Getting Started with Homeschooling

Practical Considerations for Parents of School-Aged Children

© Beverley Paine

  Australian authored, designed and built for Australian home educators
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Evaluation Techniques

There are so many different evaluation techniques you can employ in your home education program it would be impossible to describe them in this book. Techniques are like tools; they can be used to great effect, or used badly with poor results. Often the fault lies either with incorrect selection or use of tool, rather than the tool itself. The following list can give you some idea of what is most used in schools. You can select ones you feel most comfortable with, or add your own.

anecdotal records

log books

achievement tests

discussions

interviews

aptitude tests

attitudinal measures

performance charts

creativity tests

basic skills inventories

rating scales

diagnostic tests

checklists

role playing

teacher made tests

projects

self-concept scales

student contracts

observational reports

student diaries

student work samples

assessment inventories

sociograms

teacher effectiveness measures

Organisation is the key to an effective learning program. Evaluation records need to be dated and filed in an ordered way to be most useful. There are several ways to collate and store records and children's samples of work.

If children are using a traditional school program where units of work are studied in each curriculum area, exercise books for each subject and child is the simplest and tidiest method. Each page of work is dated as work is done. This subject book can then be inserted into a cardboard pocket folder, which can contain texts the child is working from, and other information or equipment needed for the immediate tasks ahead. A cardboard pocket folder is good for storing all of the scraps of paper children write or draw on as well, or you can paste memorable work into a scrap book for each child.

A simple method of recording is by pasting into a special ‘year’ book information, flyers, brochures, photos and news clippings of events and excursions that are part of the learning program. Objective and evaluative comments beside each entry help to revisit the event later and tie it in with the overall learning objectives and goals.

For keeping records of your educational program organised, a binder with plastic sleeves is a very effective way of safely storing certificates of achievement, special events (news clippings, photographs, awards, invitations, etc.), calendar pages, television program schedules, club or association calendars, forward planning outlines and checklists.

With recording and evaluation your aim is always to keep it simple and effective. Storing vast amounts of data on your children’s progress, and work samples has some personal historical value in the home school, but may not appeal to you. There is no need to keep boxes and boxes of old books and educational artefacts stored in the attic, spare room or shed! A highly organised folder, and ‘year’ books are all you really need.

 

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Excerpt from Getting Started with Homeschooling, Practical Considerations
© Beverley Paine, 1997

 

The mother of three grown homeschoolers, Beverley Paine is the author of several books on beginning home education in Australia.
Her family began their home education adventure in 1986.
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Learn how to teach your children at home with Beverley Paine's Getting Started with Homeschooling Practical Considerations - Australia's premier 'how to homeschool' manual.

"The best thing I ever did when I started homeschooling was read this book.  It has all the practical stuff, but most importantly it encourages you to look at why you are wanting to homeschool, and what you are wanting to achieve. It will also show you that there are many different ways to home educate (from 'school at home' to 'natural learning'), and encourages you to find  what works best for you and your children. I still go back and look at it all the time." Nikki, ACT

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