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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Types Of Recording

Usually when people consider recording and collecting samples of children's work they think about written work, or art and craft projects. Recording can be done in any media - video, audio tapes and photography will make a collection more exciting, and often broadens the range of learning activities if you encourage the children to do it themselves. It is important to remember, however, that recording should be an intrinsic part of the learning activity, not the reason for it!

In addition to collecting samples of the children's work (in all areas of their life - not just the so-called ‘academic’ areas), you and the children can provide comments or anecdotes related to the works to be recorded with them. Children can be encouraged to record some reflective comment next to or on their work. Often such comments reveal more about the child later than the piece of work collected!

Samples of work can become celebrations of learning, proudly displayed for awhile, before being carefully stored. Remember to always date samples.

For many home schooling families such collections form the backbone of their evaluation process, in combination with a diary or journal, calendar and the odd check-list as supplements. Depending on your personal style of writing, a diary can offer as much or as little information on your children’s learning processes as you wish, from a dry account or list of activities, books read, skills or content areas ticked off, etc., to a loving insight into your children’s developing personalities. It doesn’t have to be up-dated everyday, but regularity is a key feature of any diary.

A calendar can not only record what events are coming up in the month ahead, but also what you do each day. Some people have different calendars to record specific information on. For example, the pages of the television guide with watched programs highlighted, is a quick and simple way to supplement a more extensive record.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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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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