Thursday, 14 March 2013

Day 4 - Homeschooling in a Crisis


A crisis can take on many forms. The hardest part is knowing what to do when you are confronted with an unexpected turn of events. The biggest question home schooler's face is whether or not to continue on their home educating journey in the midst of a crisis.

Types of Crisis
  • Depression
  • Financial 
  • Death of a loved one
  • Terminal illness
  • Major injury
  • Physical disability
  • Long term health challenges
  • Natural Disasters (floods, earth quakes, fires)
  • Terrorist attacks
  • Divorce
  • Moving
  • Immigration
  • Chronic pain
  • Premature birth of your newest baby
Our Journey
Homeschooling in a crisis for us meant that school was one less thing to worry about. I did not need to fit in taking children to school or fetching them, preparing school lunches, talk to teachers about what was happening or do homework at the end of our day.

Our family has been through several crisis situations in the last 15 years (two immigrations and two spinal surgeries). The first major crisis was when my husband fell on our roof and ruptured a disk in his lower back.  Unfortunately the extent of his injury remained unknown or correctly treated for over a month during which time we were in survival mode at home.

Homeschooling was a saving grace during this crisis as we were able to be home and help him.  It allowed our two children at the time to work through the process of Daddy is not well and walk along with us in his journey to being well again.
It allowed us the flexibility we needed once he was admitted to hospital and on an emergency surgery list and this in turn allowed us to drop what we were doing at a moments notice to go and be with him.

Once he had surgery being home with us helped us all realize he is on the road to recovery and the major benefit to him being on bed rest meant that Daddy did all the read alouds for six months.  It was the highlight of our day! Actually it was three or four hours a day that Daddy read to the family.  We built family bonds we would not have had otherwise.

This experience helped us cope when my eldest son had an accident at work and needed the same surgery that Paul had had five years before and it was not as scary a thing as it could have been had he not walked this journey with us before.

I do confess I had a major panic about two months into our situation when I realized we had done no formal schooling.  At this point Paul still was not well enough for us to do full days of school so upon evaluation we settled on the three R's as a daily minimum.

A month later Paul was on the road to recovery and took over reading out loud to the children so that I could catch up on life at home. Washing, ironing, groceries etc.

A few weeks later I took up the books and we slowly built up to full school days and I was surprised to see that the children had not fallen behind. It was easy picking up our full routine at this point because it's how we had always done things so they new what to do.

Advantages
  • Take time off official school to cope with / work through worry, fear and anxiety
  • Flexibility with time. I was able to go to the hospital as often or when ever we needed.
  • Character growth. Our children learned many character things over this period such as putting the needs of Dad ahead of their own.
  • Walking through the crisis together can strengthen family bonds.
  • When moving you don't need to look for a new school. 
Supporting a family in crisis
  • Pray for the family who are in crisis mode
  • If it's within your power to do good,do it!
  • Offer to be available to baby sit at a moments notice.
  • Buy milk and bread and some fruit and take it over.
  • Take over some baking and have a cup of tea
  • Drop them an sms to let the family know they are in your thoughts.
  • Take over a ready cooked meal
  • Offer to do a couple of errands.
  • Do NOT suggest putting the children into school . . .
On the web
The thing that I have come to realize retrospectively is that I should have claimed some short periods of time in my day during the crisis to look after me. That would have helped me stay energised and would have prevented the crash and burn that happened after wards.

As a home school mom if you are walking through a crisis right now give yourself permission to take some time off school, work through the crisis then come back to school and move forward.  During your crisis claim 15 min of time twice a day to have some time out and recharge especially if the crisis will not be a short term thing.

If you have home educated through a crisis I would love to read more about what you did.

Blessings
Chareen

This post is part of a week of blog hopping hosted by The Schoolhouse Review Crew: 5 Days of Teaching Creatively Day Four

5 Days of Teaching Creatively
Day 4
  1. Delight Directed Instruction
  2. Schooling in the Kitchen
  3. Toy's, Games & Puzzles
  4. Homeschooling in a Crisis
  5. Hands on Projects

Don't forget to enter the Teaching Creatively Giveaway.  Pop on over to Ben and Me to enter in order to win one of three prize packs. (1st prize $525 value, 2nd prize $225 value and 3rd prize $190 value)


Crisis image courtesy of Free Digital Photo's -  Stuart Miles



Wednesday, 13 March 2013

Day 3 - Toys, Games, and Puzzles


Puzzles, toys and games are a multimillion dollar industry and it's growing by the day and with it often grows our confusion about what to buy and use in our home schools. Are their benefits to using / playing board games with our children ?

Some benefits of board games
  • Increases critical thinking skills
  • Grouping skills
  • Counting skills
  • Logic and reasoning skills
  • Visual perception
  • Fine motor skills
  • 3 D thinking
  • Quality Family Time
  • Relieves Stress and Mental Fatigue
  • Life Skills - negotiating, accepting defeat and trying again, being happy for another who is winning, etc
  • Pattern recognition
  • Plan ahead and reason cause and effect
  • Learn from mistakes
  • Improves general IQ
Elsewhere on the Web

My Favourites
Today I would like to share my favorite games for preparing your students for the high school years and formal logic study.

Lonpos
Contains one travel pack with 12 coloured game pieces and booklet containing challenges (One dimensional and three dimensional). Each challenge builds upon the skill of the last.

Blockus
Blokus consists of one board, four different colour tetras shaped pieces {red, yellow, blue and green),  This game can be played with 1-4 players. The game works on strategy and critical thinking skills.

Rush Hour
This game consists of a storage bag, one traffic grid board with storage board, 40 graded challenge cards (4 levels), 15 blocking cars and trucks, 1 red escape car. This game works on logic and critical thinking skills.

Block by Block
This game consists of seven block pieces, 60 challenge cards {each card has a three dimensional picture that needs to be constructed using the block pieces, the rear of the card contains the solution), and a storage bag. The game strengthens problem solving skills and 3 dimensional thinking.

The Challenge
My biggest challenge is remembering to actually take all these wonderful games out of the cupboard and using them.  It seems we are always running out of time!

What are some of your favourite board games ?

Blessings
Chareen
Puzzle image courtesy Free Digital Photo's - Salvatore Vuono 
5 Days of Teaching Creatively

Day 3
  1. Delight Directed Instruction
  2. Schooling in the Kitchen
  3. Toy's, Games & Puzzles
  4. Homeschooling in a Crisis
  5. Hands on Projects

Don't forget to enter the Teaching Creatively Giveaway.  Pop on over to Ben and Me to enter in order to win one of three prize packs. (1st prize $525 value, 2nd prize $225 value and 3rd prize $190 value)

Here are some more posts by home school moms with ideas about Toys, Games and Puzzles in your Homeschooling

Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Day 2 - Schooling in the Kitchen

The culinary arts are generally an over looked valuable resource in home educating. We are often focused on the academic achievements of our students, in order that they are able to access tertiary education, that we forget to arm them for real life. The future generations are losing the ability to cook wholesome food and our daughters don't know how to prepare healthy home cooked meals or stock a pantry.

Last year Sir N and I delighted in watching Junior MasterChef. The thing that struck me time and time again was the young ages of the contestants.  The 12 who made the final selection in Season One ranged in age from 9 - 12 years old.  These young people had definitely not learned to cook in the month before starting on the show.  I was impacted by their passion and the knowledge of their skill shone through.  How did these children get here ?

It starts here
Real life kitchen learning starts in the preschool years when we buy all those cute play sets and allow them to play in the sand pit and bath. Repetitive play at this stage reinforces and refines the fine motor skills needed to work safely in a kitchen.

 Once they have attained a certain level of prowess progress to the kitchen with child safe instruments and allow them to cut soft foods (banana, avocado, bread, etc) and help make lunch. Most importantly get them helping you to clean up the kitchen after they have finished.

As they grow taller and depending on the height of your benches expand your children's repertoire in the kitchen to helping cook dinner.  Remember to take them from being spectators to participators and onto creators in your kitchen. 

Life Lessons in your Kitchen
Sarah over at My Joy Filled Life gives a comprehensive breakdown of subjects your children can learn in your kitchen.  The ideas are endless and only limited to your imagination. The most important thing to remember is to keep it fun and enjoy the process.
  • Reading - Recipe's, Ingredient lists on products,
  • Language Arts - Learn about the abbreviations used in cooking and science
  • Math skills - Budgeting, Measuring, Multiplying,
  • Science - Chemical Reactions, Density, 
  • Home Economics - Meal planning, Storage, Cleaning, Storing food appropriately
  • Biology - Parts of an animal in cutting meat, 
  • Safety - Using equipment Safely, 
  • Geography - Find recipes of traditional foods of the country you are studying
  • History - Find out how food was prepared and what was eaten in the era you are studying and try it out.
  • Gardening - Grow your own herbs on the windowsill.
  • Art - decorate biscuits, make a ginger bread house, etc
  • Gift Giving - cooking a meal for a friend in need, baking biscuits for the elderly, etc

On the www
Since it's close to Easter we decided to bake an Easter Egg Rainbow Sponge Cake.  Sir N loved seeing what would happen with the colours and all the taste testing. . .

Tutorial

Beverley Paine
"Children love learning until we kill that love by insisting on teaching when they are already busy learning. Be mindful of what our children are learning when we get that urge to teach - let's learn how they learn optimally and tune into that and help them learn what we want them to learn as well as what they naturally go about learning themselves" - Beverley Paine


How do you apply Delight Directed learning in your Kitchen ?

Blessings
Chareen

This post is part of a week of blog hopping hosted by The Schoolhouse Review Crew: 5 Days of Teaching Creatively Day TWO

5 Days of Teaching Creatively
Day 2
  1. Delight Directed Instruction
  2. Schooling in the Kitchen
  3. Toy's, Games & Puzzles
  4. Homeschooling in a Crisis
  5. Hands on Projects

Don't forget to enter the Teaching Creatively Giveaway.  Pop on over to Ben and Me to enter in order to win one of three prize packs. (1st prize $525 value, 2nd prize $225 value and 3rd prize $190 value)



**Images from Free Digital Photo's: Child playing with Kitchen Utensil - Stuart Miles, Senior Chef Teaches Young Chef To Cut - Marin


Here are some more posts by homeschool moms with ideas about Schooling in the kitchen