Category Archives: Math

Show Me the Money!

Someday we may not have coins in the US monetary system, but for now there are the four basic coins plus a few more. Did you know the US Mint still makes a 50-cent coin? Our 11-year-old son asked for one at the bank, and the teller found him one and saved it. Apparently, while they are in circulation, they aren’t easy to find.

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We used this Dollar*Tree tray to play a simple game I called “Make a Dollar.” Li’l Miss and I played first. We just took turns giving the other person a coin value in 5-cent increments. Once the middle of the tray was $1.00 or more, the person who had just added to it got to keep those coins. Continue reading

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Using iPads for Education

I do love my iPad.
I love the Prez. For many reasons, one of which includes him surprising me with the iPad for Christmas

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In all seriousness, it has added to our educational toolbox. Not only do we use it at home, but it has become a viable addition to our on-the-go learning too. Continue reading

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Elementary Math: 2-Digit Subtraction Lesson and Math Facts Within 20 Mastery

I like math now. I used to think I didn’t like it very much.

Since I’ve been teaching little (and big) people about math, I have come to love it like it.

2-Digit Subtraction with Regrouping

Last week, the 2nd graders and I explored 2-digit subtraction with regrouping. I had held off on this with my 2nd graders, because they haven’t achieved mastery of their addition or subtraction math facts within 20. They do know how to find the answer if they don’t know it right away, but I wanted them to be able to say the answer within seconds on every fact. It just wasn’t happening, though with time and tools (fingers, thinking, abacus, number line, etc.) they could find the correct answer.

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Magnetic Numbers: Oh the Possibilities!

In my last post, I mentioned that up next would be my ideas for using magnetic numbers. So without further ado, here are some ways we have used magnetic numbers this school year.

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Just like with our letters, I use our huge magnetic board for magnetic numbers too. Other than math lessons, I’m not sure what else we could use the numbers for, but I’m open to new ideas! So please comment away!

On this day, I was showing them 2-digit number addition without regrouping. Continue reading

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Let It Snow!

It has been cold outside, but no snow here … yet!

Weather predictions are ZERO degrees this weekend. Our pond is frozen already and I told the kids I’d be buying everyone a pair of ice skates if it got cold enough to skate on it. The Prez says I might have opportunity to make good on the promise.

We are enjoying some snowy-themed learning here.

We’re reading these books, which we found at our local library or we own in our library …

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Making Meaning from Math

I like math because it is useful. I don’t enjoy math though.

But, our little ones love to learn and exercise their math skills with hands-on activities. I have to admit this keeps it interesting, usually results in greater meaning for them, and it allows me to see exactly what they know regarding math fundamentals.

Here are some recent math lessons with a hands-on approach:

Skip counting with ice cream cones

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You can grab this great freebie at Krista Wallden’s TpT store!

Numbers 11–20 Review in 10 Different Ways

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SHAPES Freebie!

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This FREEBIE has been in my Teachers Pay Teachers store for a long time, but I recently updated it due to some customer requests. After an appearance in the TpT Sunday FREEBIES Newsletter, it has been downloaded a LOT and the feedback has been positive. I wanted to be sure all of my blog readers knew about it and also that anyone who has it might want to download the updated version, which includes 3 new shapes: cone, hexagon and octagon!

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We use this a LOT in our homeschool, particularly my three-year-old, but it is so versatile you can use it with many ages and abilities. It has a self-correcting version of shapes names as well as two more versions that require your students to read and decipher which name matches which shape.

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If you haven’t stopped by my store lately, why not come by and check out my recently uploaded products? I’d love to have you visit!

 I am giving 10% of all net sales from my TpT store to the Love Without Boundaries Unity Fund.

Please know that for every purchase through my TpT store, you will be directly helping children in China to NOT become orphaned and to have the blessing of staying with their birth families, and you will be helping those families who find themselves in a desperate and seemingly hopeless situation with an ill child for whom they have no means to provide medical care. You can help make a difference!

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Learning in All Shapes, Sizes … and Colors

In case anyone reading thinks I have lesson plans … ahem, well, let me set the record straight. I really don’t. I have year-long “maps” of what I hope to accomplish with each child, particularly concerning ELA, math and independent reading book assignments. I also have assignment books that serve as a record of what they actually do, which by and large follows those assignment books and maps closely.

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Last week, I wanted to add in some interactiveness to our middle school boys’ math lessons, and I wanted to have more of a theme for our younger three. I didn’t think long and hard. I just went with what came to me and came together. It turned out to be a colorful week with rainbow-themed learning at the forefront. Some of it was review, and some of it was new concepts. All of it was good for our learners! Continue reading

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What Day Is It, Mom?

After being asked this exactly 329 times, I decided our first graders really needed to have a solid understanding of the Calendar and all its components. It is not that I hadn’t tried. I had tried teaching them with many variations, including a standard calendar. I never realized how foreign that can seem until I thought about how strange it might look to little ones.

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I decided to check out the plethora of free resources and ideas in the cyber world, and there was no lack of links there. After carefully considering this very popular post, I decided a hands-on approach is exactly what my students needed as well. Continue reading

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Homeschooling High School {9th Grade 2013-2014}

I usually do this post for all of our students, but I decided to break it down this year. I like to have these posts for reference if nothing else. I have fretted more over this plan than any other. This one COUNTS. Every homeschooling parent out there knows what I’m talking about.

It is not that the other years don’t count, but this one goes on the high school transcript. For the record: whether your child is in homeschool, private school or public school, grades K-8 do NOT go on their records for college consideration. So, when I say, this one counts, that is what I really mean. I do realize that those other grades certainly count and are very important and their performances go on teacher records and school records … but for the purpose of this post, this one counts means this one counts on our son’s record!

So, here is the basic overlay of what I have planned for our son, who will be 15 in about a month, and will be entering 9th grade officially on Monday. Where has the time gone?!

Before I get started, here are our state’s high school graduation requirements for those on a college prep course:

Total Credits: 22

  • Math: 4 credits – Including Algebra I, II, Geometry and a fourth higher level math course (Students must be enrolled in a mathematics course each school year.)
  • English: 4 credits
  • Science: 3 credits – Including Biology, Chemistry or Physics, and a third lab course
  • Social Studies: 3 credits
  • Physical Education and Wellness: 1.5 credits
  • Personal Finance: 0.5 credits
  • Foreign Language: 2 credits
  • Fine Arts: 1 credit – May be waived for students not going to a University to expand and enhance the elective focus
  • Elective Focus: 3 credits – Math and Science, Career and Technical Education, Fine Arts, Humanities, Advanced Placement (AP) or International Baccalaureate (IB)

Source

History: Simply Charlotte Mason History Guide 6 (Modern Times) {1 Social Studies Credit/3}

• This is unusual I realize b/c it covers both World History and American History. He studied early American History last year, and so he will officially finish it in 9th grade. He is actually finishing a few books that were assigned from last year. He is an avid reader, but I do assign a lot of living history books, and he loves to read some of his own choosing as well.

• This guide basically gives you tons of ideas for books to read that will give a student a LIVING history. The books are divided by grade level (with his books coming from both the 7th-9th grade list and 10th-12th grade list). He will not be using the Bible portion as he will have a full load with Community Bible Study and Youth Bible Drill (see below).

• My official plan is that he’ll be able to take the CLEP exam for US history and/or possibly take history classes at our nearby state community college while a junior and/or senior. Both of these options would give him college credit before he ever enters college, assuming he chooses a state university and/or a university that accepts CLEP credit.

• So, we will continue with SCM suggested r and a LONG list of reading material. And I quote him last night when I said, “Now I realize you have already read a lot on your own about World War I and that time period, so we may be able to mark off a couple of these books as already read” (with substitute books he has already read), but he says, “Mom, I think I’ll read them anyway. You know how I like to read about history.” Ahem. Yeah, I’m not worried about his history education.

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• The LONG List of Living History Books he has been assigned (and I’m almost certain there will be some late additions of my choosing and his own as well):

{WORLD}

Mao Tse-Tung (Marrin)
Stalin: Russia’s Man of Steel (Marrin)
Hitler (Marrin)
The War to End All Wars: WWI (Freedman)
The Hiding Place (Ten Boom)
Swifter, Higher, Stronger: A Photographic History of the Summer Olympics
Animal Farm (Orwell)
The Endless Steppe: Growing Up in Siberia (Hautzig)
World War I: From the Lusitania to Versailles (Kent) **May substitute**

{US}

The Red Badge of Courage (Crane)
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry (Taylor)
America: The Last Best Hope (VOL. II)
America: The Last Best Hope (VOL. III)
Freedom Walkers: The Story of the Montgomery Bus Coycott (Freedman)
Victory in the Pacific (Marrin)
The Yanks Are Coming: The US in the First World War (Marrin)
The Wright Brothers: How They Invented the Airplane (Freedman)
Lincoln: A Photobiography (Freedman)
Across Five Aprils (Hunt)

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Math: Completing Algebra I {1 Math Credit/4}

• The rush to go higher and higher in math in middle school quite frankly perplexes me. There I said it. I feel like I should add the word disclaimer at the beginning of this bullet point. Seriously, though, wasn’t pre-algebra in 8th grade good enough for my husband, who obtained a Civil Engineering degree (and a math minor in the process) with HONORS, back in 1996? Why the push now? I have done some research and colleges are NOT requiring algebra in 7th grade, yet it seems that is the push. Even one homeschool Mom acquaintance tries to get my feathers all ruffled nearly every time we talk asking, “Is he STILL not done with algebra? You know, I have this or that or … ” NO, he is not and NO THANKS. I’m not worried!

• OK, moving on. 😀

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• Resources:

The Great Courses Algebra I DVD and Practice Book

An Algebra I Textbook (with answers to the odd practice problems) *I found it for $5! at the used book sale and DH said it looks just fine: “Algebra is algebra.” It also gets high marks on ama•zon.

IXL for extra problems and drills (yes, they have algebra now as well as geometry)

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Finance {.5 Personal Finance Credit/.5}

• The Prez is very much leading the way on this. It was his idea, and he plans to discuss with Curly as he goes through this course. I am proud that both my son and DH think personal finance responsibility is important.

• Resources:

Dave Ramsey’s Foundations in Personal Finance

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Science {1 Lab Science Credit/3}

• Curly doesn’t love science, BUT he came back from the National Boy Scout Jamboree telling me he had earned 3/4s of the Chemistry merit badge. WHAT?!?

• This class will be handled by someone other than moi, and I (and probably Curly) could NOT be happier. He will take a one-hour class plus a one-hour lab one day a week at our new tutorial. He will complete reading, lab reports, and other assignments at home throughout the week. I’m figuring one hour a day plus the two hours of class and lab for this.

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• Resources:

Apologia Exploring Creation with Chemistry

Knowledge Box Central Vocab set (probably)

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Language Arts {1 English Credit/4}

• We are trying some different things for language this year, including a literary analysis class through our tutorial (translation: someone else will critique his writing among other literary pursuits). He will be using IEW Windows to the World along with reading seven literary works:

Fahrenheit 451 by Rad Bradbury

To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis

Hamlet by William Shakespeare

{Plus one more still to be determined}

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• In addition, he will continue with Word Roots, finishing up A2 and completing Word Roots B1 CD-Rom this year as well.

• He will also use the Critical Thinking Company’s Editor-in-Chief C1 workbook for grammar review.

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Foreign Language {1 Foreign Language Credit/2}

• He has already begun studying Danish and would like to continue. After evaluation, I decided to allow this because of his reasoning. He would really like to land a job at LEGO corporation in the near future, and he feels like a command of Danish would set him apart from other foreign applicants.

• I figure in further regards to Danish as a foreign language that any university would welcome a student with Danish as their foreign language AFTER hearing his reasoning. If that is not drive, I don’t know what is!

• Resources: On-line resources at the moment, though I’d love to find a textbook. If anyone reading has any ideas, I’m open!

We dropped this early in the first semester. He will be taking Mandarin Chinese now using Rosetta Stone and other resources. Danish is just too hard to find resources for use at home.

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Bible/Personal Growth {1 Elective Credit/3}

• We’ll put this under their “Career and Technical Growth” category. 😀

• He will continue in the Community Bible Study group I’m a part of, but he’ll be in the Senior High homeschool class this year. We will all be studying the Gospel of John this year.

• He will also continue with Youth Bible Drill, which he loves, and we love that he loves it. He still aspires to win the State Meet, but no matter the placement he knows the time and effort spent here has eternal value.

Physical Fitness {.5 Credit/1.5}

• He is now a Life Scout, though he hasn’t been awarded it yet. That will happen once the summer is over as his troop doesn’t give awards during the summer.

• He will continue with scouting. He LOVES IT! He hopes to begin working on his Eagle project maybe this spring or next fall. I have heard 15 is a great age to achieve it before one gets their license, but I don’t see this being an issue for our oldest as he loves his family and is very driven to achieve this goal.

He will also continue in our 4H Club this year, and hopefully maybe he’ll try for a leadership role? I won’t force it though. We dropped 4H this year as the kids really didn’t want to go, and honestly it was just way too clicky for my taste. I won’t elaborate, but why force it when the kids there are not always so kind and some are downright rude.

 

Total Credits: 6.5 Credits/22 6 Credits/22

At this rate by the way, he will finish in 3.5 years rather than 4 or possibly in 3 years with additional coursework next year and the following. We are not pushing for an abbreviated high school term, but we are hopeful he can pursue college-level courses at the local community college by his senior year. We are also planning for at least some CLEP tests later in his high school career.

That about sums up the plan for 9th grade, though we *may* add in his Fine Arts requirement later in the year. He will most likely take Photography for this 1 Credit requirement as he loves it anyway, and this would also be useful I believe for the career path he is hoping to take. I hope to share more in a later post about each of our older three boys’ career aspirations. I think it would be worthwhile to have it recorded from time to time.

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