BreakWomb: Bad Parent
Anyway....
In mainstream school there are so many time constraints and schedules that more often than not, an enjoyable subject is ended and another subject taken up before a student is ready to move on. This morning Kiddo wanted some coloring sheets (and of course they were superheroes because the world doesn't turn without superheroes), so we made a game. He has to write out a superhero's name, and if I can read it, I'll print out a coloring sheet. This went on for nearly six hours. Yeah, that's not a joke. My hyper, over-the-top-with-excess-energy kiddo spent almost six hours writing and coloring. Homeschool or not, figure out what your kid is into; It will save you.
| If we want to play in the yard all afternoon, we do. |
| We learned all about SC turtles after meeting this wee one. |
| Learning in a tree |
| Learning to climb that tree |
I'm nervous when I stop and think about how nontraditional this learning style is. I worry that everything won't be covered on our adventures or that something important might fall through the cracks. I worry that people will hold me to a different (and much more stringent) standard for my kindergartner simply because we homeschool and that doesn't jive with their world perspective.
However, I have to have confidence in our choices. I like the World Book's typical course of study. For preschool, we went down the list and checked off everything The Kid already new. Then I came up with ways to learn everything else on the list. The list is hanging on our bulletin board. So when we are having a lazy day where learning is slow going or maybe it's raining outside, to the list we go. So much of the list is learned before we even get to it because we learn it through other activities; for example: learning animal environments. We could watch a youtube clip about different animals and do a worksheet OR we could go outside and look in the trees and look in the compost* and look in the marsh and look at the beach and, well, you get my point. We cover so much in exploration and conversation that sitting down and hammering out worksheets is rarely necessary.
What questions does your kid come up with?
What obsessions lead your learning?
*This kid is, no joke, obsessed with compost bugs; Ants, worms, centipedes, roaches, fruit flies, you name it.
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