Sue G in PA wrote:... I know they are supposed to do the work independently (with the exception of the boxes that aren't) but I guess I am used to being more involved...
In reading through your post above, and thinking through what you shared, I think it is key to understand that "independent" does not mean we check out of teaching.
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Otherwise, we would truly be "out of the loop". As teachers of our dc, we are still responsible in some way for each part of the plans, even as our children mature. Yet, that involvement changes as our children get older.
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To show you what I mean, I'll share an example from last year.
Last year in RTR, there was one part of the plans I was not vigilant about fulfilling my teacher's role each day with my ds. It was the Bible Quiet Time box. I did not have him say his verses for me, and I did not check his Common Place Book for his copywork of them. I "spot-checked" this somewhere in the middle of the year, and I found Wyatt had stopped his memorization and copywork of the verses about 2 months earlier. But this box was "independent", one might say. Yes, but "independent", I soon realized, does not mean devoid of teacher responsibility. I learned this the hard way, but I have not forgotten that lesson.
To give you another example of what I mean...I had a teacher in high school that did not correct our work. Everyone in the class knew this. Days - even weeks - would pass, with no comment or correction of our work. I'm sure you had teachers like this in your past as well! Everyone's work suffered. We all knew the teacher did not care about our completed work by his actions, and we soon followed his lead and did not care either. I remembered that teacher and felt sad when I did not choose to be responsible for Wyatt's Bible Quiet Time box in RTR.
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This year in RevtoRev, I am happy to say that I have fully embraced my changing role of teacher responsibility, and I am striving to be very in touch with every aspect of Wyatt's learning. He appreciates this because he can tell I care about every facet of his learning, and he knows he will be held accountable. His work has been excellent because of it. I have not had to spend much extra time for this, surprisingly. It has been an excellent year.
So, I agree with you, you are quite right in your assessment above.
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We DO need to be involved in every aspect of our dc's learning. Though boxes are marked "independent", there truly is no completely independent work, without some teacher interaction, as we are ultimately responsible for our dc's education. HOD's guides plan for teachers to do their part, and what I really appreciate about the daily plans, is I receive clear guidance about how to go about this, and the manner in which I do this has much variety. This makes our interactions varied and fresh!
To give you a feel for how this looks in our home this year, I will try to do a rundown of my teacher responsibility in RevtoRev here... (I know this is much more than you're needing to know right now, but I share it in hopes that it might be helpful in giving other families a glimpse into how I stay involved with my child's education each day.)
Reading about History - Written Narration follow-up - Open RevtoRev to the "Written Narration Tips: Teacher's List" in the Appendix. Make sure I understand my teacher's part in written narrations. These 3 pages I read prior to starting school, and several times throughout the year as a good reminder of my teaching role. In the day to day of teaching, I follow the steps for "After Writing a Written Narration", and I reference "Written Narration Skills: Teacher's Part" and "Written Narration Skills: Student's List" in the Appendix as we go through my ds's written narration together. I have my ds read his written narration out loud to me, as that is the first step of "After Writing a Written Narration", give encouragement (as that is the second step), and then we work through the "Written Narration Skills" list, whichever step he is on within that list. I then read the key idea out loud, which is a nice recap of the history reading.
Reading about History - Detailed Oral Narration follow-up - Open RevtoRev to the "Narration Tips: Teacher's List" and "How to Narrate: Student's List" in the Appendix. Make sure I understand my teacher's part and the student's part in oral narrations. These 2 pages I read prior to starting school, and several times throughout the year as a good reminder of my teaching role. In the day to day of teaching, I follow the steps within the daily plans. I choose one paragraph from the noted pages of the history reading as a starting point for my ds's narration, set the timer for 4-6 minutes, utilize the Narration Tips in the Appendix as needed, have Wyatt look up and read aloud the Bible passage for the Biblical application part, and discuss the question/topic noted. I then read the key idea out loud, which is a nice recap of the history reading.
Reading about History - United States History Atlas follow-up - I ask any questions noted in the plans, and have Wyatt orally answer. If it is a day with no questions, I simply ask a brief informal question "Did you find 'x in the History Atlas? Or, were you able to locate 'x' and follow the path of 'x' well today?" He almost always responds with more than "Yes", as he was interested in what he did. I then read the key idea out loud.
Reading about History - Period Artwork study follow-up: Ask the questions provided in the plans. Wyatt orally answers. I like to look at the painting too - it is usually quite poignant. I then read the key idea out loud.
Storytime follow-up: Ask the questions. Wyatt orally answers.
History Project follow-up: Make sure he's done everything in the box he was asked to do. Give it back to him, help him fix anything he needs to, compliment him on what he did well, and of course EAT IT
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if it was something he made.
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And, you guessed it, I read the key idea out loud.
For the boxes of
Poetry and
Worthy Words follow-ups: Skim the poem or primary source document. Ask the questions provided. Wyatt orally answers. Comment, as I'm usually personally moved somehow by the poem
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, and read the key idea.
For the boxes of
State Study,
Independent History Study,
Geography, and
Timeline follow-ups: Check any written work, ask any questions in the guide, read the key idea.
Research follow-up: Have Wyatt read his cards to me. Comment - these men are INTERESTING! Correct any spelling errors together.
Bible Quiet Time follow-up: Have Wyatt say all of his verses for me. Check workbook "Hidden Treasures". Read key idea.
Biblical Worldview follow-up: Read and discuss it together, sharing what struck each of us. Go through journal instructions if it's a journal day, and write comments after he's journaled.
Drawn into the Heart of Reading follow up: Do my part as noted in Teacher's Guide. 99% of the time I have Wyatt read 2 pages out loud to me too, even though the guide doesn't suggest it at Level 6/7/8 as it helps keep his oral reading skills sharp (an area he used to struggle with).
R & S English: I ask 5 oral review questions and help him with these as needed. He reads the lesson on his own. I recap the highlights from what he read, especially any "Remember" boxes. I get a markerboard. We go through the oral review together. I choose 1 section (around 7 problems) for him to write out his answers. I stay by his side this entire lesson. It goes faster this way, and I am available to help as needed.
Math: I read the Textbook out loud. We each have markerboards and work the problems together. I stay by his side for the independent part and am available to help as needed. Again, it goes faster this way.
Science: I check his logbook and his hands-on work. I write comments on the top. I read the main answer(s) from the Teacher's Answer Key, as they are a super recap of the theory learned.
Inventor Study: Oral narration - follow teacher guidelines in Appendix again. Timeline or picture - check written work. Informally comment. Written narration - see previous comments. At end of all of these, read key idea.
Exciting World of Creative Writing: Read it together. Discuss. Get him started. Be near as needed for help. Have him read his work out loud. He edits as he wants as he reads. I edit it. Help him fix whatever needs to be fixed. Write short comments.
Dictation: He studies. I read aloud in phrases. Correct together using key.
Music Appreciation: Read through box together. Stay by to help as needed. Great fun!
I do these follow-ups in chunks of time, not one at a time spread out through they day, so it feels as if we are simply sitting down to discuss his work and dialoguing about what he's learned. I find he can now answer my questions, do oral narrations, etc. whenever I meet with him; it is not necessary for him to do these directly after the readings. This is a gain that comes with age.
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So, we have a few teaching block times, and a general "check-up" time, where we do multiple follow-ups together in a row. This is not cumbersome, but has actually become very enjoyable, and it does not take a lot of time, but actually saves time as he makes sure he is well prepared for our meeting time. He knows I will follow-up on everything, so he is ready.
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He will usually ask for a few minutes' notice to prepare for his oral narration on inventors, especially if it is science, as he gets up early to do science, and I don't have him narrate until later in the morning.
The guide makes it easy on me to make sure I am holding myself accountable for my teaching work and my ds accountable for his learning work. I skim the books (usually a page in the beginning, the middle, and the end), read the key ideas, and have Wyatt hand me the book open to the first page he read as we do the follow-ups. I have done a better job of doing "my part" this year, and as a result (no surprise), Wyatt is doing an even better job of doing "his part".
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We are also finishing in a very timely fashion. When I am diligent about checking up on our dc, I find they are diligent about their work. So, I share all of this to say, if you have not added a "check-up" time or two into your daily schedule, I highly recommend doing it - it has made our time together very focused, and we are very in touch with one another every day.
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It also SHORTENS our school day because it does not allow poor work habits to form.
What was exhausting to me in the past was finding dc had not done their work properly, had skipped portions of their work, had dawdled for lengthy periods of time, or had many corrections to make that had piled up over a day or two. Checking up daily on all that they do has fixed most of that for me. Now, it has become such a habit that it is no longer extra work for me. The children come prepared and expect to be checked.
I can empathize that the thought of trying to go back and fix things can be overwhelming - not to mention, fixing any poor work habits too that tend to crop up and take time to undo. The good news is it is fixable, simply by adding in some checkpoints each day. I encourage you that things can turn around more quickly than you think! HTH!
In Christ,
Julie