Originally posted by erinmarie
Yes, of course Turbo and Sibbie are very supportive of me and my decision to homeschool my girls.
I think that alot of people are just afraid of change, and also maybe a little bit ashamed that they weren't able to homeschool (in my mother's case especially, who was a stay at home mom, and wasn't equipped with the knowledge, nor the patience to school a child over the age of 6 or 7...).
I have taught Rose alot on my own, and she is a very bright child. Mainly what I'm concerned with is that I'm working from the proper workbooks and what not. I feel I have the total capability to give her a great education, I just want to make sure that I'm properly executing it according to whatever laws and mandates the state of PA has...I've looked at the website and I'm still a little confused...
I don't know what option you're following. But, IMHO, options 1 and 3 are the best that the state of PA offers. Did you know that you're not
required to do any schooling until your child is eight years old in PA?
For attendance you have to have either 180 days or 900 hours (I don't know how you measure the hours when you homeschool. Here, we don't use a traditional daily schedule. We do things that have to do with school any time of the day.).
Subjects you have to teach in elementary school: English spelling, reading, writing, arithmetic, U.S. and Pennsylvania history, civics, health and physiology, physical education, music, art, geography, science, safety and fire prevention.
You have to give notice by filing a notarized affidavit with the local superintendent prior to start of home school and annually by August 1st thereafter.
Your recordkeeping has to consist of the following: maintain a portfolio of materials used, work done, standardized test results in grades 3, 5, and 8, and a written evaluation completed by June 30 of each year (I've been told that the written evaluation has to be done by a teacher by friends who homeschool in PA).
And, you have to administer standardized testing for grades 3, 5, and 8, and include that in your portfolio.
Man! You would think that with all the Amish in PA, they would be a more homeschooling-friendly state. I can't believe the rules you guys have to follow.
Also, has anyone every heard of pre-schoolers and even older kids working from a leap pad program? Rose and I do about an hour of leap pad everyday, along with writing and drawing, and it's a lot of fun.
They're expensive I guess, but we recieved ours as a gift. Even the baby enjoys the story mode.
I've never heard of anyone using it as a curriculum. But, whatever works works.
:jessilu: used to have a little robot called Smartie. He came with a bunch of cards that taught everything from math to spelling to science to geography. She had fun and learned a lot with that. She still remembers it and it's been over 7 years since she had it.