misrepresent information or outright lie to us.  That we cannot take all information we receive as truth, and we have to wade through all of the evidence to figure out what we feel is the most accurate story.