Home Schooling Resources - Computer Curriculum Home School Section

 

Computer Curriculum Home School Navigation



Home Photography School
Gateway Home School Memphis
Home Schooling In Wisconsin
Home School Teachers
Mountain Home Public Schools
Curriculum Home Online Schooling
Home School Statistics
Christian Home School Curriculum
Grade Home School Texas
Mountain Home Public Schools
Home School Support
Abeka Curriculum Home School Used
Mountain Home Arkansas Schools
Classical Education Home School
California Home Schooling Law
Christian Home School Florida
Accredited Home School Curriculum
Christian Florida Home School
Colorado Home School
Online Christian Home Schooling
California Home Study Traffic School
Home In Schooling Teen Wyoming
Colorado Home Schooling Law
Home Cosmetology Schools
Privacy.html


2010 Best Seller







Main Computer Curriculum Home School sponsors

Computer Curriculum Home School

 

 

Latest Computer Curriculum Home School Books





Privacy

Amazon Affiliate


 

Welcome to Home Schooling Resources

 

Computer Curriculum Home School Article

7 Places To Go For Your Homeschooling Needs
James Masterson

Homeschooling is slowly becoming a trend nowadays and most parents are having fun with the interaction they are having with their child. Some parents are still having second thoughts regarding homeschooling though. Their main concern is that they might be having some problems finding resources to use for homeschooling. This article will help you find resources from different places.

The first stop is a ride to your nearest bookstores. Armed with a list of possible books to buy from a curriculum of a school, you can buy the books at any convenient bookstore. This will save you a lot of time and give you flexibility with regards to your child’s studies as bookstores have more choices and references for your child to use.

An alternative stop would be a trip to your closest magazine stores. Magazines provide you a lot of catalogs where you can choose from a lot of advertisers listed in it. This will help you from spending lots of time searching through bookstores and will give you a sense of what your child’s going to get.

Of course, with all the technology available on the internet, you should not be really surprised that you can find websites offering help in your child’s studies. Some of them can be easily found when searching at Google and some of them can be given to you by other people who are also having their child homeschooled.

The simplest place to look for resources is by going to a public library. Public libraries have books and references for you child to take home and use. To help with that, libraries have different instructional materials such as videos (like those from National Geographic) and cassette tapes (like tapes that will help you learn another language). These instructional materials not only help with the books in teaching but they also help in easing out the boring quality and the monotony ofbooks given out to children.

Libraries also offer a lot of computer software which will not only help with your child’s learning but will also help him in understanding different computer technologies and how they work. Often computer software is easy and fun to use, therefore attracting a lot of young people to use it.

Libraries also give book discussions. Book discussions not only train your child to read but also to think and criticize every thing that he/she reads. This will not only develop reading comprehension, it will also help your child in critical thinking.

Another place to look at is at the house of another parent who decided to homeschool their children. You might find it interesting that they are willing to share both their experiences and their used materials (books, references and other activity materials). You could save a lot of money and at the same time learn from these people who have already experienced the joys and the pains of homeschooling a child.

The most neglected place and probably one of the most informational, next only to a library, is the museum. A trip to a museum will not only help your child appreciate art and history but your child will also learn a lot from observing and listening to the history of all the museum displays. The best way to conduct this is by joining a group museum tour where there will be an instructor to guide and give you bits of information that will help your child.

The last place, but definitely not the least in this list, is inside your home. Search your cupboard and teach your child some simple baking lessons. This will not only help your relationship with your child but it will also promote your child to learn patience and of course will teach your child how to bake.

You could also do outdoor activities such as planting seeds. This will help your child be interested in plant life but if coupled with other activities (such as mathematics), this has a potential to be both fun and instructional. You basically just have to find out where your child’s attention is focused. Upon learning this, you can try to join your child’s playtime and turn it into something educational.


About the Author:

It doesn’t matter if you just want to explore home schooling possibilities or have made the decision and are looking for a guide to point you in the right direction, "The Parents Guide to Home Schooling" will provide you with the information you require. http://www.free-online-course.com/homeschool

Source: www.isnare.com


Computer Curriculum Home School News

Exclusive: Spy agency seeks cyber-ops curriculum

FORT MEADE, Maryland (Reuters) - The National Security Agency is trying to expand U.S. cyber expertise needed for secret intelligence operations against adversaries on computer networks through a new cyber-ops program at selected universities. The cyber-ops curriculum is geared to providing the basic education for jobs in intelligence, military and law enforcement that are so secret they will ...

Read more...


Connections Education to Open New "Blended" High Schools for the 2012- 2013 School Year

Nexus Academy Schools are a Tuition-Free, Public High School Option; A Rigorous College-Preparatory Curriculum Combining the Best of Online Learning with an Exciting Campus Environment.Baltimore, MD (PRWEB) May 21, 2012 Connections Education (http://www.ConnectionsEducation.com), a leading provider of high-quality, highly accountable online and blended learning, will open high schools in Fall ...

Read more...


South school briefs: Elementaries to focus on science and math

• South metro school briefs for May 23.

Read more...