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Showing posts from August, 2020

Comic books! The laziest teaching.

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  This was my bookstore haul today! All but one is a comic book, which is something I'd never have imagined happening 10 years ago. I was not one of those kids, the kids who loved comic books. My parents had a library full of old books, so I grew up on a steady diet of 19th century ladies' novels. (Wonderfully big R Romantic by the way. I particularly loved the nature crones of Gene Stratton Porter.) SO when I began with my two boys, I was very snobby about comic books. They read early, they read often, so why bother with "books" meant for boys who hated reading? I made some concessions; Calvin & Hobbes is genuinely witty, the vocabulary interesting, and the themes occasionally philosophical.  And, I believed fully in the Classical education idea of learning through text. And I still believe that textual learning is a critical skill. And if I was fully homeschooling, I would still be emphasizing text.  But! My kids are learning through text at school. They are get...

Audiobooks and podcasts, the list

This is in no way comprehensive, just some suggestions to get you started. I'll be updating over time (I'm starting with history), and please do make suggestions in the comments. AUDIOBOOKS History audiobooks Story of the World - World history for elementary students, told through narrative Ordinary People Change the World series - biographies for quite young kids Kids' History on Learnoutloud , Kids' Biography on Learnoutloud  - Clearinghouse of titles, be aware some titles may be from older text which will be outdated or have a very Western perspective.  Newbery Award winners  on Audible - This list is primarily fiction, but many winners have been historical fiction, which is a wonderful way to reinforce history. Historical titles include: Dead End in Norvelt, Moon Over Manifest, Good Masters! Sweet Ladies!, Criss Cross, Kira Kira, Crispin: the Cross of Lead, A Single Shard, A Year Down Yonder, Bud, Not Buddy, Out of the Dust, The Midwife's Apprentice, Number th...

In praise of audiobooks, with thanks to Ernestine Gilbreth

One of the books I loved as a kid was Cheaper by the Dozen , a book about a family of twelve and their efficiency-expert parents, written by Ernestine, one of the twelve.  Lillian and Frank Gilbreth, the parents, are OG afterschoolers. Frank, ever the numbers guy, teaches the kids to do mental math, multiplying big numbers. He teaches them touch typing. And appreciating the value of acquiring a second language, he has the kids play foreign language records while they bathe. "You don't have to listen to them consciously," he says, "Just play them, and they'll finally make an impression." For ten years, every morning and every evening, you could hear French and German coming out of the bathroom. Whatever grumbling the kids might have done about it, all of them could speak French and German by the time they were grown.  It's meant to be a funny story, like the rest of the book, but it occurs to me that much of what I do with my kids is very much in the spir...

Getting ready for the school year through domesticity

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Getting ready to begin teaching, especially in this crazy year 2020, feels overwhelming, but right now, before my kids have started school, I'm still in the doldrums of August. And yes, I'm gathering homeschool materials oand trying to join a learning pod and getting school supplies. One thing that I think many parents overlook during this time is domestic organization . I am no particular fan of domesticity. I'm messy, I hate cooking, mail piles up. But every August, I spend a week or so trying to front load some organization so that the school year itself is not so difficult. This is a habit that started when I was about to have my second kid. The one thing I recalled from being a new parent was how any domestic process that had not been organized ... it failed. So we set up our bills to auto-pay. We started grocery delivery, and I pre-loaded lists that would cover our usual items. I made a month of meals. I put alerts on my phone for things like sorting mail or paying pr...

Enrichment in the time of COVID-19

My kids started remote classes in March. Their classes, which had been rigorous and sound for the most part, became a shadow of themselves. Their teachers were working hard to teach, but the difficulty of remote learning seemed insurmountable.  What had been five classes a week of immersion Spanish reduced to once a week. Reading Midsummer Night's Dream and writing about it became merely watching the movie. And so on. With another year of remote learning on the horizon, I decided: it's time to share about afterschooling. The pandemic did not begin my afterschooling journey; I started years ago when my children were very young. What began as a way to improve a subpar history curriculum became a more organized, multi-year project. In fact, I had taken time off to begin writing this blog about general afterschooling when the pandemic happened.  For those reading in 2020 anticipating a half-baked academic year, these are my main ideas: Passive v. active education: I limit the need...

Having difficulty getting started?

Getting started with afterschooling can be tricky. It can feel overwhelming. Before I go on, I think the most critical step is just to begin . You probably know a subject you'd like to work on with your kid. Begin there! But if you'd like to do a more extensive program but don't know where to begin, here are some things to think about.  Answer the following questions to focus on what you want to do and how you might do it: What do you hope to accomplish? For example, is this an ad hoc gifted program or a way to help your child catch up? Is your child learning less due to remote learning during the pandemic? Make a list of school subjects and rate your school as to how well it is meeting your child's needs in each subject. (Don't feel guilty! No school is perfect! This is especially true with remote learning.) Think about how much homework your child has, on average. How much time do you feel you can commit per week to formal instruction? Include both your time commi...

What is afterschooling? Why do it?

Afterschooling : like homeschooling, but for people who need to keep their kids in school. You may already be afterschooling. Your child may be taking music lessons, or attending events at a local nature preserve, or playing a history-based RPG or video game. It may also include things like getting tutored or using online websites in subject in which your child excels or struggles. More formal afterschooling just means organizing or formalizing enrichment outside of school.  While afterschooling could be as simple as focusing on one topic of enrichment, this blog will be more for people who need a broader array of learning. Spending an hour or two a week on competition math problems, for example, is not a complicated thing to arrange. Trying to arrange a more robust learning system is a little more complicated. Why afterschool? Your school doesn't offer a gifted program, or the gifted program is minimal. Or your child may  need extra help that is not forthcoming at school. The...