|
Preparing for School -- Summer's Almost Over
I would like to offer some suggestions for preparing your children for
the new school year. Whether you are sending your children off on the
yellow school bus or homeschooling, schedule changes, demands on our
children's ability to concentrate and control impulses, and lots of noise
and activity may push our children to the edge.
Here are some suggestions for making the transition from summer vacation
to highly scheduled school days:
- Make bedtimes gradually earlier over the next few weeks. Enforce
those bedtimes and provide calming music (worship CD's are best IMHO),
soft lights, a cup of catnip tea, warm milk (if your child drinks milk),
and a warm bath before bed.
- Ensure that your child gets a high protein breakfast each morning.
High protein foods combined with complex carbohydrates is essential to the brain
functioning to the best of its ability -- has something to do with brain chemistry and the ability of brain cells to properly communicate. Eggs every morning provide
lecithin and protein, and don't forget the whole grain breads. Do not
allow simple carbs alone to fuel your child through to lunch. They will
have a drop in blood sugar mid-morning that will send them into a
downward spiral.
- Begin to limit TV, video games and other highly stimulating
activities to no more than 1 hour a day.
- Read aloud to your child, asking him to tell you what you just read.
This will help your child to begin to focus on language skills. Ask your child to
look for different kinds of details when you read: the names of all the characters, what they look like, where the story takes place, when the story takes place and more. You could ask him to
tell you all about where the story takes place, and then ask him to draw
a picture of the setting of the story (great for younger children). This can
be challenging for non-visual learners, so you could point out the
details in the story that give this information and help them visualize
the setting in their minds. Do the same with characters, story line, etc.
- Start practicing math facts: in the car, at every meal, whenever
there is a moment, work on those math facts. This includes skip counting
by 2's, 3's, 4's, 5's, 10's, etc. Math wakes up the brain and encourages
logical thinking.
- Buy a book of brain benders and play with these every day. A Case of
Red Herrings, Mind Benders are a great place to start and
encourage thinking "outside the box."
- Begin to pray every day for your child's new teacher: a tender heart,
favor for your child, understanding, openness to work with you, etc. If
you are homeschooling, ask your husband and friends to begin to pray for
you each day as you prepare for a new school year.
- Choose one day a week for the next few weeks to pray and fast with
your spouse for the success of this school year. See
Fasting
in the Bible for an online Bible study on this topic.
May the Lord guide and direct each of you as you prepare for a new
school year. Rely on the fact that His mercies are new every morning.
Homeschoolers Prepare!!!
Back to School -- from Homeschooling -- Who Me?
I asked my children last night when they wanted to start school, August
26th or Sept. 3rd. I was chuckling to myself when I asked because I knew
they would all say Sept. 3rd. I think we will start August 26th though, so
we have more days we can take off during the school year. Life happens,
and sometimes we just have to take a day off.
I have decided on a 4-day week with Friday being reserved for History
projects and catch-up. If a child keeps up during the week, they will have
a light day on Friday. Although we are going to be using more of a
classical approach to education, I want to incorporate lots of KONOS
ideas, so Fridays will be activity day with projects and activities being
the focus.
Yesterday afternoon, I finished putting together three of my children's
school notebooks. I used The
Well-Trained Mind as a guideline with some adjustments for our own
homeschool and just used one notebook per child to start. I know that
after a few months we will need to expand to another notebook per child,
but I was not going to have a binder for each subject. I don't have
anywhere to keep all those binders, and that is too many binders to keep
track of for ADHD children. Could you imagine 6 binders for each child? I
have 4 school-aged children this year. No way!
In the front of the binder I placed a copy of each child's weekly
schedule which includes each day of the week and how much estimated time
each subject should take and a little detail about what will be done for
set subjects like History, Science and Latin. See a
sample
1st grade schedule and a
5th
Grade schedule.
Behind this goes weekly lesson plans. I created a form that is laid out
with the days of the week on the left-hand side vertically and subjects
going across two sheets of paper. I created separate lesson plan forms for
each child based on their scheduled subjects. I have uploaded my lesson plan file available in
MS Excel lesson
plan file and a
Works
for Windows lesson plan file format to the website. That way you
can adjust them for your own personal use. Each child is expected to check
off each assignment as it is completed. I keep the original in my notebook
and the children get photocopies of the lesson plans to check off.
The following ideas have been adapted from the Summer
Survival Strategies article.
Daily Routine
Time to set up fresh chore charts and schedules. Give your children a
few weeks to become adjusted to the new schedule before school starts.
Free Daily Routine charts
are available for printing out and downloading.
A family meeting two or three weeks before the start of school will
mentally prepare your children for the changes that are coming. Be sure to
enforce those earlier bedtimes. This is essential to children having a
fresh start each morning when school really begins.
Family Brainstorming:
Have a family meeting; with one parent or older child as Secretary
(responsible for recording what was said during the meeting) ask each
child to tell you what they would especially like to learn about this year
in school. Do not comment on what is said, just write it down. After
everyone has shared their ideas, type them up and draw on these for
project days or field trip ideas. Children learn and retain more when they
are motivated to learn.
When everyone gets in a school rut, prepare or purchase a week-long unit
study on one of the topics the child presented. Be sure to do lots of
hands-on activities during this break from their regular schedule.
Reading Program:
Children need to learn to love to read for their own enjoyment and to
learn outside the classroom or formal homeschool environment. Be sure to
keep a steady supply of interesting books available for your children at
all times. We have quite an extensive home library and my children are
able to find something that interests them most of the time. I especially
like finding books at yard or garage sales, thrift stores and in used
bookstores.
- Reading
Challenge: free summer reading program to print out and
challenge your children to keep reading while school is out. Use this
during the school year especially for children who don't seem to read on
their own.
- Public library: teach your children how to find books on
topics that interest them. Teach your children how to use the Dewey
Decimal System and computer cardfile.
- Bookstores: Allow your children to earn gift certificates to
bookstores by doing chores, projects, etc.
- Make up your own reading program: encourage your children to
reach a reading goal each week and reward them immediately with a small
prize or a fun field trip. Have an Award Ceremony at the end of every 6
weeks or so with a trip to the bookstore or their favorite fast food
restaurant.
- Tape Recorder: To encourage reluctant readers, allow your
children to read into a tape recorder, teaching them to enunciate and
show emotion as they read. Teach them to read punctuation: short pause
at a comma, longer pause at a period, etc.
- Christian fiction: Order some good age-appropriate Christian
fiction from Focus
on the Family, Orion's
Gate, or Christian
Book Distributors.
Nature Exploration:
- Nature Notebook: present a spiral-bound notebook and set of
colored pencils to your child encouraging him to draw the wonderful
creations of Almighty God. Encourage him to write a description of what
he sees as well.
- Nature Hike: once a week, take your child to a different
city, county or state park to explore local habitats. Have your child
bring their Nature Notebook and record what they see. Give each child a
disposable camera. Teach them to quietly walk along, listening for the
sounds of nature. If your child has a tape recorder, have them record
bird calls or other sounds they hear. Introduce your child to the park
ranger and ask the ranger to explain the rules of park usage including
how to treat the wildlife, flora and fauna.
- Creation Science: teach your child on which day of Creation each aspect
of nature was created. You can study the field of science that is
related to that day for one week:
- Day 1: light and energy
- Day 2: meteorology (weather)
- Day 3: oceanography and horticulture
- Day 4: astronomy
- Day 5: ichthyology (study of fish) and ornithology (study of
birds)
- Day 6: zoology, biology and anatomy
School Fun Activities
Many of these websites have activities that are great for preschoolers.
Keeping little ones busy while teaching the older children is vital.
© Copyright 2006 ADHD of the Christian Kind.
May be printed out and used for personal HOME use only.
|