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Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation

How a Homeschool Mom Grades a High School Essay

June 24, 2015 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

When the boys were in younger grades, I felt so confident grading their writing papers.

Confidence is suppose to soar with use, right? But when it came time to grade my first highschooler’s essay, confidence lacked.  Like anything else, inexperience makes you feel less prepared.

How a Homeschool Mom Grades a High School Essay @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusOn the other hand, having homeschooled my first high schooler from the beginning, I knew that I had a unique advantage knowing my son’s strengths and weaknesses and could use that information to help me form a grading standard.

Compulsory vs. Freedom

The thinking that a teen gets to choose topics all the time was the first thing I left behind.

For the most part, I did my best to be a reasonable teacher to my teen, which meant he got to choose the topics he wanted to write about. I learned early on that the very mention of some writing topics, especially controversial ones made for eager writers.

Mr. Senior 2013 wrote most high school essays on things he wanted to write about which were about topics like injustice, the life of writers he admired and a few other frivolous topics he found fascinating.

However, I also am reminded to not abandon my homeschooling goals in high school, which means that I want to form my son’s worldview and Biblical view. That is done through research and expressing his creative thoughts in written word. So some topics were mandatory to write about.

His last essay was mandatory for a completed grade. My instructions called for him to break down each verse of 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 that talks about the meaning of love.

Not only was it important to grade him on his creative words, but it was important to me to fill his mind with something worthy of remembering since it was the last time.

Give your teen freedom with his high school essays but don’t give up guidance.

Completing a mandatory high school essay is the first part of my grade.

Forget Grading Like a Public School Teacher.

The next thing I had to learn was to not grade like a public school teacher.

No, I don’t mean to not use some of the same standards, but to not directly attack my son’s writing by all the red marks.

Homeschool Writing in Early Grades @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusI did that in my son’s younger years and regret it.

Though my oldest son is not as sensitive as my younger sons, I could see that my red marks and my writing on his page took some of the fun out of the process.

What I did learn early in my homeschool years was to write notes in the margin or at the bottom of the paper. I still practiced this in high school.

Writing in Early Years of Homeschooling @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

(Learn from my mistake and leave behind all the red pens and red marks that we think we need to do on writing. Writing notes at the bottom of their page was a keeper for communicating to my sons.)

The example above is how I did it when Mr. Senior 2013 was in the younger grades.

I followed this same example on high school essays.

Specificity counts.

This is one area where my strength for detail can be utilized for high school. Teens are just like us. They want to know specifically what you liked about their writing.

As home educators we are very specific about what we don’t like about our teen’s writing. Praise should be equally vocal.

As I mentioned, the last essay assignment I assigned for Mr. Senior 2013 was about love and how it is shown. He not only gave his opinion of why it is the strongest motivator in the universe but he supported it with Biblical facts and things he had real life experience with.

I specifically praised him for supporting his writing with solid facts.

Developing Clear Writing.

Then the next part I look for in my son’s writing is to determine how clear he expressed his thoughts.  Developing clear writing is not something we achieve.

Expressing thoughts through writing is a developed art.  It is not achieved in high school, but I do expect my teen to use what he has been taught through the years like supporting his facts, illustrations, topic sentences and sticking to his topic.

Secondary: Spelling and Sentence Structure

Try to remember that we are nurturing writers instead of spellers.  You know I love spelling and grammar, but writing is about expression, communication and breathing life into our artfully contrived words.

Don’t stifle it by counting off more for the mechanics of writing than for expression.  Clearly cut writing that moves you is worth more than grammar and mechanics errors.

Homeschool Mom Grades a High School Essay

Grading a high school essay is not only a satisfying job but a unique privilege.

All the instructions you have been given your child for years turns now into a beautiful masterpiece.

Don’t give up your homeschool goals when you grade high school essays.

What writing topics our high school teens fill their minds with as they get ready to finish their tutoring with you is just as important as you adopting traditional standards for grading.

What are you afraid of most when grading high school essays?

Hugs and love ya,

Tina Signature 2015c

Also, check out:
Should We Give Grades to Our Middle & High School Homeschooled Kids
9th Grade Homeschool High School – Avoid the Sock It to Them Attitude

Linking up @these awesome places:
Thoughtful Spot|Making Your Home Sing Monday|Mom 2 Mom|Mommy Monday|Good Morning Mondays|Tuesday Talk|

4 CommentsFiled Under: Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation, Teach Homeschool Language Arts

3 Reasons Hands-on Geography is Important in Middle and High School Homeschool

June 10, 2015 | 2 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

It’s easy enough to understand the importance of hands-on geography in the younger years, but it is equally important to understand why hands-on geography is important in middle and high school. Also, look at my page homeschool middle school and how to homeschool high school page for more fun tips. Too, look at my page Homeschool Geography for hands-on and simple ideas and tips.

Having one child who rolls his eyes at the mere mention of hands-on and prefers taking a hands-off approach and another child who fails to comprehend anything unless it’s hands-on, I want to share tips on why it’s important to keep homeschool geography hands-on.

3 Reasons Hands-on Geography is Important in Middle and High School Homeschool @ Tiina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Hands-on geography requires participation or collaboration.

The tendency when teaching this age group is to assign a boring text, drill and kill and then move on.

Geography is a subject that is fascinating because it is not only about describing the earth, but it includes pictures, maps, diagrams and it includes a description of life here on earth.

It is a subject that is overflowing with possibilities because to some extent it also includes man’s interaction with the resources of the earth.

With all of these facets to study about geography, collaboration gives the middle and high school student the teaching reins.

Hands-on geography requires active and not passive participation or studying in isolation.

My sons have taken the teaching reins as we have studied North Star Geography.  That is one reason too why we didn’t just crack open the curriculum and study the first page.

When my boys studied together, they skipped around to hone in on a part of geography that interested them first.

Guess what? You can do this when studying geography because geography covers so many topics.  You can have several trails in geography and decide which topics interests you.

homeschool high schoolgeography north star geography @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Contrary to what some people may think, hands-on learning shifts the focus of learning to the responsibility of your child.

Middle and high school years are about teaching them more independence and project learning is one of the best ways to do that.

That is one reason we use North Star Geography because it has projects that foster independent learning skills.

Geography Bundle

I will continue to use North Star Geography, which is for middle and high school kids, with Tiny now that Mr. Awesome 2015 is about ready to graduate.

Our middle and high school students just don’t know geography.

Just because a child is in middle or high school doesn’t mean his learning style has changed.  We are in a visual world and visual learners are valued now more than ever.

Too, the conventional method of throwing a map to outline at the student and a textbook to read is not working.  More and more students, including homeschoolers are graduating with little to no knowledge of geography.

Visual learners who learn best through hands-on still need projects and activities at the high school level. Rote memorization does not work for all kids.  We need to abandon the notion that hands-on geography is not for mature learners.

We want to avoid turning out middle and high school students who are geography illiterate and conventional methods are not working.  Returning to what did work in the elementary grades which was hands-on learning without doing babyish projects is key to helping our upper grade kids make meaningful connections.

Hands-on geography instills a greater awareness and fellow feeling for other cultures and historical activities.

When we studied about the American Civil War, geography took on another whole meaning when we tied it to our family roots where our ancestors fought in the battles.

It is one thing to read about history and geography in a dry text book and another to visit the physical area and walk the grounds.

Connecting geography with a physical location helps a middle and high school student to develop higher critical thinking skills.

For example, after studying together and creating maps of the battlefields during the American Civil War it lead to discussions about whether or not man learned anything about history from that bloody war?

At the high school level, my boys have formed strong opinions about the war and I am able to pass on our family values.  If they studied this in isolation, they might not have reached some of the same conclusions.

Middle and high school should be a time for activities and projects that are selective and purposeful.

It’s true that many times I didn’t insist that my son who preferred a hands-off approach to join us, however, many times I did insist and not give him a choice.

Our high school kids still need guidance, direction and interaction with us. They are preparing for adulthood, which means they are not ready yet.

I am so grateful that North Star Geography sees the value of hands-on learning in the upper grades and I will continue to use it with Tiny for the next couple of years.

When I asked both of my oldest sons what they remembered about geography, it never was about a book, but it is always about a hands-on project we worked on together.

Also, you may like to read:

  • Hands-On Geography Activity: Make a Pangaea Puzzle
  • Hands-On Geography: Australia Awesome and Deadly Animal Art
  • Hands-on Geography: Longitude/Latitude Mapmaking Activity

Hugs and love ya,

2 CommentsFiled Under: Geography, Hands-On Activities, Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation, Middle School Homeschool Tagged With: geography, hands on history, hands-on, hands-on activities, handson, high school, highschoolgeography, homeschoolgeography, middleschool

Homeschool Grad 2015 – Proud Homeschool Momma

June 8, 2015 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

{Warning: Proud homeschool daddy and momma here with lots of happy tears. Viewing these pictures can be a bit icky to look over as all I have going through my mind is that this is the last time for Mr. Awesome’s  “last day of school pictures”. See, I already have tears!}

Homeschool Grad 2015 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Mr. Awesome 2 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Such a good looking homeschool graduate.

Mr. Awesome 3 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Forget my flat hair as Ecuadorean weather can’t be predicted and we had rain, but somehow that didn’t matter as we hired a professional photographer and went dashing all over Cuenca for photos.Mr. Awesome 4 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

And of course there is no shortage for beautiful places here to take memorable graduation pictures.

Mr. Awesome 5 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusToo, somehow things turn out just like they should be despite all my worrying.

Mr. Awesome 7 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I always say this to you, which is that each kid is different, but somehow I forget my own advice.

Mr. Awesome 8 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Mr. Awesome didn’t want the official cap and gown photo. I had looked all over everywhere here to find one.  But I forgot one simple thing, just ask him.

He didn’t want a cap and gown or photo like Mr. Senior 2013 did.

Like the rain that day (unplanned), it somehow fit perfectly with what happened in our homeschool journey as we had a day of reflecting.

Mr. Awesome 9 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Somehow things just turn out better and like they should even when unplanned things happen.

Mr. Awesome 10 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

As a mom and especially at such a momentous time as graduation, you want it memorable for your child.

Mr. Awesome 11 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusWhere one kid may want to celebrate one way, the next kid wants to do certain other things like taking traditional pictures here in South America.

Mr. Awesome 12 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

So he embraced  the life that we are living right now.

Mr. Awesome 13 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

And spent the day savoring the surroundings we do have which are truly unique.

Mr. Awesome 15 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus And where Mr. Senior 2013 was a bit more traditional, Mr. Awesome 2015 is not.

As a mom I just embraced it for the day and it was his day.

Mr. Awesome 16 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

This dad and grad picture is priceless because it’s one Mr. Awesome wanted.

Mr. Awesome 17 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

And yes, he wanted this one too of proud mom and grad.

Mr. Awesome 18 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Despite the rain,  bit of cold weather and wet, Mr. Awesome 2015 is just who he is, the sweet baby that didn’t worry about reading or all that academic stuff, but turned out embracing it all in his time.

Finding the right dose of humor and easygoingness was the key to homeschooling this son.

Mr. Awesome 19 @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Congratulations Trever, mom loves you and we are all so proud of you!

Hope you enjoyed this special day of family photos and I can’t wait to share pictures of our party!

Hugs and love ya

Tina Signature 2015c

If you want to see the pictures of my first homeschool graduate Mr. Senior 2013 look at my 10 Days of Planning a Homeschool High School Graduation.

8 CommentsFiled Under: Graduate a Homeschooler, Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation Tagged With: homeschoolgraduation

Homeschool High School Transcripts – Anything But Typical

May 16, 2015 | 4 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Homeschool High School Transcripts @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

It’s that time of year again when graduation and high school transcripts can be on your mind.

Whether you have to carefully craft a homeschool transcript this year or need to prepare one soon, keep these tips in mind that will make preparing a homeschool transcript a cinch. Really!

Typical Homeschool High School Transcript?

When Mr. Senior 2013 entered the middle school years, I too started my search for typical samples of high school transcripts to use.

Soon, you realize that there are quite a few factors that make each homeschool transcript unique.

Homeschool transcripts are anything but typical. Each one reflects not only the values of each family, but the strengths of each child and the child’s future plans.

A homeschool transcript does not have to be complicated but it can be complex if you don’t have a direction in mind when preparing one.

From Complicated to Clear Homeschool High School Transcripts

Look at these 5 questions that will help you to determine what type of information (content) you want to keep up with during the high school years and how you want to present that information (form).

  1. Do you want to use the standard 4 year approach? Instead of listing each year and the subjects covered, you may want to just list the subjects covered. This works well sometimes for a child that is done with high school in a few years or one that may have gotten behind because of sickness or just because they need to plod along at a different pace.
  2.  Do you have extra classes you want to list? To vary classes in high school because it really is the time to investigate strengths and weakness of your child, some kids will take one type of class for one semester and a different one for the second semester. They may have several ½ credit classes during the course of their high school. This takes room to describe the course. What this means is that you may have more classes to list than what some forms have allowed you space or lines to write on. If your child is taking several ½ credit classes, look for a form that gives you flexibility for adding more classes.
  3. If your child will attend college, have you checked with the college to see what type of transcript is needed? Some college requirements may state they want a transcript from an accredited school. Though more and more colleges recognize the power of the momma transcript, some colleges are stickler for their policy. First, be sure you are not wasting record keeping for four years to only find out that the college your child wants to attend has a hard and fast rule about transcripts from an accredited school.
  4. Do you want or need to include your grading system on your transcript? Most transcripts do but the system varies from family to family.
  5. How will you keep a progressive transcript? When Mr. Senior 2013 started to drive, our insurance company needed his progressive transcript to that date. They ended up accepting a progress report which I was able to whip out in a minute because I had been keeping our information in a Word document. If you are an excel spreadsheet type of gal, you might like that method. I don’t care for spread sheets but preferred more of a diary entry journal method when tracking high school. So I just added entries in a Word document each week. Either way, you need to determine how you will track information informally and progressively so that at any time you can prepare a formal document. Do not wait until the end of 4 years or so and try to recall what your teen has accomplished at the end of high school.

Also, look at my YouTube video How to Easily Create the Homeschool High School Transcript to give you a great start.

Look at these samples and links for places to get started.

Homeschool Transcripts – There is a free version here that may suit your needs just fine.
How to Homeschool Today – Sweet! This is a free online transcript generator, which you save as a pdf.
Let’s Homeschool High School – Nice! Has some free editable templates.
Homeschool Curriculum Savings – If you love spreadsheets, then here is a free one in a spreadsheet.
HSLDA – Has free transcripts, detailed or simple in Word and Pdf.
Cindy Downes – More free forms here.
HSLDA – Free 30 day trial on software if you want to try it out.

How to Prepare THE Homeschool High School Transcript

Research is the foundation of a well-prepared transcript.

Be sure and check out my post about how to prepare your homeschool transcript Homeschool High School – How to Prepare THE Transcript (Editable).  Also, I have an editable form that may be of help to you.

Preparing the homeschool high school transcript is anything but typical and normal because your journey was unique.

There are some things that I explain in my post Homeschool High School – How to Prepare THE Transcript that you want to keep streamlined to give your transcript some uniformity.   However, there is much flexibility with each transcript too.

It is an art to both follow guidelines so that your transcript meets some of the norm, but so that it accurately reflects the unique goals of your family.

Do you have to prepare a homeschool high school transcript soon? Are you dreading it or dreaming about it? (or am I dreaming that you are dreaming about it,okay,okay)

Hugs and love ya,

Here are some more links to start your research. Don’t get overwhelmed, get informed.

10 Days of Planning a High School Homeschool Graduation
Creative Solution for High School When Life Happens
Accreditation Removing the Shroud of Mystery
Homeschool – How to Log Hours for High School

Also, listed below are resources that I have read and used

4 CommentsFiled Under: Graduate a Homeschooler, Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation Tagged With: homeschoolhighschool

Should we Give Grades to Our Middle and High School Homeschooled Kids

May 12, 2015 | 8 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

It made perfect sense to me because I was modeling a public school by grading papers.  I thought grades were needed then. Also, look at my page homeschool middle school and how to homeschool high school page for more fun tips

My thinking has changed and been tweaked quite a bit since my start up in homeschooling.

I had to rethink the whole purpose of grades and grading. Why was I just following what public school did?

Who were the grades for anyway?

Homeschool Grading versus Homeschool Grades.

Mr. Senior 2013 was wanting some way to measure his understanding of the papers and that is very normal.

Too, he wanted my approval and to know that he was doing things correct.  Again, that makes sense and it is a natural way to make progress.

Taking a closer look at my feelings and experience so far, I understood then that there is a fine, but significant difference between grading and giving a grade.  The two concepts have to be separated.

For example, in elementary grades, I would mark the papers with how many answers were correct.

If there were 20 math questions, and Mr. Senior 2013 got 3 wrong, I would mark 17/20. He would know he got 3 wrong and would look to correct those answers.

This method very much satisfied his need for wanting to be sure things were right and gave us an informal way of grading.

Too, it fit the purpose of what I think grading is all about in the early grades, which is making progress and having quality work.

When the boys started the middle school years, grades became more important.

They were interested in how they measured up against others who were doing the same thing.

As homeschool parents we know we are not comparing our kids to each other, but kids want to know how they would measure up in a formal setting to others their same age.

Realizing too that if I wanted to start seeing more independence at this age, my sons needed some way to chart what they knew versus what needed to be improved.

Should We Give Grades to our Middle and High School Homeschooled Kids @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

I came up with yet another system during the middle school time.

I just graded math, quizzes, tests and essays.

This system was not only doable, but it gave my boys something to measure by so they could improve their skills. At this point, they wanted a letter grade.

Too, I realized there was no need to give grades daily because I expected them to check their work each day against the teacher’s manual.

The quizzes, tests, reviews and essays were all done without the answers keys or teacher’s manual. Too, I do oral evaluations with them and this is part of my grading system.

This is much like narration. If they can’t tell me back what they know without looking in the book did they really learn it?

As the high school years crept in, I had to think again about the importance of letter grades because high school is a time to prepare my kids for more formal learning.

After wrestling with many different systems, when the boys entered high school, grade keeping was easier but still needed to be finely tuned.

When Mr. Senior 2013 entered high school, I started off grading all assignments. It made me flash back to my early days of grading in elementary school.

Soon, I realized that there was no way I could keep this pace up as I had other children to teach and I realize it was my fear of homeschooling high school that made me go a bit overboard.

Again, I had to rethink why I was grading each day.  I knew high school was the important stage to keep grades for his transcript, but again, I had to come up with another system.

I started grading weekly instead of daily for three reasons:

  • It saved time because there was no need to grade daily work that he was learning;
  • It gave me a better look at what he was doing for the week by glancing at it for a week because then I was able to judge mastery more critically; and
  • It was a much better and simpler way to record keep in high school when I only had 4 grades (4 weeks) to average and give him a grade for the month instead of 30 grades (30 days).

Pretty easy uh?

When homeschooling high school, you don’t want record keeping or grading to get away from you and I have learned it is much better to keep up with as you plod along.

I know some homeschoolers who scrambled for grades for their high schooler at the end of four years, but I can’t imagine that would be easier or even accurate.

The key is developing a system for the needs of your kids, your needs and what your children will need in the future.

How to Reassess A Homeschool Grading System EACH Year.

Look at these questions that will help you determine an easy system for charting progress at whatever level you are at in your homeschool journey.

  1.  At this time do I just need grading or grades?
  2. After my child has had time to decompress from being at public school, is he the the type of child that needs some feedback? If he needs feedback, what form is best for him? According to his age, will a smiley face suffice? Will an E for Excellent, S for Satisfied and N for Needs improvement be sufficient? Does he need a letter grade for accurate measuring?
  3. What is my reason for grades?
  4. Do I want to reward for good grades or just expect my kids to do their best?
  5. How do my children view grades? Do they stress out on a quiz or test knowing that I will grade it?
  6. Do my kids understand that there is no way we can accurately gauge everything we know but that grades are measuring sticks only?

What do you give grades for in homeschool and in which grade do you start keeping grades?

Hugs and love ya,

 

8 CommentsFiled Under: Gauge Homeschool Progress, Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation Tagged With: homeschoolgrades, homeschoolhighschool, middleschool

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