waternymph
09-01-2006, 08:38 AM
Hello,
I'm new here and still learning about classical homeschooling versus the "traditional Christian" route of A Beka Book/Bob Jones with which I've been familiar--and too busy! I'm asking about that, in fact. I've been very attracted by the ad copy on the back of my Memoria Press catalogs that shows a thick stack of books and says, "Too many subjects, too little time? Simplify your curriculum with a classical education."
But I am really wondering if that is literally possible, and how, very specifically. I have four children, ages 7, 6, 4, and 3. Right now with the two older ones I use A Beka and each has a separate phonics, spelling, language, history, science, health, and math book, some of those with separate test/drill booklets, and then the readers for each. When I have all four schooling (with A Beka, hypothetically, if I hadn't switched by then to classical homeschooling), that'd be 8-9 subjects times 4 children, which is from 32-36 different sets of subject lesson plans to keep track of daily.
But!- -can it *really* be any different with classical homeschooling? I looked at the very nice curriculum map that Memoria Press has printed on two pages within the catalog, and that didn't seem to include science or much history, both of which I'm required to include. I don't notice English grammar or any literature program there. Maybe that is just a skeleton framework and it is assumed the mom will add those other elements. Another catalog I receive is the Veritas Press catalog, that includes several items from Memoria (that's how I found out about Memoria) and their grade level curriculum looks astonishingly daunting to me, with so many books, and yet seemingly no concrete lesson plans to tell me how to teach them, and how to come up with something as "proof" of our schooling. Some may have the time to come up with their own plans, but with four quite young children practically stair-stepped in age, and two of those preschoolers, I don't have that time yet.
But I really keep being drawn to classical homeschooling, most of all because I thoroughly believe that to understand our culture, we must understand our Greek and Roman roots. So what I am hoping to find out is, can I really make it work to actually simplify the lengthy to-do list of workbook pages and bubbles and lines to fill in? I want to! Any suggestions and ideas, please?
Thank you so very much!!
Margaret
I'm new here and still learning about classical homeschooling versus the "traditional Christian" route of A Beka Book/Bob Jones with which I've been familiar--and too busy! I'm asking about that, in fact. I've been very attracted by the ad copy on the back of my Memoria Press catalogs that shows a thick stack of books and says, "Too many subjects, too little time? Simplify your curriculum with a classical education."
But I am really wondering if that is literally possible, and how, very specifically. I have four children, ages 7, 6, 4, and 3. Right now with the two older ones I use A Beka and each has a separate phonics, spelling, language, history, science, health, and math book, some of those with separate test/drill booklets, and then the readers for each. When I have all four schooling (with A Beka, hypothetically, if I hadn't switched by then to classical homeschooling), that'd be 8-9 subjects times 4 children, which is from 32-36 different sets of subject lesson plans to keep track of daily.
But!- -can it *really* be any different with classical homeschooling? I looked at the very nice curriculum map that Memoria Press has printed on two pages within the catalog, and that didn't seem to include science or much history, both of which I'm required to include. I don't notice English grammar or any literature program there. Maybe that is just a skeleton framework and it is assumed the mom will add those other elements. Another catalog I receive is the Veritas Press catalog, that includes several items from Memoria (that's how I found out about Memoria) and their grade level curriculum looks astonishingly daunting to me, with so many books, and yet seemingly no concrete lesson plans to tell me how to teach them, and how to come up with something as "proof" of our schooling. Some may have the time to come up with their own plans, but with four quite young children practically stair-stepped in age, and two of those preschoolers, I don't have that time yet.
But I really keep being drawn to classical homeschooling, most of all because I thoroughly believe that to understand our culture, we must understand our Greek and Roman roots. So what I am hoping to find out is, can I really make it work to actually simplify the lengthy to-do list of workbook pages and bubbles and lines to fill in? I want to! Any suggestions and ideas, please?
Thank you so very much!!
Margaret