Tuesday, January 20, 2015

The Best Math Books for Middle School Girls!

With a second daughter on her way into middle school level math, I pulled out these excellent books by Danica McKellar (Yes, if you're around my age, I bet you remember her!)

The Wonder Years!
However, this young woman did grow up and proceeded to become an expert in math education with a passion for inspiring girls to excel in math. 


"Math Doesn't Suck" (Click here for Amazon Link)  and
"Kiss My Math" (Click here for Amazon Link) are filled with humor, practical applications for math and clear explanations of all the easily muddled concepts in math and pre-algebra. 
Targeted for tween "girly girls," a lot of the content was not super appealing to my oldest daughter, but the teaching was clear and helped her a lot.  My very different youngest daughter lit up like a Christmas tree at the shiny "teen magazine" style covers and began to devour the books immediately with unbridled enthusiasm! 
On Amazon.com there are some new books by Ms. McKellar that cover algebra and geometry -- too late for my older daughter but I'm looking forward to getting these for Erin when she is finished with the first two!  

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

American History Reading List -- 5th Grade Spring!


This spring, my 5th grader is continuing her American History...
 There are so many great books out there that help bring this era alive, but I also wanted her to read about young people in adolescence that experience personal growth -- often overcoming an initially resistant attitude.  (My 11 year old is fabulous -- and she is very much a "tween" with her own stuff to overcome!) Being inspired by these characters will hopefully not only illuminate American History but will point her in some "growing up" directions in a positive way.

1)  George Washington: Our First Leader from the "Childhood of Famous Americans" series, by Augusta Stevenson.  This is a fictionalized biography of what "could have been."  Accurate?  Certainly not.  Some truths and facts sprinkled throughout?  Sure.  A way to liven up what can be a dry study of battles and generals and "whites of their eyes?"  Definitely.  Quick read, fun start to semester.  Wouldn't recommend a steady diet of this series but here and there is entertaining.

2) Dreams in the Golden Country:  The Diary of Zipporah Feldman, a Jewish Immigrant Girl from the "Dear America" series, by Kathryn Lasky.  I'm sometimes not a fan of serialized books created for kids but the "Dear Americas" are an exception.  They are a personal-feeling window into other people's lives that are a catalyst for understanding other cultural groups in America.  This one particularly grasps the hope that people felt coming here that anything was possible for future generations.

3)  The Ballad of Lucy Whipple by Newbery Award winner Karen Cushman.  Outstanding writing, strong female lead character who has difficulty accepting her family's move to California during the Gold Rush.  Her discoveries about California and herself make for an excellent read!

4) Calico Bush, Newbery Honor Book by Rachel Feld.  Orphaned in 1743, 13 year old Marguerite survives by becoming an indentured servant in an isolated part of northern Maine.  Suffering loneliness and hardship, Marguerite discovers how courageous she really is.  Fabulous, touching book!

5) The Perilous Road, Newbery Honor Book by William O. Steele.  The Publisher's Weekly review says "One of Mr. Steele's best books, an engrossing, realistic story of a Tennessee mountain boy who, during the Civil War, comes to realize that war is terrible no matter where one's sympathies lie."  I wholeheartedly agree with this assessment.  Uncomfortable at times: extremely important.

6) A Wrinkle In Time, Newbery Award Medal Winner by Madeleine L'Engle.  Can't go wrong with any of Ms. L'Engle's books!  An imaginative and deep look at the nature of good and evil in a fantasy setting.  The hero is a smart girl who doesn't feel she fits in -- like every adolescent ever!  My favorite book, my favorite author.  I hope my daughter loves it as much as I do!

This will take us to Easter and Spring Break!  So many adventures!

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

High School: Concurrent Enrollment in Community College


As requested, here is a description of the process we went through to enroll our oldest daughter in College of the Sequoias classes as a homeschooled high school student.

Note:  To even begin the process, the student needs a social security number (click here for info) and a state-issued ID card, available at the DMV.  (link: getting an ID card in California)

The first two steps can basically be done at the same time.  You need to complete the online COS admissions application for your student, (CCCApply click here) and fill out and turn in the Concurrent High School Permission Form.  (click here for PDF).
The permission form asks what classes student is eligible for -- I just covered all bases possible, stating "course not offered" as a reason.

As a homeschooler, with the permission form you will also need to turn in a copy of your homeschool affidavit and a high school transcript for your student showing a GPA of 3.0 or higher.  In all honesty, I don't use grades in my homeschool and, if I did, nothing would be less than an A because I would make my children re-do things until it was A work -- but I found some good templates on line to create a transcript.  This is my favorite (click here).

Once the admission process is complete, your student must use his/her COS ID number to take the math and English placement tests on campus (info here).  Assuming nothing has changed in two years, the English is a computerized test that takes students as far as their knowledge goes and then tells you what class they belong in.  The fact that my daughter tested out of the early college English classes has been very convenient because many other classes have English I as a prerequisite.  For math, you can choose to take a pre-algebra test or an algebra I test.  If your student passes, they may take the next math classes in the sequence.  My daughter took the pre-algebra test and has now completed Algebra I and II at COS. (math was/is the primary reason to kick her out of the house!)

When these things are completed, your student will be able to register -- AFTER everyone else and their brother's cousin's dog has registered.  This is the big disadvantage of being a concurrent high school student.  However, the trade-off is that the fees are waived by the state for the first 6 credits.  Every semester, I am tempted to haul my daughter off to take the CHSPE or the GED so she could register along with everyone else... but then those credit dollars... you can see the conflict...

Something that we didn't realize the first semester, however, is that "crashing" classes is acceptable and expected.  My daughter has gotten into every class she was wait-listed for simply by showing up the first day and getting an add code from the teacher.  Some classes have not even been open for waiting list by the time she could register, but it has worked out well when they are.

I'm often asked by other parents if I have worried about my 15-now 16-year old in the environment with older students.  This has really not been a concern for me.  I feel that education at home has prepared her better for life in the "real world" where there are many age/culture/values differences than anything else could have.  She approaches life with a bit of healthy cynicism and isn't easily swayed.  Perhaps if our home environment were less open and more cautious I would have been concerned, but halfway through the second year of this I am still feeling confident. 

Link to the COS Concurrent HS Student Page

Good luck!  Ask any questions you have in the comments below and I will try to answer!

Reading List: Books that are Friends, 8th Grade


My 8th grade son has decided that he'd like the "public school experience" for high school.  

I feel like Seinfeld saying, "not that there's anything wrong with that..." because I admit that it makes me slightly uncomfortable!  We made the decision to keep him at home because he always met expectations -- and if the expectations were ridiculously high, so was his achievement.  This has not changed, but many expectations come from within at this point, so his drive is his own. 
I am certain he'll be successful academically, and if the social draw ends up not being what he expects at least he will see that for himself.  So next fall, we are in for a new adventure!

But the questions in my own self have started... Have I given him all the things I think he'll need to be a successful human being with a joy for life and an ability to think and feel deeply?  We have studied philosophy, tons of history, music and art, as well as the science and math that he is naturally drawn to.  As I write, I'm listening to him speak Mandarin into the Rosetta Stone microphone, which he'll continue along with piano and musical theater when he starts high school next year.

So in a purely self-indulgent move, I have assigned him a spring reading list that reflects both books I loved at his age and ones that I enjoy now.  I hope that he will get hooked, feel friendship with the characters, want to read others by some of my favorite authors, and give us a place to connect as he moves into his next phase of life and grows more and more independent.  (As he should!)

THE SPRING "BOOKS THAT ARE FRIENDS" READING LIST!

5 books by Madeleine L'Engle:
   The Arm of the Starfish
    A Ring of Endless Light
   A Wrinkle in Time

   A Wind in the Door
   A Ring of Endless Light

L'Engle's works for young adults are timeless.  They capture perfectly the tension between dependent childhood and independent adulthood, and her characters make LOTS of mistakes.  Just like every real life teenager.  They also are able to positively affect the world in profound ways.  Good examples for any young adult.  He read "Wrinkle" several years ago, but it is my very favorite book, sooo... :)

Little House on the Prairie 
This one is more for my husband than for me, as they were his childhood favorites.  Our young man read one in the series several years ago, but never this one.  A quick read, seeing as he read "Shogun" last semester... but not everything has to be hard, right?
The Phantom Tollbooth... also from my husband's faves... a very funny book that honors smart kids! 

Steelheart by Brandon Sanderson.
Urban fantasy is not something I think my son has ventured into, and this is a great introduction, with characters up against enormous forces that are able to rely upon wits, ingenuity, and friendship to overcome impossible odds.

The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss
Modern Epic Fantasy, and one of the best I've read.  This first in the series is a lot a coming-of-age as well -- good for young men.

And finally...
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
A re-visit on a few, but like so many things, there is more depth each time these are read.  And I think he may be ready to tackle "The Last Battle" which has more solid and controversial theology than most people  realize!  I am excited to see where these take him and to talk about them.

Well-loved and often-read books are beautiful!