After sharing
my thoughts (and fears) on our next school year, I promised to talk curriculum. I'm in the very beginning stages of planning. It's barely beyond the thinking stage, though some subjects are easy. We'll simply move onto the next chronological time period or grade level. Also, I'm only mentioning the Big Four here-- history, math, science, and English. (We incorporate Bible, music, art, health, typing, and P.E. into our days, too, though not
everything in
every season.)
As a frame of reference, I will have five kids in school next year, ranging from kindergarten to eighth grade.
History:
We'll more than likely continue reading though Genevieve Foster's books. We'll start with
George Washington's Worldand continue on to
this one, too. We'll supplement with applicable literature or explore some topics in more depth. Since we discovered that Owen (currently eight and in third grade)
learns better visually, he will delve into the same time period with a selection of books on his reading level. We especially enjoy the series by the
d'Aulaires.
Math:
Our kids start
Saxon Math at the 5th grade level (
Saxon 54). Even my math-hating kids say they hate math a little less with Saxon. My three oldest kids are in varying levels of Saxon and will continue next year. For elementary math, I've had tremendous success with cheap grocery store workbooks so Ben (currently six and in first grade) will probably use
Second Grade Big Workbook.
Science:
I'm not a science person so when I was reviewing what we had done for science this year, I was surprised to discover that we had done a lot. So much that we could quit science today and have more than enough credit for the year. Between a forensics class the kids took over the summer, our nature study text, a series of at-home chemistry science experiments Gavin organized throughout the fall (and explained and demonstrated for his brothers and sisters), a long list of books we read for health, the Wild Kratts TV show (!), and at least a book a week someone brings home from the library about animals (or planets or rocks, etc.), we have science covered.
I think next year we'll continue to let science happen as it did this year and supplement with a
reproducible workbook from McDonald Publishing, both to widen our science base and to give the older kids practice in expository writing.
English:
I generally pull together an eclectic collection of resources for English. The three oldest kids currently use
Daily Grams or something comparable. (One of them actually uses a book I found at a used curriculum sale in the same format but different publisher. We like it just as well.) We'll continue with that short, daily practice and add in writing prompts, penpal letters, pleasure reading, copywork, or poetry as the urge strikes. We go in phases and we
do not study it all at the same time or even the same year!
I think Alaine (currently four-and-a-half) will soon have interest in learning to read so it's about time for me to borrow
Alpha-Phonics again. Ben
loves
Explode the Code so he'll continue moving through the series and also reading lots of library books aloud to me. (It's our special one-on-one time in the evening.)
What about you? Want to join the curriculum talk? Have you started planning for next year?