Summer and Home Shcooling Qustions

Updated on February 09, 2011
S.A. asks from Cheyenne, WY
6 answers

Ok Ladys and Gents, here it is!! My DS who is 8 and I love very much has had a hard time of it this year. School has been hard, he has been picked on by other kids to the point the self esteam has taken a pretty big hit. In the past during the summer we have put him in a youth program here on Base thats more or less a play group. After talking about this for a whill the Hubbs and I think it would be best for him if he spent the summer here at home with me. We are looking into a half day summer program offered fto kids by the comunity collage. We have found someone to take the boy to to talk to and help him work out his feeling and low self esteam. His greandfather (who was a collage prof) is plaining to spend 1 or 2 days a week with him as well in a local summer reading progrham we have here. I feel like we have most of your bases covered, but one....SCHOOL.
DS forgot a lot of the things he learned over the summer last year, and had to spend a lot of time catching up. I was thinking since he would be home with me this summer I could home school him a bit. I jsut dont know where I would start. SO to the amazing wise mommys and daddys you there...Where would be a good place to start looking into a GOOD and FUN homeschool progrham? What are some thing other people do with the kids over the summer to help keep the noodles firing at full speed? Anyother thought about what you think might be good for him. He is also taking drum lessions and is asking about Swim lessions too. Thanks for your thought
(Just because this has been an issue here for me in the past.....I have dyslexa. I AM smart enought to help my child learn, and I am still learning right along with him. It in no way get in the way of me being a the best mother I can be to him or helping him with his home work. SO please keep coments about my spelling and whatnot down. The qustion its about how to help my son...Sorry if that sounds rude I dont meen for it to...I hvae jsut had bad exp here with this being an Issue)

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C.A.

answers from San Francisco on

S., yes, you are smart enough to teach your child and I think you are a wonderful mother who is interested in and trying to find what is best for your son. (And just for the record, you have very FEW misspellings in your post and they look like you were typing too fast)

Keep the learning fun during the summer. There is a website called Mathletics.com and it motivates a child to keep their math skills up. It does cost some money but I don't think that it is that much (we get it through our school).

For reading, I would go to the local library and join their summer reading program. It's free and usually pretty fun.

I would also have him write in a journal each day.

You could also go to a local teacher's store and ask their clerk to show you some good teaching books to use. If you explain what you want, there is sure to be one that would fit your needs.

Good luck....you are being a great mother, he is lucky to be your son!

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M.P.

answers from Pittsburgh on

Has your son read Harry Potter? That is what I suggest you do with him during some of the down time this summer. It is a bit of a slow start but after the first couple chapters he will probably be hooked-my son was and so was I. If you can read to him the first couple chapters that was what I did. helped over the initial hump.

If HP doesn't appeal then pick another book series. At this age it is reading that really really helps.

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M.B.

answers from Milwaukee on

My daughters are too young for homeschooling, so I don't have experience teaching, but I was homeschooled in middle and part of high school. Back then there were great support groups for homeschooling families through the local churches - and we lived in a smaller more rural area. Homeschooling is much bigger now and we have the amazing internet, so I would look around at sites like Meetup.com to see if there are local groups in your area with boys the same age. Check out Mothering.com too because I believe they have a large homeschooling community online.

Don't let anyone tell you you're not smart enough to teach your child. You've been and will be your child's most important teacher in life. If anyone tries to make you feel otherwise, then they are ignorant. My mother was a great science and math teacher, but she wasn't as skilled in other subjects. So she used the many resources we had access to (there are many more today), such as homeschooling classes, tutors, and different kinds of curricula for different subjects to round out our education.

Also check out your local public school system. In Wisconsin there are two or three online schools for homeschooling families. There accredited and free because they are public schools. They send out materials and have teachers online to support and teach students. The great thing is the consistent testing that lets you know your child is excelling.

Good luck, Mama. I'm sure you'll do great!

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K.P.

answers from New York on

Keeping him learning in the summer is essential!

- Have him read every day for 30 minutes- he picks the book or magazine, but 30 uninterrupted minutes
- Keep a daily journal of events- have him essentially make a scrapbook of his summer... pictures, captions (full sentences of course), mementos, ticket stubs, etc. Not only will he practice writing, but he'll have a great record of what sounds like a really cool summer.
- Pick up a couple of math workbooks at a bookstore and have him help you cook- ratios and "adding" are so much a part of cooking (telling time too)

Keep it fun and not "school-like" so he isn't resistant to it.

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M.M.

answers from Washington DC on

We had those summer bridge activity books. My kids loved them and did most of them unitl the middle of vacation. THen they picked them up again towards the end.

L.M.

answers from Dover on

You can check w/ your local school to see if they have suggestions for summer activities. I think learning in the summer is great but you want to make it fun learning with the emphasis on fun...the learning will happen. Review some topics he learned during the year and expand on it (go to the libary and get books, or visit somewhere that tie in with the subject). For example, if he learned about dolphins get books (both fiction and non-fiction) on dolphins, then visit an aquarium if you can. Then get books on another animal he saw and took interest in.

Also, your local book store may have some "summer activity books" for just the purpose of helping kids retain and not loose knowledge of the summer.

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