Preparations for School 2007-2008

Posted on February 14th, 2007 by hanfaith.
Categories: General.

I’ve been very busy the last couple of weeks putting together my homeschool curriculum for next year. Eva will be in first grade and Seamus in preschool. My family can attest to the many hours of research I have put into next year’s choices, and the fun is only just beginning! I’m getting about 95% of my materials used and I love the hunt.

Phonics

We used Abeka for phonics this year and for consistency sake, I plan on continuing with them for another year. I give them credit for a thorough program. There are a few things I take issue with, such as Manuscript only being a handwriting option (i.e. some of the visuals in kindergarten are in Script) and huge variations between workloads on various days (i.e. some days have way too many workbook pages while others have barely any). I do feel like Eva is well grounded in phonics, though, so I’d give the program about 4 out of 5 stars.

Grammar & Composition

I wish I had known about Shurley English when I was teaching in a classroom. What a great program! Shurley English fits well into a classical model, making just of jingles, chants, and question/answer sessions. Students learn the parts of a sentence by asking and answering questions. This curriculum is great for an auditory learner, but would probably need to be supplemented with more visuals for other types of learners. I like the flow of the teacher’s manual, but I feel like the student workbooks could have been better laid out. Students constantly have to flip back and forth all over the book for different activities. I think it would be better if the student workbook was designed around each lesson, giving all the activities on the same page. Overall, though, I’m impressed.

** after typing this, I went and looked at Shurley’s website, and it looks like a new edition is due this fall, with some of the workbook issues solved. I’m not sure, however, if this is only for the school version of Shurley or also for the homeschool version. Hopefully both.

Mathematics

We’re switching next year from Abeka math to Horizons math. Pretty much all the reviews I have read indicate that Horizons is similar to Abeka math, but better. Both use a spiral method to teach arithmetic, but Horizons apparently does a better job of not overdoing repetition. I’ve heard that for those students that have lost the joy of math through the Abeka program, Horizons is a good fit. Hopefully that will be the case for us too. Again, like in their phonics program, Abeka is thorough, and students coming out of their math program will know their stuff, but in the process I think many stop enjoying math. Horizons is also colorful, something that appeals to my children.

History

We’re voyaging into Core 1 with Sonlight this year, exploring a first year course of World History. I love that Sonlight teaches without textbooks, using “real” books to interest students in history. I’m impressed by some of the books I’ve collected so far. Looks like an excellent program. We’re also doing the read-aloud part of Sonlight, sharing many good books with our children.

Penmanship

I’m going to try out A Reason for Handwriting, Manuscript A next year. I haven’t received a copy in the mail yet, so I don’t have much to go on, but the idea of making presentation pieces based around Bible verses and decorating the borders sounds like something that will appeal to Eva.

Science

We’re going to try Sonlight’s science program for Core 1. I’ve heard that Sonlight jumps around a bit when it comes to science, but we’re going to give it a try and see if it works for our kids. At the very least, they’ll be exposed to a lot of different scientific topics, and we’ll see what piques their interest.

Music

I like the looks of Praising God on the Piano, and I’ve heard good things about it on various message boards. Thankfully, it’s not too expensive, so looks like we’ll give this program a try this year. We’ll probably do a lesson once a week, so I’m still looking for something else to do once a week – preferably centered around classical music.

Art

We’ll be using the Come Look with Me books to talk about various art pieces, and will be producing our own masterpieces with our art supplies.

Preschool

I’m working on putting together Seamus’ preschool curriculum from various books I’m collecting. Our local library has a book cellar with .25 books, so I try to pick up a couple every time I go. Hopefully I’ll have enough soon to organize them into unit studies, and we’ll work from there. I’d like to get some of the Developing the Early Learner books as well as Critical Thinking Press’ Visual Perceptual Skill Builder.

2 comments.

Margaret

Comment on February 16th, 2007.

Complete thumbs up for Horizons Math. I think they are VERY child-friendly, and very multiple-grade-classroom friendly, in that the lesson and student work is cleanly divided into separate chunks, so you can set one child onto one lesson portion, move on to another student, and then back to the first for another portion, and so on.

Shurley is great - I recommend (and guess that you would have anyway!) supplementing with your own jingles as you feel inspired. In particular we found that the adjective / adverb jingles were too similar to be useful - we’d find that you could start with one, accidentally switch halfway through to the other, and go merrily along until someone finally said, “Hey - wait a minute!”

LOVE whole book history - marvelous with the notebook approach style.

Well, could go on and on - I love the planning part of schooling!

Be blessed!! And have fun!!

Jill Sandmeier

Comment on February 21st, 2007.

Hannah,

Don’t know if you remember me from C’ville or not, but I happened upon your dad’s blog once and followed his link here.

We’re homeschooling too, and used only Sonlight this year (Alyssa did Core K with Language Arts 1). Now that we have a little homeschooling under our belts, we’re ready to design our own curriculum for next fall. We’ll probably be doing Sonlight LA 2 (regular or intermediate readers), Horizons Math and Sonlight Literature (with a few extras). Joe is the science teacher (go figure!), so he’s putting together his own Science 1 program, and he’s also put together his own History program, though I teach that. We haven’t done much with electives yet, though Alyssa does go to tae kwon do for three hours per week, and will soon be starting piano lessons, along with all the summer activities I can get her in.

Anyway, it was good to “see” you and know that you’re so well-researched with curriculum. Maybe we’re doing something right?! I’d love to compare notes as First Grade goes along. I’m not too creative with extras.

Email sometime…

Leave a comment

Comments can contain some xhtml. Names and emails are required (emails aren't displayed), url's are optional.