Showing posts with label High School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label High School. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Homeschool History: Create Elementary Lessons on Germany and Berlin Wall for Elementary Homeschoolers

Homeschool history lessons are far more entertaining and memorable than a classroom lecture and textbook reading assignment. "Open your 700 pound book and turn to page 7276 and read the chapter on German History and the Berlin Wall" (zzzzzz - snore -zzzzzz - snore) doesn't have to start your child's day when you're homeschooling. Instead, your kids can wake up to you in your jammies staring over them with an excited wild-eyed look holding a steaming hot cup of coffee in your hands screaming and cheering "let's make like the Germans today and knock down a wall!" while ripping the blankets off their comfy warm body and sounding a bugle horn with your spare hand. Okay, truthfully, we know nobody would do this until at least one cup of coffee was finished. Does anyone else get this excited over lesson plans? Neither do I. But in my wistful images of myself being a homeschool maniac mama I do imagine myself getting excited over larger-than-life homeschool projects on Germany and the Berlin Wall.

I remember picking up my highschoolers' social studies textbooks and reading and thinking (yes, I can read and think at the same time), how on earth do they expect kids to learn from reading nothing but one bland fact after another? I read my elementary school daughter's friend's social studies books and have the same disbelief. Haven't we gone beyond the 1950's textbook learning methods? Are we not in the 21st century? Why do we even have textbooks? I thoroughly understand why I found history boring when I was in high school, and why my kids either hated it or struggled with it during their highschool years. However, I love history now and find it fascinating - probably because I found out there is life beyond textbooks.

The kids are growing up in a global world. In order to bring up open-minded children, I feel it's important for them to learn about the "big wide world" (all countries, not just America) while they still have an open mind and a big imagination. I envy my sister who taught her kids the alphabet by naming a country for each letter before they were even close to entering Kindergarten. I was lazy and sang the traditional A is for Apple instead of A is for Afghanastan. (Usually because I was falling asleep while singing them to sleep with the alphabet and I knew more names of foods than I did names of countries. My kids are in college now. We're still workin' on the abc's.)

Technology and media have created extraordinary opportunities to meet the learning styles of different students. Homeschoolers can blend hands-on history activities with learning technology to bring history to life and make it memorable. Is your child going to learn more about the Berlin Wall from reading about it in a textbook, or by using an easy art lesson to build a wall that divides two towns created by the student, creating grafitti, putting up soldiers and townspeople, drawing maps, cooking German food, and watching videos of the Berlin Wall?

Forget textbooks, an exciting interesting story on the Berlin Wall from a kid's point of view, is more likely to be read with interest, and a Caldecott Honor Picture Book will at least get a non-reader a visual glimpse of the event. A Berlin Wall lesson can be lengthened to include a compare and contrast lesson on all the famous walls, and videos can be watched to support realistic interpretations of the event.

Granted, public elementary school classes do have more hands-on classes than highschoolers, but time doesn't allow projects to be ongoing, personal, or to develop into bigger, smaller or different subjects. Not only can a homeschooler build a wall for social studies class, they can determine the walls structure and physical properties and examine basic structural components for their science class, and study how the Berlin Wall was broken down to be recyled for new roads. Then of course there are measuring (the wall was 103 miles) opportunities, word problems (the 103 mile wall blocked in 103 million people), percentages (261 people died trying to cross - names available at the Internet Archive), and other mathematical elements that can be blended into math lessons. Here's some metric figures to work with from a University of Berlin professer and his personal webpage of (dry, but informative) facts on the Berlin Wall and Berlin:

* The border between West Berlin and East Berlin and the GDR had a total length of 166 km, and there was a deeply staggered system of barriers. There was a wall with a length of 107 km at this border. Finally, the border area looked about as follows: First, there was a wall which was made up of concrete segments with a height of 4 m, usually with a concrete tube on top of it. Behind it (at the "eastern" side) there was an illuminated control area (also called death area). Refugees who had reached that area were shot without warning. A trench followed which should prevent vehicles from breaking through. Then there was a patrol track, a corridor with watchdogs, watchtowers and bunkers, and a second wall.

* On August 13 1998, a wall memorial was inaugurated at the Bernauer Strasse (at the corner to the Ackerstrasse, city districts Wedding/Mitte). It consists of a remainder of the Berlin wall with a length of 70 m, provided with slits in the inner wall and steel sheets at the ends.

* The border cut through 192 streets, 97 of them leading to East Berlin and 95 into the GDR.


From the EU Infrastructure website page on the Construction of the Berlin Wall:

The Wall was expanded into a staggered system of barriers; firstly there was the primary wall which stood 4m tall and was topped with a smooth pipe, intended to make scaling it more difficult. Behind it on the Eastern side, there was a control area, dubbed the 'death area', in which over 116 watchtowers were built. Anyone found to be there trying to escape were shot without warning. Trenches followed to stop vehicles break through and this was further protected by 10,000 border guards on patrol tracks, bunkers and a second wall.

The Wall that ran through the city center was 43.1 kilometers long, but further border fortifications separating West Berlin from the rest of Soviet-controlled Germany totalled 111.9 kilometers long. In the 28 years that the Wall stood, over 239 people were killed trying to defect across the wall.

The EU Infrastructure Construction of the Berlin Wall webpage has an interactive infograph that you can click on and it will highlight more detailed facts and diagrams. For instance:

It took 45,000 separate sections of concrete that were 12 feet high and 4 feet wide and was topped with a long pipelike channel.

There were 302 watchtowers and 20 bunkers staffed by 2 to 5 soldiers around the clock.

If you have a budding builder or future scientist, mechanic or architect, it might be worth your time to bop around the EU Infrastructure website to get some ideas on real-time news events to build lessons around.

The architectural construction of the wall, the security, and the methods used to cross the wall might be interesting for international spy wannabes, and attempting to jump or climb a wall would be an interesting gym class or lesson on basic physics.

The BBC has an exquisite collection of archived videos, pictures, transcripts and documents on the Berlin Wall. I actually found that link from a tutor2u blog that has extensive links on historical information and resources - albiet for adults and highschoolers - it's still a good resource for parents to read up on what they're teaching before they teach it.

For further studies that can incorporate geography and graffiti, the graffiti.org website has an incredible compendium of graffiti artwork from around the world, including a link to graffiti in Europe, Germany and Berlin. You and your kids can flip through some of the artwork, then you can interrogate your child - er, I mean, discuss with your child - the social rules of graffiti and the artistic elements of graffiti. A great outline for doing so is at the haringkids.com link to a lesson on graffiti. Even if you don't visit their website for their graffiti lesson, they have a database of over 100 lesson plans for elementary students, middle school students and highschool students on all subjects. The website is definitely worth touring.

A simple Google Video or YouTube search for Berlin Wall videos will get you tons of links to videos depicting the tear down, and documenting its historical significance. All the major news websites will also have indepth historical information and likely personal accounts of the event. If you're tired of Google and YouTube, you can take a look at the video websites listed on the freetech4teachers blog. Mathtube even has math problems using the Berlin Wall as an example! If you're into technology and media, you'll enjoy the blog so click around.

I couldn't find any free educational online games about the Berlin Wall specifically, so here are some rather boring geography games that can support your homeschool studies on Europe and Germany, countries and continents:

SheppardSoftware.com has online geography games on Europe, the continents and America, as well as the capitals and some helpful downloads and free printables.

Yourchildlearns.com has an interactive map that can be used to test your homeschooled child's accuracy at identifying Germany and other European countries.

Kidgeo.com has a game on latitude and longitude, a click and drag map games of Europe, and a similar drag and drop world map, and US and continent map games as well. Playkids games has similar puzzle and drag and drop geography games.

If I hadn't had to reboot twice (once to the dog turning the power strip to "off," and the other to the router having to be rebooted), I'd look for more interesting geography games. If I ever come across more interesting geography games or if anyone has suggestions, I'll add them to my search engine (which still needs a lot of work.)

Most of the online lesson plans for the Berlin Wall and Germany are high school level, but homeschool parents have the opportunity to get information from lots of sources, pare it down, and be creative and imaginative. Here's some websites for elementary age-level geography lessons, a some comprehensive lists of useful history and geography links that can help shape your lesson plans on Germany and the Berlin Wall:

Rockford Public School website has a list of links on American History and European history. If you scroll down, you'll see links to Cold War lesson plans, one on Cold War Spies, a powerpoint presentation and others. The ones I went to open were in .doc form. These do look like they are for older kids, but still a valuable source for information.

Pitt.edu has a long list of links on elementary school social studies lesson plans that parents can use to homeschool on history.

Teacher's Cafe has dozens of links on European history, American history and other social study topics, although I haven't personally tried any of them. It does claim to be a free resource for teachers and parents.

Studystack.com has flash cards and simple online word games you can play to learn how to count to ten in German (or talk fluent German). If you want to hear German, visit fonetiks.org and learn how German words should be pronounced!

If you like flashcards, hangman,crossword puzzles, matchups and the like, this website has helpful tools for an incredible amount of subjects and standardized tests. Visit studystack.com's home page to view available topics.

Want some modern pictures of Germany? Check out The German Way, and National Geographic's Berlin Photo Gallery. You can also learn about the five main themes of geography at the National Geographic website which also lists ideas for lesson plans and activities on geography. (Location, Place, Human Environment/Interaction, Movement and Regions in case you're wondering. I admit. I didn't know there were five main themes until today.)

Mr. Donn.org has some elementary links on the five themes of geography that homeschool parents can use for geography lessons, including a cute little website with more than a few free clip art pictures on geography, social studies, and other elementary school subjects.

The Educator's Reference Desk has a long list of lesson plans for elementary, middle and high school studies on geography and world history.

I've found Professor Sass's Cloudnet website with zillions of educational links very useful in locating educational homeschool websites that can't be quickly found in a Google search. They have a long list of geography websites you can skim through. At the top, the geography page looks a little spammy because of the link ads, but once you scroll past those there's a wealth of information. (That's the pot calling the kettle black! I need some work on my own blog!)

It also looks like Kidinfo.com also has a nice list of websites that can be used for homeschooling about Germany and the Berlin Wall - and all other moments in history.

CosmoLearning is a new website I've just discovered, free videos and education resources - it's for the upper grades - middle school, high school, college and adults - but you'll find tons of videos on history (including Germany and the Berlin Wall) and all other subjects. It looks like a great site, dedicated to free online courses. Every homeschooling parent should look at this and spread the word.

BBC is awesome, and not only do they have extensive archives on the history of the Berlin Wall, they have a BBC history for kids section in their website with online games and educational activities for elementary students.

Hope I've helped you dig up some resources to develop homeschool lesson plans that complements the anniversary of the Berlin Wall Fall. (The wall falls in fall. Hmm, easy phonics lesson for the Berlin Wall.)

Time for me to teach instead of type. Guess we'll have to knock down some walls tomorrow!


Berlin Wall Picture found at Mariya Ivancheva's informative essay on the Fall of Socialism.

Find Maps and Geography Maps, Globes and More at S&S Worldwide Craft and Toy Store!


Shop S&S Worldwide for all your arts & crafts, school supplies and sports equipment!





For more Free Printables, Homeschool Worksheets and Free Lesson Plans, go to Homeschool Websites Homepage

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Homeschool Science Free Printables and Lessons on Woolly Mammoths

Homeschool websites with free printables and educational online games about Woolly Mammoths are useful for early grade science lessons to coordinate with the news about the successful genome sequencing of the Woolly Mammoth.

Discovery Kids, National Geographic, and National Geographic for Kids are first-class resources for any science homeschool lesson. Discovery Education has a link with free lesson plans for almost every subject - including art, music, reading, grammar, spelling, poetry, social studies, geography, and more. They also have free printables and a worksheet generator for all grade levels on all school subjects.

Woolly MammothSnuggled within those educational links is a link for students on Woolly Mammoths, including a history, their migration path, and links to a couple of virtual Woolly Mammoth Museums.

Enchanted Learning, which has many free printables within their educational website, also has a page on Woolly Mammoths. It is a little dry, but it does contain links to some free printables on Woolly Mammoths, Elephants and Mammals. The website for the movie(s) Ice Age is probably a little more interesting for kids. The popular Zoo Tycoon game has an expansion pack for Extinct Animals that features the Woolly Mammoth, and the Zoo Tycoon 2 Extinct Animals Expansion Packis available at Amazon.

The Scienceschool.org article on Woolly Mammoth extinction brings to light the extinction debate. The Berkley University has a link to lesson plans (lengthy text articles) and information on Learning from Fossil Records, including a a lesson on Building a Topographic Model by Ellen Metzger.


Kidz World has a page on Woolly Mammoths and links on the Ice Age. They're more of a game website (typical stuff) than an educational website, but there are some useful educational links and tidbits. Dragoart.com is an online kids website with "how to draw" tutorials for kids. They have a "How to Draw a Woolly Mammoth" link with step-by-step text, graphic and video instructions, and if you scope around you'll find other links that can be used for homeschool lessons. (Think art, science and geometry in one easy lesson!)

My time is going to become extinct pretty soon so I have to cut this post short - but I'll be editing it and adding more links later. If you've come across any games or links that are useful for homeschoolers learning about Woolly Mammoths post a comment and let us know! I'm also very interested in finding websites with lesson for the early elementary years on genome sequencing. Our young children today will be facing a very different world tomorrow. The way things are going I can't help but wonder if the traditional "dissect a frog" class (which I won't be doing!) is going to be replaced with a "clone a frog" class in the future - and every kid can take home their own cloned pet frog. Our kids' kids will look back on us and say "you mean you actually had to CATCH a frog? Why didn't you just clone it?" Cloning Woolly Mammoths might be a little too large to handle for the average homeschool family - but hey - we are an ingenious bunch.

Post Script November 24th: I found this Search Engine for Kids link on Digg called Kigose, and I did a search for "woolly mammoth" and there were excellent educational links listed. This is a search engine worth looking into for homeschool lessons plans and probably worksheets and games too! (Someday I'll get my search engine for homeschool resources up and going on this blog!) There was also a link to Top Ten Biology Videos from the Wired tech website, including one on high speed genome sequencing - videos are such a great way to get a lesson through the brain fast.

The Woolly Mammoth picture is from the artist's page on Clip Art.org -he also has a "fundraw" website where you can incorporate art and products. I haven't looked into it, but there may be some interesting gift ideas in there!

For more Free Printables, Homeschool Worksheets and Free Lesson Plans, go to Homeschool Websites Homepage

Monday, December 1, 2008

Free Homeschool Lesson Plans and Aids Awareness Lesson Plan Link

Today is World Aids Day, and I did a post with links to statistics on Aids at my Reporting Statistics blog. During my search for statistics, I found a lesson plan National Geographic has on Aids for grades 6 to 8 - the upper elementary grades. It uses charts and graphs to communicate the severity of Aids in Africa. I wasn't planning on doing a post on this homeschool blog today, but I couldn't pass up sharing the National Geographic Aids Lesson Plan link...and since I'm here..I might as well surf around...

Discovery Education, which has a "worksheets to go" page, also has a Lesson Plan on Aids for Grades 9-12 (scroll down a bit on the page).

Advocates for Youth has a list of lesson plans on topics for teens - including Aids. I found that link on a website called SchoolCounselors that has a list of lesson plans on all subjects and for every grade level. You'll have to browse through because they're not really organized, but the lesson plan links are quite easy to read so you can browse through the website quickly to see if there's anything you can use for homeschooling.

There is also a link which is cached of an Aids lesson for elementary students called Band-Aid to the world, but the link to the pdf file is listed in the cache if you're interested. The link title mentions Oprah, so I thought it might be worth posting. It has some 2004 statistics but might be worth looking at. There is also the Sexed Library website with related lessons plans, and I'm sure there's one on Aids floating around in there somewhere.

Here's a Grade 5 Lesson Plan on Aids, and there are many links on health education (from 1998) for 5th graders on the same website. Gee, that's ten years ago. It's probably appropriate for first graders now! (Okay, so I'm exaggerating - but only a little.)

Here is a very nice list of health education links on drugs and Aids from Washington Township Highschool. Definitely worth a look even if your child is in elementary school. There are health and science links for every grade level, and many of the websites cover all of the major homeschool subjects.

A website named Teachnology has lesson plans on Aids and some printables and worksheets, but it looks like you have to subscribe to get any use out of it. However, after clicking on a link I was informed there are 3 free lesson plans. They have a list of lesson plans on Aids for elementary and highschool students. Another website with links to lesson plans on community awareness, including a lesson plan on Aids for teenagers, is Learning Planet. They too are looking for membership, but they do offer free sample lesson plans.

I was fortunate to stumble on the Columbia Education Center Website which has hundreds of free lesson plans on all subjects for elementary grades and high school students. The website isn't fancy - but you'll find some great lessons plans and it's definitely worth a visit. I also came across a link, I believe from the Hot Chalk website, with a list of free lesson plans submitted by visitors. I believe I joined Hot Chalk some time ago - it's free and I believe there are a LOT of free lessons plans, printables and worksheets available from their website.

For elementary kids, starting science lessons with educational microscopes and bacteria and fungi science kits will give them a good start on finding a cure for Aids - and every other disease that haunts our generations.

I've been on this computer far too long and my daughter is going to be overdosed on Curious George (although I think it's too late) if I don't get my hands handing out homework instead of looking up statistics and lesson plans on Aids. Enough of the big kid stuff...little kid stuff is more fun.

I'm working on putting up a post with lots of links to resources for homeschool elementary math lesson plans and free printable worksheets - so check back or sign up for the blog's email alerts or RSS feed if you're interested!

Until then, have fun with health! (Better yet - take a look at this board game I just found that teaches consequences of your actions.)




For more Free Printables, Homeschool Worksheets and Free Lesson Plans, go to Homeschool Websites Homepage

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Homeschool Website Resources for Science and Physics Elementary Grade Studies on Simple Machines

Homeschool websites that have relatively fun online activities for studies on simple machines (lever, pulley, wheel and axle, wedge, inclined plane, screw) weren’t real easy to find. Millions of lesson plans, science websites, science experiments, history and basic information are of course available with a “simple” (corny pun spontaneously intended) Google search for “simple machines.” A search for “online games simple machines” will bring up a few educational online games. Edheads was in the top results in my search (which varies per computer user). It has a cute popup online games where kids are guided by a talking robot while traveling from room to room identifying simple machines. Edheads also has a few links to lesson plans and other related online educational science games. This is a great website to visit for an introduction to simple machines for early elementary students.

Wikipedia (gee- what a surprise!) has an entry on simple machines, and is worth a read to familiarize yourself with some history. The Museum of Science website and the Science Learning Network have put together an “Inventor’s Toolbox” page that has photographs and simple explanations of simple machines. There’s even an activity for identifying Leonardo’s historical inventions at the Museum of Science website. These links are highly educational, but can be a little boring for the average digital kid. Still, they're more fun than a worksheet.

The Science Learning Network website has a link to “Ten Cool Websites” that are definitely worth a visit. (And you have to admit, science is cool.) The list isn't full of really cool games, but it does include incredibly valuable science related websites with resources to free activities, videos and lectures from educational institutions, lesson plans, and links to websites with even more websites on science for homeschoolers (and everyone else). There is, however, a link on the side menu for "Kids' Stuff" which is a list of educational websites for kids - and it looks like there could definitely be some truly cool websites on that list.

Another educational website listed is FreeScience Info which apparently has 1500 free science ebooks available for download. Many of these are high school or college level, but there’s definitely homeschool science literature available. I did a search for “simple machines” and nothing came up, but a search for machines listed about twenty resources – none of which were elementary school level. Their link to free videos and lectures is also a great homeschool website, but primarily for older students and adults – and it’s a definite goldmine for free science courses, including a link on free online courses for various subjects, including physics, for the upper grades. I haven’t tried any yet, but the links are from universities, and it’s definitely a website for upper grade homeschoolers to bookmark (and it’s great listening material if you’re having trouble falling asleep, even if you don’t know what they’re talking about!).

The Franklin Institute is a little more kid friendly, and has a physical science “hot list” of science websites that looks very useful to homeschoolers. For some flash visuals, and some mechanical mathematics, Cosi.org has a simple machine introductory lesson that is a great webpage to start on for a simple machine lesson, even if only to clearly demonstrate the action of simple machines such as the wedge, plane, pulley, etc. The webpages that follow the introductory page are for upper elementary grades, and include some mechanical mathematics for older students. (We’re still working on our single digit multiplication.) Cosi also has a “find the simple machine” educational activity, and many more science online activities for elementary and upper grade homeschoolers. If you’re ever in the Ohio (US) area, they have reasonably priced workshops for homeschoolers.

Whenever I do a search for homeschool websites I usually find links on Internet4Classrooms, and sure enough, they have some links to simple machine websites, and even more science links on simple machines listed in their list of educational websites for physics. I also have a lot of luck in finding links to websites for homeschooling in websites managed by teachers and other homeschooling moms. (Yes, moms. I almost wrote “parents,” but I have yet to find a website with links from a homeschooling dad. Not that they’re not out there – I just haven’t come across one yet.)

Teacher Librarian Jackie Miers has compiled a list of some websites with lesson plans and activities on simple machines, including a simple beginner’s educational online game of simple machine recognition from the Harcourt website . Jerrie S. Clark from the Educational Technology Center has also compiled a list of links on websites for lessons on simple machines. Clark’s list has links to online and offline activities, science experiments, and lesson plans. Homeschoolingmamaof4 also has a blog post with some links to websites for homeschoolers in the upper elementary grades studying simple machines, and Mrs. Julie Thompson from Missouri has an excellent science website with a list of links for simple machine studies. With all the lists of links, there’s sure to be some useful homeschool links to add to a collection of homeschool websites on science subjects.

You’ll likely find that the same simple machine links are listed on multiple homeschool website resources, but there’s usually at least a unique link or two listed in each one. One game listed on most homeschool websites on simple machines is PBS’s Goldburger to Go online educational game with the ZOOM crew. This is an interactive educational online game for teaching simple machines with the beginning help of a hamburger. Looks fun. We’ll have to try it. (Although my vegetarian daughter might not want to watch.) Scholastic has a “Digmeister” webpage on simple machines, and PBS has a list of activities and episodes on physical science for elementary school children .

Building contraptions is a great way to learn about simple machines, and there are some free online educational games that promote physics knowledge and the principals of simple machines. One very physics oriented game is Crazy Machines. We downloaded the one hour free trial (which was only enough time to get through the first few levels), and my 8 year old and 15 year old both found it interesting. The Crazy Machine game is so incredibly physics oriented, it’s like the ultimate tool for learning elementary physics. School, games, fun – can those three words actually go together? Crazy Machines has great reviews at Amazon, and is available for under $10.00. And Amazon search results for simple machinesbrought up simple machine games, books with experiments for elementary students, and of course some intermediate simple machine books.

Fantastic Contraption is a safe, fun, free and educational online physics game. (No download required, also on the miniclip game website. ) The I Know That website has some free widget building games that are great for elementary kids. The levels with stars are free to play online, but the levels without a star require a subscription.

PlanetCDRom.com advertises free software for homeschoolers, however "free" is actually the $6,95 they charge for shipping - which really isn't such a bad price. The shipping cost per item is reduced when you buy more than one item. For under $14 (including shipping), PlanetCDRom.com has a Speedstudy Physics 1 and Speedstudy Physics 2 software programs for teens. For the same price, elementary students can use the Discover Science software with their time travel theme to discover the laws of physics and play games with science. The little ones might like to design machines and take science lessons over the computer with a simple software program like Sammy's Science House .

Homeschool science studies can't be limited to the computer though. If you enjoy science kits, Hobbytron has a Physics Discovery Science Kit for under $25, a larger Physics Workshop Science Kit for under $45, and if you are lucky enough to be able to afford it, Hobbytron has a really fun looking Physics Pro Advanced Physics Kit for just under $95. A coupon might help. Save 5% on all Science projects, kits and accessories at HobbyTron.com using coupon code: SCIENCE. Now if I could just find a simple machine to carry me into bed...

P.S. Next Morning: Just want to add this free physics game download called Phun that I found at the Educational Freeware website (a must have homeschool website to bookmark!). I'm downloading it now...

P.S.S. The Phun game is cool - 80's style - but we bought Crazy Machines and my daughter (8) LOVES it. She said "this should be in a museum!" The one hour free trial doesn't do it justice. There is a lot to explore. Not only can children complete hundreds of challenges, but they can create and endless amount of their own "contraptions" - all using lessons in physics. Tools to build include an array of pipes, gears, electricity (must have complete circuit), fireworks, balloons, gravity related objects, robots and a lot more. This is a game every elementary student should have! I don't recommend you download from Big Fish - they tend to leave "leftover files" in your Windows registry. I wish I could recommend a good place to download it - I'll have to get back to you on that - I think I used iwin free download version - but they download extra stuff, but I scanned it with Spybot and Avast and it was spyware and virus free - safe, just annoying download - (make sure you choose custom if it's asked and skip the toolbar download) - but you can delete everything later with a good uninstaller. Anyhow, Crazy Machines is worth every penny! (And I think the Amazon offer is cheaper than the downloads offerred online.)

For more Free Printables, Homeschool Worksheets and Free Lesson Plans, go to Homeschool Websites Homepage

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Homeschool Links for Natural Resource Lessons

Just a quick post to share this link I found during my morning search for educational links and lesson plans on natural resources:

Natural Resource Links from Pat Elliott, Library Specialist

There are links to videos, graphics, almanacs, teacher packets, projects and lesson plans. Minerals and metals are not my strong point - and I need to relearn what I've forgotten since third grade. My daughter, however, is very science oriented - and she loves dirt and rocks. I have no doubt that she's going to be intrigued with her homeschool studies on natural resources. She'll love anything that gives her another excuse to collect rocks and dig through dirt. (I might add that she has a knack for finding rocks shaped like hearts..and has a very nice collection.)

Pat Elliott's list is going to be a resource for teaching myself as well as my daughter!

This website has links that are applicable to any grade level - and I'm sure one link will carry on to another valuable resource.

I just have to make sure I spend some time digging through dirt instead of staring at this hypnotizing laptop...you should do the same.



For more Free Printables, Homeschool Worksheets and Free Lesson Plans, go to Homeschool Websites Homepage

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Homeschool Websites New Search Engines Added!

Finally, homeschool search engines are now added to this blog! Unfortunately, I just went 4 weeks with no Internet due to satellite issues. Fortunately, I got a lot of offline work done! I got together all my homeschool links to educational games, free worksheets, lesson plans and all that fun stuff and put them into two separate search engines. One search engine searches through websites that are educational, have free worksheets AND it searches through free online educational games. Generally, these are geared towards elementary students, but most of the websites have educational information that junior high and high school students can use for their homeschooling. The second search engine searches only websites that have free online educational games. I might have messed up with the custom search engine, because my computer was wacky. I tried to put only web pages with free games that didn't require paid memberships, but Google may have included all pages of a website instead of just a particular page. (My little check boxes to select weren't showing up.) Anyhow, I hope you enjoy these!

I think if you go to these pages you can add them to your Google bookmark bar or whatever else they offer:

Link for search engine page for Homeschool Websites AND Free Educational Online Games.

Link for search engine page for just Homeschool Free Online Educational Games.

I hope it's a useful tool for all of you homeschooling mamas and papas out there! (Even the kids can use it! I tried to make sure they're all kid safe.)

I have to get ready for company - so have fun looking around at the free homeschool stuff! Have a great day everyone!


Post Script: I just want everyone to know that I've been testing the search engines and they're not up to my expectations yet. I had trouble with Google Custom Search Engine. The Homeschool free online games search engine will certainly be useful, but I'm finding that the one with lessons is mostly providing junior high and high school lessons, and it's also not including all the pages I meant to have listed. (There's issues with URL patterns I have to fix.) But please enjoy what you can, and definitely give the homeschool free online educational game search engine a try! Keep in mind I will be updating these. Thank you for your patience!


For more Free Printables, Homeschool Worksheets and Free Lesson Plans, go to Homeschool Websites Homepage

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Homeschool Regulations for New York and Tennessee, NY Testing, and some Homeschool Statistics

Homeschooling gives you a lot of freedom, but you're still bound by state and federal regulations. In fact, one of your first "duties" of homeschooling is to learn the homeschooling regulations that determine the qualifications for someone to homeschool, and then to learn your state's homeschool reporting requirements. When I was first researching regulations I found it interesting, and even slightly humorous, that in NY one of the qualifying factors is to "be able to understand the regulations." It makes a lot of sense. If you can research and understand legal regulations, you can certainly research and understand educational topics.

To find your state homeschooling regulations, it's always best to do a search for your state's Board of Education website. Someday I'll get around to making a list of all fifty states, but here are some links to homeschooling regulations in New York State along with some Tennesse Homeschool Regulations.

I listed some New York regulation links in a previous post which included links to NYS math testing exams. I also listed some NY curriculum requirement links within a science homeschooling post. I have recently found this Edinformatics website, which isn't pretty to look at, and you need to scroll down to find the state testing info, but they have valuable links, such as one that lists actual tests per state. They have a great list of NYS tests from 2003-2008 for various grades that you can easily download in a pdf form. The subjects are English, Math and Science (and possibly more high school subjects), and includes answer keys and some teacher resources. I also just found some practice links for Grade 8 Science exams.

The New York Board of Education has a link on NY Homeschool Regulations and Instruction which lists regulations and has some Q&A information. They also conveniently post the specific legal language of the homeschool legal regulations in NYS.

The Tennessee Board of Education is very lax on reporting standards, and the only requirement is submitting attendance records. (Which, although I understand the legal necessity, it seems redundant since the child is always at home and learning throughout most the day.) However, their qualifications to homeschool are more stringent than NYS (you may require a bachelor's degree to homeschool high-schoolers, but there are exceptions). You'll have challenges once your child is 6-9 months below testing level, and they don't kindly tolerate children being more than a year behind for two years in a row. (Funny how certain things are okay in public schools, but not okay in homeschools.) Also, I find it frightening that if you're late submitting reports you get fined $25 or something like that. I am ALWAYS pathetically late. But, since once I move to TN all I have to submit is attendance records, it'll be far easier to be on time. (Except for my chronic and habitual tendency to be late for everything.) I hope. Maybe I should start saving now. (Does the money go to the kids or the teacher's lounge?)

Tennessee's homeschooling page has information on individual and church-related homeschool facts and regulations. Just as NY does, TN has a link to the legal language of homeschooling statutes as well. Required testing doesn't start until Grade 5 in TN, which is great because it starts in Grade 4 in NY, and I hate the idea of having to test to public school expectations when homeschool expectations can be designed differently. My daughter may not know the answer to Question A, but you can bet she can answer streams of questions that other students her age range in public schools can't. Parents who choose to homeschool to get out of the academic inadequcies of public schools are stuck "teaching to the test" even when that's one of the repulsive anti-learning traditions of public schools today.

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) reports that the most popular reasons for homeschooling are to add morals and religion to education, to keep kids out the current public school environment, and because of a "dissatisfaction with academic instruction." The NCES also reports that in 2007 there were over 1.5 million children homeschooled. (The data is available in a free pdf download.) You can find more homeschool statistics and websites in the search results for homeschool from my Reporting Statistics blog.

I'm worried about homeschooling in TN because I've had such a kind school district here in NY, and because my daughter is below grade-level in reading because I've chosen to go at a slower place and to follow some of Finland's world-renowned educational traditions. The public schools may want children to read and spell to past tests, but I am teaching my daughter to love reading and read to learn. I have readers and non-readers between my six kids, but I've seen how pushing a student too fast can make them hate reading. And my daughter absolutely loves books and she can't get enough of them. She also has a very high comprehension level - so it's frustrating for her to not be abe to read as fast as she can understand. I like the fact that homeschooling gives you the freedom to go slow on one topic, but go grade levels ahead on another. In a public school, a child's true potential is inhibited by the need to appease the interest of the masses instead of the need of the individual. It's too bad that education has become so over-regulated.

Well, I am entirely too late filing my year-end NY report, between my teens' exams, high-school graduation, moving, and my son getting married soon, I've been way behind on paperwork. Hopefully my kind superintendent will be forgiving once again. It's time for me to start digging up memories of what Jesse and I have done for the past quarter! I really need to be more adamant with my record keeping.

Have fun reading the homeschooling regulations. Feel free to email me if I can help you in any way. I'd love to hear from Tennesse homeschooling parents (particularly in Hawkins County and the Tri-Cities area) and hear their experiences homeschooling in Tennessee. Happy homeschooling!

11/09: P.S. Unfortunately I had to disable comments on this to hide someone's tobacco advertisement. There was no way to delete just the comment. (I've enabled comment moderation for all other posts.)



Calendars for Homeschool Organization and Fun Gift Giving



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Monday, September 22, 2008

Homeschool Art with Google Doodle

Homeschool art classes are pretty easy to conjure up for elementary school kids. I just want to point out a Google Doodle contest my daughter and I stumbled upon that you can enter your homeschool child in. The entry rules say schools only, but it includes homeschoolers and it's real easy to register. Basically, you're making the Google Logo with a theme on "What I Wish for the World" and it's not due until March. I'm really not into contests, but my daughter and I really enjoyed looking at these last year and watching the video on the Google Doodle artist. "What I wish for the world" brainstorming can involve social studies, science, reading, even math - art involves science and math - and there's hundreds of tangents you can can go off on, or details you can absorb yourselves in.

Here's the links to the Google Doodle school and homeschool art contest if you're interested. It's for grades K-12 - and if you have a budding artist - or just someone who likes to doodle - it could be fun! (If you have a winner - the prizes are awesome!)

Google Doodle Judging and Prizes

Google Doodle Video and Top Ten Tips for Doodling with Google

Information for Schools, Judging Criteria, and PDF Entry Forms to Download

Link to pictures of last year's winners

Grading for the Google Doodle art contest will be categorized by the following grades:

Kindergarten - Grade 3
Grade 4 - Grade 6
Grade 7 - Grade 9
Grade 10 - Grade 12

Then it goes by states, regions and filters down until they declare "We have a winner!" - it also looks like there's online voting.

Have fun doodling with Google!


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