This is a report we have sent to our LEA on being
made known to them. I have no idea if it has been accepted yet
but it is an example of what you COULD choose to supply them with.
Hopefully its fairly obvious that i consider her life to be her
education and that very little of this is "contrived"
as an educational experience - we mostly expand what starts accidentally.
We do have fallow, or consolidation periods where little seems
to happen but on reflection we realize much has changed. With
huge thanks to Janet who's "educational philosophy"
i used as a starting point.
Reasons for Home Education - The Child
We decided to home educate Frances when she was very young. Frances
was born with a cleft lip and palate and had almost no intelligible
speech at 3 years old. In addition she was very nervous and was
reduced to complete silence if she became aware that an adult
could not understand her. Frances is young for her year and would
have been only just 4 when her reception year started. At this
time, a large and noisy classroom would have been disastrous for
her and her hearing was severely affected by glue ear and she
was exceptionally defensive about her speech difficulties. Playgroup,
with its identical Foundation Stage curriculum provided an excellent
grounding for her in a caring and well staffed environment , while
leaving plenty of time in every week for her to be with us, following
interests of a more stretching nature, socialising and enjoying
playing and being with her family.
Frances is an exceptionally active child. It is hard for her
to be still even for a short period through the day so that even
story telling involves a lot of bouncing. I do not consider her
to be particularly unusual in this way, but we have discovered
that she learns best in the afternoons and evenings after she
has had time to run off energy. I feel sure that her level of
energy would be hard to accommodate successfully in a normal classroom
setting. Frances likes to be able to "do easily" anything
she attempts and her natural "learning style" is to
try something, take a step back and then, after a period of evaluation,
come back to it and do it easily. She is immensely focused when
she wants to achieve something and will often voluntarily sit
at an activity for several hours and on successive days. Forced
"learning experiences" however, are not so successful;
she is well aware if she is being manipulated towards a certain
goal. She has a very enquiring mind and a level of interest that
will question anything, ask intelligent questions and remember
what she has been told, or what she has found out.
Our Educational Philosophy
As our approach to Frances' education is largely opportunity based,
child centred and flexible, it is not possible to submit a timetable,
or to specify in advance the activities we will be undertaking.
She is given plenty of time to explore her own interests and we
make considerable effort to ensure that she has practice at essential
elements of learning. We strive to keep a balance between child
centred and directed learning. We listen constantly to what Frances
says and asks and try to provide full learning opportunities within
her interests. We believe very strongly that Frances is naturally
inclined to learn and that she can be trusted to do so. However
we are always on the look out for any gap that may arise and we
make the necessary adjustments to ensure that such gaps are filled.
Where a topic become popular, we strive to use it to access a
variety of "subjects" and opportunities so that a broad
educational value is achieved. Discussion plays a great part in
our approach.
She has full access to books, cd-roms, music, television and radio
and we will always discuss anything that she takes an interest
in. We feel that there is great benefit in most activities and
we look for ways to improve skills she will need in life in a
more imaginative way than simply forcing her to do something she
does not feel ready for. Most importantly we want Frances to have
a love of learning and investigating and feel that those skills
and the desire to learn deserve careful protection and encouragement.
We pride ourselves in giving Frances the opportunity to "learn
to learn" and feel that essentially that is more important
than the individual topics we cover, however interesting they
are in themselves.
Since deciding to Home Educate three years ago, we have taken
our decision very seriously. I have equated myself with the Charlotte
Mason approach (the system under which my own Junior School was
run), the Montessori approach and the National Curriculum. It
is our opinion that Frances experiences an education considerably
broader than the latter, but we do ensure that her skills broadly
match those of her school peers. We have no intention of following
the NC in any terms other than to ensure she has an ability level
with her school year, and so far she seems to be doing that with
ease. At a last check, Frances had an understanding of or beyond
most of the mathematical concepts expected of a child at the end
of year one and her literacy skills were on a par with those expected
of a child of her age.
Educational Report for Frances - Age 5 - 2003-2004
As per the legal guidelines set out in the leaflet you have sent
me, I have chosen to provide you with information of Frances'
education in terms of an Educational Report. As an example, I
have included a description with pictures of a recent and very
far-reaching project we have enjoyed on Henry VIII and the Tudors.
I am supplying this as an alternative to the form you provided,
as it is not applicable to our style of Home Education.
In terms of "time spent" on Frances' education, this
is difficult to quantify. We do not "stop" for holidays
and half terms, and much of our education is in the form of discussions
in the car, in the shops, during days out, on summer holidays
etc. However, we do have a period of 2-3 hours per day, 4 times
a week in term time when one younger sister is in nursery and
the other is having a nap - this time is set aside solely for
anything Frances would like to do; this may take the form of project
work, craft, computer time, work on maths, reading, nature study
etc On other occasions it is simply a time of household peace
when she enjoys playing time without interruption from younger
siblings. She has a bedroom to herself and spends considerable
time in the evenings looking at books of her choice, completing
artwork, practising writing and playing.
In terms of an "area set aside for teaching," this
implies a "school at home" environment, which we do
not have. However every room has books, pens and paper, toys,
maths manipulatives, craft stuff, computers and space to work,
to a greater or lesser degree. Frances uses the house and the
world as her learning environment - it is not necessary to contrive
one. We have a great number of cd roms (far in excess of the nursery
classroom her sister is in!) books that would furnish a small
library, various reading and maths schemes and a considerable
amount of conventional classroom equipment like maths rods, base
ten sets etc. We have broadband Internet access and the children
all have the opportunity to help me find the answers to questions
they ask as well as playing Internet hosted games on educational
and fun sites.
Frances has an active social life and plays regularly with both
Home Educated and Schooled friends. We attend two HE groups as
and when the topics interest us, Frances is part of an Ice Skating
team and has many friends there, we attend HE camps regularly
and we visit friends across the country for several days at a
time. She has recently joined Rainbow Guides and may take Ballet/dancing
up again in the near future. With two younger sisters, Frances
does not want for company and is generally a very sociable child.
It was significant to note at a recent wedding, that she was indistinguishable
in behaviour and confidence from any school child and played happily
in a group of hitherto unknown children all day.
Reading and Writing
Frances had a good basic grasp of some words well before she
was 4. Over the last year she has mainly consolidated this knowledge,
adding words from her daily life into the mix and using computer
games, magazines and favourite television programmes to assist
her. Recently she has acquired a strong understanding of phonic
sounding and is becoming much more confident at letter blends
and word construction. We have several reading schemes in the
house and a wealth of books - she looks at these with us or alone.
Her preferred method of reading practise is currently a set of
computer games called "Reader Rabbit". She will often
request one of these and will sit for lengthy periods, working
on word games and phonics. One method we have found works very
well is to make up matching cards and games using words. We have
a "library" system, where Frances chooses one special
book and we concentrate on its content as a focus for the week.
Frances picks words she likes and we use them for games, spellings,
recognition etc.
Frances is a reluctant writer, which seems to follow naturally
on from having been until recently a reluctant drawer/colourer.
We have worked hard on helping her with a pencil grip and fine
motor skills, using bead patterns, threading and sewing and she
has improved considerably. She has started to draw with confidence
and enjoyment and asks for words to copy. We encourage her confidence
by helping her to create pretend "parties" where she
writes the invitations, giving her printed sheets with names of
favourite characters and letting her make cards and letters for
family members. Recently Frances asked for the names of all her
favourite Queens to copy; I complied and left her to it and on
my return found that she had struggled with the formation of one
letter and had had the presence of mind to find a workbook that
could show her how to form it. I felt this showed a real understanding
of her own ability as well as how to go about finding information
she wanted herself.
Maths
Our approach to maths is to allow our children to explore the
way numbers and shapes work. We have plenty of Montessori style
manipulatives in the house which the children use at their leisure
for odds and evens work, volume work, tens and hundreds work etc
Recently Frances mastered counting from 1-100 and it was interesting
that while she found those numbers she had learned by rote at
playgroup hard to visualise and use constructively, she got to
grips very quickly the higher numbers that we learned by physically
working with a base ten set and number cards. Frances has a sound
grip of "swapping up" groups of units to tens, adding
and subtracting and is beginning to work with multiplication tables.
She enjoys using her abacus and number rods as well as a variety
of games on boards or on the computer. In addition we have huge
numbers of workbooks which we can use as puzzle books, Miquon
and Singapore maths schemes and a computer syllabus called Eduss
maths which Frances enjoys working on periodically.
Science
Most science work is currently of the kitchen and nature study
type. The children bake and cook regularly, we grew an extensive
collection of vegetables and herbs over the summer and we have
rabbits who require care which the children take part in. Most
recently we have joined The Wildlife Trust, which has a series
of "badges" children can work towards. The first one
Frances has chosen to do requires 3 pieces of artwork inspired
by nature. Frances took our digital camera out into our garden,
made a record of "Our garden in Autumn" chose which
pictures she was pleased with and retook those she was not and
took them to be developed. She is now working on a creative display
with these. We have had extensive discussion on why leaves die,
why the seasons change, why clouds are sometime white or grey,
wind and climate, types of trees and plants, why plants need flowers,
why insects need plants and the difference between air and gases
(sparked by opening a bottle of fizzy water!)
An interest in healthy eating recently provoked a range of discussions
on different foods, a good look through our cupboards, a shopping
trip, several Internet games based on food groups, some food group
identification using clipart photos on the web and a serious look
at our own diet. We are currently investigating a series of science
kits from The Young Scientist Club, which we may use next year
to widen our science exploration. In the meantime, sets of "Geomags"
have provided mathematical shape exploration and an interest in
types and properties of metal and magnets.
History and Geography
Most of this year has been taken up with an extended interest
in Henry VIII and the Tudors (see attached example of work) and
variously we have spent time looking at flags of the world, using
maps, discussing travel, discussing the issues involved in the
musical Miss Saigon and getting involved in a postcards from round
the world project with other HE children. We have World, UK and
constellation maps available on the walls at all times as well
as a picture timeline and plenty of books on all sorts of subjects.
As I am a book rep for two children's book suppliers, these change
frequently!
Religious, Moral and Personal Development
Earlier in the year, Frances developed an interest in her conscience,
mainly from the film Pinocchio. We have had lots of discussion
based on this and Frances' perception of what is "good"
or "right" and it has lead naturally on to a discussion
of God and a Christian way of living. Her interest in Henry VIII
has involved several trips to Peterborough Cathedral to visit
Catherine of Aragon's tomb and so we have had the opportunity
to examine some religious imagery and buildings as well as discussing
the finer points of death and burial. Additionally, this interest
has provoked several conversations about Catholicism, Protestantism
and the reformation, which take some doing with a 5 year old!
Churches have been a focus of natural interest and Frances has
grappled with the idea of faith in something we cannot see or
know exists and its relevance to her conscience. Most recently
she chose a book of bible stories as a library book and we have
spent time working through them, discussing the stories and their
relevance to her life. I have tried to employ the idea of narration
with the bible stories and am interested to see that Frances is
retaining a solid concept of these stories. She is currently interested
in Old Testament and Moses in particular, and we have some worked
planned on Egypt, babies in baskets, Princesses and wet nursing,
amongst other things. We also found some bible story sticker and
puzzle books in the local supermarket and are looking forward
to using them with our bible.
Art
We have a wide range of art materials in the house and they change
frequently. Fran has full access to paper, pens, scissors and
glue at all times and enjoys painting, junk modelling, sewing,
Hama beads, collage and photography. Frances has an interest currently
in how shapes make pictures so we have been working on drawing
using basic shapes and filling in detail.
In addition we have started to spend some time on art appreciation,
in particular we have looked at Holbein's portraits and line drawings
(as well as other Tudor portraiture) and spent some time using
Dover publication books on costume through the ages. Part of Frances'
interest in costume involved using scrap fabrics to create a Tudor
outfit, complete with all the layers it involved and full volume
of material. Frances then played for the afternoon in her costume
and was amazed by the weight and difficulty Tudor children were
expected to cope with. As a further project, we have bought material
and a pattern and as going to investigate dressmaking and make
a medieval dress.
Physical Education
Frances ice-skates twice a week and has done for 3 years. She
has coaching with the head coach there and is expected to work
hard, for allotted periods of time and conform to normal coaching
standards i.e. accepting criticism and striving to improve her
skating. She is good friends with many of Mrs Lock's young skating
team was the youngest solo performer in this years Ice Gala. She
is currently Grade 3 standard and spends each Saturday morning
in a conventional class group with 10-20 other children. Additionally
the children swim regularly, have climbing frames in the garden
and visit soft play areas and parks frequently.
Information Technology
Frances is competent with the computer and has a wide range of
games and software available to her. She uses the computer every
day and chooses her own cd-roms as applicable to her interest.
In addition we run as children's email list, monitored by parents
and only available to children whose parents know each other.
They are able to send group emails and discuss topics. Frances
currently requires help to read and type the messages but is very
excited by them and puts huge effort into composing her own emails.
She has been a competent one fingered typist for sometime, uses
upper/lower cases easily and has a good understanding of computer
keys and mouse functions.
Other
Frances loves to dance and pretend and has ample opportunity
to do so with friends and sisters. In addition she and her sisters
have developed a real interest in Spanish language, via their
favourite TV programme Dora the Explorer. To bolster this enthusiasm
we have purchased Usborne Spanish language books and cds and have
been practising sentences and vocabulary in the car as well as
using simple sentences around the house.
MuddlePuddle
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