that is an excellent approach! |
Are you keeping up with the school district's curriculum so they can reintegrate once the school is back open, or do you not plan on sending them back? I'm quite happy with DL for my kids (MCPS) but I'm sort of intrigued by the challenge of home schooling them. I just don't want them totally out of whack with their peers when they go back. |
OMG, I had to respond to just this! DS, 1st, who is hardly an academic superstar, finally just broke down and blurted, 1+6=6+1 (equals 7), 2+5=5+2 (equals 7), and all the way down the line, and then said "so can I GO now!?" It is unbearable to watch on Zoom. (And I wanted to say, YES, yes, for the love of God...) But to your point OP, basically my 1st & 3rd graders stay on top of things when my work is light, and everything goes to crap when work is busy (or there are a lot of inflexible meetings, etc.). This whole thing makes me feel like I'm in some sort of "Waiting for Guffman" docu-satire. |
I’m keeping up with math. Other than that, not really. What are you worried about them being out of whack with? |
No, it's honestly much better than it was in the spring, partly because I have figured out how to organize it for them, and partly because the teachers have had more training/ practice. here are some of my tips:
1. Color coded folders for homeroom, science, art, etc. Folders of materials that follow the same color code. 2. Printed color-coded schedules for the kids that are pasted in front of their work space. 3. I created home screen icons for their iPads so that they can just use the icon to click on the respective links for homeroom meeting, PE, etc. 4. I have set alarms to go off 2 minutes before any synchronous session so that they can leave what they're doing and get back to their devices. 10 minutes before morning meeting to gather materials. 5. I blocked off time on my calendar, 20 minutes with each of two kids, to make sure they are caught up with assignments for each day, before the end of their "school day". |
Tell the teachers this, over and over. Or let the kid fall fly on his face, over and over and tell the teacher this all is not working out well. At all. The school needs to hear, over and over, how they are failing a large cohort of students for which virtual teaching is ineffective. |
I hope this is just kindergarten. 2 must do and 2 could do assignments per day?! REALLY?! |
I have 4th and 6th graders. My 6th grader needs no help. He is fine on his own.
My 4th grader needs help. He is getting a lot better though. At the end of the day, I click through all 10 of his folders to see if he has any assignments he hasn’t done or submitted. I delegated a science project to Dh. It was very involved, took a long time and required a video presentation to be uploaded. There was no way my 4th grader could do this by himself. |
It was terrible for us last spring with my 5 and 7 year old so with a friend with two children the same age we hired a teacher for the four children for 16 hours a week. The children are in K and 1 and they seem to be thriving. The teacher set up an incredible little class room in her home. We will keep this going until virtual or hybrid is over because with my job I just didn’t have the time to sit with them. They miss their school friends but there is very little social interaction right now at the school. |