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Sep. 7th, 2006 11:22 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It is taking us a solid two to two and a half hours to get through everything in the Calvert K curriculum. And a lot of it seems like over the top repetition. I had hoped to supplement this with some religious ed and maybe start learning Spanish, but that is just too much time spent on school with a five year old! I'm not sure what to do. Mari loves it and asks me all morning when we are doing school (we are doing it in the afternoons), so she isn't anywhere near burning out, but I know I will be soon if we add much more to this. I don't know...any suggestions from Calvert pros?
We are only a week and a half into this, so I shouldn't make any judgements yet, but I'm feeling very confident about my ability to teach Mari right now. I was nervous about it at first because we do tend to rub each other the wrong way sometimes, but so far it is mostly like playing together and there has not been a single instance yet of me having to push at all. Of course, so far this stuff is way too easy for her so that might be why I've not had to push. I've looked a little more closely through the books and we'll be getting to more challenging stuff for her in about a month. This must be the famed (notorious?) Review that I've heard Calvert users lament. The first few months are just review so this must be review of the pre-K stuff and a time to help get the child settled into the routine of school. At least I hope so. Otherwise, we really should have started with first grade, not K.
Zoe wants to do school today too. I'm going to have to look and see if I have some workbooks or something to go along with todays lessons that she can do with us. Funny girl. I should pull out our FIAR stuff and do some of it with her and Luci...but that is more time spent on school. I never imagined it would take up this much time at this age.
I'm tired today and I don't really understand why. I got plenty of sleep last night. I want to get out of the house too. I feel antzy. Maybe we will go for a walk today. It is very pretty outside.
Laundry. I hate laundry. I must go do laundry now.
We are only a week and a half into this, so I shouldn't make any judgements yet, but I'm feeling very confident about my ability to teach Mari right now. I was nervous about it at first because we do tend to rub each other the wrong way sometimes, but so far it is mostly like playing together and there has not been a single instance yet of me having to push at all. Of course, so far this stuff is way too easy for her so that might be why I've not had to push. I've looked a little more closely through the books and we'll be getting to more challenging stuff for her in about a month. This must be the famed (notorious?) Review that I've heard Calvert users lament. The first few months are just review so this must be review of the pre-K stuff and a time to help get the child settled into the routine of school. At least I hope so. Otherwise, we really should have started with first grade, not K.
Zoe wants to do school today too. I'm going to have to look and see if I have some workbooks or something to go along with todays lessons that she can do with us. Funny girl. I should pull out our FIAR stuff and do some of it with her and Luci...but that is more time spent on school. I never imagined it would take up this much time at this age.
I'm tired today and I don't really understand why. I got plenty of sleep last night. I want to get out of the house too. I feel antzy. Maybe we will go for a walk today. It is very pretty outside.
Laundry. I hate laundry. I must go do laundry now.
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Date: 2006-09-07 03:56 pm (UTC)Its extrememly time consuming and not easy by any means but definately well worth the effort :)
FIAR is fun, and shouldn't take too long, I think you should definatly give it a go. I am using a modified BFIAR with Dex and Matt this year :)
And whenever its a nice day and you want to go outside, do! its physical education ;) being able to go out and enjoy the day is one of the nice benefits od hs'ing you can always do the work in the afternoon/evening if need be :)
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Date: 2006-09-07 10:04 pm (UTC)I should really add some FIAR stuff to our morning...along with the million other thins I want to add. *sigh*
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Date: 2006-09-07 10:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-07 10:24 pm (UTC)It is a literature based, unit study thingy. You read a specified book to the child for five days in a row and do activities based on the book for learning reading, math, science, social studes, etc. It is really neat actually.
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Date: 2006-09-07 10:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-07 04:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-07 10:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-07 05:53 pm (UTC)Second, the repetition is part of the method. At this age, repetition is the key to learning. It helps drill these important foundational exercises into the kiddies' mushy brains. You may get tired of it; she probably won't.
Third, remember that Calvert is a holistic approach. Calvert's Kindergarten is "easy" when compared to some other curricula because the pedagogical method is different—Calvert's purpose is to teach a student how to learn, not to teach mastery of a particular body of knowledge; the knowledge mastery is a great side benefit. The time spent laying this very broad and strong foundation will pay off in a couple of years. Picture a curve that starts very gently at first and then begins to turn at a geometric pace. Calvert's 4th grade year, for instance, would be brutal but for the great foundation laid in the Kindergarten course and built upon with increasing rapidity in the first three grades.
BTW, we always got some of those ubiquitous pre-school coloring/workbooks from the bookstore or teachers' store for the not-ready-for-Kindergarten kids so they could feel like they were "working" too.
Hope this is helpful.
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Date: 2006-09-07 10:12 pm (UTC)So...the curriculum doesn't get more time intensive as you go up in the grades? I thought it would and so two hours seems like a lot to start with if it gets more intense. I was imagining my fifth grader with six hours of sit down work. That wasn't working for me. So your wife only spends about two hours a day on "strict curriculum" stuff even with the upper grades? That is encouraging. I like the way you guys have it planned out with one day for field trips or whatever. I don't think we'll work on the weekends, but I was thinking we might work through the summers and longer holidays, because it seems like those are times that kids in regular schools lose a lot and that is why the long reviews at the beginning of each school year are necessary. Are you guys year rounders or do you take summers off?
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Date: 2006-09-08 02:13 am (UTC)All this is really variable, though. Some kids will need more time for math; some kids will need less time for everything. It's really hard to generalize. The only rule to carve in stone is to not carve any of this stuff in stone.
We take a very definite three-month break for the summer. Going straight through would burn my poor wife out.
We're also pretty flexible with the schedule. We always take a month off for Christmas. We've also been known to take a month off to have a baby, get a child implanted with a bionic ear, etc.
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Date: 2006-09-07 08:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-07 08:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-07 10:02 pm (UTC)Maybe I shouldn't have shared that. :P
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Date: 2006-09-07 10:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-07 10:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-07 10:54 pm (UTC)slave laboropportunites for learning life skills.no subject
Date: 2006-09-08 02:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-08 01:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-08 02:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-08 02:23 am (UTC)I'm certainly looking forward to it. ;)
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Date: 2006-09-07 10:23 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-09-08 02:09 am (UTC)