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Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Well that was fast!

The actual paper copy of our LOA arrived to our agency TODAY!
(That was only 3 days! Wow!)

Our "10-14 weeks until travel" starts tomorrow when our agency files our I-800 paper.


We have had SUCH a wonderful experience with our international agency. They are on it with every detail and so sweet whenever I call to ask questions.
I am SO happy we chose CCAI!

Monday, May 26, 2014

So many choices! MATH

We have been homeschooling our children for about 4 years now. Time flies! We have used an assortment of curriculums. Some I have LOVED, some have been good and some didn't work for us (but might for you). I thought I would list some choices here that might be helpful. This is, of course, not exhaustive, just what we have experienced.

I will start with Math...

{I would love to hear of your discoveries as they come!}

I have liked SM for my oldest and youngest children. Those two are more drawn to math. C-Dub started SM at level 2B and has now finished up with 6B. My middle child (Fashion Faith) has done 1B-3B and my youngest (Jumping Joy) 1A-2A so far. My oldest will move to Pre-Algebra, my middle will change math curriculum and my youngest will do 2B-3A next school year.

{Here is an example of 1A-1B textbooks, workbooks, teacher lesson plans & answers as I mention below}



What I like about it...this has been a great series of books for my son because math comes easily to him. I also like that there is a placement test and you can enter at any book. The books are organized 1A, 1B, 2A, 2B, 3A...6B. I also like that the books are small paperback books that don't overwhelm the student. The intro few books (like 1 and 2) are also full color.

I like to purchase SM from the My Father's World site because you can get the books individually and they have put together an answer key/lesson plan book for a lost cost.

What I don't like...books 6A and 6B didn't have as clear of an explanation for problem solving or learning a new concept and the previous books. The text book did not give clear examples as I came to expect in the first books 1A-5B. I would not use 6A and 6B again.

I will continue to use SM with my youngest as math also comes easy to her and she enjoys the subject. I am trying out Abeka Math next year for my middle child (I already have the 4th grade curriculum so I don't have to spend any $$ for her in the area of math this coming year). I like that Abeka is full color even at the 4th grade level. She can do the math but too many problems on a page overwhelm her and it is not a favorite subject for her.

I used this book with both of my girls. One of them in Kinder and one of them in 1st grade. It worked great for both girls even though they are very different learners. 



What I like about it...this book is very colorful and easy to navigate for a young mathematician. It is also paperback, which I prefer.

I just discovered that they have a 3-4th grade book as well. The book shown above can be purchased at My Father's World or on Amazon.

This will be new to us this coming year for my son who will start Pre-Algebra. We have lots of friends who have used different levels of Teaching Textbooks and I am at the end of my "pull the answer out of a hat" with my son. I'm sure I could figure it out but that is not a good use of my time. So we will try Teaching Textbooks. 



What I like about it...as I understand it there is a CD-rom that comes with the curriculum that teaches the lesson. With the 2.0 addition there is also a computer-correct feature. I'm LOVIN' that!

I believe Teaching Textbooks starts in 3rd grade.

What I don't like...the cost. Whew!!! It's a lot! So it better also sing and dance ;) I am hoping to use it for all the kids in my family and anyone else I know forever and ever...

I will most likely be getting this from Christian Book Distributors. My favorite website for most of my homeschool curriculum!!!

Saxon Math
We only used this curriculum briefly with my son in 1st grade. To me it is super boring and redundant. If they get the concept I like to move on not do 30 more problems of the same thing. We only used it because we were part of a charter homeschool for a short time.

Hope this helps!
More subjects to come :)


Saturday, May 24, 2014

Where to start with homeschooling


A few years ago, when we ware thinking seriously about homeschooling, I came across this book on Amazon. It was so helpful! I didn't know there were different styles of schooling to consider or that there were styles that fit our philosophy of education better than others. This book really helped navigate the many choices. I would strongly suggest you get a hold of this book and take the quiz towards the beginning on the book. What it will assist you in is your WHY for homeschooling and what is important to your family and how school fits into that. After the quiz you will get an in-depth explanation of each style and see which one, or ones, suits your family. Then you can begin to look for curriculum that best fits for you and your children.



Good luck!

China said YES!

Over this past week David and I were blessed to get away for a few days to various places.
{Thank you to all of our parents for being amazing in different ways!}

We try to go away each year for our anniversary and each and every time
(no matter what month the trip actually lands)
something big happens-or-we get some big news-or-a big decision needs to be made. 


Well...this trip did not disappoint.

We found out on Thursday that we got our
LOA!!!

It took exactly 30 days for this to come. "What does this mean?"...you might be wondering...it means that China has agreed for our family to adopt precious Yan Jie. China said Yes! Now more paperwork {of course} awaits us but we are one more big step forward with this news. As soon as the hard copy gets to our agency (that could take 1-3 weeks)  we are 10-14 weeks to travel. Whoo hoo!

Then...when we arrived home and checked the mail look what we found! I never would have guessed that I would be holding my three kid's passports for them at such young ages. Cool!


Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Lesson Plans, Lesson Plans...

Many curriculums come with already planned lesson plans for the topics they cover. Some come with nothing... and you have to put together your own. Putting together your own can be daunting. Finding a blank lesson plan book that suits your lifestyle and the size of your family is key. I took my mom with me to the school supply store (we both LOVE school and office supplies) and we searched each and every book until I found this one. I knew I could adapt this book to what I needed. This book is intended for an elementary school teacher with a class of 30+kids. It had enough structure but not too much. It has worked GREAT for us!

I have used My Father's World a few years (which comes with the lesson plans pretty much covering all subjects) but last year I decided to write my own in a blank teacher's book. I picked so many different/separate curriculums that I needed them to be all in one spot for easy reference.

 {Here is a blank page of my lesson plan book before I wrote in it and organized it to fit our family}



{Below are 2 examples of my lesson plan book once I sectioned it out for our three school-aged kids}

I divided the blank page up into four sections. The top section says ALL for subjects we all do together (bible, science, history, poetry). Then I have the bottom three sections by child with their letter (C, K, J) at the top of their section. I divided them up with a highlighter for easy distinction. I used this for 3 kids but you could easily fit 6 kids with this style of lesson plan book. 

 week 4


Notice the small orange highlighted area on the left side of the book. This is highlighting H3 (handwriting for my third grader) on a day that she used a ticket to get out of handwriting. You can view my ticket system here. I check off each line item as the child completes that subject.

week 21

This page shows that on Monday we celebrated our 100th Day of School. I didn't plan any of our regular subjects on this day.

To get started using something like the book I showed above these are the steps I followed...

Step 1: divide up each page. I counted up how many lines there were, saved some for our ALL section and then gave the kids an equal number of the rest of the lines.

Step 2: write ALL and their letter on each section.

Step 3: highlight the lines that has ALL & their letter on it. (I just noticed that the week 4 does not have the ALL section highlighted in orange. That'll totally bug me so I will probably go back and highlight it. I'm particular like that ;)

Step 4: start by adding something simple like handwriting. This is, for us, a non-crucial subject that can be pitched if the day goes wonky. By starting with a subject like this you can get something on the page because there is not a lot of searching through your teacher manual to know what comes next and you feel like you accomplished something. Other subjects take longer as you need to see what pages go with what and so on.

Step 5: continue adding subjects to each child's section for about four weeks worth of time. I made the mistake last year of adding about 6 months of their work. That was way too much. Things, at least for us, change so I did a lot or erasing and re-writing...WASTE of TIME!
For the upcoming year I am going to decide how often a subject gets put on the books for each week and write the details in for each child a few weeks at a time.

For example we will do Geography two days a week every other week (M, Th), Literature with composition guides 4 days a week (M, T, Th, F), Math 4 days a week (M, T, Th, F). You'll notice that I keep skipping Wednesdays...that's because we won't be home that day at all. We will be in a co-op and at other classes away from home from 9am-2:30p. On a day like this I don't assign any of their regular subjects. The only thing I might add is Poetry which we listen to in the car when we drive or Story of the World (history), which we will listen to on CD this coming year, while we drive.

Listening to Story of the World is an example of flexibility for us. I know our year will be crazy with a pending adoption. If I can adjust a subject where I have to sit down and read with the kids then that is going to work MUCH better for our schedule and lifestyle. So the fact that this particular history (there are others too) comes on CD blesses me SO MUCH! I have heard great things about the curriculum. One of the things that keeps me sane is that I try to do as many subjects with THE WHOLE FAMILY as possible. For one thing I believe it builds family cohesiveness and takes less time!

My plan is that when my kids get into 6th grade they are given more responsibility in keeping their work organized. So unless you have kids in every grade from  PreK-5th grade you can use this to manage their work. You can also have multiple kids doing the same work. You could put them on one line. My thought is to get my next-year-6th-grader something on a smaller scale for him to keep his lesson plan in. We'll see how that rolls out ;) 


One of my goals with homeschooling and life is to prepare my kids to be independent and self-sufficient as early and as soon as possible. You can't serve God and others, using your gifts and talents, if people have to do everything for you.


Some thing I have learned about homeschooling and lesson plan keeping is that if we are ever audited a person needs to be able to look at our lesson plans and see exactly what our kids have been up to.

Well that's great but I am not going to write out Wordly Wise (or whatever the subject is) each time in my book. So, on one of the first pages I made a KEY for myself to follow. You will see on my lesson plan pages that it may say WW for Wordly Wise, BEY for Beyond the Code, SM for Singapore Math...and so on. The kids learned this code easily and quickly because I also write those codes for them on their daily work page. Anyone can look at my book and see exactly which subjects each child has for that day.


Now on to next year
This is the lesson plan book I have for next year. The layout is different (horizontal days) and the date is written at the top of each week. This book also comes with a month calendar for each month. I think I will like this as I can put in field trips, vacations and such that will span more than just a day. I really like the "month at a glance" view. Originally I liked the idea of the date already written in for this school year. Now I am second guessing it. I have a HUGE value of flexibility. Homeschool fits right into that but I can see this cramping my style. We will finally be traveling to China this coming school year to adopt our precious Aunna-baby but I don't know what week that will land. Grrr, I am such a planner. In my previous lesson plan book I would have just adjusted the date at the top of that week's work (it started blank) and then put the new date. On this one I may be putting labels over the top of the printed date and filling in my own. We'll see.


Here is the month view


I hope you find this helpful. I'm sure there are many more great ideas out there too! I would love to hear about how you organize your homeschool lesson plans. It's much more fun if we all share ideas and help each other out. You can see that I love to share what's worked and not worked for us. :)

up next...
**Which Curriculums we Have Used, Which Curriculums we Love, Which Curriculums we are Going to be Using Next Year

**One Word activity

**Make Your Own Board Games

Many Blessings!
erin

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

End of the year {binding your child's work}

Sometimes it's hard to figure out what to do with our children's work at the end of the school year. We have consumable "worksheet" type books, looseleaf student pages, photocopies, work from classes and other things that we need to keep samples of. So a few years I decided to bind what I wanted to keep at a copy store and pitch the rest...it's just TOO much to keep everything from each child!

Here is a quick video on what I do and some ideas of fun other pages to add in.



We just finished our school for the year today {whew!} so I am about to bind our third school year. The kids love looking back on their work from previous years and it's so handy to have it all in one spot. I have the under-the-bed size plastic bins for each child. After I bind them, they look through them a few times, I pop this year's bound book in the bin and that's that.

We did however get to use the previous year's bound books for reference material this year. That was a happy accident!

As this year's cover page I am going to do their 1st and last day of school pictures. I love to see their growth!

Happy last few weeks of school!

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Here she is!

We have already been blessed by knowing just who our daughter is.
{even though she is half way around the world in China}


She's beautiful!

It's amazing how, in an instant, you can look at the world in a whole new way. Now, I go through my days wondering about her, praying for her and her foster family, her potential physical challenges in my thoughts...and her name on the tip of my tongue all the time...the list goes on.

Last Friday {one week after our match} we sent a care package to our little girl. A great idea by someone, I forget who now, maybe our wonderful agency CCAI, said for every item we send to also bring a duplicate on our trip so that it will be recognizable to her.
We will donate those items to her foster family. What a fun idea.
We sent a blanket, a toy, jammies, a photo book of our family, a disposable camera and candies for the foster family. On each of the pictures I taped the Mandarin character of who was in the picture (like mother, father, big sister and big brother).

Another great idea, which we will do soon, is to send one of those recordable story books where I read the story to her and it plays when she turns the pages. Technology is so helpful!

**Paperwork that we are working on is the I-800 (US immigration related) and still waiting for China to send us the Letter of Acceptance.

We're comin' Aunna-baby!