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Our Curriculum This Year

Kris, over at Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers has asked homeschool bloggers to share their curriculum for the coming school year. I have been wanting to put it all down into a post so that I can really see everything we are doing (which I think is a lot!). Right now it's hard for me to come up with a daily schedule, but I can see that over the next several weeks a schedule will pretty much come into focus. I love having the flexibility to follow my children's interests and supplement with lapbooks, notebooks, unit studies, but still stick reasonably to our general plan for the year.

I wish I were more organized with plans spreading out over the whole year, but truthfully I think that would make me feel like I had to stick to the plan, and that in turn would take a lot of the joy out of our learning. Can some of you relate?

Miss B
Fourth Grade
  • Bible - daily devotions with mom and Bible Verse copywork based on Awana scripture I love what she has done with these printables - I did exactly what the mom and this site did!
  • History and Literature - Sonlight Core 3 (we will be finishing this mid year and will then proceed to Sonlight Core 4. LOVE this stuff!
  • Math - Horizons Math 3 - we began this in November of last year and will hopefully finish November of this. Horizons is a very rigorous math program, so I'm not pushing to quickly. We are playing lots of math games to make things fun!
  • Spelling - Sequential Spelling Volume 1
  • Grammar - Easy Grammar Grade 4 and Daily Grams
  • Science - a mix between Sonlight's Core 3 Science and Magic School Bus books which I supplement with experiments and other activities. I am trying to have both children do science together this year. I want to be more Charlotte Mason - like and add in some nature study and journaling.
  • Handwriting - Handwriting Without Tears Cursive Success- I also supplement with sporadic copywork, journal writing, etc...
  • Writing - Daily 6 Trait Writing, Grade 3 (again, we began mid year last year, so we will be switching to Grade 4 mid year)
  • Spanish - Miss B will take Spanish classes once a week for ten weeks from a local teacher. We are very excited to begin this class! It ends with a trip to a local restaurant where the children must order and converse with the waiters in Spanish - fun!
  • Music - 45 minute piano lessons each week, along with lots of classical music, singing, and dancing (I was an elementary music specialist for 10 years, so this is MY AREA!)
  • PE - We are members of our local YMCA. Miss B has been on a synchronized swimming team this summer. When this ends, both kids will continue with tennis lessons at the YMCA. We also obviously go outside each day for bike rides, walks, baseball games in the yard, etc.. I got a great book with a jump rope and lots of rhymes which I hope Miss B will enjoy, too!
  • Art - looks like I will be coming up with some art activities this year. Last year we took art lessons from a wonderful woman who runs classes just for homeschoolers, but they are on the same day as Spanish classes this year.
  • Co-op classes: sewing, book club, and geography (our co-op meets once every other week)
G Man
Kindergarten

  • Bible - daily devotions with mom and Bible Verse copywork based on Awana scripture
  • The spine of what we do is coming from Five In a Row, Volume 1 - we cover many subjects through this wonderful books! We've already "rowed" one book and I can tell we will love this.
  • Reading - I really lucked out here! My little guy is a great reader, thanks mostly to his big sister reading so much with him. So, I do not have to teach him how to read. I have all of our reader books arranged by level in bins and each day we read through a couple together. I just want to maintain his reading each day and keep him interested. He claims he's ready for chapter books, but doesn't have the patience for them.
  • Language Arts - First Language Lessons for the Well Trained Mind, Volumes 1 and 2
  • Math - lots and lots of math games and manipulatives like unifix cubes, tangrams, blocks, dice - you name it, we can turn it into math. I have also purchased several workbooks with math problems that are at a Kindergarten/First Grade level... I really don't want to workbook this subject to death in Kindergarten!
  • Science - G Man is tagging along with big sister here and doing Magic School Bus and lots of nature study.
  • Handwriting - Handwriting Without Tears Letters and Numbers For Me
  • PE -- this is gonna be important for my little guy! He is currently finishing swim lessons and will swim lots at the YMCA this year. He will also be taking tennis lessons and play t-ball again in the spring.
  • Music - fun fun fun! Lots of music with mom and I will be teaching his music class at the co-op as well
  • Art - arts and crafts at home with mom and Miss B
  • Co-op classes - music, crafts, geography

Of course all of this looks great, doesn't it? What I think is more important, however, is an overall attitude of learning. Last night while celebrating my daughter's birthday, a couple girls decided to let their balloons go in the sky (I wish I would have snapped a picture!) and watch them go higher and higher. My daughter was quick to point out the cirrus clouds and then another little one wondered what the record was for the farthest a balloon had ever gone. My husband was googling it on his iPhone - it's this spirit of inquisitiveness that I want to foster in my children. I think this is the greatest gift we as homeschooling parents can give them. Couple this with a love of God and family and I think we've done our jobs well.
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Great Children's Read


Over the past year, we have been reading a great series of books - The Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart. My daughter had received the first book as a gift for her birthday last year. I can't say enough how much we have enjoyed reading these books together! I read them aloud to my nine year old because they are quite advanced - the vocabulary is wonderful (I always keep a dictionary on hand when we read). The first book is simply The Mysterious Benedict Society, and there are two additional books in the series, The Mysterious Benedict Society and the Perilous Journey and The Mysterious Benedict Society and The Prisoner's Dillemma.

The books are purely for fun for us; they aren't a part of any curriculum. I would classify them as fantasy and/or mystery. The stories center around Mr. Benedict, a brilliant elderly man who suffers from narcolepsy. His trusty sidekick is Number Two, who makes sure she is with him at all times (in case he falls asleep!) He has issued a challenge in the newspaper for "gifted children looking for special opportunities". The children that respond are all such fun and quirky characters. Once the children are selected the "Mysterious Benedict Society" is born, the books then are based on their adventures. Each book contains many word puzzles which, interestingly enough, my daughter picked up and solved much quicker than I did!

I think my daughter loves the books because the children are such strong characters, each with their own very definite thoughts and ideas. And, they solve mysteries with little or no help from adults. My daughter will tell you her favorite character is Constance Contraire - a young girl who is highly intelligent, but very small. She rides piggy back most of the time just to keep up. Her attitude is pretty funny! At the end of the first book the reader finds out a hilarious truth about Constance. If I told you, it would spoil it for you.

If you want to learn more about the books, just poke around at the link I gave you earlier - the website is so well done and has lots of activities for kids to print and do online. If your children have some favorite "fluff" reads now, can you leave me a comment a tell me what they are? We're always looking for new reads to put on the shelf!
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