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Homeschool Australia K-12 Curriculum

Save time and simplify your homeschooling life...
Learn from experienced homeschoolers how to write your own curriculum. It really is that easy!

Use this website with Beverley Paine's Getting Started with Home Schooling - Practical Considerations to help you develop your own educational curriculum to suit your family situation, beliefs and lifestyle. The checklists can help you identify your children's current educational skill level in each subject area, as well as find any 'gaps' in their learning, plan what they need to cover or keep track of what has been learned.

Curriculum Pages Index

As you can appreciate this website is continuously under development... It's our aim to add pages on a regular basis in all curriculum areas: check back frequently. Feedback and comments welcome. We hope you enjoy the articles and activities and find the links and recommended resources useful.

Over the next year we will be working our way through each subject area and writing fresh, new content which will also be reproduced in a reasonably priced handy reference booklet from our Practical Homeschooling Series.

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Feel Good About Teaching Science

© Teresa, 2007

Whenever I'm asked to write, I put myself in the reader's head. And this time, that's you! It happens to be the time of year where our hearts and minds are on getting back to teaching and settling in for the new year. So let me guess.. as you search for the curriculum you want to buy you are excited about new lessons, seeing your kids eyes light up as they grasp a new concept or master something they've been struggling with. You've got new organizers or new information or a new plan and you feel excited about using it. And when you pictured these scenes, they are about English or Social Studies or Reading , but they are NOT about Science. And if they are about science, it's about an experiment you bought or a new kit or demonstrations. And let me guess, you bought all the other subjects and waited to buy science last. Or maybe you bought nothing at all because you just don't feel good about any of it. Are you questioning your curriculum, always searching for something else that will make science better? Do you feel inadequate to be teaching it and hope the curriculum you choose will do it all for you?

I hear you; I know it can be daunting. I taught high school science for eight years, have loved it my whole life and it comes easy to me. But because of the last four years of homeschooling, and dedicating myself to helping other homeschoolers, I've learned of your struggles. The most common question I'm asked is, "Which curriculum or text is the best?"

The cool thing about science is that it isn't creative or changing or subjective. Facts are facts. The basics don't change so all the curriculum will teach the same thing. The differences between them are in how the material is presented and that is very personal. You must choose what fits you and your kids best. And only you know what that should be. when I tell people this, I usually get disappointed looks. Might I suggest that if you constantly feel uncomfortable about your teaching science, perhaps your search should not be for the perfect tools or books but for peace about the subject instead? For I feel the search out there isn't likely to help you find peace. Until you make peace with science you might very well remain uncomfortable about it. So what can you do?

Luckily there are several things you can do to help you create joy about teaching science.

1. Begin by confronting your level of discomfort. Is it simply a lack of knowledge, intimidation, and fear or is it downright panic? If lack of knowledge is the problem then you have many options. High school text books in science are easy to read and understand. Pick one up and try it. Are you thinking that there's no way you can read at that level and understand it? Then you may be dealing with a fear of science. It's oaky, it's not your fault and you're certainly not alone in that fear. On my site you can find information to help you.

2. Teach the basics first . Contrary to what society has brainwashed us to believe, Chemistry is not an upper level subject any more than reading or math are. Chemistry is the mother science. A periodic table of elements should be on the wall and children of all ages, including toddlers should see it every day just like maps or a globe or the alphabet and books and numbers. It's what their world is made of. These elements are what make all of science happen. If they see it early in life, then just like everything else, it won't ever been intimidating or something to fear.

3. Teach the skills! It won't matter how much content your kids learn in science. What will matter in college and for tests and entrance exams and for making higher grades, will be how adept they are in the science skills. No age is too young to start; no age is too late to catch up. As a teacher I spent many classroom hours getting my high school kids caught up on the science skills. DOING science is much harder to learn and much more important than reading the content of science. I guarantee that if you help your kids learn how to do science, you will feel much better about their science learning.

4. Fail . It's the mark of a true scientist. Get over the idea that your experiments must get the results you want. Sometimes they do, sometimes they don't. In my 8 th year of college in my hundredth-something lab, I dropped my final product, 1.5 grams of a powder that took 3 hours to make. Did I fail the lab? No. Because I made accurate notes as I went, and measured all data and recorded it, I completed lab. Labs and experiments are not about results, they are about completion and looking at your results, no matter what they are. In your conclusion to the lab you then write your opinion on why you believe you got the results you did. Edison failed many times, as did Bell and Marconi and many other famed scientists. Failures teach you where to go next, how to try it again and push you to grow. Don't know how to write up a lab? Look on my web site under "free stuff" for instruction on how to write a lab report.

5. Relax. There's no educational emergency. You are not in a race. If you have a science lover you are teaching, they need the science skills. The rest of it, they will soak up. If your entire family dislikes science, teach the skills, let the curriculum do the rest. Litter your home with baskets of cool things from outside and a magnifying glass, with kids science magazines, with posters of sciency stuff. Then spend time on fun science activities like bird watching, shell and rock collecting, hikes and drawing nature scenes.

Once you ease your fears, get focused on the skills, gain some knowledge and relax you'll find that science becomes something that you and your kids look forward to each year. Your kids already like science, its natural to be curious.. help them have a wonderful time with science!

For free science lessons delivered to you bi-monthly, sign up for the free newsletter on Teresa's web site at: www.HowToTeachScience.com

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Pioneering members of the home education movement in Australia, Beverley and Robin Paine are passionate advocates of true educational choice for families. They began homeschooling in 1986 and three years later started the South Australian Home Based Learners network. Beverley continues to write for homeschooling newsletters and magazines as well as hosting several websites dedicated to promoting and supporting home education in Australia. Her aim is to demystify the education process and make it accessible to all parents. Enjoy Beverley's wealth of practical knowledge, homeschooling and unschooling tips and ideas through articles and books and online at www.homeschoolaustralia.com. Since the late 1990s Robin and Beverley have been building their home education publishing business - Always Learning Books - from home with the help of their son Thomas.

"Education is not a preparation for life. Education is life itself." John Dewey

Please note that the opinions and articles included in the suite of Homeschool Australia websites are not necessarily those of Beverley and Robin Paine, nor do we endorse or necessarily recommend products (other than our own) listed in contributed articles, pages, or advertisements.

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