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Showing posts from March, 2019

Which is the best form of parenting when homeschooling a child?

The overall development of children depends largely on the way they are brought up.   Parenting style affects the future well-being of the children as the brain is molded by the way parents treat them and manage them.  Parents that are strict Authoritative homeschooling parents prefer keeping complete control over the lives of their children.   Children have no right to question them and defying their parents can cause terrible consequences such as, the child being insulted, lectured, punished or shamed. Authoritarian parents believe strongly that their children should do well academically. They feel they are not doing their jobs well if their children are weak in studies. The parents are least concerned about the emotional wellbeing of the child.   They believe treating children in a tough way will make them strong. In fact, strict parents assume that their little ones are strong, and not weak. Research shows that children who are protected do not develop “ma

Step by step method of creating a Math Lesson Plan

One of the most overwhelming tasks for any homeschooling parent is to come up with a lesson plan for Math. However, it is not as complex as it seems.   The method mentioned below can be personalized as per different learning philosophies and styles. Decide the scope.   Smartest way of determining the scope is by using province-standard lists, scope and sequence of math curriculum, books about what a child needs to know, and the like. Basically, Math concepts are segmented into five essential strands: Number computation and sense, Geometry, measurement and spatial sense, data management, algebraic pattern, and probability. Construct a timeline. Plan out which concept will be introduced when in the Math curriculum .   For instance, adding, counting, subtraction, division, multiplication, decimals and fractions, make up computation and number sense.   For mastery learners, newer concepts can be taught every year, starting with counting in kindergarten and ending with decim