How Can I Combine Several Students & How Does the Program Change to Meet the
Needs of Older Students?
How Can I Combine Several Students at Once?
Each of our programs
includes books to read together and discuss as a family. During these discussions,
questions can be tailored to the ability of each student. The content and
stories themselves are ageless, meaning that they will be interesting and
absorbing to almost any age, even if the reading level itself is not at the
age of the student.
Additionally,
our program offers activity ideas, workbooks, notebooking, timeline building,
DVD suggestions and internet links -- resources that can be used or discarded
as they work or don't work for your student(s) particular learning style(s).This
variety of resources also means that a family can require older students to
complete/use more of the resources, while younger students do less. Students
can also work independently on projects or try to venture out on their own
on research or ideas offered in the guidebook or resources.
Some of our programs
are multi-level programs, that share some common resources, and split to offer
a set of resources for two age groups. These programs allow family work done
together to be a shared and memorable experience, while resources particular
to each age group are chosen for their ability to excite students right at
their grade level.
You’ll also find
that we offer a few “extension” guides for some studies. Look for guides for
“Older” or “Younger” learners that will offer you helps and ideas on how to
make a program work to fit all of your family members.
Finally, a range
of language arts programs are available to coordinate with the history or
science program that is right for your family, giving you quite a few options
for age groups.
How Does This Program Change from Level to Level to Meet the Changing Needs
of Students?
Our youngest
learners begin with programs that focus more heavily on crafts and do not
have as many different kinds of activity suggestions as older programs do.
"Animals and Their Worlds," for example, has fewer suggested videos and “activity-based”
ideas like games or cooking. Instead, this program focuses on giving this
additional space to alphabet activities written into the program, designed
for learning and reinforcement for young learners. It has less written work,
no independent work to speak of, and includes a few picture books (which our
other programs do not); primarily because this is written to target young
learners. You see, this program is specially designed to meet the needs and
interests of young learners, and to give them plenty of time to master reading,
which is their top priority at this time of their education.
As students mature,
the programs Amer 1, Amer 2, Adventures in the Sea and Sky, and Ancient World
4/6 all focus on interactive opportunities with written work as well, with
an emphasis on hands-on, experimental learning. Independent work is introduced
and gradually becomes a greater part of the program for middlers.
As we move into
our high school programs, the emphasis changes once again. These programs
focus on a balance between the hands-on experimental learning, research opportunities,
written work, great literature and discussion sessions. In short, our program
grows and changes as a students’s skills, mental development, and interests
grow over time.
What Kinds of Activities Can I Expect
& What Kinds of Supplies Will I Need? >
