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The Joys of Homeschooling Older Children

Homeschooling has plenty of HARD days. 

No matter the stage your children are at, homeschooling is just an immense undertaking. 

We have homeschooled through job changes, illness, home remodeling, chronic pain, teen hormones, and so much more.  There have been times where it would have been SO MUCH EASIER to enroll my children in school. 

This year - the year where my children are  9th and 5th graders - has been PIVOTAL.  We've completed the first year of high school for Anna, and we're getting ready for middle school with Grant. These children are growing at an astounding rate, and I'm just trying to keep up!

 I am beginning to see the fruits of our labor. The kids are becoming independent learners and excellent homeschool ambassadors to boot! 

As the school year draws to a close, my heart is FULL. I want to celebrate the many successes, because those keep me going through the hard days. 

Homeschooling older children is immensely rewarding, and if you don't gain anything else from this post, I want you to gain this:  It is WORTH IT to homeschool your older children.  

 

The Joys and Blessings of Homeschooling Older Children

Homeschooling a Pre-Teen Boy

My son literally appears bigger to me each and every morning when he gets out of bed. 

His CC Foundations class this year was all boys. They had a joke with their tutor, Miss Dawn -- that they would all be taller than her by the end of the year! Each Tuesday they would come to CC and measure themselves against her. Lo and behold, they are all taller than she is now. 

This is such a critical time for boys. They are still little boys, but they are quickly turning into young men, and guiding them is such a privilege. 

Each week Dawn would end each class session with the boys huddled in prayer. These boys grew into such considerate, helpful, and generous young men. I cannot accurately express what this year did for Grant, but I am fairly certain he couldn't have gotten this in a traditional school setting.  

A couple of weeks ago Grant earned the distinction of Memory Master!  What does that mean? It means he memorized and was tested on:

  • 160 events and people in a chronological timeline
  • 24 history sentences
  • 44 US Presidents
  • 120 locations and geographic features 
  • 24 science facts
  • 5 Latin declensions and the Latin noun cases
  • English grammar facts  (all of the prepositions, linking verbs, and helping verbs - and their definitions)
  • Multiplication tables up to the 15s, squares, cubes, geometry formulas, unit conversions, and algebraic laws of addition and multiplication

This information has to be 100% memorized and recalled with ZERO mistakes. Yes, his dad and I are proud of him, but more importantly Grant proved to himself that hard work and perseverance pay off in spades!

Memory Master & More

He's learned so much through completing the Veritas Self-Paced Ancient History course. We're wrapping up the year with a read-aloud, The Cat of Bubastes -- it's hard, but oh so good!  

A huge joy this year has been our homeschool tennis group. This once a week lesson has spurred an interest in Grant, and now he is playing two more times a week at our local YMCA. 

We are also leaving for Hawaii in just 10 DAYS (squeal!) and Grant has been completing the Hawaii notebooking state study from Notebooking Pages.  This has been a super way to learn about our destination and also to document that knowledge. I'm having him keep a journal while we are there and I hope this will be a nice keepsake for him. 


Challenge I Presentations

Challenge I has been a pivotal year for Anna. She has become almost 100% independent in her school work and is responsible for planning all of her work. 

(I shared a few months ago about a day in the life of a Challenge I student)

In short, Anna's 9th grade year has consisted of the following academic seminars:

  • Henle Latin I
  • American Literature and Persuasive Essay Writing
  • Free Market Economics and American Government
  • Physical Science
  • Drama and Music Theory
  • Algebra

She is also taking piano lessons, singing in a large children's chorus here in Atlanta, and playing tennis on the homeschool tennis team. She's been a busy girl, but I'm ok with that as long as everything has a PURPOSE and is of value to her. 

Challenge End of Year Presentations

The last day of Challenge I was Tuesday, and I had the great JOY of watching presentations from all of the students.

The Cost of Living project was particularly interesting! Anna had to choose a future profession (she chose Occupational Therapy), research the salary for that profession, and then come up with a working budget for herself.  She created a Keynote presentation and presented to the class.

Wow is all I can say. 

Another presentation was the music theory hymn score analysis and transposition project. Using the music theory curriculum each student was able to successfully analyze a hymn using figured bass and put that hymn into a different key. 

This project was DIFFICULT, but everyone rose to the occasion and I was so proud of them. (I had the JOY of helping them through this curriculum and it's one of my favorite things I have done as a homeschooling mom.)

Anna still has her Memoria Press Latin class and Mr. D Algebra I that are still meeting... and of course there are finals to be studied for. 

I've been sitting back a lot recently and just marveling at everything she has learned and accomplished this year.  It's just so very good.


Challenge Protocol Event

Challenge I Protocol

A highlight of Challenge I is Protocol.

Protocol is a formal event hosted for all Challenge I students and older... the Challenge I moms plan this event and invite the other Challenges (II-IV) to attend.

In the weeks preceding the event the students received etiquette instruction before normal classes started each Tuesday.  

Our group chose to have dinner at a nice restaurant locally and then attend a production of Hansel & Gretel by the Georgia State Opera Theater

Watching these young people conduct themselves so beautifully during an evening out was a JOY. They have come to be such good friends to one another, and I couldn't help but think how completely DIFFERENT this was from a traditional PROM experience. 

There was no PROM DRAMA (and I've been hearing stories about this from friends who have children in school) and the expense of this event was minimal. This also wasn't a time for dates, but rather a time for everyone to enjoy an evening out together as a group. 

The opera was a perfect introduction to the genre. It was sung in English, and even included the words on a screen above the stage. This is commonly performed and I would recommend going to see it if you ever get the chance -- maybe you're familiar with this piece:

Parents of younger CC students: keep the faith!  It is events like this that make all of the hard work worth it!


May the 4th Be With You

One of the most fun things this school year has been starting a LEGO club for my son's friends. 

A wonderful young man (who is also in my daughter's Challenge I class and LOVES LEGOS) is my very capable assistant. We meet every other week and have a ton of fun and learn a lot, too! 

Normally we are using materials from LEGO® Education, but this week we skipped the "learning" and just went for pure Star Wars FUN! 

This week we decided to celebrate May the 4th! 

 

May the 4th Be With You Party

Our agenda for May the 4th was as follows:


There is so much more I could share with you... but I'll save that for future posts. 

I'd love to hear from you! Do you homeschool older children? Or, do you have questions about homeschooling older children?  This is a new stage of life for me and I'm trying to embrace it fully (while quietly mourning the "littles" I used to have in my house!). 

 


Collage Friday

Collage Friday at Homegrown Learners

Join me on  Fridays for a wrap up of the week - or just to share pertinent thoughts that have been rambling in your head during the past week.

Be sure to include your photo collages!

Then, visit other bloggers that have linked and leave them a supportive comment.  I love the Collage Friday community!

Add your link using the widget below. Additionally, if you'd like to join further, use the hashtag #collagefriday on Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter. 

 

 

 

 

 

Hitting Reset in Your Homeschool

GRACE is a magnificent thing.

The first official semester of this homeschool year was very disjointed. Despite my best laid plans, illness, a home renovation project, and LIFE happened and the beautiful routine I had crafted early in the year seldom occurred. 

It was important for me to lavish grace upon my children - and upon MYSELF, and to realize that so often progress cannot be measured in scores or "accomplishments". 

Progress happens slowly over years of pouring ourselves into our children. 

(I also rest in the fact that our Classical Conversations  Memory Work is enough and am so thankful my Challenge I student is self-disciplined.)

Over the past two weeks I've hit the "reset" button in our homeschool, and I have the feeling that many of you have done (or will do) the same thing as we enter into a new year. 

I'd like to share what hitting reset looks like. 

Maybe you can glean a few ideas - and maybe you can offer ME ideas, too. 

(I love to interact with readers who leave comments.)

 

Hitting Reset in Your Homeschool

Simple Organization

Over the past year our ENTIRE family has been at home. 

A new job meant my husband now works from home (no more nasty commute downtown), but that also comes with its own set of challenges.

We needed to finish out a space in the basement just for him. He now goes downstairs to "WORK". 

With that finished basement came a space for storage of school things and a workspace. I have gone many years schooling at the kitchen table, so this completed projected feels like HEAVEN! 

I'm trying EXTREMELY HARD to stick to my  SIMPLE HOMESCHOOL PHILOSOPHY.  Less is more. Only keep out what we love and truly use. 

Organizing Homeschool Spaces
  • Anna, my 9th grader, organized her own books in one shelf of the school room. We keep those books, and a few reference books, on the shelves. She does so much online now and doesn't need a lot of physical books.   Anna has a work space in her bedroom that she adores.... she keeps many things in her desk there, so she doesn't actually use the school room as much as her brother. 
  • Grant, my 5th grader, has one bookshelf for his current Cycle 1 resources. He works on a simple craft table in the school room, and all of his supplies (pencils, markers, etc...) are organized in an hanging shoe holder inside the schoolroom closet. 

Favorite "Must Haves" Pictured Above

{ Stay tuned for a "schoolroom" post ---> I still have a few more finishing touches before I'll share the whole room on the blog. }

And... if you'd like to keep up with our day to day activities, I love to hang out on Instagram.  


Take Time For JOY

This sounds so obvious, right? 

Who wouldn't want to take time to be joyful?

But, when you have a high schooler with a demanding academic load, the temptation can be to just buckle down and be SERIOUS much of the time. 

This IS NOT a good idea. 

The Joys of Homeschool

This week we got outside, spent time with friends, and brought back some WONDER into our homeschool. 

Anna and I also enjoy spending time with younger children - our six year old friend that we hiked with put us in such joyful moods. It's good to get out of ourselves and see the world through a young child's eyes. 

We need to something like this WEEKLY to remind us to embrace beauty and joy. 


Let Your Children Take the Lead

Yes, we educate Classically.  Yes, much of what my children learn is dictated by ME and what I know to be best for them based on my research and expertise.

I believe, however, that children MUST take the lead when it comes to certain parts of their education. 

One area that I simply FOLLOW my child's lead is in STEM activities. 

LEGO Education in Our Homeschool

As part of our homeschool reset I am allowing ample time in our day for exploration and play, using our LEGO® Education materials

This week Grant gave me such a perfect opportunity to give him grace.  While I was grocery shopping one afternoon he decided to take all of the very well organized Mindstorms EV3 pieces and dump ALL of them into one big bucket. 

(Our LEGO club starts next week and I was depending on everything being organized and ready for the boys.)

I must admit I was less than thrilled when I came home to find all of those pieces combined. I told him it didn't really please me - then he looked at me with his sweet eyes and said, 

Yes, I think it was kind of a dumb thing to do. Did you ever do anything dumb when you were a kid?

Sigh. Of course I did. 

I helped him reorganize the LEGOS over the next few days, and in the end I think we came up with a better system of storage, and in the process Grant taught me the "grammar of Mindstorms" as he said the names of all the different pieces and what their functions are. 

He also spent much time building a super cool elephant that will probably be programmed this weekend. 


There you have it.

Simple organization, joy, and letting my children sometimes take the lead.

Our homeschool has been "reset" and I'll keep you posted on how things are going!

I'd love to know if you are resetting your homeschool at the beginning of a new year.  What are you doing differently?  

How to Reset Your Homeschool

Collage Friday

*Note: Collage Friday will now be a bi-weekly event. I will leave this link up open for 2 weeks... the next Collage Friday will be on January 22! 

Join me each Friday for a wrap up of the week - or just to share pertinent thoughts that have been rambling in your head during the past week.

Collage Friday at Homegrown Learners

Be sure to include your photo collages!

Then, visit other bloggers that have linked and leave them a supportive comment.  I love the Collage Friday community!

Add your link using the widget below. Additionally, if you'd like to join further, use the hashtag #collagefriday on Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter.