The next big hurdle natural step whether you decide to use unit studies as enrichment or as a stand alone curriculum and after you adopt your definition of a unit study is determining a topic.
Sharing tips today on how I choose a topic, I hope you leave behind a bit of the fear that hems us in to using curriculum laid out by others and embrace the teacher in you. Yep, teacher mom is screaming to get out. Okay—screaming with shaking knees is fine too. Trekking this together, we’ll both have a step by step guide.
Avoid Capture & Release Tactics
One of the very first resources I turn to when deciding a topic is to my sons. For me, this is the part of unit studies that makes it child-led. Engage your children and from the beginning you already have a captive audience.
The first year I asked Mr. Senior 2013 who was in 3rd grade at the time and Mr. Awesome who was a 1st grader what topics interested them, I received some great ideas. Here are their answers: To blow up something (sounds like my kid), learn to weave or tie a knot, about bears, and grow crystals.
Sounds like a good plan to me. The next step is to turn their idea into a topic that is teacher approved for the year. When I mean teacher approved, it has to be something that we need as a family. Blowing up something told me that they needed more hands-on activities so we studied basic chemistry. (We did blow up corks in our kitchen and the indentations on my ceiling are there to prove it.)
Tying a knot was tied (pun intended) into our reading and study of Carry on, Mr. Bowditch. Studying about bears we covered in our Native American unit studies and we grew crystals one week for our science activity.
As you can see not every idea gets a full blown unit study, sometimes it is an idea that can be part of a unit study that you want covered too. Asking my sons is always my beginning point.
Some years, I too have kids that say: “I don’t know.” So next, I turn to the seasons and times in our life at the present moment. I like to teach in practical ways and learning becomes so much more meaningful when you are living and learning together.
Whether you choose to study a topic like snow flakes, the Winter Olympics, about the Arctic or how to survive in the cold if it’s the winter season or choose a topic for an event coming up in your life, moments that occur naturally have been some of our best learning moments in unit studies.
This is actually the choice I am using to determine the topic for our next unit study which is a study of the Ocean. With our move overseas, and because South America lends itself well to studying about the Ocean, that will be our next unit study topic.
Other factors I consider when choosing a unit study to coincide with our present family life is to determine what my kids know and don’t know, whether we want an expansive unit study that lasts weeks or even months or a mini-unit study. I always start first though with what we have previously studied so I can use that as a jump start into our next topic.
We have covered some of the Animals of the Amazon and about Coral Life so I can build on those topics when we start our Ocean Unit Study. Things like the Amazon River and the importance of coral will help them to recall some basic information.
Remember, unit studies is about connecting information together and it is not about being a study of disjointed topics or subjects. Try to use your previous studies of any topics to connect it with the current one or weave it together so that you help your children see connections.
Unit Study Textbook Tips – Uh?
It almost seems like an oxymoron to use unit study and textbooks in the same breath, but textbooks can be of practical use especially when you live in an area that requires stricter record keeping.
If that is the case, then use a text book or chapter from it to create a unit study which is approved for record keeping purposes.
Or, if you have purchased textbooks and feel more comfortable using it as you begin a unit study, it is a practical way to not waste what you have already purchased. Create a unit study from your textbooks on hand and bring the topics to life.
Basically a unit study from a textbook can become enrichment or it could be a lengthy and extensive unit study. You decide.
Tap Into Other Types of Unit Studies
Unit studies can also be prepared using a living book, based on a famous person, on geography, on a time period in history including persons like explorers, based on a family vacation, current news events, on an art topic, on an animal, on science and famous scientists, on life skills like cooking and choosing a career and on character traits like Konos uses.
Okay, I have my big general sweeping category of an Ocean Unit Study. But now, we need to trim this baby into something we can actually study for weeks. I need to determine what is beneficial for my family.
If you have chosen a much narrower topic, like the study of a famous person or even the study of an animal or time period in history, you still need to narrow down exactly what benefits you want your family to get from it.
Sub-topics to the rescue. I will share on Day 3 how to determine which sub-topics are important and which ones are not.
Are you with me? What is your topic? Can you imagine if everyone shared their topic or ideas? That would be a huge benefit to each other.
I’m stoked to share my sub-topics with you next.
Hugs and love ya,
Carla says
Love that you have such great information on your site Tina! 🙂
Tina Robertson says
Carla,
I am glad to have you here and happy that you can use the information! Thanks for being here.