Hi! Welcome to our Road School blog. This blog is designed to help other homeschooling parents just like us, as we all strive to help our precious treasures become the people God has made them to be.
I started this blog when I first began my exploration of the homeschooling world. The plan is to document our discoveries as we go along.
Traditional Textbook Approach * Instructor-driven * Text-based * Reading material followed by questions * provides teacher editions, lesson plans Advantages: -Less planning on teacher's part -Easy to chart scores -Contains built-in tests Considerations: -Less freedom -Less depth -Student often becomes bored -Student who does not fit the curriculum may feel inferior -Student simply masters tests rather than material
Unit Study Approach *Most subjects are covered by studing one topic *Study material usually comes from reading books *Usually includes hands-on activities *Focuses on discovery learning Advantages: -Allows depth of study and greater understanding of topic -Child retains what they have learned -Useful for teaching multiple grade levels Considerations: -More planning required of teacher -Harder to track accomplishments -More uncertainty about covering all subjects
Classical Approach *Teaches the trivium *Grammer Stage (birth to 11) *Dialectic Stage (11-14) *Rhetoric Stage (14-16) *Rigorous academics *Strong reading program Advantages: -Follow stages of mental development -Develops independent learners -Teaches thinking skills Considerations: -Very little prepared curriculum available -Overemphasis on ancient disciplines and classics.
Living Book Approach *Study material comes from "real" books, not textbooks *Various subects are integrated into reading, but not necessarily as purposefully as in unit studies. Advantages: -Students are reading books by someone who is passionate about the subject -Learning is low-key because it comes as a natural process of simply reading a good book -Allows exploration of a subject Considerations: -Not all subjects are covered at all times. -Very difficult to track work because very little is written -Hard to follow a traditional scope and sequence
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