Fun Home School Projects

June 3rd, 2008
by Diane Noble

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.

Here’s an example of how to organize a project with your child. Let’s assume you’ve just finished a biology unit, a great week long project might be to create an ecosystem in an aquarium. The goal will be to create an environment that can be self-sufficient in the sealed aquarium. While learning about the different cycles of nature, encourage your child to think of the most efficient way to create the ecosystem. Your child can think of ways that nature is efficient and try to mimic these characteristics to create a sustainable and efficient environment.

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.

After your child is done detailing the plan, it’s time to gather the supplies. You child should have a list of supplies needed to put together the ecosystem. You can offer your child some assistance in setting up the aquarium but allow your child to do as much of the work on their own as possible. It much more useful for a child’s self-esteem to end up with a mediocre project they created all on their own, than to end up with a tidy and well done project that they know required someone else’s skills to pull off.

Projects can also be a great way to involve the entire family in a child’s education. The ecosystem your child creates, for example, could be placed in the kitchen or family room where all family members can observe and enjoy it. You can have your child present the project to the other family members and even hold a question and answer session. This will surely create a sense of pride in your child and help create positive feelings about his/her education. If your child attends public school, then chances are you only get to see their project when it all done. Homeschooling parents have the advantage of admiring and encouraging their child during every step of the way.

Projects like the aquarium project can be an indispensable part of your child`s homeschooling education. Projects allow the child to not only make use of the knowledge they have acquired but to also use and improve their creative and organizational skills. Parents find it much easier to engage their children while working on projects. Projects will also help your child remember and sum all they have learned in a unit and come to realize that the knowledge they have obtained can serve a practical and useful purpose.

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