Getting Started with Homeschooling

Practical Considerations for Parents of School-Aged Children

© Beverley Paine

  Australian authored, designed and built for Australian home educators
Index
Homeschool
Australia

What To Record

Recording can include just about anything you do in your daily life, not just those things normally associated with ‘school work’. It will save you a lot of time if you become clear about what it is you really need to have a record of, and for you to develop a system of recording which is simple, quick and well organised. It also needs to be done in a style you feel most comfortable with, or your resistance to keeping records will cause much frustration and feelings of failure!

What you record may include anything, although preferably not everything, your children do in the process of learning, either spontaneous, organised or solicited. Some parents often find themselves keeping most of the art and written work of their children, as the children’s output is sometimes low in these areas, particularly for boys. Experience has shown home schooled children tend to produce less ‘paper’ work, but when they do, it is generally of a very high standard. Other parents will select only the best work, or examples which demonstrate milestones, new abilities, or desired outcomes of activities. A collection of such samples provides a basis for comparison over time, allowing you all to see how each child has progressed. It is important not to compare children against each other. Such comparisons are not relevant to each child’s learning process and can be harmful to developing self esteem.

Most of the children’s activities will not involve written or drawn work, and you may need to be creative in recording the most significant of them. Craft work can present particular problems if you are short on room to store finished products. Try encouraging the children to record their masterpieces as photographs which they can then date and caption, and may launch them into photography as a hobby!

The questions children ask offer an important insight into their existing or modified concepts and understandings. By keeping a record of these questions in your journal or evaluation folder you provide yourself with an extremely useful aid in planning future and follow up learning opportunities. Jot them down at a convenient time.

Anecdotal records are an excellent way to record, and often take the form of a journal. Journals, diaries or calendars become more useful if they record children’s comments and responses as well as simply listing the children’s activities. Anecdotal comments reveal your reactions or insights into not only your children’s learning processes, but how you are learning from being the educational facilitator.

Such recording is made easier for you if you place a notebook, or your journal, open somewhere in the kitchen or family room with a pencil or biro next to it.

Recording and evaluation plays a pivotal role in educating your children at home. It may seem tedious and time wasting at times, but as you take the time to record, you are learning about how your children are growing and developing, and how they perceive their world. You are also reflecting upon your own role as their parent and educator, and how you can adapt and improve your methods to provide the best education possible. All this takes conscious effort and time.

Recording and collecting selected products of learning - the finished or half finished projects, workbooks, art or craft items, photographs of activities or events, etc., helps with immediate evaluation and planning, but can also provide a long term evaluative perspective.

Looking back on what your child did a month, a year or more ago, can illustrate how the child is building concepts and progressing with their acquisition of skills and knowledge in a way impossible to determine or remember from day to day. This long term view is invaluable at allaying nagging doubts about the effectiveness of your home learning program.

Not only will your recording efforts delight you when looking back over them in the years to come, your children will treasure revisiting their younger selves time and time again. Children enjoy reviewing collections of their work, which tend to evoke more detailed memories than any photograph album!

previous page

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.
© You are invited to reprint the above article provided you include the information in this box as you see it here.
Please visit Homeschool Australia for more original content by Beverley Paine.
No time to visit the site? Sign up for Beverley's regular Homeschool Australia Newsletter for inspiring tips, activities, quotes and links to articles and great resources.

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

ISBN 1876651008, 132 pages... $22.95

available from
ALWAYS LEARNING BOOKS

 

click here to visit Australia's premier homeschool website, Homeschool Australia Homeschool Australia Newsletter click here to visit Beverley Paine's South Australian Home Education Network pages SA HE Network click here to view stories, poems, art work and more by Australian homeschoolers Unschool~Kidz! click here to learn more about Beverley Paine and visit her other websites About Beverley Paine button

Disclaimer: The information on this page is opinion,
written by someone without legal qualifications.
Always seek qualified legal advice if in any doubt as to your legal position.