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Written by Diane Noble   
Friday, 23 May 2008 13:28

By DianeNoble

Homeschooling your children will probably be one of the most significant decisions you make for your family. When you decide to homeschool, you need to become at least somewhat knowledgeable on a broad range of subjects in order to prepare an adequate educational plan. Once you have created this plan, which should include specific goals for each subject area. These goals should include unit projects. Projects help children take a large amount of different facts and information and apply them in a useful way using new skills and old skills that require fine tuning. Projects are a great way to implement and test knowledge acquired through an educational unit.

Projects are not only an important part of any homeschooling curriculum, but they can also be lots of fun. Most people have fond memories of some of the projects they did during their school years. Homeschooling parents are always on the look out for wayt to implement and test the knowledge they have taught their children and projects are a great way to get this done. A good plan is to have a multi-week unit set up for a given subject, and at the end of the unit assign a week-long project that will put to use and implement what your child has learned.

Do your best to allow your child to do most of the setting up on their own. Many parents are tempted to help their kids so that the project can look more tidy and organized, but it's more effective to allow kids to learn from their mistakes. Once your child is done setting up, have them come up with a way to track progress on a daily basis. This will be an opportunity for your child to learn all about graphs and charts.

Projects like this have proven effective because they allow children to not only make use of the knowledge they have acquired but to also use their creative and organizational skills. Parents find it easier to capture their children's attention with hands on activities such as unit end projects. Projects also help children recall facts and ideas from the unit and instil them in the memory more permanently.

You can also engage other family members on such projects. The ecosystem, for example, could be placed in a prominent location in your home where other family members will have a chance to observe it and provide your child with feedback on his/her hard work. Parents of children in public schools know how exciting it is when a child comes home with a project they just completed at school. Homeschooling parents enjoy the benefit of having 'school' at 'home' and therefore watching their child's excitement throughout all stages of a project.

Another super advantage to homeschooling is that you are not limited by the practicalities necessary in a public school. Project ideas are only limited by you and your child's imagination. For every unit, encourage your child to list ideas for long term project that will help solidify the knowledge they have acquired in a particular unit. Allowing your children to choose their own project ideas will not only enhance their creativity, it will also make them feel like they have a say in their education. This will do wonders for their motivation and enthusiasm.

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Last Updated ( Monday, 26 May 2008 05:43 )