homework Archives - Character Ink https://characterinkblog.com/tag/homework/ Home of the Language Lady & Cottage Classes! Thu, 02 Jun 2016 22:37:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Sticky Notes = The Road to Success https://characterinkblog.com/sticky-notes-road-success/ https://characterinkblog.com/sticky-notes-road-success/#respond Mon, 01 Aug 2016 14:00:31 +0000 http://characterinkblog.com/?p=4868 Imagery. Word association. Similes. Metaphors. Word pictures. How we teachers all want our students to write with all of those stylistic elements! Last spring a couple of my son’s students got creative with an assignment to write about a physical thing in the room using stylistic elements that they had been taught that semester. Imagine […]

The post Sticky Notes = The Road to Success appeared first on Character Ink.

]]>
Sticky Notes = The Road to Success

Imagery. Word association. Similes. Metaphors. Word pictures.

How we teachers all want our students to write with all of those stylistic elements!

Last spring a couple of my son’s students got creative with an assignment to write about a physical thing in the room using stylistic elements that they had been taught that semester.

Imagine our delight when they wrote their imagery-filled paragraph about our beloved “sticky notes,” those little post-its that all Character Ink Cottage Class students mark their homework for the upcoming week. I think you will like it too–

Sticky Notes = The Road to Success

“Sticky-note time! Sticky-note time! Everybody loves it when it’s sticky-note time.” Half a pack gone in only sixty minutes. Hundreds of traffic lights stopping the lives of children. Red lights signaling imaginations to pause, to think fast. One by one, sticky-notes disappear. One by one red changes to green. Our brains speed forward: assignments complete. We get over potholes. The interstate is smoother. Sticky-notes thrown off, fall like confetti; land marks to success.

Save

Save

The post Sticky Notes = The Road to Success appeared first on Character Ink.

]]>
https://characterinkblog.com/sticky-notes-road-success/feed/ 0
Independent Work Lists for Junior High and High School https://characterinkblog.com/independent-work-lists-junior-high-high-school/ https://characterinkblog.com/independent-work-lists-junior-high-high-school/#respond Mon, 21 Mar 2016 19:36:15 +0000 http://characterinkblog.com/?p=4704 Now on to Junior High and High School! The concept behind the Independent Work List is that it helps a student become, well, independent. In that way, the chart/list/planner should grow with the child—more independence/less neediness. More responsibility/less spoon feeding from Mom. These will be in no true order–just some things that I want to […]

The post Independent Work Lists for Junior High and High School appeared first on Character Ink.

]]>
Independent Work Lists for Junior High and High School Students

Now on to Junior High and High School!

The concept behind the Independent Work List is that it helps a student become, well, independent. In that way, the chart/list/planner should grow with the child—more independence/less neediness.

More responsibility/less spoon feeding from Mom.

These will be in no true order–just some things that I want to re-emphasize from the younger ages as well as things that pertain only to olders.

1. Consider the document or chart that works best for your age child now.

Most kids in junior high and high school no longer want cutsie charts. Once you decide you want a genuine paper document, then you have to decide how you want it filled in:

a.  As he goes, he lists what he does each day, sort of a daily school journal.

b. You write in a planner each week for him for the following week (page
number, number of pages, lesson number, etc.).

c. You have a standard daily Independent Work List that you create in your
scheduling program or Excel—that you can customize when something
changes, etc. You print this off, put it on a clip board, and have him highlight
or mark off as he does things each day.

 

2. Consider if you are going to make his Independent Work List for him completely or if
you will have his input.

We liked to choose our high schoolers’ materials, schedules, lists, etc., with them, so that they have some input in the process–and to help model for them/teach them how to organize, prioritize, etc.

 

3. Still use some of the elements from the earlier suggestions (for younger kids) that are
universal, such as:

a. School is your child’s occupation. It is what he should be about during the
day.

b. Put the daily tasks in sections according to time of day or importance–and also in order according to when they should be done.

c. Have a system that works for you every day. Have his list on a clip board that he carries with him/keeps in his school area. Have him highlight as he does things. Have him leave it on your desk when he is done, etc.

d. Develop a “no exceptions” approach to daily independent work. A student doesn’t go to basketball, girls group, youth group, etc., until his daily independent work list is done.

 

4. Have blanks on the chart to add in any work from outside classes, music lessons, Bible quizzing, etc.

 

5. Put things that are not dailies where ever they go. This was always a little bit difficult for me.

a. Do twice weeklies go on Tuesday and Thursday (but Thursday is our lesson and
errand day…)?

b. Do three times weeklies always go M-W-F, even though Wednesday is our “cottage class day” and extras do not get done on that day?

c. This might take a while to get in the groove, but it is worth it to tweak things and make it work.

 

6. For junior high kids, consider that you might need smaller chunks (maybe two math
sessions at 30 minutes a day, etc.).

Again, you know your student and your family situation, so do whatever works best for you.

 

7. Consider if you want this Independent Work List to be his total chart/list for all aspects of his day at older ages:

a. Do you want to put his devotions, music practice, and outside work on there
too?

b. Do you want it to contain meetings/tutoring sessions with you?

c. Do you want it to also be his chore list?

 

8. There are some definite advantages to a junior high or high schooler having his day right in front of him in one spread sheet. However, this can also get overwhelming to some kids.

 

9. If you are using a “time” planner in which the time slots for each subject are written in, you might want to include times in which he meets with you, does chores, does lab with a sister, etc., so that he can see the big picture for how time fits together.

 

10. Consider switching to a start time/finish time approach and having him total up his time spent on school if he is having a lot of trouble with time management.

Seeing how much time actually got spent on important things and how much time got wasted can be invaluable in teaching older kids independence.

I hope that these posts have been a help to you. I can’t tell you how worth it, it is to implement independent lists!

 

LINKS

For a downloadable product with a dozen charts to use with various ages, check the store here!

Video: Independent Work Lists

Audio: Independent Work Lists

Audio: Using Your Planner to Get More Done

Audio: Overcoming Parenting Obstacles

Video: Using Consequence Pies

 

The post Independent Work Lists for Junior High and High School appeared first on Character Ink.

]]>
https://characterinkblog.com/independent-work-lists-junior-high-high-school/feed/ 0
Starting Out Right With Kids’ Homework https://characterinkblog.com/starting-out-right-with-kids-homework/ https://characterinkblog.com/starting-out-right-with-kids-homework/#respond Thu, 12 Sep 2013 16:29:00 +0000 http://characterinkblog.com/starting-out-right-with-kids-homework/ image clker.com Once school starts and the textbooks have been previewed, you can help your students get into good homework habits by doing their homework with them for a few weeks. Here are some tips along those lines:1. Taking the textbook preview furtherThere are a number of ways that you can take the previewing of textbooks […]

The post Starting Out Right With Kids’ Homework appeared first on Character Ink.

]]>

image clker.com



Once school starts and the textbooks have been previewed, you can help your students get into good homework habits by doing their homework with them for a few weeks. 


Here are some tips along those lines:


1. Taking the textbook preview further


There are a number of ways that you can take the previewing of textbooks that I discussed yesterday even further with your children for more comprehension of the material:


a. Do his first few assignments out of the book with him, pointing out the things again that you observed in your first preview. This will help him see that those things are not just good things to know, but also helpful for completely homework quicker and more accurately.


b. Help him prepare for his first test with his textbook and you by his side. Show him how he can use the glossary, sidebars, table of contents, etc. to quickly fill in his study guide or quickly determine what the most important aspects of the chapter are in order to prepare for a test.


c. As you are previewing a text (for the first time or an additional time), use a large sticky note to record what you find. Write the title of the text at the top, then make notes about what it contains as far as study and homework helps. Stick this in the front of his textbook and help him refer to it when he is doing homework or test preparation. You could even record a plus and minus system, such as



+++ means something is going to be really helpful—a +++ beside the Table of Contents, for instance



+ beside a word he writes in the front of his book tells him that this might be somewhat helpful—Example: +Some graphs



– No study questions at end of chapter—again, he can make a list in the front of his book (on a large sticky note), etc. 



d. Help him “label” different sections of his book with sticky notes along the edges. For example, you could put a yellow one at the beginning of each chapter and a pink one on the page that has definitions for that chapter, etc.






2. Prepare your younger student for textbooks by using user-friendly non-fiction books

Maybe you are not in the textbook stage with your kids; however, you can begin preparing them for those all important study skills that I described yesterday with quality non-fiction books. If kids at ages five, six, eight, and ten, learn to navigate around Dorling Kindersley, Eyewitness, and Usborne books (among many others), they will be heads and shoulders above other children who have only been exposed to fictional stories (more on the benefits of fiction later!). 

These outstanding non-fiction books have literally hundreds of topics that interest kids, but they are so colorful and alluring, you do not feel like you are “teaching” at all. Additionally, they have many aspects that your child’s future textbooks will also have: glossaries, Tables of Contents, sidebars, graphs, pictures, inserts, definitions, bold font, italics, etc. Reading these to and with your children when they are younger will provide a natural step into textbooks later on.


Note: We teach our students (in our home, our cottage classes, and in our language arts books) a simple memory device for remembering fiction and non-fiction:

Fiction=fake (both begin with f)

Non-fiction=not fake (both begin with nf)

The post Starting Out Right With Kids’ Homework appeared first on Character Ink.

]]>
https://characterinkblog.com/starting-out-right-with-kids-homework/feed/ 0