BookShark Virtual Online Homeschool Curriculum
BookShark Virtual Online Homeschool Curriculum brings the power and ease of online accountability to a literature-rich curriculum! Online lesson plans, automated grading, printable worksheets, assessments and more! A review from Starts At Eight.
3 Must Have Money Conversations with Your Teen
Must Have Money Conversations with your Teen discusses important money topics to have with your teen as well as a FREE Real-Life Finance Worksheet.
Homeschooling Through the Eyes of a 5th Grader
This is the last year I will have an elementary student. My youngest is a 5th grader this year. To commemorate this I thought I might document what Homeschooling Through the Eyes of a 5th Grader looks like in our house this year. Hint: there is Singapore Math, Equine Science, a unique history exploration via […]
The Candymakers Book Club – Activities & Discussion
Oh how I love The Candymakers by Wendy Mass! It offers mystery, friendship, integrity, and CANDY! I absolutely love how Wendy Mass tells the story from 4 different perspectives! It is amazing what you don’t see on the outside – or at least what you perceive of others from the outside! “Some people have scars […]
Math Mammoth Elementary Homeschool Math Curriculum
Math is a subject that has brought great stress to my oldest, ease for my middle child, and somewhere in between for my youngest. Regardless of how they feel about it, or how easily it comes to them, math is a point of emphasis in our homeschool. I feel it is important to have a […]
Starving Hearts Book Review
His foundation is eternal. Her world is crumbling, but a chance encounter leads to love. From England to Jamaica and back, will they be able to accept God’s plan, even if they are forever separated by the triangular trade? Or will faith be enough to satisfy their . . . Starving Hearts? About Starving Hearts: […]
HoliMaths X – Educational Multiplication Game
Multiplication can be an early sticking point along the math journey for many kids. Through the years we have seen and used many approaches to teaching/learning multiplication. One thing I have learned is that making multiplication (or anything else for that matter) fun, will not only speed up the learning process, but make it a […]
10 Motivation Boosters for Learning Online
Online education is growing almost daily, but the challenge of remaining motivated in the process of learning online is a constant struggle for every student out there. Distance learning is a convenient, flexible and available way to learn, but every benefit has its challenges. While its affordability and the chance to study it anywhere with […]
Elementary Homeschool Science Curriculum – Real Science-4-Kids
Science is one of those subjects of which I seem to flutter from curriculum to unit studies using various programs and resources. I usually start out with the best of intentions, but then I tire of having to print multiple pages, click here, there and everywhere for resources, and having to do and gather so […]
Bouncy Bands for Wiggly Kids
Do you have a wiggly kid in your house? If you are anything like us (we have two) the answer is YES! We have struggled for years with our son in particular. From the time he was little sitting still was an issue. He would bounce with playing games, roll around and run around while […]
Teaching Shakespeare Sonnets
So what exactly is a sonnet anyways? A sonnet is a 14-line poem with a variable rhyme scheme originating in Italy and brought to England by Sir Thomas Wyatt and Henry Howard, earl of Surrey in the 16th century. Literally a “little song,” the sonnet traditionally reflects upon a single sentiment, with a clarification or “turn” […]
The Things We Knew Book Review
The Things We Knew by Catherine West is a work of contemporary fiction involving the ties that bind a family together. Through old secrets, individual trials, and new obstacles, they find their way through to become stronger and closer, but not without scars. About The Things We Knew: A tragedy from the past resurfaces in […]
Gifted Homeschool Math from Kendall Hunt
It isn’t often that I put the words gifted together with homeschool math, but here I am, talking about gifted homeschool math! (And I am super excited to do so by the way!) While I wouldn’t term my children gifted, I would definitely say they have bents or strengths in certain areas. Math has been […]
The CLT: A New College Admissions Exam
As the new SAT makes its way to colleges and universities across the U.S., students and educators are scrambling to ensure they are prepared for what promises to be a substantially different test than the previous iteration of the College Board’s gateway to higher education. Written to align with the Common Core Standards being taught to many American students, the new SAT creates a dilemma for many educators. They must try to find a balance between instilling in students the virtue and knowledge necessary to form a well rounded student and lifelong learner, and conforming their teaching to the rigid body of knowledge required to succeed on the SAT. But what if there was another option? Classic Learning Initiatives (CLI) in Annapolis, Md., has created the Classic Learning Test (CLT), the first new college admissions exam to be offered since the debut of the ACT in 1959. The founders of CLI recognize that the SAT, while not without merit, leaves out crucial aspects of a true education. Texts featured on the SAT don’t reflect the values that are most cherished by home and private educators. CLI believes that within each child is a capacity and thirst for unlocking the good, the true, and the beautiful. Put simply, the texts featured on the SAT, and ultimately in many classrooms, fail to connect students to the goodness, truth, and beauty they inherently desire. By contrast, the CLT features works from the Western tradition by authors such as Plato, C.S. Lewis, and Martin Luther King Jr. By doing so, the CLT hopes not only to espouse a love of deep analytical thought in students, but also to be accessible to students from all educational backgrounds. The CLT hopes to be a more user friendly exam as well. The exam is taken online on a student’s computer or tablet, and, at two hours in length, is significantly shorter than either the SAT or the ACT. Students are also free to move between the exam’s three sections (reading comprehension, writing, and quantitative reasoning), as well. With its premiere June 11th administration, the CLT has proven itself to be a more comfortable and accessible exam for students to complete. Students are also given their score soon after submitting their exams, eliminating the anxious wait to receive test scores! The CLT is a new, and the fastest growing college admissions exam in the country! For more information and to […]