Exciting News!
Kelly from Fearless Homeschool is running a rare live session of her Zero to Homeschool course!
Here’s a quick overview -
Full course access – instant & lifetime
July 6 – August 28
Weekly live coaching sessions
Accountability (so you actually do it!)
Over eight weeks you’ll go through one module a week. You’ll meet for a live session once a week where Kelly does some extra teaching, answers questions, and helps troubleshoot your issues. She’ll even record it so you can watch if you can’t make it live.
At the end of the eight weeks you’ll have a personalised homeschool that’s interesting, enjoyable, AND educational (and that you don’t want to run away from).
If that’s EXACTLY what you need right now, you can join Zero to Homeschool here. Enjoy!
We did Queensland handwriting books at about age 6 for printing, and age 10 for cursive writing. I'm not sure anyone finished their books, though, they really disliked them.
I also bought the dotted thirds lined exercise books and would write words and sentences relevant to the children - names, address and other locations, friends, family, pets, words related to their interests... This was a more popular method than the workbooks.
I used to get them to write on my shopping list, or on the calendar, and they wrote cards and occasional letters to family and friends. The older ones had penpals, but the younger ones used email for communicating with friends far away.
As they got older, if it was evident that their handwriting was still both a chore for them and not very neat, we tried keeping a journal. This of course helped with other aspects of writing such as composition and grammar. Most of them disliked journaling, so it was abandoned fairly soon.
For some we tried Copywork....
We love Twinkl for printables and inspiration. We took advantage of the full free access during the covid-caused global homeschooling era, and we were rapt to see they're offering discounts for home educators this week so we can continue to access the resources.
Are you creating things with little people? I often am! I have a few craft books to inspire, but I don't regularly use them... I normally search online for a specific theme, eg: "rainbow craft preschool". Or sometimes I search for activities to use up specific materials, eg: "seedpod crafts". I have the beginnings of a folder of ideas in Pinterest, but I forget to add to it!
We like to use materials from nature, mixed with materials that can be composted. We try to avoid plastic, foam, synthetic fibres, over-packaged kits, single-use everything! I remember about 20 years ago taking my tribe of small children to playgroup and coming home with at least four creations made from plastic and styrofoam, glitter and googly eyes. And another four the next week. And over and over until our home was filled with non-recyclable art that inevitably ended up in the bin. We still have way too many precious creations floating...
A free video workshop - 7 Simple Steps to Create Your Own Homeschooling Curriculum
HERE’S WHAT YOU’RE GOING TO LEARN
– How to create a curriculum based on real life
– How to meet the needs of homeschool registration while remaining flexible and family-centred
– How to easily integrate skills for adult life in your curriculum
I only received these recently, but I love them already! Not sure if this is a resource for the kids, or for me...
These Grow Do It Permaculture Action Cards were written by Charlie Mgee (based on his awesome musical offerings) and illustrated by Brenna Quinlan. There are 63 different cards and they are large.
So far I've used them with Zeah (4) and we've done matching type activities to identify what goes with what... eg: choose a principle card such as Catch and Store Energy. It was interesting to hear her reasons for matching certain cards, and also useful for me to have to explain my reasons. Because she can't read yet, we mostly used the illustration side of each card.
I love Permaculture. I love open-ended resources which can be used in multiple ways - from setting challenges to action games to creative prompts. I think these ones are well worth the investment, and I love how ethically they are produced, packaged and promoted. Each...
My older children were independent readers at a huge variety of ages. One was reading novels at three years of age. Others learned to read around five, and progressed at a similar rate to most schooled children. A couple of them could read basic words, but weren’t independent readers until they were 8 or 9 years old. I define an “independent reader” as one who will seek some text to read for pleasure, or obtain information, without much assistance. Most of our kids jumped from “The Cat Sat On The Mat” style readers to novels or non-fiction books in a matter of weeks.
As adults, they all read for pleasure and study. They’ll often come home and scour the bookshelves for favourites to re-visit or reference books they remember.
“Children are being freed to learn as nature intended” – just one comment I will always remember from my 2002 research into why Australian parents were home educating their children. I was curious as to why so many were taking the plunge into home based learning in Australia. Recently, isolation-schooling during the pandemic has exposed the option to all families as a possibility. Here, I explain why a steadily-increasing number of families been home educating in Australia over the past few decades.
Some parents actively choose to home educate. They make the decision sometime – whether when their children are infants (and even unborn), or when they feel dissatisfied with their children’s schooling for any reason. Some parents feel that there was no other choice. Perhaps they have exceptional or neurodiverse children, their children are sick or injured, they may be simply unable to cope with the stress...
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