100 Top Picks for Homeschool Curriculum: Choosing the Right Curriculum and Approach for Your Child’s Learning Style by Cathy Duffy

Review by Laurie Bluedorn from Trivium Pursuit

100 Top Picks for Homeschool Curriculum:

Choosing the Right Curriculum

and Approach for

Your Child’s

Learning Style

by Cathy Duffy

We just got back from the Indiana state homeschool convention — what a vast array of curriculum in their exhibit hall! It was just the place for Moms and Dads to look at what’s new and compare with the old. There is so much new curricula on the market today that for many, especially those new to homeschooling, it can be rather confusing and overwhelming. Cathy Duffy’s newest book 100 Top Picks for Homeschool Curriculum has come along at just the right time to help us sort out all our many choices.

I love Cathy Duffy’s dedication at the beginning of this book: To the thousands of dedicated homeschoolers who have resisted the impulse to imitate “real school” and have chosen instead to figure out what is best for each of their children, even if it meant writing their own curriculum. You have made the world of homeschool curriculum far richer than the most well-funded schools in the world.

Read the rest of Laurie Bluedorn’s review here:

http://www.triviumpursuit.com/blog/2010/04/08/100-top-picks-for-homeschool-curriculum-choosing-the-right-curriculum-and-approach-for-your-childs-learning-style-by-cathy-duffy/

Free Homeschool Planner

Free Homeschool Planner

Homeschool Scheduling with a Difference

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‘Battle at the Gate’ by Jenny Jenkins

‘Battle at the Gate’ by Jenny Jenkins


Battle at the Gate is a kids history book written about the last battle of the New Zealand wars, the Battle of Gate Pa, Tauranga. It is written by homeschooling mum, Jenny Jenkins, and published by Penguin, and teaches the character qualities of compassion and forgiveness.
In 1869 British warships began landing soldiers in Tauranga, and local Maori built a pa to defend themselves. On April 29th almost 2000 soldiers attacked the pa after it had been shelled all day by heavy artillery. The 200 Maori inside the pa were mostly Christians, having had a resident missionary for about 30 years. They beat back the British charging into the pa, and won the battle.
That night a Maori woman risked her life to take water to a dying British officer.
A poignant story stunningly illustrated by award winning artist, Bruce Potter. Suitable for ages 7 to adult. Great story for Home Educators, Bible in Schools, Sunday School and Good News Clubs.

Quarter of NCEA answers fail on re-mark

Quarter of NCEA answers fail on re-mark

Education minister Anne Tolley is demanding answers after new figures reveal almost a quarter of the marks given for internally assessed NCEA standards last year were incorrect.

Each year about 250,000 internally assessed standards – 10 percent of the total – are re-assessed by moderators hired by the Qualifications Authority (NZQA), who judge whether teachers are being too soft – or too hard – on their pupils.

This year, 24 percent of the re-marked standards had problems, meaning there was only a 76 percent “agreement rate” between teachers and moderators. The 60,000 dubious grades will not be changed and students affected will not be told.

The failure rate is only marginally better than for 2008, when a full 27.5 percent of re-marked work was found to be wrongly graded, a number that Tolley said then she was “extremely concerned” about.

Last week Tolley said she was disappointed there hadn’t been greater improvement in the 2009 agreement rates. “This is an issue which I’m focused on, and I’ve asked NZQA to explain why these results aren’t as good as they should be,” she said.

But NZQA said the apparent amount of mis-marked coursework was an overestimation, as many of the standards reassessed had been brought to the moderator’s attention by teachers who specifically wanted guidance on a close call between a pass or fail.

It is the latest controversy to dog the internally assessed National Certificate of Educational Achievement rolled out in 2004. The system breaks subjects down into a large number of “unit standards” and “achievement standards”, which are each worth a certain number of credits.

Students must collect a certain number of credits to pass each of the three NCEA levels – 80 credits are required for Level 1 – and their performance by the end of Level 3 determines which courses they can take if they go on to university.

A number of schools that believe NCEA is flawed now offer their students external assessment such as the Cambridge international exams, or the International Baccalaureate exams.

Over the years there have been concerns over inconsistent marking, and of NCEA standards that are considered too “easy”, potentially allowing students to achieve worthless qualifications.

NZQA deputy chief executive Bali Haque told the Sunday Star-Times that recent changes to the re-assessment process meant the 24 percent dubious marks was probably an overestimate, and next year’s figures were expected to be lower.

NZQA had also put in further professional support to help teachers with their internal assessments, especially when a student’s work was just on the boundary between a pass and a fail, or between a “merit” ranking and an “excellence”.

While details of the incorrect 2009 grades were not available, problems exposed during moderating of 2008 grades included teachers accepting “vague generalisations” and wrong answers “being ticked correct”.

Teachers were also found to be handing out test papers that were so detailed students “could essential copy answers”.

The details of mis-marked NCEA standards were released at the same time as the NCEA pass rates for every high school in the country. Pass rates for Year 11, 12 and 13 students sitting NCEA Levels 1, 2 and 3 have been posted on the NZQA website, and can be broken down by such criteria as the school, students’ ethnicity or the school decile rating.

By MICHELLE SUTTON – Sunday Star TimesThe full list of NCEA results

Read article here:

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/3570411/Quarter-of-NCEA-answers-fail-on-re-mark

Schools to look into undercover bully-watch

Schools to look into undercover bully-watch

Children’s aggressive behaviour will be monitored and measured in all of the nation’s 2370 schools, if a new government proposal to curb the growing incidence of bullying goes ahead.

The plan is still in the early stages, but it is understood that the Ministry of Education, police and the Children’s Commissioner will seek tenders for a system to monitor aggression and bullying in every school.

The suggestion comes after Children’s Commissioner Dr John Angus last week issued a new guide – called “Responsive Schools” – on how to combat increasing levels of physical, verbal, emotional and technological bullying. Among the recommended techniques is a system that recruits students to secretly work “undercover” in their school, alongside a teacher, to fight bullying.

The government has already started a $45 million campaign to bring schoolyard misbehaviour under control. The “Positive Behaviour for Learning Action Plan” includes parenting programmes for 12,000 parents, specific training for 5000 teachers of children aged three to eight, and long-term help programmes for 400 secondary and intermediate schools with the worst behaviour problems.

But the Sunday Star-Times has learned that another tool, to monitor violence and students’ fears in school, is being planned. Angus said the new scheme would allow teachers and parents to “understand the social climate in their school”.

Education Minister Anne Tolley confirmed work was under way on the scheme. It was being put together by the Ministry of Education, police and the Children’s Commissioner.

It is understood the new tool will work like a student survey, where pupils report regularly on how comfortable and safe they are at school. The data will be collected so that school leaders can quickly identify a deterioration in a school’s climate and spot problem areas.

Similar surveys have been carried out in the past by groups such as the New Zealand Council for Educational Research but only in a one-off, snapshot format. The new tool would eventually work in every school, all of the time.

When victims felt safe reporting incidents, and where there was systematic gathering of information on the frequency of bullying, programmes were more likely to succeed, Tolley said.

Angus’ “Responsive Schools” report lists scores of different anti-bullying programmes in use around New Zealand but warns that whichever one a school chooses, a community-wide change of culture must go along with it.

Among the anti-bullying techniques commended in the report is one where students work “undercover” to cut bullying. Three or four pupils who are neither victims nor bullies are asked to join an “undercover team” along with one or two bullies.

Teachers, the victim of the bullies, and the other team members know of its existence, but no one else does. The team comes up with a plan together to help the victim and progress is communicated to the teacher regularly – often via email.

The approach, pioneered at Auckland’s Rosehill College, is commended in the report. “The sense of intrigue makes the setting up of the undercover team into a playful approach,” it says.

Principal of Auckland’s Papatoetoe High School, Peter Gall, said the majority of schools would have some sort of anti-bullying programme in place by now. “It’s a matter of treating every situation seriously. You have to, because if you don’t it can come back to bite you.”

Some people thought bullies would grow out of it and that some children were just “life’s victims” but that was nonsense, he said. “It’s all very well until it’s your child that’s bullied – then things change quite rapidly.”

By JOHN HARTEVELT – Sunday Star Times

Read this article here:

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/3570417/Schools-to-look-into-undercover-bully-watch