Spice up your Home School Routine with Fun Projects

Posted on Thursday, May 22, 2008 at 8:02 am
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 a great project idea that will demonstrate how to incorporate projects into your lesson plans effectively. Let’s say your child just completed a unit on biology, a great way to end the unit is to ask your child to create an ecosystem in an aquarium. The goal would be to create a self sufficient environment in a sealed aquarium. While learning about the different cycles of nature, encourage your child to contemplate different ways to create such an ecosystem. After your child has devised an action plan for the project, go to the store to pick up the list of required materials.

Teach your child to spend a good amount of time planning before taking any further steps. Planning is often the part of the project children like to skip over or hurry along so they could get to the fun part. But teach your child the popular saying: “If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.“ Reinforcing the need to plan for a project will help your child establish this good habit for all future endeavours.

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.

Homeschooling families are not limited by the practicalities necessary in public schools. Project ideas can be as diverse and far reaching as your imagination. For each unit, encourage your child to brainstorm a list of long term project ideas based on what they have learned. Allowing your children to come up with their own project ideas will not only trigger their creativity, it will also make them feel like they have a say in their education. This will make them more enthusiastic and excited about their learning and make for a more successful homeschooling experience.

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