Spice up your Home School Routine with Fun Projects

Spice up your Home School Routine with Fun Projects

by Diane Noble

When you decide to homeschool your child, you are committing to taking charge of your child’s education. There are many amazing benefits to homeschooling, but the responsibility and time commitment is significant as well. You probably need to spend a good amount of time planning lessons and units. A great way to end a unit is with a project. Projects help children sum up, review and implement everything they have learned.

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 place to use and implement what your child has learned.

Let’s look at one example of how to set and implement a project. If you’ve been working on a biology unit, a good project intent is to create an ecosystem in an aquarium. The goal is to create an environment that can be self-sufficient in the sealed aquarium. While learning about nature’s different cycles, encourage your child to consider the most effective way to create an ecosystem. After your child has hatched a plan and spent some time laying out the details in terms of materials, methods and so on, go to the store to buy the required project materials.

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.

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 notice 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.

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 apiece 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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