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Journal of a Busy Mom

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Planning My Homeschool Year 2015-16: Course Design & Grade Standards

November 26, 2015 By Ligia

This is probably the hardest step in planning my school year. This step is not required by the P.S.P I belong to, but it helps me to stay on top of things. I only do this in-depth step for my high schooler. I do a modified version for my son which I will share later.

Again, I have been using these two amazing books: The High School Handbook and Senior High: A Home-Designed Form+U+La

Course Design: A course design is a detailed explanation of what is the course requirement. In the Course Description I do an overall explanation of what are the goals and objectives. In the Course Design I give specifics on how we will achieve those goals.

A Course Design might be as simple as:

  • Complete all chapters in the textbook
  • Complete all 12 chapter tests

As I design the course I also have to consider how many credits this course is worth. If I am doing a 5 credit class (75 hours) I guesstimate what each requirement will take. When using a textbook, it is a little easier since 1 textbook usually equals 10 credits. Some curriculums will say “one semester” which would translate to 75 hours.

The harder part is when I am creating a class. I have created classes like: Study Skills or Home Economics. I don’t know exactly how long something will take so I have to go with what I know about my child (reading speed, interests) and what I know from experience. I am also relying heavily on the expertise of the ladies who wrote the above books. They have many course designs that are easily transformed to something that fits my child and our life situation.

For our Home Economics class I decided to use the Betty Crocker Cookbook as her base textbook and then supplement with other cookbooks, Pinterest, and other websites.

I am also including holiday baking, etc as part of the curriculum. For example, helping with appetizers and desserts for Thanksgiving counts towards Home Ec hours. Baking Christmas cookies also counts.

    The Grade Standard explains:

  • How each course will be graded
  • How student can earn the grade

Going back to the Home Ec class, I am not grading each cooking session, but I am requiring 45 hours of Home Ec. When those hours are completed, they earn an A. So part of her grading sheet will include an hourly log or check off list to help keep track of her time spent on tasks.

Some other classes are more complicated. A core subject will be graded based on assignments, quizzes or test. Some classes, like English, will have written papers to add to grade. Most of the time I break down the grade like this; 50% assignments and 50% quizzes and tests. If the subject has several components, I will assign a percent to each component for a total of 100%. For History, she has 10% co-op attendance, class assignments, reading assignments, home work assignments, and exams.

Filed Under: Planning & Organization

October is Dyslexia Awareness Month

October 22, 2015 By Ligia


In honor of Dyslexia Month, I would like to share three myths about dyslexia:

1. People with dyslexia see things backwards- They do not see things backwards.

“Dyslexia is a specific learning disability that is neurobiological in origin. It is characterized by difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition and by poor spelling and decoding abilities. These difficulties typically result from a deficit in the phonological component of language that is often unexpected in relation to other cognitive abilities and the provision of effective classroom instruction. Secondary consequences may include problems in reading comprehension and reduced reading experience that can impede growth of vocabulary and background knowledge.” International Dyslexia Association

2. People with dyslexia can’t read at all-they actually do fine for a while but they hit a wall in 3rd grade when words get bigger and the pictures are gone. Some kids can fly under the radar for even longer.

3. Dyslexia is rare – wrong again
1 out of 5= 20%
It is not uncommon to be accompanied with dysgraphia
And 30% have either ADD/ADHD
It’s not uncommon to have both
50%-50% right handed/left-handed 10% of population is left handed
50%-50% girls/boys

Filed Under: Dyslexia, Homeschooling

Educing Free King Tut & Ancient Egypt Mini Unit

August 12, 2015 By Ligia

My son is taking a Geography class this year at our co-op. I saw this and thought it would be a great addition to the study of Egypt. I will be looking out for things like this to match the 15 countries we will study.

King Tut Mini Unit - Educents

Students LOVE to learn about King Tut and Ancient Egypt! Download a FREE lesson for kids about Ancient Egypt and jump into King Tut’s history! The freebie has several activities included in this pack, including reading comprehension, math review, map skills, and timeline practice, so there are a multiple ways to use them.

Hieroglyphics Math

King Tut Mini Unit - Educents

Use these fun pages to practice place value and/or addition and subtraction skills! Page 12 of the King Tut Mini-Unit Freebie asks students use the symbols to determine the number. The following page goes a step further and asks students add or subtract numbers.

Fun facts about Ancient Egypt:

  • The Egyptian alphabet contained more than 700 hieroglyphs!
  • Egyptians believed cats were a sacred animal and having a pet cat would bring a household good luck.
  • Ancient Egyptians invented pens, toothpaste, and a game very similar to bowling.

More Ancient Egypt resources:

Mini Bio: King Tut – Here’s a mini bio about King Tut to go with your mini unit!

Ancient Egypt Lapbook – Study interesting facts about the discovery of hieroglyphic writing, the Rosetta Stone, the great King Tutankhamun, the lovely Cleopatra and more.

Recipes From Egypt – Delight your little cooks with two authentic and easy-to-make recipes from Egypt: Tameya (the original veggie burger), and Basboosa (Semolina cake with honey and lemon).

My Book About Egypt – My Book About Egypt takes elementary students to the cities of Cairo, Alexandria, Damietta, and Giza.

 

King Tut Mini Unit - Educents

Want free lessons for kids about Ancient Egypt?

Download the King Tut Mini-Unit Freebie on Educents!

http://www.educents.com/king-tut-mini-unit.html

Filed Under: Schooling Fun

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Welcome to my blog! I'm a homeschool mom of two kiddos. I'd love to share what I 've learned and continue to learn as a busy mom trying to do it all!

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