Saturday, July 7, 2012

Race to college

I recently found a blog about acceleration with a goal towards early college. As someone who has already been down that path personally, I found it interesting. I currently have an informal plan of acceleration, with the goal of having Cowgirl do FAU High, and be able to complete a few years of college work during high school. So it was interesting to me to see other people's approaches. Well, after reading it, I had some concerns. Their approach is to school year round, and do lessons 5 days instead of 4 days. That seems fine, we also are pretty much doing the same. But, after reviewing her curriculum choices, I had to wonder how well it would really work. It's mainly in her math program choice, which is widely known to be about a year or two behind other math programs. The advantage of this math program is that it is computerized, and student activities are managed by the program. She has about 6 kids, so I can see the convenience of it, but if you use it at the grade levels, you are behind other programs by 1-2 levels. It doesn't seem very accelerated when you start 1-2 years behind. And then there's the aptitude, not every child will be able to work at that level, especially in college. I was fine being 14 in college, but I'm pretty sure that out of 6 kids, some will not be fine. Or they'll end up getting some fluff degree. (ok, so I found out that she's planning for them to get Bachelor of Humanities from Thomas Edison College.)

I don't think accelerating using weak programs and loopholes will really prepare a child well. The kinds of jobs a person with a Bachelor of Humanities from a unknown college is pretty low paying. Aside from the fact that they are still young and don't have a clue to what they want to do with their lives.


But this also brings to mind the weakness in the American educational system. I look at the Core math standard and compare them to other countries and find us behind. Then if you compare your math program to the Core standard and it's behind, then you're basically twice as behind. Now you want to accelerate from that hole you're in. And the end goal is to do a test based college "degree." It seems to be about doing the minimum to get that piece of paper. I can only think that a minimum effort to get a minimum degree can only yield a minimum job. And when lots of people are only doing the minimum jobs, it's hard to be an high achieving country.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Digital Homeschooling

We have several digital tools for our homeschool. I've gone to a web based tracking system. I have a Nook simple touch and a Cruz ereader. I prefer the Nook for plain books, it's lighter and the battery lasts forever. I've started using the Cruz for pdfs, it renders them better plus it's got a color screen but it only lasts about 4 hours. So I have downloaded a ton of books for the Nook, and also some from the library, and Cowgirl loves using it. A lot of the vintage stories we read are freely available, like Peter Pan, Beauty and the Beast, and the stories from the Grimm Brothers. Reading the originals are pretty challenging, the vocabulary is advanced and the themes are more adult. And I love the idea of having a lot of books available anytime, anywhere I want to read.

The Cruz is more of the teachers device, I've started downloading pdfs of various curricula to it for my use, instead of printing. So far I have the MEP math answer pages, the BFSU 2,3 texts, the electronics lab manual, some chemistry curricula I'm reviewing and whatever else I find. There are some educational apps I've downloaded too, such as Chinese and math practice apps. The Cruz also has a full browser, so I can access the tracker system and update it remotely. Usually I take both devices with me.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Mating season

Apparently it's mating season around here. We observed for the time it took for me to get a decent picture, and then she wanted to touch them. They didn't take to that idea very well and separated and ran their separate ways.


Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Summer school

School's out here in Florida, but we're still working on our home school. We're going year round, taking time off when we feel like it. Our daily schedule has changed though, we're doing the pool in the morning when it's somewhat cool and staying inside during the mid-day, then going outside again in the afternoon and evening. There's a lot of water time over the summer. We're doing some electronics for fun, maybe play around with a lego robotics set I have. And see if our chickens end up having baby quail.

Friday, June 1, 2012

Finished with 1st grade Vietnamese!

We finally finished the 1st grade Vietnamese curriculum. Between starting it late, and not doing much school while my mom was sick, it's been slow going. I also slowed it down because it seemed like dd was not really retaining it so much. I changed the pace from one lesson a day to one lesson taking about 3 days. The first day we would read the passage. The second and third days we would reread the passage and do the workbook. There was usually enough in the workbook to split up. She was able to read much more fluently after multiple exposures to the same passage. She is still very sloppy about looking at the diacritics, and I constantly have to remind her which one it is. I was thinking of starting the 2nd grade right away, but since we didn't do the read aloud book yet, I think we're going to work through that over the summer and start 2nd grade Vietnamese in the fall after a short break.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Electronics Learning Lab

So we're in the middle of moving things around and somehow this thing shows up. I had been thinking I wanted to do some electronics and was looking at the Snap electronics but this was here and free. Nothing else came with it, so after a little googling I find a manual and list of parts.  I went to Radioshack several times, priced out the parts and decided it was crazy expensive there to buy all the parts, and on top of that, they didn't have everything. My husband said his dad had a bunch of resistors and capacitors so I decide to wait  and go raid his dads stash. I figure he probably wouldn't have any transistors so I buy one from RS. Then soon after that a box of parts comes over from my moving neighbor. How awesome is that?! It even had the one thing I already bought from RS. Anyway, we were able to put together this flashing LED circuit.

Pointing to the LED

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Finished Year 1 Writing with Ease

We started this year slowly, and really just did the bare minimum of Math and Vietnamese. She reads a lot on her own anyway, tons of books from the library. So I had this writing curriculum(Writing with Ease) that we didn't resume working on until Feb( we had started it last year). We did it double time and 5 days and have just now finished level 1. I expect that we'll continue on the double pace until we finish Level 3. It's not really so bad, I think it really is only about 15 minutes for both copywork and narration, not including the actual reading time. I'm using the instructor guide and not the workbooks. I like the flexibility of the instructor guide a lot. Plus it appeals to my frugal nature since 4 years worth of material are covered in the one book.