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Author Topic: We Can Do by Moshe Kai with guest Robert Levy discussing Saxon Math.  (Read 409413 times)
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nee1
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« Reply #315 on: May 12, 2013, 03:22:28 PM »

Mummyroo,

Someone once shared this short, yet interesting article titled ''Parents are you ready to teach your children Arithmetic?'' Link to the entire article - http://www.eagleforum.org/column/2000/mar00/00-03-29.html.

An excerpt from the article:

Quote
The schools appear just as determined to force fuzzy math on children despite its obvious failures and the opposition of scholars and parents. In Illinois, parents have clashed with schools over one of these "exemplary" courses called "Everyday Math," or "Chicago Math" because it was produced by the University of Chicago Mathematics Project, complaining that the curriculum neglects basic computation.

Last August, parents in Plano, Texas filed a lawsuit against their school district over another of these Department-approved courses, "Connected Math," accusing the district of failing to give their children basic math instruction. In December, parents in Montgomery County, Maryland kicked up vigorous opposition to Connected Math even though the district was being enticed into using it by the prospect of a $6 million federal grant. 

Another of these Department-approved courses, "Mathland," directs the children to meet in small groups and invent their own ways to add, subtract, multiply and divide. It's too bad they don't know that adults wiser than those now in school have already discovered how to add, subtract, multiply and divide.

Critics charge that these fuzzy math programs, which are touted as complying with "standards," do not teach traditional or standard arithmetic at all and actually give the word "standards" a bad name. They are based on such theories as that "process skills" are more important than computational skills and that correct solutions are not important so long as the student feels good about what he is doing.

The arguments for fuzzy math are that it is supposed to spare children the rigors of teacher-imposed rules and teach them that all they need is a calculator. Fuzzy math omits drill in basic math facts, fails to systematically build from one math concept to another, and encourages children to work in groups to "discover" math and construct their own math language.


My guess is that the ``inventive'' spelling phenomenon follows along the lines of ``discovery'' math. So rather than kids being taught spelling rules, they are now told to ``construct'' or ``invent'' or ``discover'' their own spelling.  LOL 


« Last Edit: May 12, 2013, 03:24:21 PM by nee1 » Logged
Tamsyn
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« Reply #316 on: May 12, 2013, 03:32:35 PM »

Utah says that Saxon math is inadequate.  Constructionist math is great.   mad   My brother's math class changed mid-year and my mom changed her mind about letting him do public school.  He is now okay with that.  Math at the public school isn't fun for him anymore.  So if "fun" really was their primary goal, they failed there too.  Anyway, this is something going on in my neck of the woods.

http://www.utahnsagainstcommoncore.com/stem-is-dead-in-utah-courtesy-of-the-usoe/

« Last Edit: May 13, 2013, 01:12:17 AM by Tamsyn » Logged

MummyRoo
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« Reply #317 on: May 13, 2013, 07:09:42 AM »

Quote
"Mathland," directs the children to meet in small groups and invent their own ways to add, subtract, multiply and divide.

How things change - I seem to remember getting into arguements with my A level teacher when a friend and I would work together to try and figure out how to do the problem (because neither of us understood the textbook explaination she gave us)  rolleyes

I do think exploring rules and figuring out solutions to problems are fantastic skills to have, but not at the expense of actual learning! How about they teach the kids the proper algorithms that their parents know and understand and only then give them a small part of the class (or an occasional lesson) to explore other ways to do things. At least they would be able to check their answers, then!

Or maybe there should be a compulsory course in common sense added to teaching degrees  LOL

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GeniusExperiment
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« Reply #318 on: May 13, 2013, 07:57:15 AM »

This thread is eye-opening. Luckily, I think in the UK things are much better than the US (and the government is trying to go back to a 1950s style national curriculum which I think is the right thing but the teaching unions are up in arms about it). But still everywhere we're fighting the same problems. The private schools here are quite good and tend to work 1-2 years ahead of the national curriculum, so you would think you can trust them, but recently I had an experience that really shocked me. Friends of ours (very smart educated couple, the equivalent of Rhodes scholars in their country) have a great daughter at a top private school (not the absolute top but pretty good), she's 9 years old and among the top students in her class. We were there with our toddler, they started playing with scales and she weighed herself at 23kg and I told her my daughter was 14kg. Then I just asked for fun "so how many more kilos do you weigh?" and she couldn't tell me, first she thought about it for a while, then she ran to get her calculator and I said "come on, 23 - 14, no calculator, what's the answer?", then she started guessing... "12? 10?", then she went into her room, came back and told me the correct answer (she probably typed it into the calculator in the next room). I was so shocked. I was thinking am I later going to be paying $30k per year for a fancy private school and aged 9 my daughter can't do a simple problem that in the 80s any 7 year old could do? Now when I choose schools I will always ask at what age they introduce calculators (and I hope there is a school that doesn't use them at all!).

And the modern textbooks are a disgrace, I agree. I actually just ordered the first hardcover edition of Saxon Math 54 used on amazon (for $4 :-) ) after reading this thread, I'm worried in a few years time you only get some modern version. I experienced this with Latin textbooks. i loved the Latin textbooks introduced at my school when I was 10, it had 50 lessons, everything was in Latin, black on white with a small beautiful drawing depicting the story. it started out with simple stories like Aesop's fables and other short Roman/Greek myths, then went into the history of Rome, then short excerpts from comedies and poems, and then legal texts, Seneca's letters and so on. This was good for about 4 or 5 years, doing one lesson per week. it was so perfect and no-frills that last year I decided to buy it before it is phased out. to my horror, I found out it's not available online and probably out of print. Then I went to the bookstore that sells the Latin textbooks for the school I went to, but they only had modern textbooks. I checked them to see if they were equally good and was horrified that it was full of colours, text boxes, all in English with little pieces of Latin here and there, and texts written by the editors (rather than real Latin texts) about things like "going to the market", "what houses in Rome looked like" and everyday things like that, just like modern language textbooks.Luckily I found my old edition of the textbook back home when I visited my parents and took it to London with me (along with an old school Ancient Greek grammar book). It's so sad that they are trying to make everything more interactive and fun and in the process, they just confuse everyone. I don't know how I would ever learn Latin with a modern textbook. In my time, you could pick up a Latin grammar book of 90 pages, and it was so concise that when you had memorised all 90 pages, you knew all there was to know about Latin grammar. Now you can read 300 pages and still have no clue about anything. So I decided to teach my kids Latin myself with my old textbook because I am sure even at the nicest private schools it's going to be a total disaster nowadays.



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Mandabplus3
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« Reply #319 on: May 17, 2013, 11:14:59 PM »

Oh phew. Both my 9 year old and 7 year old got the answer with no calculator.  big grin my son even started to figure it out but he had to leave with daddy. I shall see if he gets it later tonight Wink I would be devastated if I was spending money on education and my 9 year old count work that one out in her head!
$4! Bargain! My shipping is $36 on top and I still think they are worth the money!
Definitely ask about the calculators but reword your question. Here in Australia they HAVE to introduce calculators in grade 1 as part of the curriculum. My kids got an " introductory lesson" which involved me buying a $12 calculater, the teacher showing them how to turn it on, do a simple sum and then shelve it til high school! Lol perfect lesson!  LOL you just need to ask when they begin using calculators for regular computation during math lessons and make sure it isn't before grade 7 at least.
Very  few schools teach Latin these days at all. There is one school near us that does, I wasn't at all interested in having my kids learn such and old and unused language, so overlooked the school quickly. Boy would I reconsider that decision now knowing all I know. They teach a classical education...which i used to think meant outdated and boring. Oh well, we live and learn. I am keen to start teaching them some Latin route ( root?) words but haven't found a simple text for it. We just want a word a day type text. A basic coverage to help cement the French, Japanese and Spanish and english they are learning. ( ok dabbling in  smile ) check if the book you have it out of copywriter. You may be able to share it around.
Keep collecting your Saxon books you will be quite happy with the results from using them. We certainly are. The school my kids attend has a REAL meaning C point average grade. ( C is the grade you get if you are working at grade level and passing, A and B are above grade level marks and rare) my daughter doing Saxon is sitting on an A- she could get higher but they haven't actually tested her on anything higher than a B, so they are assuming her abilities based on that. Her teacher has commented that she doesn't always understand HOW my daughter gets to the answer but if its right she isn't going to re teach her another method and confuse her. (Wooooohoooo!) but that she often just KNOWS the answer and although that is great we need to encourage her to show her working out. This year it's not so important but for high school they get marks for the working out and marks for the answer ( yep even if the answer is wrong the working out gets you points in your tests) so we will need to work on that over time.
This discovery fuzzy math is a perfectly acceptable way to teach math.....to 3 and 4 year olds only!  LOL

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Robert Levy
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« Reply #320 on: June 02, 2013, 02:08:59 PM »

"We told her that we wanted our son to learn how to spell, and we wanted him corrected in class. She stated she would not do that because it would damage his self-esteem."

First, sorry all for being such a slacker, I needed some time off...

Anyway, the above quote from Nee's posting (May 9) is very enlightening.  The word brainwashed is used a lot by critics of our education system and I try to stay clear of it.  But I'll use it here, but not in the usual way.  What this quote tells me is that the teacher is brainwashed into thinking that she is an absolute expert, above reproach, and that parents are a bunch of dimwits.  And that is true in the vast majority of cases, as this hapless parent found out.  It is futile to get into a discussion of methods or curriculum selection with them, they will simply tune you out and do whatever it takes to get you out the door.  As far as they're concerned, they have the degrees, the training, and the experience to teach properly.  Having read Thomas Sowell, I knew this was not the case from the beginning, which is why I only attended one parent-teacher conference during the 7 years or so that David was in his Christian schools, and only then because the teacher (a real basket case) demanded both parents show up.

The bottom line is that your kids' primary education (math and reading) has to be done under your control.  Public schools are not under parental control because their money comes from government, so that's who they answer to (and sometimes, as we learned in Texas with CSCOPE, that is may not even be the case).  Private schools are somewhat better because they know you can walk away, but the major issues with public schools rubs off on them to - and often due to other parents.  I may have mentioned it before, but my wife was a substitute at one of David's Christian schools.  Now I still remember from 40+ years ago how happy I was when I saw a "sub" because I knew it was a day off.  But not with Susan - she had the kids work in class, do homework, and was about to test them (she had the class for a week).  Then she got fired, because too many parents complained...

You really have to do it yourself, or do it through a learning center which doesn't claim to be a school in any way.

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Robert Levy
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« Reply #321 on: June 02, 2013, 02:30:58 PM »

To GeniusExperiment,

I don't know anything about the Jakow Trachtenberg system of speed math, so I could only find what you found.  Regarding the faith method, it's interesting that you mentioned it as stopping your progress, as it very nearly stopped mine too.  In my case, it was getting into complex analysis (for engineering, beyond Calculus).  You have to simply forget about understanding anything when you go into that world.  An example is Laplace Transforms.  You start with a differential equation from the real world that's understandable, then you do a Laplace Transform, do some algebra, and what you get makes absolutely no sense at all.  But then you do an Inverse Laplace Transform and enter the real world again and your answer makes sense.  So why do the Laplace Transform in the first place?  Because the problem is either very difficult to solve in the real world, or impossible to solve - but you go into a system that makes no sense, then come out of it, and you easily get the right answer.



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Robert Levy
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« Reply #322 on: June 23, 2013, 01:57:19 PM »

Not much posted here lately, so I'll add a bit.  In meeting with several Brill moms recently one thing we struggled with was figuring out was how kids could spend 6 to 7 hours per day in school, and learn next to nothing.  We wondered what they were doing with their time, when we parents can double or triple the speed of their development with around 3 hours per day of concentrated work (and no training), which is even possible with the kid still enrolled in school.  For example, as I've mentioned before, David was in 2nd grade when we started on Saxon (Saxon 54), and we got through 4 grade levels (through Saxon 87) in one year.  He did this while enrolled in school full time, traveling to visit relatives around the country, going skiing for a week, and doing some things that other kids do at that age (karate and piano).

So I'll list a few things, some I've likely mentioned before:
1) Summer Vacations (2 to 3 months to forget things)
2) Field Trips (lots of fun, but no educational value for young kids)
3) Substitute Teachers (understandably) unable to pick up the work
4) Non-Academic Subjects* - like art, music
5) Premature Academic Subjects* - like science and history
6) Watching Movies
7) Diversionary Curriculum*
8 ) Physical Education*

*see below for more info


Non-Academic subjects:  I think are just to tweak the kids to see if they have any talent in those areas.  At least that's the best that I can come up with.  Touching on these areas might be ok, but dedicating a large chunk of time means other subjects are missed.

Premature Academic Subjects:  These are academic topics that are not doing the kid any good at his age, and will be fully repeated later, as in high school.  There is nothing gained by these subjects in grade school and little gained in junior high.  In David's case, he didn't have Biology or Chemistry until he was in college (most people have them in high school), and did well enough in both - so if he had them earlier, even in high school, the additional benefit would have been marginal.

Diversionary Curriculum:  This is my term for teaching core subjects in a way that will not work effectively for most (maybe all) kids.  I call it "diversionary" because reading is still called reading and math is still called math, but they are taught in ways designed to fail (I would use weaker language - but the people at the top levels have had enough time to figure out that they simply don't work).  So, for reading, it is the use of Sight Words, instead of phonics, from Kindergarten through Third Grade.  For Math, it is "Discovery Math", sometimes called "Fuzzy Math", often with calculators, and never with memorizing of addition and times tables or long division.  So, in both cases, the parents are told that their kids are learning math and reading, so they typically walk away happy.  For the parents that did their own research and are on to this scam, they are told that the these new ways are "tested" and "proven" and the results won't be seen immediately, just "trust us".  That probably takes care of nearly all of those parents.  Of course your kids are only kids once, so it's too late when these parents realize what's really going on.

Physical Education:  It seems that we are constantly being told that kids need PE and without it they turn into fat, useless, blobs.  Well I don't think that's the case because exercising actually burns very few extra calories, compared to just sitting around doing nothing (for example, to burn off an extra McDouble, an average person has to walk 12 miles or run about 4 miles - that's a lot for a small sandwich), since but I'm not a nutritionist, so I won't go any further.  As to the kid really needing the exercise during school hours, I don't see it, providing that he's not simply going to his room and playing video games constantly after school or on weekends.  If he's doing that, then he'll need Army boot camp and other help - school PE just won't do anything for him.  So, for a kid that gets around a bit after school, and is otherwise normally-active (as it was understood prior to video games and facebook), he's probably getting all the exercise he needs.  This leads back to David and his physical development.  He was enrolled in his Christian school through what would have been 6th grade, based on his age.  During that time, he did have PE, and that was fine.  But once in college full time, starting at what would have been 7th grade (again based on age) he no longer had any PE or other organized exercise (Karate was long gone by then).  Did he get fat? - nope.  In fact, just before he turned 18, we went to Yosemite National Park and I pretty much challenged him to climb the Upper Yosemite Falls Trail.  It was considered an 8 of 10 as far as strenuous day hikes are rated, about 3,000 feet vertical and 7.5 miles round-trip.  We both made it.  My knees were feeling it at the end (having also descended that elevation).  But even though he violated every rule in the book for a kid, he still made it, and probably could have done quite a bit more.  So I think this PE push is bull.

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Mandabplus3
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« Reply #323 on: June 24, 2013, 03:18:06 AM »

My head hurts  wacko
I know for a fact school is a time sapping capsule. I teach, I am with my kids 5 hours a day and only 2.5 of that time can I actually teach them! Of course I teach 4 year olds and we shedule morning tea, lunch, rest and I have to make it look like they are playing at times too....  smile its just that groups of children create problems that take up time. One child having morning tea takes 10 minutes. 24 kids eating pre cut fruit takes 30 minimum! Same with lunch and EVERY other transition between activities takes 5-10 minutes. Rather than 5-10 seconds as it would with one child.
I think I would agree with the idea that science is a waste of time before grade 8 but I have a differing view of what school should be like to you. I think children should be taught reading and math intensively for the first 3 years of school. They should all know math facts, times tables and be able to read anything by that time. Ralistically it shouldnt take that long but we knownwhat the real world is like  tongue Saxon 5/4 should be finished with by grade 3.
 From years 3-7 I think they should have a go at everything. An introduction to science, history, languages, art, drama, music, sports, nutrition, farming, cooking, sewing, IT, I mean EVERYTHING. By the time they hit year 7 they should have a very solid idea of their strengths and preferences and be able to select a high school path way that will suit their skills and future employment opportunities. A pathway that doesn't have them doing art if they have no interest in an art career.
I am not suggesting English and math be ignored during these exploratory years BTW.  A School day can include an hour of both and still fit in everything else. That way even the children who don't find a strength or interest will still be progressing in skills for life long benefit.
I think children need time to dabble in different skills and subjects I just don't think any dabbling should be done in high school ( grades 8-12) as is done here. By then the kids should be confident in all the basics and on a pathway to their career. From grade 8 PE should be an offer for those interested in an active career or as an after hours sporting/social option.
On top of this, I think it is ridiculous to move 30 kids to a teacher when its quicker to move 1 teacher to 30 kids! I think food breaks should be just long enough to eat and no longer and I think schools should finish earlier in the day, so kids can play outside and receive extra tuition where they need it. ( or us parents want to give it) I think age should be irrelevant to ability in class grouping.
Of course all of this can be accelerated if done at home but a comprehensive literacy and math focus in the first school years will excellerate the majority of children. Why waste time on PE with 5 year olds who are naturally endlessly active any way? Why do art when they are still learning to hold a pencil properly? why dabble in language at age 5 when we all know 30 mins a week wont teach them anything?
Science can be started earlier in a child who is a voracious reader by age 6 by giving them quality science concept books to read. Art can be self studied by interested children who can read how to draw books, economy can be studied by 8 year olds who like math and can read.


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Korrale4kq
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« Reply #324 on: June 24, 2013, 04:25:31 AM »

I have been mulling this one over.
Mind you, my education was in Australia, where things are done differently to the US.

Something's that stand out to me that I just ant agree with.

Taking away P.E education cuts to the quick. Maybe it only really did that because I was an athlete and I was active in track ans field, swimming, cross country, softball etc and I was on track for the pan pac games and one day the commonwealth/Olympic games. I only made it to states before I moved to a school that did not have a comprehensive P.E program and I stopped running, swimming, and any other sports altogether.
Maybe there are extra curricula programs? But there wasn't where I lived, with the exception of Nippers

Now here in the US sports are often a gateway for kids who don't excel academically or go to college with scholarships. To take that path away from many kids who aren't academically adept, and are often lower income students is a shame.

Also, from pure observation, I have noticed that my friends who are healthy and active are the ones that were involved in a sport or enjoyed P.E as a kid. The reason I have focused on trying to teach my son to catch, throw, hit, and have a myriad of basic sports skills is so that he can enjoy playing sports and games with his friends without feeling like he is that kid that can't play. I think the sole purpose of P.E should be fun. 30 minutes a week may not teach much. But it should get kids involved in active fun.

I am sure the same argument could be said for art and music. I played clarinet and violin and did verse speaking ans choir through school. I leant enough to have some music fundamentals but I am not as passionate about it as I was about running. Art? I was a lot cause. And I never liked art class. But I don't think that 30 minutes once a week hindered my education.

I really don't think 1.5-2 hours a week for the extra curricula stuff that can make school bareale for a young child is that much wasted time. I think the wasted time is when the students are sitting around making penguin crafts for a week in an attempt to learn about arctic animals. A range of biomes could be covered in a week via reading  and writing exercises.

I also don't feel that science, history, geography et al  need be neglected in the early years. My 3 year old learns a lot from many subjects. Mostly from reading books. He will read a low level reader about a variety of subjects. We will disucss those subjects. Then as his reading and his compreshension improves we are able to revisit the subjects in more depth. Non fiction books, including encyclopedias are essential to my son learning to read.



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Korrale4kq
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« Reply #325 on: June 24, 2013, 04:35:10 AM »

Somethings I do agree with.

Summer vacation. In Australia we had 6 weeks off and that was more than enough time I thought. And.more than enough time for scholastic  regression.

Fuzzy math. Haha. Love the name, hate the concept, and big waste of time. I tutor a child going into 6th grade in the fall. Her school uses Everyday math She is learning Very little. At fhe rate we are going son will be at her level in a few years. And I spend less time with him on math than I do tutoring her each day.

Watching movies? Not sure what this is about. There is a lot of edutainment out there. But I find minute for minute the educational value is often not as good as reading a book, or direct instruction. Now there are some amazingly educational movies (ahem. Peter Weatherall. Ahem.) But I am not sure that teachers would use the good stuff.






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Math:  CLE2, Singapore 2A, HOE, living math books.
Language Arts: CLE2
Reading: CLE2
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Science: BFSU, Peter Weatherall, lots of science books.
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« Reply #326 on: June 24, 2013, 11:38:54 AM »

So I'll list a few things, some I've likely mentioned before:
1) Summer Vacations (2 to 3 months to forget things)

I agree about the summer vacation loss. Homeschool.com is currently hosting a massive freebie deal (http://www.homeschool.com/freebie/deals/) and on there, I found downloadable articles on summer learning loss (http://www.thinkstretch.com/research/articles-to-share/). The 4 articles showed that there is a lot of research that shows children regress seriously in their learning during summer vacation. I read all 4 articles on that page, and the article titled ``Doesn't Every Child Deserve a Memorable Summer'' was particularly interesting. It cited the research, and I quote an excerpt below:

Quote
Do you know?
- All young people experience learning losses when they do not engage in educational activities during the summer. Research spanning 100 years shows that students typically score lower on standardized tests at the end of summer vacation than they do on the same tests at the beginning of the summer (White, 1906; Entwisle & Alexander 1992; Cooper, 1996; Downey et al. 2004).

- Most students lose about two months of grade level equivalency in mathematical computation skills over the summer months. Low-income students also lose more than two months in reading achievement, despite the fact that their middle-class peers make slight gains (Cooper, 1996).

- About two-thirds of the ninth-grade achievement gap between lower and higher income youth can be explained by unequal access to summer learning opportunities during the elementary school years. As a result, low-income youth are less likely to graduate from high school or enter college (Alexander et al. 2007).

- Children lose more than academic knowledge over the summer. Most children—particularly children at high risk of obesity—gain weight more rapidly when they are out of school during summer break (von Hippel et al. 2007).

-  Parents consistently cite summer as the most difficult time to ensure that their children have productive things to do (Duffett et al. 2004).

The fact that student lose about two months of grade level equivalency in math was especially scary. So Robert, you are right. And so were Joyce Swann and Arthur Robinson. And still on that page, the article titled ``More Than a Hunch: Kids Lose Learning Skills Over the Summer Months'', was also very interesting. Here is an excerpt:

Quote

WHAT HAPPENS TO STUDENTS OVER THE SUMMER:
 -  At best, students showed little or no academic growth over summer. At worst, students lost one to three months of learning.
- Summer loss was somewhat greater in math than reading.
-  Summer loss was greatest in math computation and spelling.
-  For disadvantaged students, reading scores were disproportionately affected and the achievement gap between rich and poor widened.

Very scary statistics, if you ask me. So Robert, you are completely right. Kids lose a lot of learning during the summer vacation months, and math is one of the things that suffers most.


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Robert Levy
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« Reply #327 on: June 24, 2013, 01:03:23 PM »

Thanks all,

As usual you guys have given this more thought than myself.  What I was really getting at were just the early years in education, when the kids really need to learn to read, in order to be good at it, and likewise with math.  I should have included, for sure, learning to speak a foreign language in those years (thanks Mandabplus3).  What was bothering me is that math and reading are put on the same level as the other time-fillers, which then ends up meaning that relatively little math and reading get done in those years, and thus it gets dragged out over many more years.

After those early years, if you keep going that way, you wind up with 10 to 12 year old kids that are ready for college, which is probably too much for society (and them) to handle.  So, like you say, Mandabplus3, you slow down the pace of the academics somewhat and let them see and try out the rest of the world.  I like it.  My kick on PE is mainly restricted to having PE displace time in the classroom, as it does now, right through high school.  On after-school sports, I'm kind of mixed, but I would agree that anything that gets kids active, rather than spending their late afternoons playing video games is a good thing.

Good point here, Korrale4kq :  "I think the wasted time is when the students are sitting around making penguin crafts for a week in an attempt to learn about arctic animals."  Good point also on pointing out that reading can (and should) be used to learn other subjects, like science.  Maybe where it gets carried away is when kids have to make "penguin crafts" (LOL) rather than simply read about penguins.

I think part of my narrow focus is due to my own experience with David, where I concentrated on reading, and then math, and at that point basically let his schooling (being it the Christian school, or college) take over from there.  We did do other things (tee-ball, violin, piano, karate), but I didn't see David get much out of any of them...so I would tend to not treat them at the same level of what worked for him - although for other kids, they may get much more out of those types of activities.

Finally, thanks Nee, on the summer break info.   For kids, and most adults, math simply isn't necessary or useful day-to-day, but reading is used practically non-stop (for good readers), so it makes sense that math would be pushed back in the brain over an extended period of time (i.e., summer break).  As most people know the concept of a summer break originated from having the kids "help out at the farm", but has since worked its way into union contracts.  I doubt that there was ever any academic justification for the breaks, just the slow inertia of changing things keeps them intact.   Saxon, at least in the earlier books, lines up perfectly with your data, where they spend the first 40 sections reviewing the prior material at the beginning - which works out to 9 to 10 weeks, at their standard pace.  So, to really get a feel of how summer break affects math development, you have to pretty much double the time of the break - and at that point, you see more and more months disappearing and it becomes easier to see why math drags out so long, when we all know it doesn't have to.  Reading is kind of interesting too.  I think the slower-paced children probably just turn off attempting to read during the summer, as it is such a struggle - so they regress there also.  But good good readers will gobble up everything in sight.

For you out there looking to change things (and I know who you are), getting rid of summer break is probably the fastest way to get results.

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« Reply #328 on: June 24, 2013, 05:36:29 PM »

Quote
For you out there looking to change things (and I know who you are), getting rid of summer break is probably the fastest way to get results.

Nee1's post above about summer break really made the light bulb go off in my mind this morning when I read it. Yeah yeah yeah, you can save some time by skipping summer, right?

Well, hold on there cowboy. That was a truly insightful post in response to Robert's question of "what the heck are they doing all day"? Here's the way I interpreted the post...

Summer break here in the States is 3 months long. K-12 has 12 summer breaks (I'll exclude anything beyond graduation). That's a full 3 years. But it's even worse than that because the average kid slides back 2 months per summer break! That makes it a full 5 years!

For the kid that just graduated this month and is 17, it means he could have gained the same academic achievement at the age of 14 with no sliding effect, or at the age of 12 factoring in the sliding effect.

Therefore, if you just skip summer - you can legitimately gain the academic achievement of a typical 17 year old by the age of 12 just through this method alone.

Add early learning and skip another 2 or 3 years. Plan and homeschool and skip yet a few more!

Just ponder the math for a moment as I have.... It's quite profound.

« Last Edit: June 24, 2013, 05:38:26 PM by PokerDad » Logged

nee1
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« Reply #329 on: June 24, 2013, 06:23:00 PM »

PokerDad, the day I read those summer loss articles I was very shocked. Completely shocked. The article said that: ``At best, students showed little or no academic growth over summer. At worst, students lost one to three months of learning.''

This means that in the BEST CASE scenario, they showed little or no academic growth. In the worst case scenario, they actually LOST 3 months worth of what they had learnt before. This simply means the first few months of school would be spent trying to get them to remember what they had learnt in the last 3 months before the vacation.

I now understood why Joyce Swann (mom of the accelerated Swann kids) was able to move as quickly through school as she did. With her doing 3 hours of focussed homeschooling each day, and doing school all year round (with no summers vacations), her kids could finish the entire k-12 system in very little time. And remember, she did no formal early learning.

And she gives very good advice here - http://www.home-school.com/Articles/to-maintain-control-maintain-a-schedule.php. Under subtitle ``School First, Field Trips Second'' she said:
``Remember, no schedule will work if it is not followed. Therefore, if you want to have a successful school year, you must be willing to put your school first. Save field trips, visits to museums, etc., for Saturdays. These activities may be educational, but they are no substitute for a day spent working at the books. Only when you are able to separate all other activities from class time and adhere to a schedule that concentrates on structured study, will your students make genuine progress. Then you will be able to maintain control, and you will meet your goals. ''

And more good advice from her here - http://www.home-school.com/Articles/joyce-swanns-homeschool-tips.php
On there, she says: ``We have specific school hours (8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.) and everyone is in the school room seated with his materials in front of him at 8:30. We also have a highly disciplined school room: No talking about anything that does not pertain to school. No going to the bathroom without permission. No food or drinks in the school room. No wasting time.  These rules actually give my children a good deal of freedom that they might not enjoy in a less structured setting. After all, they know that they will be finished with both their routine housework and schoolwork by 11:30 a.m. The rest of the day is theirs to spend as creatively as they like.''

And more VERY good advice from her here - http://www.home-school.com/Articles/dont-go-back-to-school.php. This article is titled: ``Don't Go Back To School - Five Reasons To Consider a 12-month School Year''. What she said in this article echoes almost word-for-word what PokerDad said and what I read in those summer loss articles.
   



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