Showing posts with label phonics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phonics. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

My Homeschool Curriculum Favorites


The past few years I've written a post around this time outlining our curriculum plans for the upcoming year.  ( Curriculum Choices (2013 - 2014) and Curriculum Choices (2014 - 2015) ) They were among my favorite posts!!  They're all about books and supplies and planners and programs and systems and books, books, books, books!!  

I was pretty bummed when I realized it would be repetitive and unnecessary to write a curriculum choices post this year; not much has changed.  On the other hand, I'm super excited at the fact that this is the first year I'm not really trying out anything new!!  For the past three or four years I've been researching programs, comparing methods, reading reviews from other moms, price shopping, and testing out new materials.  And we finally don't need to do that again this year because I've found what works for us and we're sticking with that stuff!  Yay!!   

When September rolls around, the "start" of the school year will lack the thrill that nerds like me get when diving into a new program or curriculum.  But in a way I'm looking forward to being back in the thick of it but feeling like it's "coming home" - being familiar and comfortable with all the methods and books and programs and not having to navigate anything new.  

Here are some of the programs that I love and that work for us.  So much so that we keep coming back to them year after year...  



(double digit multiplication in progress... the MUS way)

We've never used any other math program, so I can't compare Math U See to anything else.  I just know that so far it's worked for us.  It's a multi-sensory approach, so it can be a good fit for a family with children with different learning styles.  Lessons are taught via DVD, there's practice and review in each chapter,  concepts are taught using colored manipulatives, and you have the option of purchasing a CD of addition facts and skip counting songs.  Something for everyone.  

MUS's straight forward, systematic approach  especially works for my oldest who doesn't need bells and whistles.  He just wants to learn, practice, master the material, and move on.  He's perfected skip counting by every number from listening to the CD, and that was enormously helpful in learning his multiplication facts.  Math U See is a perfect fit for this kid.  

For my second son, Math doesn't come quite as easily, but he benefits a lot from the "tricks" that are taught for adding and subtracting with different numbers.  He also appreciates the application and enrichment activities included at the end of each chapter.  He's often hesitant to use manipulatives because he feels it's an indication of his "weakness" in Math, but I usually just have to remind him that it's called Math U SEE and that the manipulatives are part of the see-ing, and he capitulates.  Even though I think my second son would enjoy a math program that is in color and has more "fun" and engaging activities, Math U See seems to work well for him in that the straight-forward, no nonsense approach has nothing on the page to distract him.  

Finally, Math U See hasn't only been good for my kids... Math was one of my weakest subjects all throughout school, and I've been SO enormously grateful for some of the tips and tricks that I've learned from Professor Demme's DVD lessons.  Honestly, I've gotten much better at math by doing MUS with my kids!  Yay!  








I love Handwriting Without Tears.  But not because there are actually no tears involved... I love it because it's so systematic and simple.  I also love it because the workbooks are easy to use and once my "students" know the HWT method of forming each letter, I can let them practice independently.  I check their pencil grip and that's about it until they're done and bring their work to me for review.  

The first year I used HWT I bought the teacher guide (it was the Kindergarten level.)  I'm glad I did, because by reading through it I learned the how's and why's of their approach. In my opinion, if you read one of their teacher guides, you don't need to purchase any for the other grades.  Save your money and instead buy the HWT writing paper and notebooks/journals.  Because HWT uses lined paper that is different from the "regular" 2 solid lines with the dashed line in the middle, it's worth having some of their "method" paper on hand for extra practice. 

If you look into the HWT tears program, you will find that it can get a little gimick-y.  It is designed for large classroom settings and so you can *maybe* see why a preschool or Kindergarten teacher might need "Mat Man" to teach kids about where parts of the body are or a bunny puppet to keep kids engaged.......  However, as a homeschool mom, there are LOTS of things that HWT offers that I just don't need.  If you are thinking about purchasing some of the "extras" for a Kindergartner or first grader, I would recommend (in addition to the workbooks, extra paper, and notebooks) the wood pieces for building letters (great for tactile learners) and the blue mat and capital letter cards that go with them.  We've also had success using the slate chalkboard and the blackboard with double lines.   I also have a set of their letter and number wall cards that I put in plastic sheet protectors and keep in a binder for my preschooler to trace with a dry erase marker.  Obviously, all these things are extras, but I've appreciated having them for my younger kiddos.  


(Emergent Reader Series and Decodable Literature Series.)


Ugh.  Are you sick of me talking about these?  Sorry.  I have to!  Here's some of what I've already written...
...the things that truly set this series apart from other reading programs are the engaging stories and delightful illustrations. There are no fat cats sitting on mats in this series, but there are cats who nap in camping equipment and a cat detective who investigates mysterious tacks and tan sacks. The stories are equally suited to boys and girls, they often convey wholesome childhood experiences (think running through a field to play fetch with your dog or going to the amusement park with the whole family).  Several of the stories also feature (without fanfare or overtones of trying too hard to be "inclusive") children of different ethnic backgrounds and blended race families.  (These are not themes of the stories, but are portrayed beautifully in the illustrations.)  There are a handful of artists who provided the illustrations for the books, all of which are lovely.  There are no stick figures or foolish cartoon characters here.  The artwork is such that the child reading probably feels like he's reading a "real" picture book instead of a meticulously researched and planned out phonics-based reader.  
They are the absolute opposite of typical make-mom-want-to-gnaw-her-arm-off readers.  (Bob Books, I'm looking at you.).... The language and illustrations are truly enjoyable, even for adults; a mother won't feel compelled to bang her head against the wall as she sits by and listens.  
You can read my complete review of the Emergent Reader Series here.  (This was one of the one-time expensive homeschool purchases that I'm soooo happy I did early on.  The cost is justified by the fact that I anticipate using them with all my kids :) )


In all fairness, I have to tell you that we've only used this program for one year, but I liked it enough that I bought the next level and we're using it again for this upcoming year.  I had tried (and ditched) two different spelling programs before chatting with Erin enough to give AAS a go.  After one year, I can easily see how this program builds solid spellers.  It's in depth and thorough.  It teaches spelling and phonics rules from the beginning and young kids are quickly spelling words beyond CVC words.  

The teacher's guide is a must, but I was able to pick and choose which activities I used for each of the children in each lesson.  (My younger son benefited from the letter tiles, while my older son found that activity to be tiresome.)  

Note: we don't use All About Reading, but that hasn't hindered our progress through AAS.



Story of the World (Audio Books)



Pretty sure these are nothing new for most homeschoolers out there.  This will be our fourth year using STOW, but only our second year using the audio version of the books (read by another of our family favorites, Jim Weiss!)  The audio books were a game-changer for us.  They've made all the difference because we can listen to them in the car and so we're all getting a history lesson, instead of just the older kids.  I can't recommend this series, especially the audio versions, enough!  


  Maps, Charts, and Graphs


I love this Geography series and so do my kids.  They actually beg to do geography.  When I say "it's time to do grammar," and my son gets super exited, I know that he misheard me and thinks I said "geography."   (He hears what he wants to hear!)  The lessons in these books are short, but complete, followed by questions to practice the new skill just introduced (understanding various kinds of maps, charts, and graphs... duh!)  We've been using these workbooks for three (or maybe 4?) years and I've been so happy with them that I imagine that we'll keep using this series for as far and as in depth as it goes.  I believe there are 8 levels (one per grade level from 1 - 8th grade) 



Song School Latin


I just LOVE this gentle introduction to Latin for kiddos.  The study center my kids attend use this program, but if we were ever to leave there, we'd still use it!  The vocabulary songs are so fun, the workbook is easy to use.  If you're considering starting Latin early, don't worry about starting with grammar and tricky stuff for your little ones.  This is a fun for kids, manageable for mom, introduction to the language.  After completing books 1 and 2 (my kids have done each book twice, actually) they'll be ready to start with Classical Academic Press' Latin for Children program with hundreds of vocabulary words and some basic grammar under their belts.  


 Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons




This definitely gets mixed reviews from moms, but if you're looking for no-nonsense, no frills, totally scripted reading lessons, this may be the program for you.  Letter sounds are taught progressively, unlike some phonics reading programs that require your kiddos to know all the letter sounds before they can start reading anything.  This program starts with simple sounds and simple words, then gradually adds in more sounds, including common blends and sight words.  Kids are reading "stories" from the very beginning.  I've successfully used this program while also using the Flyleaf Publishing books as supplements.  



I have been so happy with this step by step learn to draw program.  The books cover so many different topics that in the last few years, we've easily been able to choose drawing projects that coincide with specific things we're studying (animals and habitats, historical events, geography, etc...)  Also included are paragraphs for copy work (only my older kids use these since, again, the triple lines can be confusing for young Handwriting Without Tears users.)  I recommend these books for anyone interested in adding drawing to their weekly lessons.  We've certainly used ours a lot! 

Elemental Science (classical science program)

I'm tagging this on to the end here because even though we're not using it again this year, I really loved it :( If my boys weren't doing science at the study center, we would most definitely be doing Elemental Science again.  

This past year we did Biology for the Grammar Stage.  There is no text, but the parent guide provides the titles you need to complete the program.  The boys loved the student workbook as well as the scientific experiments and demonstrations.  I purchased the experiment kit, so we always had everything we needed and I wasn't left scrambling to try to find bizarro things around the house for experiments.  One of the best features of Elemental Science is that they serve homeschoolers of different methods.  You can choose their Classical approach (which we did, and can I mention again, we loved it?!), or their living books series for a more Charlotte Mason approach, or their lapbook-based program. 

I often hear moms wondering what to do for science, if anything at all.  For our first few years we just did a lot of nature study and interest-led reading (library book binges to the Nth degree...) but I decided last year we needed something a little more formal.  I heartily recommend the Elemental Science program, especially if you're leaning more toward a classical approach to your homeschool.  It's cyclical, as much of classical ed is, and if you stick with it, your students will cycle through biology, earth science and astronomy, chemistry, and physics approximately three times.  
  

Do you have any favorite educational programs that you love and keep coming back to year after year?  Or do you have any questions about mine?  Ask away!  I love chatting about this kind of stuff!!

Annnd... linking it up with Micaela at California to Korea.  Head on over there to check out her vision and mission for the year, as well as the books and stuff they'll be using this year in their west coast homeschool!

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Wednesday, May 21, 2014

The 10 *Best* Alphabet Apps for Toddlers


And by *best* I mean my totally subjective list of what's awesome.

Because let's face it, "best of" lists found on a blog like this are reflective only of my classy opinions and inspired whims!   At best.  

But really, I've poked around in a lot of alphabet apps, and I've tested them on my toddler, and these are the best :)

A few words about how I chose:

~ Graphics count.  I like charming and artsy, quirky and creative.  

~ Sounds count.  I can't stand apps that sound like a carnival midway.  Raucous sound effects don't make the cut.  Cute music and minimal sound effects?  Good.

~ The apps I'm recommending are truly for toddlers (1-3 year olds, in my book)  They are simple, easy to navigate, and are (for the most part) just ABC's (flashcard-style) (So, no tracing letters, matching capitals to lower case, find the missing letter, etc..  That's more preschool stuff.)

~ I've included the prices for each app, but note that I got many of them for free with email notifications of "sales" from smartappsforkids.com  Sign up.  It's free. 

~ Finally, you will notice that this list reflects a trend which I neither support nor understand, but it's out there and it cannot be avoided: nearly all alphabet teaching tools for kids are about animals.  WHY IS THIS??????  It drives. me. nuts.  If you are an app developer and you are making a charming, artsy, quirky, creative alphabet app that is not about animals, I love you. Could you hurry up and finish it, though?  I need to give it to my kids before they outgrow their impressionable young years lest they leave childhood with the impression that the only "Q" word worth knowing is quail.

The *Best* Alphabet Apps for Toddlers

(And don't forget to scroll all the way to the end for the absolute best ABC teaching tool yet!)

1. Mini U: Zoo Alphabet, PopArt Factory
$2.99
My very, very, very favorite ABC app of all!  The retro-style graphics are gorgeous - a real delight for the eyes!  The app's settings allow you to choose whether you'd like the narrator to say the letter name or sound. (bonus!)  She also speaks the animal name, and then you may tap for a simple animation.  Much to my pleasant surprise, some of the animals are different when you go through the alphabet a second and third time!  For instance, when viewing the letter "O" you may see "owl" or "octopus," or "orangutan"!!  If you only have $3 to spend on an alphabet app, spend it on this one.
*this app references quails

2. An Animal Alphabet, Jason Walters
free

Beautiful artwork.  For each letter you can tap to hear the letter name, a delightful sound effect (for instance, you hear the seashore on the "Crab" page), and the "sentence" that accompanies the graphic.  No animation.
* references quails

3. Funimal Phonics,  School of Happy
$.99

Basic letters, sounds, animals flashcards.  Somewhat quirky graphics!  Minimal animation.
* references quails

4. The Lonely Beast ABC, James Kelleher
$2.99

So simple, yet so fun.  Quirky :)  Have fun playing the drums on the "D" page!  
* makes no mention of quails

5. The Animal Alphabet, Fish the Mouse Media
$.99

The artwork in this app looks like expensive ABC wall cards you'd see in a pricey catalog nursery!  It's lovely.  Has the look of an old-time traveling carnival show, delightfully onomatopoeic and alliterative narration, simple animations, and "easy" games to play on each screen.  
* references quails

6. Starfall ABC's, Starfall Education
$2.99

All the great stuff you're already familiar with from the ABC portion of Starfall's on-line offerings.  Worth the money (I think) to have the info available to my toddler who can use a touch screen but not a mouse pad.

7. Interactive Alphabet, Piikea St.
$3.99

Lots more here than just ABC flashcards.  You can set this app to "baby mode" and just get the flashcards with some simple animations, or you can play through the more interactive version.  Also has setting for older kids to practice tracing letters and typing words using a QWERTY keyboard.
* no quails were harmed in the making of this app

8. Talking ABC,  Jutiful
$2.99

Claymation!!  Tap the letters to see them morph into... an animal (Except the "Yeti."  What's that all about?) I have to admit, even though it's more animals, they are cute.  And did I mention  claymation?!?   In addition to the alphabet flashcard setting, there are also a few moderately fun activities/games to play (and an alphabet song that I won't mind if I don't hear ever again.)  
* and then God said, "Let there be quails."

9. Animal Alphabet, Happy Kids/Yabra
$1.99 

Again, so simple, but my two-year old and I both love it.  Sweet music, animals wearing amusing costumes, silly animations.  
* quails...

10. Animal Alphabet BookAnna and Ava, LLC
$.99

Sweet illustrations.  No animation or music.  Three different voices to choose from, and three different settings: "A is for...", "Alligator starts with A," or "A".
* and more quails.

*   *   *   *   *   *

What are your favorite apps for toddler learning time?

*   *   *   *   *   *

Clearly, I'm a fan of iPad learning.  

But you want to know the all-time best ABC teaching tool ever??  Good old fashioned time curled up in a parent's lap.  Learning.  Loving.  Cuddling.  No app can replace that. 





*   *   *   *   *   *

I have tried my best to alert you to all apps in which you will encounter quails.  If quails are against your religion, you have been forewarned... and good luck teaching your kid the alphabet without that word in your vocabulary.  It appears it can't be done ;)

Monday, February 3, 2014

Flyleaf Publishing for Home School :: a Review of the Emergent Reader Series

One week old James was read to for the first time in his life! And it wasn't me who read to him...


At this time last year I wrote a pseudo-review of the Books to Remember Decodable Literature Series from Flyleaf Publishing. The Decodable Literature books are written for advanced Kindergarten, first and second grade students.  This is a review of the Emergent Reader Series, recommended for beginning and struggling readers, Kindergarten and first grade. 

image from flyleafpublishing.com

I first learned about Flyleaf Publishing and the Books to Remember series by Laura Appleton-Smith in The Well-Trained Mind: a Guide to Classical Education at Home, by Susan Wise Bauer.  I bought a few of the Decodable Readers because I was having a hard time finding material to use after finishing Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons with my son, Aaron.  I loved them, and then bought more.  Aaron and I enjoyed them so much that I decided to take the plunge and buy the 41-book set of Emergent Readers for Dominic.  (We use them as a supplement to the Catholic Heritage Little Stories for Little Folks reading program.)

Note: I have only purchased the books, and am not familiar with the additional materials available - teacher guides and learning cards.  

The Emergent Readers series appears to follow a fairly typical phonics-based approach to learning reading, starting with the CVC words you'd expect to see in any early reader.  What makes these books different though, (compared to the BOB books, for instance) is (1) the artwork is delightful and often beautiful and (2) though using simple words and sounds, the author has managed to avoid the halting, often awkward and disjointed text I'd become familiar with in other easy readers.  With the Books to Remember series, I feel like even my very early reader is reading a story, not just lines of rhyming words strung together in a bizarre order in an attempt to make a story.  


The books build on each other, adding new consonant and vowel sounds, sound  blends, compound words, and word endings as the series progresses. (I believe you can even print out the phonics scope and sequence here.)  Using the books alone does not provide information for instruction: ie: there are no instructions for teaching that "th" says "th" instead of "t...h"  (did that make any sense????)  The parent using just the books from this series will need to review letter sounds and blends, etc... with the child by her own method (parent-taught or via another phonics program.)  However, another of the great features of these books is that the back cover (or last page) of each book has all the phonics and vocabulary that will be encountered in the story. Each book has a Target Letter-Sound Correspondence that is featured in the story (ex: long /e/ spelled ee).  So I am able to review that concept with Dominic before we begin reading. Also provided are an entire list of the decodable words found in the story (words that can be "decoded (layman's speak: "sounded out") solely on the basis of the letter-sound correspondences or phonetic elements that have been introduced," and a list of High-Frequency Puzzle Words (layman's speak: "sight words").  The list highlights which Puzzle words are new to the student, so I'm able to easily create sight word flash cards for Dominic as new words are introduced and need to be practiced.  

Another nice "extra" that this series provides are "Companion Books" - books for the early readers that have a longer version in the Decodable Literature Series.  Dominic has listened to Aaron read The Sunset Pond,  and Just a Box, and Meg and Jim's Sled Trip, and others (from the Decodable Series) many times, so you can imagine how excited he was to see the same titles in his own series.  The same stories are presented in abbreviated text using words covered in the Emergent Series. Dominic was thrilled to be able to read the same stories his older brother was!


As I mentioned earlier, the things that truly set this series apart from other reading programs are the engaging stories and delightful illustrations.  There are no fat cats sitting on mats in this series, but there are cats who nap in camping equipment and a cat detective who investigates mysterious tacks and tan sacks. The stories are equally suited to boys and girls, they often convey wholesome childhood experiences (think running through a field to play fetch with your dog or going to the amusement park with the whole family).  Several of the stories also feature (without fanfare or overtones of trying too hard to be "inclusive") children of different ethnic backgrounds and blended race families.  (These are not themes of the stories, but are portrayed beautifully in the illustrations.)  There are a handful of artists who provided the illustrations for the books, all of which are lovely.  There are no stick figures or foolish cartoon characters here.  The artwork is such that the child reading probably feels like he's reading a "real" picture book instead of a meticulously researched and planned out phonics-based reader. Perhaps that's the point behind the Books to Remember, after all. Here is a portion of what author Laura Appleton-Smith has to say about her work:


During my teaching years, I felt strongly about the importance of systematic phonics instruction, but I was dissatisfied with the decodable books that were available. The only decodables I could find were low quality and contained controlled texts that lacked meaning and comprehensibility.
I wanted decodable books that would enable students to successfully apply phonics skills while enjoying meaningful reading experiences. If I was going to introduce children to the important world of reading and books, I wanted to motivate them with beautiful literature that they could read independently. I wanted " real" books with decodable texts.
I founded Flyleaf Publishing in 1998 with a mission to create fine-art illustrated, authentic, and engaging decodable literature to help students and teachers bridge the gap between phonetic decoding and fluent independent reading.
(taken from the Flyleaf Publishing website.)
Thus far, I have been beyond happy with all of the books we've used from Flyleaf Publishing.  Perhaps even more importantly, I have never heard a complaint from either of my boys when it's time to do reading. They enjoy them as much as I do.  I highly recommend both the Emergent Reader Series and the Decodable Literature as valuable supplements to any phonics program that you may already be using in your home school.  It is my hope (and my plan) that I will be using these books for all my other little ones when they are ready for "learning to read" and loving the process!  


Friday, May 31, 2013

iSchool: Using the iPad in our HomeSchool

This is a bit of a follow-up to my post on How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the iPad



** Don't forget to go to the end of the post to leave comments with your favorite apps for school! ** 


We've been using iPads in our lessons for close to a month now.  So far, so good great!  Even in just this one month, I've been converted to an iPad lover.  It is so convenient to carry if we're on the go - but we hardly ever go anywhere, so... I'm just speaking on assumption.   It's easy to use - and that's really saying something coming from me. And it really and truly has brought enrichment to our home school.  

If you know me even a little, I'm sure you can imagine the types of apps we've been working with... they are either straight up educational, or are some type of game with educational value, or they are games which, though they may not be teaching Calculus or Chemistry, they make the user's brain chug and think and think and chug.

Some of my criteria for choosing apps have been:

- nothing pop-culture related - so no Disney, no super heroes.  It doesn't matter how good the app is, this general avoidance of licensed characters is just the way we roll around here.  (except for that Olivia shirt we got Ruth for her birthday...)

- pretty or artsy graphics are a plus if they can't be a must.  I love graphics that look like someone was thoughtful and creative about them... almost as if they were an illustration in a good book.  Apps that are outright cartoon-y have to have a spectacularly high education factor to gain my approval.

- educational apps that give you the ability to set up profiles for different users are great, especially when you have kiddos at different levels - for example, if both kids are practicing addition but need to focus on different sets of facts, you can customize what a specific player will cover.

- low cost, but not necessarily free.  I discovered fairly quickly that (most) free apps kind of stink, and if they're not stinky, they still have a lot of pop-up adds.  It's worth it to me to pay 99 cents for all three kids to play math games (high quality and add free) at the same time... cheaper than workbooks, folks!


************

So, here are some of our favorites that we've been using...
Keep in mind, my school-age boys are 5 1/2 and 7.  That's the age-group we've been app-shopping for. (Apps for our pre-schooler will be in a separate post!)

MATH


Freefall Math - Lots of options for personalization for a single player - which operations/facts to cover - but does not have the option of saving your setting choices for different users. I also like the Freefall Telling Time and Freefall Coin Math.

Freefall Math 

Whacky Math - you have to "whack" the mole with the correct answer to the math equation given.  Ok, this app is borderline obnoxious... lawn vermin with mustaches popping out of the ground... but so far, I actually appreciate it because you can choose very specific facts to cover in the game - example, you could have your child just work on addition with 9's, or you could do addition facts from 1 - 9.  The kids like this "game" and I like that it's a straight up timed math drill.  


Whacky Math

Slate Math for Kids - The cool thing about this app (in addition to the fact that it's FREE!) is the scenery.  The math concepts and activities are nothing too out of the ordinary, but you get to choose your desired backdrop for practicing those facts - dozens of sweets scenes from across Europe.  For example, you can practice advanced counting through the canals of Venice, write numbers in the sand on the beaches of Greece, or work on quantitative ordering in a Swiss chocolate factory...
Slate Math for Kids
This picture does not actually convey the lovely artwork in the app... sorry.  Best I could do.

Monkey MathSchool Sunshine - this is as cartoon-y as it gets.  I probably wouldn't have chosen this app if my kids hadn't had already befriended the host monkey in a PreSchool app by the same company.  But, as it stands... the math practice is good, and they enjoy it.  Note: it's not advanced enough for my first grader; it's better suited to pre-K and Kindergarten.  Has the ability to create "accounts" for different players - a definite plus!


Monkey MathSchool Sunshine

And at the risk of going overboard in the Math Games Department... Aaron (finishing first grade) also likes Mathmateer  - answer Math problems to earn money.  Save your money to pimp out (if I may...) your custom rocket for launch.  Once you get up there, there are more Math missions to conquer.  (We haven't gotten there yet...)


Mathmateer

SPELLING

Freefall Spelling - As with their Math apps, this one is great because you can choose your game settings based on the player. For example, in the image below, "hints" are given on the bottom to help you spell apple, but the hints can be removed for older players.  This app also allows you to upload your own lists so that your child can practice words on his current spelling list. I have yet to use this feature, but will try to get back here to report on it when I do. 


Freefall Spelling

Rocket Spelling - Fun spelling/phonics practice - you earn rocket parts as you spell words correctly.  After 12 words, you get to launch your rocket and collect stars for points.  That's it.  Super simple.  Yet, my kids love it.  And I love that it has a level for my preschooler - letter hints given, a level for my Kindergartner - three and four letter words, no hints, and a level for my 1st grader - longer words, no hints.  

Rocket Speller

READING/PHONICS PRACTICE

Little Reader - word to picture match-up activities get more complicated as the child progresses.  This app also allows you to add your own pictures and words (using your own voice!) to create customized reading lists!! (this is the version with four letter words, they also have a three-letter version)



Learn to Read - Four Letter Words by Little Readers

Word Grab Phonetics - Cute graphics - they look like scrapbook pages made from textured paper.  You know I like that kind of thing!  Best for younger players, I think.  Deals a lot with beginning letter sounds, and rhyming word-endings.  (I've bought a few apps by Bellamon - all very cute graphics!)



Word Grab Phonetics, from Bellamon

POETRY and MEMORIZATION

Super Note - Allows you to easily create "notes" in which you can hold written and recorded material.  Easy to use.  


SCIENCE/NATURE STUDY

Audubon Birds a Field Guide to North American Birds - I think we'll mostly use this for learning bird calls.  The recordings are of very good quality.  I checked out the calls for the ruby-throated humming bird and you could hear the humming wings in the background, and in the background of the great blue heron you could hear pond water lapping!  Yesterday, Ruth and I sat on the deck with this app and tried to get a rise out of the local woodpeckers and cardinals.  Not much success.  Yet.



Discover Your Body HD - the "info" part of this app is fairly standard - the same stuff you'd read in an kid's anatomy encyclopedia.  The portions that we've really enjoyed are the timed games in which you have to correctly place/identify major parts of various body systems.  




HISTORY


American Presidents - This is a really neat interactive time line of the presidents.  Once you choose a president, you can view an image gallery, bullet-point lists of important events during his presidency, lots more in depth information on his life and term of office, text of speeches, related articles etc... There is also a table of contents so as to view documents, maps, events without having to go through the time line.  Easy to use, informative and fun! 

American Presidents

GEOGRAPHY 

I sort of went crazy in this area and ended up downloading some things that are over the heads of the kids, and two apps that turned out to be games with content that was definitely not appropriate for them. 

Part of the trouble I ran into is that there are some really fun geography games out there that require a pretty significant knowledge of where places are (imagine that!)and at this point, I need something that offers more instruction.  Also, many of the neat geography programs that I discovered require a lot of reading, and since my kiddos are not yet proficient readers, I'm somewhat limited to apps that offer audio information and instructions.  (Note - this is significant for me right now, because since I've been letting the kids use the iPads "independently" - I'm in the room, but not over their shoulder - I do need to make sure that they can understand and navigate the apps on their own.  Since I'm usually working on another lesson with someone else, I'm not able to pop over and read out loud about the capital city and ratio of cars:people in American Samoa.)  

Obviously, we'll use Google Earth, because it's just awesome (and free!)


Google Earth App

Kids Maps - This app is extremely simple, but it's one of the better ones I could find that suits my needs.  It allows kids to place the states into the map of the US, puzzle style.  There is minimal audio - a man (presumably the dad who created the app) says the name of the state and an easy-to-remember fact about it, like "Michigan.  Many cars are made in the state of Michigan."  You can choose to place the states in alphabetical or random order.   


Kids Maps


Barefoot Atlas - this app is pretty and it's fun to be able to navigate the globe with finger swipes!  It's easy to use and has a lot of "fun" information - all of the little pictures are items you can click on for additional info.  The actual stats  provided for each country though are very limited - much less than you'd get in any standard Kid's First Atlas book.  I think this is a good tool for learning where countries are, but I think they sort of missed the boat on providing better information on each country. 


Barefoot Atlas App

When the boys get a little older and have a better foundation in U.S. and world geography, I think we'll enjoy some of these games that I bought prematurely...
Stack the States
Learn the World
Learn the States


General Knowledge

Khan Academy - I haven't used this yet except in previewing excerpts of videos - it's FREE, so if it isn't useful, no harm done.  It is a collection of over 3500 videos on TONS of different school topics.  I think we'll be doing earth science/astronomy for science next year, so I started watching a video on "understanding" and appreciating the scale of the universe - 11 minutes of a chatty professor using still photos and a pen-on-screen.  It's informational, but certainly not thrilling or captivating.  We'll see if we use it as much as I thought we would when I first downloaded it...


Khan Academy

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Some of Mom's rules: an attempt at quality control and time limitations in the face of mind-bogglingly-awesome technology:

-You may only use an iPad with Mom or Dad's permission.  Obviously.

- Using an iPad is not a right.  It is a privilege that is up to you to maintain.  You can lose your privilege to this just as you could lose any other of your privileges. 

- You must stay on the activity or game that you're on until you have permission to go to something new.

- You must finish the "lessons" portion of what you're doing before going on to a game.

- You won't finish an activity or game if you aren't trying your hardest to do well or are getting incorrect answers intentionally.

- Even though there is one particular iPad in which the games are set up particularly for you (your name, your level, etc...), and it has your poems and pictures on it, it is not your iPad. I know this will be a hard concept to understand... but we will all have to try. They belong to our whole family.  

- If you "forget" any of these rules, or whine or delay when it's time to turn off the iPad, you'll lose your privilege of using it next time we get them out.  


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I think there are other homeschooling moms using iPads out there, right? I love spending time investigating apps for school! ... please leave comments with your suggestions for other great homeschool apps!  



Happy iLearning!
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