Archive for June, 2006

Two Items of Interest: University Admissions and Homeschoolers Helping Others

BevK June 29th, 2006

I found two items of interest in the Agape Press Commentary & News Briefs compiled by Jenni Parker:

..A tentative ruling by a federal judge would allow six students from a Christian school to sue the University of California over its refusal to recognize religious-based courses in the admission process. U.S. District Judge James Otero has ruled for now that the students from Calvary Chapel Christian School in Murietta can pursue their case. It claims that the UC system violated their free speech and discriminated against them. (See earlier article) At the same time, Otero expressed concern that no Islamic or Jewish schools had joined Calvary’s suit. UC attorneys argue they have a right to set standards and that the courses were not rejected because of ideology but because they did not teach adequately. Joining the lawsuit as a co-plaintiff is the Association of Christian Schools International, which represents 800 religious schools nationwide. [AP]

I posted on this previously: Christian Based High School Credits Disallowed at UC The university was rejecting courses that used Bob Jones Press and ABeka curricula.

…WORLD Magazine founder and columnist Joel Belz says although he supports Christian education and home schooling, those methods of education are not perfect. Belz is particularly concerned that those involved in private Christian or home education may sometimes ignore others who might like to participate but cannot afford to do so. “Don’t get me wrong,” the writer says. “I think it’s the most natural, God-ordained sort of thing for us to think first about our own children. We should think first [about them], because that’s the order of things. But in thinking first of our own children, we ought to hurry then to think about the needs of others and not put it on some long-term agenda list and say, ‘Well, I’ll get around to that when I get things straightened out for myself.” Belz also encourages Christian parents to train their children not just to know biblical facts but to defend their beliefs. [Natalie Harris]

I know people that have incomes well inside the poverty line who homeschool. So, I don’t see how homeschooling cannot be afford by just about anyone who’s willing to make sacrifices. Most homeschoolers are making those sacrifices to have their children at home. And far from ignoring others who might want to homeschool, the homeschooling movement is full of people taking time to help new homeschoolers. It’s sort of an unwritten rule that once you get your feet under you, you help someone else. That’s what support groups are all about.

If the objection is that we don’t continue to fight for the children who remain in public schools, that’s probably true. Most homeschoolers have found their solution in homeschooling. But the growth in homeschooling has had an impact on public education. Homeschoolers have run for election on their local school boards.

Let’s Google and Yahoo Our Kids’ Education

BevK June 29th, 2006

I love Google and Yahoo. With Google and Yahoo I can search the Internet on any subject that interests me, at any time day or night, in the comfort of my home. I was thinking how much fun it is to learn new things with Google or Yahoo, compared to the boredom or learning torture that public schools put millions of kids through every day. Let’s consider the differences in how a typical child (we’ll call her Jenny) learns when she uses Google or Yahoo, compared to how she ‘learns’ in her public-school classroom.

Help kids to handle real life

BevK June 29th, 2006

A terrific article about expecting children to want to learn and to be able to handle more than we think.

The little budding musician didn’t just plop down onto the floor in front of the other children. Instead, he took his little body, slithered sideways into the few inches that remained between guitar teacher and student and melted to the floor. Face beaming, he reached for his little guitar while teacher and student each scrambled to move their own guitars a safe distance away. Here he was, in the middle of it all. The dog moved in, claimed a vacant spot and the band was complete. Our little friend stayed planted where he was for the rest of the lesson. He didn’t get bored, nor did his mind wander for he was included with the bigger children and doing real work.

God, Gone with the Sugar: Schools Today

BevK June 29th, 2006

I enjoyed reading this piece at National Review Online. It has nothing to do with homeschooling. In fact, the author Susan Konig sends her kids to parochial school. But I did appreciate her sentiments about public school parents.

Here’s some bits and pieces. Read the whole thing here.

I saw a bumper sticker in the parking lot of the local public elementary school that read: What our schools need is a moment of science.

Science is great. In fact, it’s our nine-year-old’s favorite subject. But this statement isn’t pro-science, it’s anti-God. It’s saying that a moment of silence is an offensive thing and that it should be replaced by something academic.

it would be nice to show up for a sports event or a play at the public schools we support wholeheartedly with our tax dollars and not be offended for our beliefs. I don’t meet to overreact — I realize this is one bumper sticker on one person’s car — but I have been overtly confronted with this anti-religious fervor before.

The Narrowing of the American Curriculum

BevK June 27th, 2006

An interesting opinion piece on the state of our schools and how No Child Left Behind has had unintended consequences.

History, science, and the arts are being de-emphasized by most schools in order to make room for teaching basic reading and math skills, according to a recent study . Who’s to blame for this? Critics of reform point to the No Child Left Behind law.

The author suggests two solutions. One would be to teach reading in the content areas ala ED HIrsch’s Core Knowledge concepts. The second is just to keep children in school longer each day and give teachers the time to expand the curriculum to include intensive reading and math instruction as well as art, history, and science.

More from the article:

Still enamored with romantic beliefs that children can learn to read as naturally as they learn to talk, and disregarding knowledge and content as nothing but “mere facts,” the leaders of the education establishment and their comrades in schools of education continue to indoctrinate teachers and principals in self-defeating ideas.

So why doesn’t every high-poverty public school embrace the KIPP model and lengthen its day? In this case, the answer is politics: It’s not allowed under the collective bargaining agreement.

Diplomas Count: An Essential Guide to Graduation Policy and Rates

BevK June 27th, 2006

Education Week’s first annual report provides detailed data on graduation rates across the 50 states and the District of Columbia, and in the nation’s 50 largest school districts.

Britannica Launches Online Video Store

BevK June 27th, 2006

These sound like great items to request your local library purchase. At $49.95 for the first video and $29.95 for each additional video added to a DVD they are pricey. Most are no more than 15 minutes long.

Some of the finest educational films and videos ever made are now available online from the Britannica Video Store, just introduced by Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.

The new online outlet, located at http://www.tangibledata.com/britannica, features scores of Britannica’s most famous videos on subjects ranging from history and biography to mathematics and science to the humanities.

Eighty-six titles are currently available, including 13 in Spanish, but the total will rise to about 200 this summer. Current titles include biographies of Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln; programs on Chaucer and Shakespeare; surveys of Africa, Europe and South America; an instructional video on maps; and science titles on matter and atomic-molecular theory.

When Schooling Takes Place at Home, Summer Often Knows No Vacation

BevK June 27th, 2006

Poor homeschoolers, it sounds like they don’t get a summer vacation…read on…

Public school came to a screeching halt last week - tests and final projects one day, sweet freedom the next. But at least 16 Island youths will merely slow their studies, instead of stopping altogether. Some may not even acknowledge the two-and-half-month academic bump in the road called summer vacation.

For the home schooled students of Martha’s Vineyard, school may be just another day at the beach: reading a book, collecting shells, practicing arithmetic in the sand. Working with curriculums that reflect their unique interests and learning styles, the ubiquitous days-until-summer countdown is absent from these students’ calendars.

Parents delivering quality education

BevK June 27th, 2006

A nice article promoting homeschooling by Michael Smith of HSLDA.

Home-schooling is thriving across the country as more parents choose to take personal responsibility for their children’s education. The rapid growth of home-schooling caused home-school critic Rob Reich to say in the April 18 issue of Family Circle magazine, that “today everyone knows someone who’s home-schooling.”

The overwhelming majority of home-school parents are forward-looking and desire for their children to be active and make a positive contribution to society. As time goes by, and as home-schooling continues to grow, people will come to a greater understanding of the benefits of this method of education.

100 Top Picks for Homeschool Curriculum: Choosing the Right Curriculum and Approach for Your Child’s Learning Style

BevK June 21st, 2006

Publisher: Broadman and Holman Publishers
Author: Cathy Duffy
List Price: $21.99
Reviewed By: Tammy Cardwell at the Eclectic Homeschool Online

When I began researching homeschooling a seeming lifetime ago, Cathy Duffy was my friend. I don’t mean this literally, of course, but her Christian Home Educators’ Curriculum Manuals were some of the most helpful books on the market. They introduced parents to the different learning styles, which was an entirely new concept to me, and helped us in our frantic search for just the right curriculum. When her books went out of print, I knew the homeschool world had lost a tremendous asset.

But now she’s back in print, and better than ever. 100 Top Picks for Homeschool Curriculum, a brand new release, is my new homeschooling favorite for parents on the curriculum hunt. If you’re a Christian in search of curriculum, do yourself a favor. Invest in this book first, take time to work your way through its variety of helps, and then make your purchasing decisions. I guarantee you’ll be glad you did.

If someone had asked me what ground should be covered in a book designed to assist homeschoolers in selecting curriculum, my list would have included everything Cathy Duffy covers here, and less. Right, no matter how thorough I could have been in my suggestions, she’s thought of even more. The only way you could get better help than this is if you were able to hire a qualified curriculum consultant who could work with you on a one-on-one basis. Cathy Duffy is the perfect guide to chose when venturing into the curriculum world.

Think I’m exaggerating? Read on.

Chapter One: How on Earth Do I Figure Out What Curriculum to Use?

In these few pages, you’ll find encouragement, exhortation, and a few hints at the helps to come. One of my favorite sentences from this chapter also explains the power of the book. “My purpose with these first few chapters is to help you become goal-oriented rather than ‘curriculum driven.” Take it from someone who has been there and done that; dashing out into the exhibit hall without preparing yourself properly ahead of time is a mistake. You cannot chose the right curriculum without clearly outlined goals.

Chapter Two: “Drill and Kill,” “Real Books,” “Delight-Directed Studies”. . .What’s Best?

This, of course, is the first question most potential curriculum consumers ask, but the answer is not so simple. The question isn’t really, “What’s best? ,” but is actually, “What’s best for US?” Here in chapter two you begin working towards finding out what is best for you, one step at a time. The very first, and most important, step is establishing your “Philosophy of Education.” In my early years I saw this as a non-essential, something I didn’t need to spend time on. In my later years, I saw differently; much of the heartache we went through as we grew as homeschoolers could have been avoided if I’d taken time for this. Please, learn from my mistakes.

Understandably, many are intimidated by the thought of dealing with anything that includes the word philosophy, but establishing your philosophy of education will be relatively easy if you follow the path laid out in this chapter. It starts with answering a series of simple questions, and ends by condensing those answers, and quite a bit of other information, down into a single statement. This statement is the foundation for decisions you will make later, so don’t skip this step.

Continuing to work on your Philosophy of Education, you begin the process of determining which approach to education is most likely to fit with your family’s needs. Your guide has created an outstanding chart that permits you to rate the importance of certain educational details. Once you’ve marked the chart appropriately, prioritizing the things that are important to you, you then learn how to interpret what it tells you. With these results in hand, you have a list of the teaching approaches that are most likely to suit. Continue through the chapter and you learn about each of these approaches - the way they work as well as both their strong and weak points - and will likely end up with a fairly definite direction in mind. Along the way, you’ll find many suggestions for further reading on the various teaching approaches.

At the end of Chapter Two, you look more closely at what you’ve learned about yourself and the most appropriate teaching methods by answering questions that serve as reality checks. For instance, in a perfect world, Unit Studies may be the ideal course for you, but if you answer “Very little” to question 2 (“How much time do you have available for working directly with your children and for planning and preparation?”) you may have to reconsider. But don’t despair; your helpful guide offers assistance in matching your ideal teaching approach with your very real lifestyle.

Chapter Three: Putting Together Your Philosophy of Education

You’re getting closer, and Cathy Duffy is right there with you! She shares her own philosophy, and how she put it together, as if she were in your shoes. You’ll get to see how she answered the same questions she’s already asked you, as well as how she filled out the charts and forms, and how she translated the results from both into a four-sentence Philosophy of Education. Once you have done the same, clarifying exactly what you believe education should be in your family, you will find that choosing appropriate curriculum is much easier than you had anticipated.

Chapter Four: Learning Styles: How Does My Child Learn Best?

The next step is understanding learning styles - not just learning modalities (visual, auditory, kinesthetic), with which many people are familiar, but learning styles, which goes much deeper. This is a complex subject, but one that your guide has quite skillfully distilled into a few, short descriptions and explanations. First you determine your own learning style. This alerts you to the manner in which you will be inclined to teach. Having discovered this, you then, if they’re old enough, determine your children’s learning styles. This is where life gets challenging, because it seems God delights in giving us children who are our direct opposites. Understanding both your and your children’s learning styles is important when choosing a curriculum, because you want whatever you buy to work for everyone if at all possible - not just for Mom. It won’t surprise you to learn that your guide is still beside you, helping you confront this challenge as well.

Chapter Five: Who Should Learn What and When?

See? She really does know what questions you’re asking!

And she answers this question every bit as well as she’s answered all others, though the answers may surprise you. You will discover, while working your way through this chapter and setting your goals, just how important your Philosophy of Education really is, because it is what will help you determine what your children should learn and when they should learn it.

Hopefully by now I’ve made it clear that this is not a book to be read lightly, but one to be worked through quite seriously. Choosing the right curriculum is a huge part of the homeschool challenge. Don’t try to cut corners in making the decision; use this book as it was intended to be used if a successful homeschool really is your goal.

Chapter Six: Top 100 Picks

Now that you’ve navigated the challenging path towards that all-important exhibit hall (Or wherever you intend to search out curriculum), you are prepared to take a look at Cathy Duffy’s top 100 list. But this is no mere list!

In Chapter Six you discover, preceded by several pages of explanatory notes, page after page of charts that break each of her top 100 choices down by various categories. For instance, if you’re in search of a math curriculum that’s right for your Wiggly Willy, you need only go to the chart’s math section, look down the column entitled “Multisensory/Hands-on (Wiggly Willy)” and you will find your guide’s rating for each of the math programs’ appropriateness for one who operates in this learning style. There are fifteen columns on the chart. Four deal with the learning styles, two with the amount of parent/teacher involvement, and others with things like prep time, ease of use, education style (ie., Charlotte Mason), and Christian content. The final column gives the page number on which you will find the review of the product.

Subsequent chapters present the product reviews, broken down by category. Those categories are: Phonics, Reading and Literature; Mathematics; Language Arts; History, Geography, and Cultural Studies; Science; Unit Studies and All-in-One Programs; Foreign Language; and Electives, Online Classes and All-in-One Programs. All reviews follow a consistent format (cover photo, title, author, publisher/supplier, contact information, price, review text) and each of the reviews is pure Cathy Duffy, which translates as “entirely helpful.”

Cathy Duffy, we’re glad you’re back in print!

Get your copy here.

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