Friday, January 7, 2011

Miquon Math: How Do You Schedule This Stuff???

I mentioned in my January Goals post that I need to organize and schedule things for the new school year*.

I'm at a stand-still, and hoping some of you can help me out. My homeschooling readers, put your thinking caps on -- I have a dilemma.

I'm pretty much done organizing the stuff for the big boys. Sonlight materials are easy that way -- open the Instructor's Guide (IG), decide if I want to use the 4-day schedule or the 5-day schedule, put the Language Arts schedule in the right place, pull out the student activity sheets, and, in my wacky world, copy over the IG instructions into the Lesson Plan book I bought. This way I can see the daily assignments for all three boys, right on one two-page spread.

The stuff for The Adventurer has me frozen in fear, though.

I'm using all new things for him. Things I never used for the older boys, because they learn in very traditional ways, and The Adventurer, surprisingly (not), does not.

Non-traditional learning, I have to admit, scares the beejeebies out of me. So much so that, even though I'm going tomorrow to get some storage drawers, I'm terrified to open the packages that constitute The Adventurer's school materials. Because I'm afraid I won't know what to do with them.

Let's start with Math, for instance. With the older boys, I used Singapore Math, a nice, normal workbook based program that's heavy on mental math but still workbook based. It's easy to pick up a workbook, count how many pages there are, divide that by how many days of school there are, and poof, you instantly have a schedule. Every morning, then, you just get up, sit with the child and the workbook, teach the lesson, let him do the problems, done. Easy. Normal.

Naturally, when The Adventurer started Kindergarten I pulled out all the old favorites, all the materials that worked so well for the older boys. And found, almost instantly, that these materials were not going to work for him. He looked at workbook pages which had come almost intuitively to the older boys and decided to do totally different things with them. Or he balked, more than the older two, at having to follow directions.

 When asked to draw a line, matching pairs of objects, he'd take the first object on a journey all around the page before his line ended at the correct matching object. When asked to count sets of objects, he'd want to add up all the objects, not just those in each set. So, one set of two; next, a set of three (that's five things); third, a set of four (now we have nine things), and so on. Or he'd also want to count the little picture at the top of the page. Or, or, or. He always had other plans for the worksheet, never content to follow the given directions. 

Now, sure, my big boys did this too. To an extent. Instead of circling an object, they'd X it out. Instead of drawing straight lines, they'd do zig-zags and curves. But never anything like this, coming up with whole, entire new sets of directions.

And they never asked me the sorts of questions that The Adventurer asks me.

 "What is 2 and 2 and 2?" (six).
 "What is 2 and 2 and 1 and 1?" (six)
"What is 2 and 1 and 1 and 1 and 1?"  (six)
 "What is 3 and 2 and 1?"  (six)
"What is 1 and 1 and 1 and 1 and 1 and 1?" (how many 1s did you say?? oh, six...)
And so on.

He does this with all sorts of numbers, everything that can be broken down into factors. See, he's figuring out that "six" can mean lots and lots of things, but that no matter what it looks like, it's still "six." (or seven, or nine, or ten, or whatever number he's chosen for this game). 

So, with great trepidation, I'm beginning whole new math courses for him. Materials I've never used before, materials with huge learning curves. And I'm panicking.

So -- finally, the question. Miquon users -- how do you schedule it???? Manipulatives users, how do you schedule it??? 

We're going to use Miquon as our primary curriculum. We're also going to use Sonlight's brand new MathTacular Manipulatives Activity Kit to go along with it. And extra pattern blocks and pattern block cards. (these are tangrams, to those of you more familiar with that term). And probably I'll throw in games like Uno and dominos, and connect four, and any other math themed thing I can think of.

But how on earth do I schedule it all???

 Is it okay (please say yes, please say yes) to write on the schedule "Math Activity" and let him choose something from, say, a designated Math Drawer??? He'll be six at the start of our year, and I'm calling this his First Grade year, if that makes a difference to your answer.

I'm thinking I'll put the Miquon books on his workbook shelf/drawer, put the SL Manipulatives Activity Guide in the workbook drawer, and put all the manipulatives in the Math Drawer. Then, each day, I'll have him choose what manipulative he wants to work with that day. Then I will grab the appropriate workbook or guide book and we'll do some free play, a little guided experimentation, and then more free play.

Those of you who've used Miquon &/or any math program that uses a lot of manipulatives, does that sound reasonable??? I plan to use the mathy board games on Fridays, and maybe as a second session of "School Games" when I need to occupy him.

Someone with more experience, please weigh in here. I feel like a complete and utter "newbie" when it comes to schooling this youngest boy of mine. I'm reading up on learning styles so I can feel educated, but man is it all overwhelming.  And I've only told you about the math! We'll tackle the Language Arts (say, teaching him to read????) in a future post sometime. Assuming you guys are helpful this go-round.

8 comments:

  1. OMG! I can so relate to this. My youngest also has to take detours around the whole worksheet before reaching the item she was suppose to draw a line to. But I have learned through this all that that is how she learns also. I have come to accept that being animated is just her and love her for it.

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  2. Did you read First Grade Diary?

    Did you get Lab Sheet Annotations?

    (I will mail both of them to you for price of postage, if you didn't.)

    Yes. Put it in a drawer and write "Math activity" on the schedule/planner. And some days, the math activity should be grocery shopping or something. Especially with these guys, I think taking them out of the house to watch other people use math in many different ways is a huge important part of their education.

    In fact, I think more students should benefit from such field trips.

    But I digress.

    Just saw the MathTacular stuff and admit I would have never spent so much money at once, but probably have come close to acquiring as many manipulatives at some point. I end up not using manipulatives as much as I thought, because I spend much less time sitting at a desk with a child than working in the kitchen with him. Our manipulatives end up being the real tools and objects we encounter as we work throughout the day. Don't discount the learning opportunities you have all around you.

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  3. Birthblessed, I seem to have lost your email. Would you email me via the blog email? I would love to chat with you more on this.

    Also, no, I didn't get/read the First Grade Diary; I did get and am reading the Lab Sheet Annotations.

    We definitely do real life stuff, too. But man oh man, this boy is just so different. Thanks for the many great ideas you've given me.

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  4. Um, call me weird, but my (older) kids just did two pages of Miquon a day. I never graded them. They just did them.

    Will I do the same with Adventurer's twin? We'll see. And, come to think of it, I'm not sure I told them how many pages to do when they were that age, anyway.

    So, just because you use Miquon doesn't mean you can transition him towards a schedule at some later date, if you feel like he needs it, even if you don't do that now. No reason to be afraid. :-)

    Oh, and we did Miquon parallel to Singapore. Worked for us.

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  5. I'm in the same boat. Faith is my different one. I have been using Right Start Math with her after a decade of Saxon. I just knew it wasn't going to work for her and I wanted something a little more hands on and something that approached the concepts differently. I'm struggling still, but finding my way.

    As far as the games, I would let him choose BUT I would probably have one basket full of 'games' and an empty one. Once he picks a game one day, it goes in the 'empty' basket and he has to pick something else the next day. The end of the week, all the games go back to the first basket. Actually, I like this idea so much, I'm going to do it now. Heehee! Thanks for the help.

    I'll be praying for discernment and peace.

    hugs!

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  6. Thanks, all! Lots of great ideas!

    Mideastmom - I definitely will transition him to a schedule later on; right now, he's rather adverse to any form of "Now do this...." so I want to let him lead for a while.

    GfG, I LOVE the idea of moving used games/manipulatives to an empty box each time, so he doesn't just do the same exact game/thing every single day (which I could totally see him doing). Will definitely use that idea! And, glad I could "help" you out as well : )

    Feeling slightly less freaked out about schooling this boy, now that I'm able to admit that school is not going to look like school.

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  7. We used Miquon - the only formal maths we ever did... until I bought the Key To workbooks, most of which we didn't use and I've just sold.

    We had it in our math area, along with games, family math (a book of family math games most with printable/copyable paper 'boards) and the kids pulled 'em and played.

    If I was panicking/thinking we should do formal, then I suggested the 2 page minimum. But often they'd do much more, and there were weeks they didn't touch them.

    Email me if you want to talk more. Princess - currently doing A maths, Ewok - still doesn't do abstract but that the aspie bit.

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