|
| |
 For 29 Years The Teaching Home Has Been Providing Home-School Families Information, Inspiration, and Encouragement from a Distinctively Christian Perspective.
Co-Editors: Veteran Home-School Sisters, Sue Welch and Cindy Short
|
|
|
|
|

From NASA. Earth is
entering a stream of dusty debris from Comet
Swift-Tuttle, the source of the annual
Perseid meteor shower. Although the
shower won't peak until August 11th and 12th,
the show is already getting underway. Earth passes through the densest
part of the debris stream sometime on August
12th. Then, you could see dozens of
meteors per hour. For sky watchers in North America,
the watch begins after nightfall on August
11th and continues until sunrise on the 12th. Veteran observers suggest the
following strategy: Unfold a blanket on
a flat patch of ground. Lie down and
look up. Perseids can appear in any
part of the sky, their tails all pointing
back to the shower's radiant in the
constellation Perseus. Get away from
city lights if you can. There is one light you cannot
escape on August 12th. The 55% gibbous
Moon will glare down from the constellation
Aries just next door to the shower's radiant
in Perseus. The Moon is beautiful, but
don't stare at it. Bright moonlight
ruins night vision, and it will wipe out any
faint Perseids in that part of the sky. The Moon is least troublesome
during the early evening hours of August
11th. Around 9 to 11 p.m. local time
(your local time), both Perseus and the Moon
will be hanging low in the north. This
low profile reduces lunar glare while
positioning the shower's radiant for a nice
display of Earthgrazers. "Earthgrazers are meteors that
approach from the horizon and skim the
atmosphere overhead like a stone skipping
across the surface of a pond," explains Bill
Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment
Office. "They are long, slow and
colorful – among the most beautiful of
meteors." He notes that an hour of
watching may net only a few of these at most,
but seeing even one can make the whole night
worthwhile. The Perseids are coming. Enjoy the
show! See Science.NASA.gov
for more information.
Free E-mails from HSLDAHome School Legal Defense Association
produces several informative and helpful
newsletters – available for members and
nonmembers. HSLDA Alerts and Information
Urgent action alerts and other information
for the homeschool community. HSLDA's Weekly Update
Weekly updates on what's happening at
HSLDA and in the world of home
schooling.
Homeschooling Thru
the Early Years
Regular encouragement and guidance for
families who are homeschooling pre-school
through middle school children.
Homeschooling Thru
High School
Regular encouragement and guidance for
families who are homeschooling through high
school.
Homeschooling Your
Struggling Learner
Past experience has shown that the parent
is the best teacher for a child who is
struggling with the learning process in any
way. The goal of the monthly newsletter is to
help equip parents to identify their child's
struggle and teach their child successfully
at home ... and have fun doing it!
Home School Heartbeat Daily
Daily transcripts of the Home School
Heartbeat radio program along with links to
the online audio and special offers. @home
Our @home e-vents are like attending an
interactive homeschool workshop right in your
own living room. As part of HSLDA's
commitment to equipping and encouraging you
in your homeschool endeavor, we've designed
our @home e-vents to bring you an exciting
lineup of interesting and helpful speakers
and topics in the comfort of your home.
The Foundation Report
News and Information on the work of the
Home School Foundation. The Foundation's
mission is to preserve parental freedoms,
promote home schooling, provide assistance to
needy home schooling families, and support
like-minded organizations.
HSLDA Political Updates
News and info related to the limited
political activity conducted by HSLDA. These
emails will include messages such as
endorsement of a candidate (HSLDA members
only) or info on topics not directly related
to homeschooling. The frequency of messages
to this list will be approximately one per
month.
Generation Joshua
News and info related to the Generation
Joshua program.
Sign
up for any or all of these free e-mails
online.
 HSLDA offers homeschooling families
a low-cost method of obtaining quality legal
defense that gives them the freedom to
homeschool without having to face legal
threats alone. (Use discount
group number 299142 for $20 off your
membership fee.) We trust that you find this newsletter
informative and encouraging. • See our
archives
of more than 200 newsletters online. • To change
your e-mail address, follow the
“Update Profile / E-mail Address”
link at the end of this e-mail. • Add our
e-mail address publisher@teachinghome.com
to your address book, contact list, or safe
list. • If this
issue has been forwarded to you, sign
up to receive your own free subscription. Your e-mail address will never be sold or
given to anyone, ever! • Encourage
your friends and support group to sign
up to receive this free newsletter. • Use the
link at the end of this e-mail to forward
it to a friend. The Teaching Home
Back Issues
|
Always-Relevant
Teaching Home Back IssuesFifty-one back issues are offered online
or by mail order. The information, inspiration, and
encouragement packed into
each back issue never goes out of date. They
are always
relevant, applicable to your needs today. Order securely online. What Is an In-Law?
After we had studied the pioneer period
and the westward movement, I had read a
couple of Wild West tales. We had also
recently studied antonyms. One morning soon after my two brothers
were married, presenting me with new
sisters-in-law, my 7-year-old son and
I were alone in the kitchen. He
asked, "Mom, are outlaws bad guys?" I said,
"Yes." With excitement and relief in his voice he
replied, "Then in-laws are good guys!" Submitted by Rebecca M., Georgia. Send your humorous anecdote to publisher@teachinghome.com.
Immerse your family in God's truth through
systematic reading and study of God's Word. See The Teaching Home's Bible reading
schedule online at TeachingHome.com.
Christian Music Online 24/7!Listen to beautiful traditional, sacred,
and inspirational conservative Christian
music (commercial free!) when you tune in to
Abiding Radio at www.AbidingRadio.com. Also: Old
Christian Radio.
Because we have been separated from God by
sin, Jesus Christ died in our place, then
rose to life again. If we trust Him as
our Savior and Lord, He will forgive our sin
and give us eternal life. "For God so loved the world, that
He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him shall not perish, but have
eternal life." (John 3:16) "The Lord ... is patient toward you, not
wishing for any to perish but for all to come
to repentance." (II Peter 3:9) We encourage you to share our e-mail
newsletters in the following ways: 1.
Newsletter. Forward the entire
newsletter to your friends and support group. 2.
Articles. Reprint articles in an
e-mail or print publication. 3. The
Internet. Articles may be posted on
the Internet by observing the copyright
policies below and including an active link
to our website: www.TeachingHome.com. Please observe the following copyright
policies when you reprint our material: •
Editing. Reprint articles
unedited and in their entirety. •
Byline. Include "by Cindy Short
and Sue Welch," unless another author is
listed. •
Copyright Notice and Link. Add:
"Copyright 2009 (or year published) by
www.TeachingHome.com. Reprinted by
permission." Send Your Newsletter
by Constant Contact! |

We use, and recommend, E-mail Marketing by
Constant Contact to send you this newsletter. For information about how you can use this
service to send out your newsletter and to
receive a free 60-day trial, please use our
affiliate link to go to www.constantcontact.com. To advertise in this newsletter, request
information.
Copyright 2009 The Teaching Home
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
Use the Content of This Newsletter We encourage you to share the
content of our e-mail newsletters. See
"Free Reprint" information in
sidebar.
Follow That Link! See something underlined in blue
type?
Click it to find more information and/or free
resources.
Back-to-Home-School, Part 1
Help Someone Start Home Schooling
–
Maybe Even Yourself!
1. Reaffirm Your Decision To
Home School 2. Set Goals and Objectives 3. Set Up Class Arrangements
for Highest Efficiency 4. Select and Assemble Your
Curriculum
Recommended Resources
• Doorposts: Parenting
Charts
• Common Sense Press:
Language Arts; Science
• Birch Court Books:
Home-School Books
• Basic Christian
Education: Bible Based Curriculum
Greetings,
Are you all ready for school to start? In the next four issues, we will review
some of the back-to-home-school basics that
you might use as reminders for yourself
— or to help someone else start home
schooling. Look around at your church, support group,
relatives, or neighbors. Is there
anyone who would appreciate a little help in
considering or starting to home school?
Here are some ways you can help. Tell Your Story
Realistically give your convictions and
reasons to homeschool, as well as your
experience – both challenges and
successes. Provide InformationPoint your friend to information.
The Teaching Home website offers
hundreds of articles, including:
• The
most frequently asked Questions
& Answers
(also in Spanish). • A
series of articles on getting
started. • A checklist
for starting a school year. Give a SampleSchedule a day or a week of home schooling
together (call it a Day Camp or something
fun!). You could do a simple unit
study, work on basic skills, and/or explore
just one subject area of interest. A field trip on the last day would round
out a good sampling of home-school
opportunities. Of course the best way to help someone is
to pray for them and be there to answer
questions and give encouragement! We trust that this newsletter will help
you and/or a friend lay a good groundwork for
a successful and enjoyable school year
ahead! Cordially,
The Pat Welch Family, Publishers
Pat, Sue, Heather, Holly, and Brian
The Teaching
Home is a home-school, family-run
business operated in our home since 1980.
|
|
|
|
The Bible Has the Answers!
|
Parenting charts from Doorposts will help
you:
 • Establish Biblical
standards
for
discipline
• Encourage godly
behavior
• Be more
consistent
• Point your
children to God's
authority and
wisdom
• Be more united as
husband
and wife in
your parenting
"The If-Then
chart revolutionized our family almost over
night. Suddenly we could go to the
store – or anywhere for that matter
– and actually enjoy having our
children along. They thrived on the
Bible-based security and consistency ..."
– A satisfied
customer
| 1. Reaffirm Your Decision
To Home School
Your decision to home school should be
based on your determination of God's will for
your family. Seek the Lord through His Word and pray
for His promised wisdom, guidance, and
strength. Then agree as husband and
wife on
this important decision. Consider the Home-School Advantages
Teaching and training your children at
home can provide the optimum opportunity for
your children's spiritual training and
character development as well as their social
and academic welfare. As you look at your mission statement and
goals, you will see the many ways that home
schooling is a good, if not the best, way to
achieve them, including: • Spiritual.
Bible training and Christian worldview for
all subjects. • Academic.
Individual tutoring, independent thinking,
and proven results. • Social.
Family unity and closeness, and guided
social skills. • Character
Development. Discipline, training,
and good habits. Remembering why you are teaching your
children at home will provide the conviction,
confidence, and commitment that you will need
in order to persevere during difficult times. These reasons will also help you explain
your home education choice to others,
including your children. Many home-school families have found it
beneficial to write out their decision to
home school (this could be in your mission
statement) along with a list, or summary, of
the reasons why they have made that
decision. Make Legal Arrangements To Home
School
Avoid potential problems by making the
following arrangements. • Know
your state’s
law. • Contact
your state
home-school organization to learn how to
comply with your state’s law. • Consider joining
Home
School Legal Defense Association.
(Use discount group number 299142 for $20 off
your membership fee.)
Three Easy-To-Use, Highly Effective
Series
|
Learning Language Arts Through
Literature. This fully integrated
language arts program for grades 1-12
teaches: • Phonics
• Grammar •
Reading • Writing
mechanics • Creative
writing • Spelling
• Vocabulary • Thinking
skills and more. Complete
info and samples.
The Great Science Adventures. Nine
books contain activities and basic content
appropriate for grades K-8 - perfect for
multilevel teaching! Complete
info and samples.
Wordsmith. Self-directed programs,
cover all the basics and forms of good
writing for grades 4-10+. Complete
info and samples. |
2. Set Goals and Objectives
Goals help keep your family focused on
what is really important, rather than letting
the immediate or otherwise good opportunities
crowd out the best. Your Family Mission Statement
Start with a family mission statement,
outlining your values, vision, and purpose
(see Newsletter
#80). This need not be a long, hard, or
complicated procedure. You can start with
God's mission statement for us (Love God and
others, Mark 12:29-31) and expand on
that. Setting Goals for Your Home School
Goals form the detailed plan that will
enable you to fulfill your mission statement
(see Newsletter
#81 for more information on goal
setting). You might start by asking, “When our
children leave our home to begin their own
families . . .” • “What kind of people do we want
them to be?” • “What values do we want them to
embrace?” • “What knowledge do we want them
to possess?” • “How do we want them to
behave?”
Long-range goals for your children's
education and training might include the
following. Spiritual Goals • Knowledge of God and His Word • Salvation • Love and obedience to the Lord,
spiritual growth • Love for others resulting in
evangelism and service • Character development and
discipline
Academic Goals • A Christian world view • A solid foundation in the basics • An excellent, well-rounded
education • Confidence and independent
thinking
Social Goals • Family unity • Social skills, good manners • Life skills: practical preparation
for adult life
Set Specific Objectives for Each
Child
Now you can break down these general goals
into objectives for each child to reach in
the coming school year. Take an inventory of each child's
knowledge, skills, aptitudes, interests,
learning style, and character in light of
your goals for him. You can do this in
several ways. • Informally.
Simply write a few notes from your everyday
observations of each child on a notebook
page. • Testing.
Use
results from standardized tests. • Alpha
Omega Publications' free online
diagnostic and placement tests. • Scope
and sequence. Check off the skills or
knowledge that your child has attained.
Free online: A Beka
Books, Bob
Jones University Press, World
Book, or your
state's testing preview site. The specific objectives you set for each
child will take him towards the long-range
life goals you have set.
Outstanding Products To Create a
Curriculum –
Or To Enhance Your Own Packaged Curriculum
|
 This is a sample of
the many resources that can benefit your
family. (Click on number for info.)
1.
How to Get Your Child Off the Refrigerator
and on to Learning 2.
Making Brothers and Sisters Best Friends 3.
Miller Family Series 4.
Fun Projects for Hands-On Character
Building 5.
What Your (First, Second, etc.) Grader Needs
To Know 6.
Created for Work: Practical Insights for
Young Men 7.
Handwriting by George 8.
Mary Pride's Complete Guide to Getting
Started in Homeschooling 9.
Lessons in Responsibility for Boys
/ See more at:
Birch Court Books Free Media Mail Shipping with $20 Purchase www.birchcourtbooks.com
Free catalog. 800-655-1811 N7137 County Hwy. C, Seymour WI 54165
|
3. Set Up Class Arrangements
for Highest
Efficiency
Teaching several of your children together
with the same material at the same time can
be the most efficient use of your time and
effort. There are many possible variations and
combinations of multilevel teaching
techniques that can work for any home-school
family. Consider the following. Separate Classes
• For
basic skills such as reading, handwriting,
and math during the early grades. • For
a student who needs individual attention. • For
an older student who can work
independently. Combined Classes
• For
geography, history, science, literature, and
Bible. • A
large family, with a wide range of ages,
could have two group classes, an older and a
younger. Present lessons in an amplified manner
with explanations and extra resources that
enable all children to understand. Combined Classes and Subjects
• For
most of your subjects, using unit studies
that integrate literature, history, science,
Bible, and other subjects around a theme.
Your Success Is Our Goal! Over 25 years experience serving
homeschool families.
|
Bible Based Curriculum Full Service Homeschool Program –
with Personal Academic Assistance
• Easy To Use –
for Parents and Students • Effective for all Ability
Levels • Diagnostic Placement • Individualized Curriculum • Record Keeping Service • Reasonable Rates • Accredited Diplomas
Basic Christian Education 7511 Palestine-Union City Rd., Greenville OH
45331 Toll Free: 866-567-2446 Call for a Free Catalog or Visit Our Website
Today! www.BasicChristianEducation.com
|
4. Select and Assemble
Your Curriculum
There truly is not only one right way to
home school or one best curriculum for
everyone. One of the advantages of home education is
its great flexibility. There are many
excellent educational methods and materials
from which each family can choose to meet
their needs and preferences. Whatever your situation, there are
multiple solutions that can make home
schooling a blessing to your family. How you use your curriculum can be as
important as which curriculum you
choose. A wonderful curriculum that
stays on your shelf will do your family no
good. On the other hand, a simple,
basic curriculum used conscientiously along
with reading, enriching experiences, and
normal daily living can produce an excellent
education. • Consider using
elements from a variety of approaches
including traditional textbooks, worktexts,
the classical approach, the principle
approach, unit studies, books, and life
experiences (see Newsletter
#82).
• Consider using
a variety of media to add interest and
motivation for all your children, and at the
same time enhance each child’s learning
according to his preferred learning style.
Include books, printed materials, videos and
DVDs, supervised Internet studies, computer
software, educational games, tools and
manipulatives. • Buy
or borrow any materials needed in addition to
what you already have (see The Teaching
Home's Resource
Directory.) Do Not Be Overwhelmed
Don’t worry about making a
“huge mistake.” You can
give your children a good education with
practically any curriculum, and you will
learn what works for your family by
experience. Do not become overwhelmed by the many
choices available to home educators.
Instead, approach them like a smorgasbord and
choose what looks good to meet the goals of
your family. Rely on the Lord’s
promised wisdom and strength. “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him
ask of God,
who gives to all
generously and without reproach,
and it will be given to him.” (James
1:5-6a)
“Therefore let us draw near with
confidence
to the throne of
grace,
so that we may receive mercy
and find grace to
help in time of need.”
(Hebrews 4:16) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
We need your help!Please help us make this newsletter better
by letting us know what we are doing
correctly, where we need to improve, and
topics you would like addressed.
E-mail us today!
|
|
 |
| |
|

|
|