Friday, July 24, 2009

KONOS Curriculum

In 1991 during our first year of homeschooling our main curriculum was Volume 1 of KONOS. KONOS is a character based curriculum.
We learned just about everything about birds which included identifying feathers, beaks, feet, eyes, migration and kinds of birds. We made bird feeders and bird books.
During our Attentiveness unit we learned about Ears, Sound and Music. This included Helen Keller, ultrasonics, Alexander Graham Bell, echos, deafness, orchestra, instruments of the symphony, reed and brass instruments, famous violinists and more. We labeled parts of pianos and violins.
Other topics included eyes and seeing, and other senses.
During our mountain men unit we learned about the Lousiana Purchase, tracks, beaver, Daniel Boone, 49ers, California etc. We made "possibles" bags for a project.
While we were studying North American Indians we made Indian necklaces, cardboard shields and made maps of all tribes, their homes and how they lived. We learned about woodland, southeast, plains, southwest, Plateau basin, California, Pacific northwest and sub artic Indians and what made each tribe unique.
We really enjoyed this curriculum since you have a list of items to do which you can pick from. If you are not interested in a unit just go to another. The volumes include weekly lesson plans. Each volume is recommended for 2 years of study. They cover from kindergarten to 8th grade. Bible, science, social studies, arts, music, literature, health and safety are covered in each volume.
A good library is a must. We lived in a small town with a small library. In 1992 we used the Weaver curriculum since we didn't need the library as much for that curriculum.
We have volume 1 and 2 of KONOS and we still use them at times.
One of our next articles will be on the Weaver Curriculum which we do have for sale on our store at www.wabbstersbooks.com. It is an excellent curriculum, however our children are older now and learning thru other programs.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Homeschool Supplies

The first couple years we home schooled we took advantage of August going-back-to-school sales at retail stores. When you can buy 24 crayons for 39 cents, paper for 4/$1, paperclips, rubber bands etc also on sale you save a lot of money. We would buy a years worth of supplies.
A years worth of supplies per child is one box of colored pencils, 2 boxes of 24 crayons, 1 ruler, 1 scissors, 1 pkg. pens, 1 pkg. pencils, 1 box markers, 1 small pencil sharpener 5-10 70 page notebooks, 2 pkg. notebook paper. For young children 2 pkg. of pencils and no pens.
Each child had their own scissors, crayons, pencils, pens, ruler, markers, small pencil sharpener all put into their own school box which they decorate on the first day of school. The kids always looked forward to the first day since they enjoyed receiving all the new school items. They are responsible for taking care of their items. Each item is labeled. When something is not put away we know who the culprit is.
Some children keep very good care of their things while others don't. When one of the children loses an item they have to earn another which teaches them to take care of their things.
Usually in January when school starts after Christmas break we add more pencils, paper and pens.
We have an electric pencil sharpener, stapler, hole puncher, paper clips, rubber bands etc. which stays in a drawer for everyone to use. In another drawer extra notebooks and paper are kept.
We put crayons, pens, pencils, markers etc. which have been used a lot in cleaned out plastic peanut butter containers for summertime or for other use.
This works well for us.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Homeschool State Books

One of my grown daughters favorite activities when she was being homeschooled was making state books.
Every few years or so we would study all the states. One year they had to draw and color the state and include all the main rivers, mountain ranges, national parks and cities.
On the next sheet of paper they drew, colored, and wrote about the state bird, tree, flower etc. They would also make a list of the capital, state song and any other information they might want to include.
They also had to research the state to find out why someone would want to visit that state and what they would see if they visited. Such as historical monuments, national parks, worlds biggest ball of twine etc. This would include the geography of the state as well.
We spent a half a week on each state and would spend a whole week on those that we really wanted to know more about.
We put all the states in a notebook which they now have to treasure.

Monday, July 13, 2009

Activities at your Fingertips

Years ago, due to lack of space we could not save all of our magazines. Our favorite ideas and activities were torn out of the magazines and placed in sheet protectors and placed in a three ring binder. Sheet protectors come in a a variety of see thru pastel colors so they can be organized by projects such as outdoors, indoors, holidays, or different seasons etc. The sheet protectors are washable and very durable. When you need an idea the activites are at your fingertips.
We saved so many ideas we now have notebooks for different catergories. Holidays, homeschool projects, arts, recipes and gardening. It is nice to have good ideas in one place in binders that even small children can look through.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Homeschool Letters

I have been going though our homeschooling papers from the 90's when our daughters were 9, 11, and 13. One of the neat ideas we used was a notebook which we wrote letters to each other in. On the first page I wrote them a letter similar to this one:

Dear (daughter), date
A least once a week you can write a letter to me and I will write you back.
You can write about what you do or do not like about school, what you would like to do, how you feel or what you would like to do on a holiday. You may write about anything you want.
When you have a letter for me to read put it on the blue box by the library books.
I will write you back, answer your letter, tell you how I feel or just write about something I like or dislike.
write back soon, love mom


It was amazing to see how their writing and spelling improved. They also had good ideas and if they had a problem they had a way to write me with out everyone knowing about it. In some of the letters they wanted to trade chores, had field trip ideas and just wanted to know that I was paying attention. These books are now like a diary or journal.

My daughter Annabelle wants to do this during the coming school year.

http://www.wabbstersbooks.blogspot.com/















Monday, July 6, 2009

Homeschool Using American Girl Products

One year over a decade ago, we used American Girl products as part of our curriculum. Our girls were about 7, 9, 11 at that time. The birthdays were in April, July and November. Each girl received a doll for her birthday. We did each doll separately so we could all learn about that time period. We would read The American Girl book, do the craft and art projects, cooking, and we would sew some of the clothes(I did most of this but they were able to do simple things). We had Kirsten, Molly and Addy. When we finished with the dolls we had, we continued through the rest of the series including Samantha, Felicity and some of the others so we could continue learning about the different time periods. I think the girls really enjoyed the lessons since everything was so interactive.
This worked well because I had three girls who were all interested in dolls, books and the crafts.
Annabelle is the last girl at home and even though she is eleven she is more interested in stuffed animals so this would not suit her.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Homeschool Field Trips on a Budget

Most of our field trips were free.

We had field trips to the post office, grocery store, police station, airports etc.

Sometimes we would go on a walk and identify birds, plants, bugs etc.

Going to the park and having lunch and reading a book under a tree is another great idea. A park with ducks is fun, especially if you can feed them.

A wetlands or national park is great way to spend the day or camp overnight.

In the spring a trip to a nursery is very educational. Usually they have plants at all stages of growth.

Zoos, Aviaries and planetariums sometimes have a small fee but are worth it.

Manufacturing plants are great learning experiences. Do you live by plants that make cheese, chocolate, shoes, soda etc.?

A pet store can be a good experience if you call ahead to let them know you're having a field trip and request a knowledgeable associate who may have a wealth of information.

Anyone in your neighborhood with a special hobby. Llamas, dairy farms, ostriches, a weaver, a seamstress, mechanic, author, singer, train collector, truck driver, etc. A person with a hobby is more likely to be enthusiastic about it and may give your kids new ideas to explore.

When you really look around you will soon have so many ideas you won't know how to fit them all into your busy schedule.

When you decide where you want to go its a good idea to call ahead and make arrangements. Most businesses and hobbyists are more than glad to help.

Homeschool Yearbooks

For the first couple of years we homeschooled we kept written records and that was about it. I read in a magazine about making a yearbook each year. We can look back now and we have yearbooks for each year with pictures of the different things we did. We have pictures of them doing schoolwork, how they looked on the first and last days of school, special projects, field trips, activites, Valentines parties, crocheting or shop projects, gardening projects from start to finish, fair entries with pictures of items entered and ribbons won etc. Its wonderful to look back and see all things we did together. Now that part of my children are grown it would be a neat idea to put them in a digital format so they could all have a copy. We always kept written records but the yearbooks were something special.
With only two children at home this year we are going a step further and making homeschool scrapbooks and have the kids put them together for an art project.

Homeschooling with the Weaver Curriculum

The Weaver Curriculum is a core curriculum which contains Bible, Social Studies, Science, Language Arts, Health, Safety, Field Trips, Vocabulary, Art and Memory Verse. Each volume is a full years curriculum for 7 grade levels which are k-6. A supplement can be bought with each volume for grades 7-12. It is reusable, so every couple years the volume can be repeated. Each volume covers a different part of the bible and is based on that area.
This curriculum worked well for us since it covers a wide range of subjects and grades. We have 7 children and learning the same topic at the same time was very helpful and saved time. Being Bible based was also a plus.
Day by Day is a separate volume which helps you know what to teach, when to teach it and what you need to teach it so you can have all supplies ready. Creative writing and page numbers for Wisdom Words is also included.
Wisdom Words is a separate volume. It is a grammar and composition program for grades k-6. Highway to English Grammar is a supplement for the older grades.

We did a chapter on Kings and Queens and for part of the lesson the kids all dressed up in different costumes and put makeup on etc. We took pictures and treasure them now. When we did lessons we could gear them to the age of the child. A three year old would draw a picture whereas a 12 year old would write a 2 page report. Both could choose the king or queen they wanted to study.
When we did our cities chapter we made maps, learned about geographic features and street signs to name a few activities.
For Family History we made timelines, memory books, history of family, family events etc.

Each chapter has many ideas to use including movies to watch, things to make, language arts, bible lessons, science etc.

These are some of the things we did which stand out in my mine. There are so many subjects covered it would be hard to write about all of them.

We have volumes 1-5 for sale on our store along with Wisdom Words, several supplements and Genesis. http://www.wabbstersbooks.com/ To buy a new copy from Alpha Omega publications please go to http://www.aophomeschooling.com

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Homeschooling-Science in Summer

During the summer we do a lot of hands on Science activities. Baby chicks, baby goats and other baby animals make wonderful projects.Gardening projects- even container gardening makes a wonderful project especially when the vegetables get ripe and you get to eat them. Which of course leads to a cooking project. Last summer we were able to get fruit from an orchard next door to us and do a canning project. There were some complaints. During the winter we opened the different jars which we called "summer in a jar" and the kids loved it. Now we hear "how much are we canning this year." Its great the kids know where their food comes from.Taking walks and identifying plants, animals, rocks, insects, birds etc.makes a great field trip and the kids enjoy doing something different and spending time together. We make a nature book and draw what we have seen with date, place etc. The kids love it. I also have a nature notebook as an example.Camping out in the backyard and identifying constellations, big and little dippers, the north star and the moon is also very exciting for kids. Of course we are very lucky here and the mountains are only a couple of miles away and there are fewer lights and you have more visibility of the sky.During the hot times of summer is a good time for other activites such as teaching crocheting, knitting or even shop which you might not have time for during the school year.