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homeschoolanguagearts

When Should I Start Teaching Spelling in Homeschool?

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

Spelling is more than just associating letters with sounds and deciphering them. Spelling is an essential element to writing clearly and convincingly.

Although I valued the usefulness of spelling prior to teaching my sons how to spell, it wasn’t until I started actually teaching that I was able to see that learning styles affected how each of my sons learned to spell.

I couldn’t possibly understand the struggle of spelling at the beginning of my journey because Mr. Senior 2013, like me, is a visual learner. He looked at words, formed a mental map in his head, and spelling came naturally for him.

I taught him phonics and he began to write the letters he knew associated with the sounds. Pretty easy I thought. Rocking along thinking that I was actually teaching spelling, Mr. Awesome came along and everything I thought I knew about teaching spelling could fit in a button.

My second child was not a visual learner, but a hands-on learner. Laying the foundation for spelling, which is phonics instruction took longer with him.

The Difference Between Readiness and Formal Spelling Instruction

Look at these these tips that I learned and want you know when you formally start teaching spelling.

Don’t be so quick to add formal spelling to your day.

Some programs start testing children right away like at Kindergarten level.

Teaching spelling is one thing and testing spelling is quite another thing.

Before you can test output (which is making the letter or letters the sound makes) a child needs enough time for input.

We live in an educational society that is impatient on seeing results. We have instagram and instant messaging, but there is no such thing as instant education.

Children need enough time manipulating letters and sounds in the formative years or before Kindergarten.

Phonics is the springboard to spelling.

I feel you should be very selective as to when you start testing or beginning a formal program; I feel equally important that stringing letters together to form words should not wait.

Teaching phonics early even before a child can write is foundational to strong spellers later.

One thing I did right in teaching my sons how to spell was to spend a great amount of time on manipulating letters.

Look at these activities that I mean by manipulating letters:

 

Do not let your child’s fine motor skills hold your child back from stringing letters together to form words.

When I started teaching Mr. Senior 2013, one of the very best investments I made was to purchase Spell Time.

 

It was pricey but I knew that I had at least 3 kids ahead of me to teach phonics and using it with each child for several years, I got 6+ years use out of it.

A few things that I loved about it was that it was portable, had several letters of the vowels and I could grab a few letters to teach one child spelling while my oldest son could play with the letters and put them on the mat.

The mats are self-teaching meaning that on the back of the letter tiles are pegs which fit only in the correct spot on the word mat.  It is self-checking because another letter won’t fit.

Bottom line, Mr. Senior 2013 could practice spelling alone while I was teaching the other boys.

Using this great teaching tool, I was able to give them a strong start to phonics before they learned how to write.

Spelling rules are just tools.

Remember too that in English the pronunciation of a word at times gives very little help as to the spelling.

Through the years, I feel I have swung like a pendulum back and forth between constant memorization of rules to very little work remembering them.

I have learned that balance is needed instead of swamping them with too many rules or not giving them any.

Your child needs to understand that though beginning phonics is easy, the English language is not predictable all the time.

Giving my middle son not only direct phonics instruction but memorization along with the rules armed him with tools he needed to encode (spell).

All About Spelling

So it takes time for a child to understand those rules and this is best done after they have been immersed in phonics instruction.

Most spelling programs as I mentioned earlier are focused solely on the testing part of the program instead of activities like games, songs, stories, puzzle word search and fun unscrambling exercises to help a child learn through all senses.

It has been my experience that waiting to the end of first grade or the beginning of second grade to introduce formal spelling, which requires output immediately, gives your child a lot of hands-on practice with sounds.

Natural spelling through writing  and copywork were also key things I did in our day.

By delaying formal spelling until second grade, my middle son came in armed and ready to tackle the tests.

He even jumped two levels in spelling one year because we were immersed in letter fun.

Do immerse your children with the fun of sounds and don’t be so quick to add a formal spelling program if the emphasis is on constant testing.

When Should I Start Teaching Spelling in Homeschool @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

 

 

 

 

 

You’ll love these other tips:

  • 21 Hands-on Ideas for Homeschool Spelling From a Seasoned Mom
  • 7 Budget-Friendly Language Arts Curriculum to Pair with Unit Studies (with printable)
  • 24 Borderline Genius Ways To Relieve Language Arts Boredom

What grade do you start formal spelling?

Hugs and love ya,

 

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Teach Homeschool Language Arts Tagged With: homeschoolanguagearts, language arts, languagearts, spelling

Why It Is Hard to Teach Homeschooled Kids Writing But Not Impossible

April 23, 2015 | Leave a Comment
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, in sharing why it is hard to teach homeschooled kids writing but not impossible I will share some background information on how to teach writing. Also, look at my page The Dynamics of How to Homeschool Easily and Smarter for more tips!

First, let me tell you my story.

In public school, I had a middle school teacher that I adored.

She understood my preference of communicating orally where I could look into the eyes of the person I was talking to, give them a gentle pat or flail my arms out long when talking fast.

But she also encouraged me to give my written words the same gravity.

It wasn’t until I started teaching my boys how to write that I truly appreciated what a difficult task it is to teach my boys how to write.

Understanding the process of any skill that I am teaching has always helped me to find a solution to any problem we are experiencing.

More importantly, I have a direction to follow.

For example, it’s easy enough to understand that when teaching reading we need to start with a set of letters that express sounds.

After that, we build words, sentences and we are off to teaching our kids how to read.

Finding a starting point for writing, however, can be more elusive.

Why It is Hard to Teach Homeschooled Kids Writing But Not Impossible @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Word Writing Scramble

One reason I found writing hard to teach was that I didn’t appreciate that it is a learned art to fashion words on a page that are appealing.

It’s almost like playing word scramble or in this case sentence scramble when teaching our kids to write.

Immature readers can create awkward sounding sentences because of their lack of experience in life.

For that matter, awkward sentence that don’t flow smoothly can happen to even the most experienced writer too.

That is why it is important in the early stages of writing that children have plenty of time to mull over words, thoughts and arrangement of ideas.

Ideas like creating and writing in daily journals, playing word games and vocabulary games are important to arming children with the creativity they need to write.

When I started teaching writing, my oldest son felt almost paralyzed when I would ask him what topic he wanted to write about.

That was my first ugly encounter with writing after teaching him how to write his ABCs.

Mature Writers Born?

I taught him how to write his ABCs, how could this not be just as easy or so I thought.

My next mess up came because I was expecting maturity and experience with writing topics from a 5 year old.

Experiences and maturity come just from that, age and life experiences.

How could I equip my 5 year old with opportunities for writing experiences?

It is the same answer that equipped him at 15 years old, which is reading to the rescue.

I had heard many times that a reader is a writer and we read every day.

But other than pleasure and reading to find out what we wanted to know about, I under estimated the value of it in gaining experiences outside of what we were learning each day.

There was a connection between the books we were reading and writing topics that swirled around in my son’s mind.

I didn’t have to rush childhood, nor would I want to so that he could learn the art of self-expression.

Drawing out of him experiences that he read about either in his books and daily living were the keys to overflowing topic ideas.

Are You Making this Mistake?

There is just no rushing content, facts, ideas and details, which is the foundation of writing.

Content is the next biggie that kids are afraid of.

As if struggling with the structure of creating delightful sounding words is not enough, they have to think about content, topic sentences, details and a strong conclusion.

There is no getting around it, our kids needs our expertise when it comes to helping them with their writing.

In the early stages of writing especially, our kids need us to supply content and it is okay to do this.

We don’t want to ever put our kids in a sink or swim situation when writing.

It does absolutely no good and it can create a kid who hates writing and carries that feeling to high school.

It is important to continue these building skills through to middle school.

That is the time to continue to reinforce what was learned at the foundational level and to hone outlining and note taking skills.

Though I didn’t know as much then when I started teaching my kids to write as I know now, I did know that certain valuable skills could not be overlooked.

Look at these basic things to include in teaching everyday writing.

  • Copywork
  • Dictation
  • Outlining
  • Constantly reading back what they wrote
  • Journal writing to not be corrected but to use as practice for self-expression.

More Homeschool Handwriting Curriculum Tips!

Keep reading for a list of 8 handwriting curriculum and the benefits of each.

  • Which One is Really the Best Homeschool Writing Curriculum (a comparison)
  • 5 Creative Ways to Boost Handwriting in Older Kids
  • Cursive Matters; Handwriting Style Doesn’t + Free Resources
  • Teaching Handwriting When Homeschooling the Early Years Part 1
  • Teaching Handwriting When Homeschooling the Early Years Part 2
  • Teaching Handwriting When Homeschooling the Early Years Part 3
  • Faith-Neutral Homeschool Grammar and Writing Program
  • 3 Ways to Choose the BEST Writing Curriculum (for a Growing Homeschool Family)
  • Why It Is Hard to Teach Homeschooled Kids Writing But Not Impossible
  • Homeschool Writing Program For Middle and High School Students
  • A Reason for Handwriting Workbook & Teacher Guidebook Level K

Leave a CommentFiled Under: Teach Homeschool Language Arts Tagged With: composition, hand writing, homeschoolanguagearts, languagearts, teachingwriting

Free History Copywork – A Roundup of History Resources

March 17, 2015 | 5 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Copywork is a valuable aid in teaching visual learners.

Too, because copywork can be part of a history unit study, I have rounded up some free history copywork pages.

Free History Copywork. A roundup of history resources you'll love. Click here to download the free copywork @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool Plus

Free copywork is easy to find, but I wanted to round up just those focused on history so you can pair them with your history unit studies and with the free unit studies I have here.

History copywork does not exist as plentiful as just plain copywork, so I will be adding more freebies for history copywork to match my unit studies here.

Today, I have a copywork page on the poem, Kubla Khan by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

You can read the whole poem on the link and then also look at sparknotes for an explanation of the poem if you want to do some more copywork.

Kubla Khan by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Kubla Khan by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Then here are the free ones I rounded up.

Theodore Roosevelt Copywork Pages from Jimmies Collage.

President Quotes Copywork Pages from Walking By the Way. {Click on picture to download.}

American History 1770-1880’s Copywork Pages from Lulu.

Famous quotes from World Leaders Copywork Pages from Practical Pages.

28 Principles of Liberty Cursive Copywork Pages from Notebooking Nook.

Leonardo Da Vinci Copywork Pagesfrom Harrington Harmonies.

American Revolution Copywork Pages from Harrington Harmonies.

Preamble to the Constitution Copywork Pages from Cynce’s Places.

George Washington’s Rules of Civility Copywork Pagesfrom Donna Young.

Winston Churchill Quote Copywork Page from Activity Village.

Shakespeare Quotes Copywork Pagesfrom Activity Village.

Martin Luther King Quotes Copywork Pages from 3 Boys and a Dog.

John F. Kennedy – Excerpt from Inaugural Address Copywork Pages from Blessed Beyond a Doubt.

Then here are my other two copywork pages I have done that are history related.

Greece Poetry by Robert Frost @ Tina's Dynamic Homeschool PlusCattle by Berta Hart Nance Collage

Download Greece poem here.         Download Cattle, a Texas Poem.

This will give us a running start but I will be adding more history copywork pages especially for Ancient history.

Hugs and love ya,

Also, grab:

Free Middle and High School Homeschool Language Arts

5 CommentsFiled Under: 1. My FREE Learning Printables {Any Topic}, History Resources Tagged With: copywork, history, history resources, homeschoolanguagearts, language arts

3 Unexpected Benefits of Homeschool Narration

February 5, 2015 | 6 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Second only to reading aloud, there is not any other homeschool tool more outstanding than narration.

It it totally free, works across the board with any homeschool approach used and the skill level is absolutely zero for beginner homeschoolers.

Explaining the definition of narration, which is simply telling back what your kids have read or learned or telling back what you have read to them, is easier to explain than the way I feel now about the 3 unexpected benefits of homeschool narration.

It’s not a secret that I use a more unit study approach and don’t really follow a Charlotte Mason approach.  With that being said, I don’t think many of us totally follow only one homeschool approach, myself included.
Narration, which is a hallmark of the Charlotte Mason approach though is one homeschool technique that I have used from the beginning of my homeschool journey and that has spanned all of my sons’ learning style.

Most homeschoolers will tout that the greatest benefit of narration is that it is a way of checking what a child understands.  Though this is true and it’s important in gauging progress, there are benefits to narration that I couldn’t even imagine.

ONE/ Teaches Valuable Critical Thinking Skills.

When I did narration with Mr. Senior 2013, little did I realize that “simple narration” in younger grades would prepare him for not just high school level courses but for honors courses too.

Mr. Senior 2013 did honors classes early in math. Looking back now, I feel this was directly related to teaching him to only know how to think, but how to sift through information when he was narrating back to me.

Many days as I would sit and listen to him or write down what he would say, I wondered what he would be doing with this massive amount of information he was storing.

I am not the most patient mom but I sat still as my son bubbled forth with what he knew about any subject.

Is Your Homeschool Narration Missing a Vital Link?

I admit, it was not easy to sit and listen to details that I didn’t think mattered to what we were learning at the time.

Simple narration then was the basic framework of teaching him how to think long-term.

Having helped many new homeschoolers, one of the problems they had in the beginning was that their child was not use to sitting still for long amounts of time to contemplate, think or recall information.

A fast paced schedule at public school and constant shifts in focus can leave very little time to process new information.

The problem is exacerbated now because we live in a fast paced technological word and that can breed in all of us a “give-me-an-answer-right-now” attitude.

Narration helped Mr. Senior 2013 to avoid the negative effects of an instant education.

TWO/ Narration nurtures togetherness.

By it’s nature, the process of narration is sociable and interactive.

When I first started narration, I was probably more teacher like using white boards and writing down everything my children told me.  That can be part of narration but as I have schooled longer, I realize narration is more of meaningful conversation than me quizzing my children.

Narration in 5 minutes.

Time spent one on one with each of my sons nurtures a warm relationship and it begins with short meaningful conversations each day.
Getting past the feeling that narration had to be so formal and school like each time, I realized that communication with each of my sons was filling an inborn need for all of us, which is to communicate.

One of the reasons for homeschooling, which I hold very dear is to give each child my exclusive undivided attention for discussing whatever is weighing heavy on his mind.

As each son narrated back what they liked about a story, a science lesson or history lesson, it almost always was a time for them to share with me what else they were thinking at the time.

I wouldn’t trade any of those special moments I have had with them for making them sit down alone and do a quiz to process information.

THREE/ Self-Expression flourishes.

Another benefit of narration is that your kids learn beautiful expressions that fill their mind’s memory from worthy literature.

Using literature like the Bible and other great sources like classical literature and living books your child gradually learns to adopt values and principles that make up the man or woman they will turn out to be.

Self-expression flourishes because they have been influenced by resources that you value.

What I am saying is that instead of being molded by this world, which can make a child feel withdrawn because they are always being corrected, your child becomes an independent and free thinker in a positive way.

A lot of homeschooled children who have never been public school simply do no care whether their viewpoint is accepted or not by others.

Being sure of their identity because they have spent time pondering morals, principles and values learned and recited during narration from childhood, a child is proud of their adult role whether they start a family of their own, go to college or take up some form of ministry.

It has been hard for me to strain all of my feelings, thoughts and reflections about the value of narration into these short nuggets.

My love for the tool of narration has only been heightened now as I help Mr. Senior 2013 with his next venture as an adult.

Seize the moments for narration and don’t let them pass you by because they are filling more needs than you can imagine at this point in your homeschool journey.

What about you? Do you take time for narration?

Hugs and love ya,

Signature T

Check out these other posts:

Narration – Telling Back or Testing? Books that Make Teaching Narration Easy Peazy
 Am I Doing Enough When Homeschooling
 
Gauging Homeschool Progress – Masters of their Material?

 

6 CommentsFiled Under: Teach Narration Tagged With: homeschoolanguagearts, language arts, narration, teachingmultiplechildren

Free Middle and High School Homeschool Language Arts

January 30, 2015 | 27 Comments
This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, please see my full disclosure policy.

Today, I am sharing free middle and high school homeschool language arts resources. Also, look at my page homeschool middle school and how to homeschool high school page for more fun tips

Update: You know I love ya so when I round up freebies, I round up everything I can find.

I do not have the answer keys to these free resources below. 

Free Middle and High School Homeschool Language Arts

Kindly said: Please do not email me asking about the answer sheets, other teacher guides or tests.  If and when I find them, I will post them for you and me.

These workbooks are ones that I have kept up with and used through the years with my sons as enrichment.

The links have changed and as I have found them, I have updated my links. 

Too, I have found new resources to add, but never had them in one place.

Middle and High School Homeschool Language Arts

After using some of the books, they are pretty nifty enough to almost be used as stand alone curriculum.

Too, kazillion (new invented word alert) resources exist for helping you out in preschool, kindergarten and early elementary and after that, free resources seem to thin out.

Determined to have plenty of free homeschool language arts program through middle and high school, I hope you can use a few of these with your kids.

Language Arts Reference

Free one reference of The Elements of Style by William Strunk, Jr.  Great tool to also teach middle and high school students research.

Multi-grade Language Arts Resources

Free Guide to Grammar and Writing and Principles of Composition and a Search Engine will also help you find help on grammatical issues, tips on composition, and advice on English usage.

6th grade Printable Resources

Glencoe Language Arts Spelling Power 88 pages.

6spw2.pdf (64010 downloads )

MacMillan Treasures Practice Book O 230 pages.

Free-MacMillan-Treasures-Practice-Book-O-6th-grade-230-pages..pdf (66829 downloads )

Glencoe Language Arts Vocabulary Power 98 pages.

Glencoe-Language-Arts-Vocabulary-Power-98-pages.pdf (64596 downloads )

MacMillan Treasures Spelling Practice 200 pages.

94274741.pdf (64727 downloads )

MacMillan Treasures Grammar Practice 200 pages.

MacMillan-Treasures-Grammar-Practice-200-pages.pdf (66546 downloads )

Free Glencoe Grammar and Language Workbook 150 pages.

7th grade Printable Resources

Writers Choice Grammar and Composition – Grammar ENRICHMENT 56 pages.

Free-Writers-Choice-Grammar-and-Composition-–-Grammar-Enrichment-7th-grade-56-pages.pdf (64611 downloads )

Glencoe Language Arts Spelling Power 88 pages.

7th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-Spelling-Power-88-pages.pdf (65322 downloads )

Glencoe Grammar and Language Workbook – 172 pages.

7th-grade-Glencoe-Grammar-and-Language-Workbook-–-172-pages.pdf (66331 downloads )

Writer’s Choice Grammar and Composition –  Grammar RETEACHING 56 pages.

Free-Writers-Choice-Grammar-and-Composition-–-Grammar-Reteaching-56-pages.7th-grade.pdf (65790 downloads )

Free Glencoe Language Arts Vocabulary Power – 100 pages

7th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-Vocabulary-Power-–-100-pages.pdf (65374 downloads )

8th grade Printable Resources

Glencoe Grammar and Language Workbook 352 pages.

Grade-8-Grammar-Complete.pdf (65206 downloads )

8th grade Glencoe Language Arts Spelling Power 88 pages

8th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-Spelling-Power-88-pages.pdf (64307 downloads )

Writer’s Choice Grammar and Composition Grammar Enrichment 56 pages.

Free-Writers-Choice-Grammar-and-Composition-Grammar-Enrichment-8th-grade-56-pages.pdf (68822 downloads )

9th grade Printable Resources

Glencoe Language Arts – Vocabulary Power 131 pages.

Vocabulary-Power-Workbook-9th-grade.pdf (64731 downloads )

Writer’s Choice Grammar and Composition – Grammar Practice Workbook 56 pages.

[ 9th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-–-Spelling-Power-104-pages..pdf (64275 downloads )

Grammar and Language Workbook  352 pages.

grammar_workbook_honors-9th.pdf (66614 downloads )

Glencoe Language Arts – Spelling Power 104 pages.

9th-grade-Writers-Choice-Grammar-and-Composition-–-Grammar-Practice-Workbook-56-pages.pdf (65243 downloads )

10th grade Printable Resources

Glencoe Language Arts – Spelling Power 88 pages.

10spw2.pdf (65225 downloads )

Writer’s Choice Grammar and Composition – Grammar Practice Workbook 56 pages.

10th-grade-Writers-Choice-Grammar-and-Composition-–-Grammar-Practice-Workbook-56-pages..pdf (66055 downloads )

Glencoe Language Arts – Vocabulary Power 131 pages..

10th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-–-Vocabulary-Power-131-pages-2.pdf (65497 downloads )

11th grade Printable Resources

11th grade Glencoe Grammar and Language Workbook 170 pages.

11th-grade-Glencoe-Grammar-and-Language-Workbook-170-pages.pdf (64783 downloads )

Glencoe Language Arts – Spelling Power 88 pages.

11th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-–-Spelling-Power-88-pages.pdf (63638 downloads )

Glencoe Language Arts – Vocabulary Power 131 pages.

11th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-–-Vocabulary-Power-131-pages..pdf (64214 downloads )

12th grade Printable Resources

Glencoe Language Arts – Spelling Power 88 pages.

12spw2.pdf (66836 downloads )

Glencoe Language Arts – Vocabulary 131 pages.

12th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-–-Vocabulary-131-pages..pdf (66561 downloads )

Glencoe Language Arts Grammar and Language Workbook 352 pages.

12th-grade-Glencoe-Language-Arts-Grammar-and-Language-Workbook-352-pages..pdf (65307 downloads )

 Check out these other resources.

  • How to Choose the BEST Homeschool Middle and High School Language Arts Curriculum & Options
  • 5 Creative Ways to Boost Handwriting in Older Kids
  • Free Middle School Science Curriculum and Magazine
  • Toddler to Teen 100 Free Unit Study Resources
  • 7 Budget-Friendly Language Arts Curriculum to Pair with Unit Studies (with printable)
  • 3 Beginner’s Tips: Homeschool High School Literature
  • 24 Borderline Genius Ways To Relieve Language Arts Boredom

Hope you enjoy them.

Hugs and love ya,

27 CommentsFiled Under: Free Homeschool Resources, Homeschool Teens _ From Teen to Graduation, Middle School Homeschool Tagged With: composition, grammar, high school, high school literature, homeschool, homeschoolanguagearts, language arts, languagearts, middleschool, reading, readingcomprehension

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