[Start Well In Your Home School] Home School Day in the Life (2nd, 6th, 8th & 10th Grades)
0 views
Skip to first unread message
Virginia Knowles
unread,
Jan 29, 2013, 5:10:01 PM1/29/13
Reply to author
Sign in to reply to author
Forward
Sign in to forward
Delete
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to virginiaknow...@googlegroups.com
Hello! My name is Virginia Knowles, and welcome to my Home School Day in the Life! I'm linking up to Simple Home School's blog party on Friday. That's my big family in the picture above, including sons-in-law and grandsons, but I'm only home schooling four kids this year.
Our typical schedule varies by day of the week. On Mondays, we are in co-op classes from 9 AM until 3:45 PM. The students have 90 minute classes in math, history, science, and English. I assist in a 4th-6th grade history class and teach 5th-6th grade English. I have to set aside several hours a week for lesson planning for the English class, where I cover grammar, literature, creative writing, and vocabulary/spelling. While I use a variety of materials, our core resource this year is The Book of Virtues, which is a virtual virtuous treasury of stories and poems. I try to integrate many of the literature lessons with the time period and geographical region they are studying in The Mystery of History Volume 2 (Creation to Middle Ages) text they are using in history. After our regular classes, we stay for Yearbook (10th grade) and Drama Club (6th grade), up to an extra 45 minutes. We have been in this co-op with about 25 other families since 2006, with one year off. On Tuesdays - Fridays, our morning schedule for the five younger school age kids and I looks like this: Around 7:30, I get up, eat breakfast, take a shower, and putter around, usually either reading or writing blogs. Our son who attends public school leaves before 8 and eats breakfast at school. Sometimes I am up earlier if I can't sleep. At 8:30, the other kids get up, eat breakfast, and get dressed while I continue to putter. At 9:00, I spend an hour with my 2nd grader doing her co-op assignments (which are not that time-consuming) and reading good books to her. Right now we are working our way through the Paddington Bear series. At 10:00, I spend an hour with my 6th grader doing history and literature. It goes faster if we read it out loud and discuss it. She writes out summaries of the history lessons every day, but we do the literature questions orally. She does the writing assignments, language arts workbooks, science (Apologia Flying Creatures), and math on her own time with minimal help from me. At 11:00, I spend more than an hour with my 10th grader doing history (Notgrass World History) and literature (just finished The Hobbit and now starting poetry). He usually reads the chapters aloud to me, we discuss them, and he answers the comprehension questions orally or on the computer. My husband is in charge of his Algebra 2 and Apologia Chemistry assignments. You may notice that I didn't schedule an hour for my 8th grade son. He is an independent learner and doesn't often need my help, though he asks for it when he does. My husband helps him with Pre-Algebra and Apologia Biology. Around noon or so we eat lunch. Usually everyone fixes their own, but my 12 year old daughter will sometimes fix something like macaroni and cheese for all of us. Our afternoon/evening schedule is a bit more loose. Yes, we work on academic school assignments until around 3 or so. They also spend a lot of time on our computers and some watching TV. However, we are trying to get into a routine of going to the YMCA on Tuesday and Friday right after lunch, especially since they have home school PE on Tuesday. We have to be home by the time my 4th grader gets back from school. I try to schedule all appointments for Thursday afternoons.
Somewhere along the way the laundry and dishes get done (or not!) by some combination of adults and kids. Each of the five younger kids does an afternoon dish load during the week, and there is always a second or even third load in the evening. Though we have basic organization for each room, we do tend to leave it a bit cluttered, especially with school books and papers. Then, too, our big family has this funny little habit of eating lots of food, so it seems I'm at the grocery store two or three times a week refueling milk and such.
Speaking of food, I now interrupt this blog post because my 8th grade son just brought me a big bowl of fresh fruit salad with vanilla yogurt. Yum. Dinner is usually around 6:30, and after that we have free time, clean up, or more school work if not enough of that got finished earlier. (I often help kids with school work in the evening and on weekends.) The kids go to bed sometime between 9 PM and midnight, depending on their age and if something exciting is happening or not. So that's how we supposedly spend our days. It rarely works out just like that, but you get the gist of it anyway. What is your home school day like? Virginia Knowles www.StartWellHomeSchool.blogspot.com P.S. This post will be linked at these other blog parties: