Posted on 18 December 2010.
Posted in Reading Instruction in HomeschoolComments Off
Posted on 15 December 2010.
A good reading program is the basis of a good homeschool curriculum. So how should you begin designing your reading program and what do you need to know?
Review the National Standards for homeschool reading but do not expect to find solutions or structured guidance from the Standards. And maybe that is a good thing, Continue Reading
Posted in Reading Instruction in HomeschoolComments Off
Posted on 24 August 2010.
As you contemplate curriculums, organize materials, and ready your home school “classroom,” Reading Horizons can help you. Reading Horizons home school reading curriculum provides a foundation for young readers as well as reading intervention for older, struggling readers. FREE online trainings are available to help you teach reading skills effectively. This reading program provides proven results with fast, measurable improvement — what you need to feel confident in your homeschooling efforts.
And get this — Reading Horizons is offering 20 percent off of your entire purchase so that you have access to a research-based program with the materials already planned and organized for you. This is a perfect way to have your homeschool “classroom” ready.
Check out the Proven Home School Reading Program.
Posted in Home School0 Comments
Posted on 18 August 2010.
This homeschool magazine provides you with hundreds of pages of practical and inspirational content.
Designed by your fellow homeschoolers, TOS helps you manage with the issues and challenges that home educators confront every day. Each issue of the magazine is filled with new ideas and solutions for your homeschool. Here are just some of the kinds of information content you’ll find in the pages of The Old Schoolhouse Magazine for homeschooling:
Posted in Home School0 Comments
Posted on 18 August 2010.
| Learning Abled Kids: Homeschooling Children with Learning Differences |
| Children with Asperger’s Syndrome can be intelligent, articulate, and delightful |
| They are typically seen as being a bit ‘odd’. While bright and talkative, a child with Asperger’s doesn’t interact in a socially typical way, and their difficulties can bring challenges to their ability to learn in a traditional school environment.. |
| Mathematics Programs for Children with Learning Difficulties |
| Learning Mathematics can either be a strength or a struggle for many LD children. For those children who learn quickly, options abound. For children who struggle, there are excellent, viable options as well.. |
| Enhancing Learning through Brain Gym |
| Brain Gym is a brain-based exercise program which allows you to create a physical-therapy type of routine specifically targeted to your child’s learning deficit areas.. |
| How to Find Effective Orton-Gillingham Reading Instruction Programs for children with dyslexia. |
| Some reading programs claim to be Orton-Gillingham based, but many are questionably so. How do you know a program is truly an Orton-Gillingham program? How do you pick an effective program for your child? Consider this.. |
| Homework Organization for students with ADD / ADHD and Executive Function issues. |
| Many children with ADHD, ADD, or Executive functioning difficulties have a horrible time keeping track of their homework. Assignments get completed, but lost. Parents are dismayed about how to help their child become organized. In order to become organized, your child must have the tools.. |
| Special Education Nightmares – Parents and Teachers.. Tell YOUR Story! |
| If you are living or have experienced “Special Education” abuses first-hand, a new anthology is being compiled. Help tell the story of this national tragedy and help change the world.. one reader at a time. |
| Learning Style and Dyslexia – Multi-Sensory is best |
| There are reasons to avoid being too focused on one “style” when teaching persons with dyslexia, and any person for that matter, and multi-sensory teaching is the best means for teaching anyone.. |
| FREE Informal Reading Tests |
| Knowing what your child’s actual reading level is can help you manage his education better. Whether you are homeschooling, or your child is in public school, using free informal tests can help you keep tabs on your child’s reading progress. |
| Teaching the Reluctant Writer (Dysgraphia) |
| Does your child HATE writing? Explore options for teaching written expression to a child who hates writing using inexpensive programs and simple homeschooling techniques. |
| President’s Day |
| There is no better time to engage in an impromptu unit study than President’s Day. There are a number of information-rich sites with excellent lesson plans, activities, games, etc to help your child learn about our U.S. Presidents without feeling like he is doing school work. |
| Learning Styles |
| There are four main learning styles.. auditory, visual, tactile, and kinesthetic. Your child will learn best through one or more of these learning channels, and you can help him become a successful learner by teaching the child through his primary learning style(s). |
| A Gifted Child with a Learning Disability? How can that be true? |
| Gifted children who have learning disabilities have been called twice exceptional, 2E, Conundrum Kids, and a Puzzling Paradox. Having a child who is clearly gifted in some areas, but struggles in others is confusing, to say the least. |
| Valentine’s Day Interactive |
| Valentine’s Day is a great time for visual, hands-on learning activities for children who excel in creativity, and the activities provide an outlet from the daily chore of doing typical schoolwork. |
| Vocabulary |
| The National Reading Panel has concluded that Vocabulary is one of the critical elements in a child’s ability to read. Having a robust vocabulary will improve a child’s reading decoding skills, reading comprehension level, and his ability to read fluently.. |
| Reading Fluency |
| Fluency can be difficult to develop when a child has to concentrate on figuring out each word.. |
| Symptoms of Dyslexia |
| You should know that 85% of children who have difficulty acquiring reading skills have learning disabilities that require specialized instruction for learning to read. Thus, only about 15% of children will “outgrow” their difficulties.. |
| ADHD Treatment Alternatives |
| A common concern for parents of children with ADHD is fear of the long-term ramifications of using medication. Many parents don’t want their children to be dependent upon a brain stimulant. There are alternatives.. |
| Orton-Gillingham Teaching Methods for Dyslexia |
| Orton-Gillingham is a specific way of teaching children with learning disabilities, and particularly children with dyslexia. For children with dyslexia, this means they are taught every sound (phoneme) and the representative letter combination(s) that represent the sound, one at a time, in a specific order, in a small group, using multi-sensory teaching methods.. |
| Text-to-Speech and Books-on-Tape |
| Children with specific learning disabilities in the area of reading need not fall behind in other areas of learning. There are assistive technology solutions that can help your child with books that are beyond his reading level.. |
| Home School Jitters |
| Honestly, I was TERRRRRIIIFIIED by the thought of homeschooling. What if I failed to meet my child’s learning needs? What if I did worse than the school? What if we battled all the time, and he ends up hating me?.. |
| You CAN Home School |
| One of the questions I’m frequently asked is, “Can I homeschool my child? He (she) has learning disabilities.” Parents are often terrified at the though of having to meet the special learning needs of a challenging child. My answer is an emphatic, “YES!”.. |
Posted in Home School, Homeschooling LD Children0 Comments
Posted on 18 August 2010.
Lots of research has been done over the years to determine what elements should be part of an effective reading program. Obviously, whether a child is home schooled or attends the traditional public school system or a private school, he/she needs to acquire the same set of reading skills as his peers, in order to become a successful reader.
So choosing a homeschool reading curriculum for your home school should involve the same evaluation criteria as used for any school’s reading program. There are many ways to implement a program, but most importantly, be sure that the following components are included in your curriculum, whether it is a program you buy from a home school publisher or a curriculum you put together yourself using worksheets, books, software, flash cards and any other tools you see fit.
1. Phonemic awareness, letter knowledge, and concepts of print
Phoneme awareness and letter-sound knowledge are the basis for learning an alphabetic writing system. Children who have poorly developed phonemic awareness at the end of kindergarten are likely to become poor readers. Explicit instruction in sound identification, matching, segmentation, and blending, when linked appropriately to sound-symbol association, reduces the risk of reading failure and accelerates early reading and spelling acquisition for all children.
2. The alphabetic code: Phonics and decoding
In addition to phoneme awareness and letter knowledge, knowledge of sound-symbol associations is vital for success. Accurate and fluent word recognition depends on phonics knowledge. A good reader can encounter an unknown word and decode the word. Once a word has been decoded, the reader then can use the context to determine the meaning of the word.
3. Fluent, automatic reading
Beginning readers need to apply the decoding skills they learn to fluent, automatic reading of text. Children who are reading with adequate fluency are more likely to comprehend what they are reading. Reaching an independent reading level means that the child recognizes more than 95 percent of the words and can read without difficulty in decoding.
4. Vocabulary
Vocabulary is critical to reading comprehension. Knowledge of words is the foundation of comprehension. At school age, children should be acquiring new vocabulary at the rate of several thousand words per year. New vocabulary is primarily acquired through books – either by reading or hearing books read aloud. A child needs to develop the ability to actively process word meanings, which develops understanding of texts.
5. Text comprehension
Comprehension instruction should start at school age. Comprehension is dependent on an extensive, working vocabulary. Children should be provided with abundant opportunities to work on building their working vocabulary even before they by being read to and being engaged in a variety of narratives and texts. By asking children questions about the texts and engaging them in discussions about what has been read, parents and teachers can check that students comprehend.
6. Written expression
Reading and writing are interconnected and enhance each other. Starting in first grade, children will benefit from repeated and consistent opportunities to organize, write, and edit their thoughts. A child should be given writing assignments that suit their abilities. Even while they are learning letter formation, spelling, and sentence generation, children can be taught to compose in stages.
7. Spelling and handwriting
Students learn spelling and handwriting more readily if those skills are taught explicitly from first grade onward and if they are applied in the context of regular writing assignments.
8. Assessment and Monitoring
Beginning and early readers should be frequently assessed as the best prevention for falling behind and failure. Difficulty with phonologically-based reading skills is a strong indicator of continued problems in reading and should be addressed early on. Early intervention prevents difficulties later on.
9. Motivation
A good reading teacher will inspire enthusiasm among young readers and help them to develop an appreciation for reading. The child who likes reading is likely to read more and through the experience, to become a good reader quickly..
Posted in Home School, Reading Instruction in Homeschool0 Comments
Posted on 18 August 2010.
Phonics programs can be introduced into any homeschool environment to provide an effective curriculum for your early reading program. Children vary in the amount of phonics training they require to achieve reading fluency. Programs like Hooked on Phonics offer a direct, systematic approach to teaching reading for most children:
Step 1: The first goal is to teach the child to understand how the sounds of spoken language work together to make words (Phonemic awareness). This is a decoding process.
Step 2: The second goal is to demonstrate how vowels are manipulated and how words are parsed into written phonemes, digraphs, diphthongs, blends, vowel patterns and other letter segments. This is an encoding process.
Home School Phonics
Considering a Home School Program?
Home school programs typically offer curriculum for reading, language arts, math and other subjects. For fluent reading, be sure to include a phonics program so that your child learns letter identification, decoding, phonological awareness and phonological memory.

"Remember your child’s profile of strengths and weaknesses will be more like a drawing of the Alps than a picture of a gentle rolling countryside. One who can scale math heights with ease may stumble over spelling or reading comprehension. The big talker may have trouble getting ideas and words on paper . . . The jagged peaks will offer thrills and spectacular views though the journeys up and down may feel like a roller coaster." -Priscilla L. Vail, M.A.T Author of 9 books on dyslexia and giftedness
The children subsequently learn to use the letters as they manipulate these segments to form new words.
Home School Phonic
Considering a Home School Program?
Home school programs typically offer curriculums for reading, language arts, math and other subjects. For fluent reading, be sure to include a phonics program so that your child learns letter identification, decoding, phonological awareness and phonological memory.
Posted in Home School0 Comments
Posted on 18 August 2010.
| HSLDA | In The News |
| Louisiana Athletics Law Misunderstood |
| Mon, 16 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Homeschooling a Growing Trend |
| Sat, 14 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Homeschool Numbers On The Rise |
| Fri, 13 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Homeschooled QB Gets Offer from Memphis, Despite Limited Exposure |
| Thu, 12 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Homeschooling Can Pave Fast Track to College |
| Thu, 12 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Football Team Welcomes Homeschoolers, Others |
| Wed, 11 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Brevard Introduces Fitness Classes for Homeschooled Students |
| Tue, 10 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Homeschool Program Uses Classical Education Model |
| Tue, 10 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Homeschools Multiply in N.C. |
| Mon, 9 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Some Families Take on Role of Teacher |
| Sat, 7 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
| Legal Battle Involving Homeschooler Escalates |
| Fri, 6 Aug 2010 00:00:00 EST |
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