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Thaleia

Homeschooled Through High School: Taking the Fear out of Creating a Transcript

March 21, 2013 By Thaleia Leave a Comment

Homeschooled Through High School:

Taking the Fear out of Creating a Transcript

Elizabeth Curry Ordinary Time

Those of us who homeschool or who have been homeschooled through high school know that IT IS VERY Possible.  But how? Many parents and students look towards high school with fear and trepidation instead of being joyous as to how far into the journey they have come. I realize that families homeschool for a multitude of reasons and that each family is unique, but questions still arise when the words high school are mentioned!

I admit it. I was a wreck about my oldest child starting high school at home. It wasn’t the subject matter. It wasn’t my ability to teach high school level subjects. It wasn’t that I was concerned about her social life. It was all about the transcript and whether or not she could get into college. And she was only fourteen!

For our homeschooling up until the dreaded freshman year, we were fairly relaxed in how we made it work. We did a lot of unit studies and read a lot of books. Much of what we learned about was decided by what one or all of us were interested in at any given moment. Sure we did Math and English on a daily basis, but this was just a small portion of what homeschooling looked like in our family.

But I just couldn’t wrap my head around how we could continue to learn together as a family and still come out at the end with a transcript that would be acceptable to colleges. I felt as though we had to completely change our view of school for my daughter or she wouldn’t have a chance at getting into college. It made me sad and panicky and I secretly hoped she would come to me and declare without a doubt that she never wanted to go to college so we could all just get back to life as normal.

I was tied up in knots about it for several months until a good friend went to a conference presentation on creating high school transcripts and shared two key pieces of information with me. Just having these two new ideas in my head allowed me to take a deep breath and realize that the world was not ending and that I could continue to enjoy homeschooling even through high school.

The first key piece of information was that transcripts could be organized by subject instead of by year. This was huge for us. One specific thing I was worrying about was that my daughter, who didn’t love math and for whom math didn’t come easily, was going to take more than one year to complete Algebra. (She ended up with credit for Algebra, Geometry, and Algebra 2, but she completed the classes in somewhat unconventional order and was even working on two math classes at once for a while.) How do you show credit for work done, yet not have it seem weird that it took multiple years to complete it? This is why a subject organized transcript worked so well for us. It was able to communicate what she had completed without raising any eyebrows about the way in which it was completed.

The second piece of information was the idea of creating the transcript based on what the student has done instead of deciding ahead of time what the student should do. Let me explain. I have my high school age children keep fairly detailed records of just about everything they do. There are the traditional methods of learning… books read, textbooks completed, documentaries watched… that sort of thing. But there are also the non-traditional ways of exploring and learning about ones world. They kept track of volunteer work, hobbies, and places they went. Pretty much if they did it, I want them to write it down.

When it came time to create my daughter’s transcript, I looked at what she had done and worked backward. The rule of thumb is that one Carnegie unit (one unit of high school credit) equals ~120 hours of study. It turns out that if you have children who are interested in a lot of things, it isn’t difficult to rack up the credits. For example, my daughter started volunteering in the sound booth at our church when she was a Freshman. She learned how to set up everything, mix sound using the board, and how to trouble shoot. She became quite interested in this and learned all she could and did some outside reading that the professional sound technician gave her. Between the hours of study she did on her own plus the hours of volunteer work actually doing sound, she earned two high school credits. So on her transcript under the science category I documented the classes, “Sound Technology 1” and “Sound Technology 2.”

With this new found knowledge we were free again to learn as we had always done and high school ceased to be the scary and overwhelming thing that I had made it out to be. I will add that my daughter did indeed get into college… with scholarships to boot. She is now a sophomore and is doing very well. Our somewhat unconventional approach to learning doesn’t seem to have hindered her in any way.

As you begin to think about creating your own child’s transcript, here are a few things to keep in mind.

 

  • Start early. If at all possible, don’t wait until their junior or senior year to try to recreate what they have done. You won’t remember it all. Plus if you start your child on documentation right away, it will be easier to keep track of what things contributed to the credit. Some schools want a list of textbooks used, or if textbooks weren’t used how the credit was earned. With good written records, this documentation is easier to produce. (We did not need this explanation of coursework, but I know other homeschoolers have been asked for it.)
  • If my child completed a full high school level textbook, I awarded them the credit for the class and didn’t worry about keeping track of hours. This is certainly the easiest path to take, though (in my opinion) somewhat uninspiring.
  • Pay attention to hobbies and interests outside of traditional schoolwork. My son has earned a science credit in Apiology because he was interested in keeping bees. He took a bee keeping class, filed all the appropriate governmental paperwork to keep a hive, built the hive from a kit, and then raised bees and harvested the honey over the course of one spring and summer.
  • Every so often take a look to see if there is a class you can create based on what your child has been doing, simply by adding just a little bit more. For instance, if your child has been doing a lot of babysitting or volunteer work with children, perhaps you could turn that into a “Child Development” credit by adding in some reading and perhaps a written paper or two on the experience.
  • Don’t be afraid to give academic sounding names to your child’s learning. Each of my children will graduate from high school with a “Life Skills” credit. This means that they have demonstrated to my satisfaction that skills needed to live on their own. They know how to cook, clean, grocery shop, compare prices, ask for help from others when needed, manage a checking account, have a knowledge of credit cards and their appropriate uses, how to do laundry, etc. This is a completely legitimate credit to give, assuming that they do indeed have this knowledge.
  • Realize you’ll probably leave off some of what your child does. Once we reached 33 credits for our daughter, we stopped adding to her transcript. She had the basics plus some extras covered and to add more could have looked odd. Because our children learn on their own time and at their own rate, it is quite possible for them to have more hours of learning than a traditional high school student. We decided to stop when it seemed like a reasonable amount.
  • In IN, each semester is counted as 1 credit as opposed to 1/2 a credit which is how most other states figure it. Consequently, Indiana high schools would seem to require double the amount of credits than other states, but it is more of an accounting question. (Please check your individual state’s requirements as the final authority since states do differ slightly in how credits are counted.

 

I’m so glad I learned all of this early in my first child’s high school career so that I could enjoy her last four years at home instead of constantly being in a state of worry. Our time with our children is so short; don’t let anxiety rob you of the time you do have.

 

Elizabeth Curry Elizabeth Curry and her husband live in the Chicago area and have been homeschooling their 10 children for the past 15 years. They love the freedom that homeschooling allows and look forward (usually) to the next 15 years. Elizabeth blogs about her adventures of raising and homeschooling her large family at www.ordinary-time.blogspot.com

If you would like the transcript template that the Curry’s developed please contact her via her blog:

Filed Under: Homeschooled Through High School, Homeschooling Tagged With: credits, high school, transcripts

Pears from Heaven: Our Homemade Baby Food Story

March 20, 2013 By Thaleia 1 Comment

Pears from Heaven:

Our Homemade Baby Food Story

pears from heaven Our homemade baby food story

I was pregnant, almost 10 years ago, with Eldest when I was heading to my mom’s house. I drove past a local city park and noticed a large pear tree dropping fruit EVERYWHERE! No was picking the fruit up or even seemed to notice it being there. Bees and flies were the only ones that seemed to notice. I COULD NOT let all those pears go to waste!

The frugalista in me decided to turn around and go back home for containers to pack up the pears. I grabbed a backpack on wheels, plastic grocery sacks, and any other heavy-duty sack that would hold all the pears that I could fit into them.

I trotted down the hill with sacks in tow. I loaded all the bags till they were full and then I lugged them back up the hill to my van. Off I set to my mom’s house to cook and can all the FREE baby food pears from heaven I had just acquired!

We had lots and lots of pints of pureed pears for our new baby! We also canned 30 pounds of squash we had gotten with farmer’s market food vouchers. Needless to say Eldest and Princess ate very well. We had extra for pumpkin bread and pumpkin pie.

I would also stock up on produce when on sale and steam it, puree it, and freeze in ice-cube trays for when it was needed. Yes, I did buy baby food, but most of it was almost free with coupons! (This was awhile ago before everyone started to make a fuss about all the additives in baby food,etc.)

I have never seen that tree produce even one pear since that year and seems that the pears from heaven tree happened just at the right time for us!

 

Just a quick reminder to enter to win some very nice products for pregnant moms OR mom’s of babies & young children at the BUNDLE OF JOY giveaway event!

bundles of joy giveaway

More great offers:

Glow Bug Cloth Diapers

Free Nursing Covers (a $ 35.00 Value) at UdderCovers.com, use Promotion Code Some2offer3 TODAY!

Check out my AMAZON DEALS & FREEBIES!

Linking up with:
BabyLinkUp500pxWaste Not Want Not Wednesday

Filed Under: Baby Products, Freebies, Frugal Living Tagged With: baby food

Amazon and Kindle Deals 3/20/2013

March 20, 2013 By Thaleia 1 Comment

Amazon and Kindle Deals 3/20/2013

I love free stuff and really great deals and I thought my reader’s my enjoy them, too! Yes, I know there are TONS of places to find free kindle books, but sometimes I still miss them! Not sure how often I will post freebies and deals.

I was super excited to see more Kids Look and Learn series for FREE today!

We just bought two new Nextbook Premium 7 Tablets with Google Play  that have Android 4.0 and will run KINDLE-SQUEAL!! You do not know how exciting it will be to actually be able to read/use all the books I have been collecting (all 516 of them,lol). I am hoping this will help with our homeschool, homesteading, and emergency preparedness efforts even more!

Here’s my first edition of great stuff on Amazon! These titles were FREE when I downloaded them, but prices CAN CHANGE by the hour on Amazon. Just double-check to see if it’s free or the price you want to pay BEFORE buying:

 

 

 

This post contains affiliate links which allows Something 2 Offer to earn a small percentage of all items purchased through Amazon.com at NO extra cost to you! Thanks for your support:)

Filed Under: Freebies, Frugal Living, Homeschooling Tagged With: audiobooks, ebooks, kindle

Repp Stripe Necktie Collection by PUCCINI

March 19, 2013 By Thaleia Leave a Comment

by PUCCINI

Repp Stripe Necktie

Review:

Super handsome ties at super great prices from Bows N Ties. My hubby has not bought a new tie in a very long time and when I saw this promo I knew he would enjoy trying a new tie. Some of the color descriptions were a little off putting in reading them BUT when my husband opened the package he said, “That is one sexy tie!”

The tie had a really nice feel to it and was easy to tie. The material wasn’t super slick and troublesome like satin ties. It was a great balance of texture and durability. I received the Aubergine Purple & Berry Pink Striped Tie and chose to wear a black dress shirt. Other options would be a white dress shirt with suit coat or for a more casual look khakis.

one tie two looks

I could see some of this collection of ties being a great addition to any man’s Spring Wardrobe while others would be for Summer or Fall. The colors would be great for weddings, prom, or Easter dinner. The Repp Stripe Necktie Collection by PUCCINI are a great value for the money starting just under $10.00.

If you want to keep up with all the latest styles and any specials follow Bows ‘n Ties on twitter!

striped-tie-grass-green-white

Description:

We are excited to feature PUCCINI’s New Repp-Stripe Collection that is available in 8 trendy colors. Each tie is made from a unique microfiber fabric that looks and feels identical to silk but is more wrinkle and stain resistant. Each tie features two unique colors paired with a contemporary striped design. To see all available colors, please see PUCCINI’s New Repp-Stripe Collection.

Disclaimer:I received one or more of the products mentioned above for free using . Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will be good for my readers.

 

Filed Under: Reviews

My Birthing Center Experience

March 16, 2013 By Thaleia 2 Comments

My Birthing Center Experience - Alldonemonkey.comLove the idea of a home birth but not sure you’re that brave? Want the security of a hospital without the pressure? Try delivering in a birth center!
When you are expecting your first child, there are so many decisions to make about the kind of birth experience you want: Who do you want with you? Do you need a birth coach? Do you want an epidural? Would you consider a water birth? And the list of questions lengthens with each pregnancy book or website you obsessively read.

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Read More »

Filed Under: Controversial Topics, Family Tagged With: birth story, pregnancy

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