A new school year is upon us. Paulie, Philip, and Finn are back in their respective high, middle, and elementary schools in 10th, 7th, and 3rd grades this year. School is now underway, and we are settling into familiar routines. Except Elizabeth. She's feeling her way through a new routine this year as she homeschools for 9th grade.
The feedback when you decide to homeschool a highschooler is interesting. "Really?! Why?!" "What about math?" "Won't she miss the socialization?" Ok, maybe those responses aren't so different as when you announce that you intend to homeschool at other ages, but the underlying question that many seem to hedge is, "aren't you afraid of spending THAT much time with your teen?" The basic answer to all of those questions is this: I not only love her because she's my daughter; I like her too. She's witty, curious, and engaging. She's had a great educational foundation and enjoys learning. She's a motivated kid who likes to check things off lists, which means no nagging from me. She already has deep connections to many friends. She will volunteer, take art classes, take violin lessons, and find other ways to "socialize" if we find that lacking over the year. As for math...thank goodness for Sal Khan.
Since the ever-burning question from other homeschooling parents is generally curriculum related, I'll post a list of our resources below:
English: I'm making my own literature curriculum supplementing with resources online. We started with Tom Sawyer. Brave Writer will stand in the gap for writing.
Math II: Khan Academy (following the basic Common Core Integrated Math II)
US History: A History of US, US History Maps
Earth Science: CK12 Earth Science for High School, supplementing with YouTube, online activities, and projectsPE: 4-6 week units as Elizabeth chooses, right now she's doing yoga and stretches
Art: assignments that tie into her other classes as well as classes through our local art school
A few other things worth noting, I'm trying to keep a week or two ahead on planning, which will allow me to adjust as needed. Teachers Pay Teachers has fantastic resources, some free, for nearly every subject. I've already downloaded many of their resources to tie into other curricula we're using. YouTube is your friend. There are videos on EVERYTHING out there! Netflix too. I'm sure as we continue I'll find things that work better and not as well. I'll try to keep you posted as we go along!
I'm excited to read this, as we are already pondering what our older kiddo may do for high school. I'm trying to be open-minded about it way ahead of time, because if we don't find a school that's the right "fit", this would be our next option. Unless we can get our current school to start adding on the high school grades :)
ReplyDeleteJust save everything for me for 3 years from now!
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