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Archive for the ‘Education for Homeschooling’ Category

Individualized Learning Improves Behavior

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Part 4

Studies have shown that if you give a child rewards for behaviors they were doing spontaneously, and then withdraw the rewards, the child will stop doing what they had done before they were getting rewards.  So, if the child is already capable of getting good grades and now is getting rewarded, what happens when the child stops getting the rewards?  And, if they haven’t got the capability to achieve the goals the school has set for them, what will rewards held out of their reach do?  Teach by using the learning style of the student produces superior results in a blended learning environment, without confusing the joy of learning with extrinsic rewards.

Children are no different from you or me.  If I have poor self-esteem and believe I can’t do something, chances are that I probably won’t even try the task.   But if I’m taught the skills in a way I understand, I am much more likely to succeed in accomplishing the task. I will develop confidence in myself to try other tasks that might be a bit harder.  My previous success becomes the motivation to do well on the next goal.  Individualized learning where the student’s learning style is taken into account makes all the difference.

Allow children to succeed in their learning by adapting to their learning style.  Paying students isn’t going to motivate them to become learners.  This is what we as teachers should be doing, hopefully public schools will one day change their one size fits all mentality.  The responsibility is not just to motivate our children to learn now, but to instill in them the desire and confidence to become life-long learners.

Friday’s Thoughts – September 3, 2010

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Friday, September 3, 2010

Millions of kids have, or are about to start a new school year. According to an article in Kids Health: Although every day isn’t great, 65% of the 965 kids asked said they liked school a lot. That leave 35% of the students that disliked being at school. That is a large group of children that are not happy.

Interesting is that girls were generally happier then boys. 30% of the boys surveyed said they disliked school a lot as compared to 14% of the girls.

Why are so many kids unhappy with school? Often it is because of low grades or problems with their peers. Sometimes it is related to home issues. And students, by their own admission, will not seek out the help that is offered them through the school. If they aren’t seeking help then they are less likely to problem solve the issues successfully causing them to just get worse.

Having more personal contact with their child, control over the educational environment, more productive quality family time are just a few reasons why families decide to home school. With a good support system that assures the child’s academic needs are being appropriately met, home-schooled students are less likely to have the challenges that face many of the students in the public schools.

My Friday’s Quotes

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Friday, July 30, 2010

My Friday’s Quotes

Today I thought, rather then share a quote, that I would share with you an educational site. Teachers will probably know this as a very valuable resource. However, for parents who home school or are just interested in what is going on in education, this is a great place to bookmark and visit regularly.

Edutopia, “K-12 Education & Learning Innovations with Proven Strategies that Work”. I strongly suggest you browse this site and then sign-up for their weekly newsletter. For me to list all it’s benefits would be a waste of my time for they become quickly apparent when you enter the site. It is broken down into five major sections: Core Concepts, Community, Sections,(where you will find blogs, videos, webinars and more), Stay Connected, and The Foundation, referring to the George Lucas Educational Foundation.

“An in-depth and interactive resource, Edutopia.org offers practical, hands-on advice, real-world examples, lively contributions from practitioners, and invaluable tips and tools.”

“Through an extensive offering of documentaries, Edutopia video is a catalyst for innovation by helping educators and parents, as well as business and community leaders, see and understand pioneering best practices.”

But don’t take our word for it – go find out for yourself. You will find a wealth of information and support.

PBL – The Steps

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Thursday, July 29, 2010

Yesterday we briefly looked at the first 4 steps when doing a Project Based Learning assignment. It should be easy to see how nicely this allows for individualization and homeschooling curriculum. Now let’s look at the last 5 steps.

5.Make a list of what needs to be completed with a timeline: What information is needed to solve the problem? How are the possibilities ranked? How are they relate to the list of solutions?

6.List “What do we need to know? You will have already started this list in step 2 but as you have looked more closely at your question, there may be additions to the list. Start the research. Parents can help find possible resources, 
experts, books, web sites, etc.

Make up a timeline listing the tasks/question being researched. This will help to stay focused and organized. *If your research supports your solution, go to (7). If not, go to (4)

7.Write up your solution with its supporting documentation 
Findings and/or recommendations should include the problem statement, questions, data gathered, analysis of data, and recommendations based on the data analysis: in short, the process and outcome.

8.Review your performance
: 
Take pride in what was done well well and learn from what could have been done better. Thomas Edison felt unsuccessful experiments were part of his journey to successful outcomes!

9.Celebrate the work! Find a way the project can be shared with others. It could be anything from addressing the town council to putting up a video on U-tube.

PBL is a perfect match for a virtual school. It is an effective way to integrate technology used by the school into the curriculum. Like a virtual school, its potential is a limitless.

The Nine Steps in PBL

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Project Base Learning is a wonderful tool to use with home-schooled children. It enables them to learn standard base skills across the curriculum through real-life projects.

There are nine basic steps when completing a Project Base Learning assignment. That being said, they may repeat steps two through five as they gather new information and redefine the problem.

1.Explore an Issue: Brainstorm with your child issues or problems in your community, state or country. They don’t have to know much about the issues because they’ll gather informatin, learn new concepts, principles, or skills as they become involved in the problem-solving process.

2.What do you Know? Have your child select one issue to be their Project and develop a chart showing what they know on one side and questions that need to be answered on the other.

3.Develop and write a problem statement: This statement should address what they know and what you need to know to solve their problem. This statement may be rewritten many times during the problem solving process as new information is obtained or old information tossed.

4.Brainstorm possible solutions:  Have your child list all different ways the problem might be solved. Have them list each idea  on a note card.  Then have them review the ideas and organized them from the strongest, most likely to succeed, to the weakest. From that they can make a selection on which idea to research.

Tomorrow’s blog will look at the remaining 5 steps for a Project Based Learning assignment.

What is PBL?

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Tuesday, July 27, 2010

We recently got involved in a workshop to learn about PBL or Project Base Learning. Would it fit into a homeschooling program? Could it be used successfully in a virtual learning environment? Did it allow for the necessary individualization which is so important to Mistacres School?


PBL is an approach to teaching across the curriculum by allowing students to explore real-world problems. These projects can last a few days or can go on for a semester. They allow the students, either individually or collectively, to develop a deeper knowledge of the subjects they are studying through direct involvement. It is a way to provide active and engaged learning.
It is obvious students are more likely to remember things they learn through an active, hands-on approach then the more traditional textbook-centered learning. But as important is the confidence and self-direction students gain as they move through their project. As students work through their projects they strengthen their organizational and research skills, develop strong communication skills with peers and adults, and will often have opportunities to work within their community and see first hand effects of their work.
Assessment also becomes reality-based, not on some arbitrary fill-in-the-blank test that asks them to regurgitate what a teacher has said.  Students are evaluated on the basis of their projects which has more meaning to them and is more in line with how were are assessed as adults in the real world. How often as I teacher did I hear, “Why do we need to learn this? I’ll never use it!” PBL allows students to see how academic work connects to real-life issues.
The next post we will look begin to look at the steps involved in Project Based Learning.

My Friday’s Quotes

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Friday, July 23, 2010

I want to share with you some quotes from inspired people in history and literature. These quotes have made me happy and given me something to think about. They have led me to decide to provide online education to children. I hope you will enjoy them as well.

“Formal education will make you a living; self-education will make you a fortune.” 
– Jim Rohn

“Education would be so much more effective if its purpose were to ensure that by the time they leave school every boy and girl should know how much they don’t know, and be imbued with a lifelong desire to know it.” 
– Sir William Haley

” Instruction ends in the school-room, but education ends only with life.
 Frederick W. Robertson

What is “Complete Understanding”?

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Todd Farley, author of Making the Grades: My Misadventures to the Standardized Testing Industry points out his major complaint with large -scaled assessments. It isn’t the multiple choice questions of standardized testing he finds issue with. They are scored electronically. The answer is clearly right or wrong. However, the open-ended test questions are much different. Those are scored by temporarily hired employees who have only a short training session to learn the industries scoring rules. After sitting through said training session, his stated opinion was that is was ” a theater of the absurd.”

A rubric or written guideline is developed for the scores to follow. However, if you were to scored a question and read that full; credit should be given to an answer that showed “complete understanding” would you know what that meant. It is no longer being scored objectively but subjectively according to the particular scorer. He talks of a wonderful example when potential answers were being evaluated and the group spent much time trying to determine if “bubbled” meant the same thing as “sizzled” or “fizzled”.

Would you Pass or Fail

posted by admin @ 8:00 AM
Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Are you a good test-taker? If you knew that performing well on one test each year determined if you would keep your job, how well do you think you would do? It wouldn’t matter how well you did your job on a day to day basis or even those great reports that your boss wrote on your evaluations. It all comes down to one test, written by a company who may or may not have any direct experience with the current workings of your job or even your organization. How do you think you would do? I, for one, am not a good test taker!

The educational system, however, is fast approaching the point where students will not be promoted based on their daily classroom work or the reports written by those educators who spend each day with them. They will be promoted based on their performance on a standardized test given on a yearly basis. In fact, federal funds for education are being linked to regional standardized test scores (No Child Left Behind). As an unintended result of Obama’s Race to the Top, teacher pay could be tied into student test results.

Home Schooling vs. Public School

posted by OnlineSchoolMom @ 12:10 PM
Wednesday, July 7, 2010

The home schooling vs. public school debate has been taking place for decades, and it doesn’t appear to be going anywhere anytime soon. Unfortunately, people often take part in polarized discussions on the topic, refusing to even consider the other side’s arguments. It’s no secret that our public education system leaves something to be desired, which is exactly why many people decide to home school their children. Preventing uncouth social influences and eliminating peer pressure are also common factors.

Advocates of the public education system say that learning in an environment with your peers is essential for developing basic social skills. The classroom setting also offers opportunities for teamwork and collaborative assignments. Of course each child is different, and what is best for one child may not be optimal for another. Luckily, there are constant innovations in education, including new methods that combine classroom and online learning.

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