Celebrate Cerebrodiversity! by Christine Field

Men are from _________, Women are from __________.  That boy just can’t sit ___________.  Are you ______________ to me?  Keep your ___________ on the board, young lady.

Venus, Mars, still, listening, eyes.  Each of these phrases represents concept in education and brain research called cerebrodiversity.  It’s the recognition that each of our brains is unique and may process information differently.

The traditional classroom caters to the visual/auditory learner.  Write this down, listen to this, can you see the example, let me hear your answers.  These brain types typically do well in school.  They fit the method.

But we were each created distinctly.  While one child may recite complex Shakespearean sonnets, another may just look at a piece of electronics and know and see the missed electrical connection.

We are all smart in some way.  A school setting generally rewards one type of learning.  If you don’t learn that way, is your “performance” the result of a disability or an environment that doesn’t accommodate diversity?

As the parent of a couple of kiddos with learning issues, I struggled with the diagnosis/labeling issue.   On one hand, having a label for our struggles opened a door for reaching the child – we learned to teach to strengths rather than focusing on weaknesses.  On the other hand, a label is a label.

But now, we have a new descriptor!  Children who learn differently are exampes of cerebrodiversity!  I love the word because it provides another perfect reason for homeschooling.  A parent can say, “I homeschool my child
because we honor cerebrodiversity.”

If your child is a different kind of learner, consider these points:

1.  Don’t panic or fret.  Weaknesses in one area are often counterbalanced by strengths in another area.  Do what you need to strengthen the weakness,and celebrate and honor the strengths.

2.  Recognize that assembly line learning, common standards and evaluating success by traditional testing may not be the best choice for your child.

3.  Educate yourself on your child’s differences.  You are their champion and their advocate.  The more you know about your situation, whether it’s dyslexia or adhd, the better position you are in to reach them.

4.  Finally, celebrate cerebrodiversity!

In homeschooling, there is no failure – only progress in the direction of their path.

Homeschool Legal Advantage by Christine Field

We are pleased to offer a complimentary First-Year Membership in HLA! That’s a $65 value – absolutely FREE! (See Member Benefits below)

HLA is an outreach of the Christian Law Association (CLA). The CLA has faithfully served churches and families since 1969, and has successfully defended over 8,000 educational freedom-related cases.

HLA provides homeschooling families with every legal service that any other homeschool legal organization provides. Additionally, they provide a free will for both Mom and Dad, represent homeschool organizations, help working parents with workplace issues related to their Christian faith, serve local churches and pastors, and do it all on a suggested donation model.

You may wish to note that the HLA team includes a large group of full-time attorneys and an additional 200+ affiliated attorneys throughout the United States.

BENEFITS of MEMBERSHIP in HLA
As a member of Homeschool Legal Advantage, you are given the telephone number of an attorney who is available to answer any legal question related to homeschool issues.
Homeschool Legal Advantage members receive all homeschool related legal representation free of charge. HLA pays for all attorney fees, expert witness costs, travel expenses, and court costs allowable by law.
In addition, HLA members receive free legal representation from the Christian Law Association for religious liberty issues even if the cause of action is not related to homeschooling. This includes matters such as workplace discrimination, Christian employer obligations, the right to witness, public prayer, and any other matter related to Christians in matters of faith.

Most legal matters related to homeschooling and Christian liberty are resolved quickly without court action. Often, HLA and CLA attorneys can successfully defend an attack by contacting local officials on behalf of their member. If a homeschooling court case is necessary, Homeschool Legal Advantage provides full representation every step of the way. Members can take comfort in knowing they enjoy full legal protection for homeschooling and Christian liberty issues.

ADDITIONAL BENEFITS
• A last will and testament drafted by an attorney that will thoughtfully distribute your estate to your heirs and outline your wishes for your children.
• Access to a comprehensive website with homeschool laws for your state.
• Legal alerts and a monthly HLA newsletter.
• A 20 percent discount on legal and educational resources from the Christian Law Association.

To take advantage of this FREE offer, go to www.HomeschoolLegalAdvantage.com. Click on the link JOIN NOW. The program asks a few identifying questions, then you click to join. When you are asked for a promotion code, type in GIFT. That’s it!

Upon receipt of your registration, you will receive a confirmation email that also includes instructions on how to ACTIVATE your Homeschool Legal Advantage membership. Follow instructions to download your membership card and questionnaire for your Last Will & Testament.

Homeschool Legal Advantage is here for YOU so you can homeschool without fear and with confidence. We know you will enjoy this new approach to legal services for your family.

Special Needs Teaching Product Reviews by Christine Field

Product Reviews
Pearson Learning
800-992-0244
I love this company! This is the first catalog that I ever ready that made me believe that high school is MORE than do-able with my LD kids.
AGS Globe and Pearson publish textbooks written at Alternative and Foundational levels. Alternative texts are for students who need some extra support, but who are on-track for graduation. They are written for kids who attend general education classrooms, but who are reading 1 – 3 grades below level. Foundational texts are for studens who divide their time betweek regular classrooms and separate classrooms and who read 3 or more grades below level.
Why do you care what the public schools do, or what books they use? I cannot tell you how many times I have been asked this question: My child has been diagnosed with XYZ and I want to homeschool high school. How can I do those courses with him?
These types of modified texts might be the answer! They cover the content of state high schools, but at a level that is reachable by our students. Titles are available in all subject levels, giving you the knowledge that you CAN homeschool your special needs high schooler!
This catalog also has tons of other resources, like adapted classical literature, life skills instruction and more. When you call for the catalog, ask for the “Accessible resources for secondary students” catalog.

Remedia Publications
800-826-4740
There are so many fun and interesting things in this catalog!  Like Catch Balls to practice math skills and Hot Dots (R) math flash cards.  There are materials for high-interest readers, writing, math, science and test taking strategies.  If you are looking for ideas to spice up any of these areas, you’ll find lots of them here.  What I really appreciate about catalogs like this is that I can take the ideas and often make comparable materials for use with my kiddos.  For example, there is a classroom time activity mat.  The child lays on the mat and places their arms in the position of the hands on a clock, getting their whole body involved in learning to tell time.  Great idea, right?  In the summer, why couldn’t you draw a clock face in your driveway with sidewalk chalk and do the same activity for next to nothing?  See what I mean!

EPS – School Specialty Intervention
800-225-5750
Have you heard of Explode the Code, or Wordly Wise?  These great books come from this company and their School Specialty Intervention catalog is full of other great aids.  You can fins a Gillingham manual here, as well as the Primary Phonics program and the Megawords program.  This catalog is strongest in the language arts ares, including spelling, reading, writing, grammar, handwriting, and vocabulary.  They also have some leveled and decodable readers.  If you are at a loss for teaching in these areas, this catalog will give you plenty of ideas.

Sopris West
800-547-6747
Although prediminately “professional” resources, there are a few products in this catalog that I like. When my dd was in 4-5 grade, we used their REWARDS program for developing fluency in multi-syllabic reading. She learned prefixes, suffixes and root words, allowing her to ready many more words than she had before.
REWARDS programs are also available for social studies passages, science passages and writing – sentence refinement.
This is also the source for the Step Up to Writing program. Although it is pricy, this program teaches the 6+1 (c) writing trait method. If you aren’t already wedded to a program, like IEW (Institute for Excellence in Writing), this might be a good hands-on, incremental program to explore.

Perfection Learning
800-831-4190
Of the several vendors I’ll discuss, I am least familiar with this one, but their catalog is intriguing and is worth a look if you seek modified materials for your child. So many interesting books jump out, like parallel text Shakespeare Plays. The books have the original text on one page and a line-by-line modern translation on the facing page. Then, there are classic books in the Retold Program, which adapts cultural tales and classic literature. The literature section alone provides tons of ideas for fitting the work to the child, rather than the child to the work.
Another useful feature of this catalog is the booklists. You can cruise books for specific groups, such as reluctant young male adult readers, or ALA picks for middle school. For those of us who don’t always track with new writers and literature for students, these lists are a great take-along to the library.
Books are offered for other subjects as well, including science, grammar and more. Tale a look here to see if you can gather some ideas for your kids.

Academic Therapy Publications
800-422-7249
While Academic Therapy predominately publishes assessments and “professional” resources, this is the source for the High Noon series. These are so-called high interest/low level supplemental readers, with 1st, 2nd and 3rd grade readability. These are little chapter books that will make your struggling reader experience success in reading longer material. There are also a few mystery series, sports series, biographies, historical fiction, science-based fiction, and adventure series. I also really like the Cornerstone Classics series of classical literature adapted for our kids.
These are a little pricy. If you know a special ed teacher or receive services through a school, they will probably have these in their lending library.
Walch Education
Middle & High School, Adult/Alternative Education
800-341-6094
While this catalog has many products geared to public school systems, there are many resources that are appropriate and useable for our kids.
Have you seen the mini-sized books called “Daily Warm Ups”? These are available in a variety of subjects, like world cultures, law and world religions. What I have used them for is as mini-reviews for my kids.
There are topics that you want to stick that require several repetitions, like geography concepts, general math or daily editing exercises. I like these because they are bite-sized reviews that you can build into any study.
Another great product from Walch is their Daily Writing Fundamentals series. Available in four grade levels, each book has 32 weekly passages, with five-daily question and writing applications. Kids edit, dissect and learn from models of narrative, persuasive and expository writing, and daily work only takes 5 to 10 minutes. Again, a great way to work repetition of these concepts into your daily schedule.
The other products I have seen from here are two history volumes for grades 6-9: Short Lessons in World History and Short Lessons in US History. These are interesting, easy readings for our kids. Although they are advertised as a supplement to a core curriculum, you could use these as core texts, add some other non-fiction resources and literature, assign some writing activities and you would have a decent high school level course for our learners.
Walch also offers alternative texts for our kiddos in math, science and more. There are also several life skills books worth checking out to ensure that your child has these necessary skills.

Heads Up! Homeschooling the Challenging Child

My friend, Magnificent Melinda Boring, interviewed me a while back about one of my books.  She is so wise, knowledgeable and fun!  Check out the interview and her blog.  You’re sure to learn something.
She’s at headsupnow.blogspot.com where the video can be seen http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcyFPXDaFM0&feature=player_embedded

Special Homeschoolers

Are YOU a Special Homeschooler?

Do you have a special needs child who you homeschool?

Maybe you have an official diagnosis, like learning disabilities or ADHD. Maybe you are still struggling to make sense of your hard-to-teach child.

I understand. After homeschooling two “neuro-typical” children, the Lord blessed us with two children who had both learning disabilities as well as attention issues. We embarked on a new learning journey as parents, with both stumbles and successes along the way.

With research, self-education and prayer, I learned techniques and teaching tips and discovered more appropriate curriculum and materials. It is this journey of learning that I want to share.

While your kids may be the ones with special needs, YOU are the special homeschoolers. You need information, encouragement, ideas and support. My prayer is that you will find this here.

I remain a mom in the trenches. My last two kiddos are nearly 16 and nearly 13, and although they are in school due to my husband’s cancer, we have a few more years to go. I’ll share what I’ve learned and discovered and would love to hear about your journey too.

End of the Homeschool Year Blues by Christine Field

End of Homeschool Year Blues

It’s the end of another school year – one of successes and shortcomings. When I look at all that didn’t get done, I can feel defeated. There are many mountains we have not yet begun to climb with the kids – mountains of basics, character, work ethic and more.

On a tired end-of-the-year day, I am discouraged. My focus is on everything that has yet to be done. I recall the disruptions and distractions of the year and sigh. Will we ever get it all done?

The reality is – probably not. It will never get all done, the kids will never learn everything you want them to, they will face adulthood with their weaknesses. The question is this: Have I encouraged their strengths?

Have we taken time to explore who they are and how God wired them? Maybe they weren’t gifted with the “math gene” but are gifted artists. Maybe the details of grammar escape them, but their imagination allows them to dream the dreams of a future we cannot see. Have these strengths been nurtured and encouraged?

Take a break. Talk to the kids about the things that went WELL this year. Hug them and tell them how very awesome they are and how blessed you are to teach them. Take a moment to celebrate another year of learning, loving and living together.

You will feel renewed at some point. Get some rest, have some fun, do something for yourself and relax. Then you can return to planning the lessons for math facts and teaching grammar.

Savor a moment.