Friday, April 30, 2010

The Idea of Saturday School

I am not a professional teacher. I have a B.A. degree, so I am college-educated. I used to tutor students in college, so I do have some background as a tutor. I expect there will be challenges along the way, especially as both J and I can be stubborn. :)

The idea of saturday school came to me as I was looking at J's report card. She needs some fun, yet intensive, time to study and learn. She already spends an hour each evening after school reading (which was a school requirement to reach a reading goal). An hour each day is more like review time than anything else.

Saturdays are often wasted around here; we end up shopping or sleeping in. It's the best day of the week for us to find time for activities. I have to make an effort if she's going to make an effort!

So I started by cleaning off the dining room table. I had J help me choose notebooks from my extensive supply. We talked about what she would be required to do, and that she would still have time to have fun and play outside all summer. She was excited about the idea.

Probably, she's more excited about the time she will get to spend with me, with my undivided attention.

Introduction

After yet another mediocre/poor report card, I decided it was time to put more of an effort into my 10-year-old daughter's schooling. She attends a highly-rated school, in a very small school district. The school always performs well on standardized tests. I have nothing to complain about there. The teachers she's had so far have seemed to be good enough. I have always encouraged her to complete her homework and be organized about school. School is her job.

Her 4th grade class size is about 19 kids, most of them boys. Their rowdiness seems to be a distraction for my daughter, J. She is an only child, so maybe she is not used to filtering out the distractions that would come from siblings. J is struggling in math and language arts. Even though she is in Title I class for math, the classroom teacher's decision to not use a math textbook does not seem to be working for J.

This summer is going to be structured. TV will be turned off. My plan is to spend 3 hours on Saturday mornings reviewing what she seems to not have learned very well in the past 4 years of school, such as basic math facts and vocabulary.

I don't want her grades to be just mediocre, but I don't expect perfection, either. I think she is just a reluctant learner, choosing to give up instead of challenging herself to the next level. We'll work on basics, but we'll also work on developing her imagination and thinking skills. Even though she is an only child, she doesn't seem to be able to create her own entertainment.

I plan to model the behavior by reading and writing also while she's reading and writing. Even though I already read and write a lot, maybe she just doesn't see it enough.

So that's the who's and why's of this blog. Hope you find some useful information here.