Teaching Math
It all begins with an idea.
I was always good at math and it was my favorite subject. My husband is a mathematician. Surely, I thought, I will be good at teaching math to my kids. When my oldest was ready to start learning math I realized, very quickly, that I could not teach it at all, as my oldest was not grasping it. I researched curricula and found the Math-U-See program which solved my problem completely. All my kids learned well with it despite very different learning styles because it is fully multi-sensory. Even better, it required very little effort from me as my kids would watch the video, then do the work, and only come to me if they did not understand something.
This was all fine until a younger sibling wanted to start “school” like his siblings while still very young. This is when I discovered Ray’s Arithmetic. These adorable books were best sellers in the era of one room schoolhouses. Back then paper was expensive and even little chalk boards were in short supply. For the first few years the students learned using manipulatives and mental math. My very hyper daughter would bounce around the room while I read story problems and she did them in her head. I used the more advanced problems to supplement Math-U-See for my older kids and build speed, while I used the very first book to lay down a good foundation with my littlest.
As I am old fashioned and a big fan of drilling a skill until it is very easy before moving on, I also had my kids do math drills using a deck of cards with the face cards removed as a random number generator. I would set a timer for just 5 minutes. The first level was laying two cards side by side and having them add them, I would next place one new card on top of one of the existing cards and they would add those two. We continued until either the deck was finished or 5 minutes was up, whichever came first. With reluctant kids I have tutored, once they realize I really will stop after 5 minutes, they apply themselves harder. When they get too fast, I add difficulty. Just 5 minutes a day will do wonders, in fact even if life interferes and it is fewer days, this exercise will make a big difference. The next level is 3 cards across, then after that, I have them add the whole deck, one at a time, continuously in their heads up through 100. When that is too easy, after 100, we subtract one at a time. I use the cards to drill multiplication as well. The cards make it feel more like a game. If siblings are close in ability and enjoy it, they can race.
In our modern world of calculators and computers this may seem silly, but being able to do mental math easily frees up the mind for higher order thinking and will add speed in standardized tests. Some teachers in universities do not allow calculators and some standardized tests do not either. If the student is not proficient, this can be a shock. Deep intuition is also developed so the student will go back and redo a problem that doesn’t look right.
The timer is also a wonderful tool for all kinds of school work as kids focus harder when there is an end in sight. It helps me as well. If there is something I don’t want to do, I set a timer and do 10 to 15 minutes at a time. Usually I discover that the task required far less time than I anticipated.
You can buy Ray’s Arithmetic at Mott Media. I only like the first three levels. https://www.mottmedia.com/
Both of these can be bought once and used for all your children and passed on. My kids did not write in their Math-U-See workbooks so their siblings could use them and I did not have to purchase for each child. This is extremely economical.
All Parents Homeschool
It all begins with an idea.
Many people think their choices are to either send their kids to school or to homeschool them. More realistically, all parents teach their children. For some parents it is their hobbies or their trade, others integrate academics into their lives at home or with tutors. Even the attitude parents have toward education teaches their children what the parents think is important.
Those parents who read bedtime books every night are homeschooling their kids, they just don’t label it that. The parents who buy workbooks with math problems to keep their kids busy at the doctor’s office are homeschooling them. The parents who get so caught up in studying a subject that they use much of their free time learning it are teaching their children how to learn by example.
When I was officially homeschooling I would have parents who were already working with their kids and teaching them daily, tell me they could never homeschool. They did not realize they already were, just in a different format.
In many states parents have so many options including hybrid forms of schooling by enrolling their kids part time in public schools. This can be a wonderful way to outsource subjects the parents may not want to teach or remove children from a class which is not working for them while they stay in the others. In my case, I knew I would not teach music well and my kids took lessons, but also joined a school orchestra and community youth orchestras. Maybe the student loves team sports or wants to see friends. Perhaps the parents are not temperamentally suited to be home all day. We each find our own solutions and there is no one right way of the universe to teach kids. We can change and adapt to what works best for us.
Blog Post Title Three
It all begins with an idea.
It all begins with an idea. Maybe you want to launch a business. Maybe you want to turn a hobby into something more. Or maybe you have a creative project to share with the world. Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.
Don’t worry about sounding professional. Sound like you. There are over 1.5 billion websites out there, but your story is what’s going to separate this one from the rest. If you read the words back and don’t hear your own voice in your head, that’s a good sign you still have more work to do.
Be clear, be confident and don’t overthink it. The beauty of your story is that it’s going to continue to evolve and your site can evolve with it. Your goal should be to make it feel right for right now. Later will take care of itself. It always does.
Blog Post Title Four
It all begins with an idea.
It all begins with an idea. Maybe you want to launch a business. Maybe you want to turn a hobby into something more. Or maybe you have a creative project to share with the world. Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.
Don’t worry about sounding professional. Sound like you. There are over 1.5 billion websites out there, but your story is what’s going to separate this one from the rest. If you read the words back and don’t hear your own voice in your head, that’s a good sign you still have more work to do.
Be clear, be confident and don’t overthink it. The beauty of your story is that it’s going to continue to evolve and your site can evolve with it. Your goal should be to make it feel right for right now. Later will take care of itself. It always does.