Tag Archives: homeschooling

What sixth grade looks like at our house

Way back when Poppy started kindergarten, I couldn’t believe she was already 5 years old. Now she’s about to turn 11, and the more things change the more things stay the same because when we start school in a few weeks she’ll be a middle schooler and I am once again in awe at how quickly the years go by.

Poppy was interested in trying public school out this year, but I was hesitant to drop my always-homeschooled kid into a 700-student middle school. We put her name in the hat for a couple of charter schools, but she didn’t get in to either of them. She was perfectly fine with that. She’s still going to get a very small going-to-school experience this year, though, as we’ve signed her up to spend three hours every week taking classes at a place downtown.

Social Studies
  • Poppy and Pete will be doing Story of the World: Volume 4 together. Last year I bought the audiobook, and the kids enjoyed listening to it in the car on the way to co-op. We’ll do the same this year. I’m sure I’ll also lament the number of hands-on projects that we actually do this year, too.
  • One of Poppy’s outsourced classes is Civilization and Culture. They’re going to spend the first semester focused on Community and Recreation — the description says they’ll talk about things like the Library of Alexandria and how baseball was invented. It sounds like it’ll be a fun class.
  • I bought the kids a couple of ginormous “Map Skills” workbooks last year. We’ll continue working through a couple of those each week.

    Math

    Poppy will be finishing up McRuffy Math 5 for the first part of the school year, and I’m not sure what she’s going to do after that because there is no McRuffy Math 6. I’ve looked at more traditional programs (Horizons, the web-based Monarch curriculum) as well as more fanciful options (Beast Academy, “Life of Fred”), but I haven’t settled on anything yet. The good news is that I have a few months to continue mulling it over.

    Language Arts

  • I’m still trying to get myself to pull the trigger on the next level of Michael Clay Thompson books. The kids enjoyed them and they retained a lot of information, but it’s a very expensive curriculum.
  • Poppy will most likely do a few Reed Novel Studies books again this year. She doesn’t love it, but they help her to slow down and pay attention to what she’s reading.
  • We’re outsourcing Poppy’s writing this year with an Institute for Excellence in Writing class. It looks like she’ll have a good bit of homework from this one, which will be a new experience for both of us.

    Science

    Poppy’s other outsourced class this year is Earth Science.

    Art & Music

    The piano lessons shall continue. For art, I’m thinking about using Kahn Academy’s art history lessons.

    P.E.

    Poppy is going into the school year as a red belt, and she’s aiming to test for her next belt before 2017. She’s playing soccer again this year, too, and the league she’s playing in this year includes a few tournaments and away games.

  • This week in homeschooling: The history of pinball and the absence of Shaq

    NaBloPoMo November 2015Most of the games at our local pinball museum are also for sale, and I was saddened today to discover that they’d sold both Shaq Attaq and Bride of Pinbot. They were, respectively, my second-favorite and Rockford’s very favorite pinball game in the building. I had neither a favorite nor a second-favorite pinball machine until a few months ago, when one of Pete’s friends invited him to his pinball birthday party. After that, the Butterscotch Sundae family went to the pinball museum several Sundays in a row before finally and sadly concluding that our budget could not support that much pinball.

    Today the children and I returned after a weeks-long absence. We went with a few other families from our Monday co-op, and the owner gave us a presentation on the history of pinball before setting the kids loose to play for awhile. Poppy threw him off a little with her question: “What’s with all the ladies on the pinball games?” He explained that it was because the makers of the machines were advertising to boys, since boys were the ones with the freedom to go gallivanting about playing pinball, thus we have ladies on the pinball displays. The burgeoning feminists in our crew were not impressed.

    So we started the week with no school at all, because we were all sick and tired, and we wrapped it up with a field trip to the pinball museum. It was kind of a weird week, I guess. Here’s a bit of what the kids did this week beyond recreation history:

    History

    This week’s “Story of the World” chapter discussed the Trail of Tears. The kids listened to the chapter several times and did some map work, and today we made Cherokee Fry Bread:

    Cherokee Fry Bread
    CherokeeFryBreadadapted from the Manataka American Indian Council
    1 cup flour + extra as needed
    1/2 tsp. salt
    2 tsp. baking powder
    3/4 cup milk
    cinnamon sugar
    honey

    Mix ingredients, adding more flour if necessary to make a stiff dough. (I needed an extra half cup.) Roll out the dough on a floured board until very thin. Cut into 2- by 3-inch strips and drop in hot cooking oil. Brown on both sides. If your oil is quite hot, it’ll only a minute or so. Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar and serve hot with honey.

    I thought it was delicious, but Poppy didn’t care for it and Pete wouldn’t even try it.

    Language Arts

    Reading

    Poppy has started reading “Serafina and the Black Cloak” for our book club, and Pete has been re-reading one of his “Star Wars” universe graphic novels. I’ve been sick all week, and when I get sick I lose my voice. So our “Harry Potter” read-aloud has fallen by the wayside a bit.

    Vocabulary

    I gave each of the bookclub girls a notebook to jot down thoughts as they read, and one of the other moms suggested that we also have them use it to record words they don’t understand. They’re going to share one new vocabulary word at our next meeting. So far Poppy has written down “camaraderie,” but I don’t think she’s looked it up yet.

    Poppy and Pete are also continuing their WordlyWise 3000 studies.

    Writing

    Pete is still very reluctant to do much writing on his own, so it’s nice that his WriteShop curriculum has me doing most of the physical writing. This week he was supposed to dictate to me a memorable holiday event, and he told me about the time his sister accidentally punched him in the face and knocked out a loose tooth on his birthday. Sweet, sweet memories.

    Grammar

    We’re near the end of the Grammar Island practice book, and I’m impressed at how well the kids are retaining the information. They get especially excited when they identify a pronoun, or as we like to call it — “a noun that’s lost its amateur status.”

    Memorization

    The kids have been working on memorizing the names of the US presidents in order. We’re up to Grover Cleveland, but I think we probably need to go back and review Harrison through Lincoln because we didn’t spend much time on that segment.

    Math

    I’m thinking about getting Beast Academy for Pete to try out once he finishes his current curriculum. I think Poppy might enjoy it, too, but I’ll probably just go with the first level and let her use it as review.

    Wanna read more about homeschooling? Check out the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers weekly linky thing!

    This week in homeschooling: A whole lotta Language Arts

    Homeschooling at ButterscotchSundae.com

    Our homeschool schedule has been pretty loosey-goosey over the last few years. The kids each had a daily list, and as long as they got everything (or, let’s be honest: most things) checked off by bedtime, we were good. This year, though, they have so many extracurricular activities that I had to make a sort of draconian schedule. We start work at 9am, take a snack break at 10, do more work until lunch, and so on.

    And you know what? School has been going really well so far this year, and I think the extra structure has a lot to do with that. Most days the kids are focused and cheerful and have finished their schoolwork before or shortly after noon. That’s a great thing, because with the soccer and tae kwon do and tennis (oh my!), it’s nice for them to have the afternoon to take it easy.

    In the spirit of changing-things-up, I also reorganized the kids’ daily to-do lists this year, and when I did it became obvious that we are really heavy on the Language Arts around here. That shouldn’t have surprised me, I guess, since those are my favorite subjects, but it certainly makes for a long This Week In Homeschooling post. So for this week, at least, we’re just going to talk about Language Arts.

    Reading
  • Our first read-aloud of the year is always a “Harry Potter” book. (Or at least, it will be until 2018, I guess, because that’s when we’re slated to finish the series.) (Yes, we’re only reading one a year. As it should be.) This year we were reading “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.” Until last night, when the kids asked for another chapter before bed and suddenly it was 9:40pm and we’d finished the book. The kids, as always, loved it.
  • Pete is tackling his first chapter book! He’s been wanting to check some of the “Star Wars” books out from the library, and I told him he could if he’d read it on his own. He’s currently reading “Boba Fett: The Fight to Survive.”
  • Poppy’s been reading her way through the “Warriors” books and every “Garfield” compilation she can get her hands on. She’s also started an official Literature curriculum this year, and her first book for that is “The Borrowers.” She reads two chapters on Mondays, then spends a few days doing the accompanying worksheets from Reed Novel Studies’ “Borrowers” unit. She doesn’t always love it, but I really like the emphasis on vocabulary and reading comprehension.
  • Spelling

    Pete finished Lesson 13 of “All About Spelling: Level One” this week. It was a lot of annunciating different letter blends and writing different phrases, and he wasn’t crazy about it. Hopefully the next lesson will be a little more hands-on for him.

    Vocabulary

    Poppy started Wordly Wise 3000 toward the end of last year, so she’s still working through their third-grade curriculum. She’s doing very well with it, though, and she enjoys the program. I’ll probably sign Pete up for it next year, too.

    Writing

    We finally resumed “Writing Strands” this week! The first step of Poppy’s current lesson was making a list of things she enjoyed about a recent school day. “Reading ‘Garfield’ ” was on the list.

    Grammar
  • We’ve been reading a little bit of “Grammar Island” every day. The kids like the couch time, but I’m not sure how their retention is with the material. They’ll be starting on the practice portion of the curriculum in a few weeks, so I guess we’ll find out then.
  • Poppy’s still working through “Growing with Grammar.” She didn’t do anything with it over the summer, and she definitely hasn’t retained much of what she learned from it last year. She still enjoys doing the work, though, so we’re going to stick with it.
  • “First Language Lessons” is still another cuddle-up-and-read project for Pete and me, and we’re both fans of that. He seems to be remembering the information, too, which is a good thing.
  • Poetry
  • This year Poppy is doing a curriculum produced by the Mensa people called “A Year of Living Poetically.” It includes a little bit of poetry analysis as well as stuff about rhyme, meter, etc. Last week she did John Donne’s “No Man Is an Island,” and this week she’s been working on “Sonnet 116” by William Shakespeare. She didn’t have much trouble memorizing the Donne, but Shakespeare is giving her a little bit of trouble. She’ll probably have it done by next week, though.
  • Pete is memorizing the same poems that Poppy did a few years ago. Last week he did Christina Rosetti’s “Fly Away, Fly Away Over the Sea,” and this week he’s working on Shel Silverstein’s “Bear in There.”
  • Wanna read more about homeschooling? Check out the Weird, Unsocialized Homeschoolers weekly linky thing!