Anonymous wrote:I homeschool my three kids, and one of them, my ten year old son, sounds a lot like your daughter. He is bright and a quick learner. He's curious and enthusiastic about a lot of things. But he also has a strong preference for being self directed, and if I don't structure things clearly, he while whine, or dawdle, or turn in half hearted efforts that don't respect his best work. Because of this, our homeschool runs best when it is highly structured. Here's how we do it.
First of all, I thought about my kid and what his "currency" is. That is, what things motivate him to work hard. For my kid that list is easy: He is motivated to win, so activities that are competitive work well; he is motivated by having choice and control; and he is motivated by video games. He's also motivated by sugar, but I'm not willing to set up a system of food reinforcers.
Then we set up the following structure:
In our house, on Monday through Saturday until the dishes have been cleared from the table after dinner, and on Sunday until the dishes have been cleared from lunch, it's considered "school time". During "school" you can only do educational things, which we define very broadly. There is a list on the fridge of "school activities" which has things like
Read (a book, comic, magazine, etc. . . )
Make art
Build something (legos, woodworking, and cardboard boxes are his favorites here)
Cook something
Make lego robots
Take an online Taekwondo class
Facetime a relative
Go outside (they can do anything outside, other than bringing their iPad outside to play video games)
Attend a religious service
Watch a science or social studies documentary from an approved list
Use certain iPad apps that teach coding, math (for my 10 year old, Beast Academy is his favorite), or science (he likes something called Uzzinggo) or board games (one of his siblings likes online chess, and Go puzzles)
Play a musical instrument, including watching instructional youtube videos
etc . . . It's a long list, and my kids are frequently coming to me and asking that things be added to the list and the answer is almost always yes.
The "not school" list is basically TV and video games, but of course they can do "school" things when it is "not school".
Then, I watch what they do spontaneously. I have an idea in my head of what I want them to accomplish in a week or month or school year, and I sort of track how that compares to what they are choosing to do. So, for example, I want my kids to read at least 30 minutes a day. One of my kids reads way more than that on his own, two don't. I want my kids to learn to cook. My 10 year old loves to cook and chooses it a lot, but my oldest doesn't.
Once I see what they are doing, I make a list of tasks for each day. I try and keep the list short, and to make sure that I give a very clear picture of what "done" means. So, I don't write "clean your room", I write "wipe down surfaces and baseboards, run the vacuum, empty trashcans and take the bag to the curb". If possible, I'll give two choices on how to meet a goal, so it might say "do the next two pages in your math book OR play fraction war with mom for half an hour".
I generally aim to have my 10 year old's list have about 3 - 4 hours of work. His list includes things that are academic, but also chores. So, for example, on today's list it says that he needs to make lunch for the family. On tomorrow's list it has him washing his clothes. Take a shower, and brush your teeth are on the list every day.
On Sunday evening, my kids and I sit and look at the lists for the whole week.
The each day the kids need to finish their list. "Not school" time doesn't start until the dishes are cleared, and the day's list is done.
This works really well for my kid who sounds like yours. He has gone from whining about every assignment, to working efficiently so he can get back to making his own choices. Because he's motivated by control, he'll also do things like spontaneously picking science activities, so that I leave science off his list. Because he's motivated by winning, he'll try and race his siblings, e.g. by doing things before they're due. They can move almost anything up (e.g. do all 5 math packets on Monday and then have a math free week), but they can't, for example, take 7 showers on Monday and have a shower free week.
So far, it's working.
Anonymous wrote:I homeschool my three kids, and one of them, my ten year old son, sounds a lot like your daughter. He is bright and a quick learner. He's curious and enthusiastic about a lot of things. But he also has a strong preference for being self directed, and if I don't structure things clearly, he while whine, or dawdle, or turn in half hearted efforts that don't respect his best work. Because of this, our homeschool runs best when it is highly structured. Here's how we do it.
First of all, I thought about my kid and what his "currency" is. That is, what things motivate him to work hard. For my kid that list is easy: He is motivated to win, so activities that are competitive work well; he is motivated by having choice and control; and he is motivated by video games. He's also motivated by sugar, but I'm not willing to set up a system of food reinforcers.
Then we set up the following structure:
In our house, on Monday through Saturday until the dishes have been cleared from the table after dinner, and on Sunday until the dishes have been cleared from lunch, it's considered "school time". During "school" you can only do educational things, which we define very broadly. There is a list on the fridge of "school activities" which has things like
Read (a book, comic, magazine, etc. . . )
Make art
Build something (legos, woodworking, and cardboard boxes are his favorites here)
Cook something
Make lego robots
Take an online Taekwondo class
Facetime a relative
Go outside (they can do anything outside, other than bringing their iPad outside to play video games)
Attend a religious service
Watch a science or social studies documentary from an approved list
Use certain iPad apps that teach coding, math (for my 10 year old, Beast Academy is his favorite), or science (he likes something called Uzzinggo) or board games (one of his siblings likes online chess, and Go puzzles)
Play a musical instrument, including watching instructional youtube videos
etc . . . It's a long list, and my kids are frequently coming to me and asking that things be added to the list and the answer is almost always yes.
The "not school" list is basically TV and video games, but of course they can do "school" things when it is "not school".
Then, I watch what they do spontaneously. I have an idea in my head of what I want them to accomplish in a week or month or school year, and I sort of track how that compares to what they are choosing to do. So, for example, I want my kids to read at least 30 minutes a day. One of my kids reads way more than that on his own, two don't. I want my kids to learn to cook. My 10 year old loves to cook and chooses it a lot, but my oldest doesn't.
Once I see what they are doing, I make a list of tasks for each day. I try and keep the list short, and to make sure that I give a very clear picture of what "done" means. So, I don't write "clean your room", I write "wipe down surfaces and baseboards, run the vacuum, empty trashcans and take the bag to the curb". If possible, I'll give two choices on how to meet a goal, so it might say "do the next two pages in your math book OR play fraction war with mom for half an hour".
I generally aim to have my 10 year old's list have about 3 - 4 hours of work. His list includes things that are academic, but also chores. So, for example, on today's list it says that he needs to make lunch for the family. On tomorrow's list it has him washing his clothes. Take a shower, and brush your teeth are on the list every day.
On Sunday evening, my kids and I sit and look at the lists for the whole week.
The each day the kids need to finish their list. "Not school" time doesn't start until the dishes are cleared, and the day's list is done.
This works really well for my kid who sounds like yours. He has gone from whining about every assignment, to working efficiently so he can get back to making his own choices. Because he's motivated by control, he'll also do things like spontaneously picking science activities, so that I leave science off his list. Because he's motivated by winning, he'll try and race his siblings, e.g. by doing things before they're due. They can move almost anything up (e.g. do all 5 math packets on Monday and then have a math free week), but they can't, for example, take 7 showers on Monday and have a shower free week.
So far, it's working.
Anonymous wrote:An 8 year old raging is a SN. Find out what’s causing this.
If you decide to homeschool, read this:
https://www.amazon.com/Unstuck-Target-Executive-Curriculum-Flexibility/dp/1598572032
Read it anyway. Your child has issues with flexible thinking, hence the doubling down and regulation, hence the rages. Unstuck was developed with kids on the spectrum and retested with kids who have adhd.
Anonymous wrote:Op,
I would read the kazdin method about creating behavior change through positive reinforcement.
If she’s been resistant to anyone teaching her throughout the years and especially if you’ve seen some red flags, I would urge you to contact your local children’s hospital and ask about a neuropsychological evaluation. It may be covered whole or in part by insurance.
I know that doesn’t answer to home school or not, but there seems to be some big issues looming and you need more information.
Anonymous wrote:That is a tough one. Is she neurotypical? If she is special needs at all, I’m definitely not qualified to advise other than to ask for advice from your child’s doctor or treatment team.
8 is a tough, stubborn age. The “fun” and “easy” schoolwork is going away and being replaced with challenging things, plus they kinda want to test and see what happens if they say no to you. I have predictable, firm consequences for resistant behavior and grumbling. If you grumble about math, you must need more practice. Here’s another page. (This is also true for my house for non-school activities. If you grumble about emptying the dishwasher, you must need more practice. Let’s re-sort the silverware drawer.). It doesn’t always work with my stubborn 8 year old but it helps. He’s always allowed to remove himself from a situation to cool off, but he knows when he is cooled down, the very next thing he will do is the thing he was mad about in the first place. Sometimes it takes a while, but he knows he doesn’t get out of anything at the end and it just makes it longer for him.
Best of luck to you with this tough age! Remember to appreciate your sweet 8 year old and hug and love on her as well! She has a ton of positive qualities too - work on the relationship as well as the schoolwork!