Bursting with pride for my 6 year old
My 6 year old had her first public speaking engagement a couple of days ago. She gave a presentation to a 4-H group on different types of rocks and how they are formed. Her factual information was good, although she had a few slips, which can be expected of anyone so young.
The biggest thing is that she spoke with confidence and engaged her audience with eye contact at various points during her presentation. She stayed up there speaking for 20 minutes until she was finally cut off due to time constraints.
This experience has really reaffirms our decision to engage in Homeschooling. It's remarkable just how fast and well a child can learn when the destractions and agendas of the public school system are removed.
I have been bursting with pride the last couple of days and just had to share this achievement.
The biggest thing is that she spoke with confidence and engaged her audience with eye contact at various points during her presentation. She stayed up there speaking for 20 minutes until she was finally cut off due to time constraints.
This experience has really reaffirms our decision to engage in Homeschooling. It's remarkable just how fast and well a child can learn when the destractions and agendas of the public school system are removed.
I have been bursting with pride the last couple of days and just had to share this achievement.
We use a lot of positive reinforcement. One example is a caterpillar around the top of the wall. The sections of the caterpillar are made of cut circles with the names of books she has finished on them. The more she reads the bigger the caterpillar gets as circles are added to the back. There are coupons for things like toys, pizza, etc at intervals taped to the wall as rewards for achievement. The final reward is if the caterpillar reaches my desk. When it does I will build her a reading nook in her room.
We use online resources such as games that teach typing, TEDtalks on youtube for logic, random college level lectures from youtube that interest her, and http://pbskids.org for entertainment. The biggest resource has been JumpStart. She started it when she was three and has been in it this whole time. It’s a great tool for learning, something I highly recommend for any child. It builds a lot of basic skills, yet seems to avoid all the “social life lessons” that everyone thinks is so important. We are currently evaluating the Time4Learning program as an actual curriculum starting next year.
We have balanced all this with her natural love of science and the outdoors. The TEDtalks helps with this, but also a big factor is spending time in the bush. We use the BushcraftUSA site as a great outdoor resource. She lacks the physical strength to do it, but she knows how to build a fire with a bow drill. It is important to me that my girls grow up being able to take care of themselves both in society and the natural world. I want them to have the confidence that they do not need a man to give them purpose.
http://www.lifehack.org/articles/technol...
I can personally vouch for duolingo.com
It is very good.
Probably equal to the first disk of a Rosetta Stone package.
Rosetta Stone also has online subscription rates.
http://www.ronpaulcurriculum.com/
The current political situation, coupled with amount of school officials confusing their jobs as educators with their liberal agendas means this can be a dangerous occupation for her. Homeschooling gets rid of that also.