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Pay What You Want Sale

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Currclick is having a Pay What You Want Sale this weekend for curriculum, lapbooks, other resources and classes. The sale ends July 29, 2013.

The great thing is they have a wide variety of resources and classes beginning at preschool and going all the way to adults. Mom, you can even take a class yourself if you want. If you are interested in seeing what products are available Click here.

 Please pay a fair price for your items. Happy Shopping!

Extracurricular Options

circle label template sports sample There are a few limitations we homeschoolers have when it comes to playing team sports, mainly the number of participants. After all, I couldn’t have a baseball team with just my two sons and if you do have a large family, chances are not everyone is interested in playing the same sport. 🙂 If you are blessed to live in the Greater Cincinnati area there is a homeschool sports organization for your student to participate in team sports.

Cincinnati Trailblazers offers baseball, basketball, cross country, and volleyball for middle school and high school students. If you are interested and want to find out more information click here. If this option does not work out for you or you don’t live in Cincinnati, but you do live in Ohio, here is another option that just became available.

Ohio families who are looking for options for extracurricular activities (not just sports) are now afforded the opportunity to participate at the local public school. In the past it was a decision that each local school made, but now your student can participate in extracurricular activities such as: play on a team, be in a drama production, play in an orchestra, etc. Here is the information pertaining to the new bill that was passed. At this point, I do not know what type of requirements each school district would place upon homeschool families in order to participate. Be sure and investigate thoroughly before committing to participating. Please realize that it will take the schools time to put policies and procedures in place, so be patient and realize this may not happen this fall.

Story authored by Paula Bolyard: When Ohio Governor John Kasich signed the state’s $62 billion, two-year budget into law on Sunday night, June 30, 2013 (specific text, here), some homeschoolers were stunned to find out that tucked inside was language (3313.5312) expanding the rights of homeschooled and private school students. They will now be permitted to participate in extracurricular activities in the public schools in their home districts, including high school athletics. Without debate or fanfare, legislators added an amendment in the finance committee before the final vote giving homeschoolers (and private school students whose schools do not offer a particular activity) the right to join their local public schools for extracurricular activities:

“A student who is receiving home instruction…shall be afforded, by the superintendent of the school district in which the student is entitled to attend school…the opportunity to participate in any extracurricular activity offered at the district school to which the student otherwise would be assigned during that school year.”  Source: Ohioans for Educational Freedom

What does that mean? Investigative Learning

imagesI am a person who is curious. Curious about many things, but I am always curious about words and phrases and their origin. The word for that is called etymology. This word [etymology] is composed of two parts: the Greek word etymon, which means “the true sense of a word”, combined with the Greek element logia, which means “doctrine, study”. Combining these two parts gives us “the study of the true sense of words”, which can be said to be the ‘meaning’ of the word etymology.(source Behind the Name)

I spoke at the CHEC Orientation program yesterday and when I introduced myself I mentioned that I have a BS in Elementary Education and how I thought it strange you have 2 letters (B and S) for your degree. My unspoken thoughts were, “Why not something else? Why did they assign those letters? Why the combination of  the two words, Bachelor and Science? I didn’t even take that many courses in science!”

Why do people get a BA (Bachelor of Arts) when the only difference that I know of is that those students are required to take a foreign language. I don’t think many students who receive a BA have much more art than a BS student. I realized that was a rabbit trail, and I didn’t go down that trail when I spoke.  I am sure I didn’t clearly explain what I was thinking either! This was weighing on my mind so when I awoke today I was going to find out how exactly those letters (BS and BA) attached to college degrees actually meant.

“What is my point?”  It is this: curiosity is a good thing! It drives us to think beyond what is given to us and causes us to question and investigate. Isn’t this what we want our children to be doing as we teach them? Yes, it takes some time to go on rabbit trails, but it also what learning is about, going beyond the pages of a textbook.

So, how do you help a student who is curious about things? How do you help a student (like myself) who goes down rabbit trails easily and wanders off when work still needs to be done? How about keeping a running list of topics, ideas or words nearby so that when questions arise they can be investigated during free time. If you have a visual student you could put the list on large easel paper and put on the wall. If not, keep a clipboard near your desk and write down the questions to be investigated later. See, keeping your student on track while also validating that curiosity.

Research is an extremely important skill to be cultivated in our students, and frankly I find it makes the school day interesting. If you have younger students you may have to do the research and if there have been a million questions, pick the ones that are truly worth checking out.

What if you don’t have a student who is naturally curious? You could post a “Question of the Day” about topics you are studying. Allow 10 minutes of investigative time during your language arts class or assign it as part of their “homework” after your school day is finished.

Here are some questions to consider if your student isn’t naturally curious. Why is the sky blue? Why do we have bumps on our tongue? From where did the word onomatopoeia come? Does a house centipede really have all those legs? (eww!) Why do we yawn? How far is it to the moon? What is your name’s meaning? How far is it to Grandma’s house? How long would it take to get there if we drove, if we walked? Answering questions many times leads to other questions, which is a good thing!

Plan a time to discuss the answers that have been researched as that not only gives your student an opportunity to summarize and synthesize what they have discovered, but also sends a message that this is important in relation to life and learning. You can either makes these investigations part of your dinner conversations or as part of your school routine.

~Lisa

Okay, who is curious to know what I discovered about the academic degrees BS and BA? 🙂 I found several answers about the word bachelor.

The first answer I found was this one. eHow states, ” Initially, universities were attended by three distinct types of  individuals: attendees who listened, students who participated in discussions, and teachers who delivered the lectures. they were called scholars, bachelors, and masters respectively. Of French origin, the title is derived from knight known as, ‘chevalier bachelier” who committed himself to battle. Eventually, this phrase would designate the humblest of university students.” I love it!

The second answer I found came from elearnportal. ” Bachiler came to mean “an apprentice student,” or a student completing an initial level of training.  It was from this usage of the word that came the meaning of a young man in the service or working as an apprentice to a knight or skillsman in order to gain greater knowledge of a field.  Individuals of this status were not considered to have a mastery of the given field of study.

To grasp the final transformation, we must take a brief look at the common equivalent to the bachelor’s degree: baccalaureate. The term baccalaureate originated from the 17th century Latin word baccalaureus, meaning “student with the first degree.” In fact, baccalaureus is actually play on the Latin phrase for ‘laurel berries,’ or bacca lauri.   Laurel berries were presented as a prize at the Pythian Games, an athletic competition of ancient Greece.  Since this occasion, wreaths of laurels have been associated with great honor and academic achievement. ”

I also saw in my reading today that the Bachelor of Science is Bachelor of Behavioral Science, shortened somewhere along the line. Aha! This is making more sense! It doesn’t apply to “science” as I know it, no test tubes and dissections. A Bachelor of Arts degree has been shortened from Bachelor of Liberal Arts. That is probably why those who have a BA had to take a foreign language (liberal- broad) and those who did not have a BS. Now I know and you do too! I can rest easier today knowing that the letters (BS) I put down as a credential mean more than I had originally thought. 🙂 Now I wonder we get the term “degree” and why behavioral science?. ..

~Lisa

Stop, Drop, Roll!

imagesFire Prevention, First Aid, and Safety are areas that we are to cover in the course of our academic year while homeschooling. There are not many textbooks related specifically to this topic, so you have to “think outside the box.” Safety doesn’t have to be taught from a book, but can be topics that you need to discuss with your student. Ones that come to mind are: kitchen, food, fire,water, bike, internet, stranger, personal, and pedestrian safety. I have some resources that will help you. The only book that I am familiar with is ABeka, but according to reviews, these books look like good resources to use. If you have used a resource that you have found helpful please share! 🙂

 Books (textbooks and other books)

Health, Safety and Manners, Abeka This is a series that addresses various topics and there are books for grades 1,2, and 3.

Let’s Be Safe, P.K. Hallinan Various topics are discussed including tying shoes, safely crossing the street, and stranger safety.

Busy Places, Caroline Hardy This preschool book is colorful with rhyming text that teaches children safety by highlighting something in the picture.

Watch Out! Around Town, Claire Llewellyn Grades Preschool- 2  “Advice in this book focuses on staying in parents’ sight and avoiding getting lost when in large, busy places like stores and theaters. Kids are also instructed to observe safety rules in playgrounds, and to take extra care when encountering adults they don’t know. Clearly written in brief passages that are easy for younger children to absorb and understand, the Watch Out!series of color-illustrated books give kids safety advice that applies inside and outside the home, while they are traveling in a car, and when they are enjoying nature and having outdoor fun.” (Barnes and Noble synopsis) Another book in this series is At Home A book about safety inside and outside the home.

No Dragons for Tea: Fire Safety for Kids, Jean Pendziwol A charming book that teaches children about fire safety with catchy phrases and a friendly dragon. Other books by this author include: A Treasure at Sea for Dragon and Me (water safety); The Tale of Sir Dragon (bullying issues)

Internet Resources

Study Ladder has mini books that can be read online and also offers free worksheets and activities. Grades: Preschool- 4.

Food Safety Here is a list of online games your student can play that pertain to cooking and storing food and cooking temperatures. Grades 1-6.

Firework Safety These are safety rules and games for  keeping safe from fireworks.

Internet Safety PBS has an online game that is interactive and geared toward 8-12 year olds, although I enjoyed playing too! 🙂

Playdough Mats

This week there is a set of FREE playdough mats that introduce and review colors with simple directions. What a fun way to work on colors! Check out Curr Click’s website.

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