• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Notes From the Parsonage
  • About Us
  • Faith
    • Encouragement
    • Bible Reviews
    • Seasonal Devotionals
    • Topical Devotionals
  • Family
    • Kid Product Reviews
    • Mama
    • Crafts
  • Homeschool
    • Morning Basket
    • Bible Classes
  • Table
    • Kitchen Product Reviews
    • Recipes
      • Desserts
      • Large Family Meals

2017-2018 at Godbold Academy

August 28, 2017 by notesfromtheparsonage 3 Comments

Let's share this!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • LinkedIn

I’m finally mostly planned out for this coming school year. I usually don’t do quite so much pre-planning, but I’m having a baby late October/early November, so I figured I should plan out all I could in advance. A couple new things for us this year: First, I planned in terms instead of just all year. 5 terms total. Three 12 weeks terms, an Advent term, and then a summer term. The kids have been begging me for a more traditional summer, so I have taken their request and we made a compromise. (We usually do year round school.) They will still be completing their third term after the local schools get out. But then they get an actual summer term, which will mostly just consist of each of them having a required reading list. The other new to us thing is the Morning Basket. It is a Charlotte Mason homeschooler thing, but I have adapted it a bit for our more classical methods. More about that if you click the Morning Basket link below.

I did look into switching from The Well Trained Mind to Ambelside this year. I love a lot of things about Ambelside, but ultimately felt The Well Trained Mind is still a better fit for our family. I did look over the Ambelside reading lists for the corresponding years of history and picked a few of those suggestions that I thought might be a good fit for my crew. The Well Trained Mind is really adaptable on a child by child, family by family basis. You have a wide variety of ways the method is really done and worked out in families. We’ve used it from the beginning of our homeschool journey. (This is our 8th homeschooling year.) I’m always tempted by other things, but ultimately decide every year to stick with The Well Trained Mind. It just fits us best.

This year, I am homeschooling 5 kids. One of those is an optional one who is currently opting in. (“School” in our house is optional until you are 6 years old.) Grade levels also get a little mixed when you’re talking about homeschool, especially when you’re not just using a box curriculum. Kids tend to move at their own pace and advance quicker in some areas than others. I kind of average out their level and that is what grade the kid says they are in, since “What grade are you in?” Isn’t usually meant to be answered with, “Well, I have the vocabulary of a high school sophomore, but in math, I’m around grade 6. In literature, we read higher level books than our ages would suggest. And in Grammar, I am on grade level.” People usually expect something more like, “I’m a sixth grader.” Believe me, getting testing scores back for homeschoolers learning in non-traditional methods is quite amusing as they may very well likely place in every single grade in something. But on the average, this year I have a preschooler, a first grader, a fourth grader, and two sixth graders.

This year should prove to be a bit of a challenge for each of them as I am realizing they can do some pretty hard things. They are typically limited by the challenges, or lack there of, that I give them. We are not doing Latin this year, though that is a typical classical homeschooler subject. We are incorporating it a little in their vocabulary studies. We are also leaving out handwriting for the time being. They have a lot of writing to do, so I am not too convinced a full handwriting course is really necessary this year. If I change my mind, I can always add it in for Term 2 or 3 or even the Summer Term.

To save us from an infinitely long post, click on the links to the individual parts of our school year below.

Morning Basket

First Grade

Fourth Grade

Sixth Grade

**This post contains affiliate links. Using affiliate links on your favorite blogs doesn’t cost you more but it does help the blogger out!**

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: books, children, Christian, classical, classical homeschooling, family, family devotional, first grade, fourth grade, homeschool, homeschooling, kids, kindergarten, large family, preschool, reading, sixth grade, the well trained mind

Previous Post: « Sixth Grade Curriculum 17/18
Next Post: Choosing A Bible Translation »

Reader Interactions

Trackbacks

  1. Back To School – Notes from the Parsonage says:
    September 15, 2017 at 1:49 pm

    […] I gathered up the kids on the first day of school and took their pictures. Some were a little more willing than others. You can read about our back to school curriculum choices for the year here.  […]

    Reply
  2. 2017-2018 Preschool- First Grade Curriculum Review – Notes from the Parsonage says:
    May 14, 2018 at 1:37 pm

    […] can find my post about our plans here. As usual, some aspects of the plan changed, but for the most part, this is what we stuck […]

    Reply
  3. Secular Is Not Neutral - Notes From the Parsonage says:
    February 11, 2023 at 10:11 pm

    […] 2017-2018 at Godbold Academy […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Let’s connect!

  • Facebook
  • Goodreads
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Hello there!

Mother holding a one-year-old drinking from a water bottle

I’m Lindsey Jane, wife of a pastor and mama of 9 (yep, 9). Read along as I write about faith and family!  You can read more about our family and me here.

Try Audible Plus Today!

Copyright © 2023 Notes From the Parsonage on the Foodie Pro Theme

0 shares