“Progress Academy’s Web-Based Curriculum Now Features Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Interactive Textbooks” plus 3 more |
- Progress Academy’s Web-Based Curriculum Now Features Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Interactive Textbooks
- Home-schooled teens get a prom
- Home-schooled get their own prom
- needs web head
Progress Academy’s Web-Based Curriculum Now Features Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Interactive Textbooks Posted: 27 Apr 2010 11:00 AM PDT Progress Academy's web-based homeschooling program is now utilizing interactive textbooks from the award-winning publisher, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. The curriculum features the latest advancements in educational technology and provides tools for academic success in a one-on-one setting. (PRWEB) April 27, 2010 -- Progress Academy has added online, interactive textbooks from the Houghton Mifflin Harcourt family of publishers to its wide range of curriculum for Kindergarten through High School graduation. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt's updated and innovative textbook curriculum, combined with the 21st century functionality of Progress Academy's web-based platform provides a comprehensive education for homeschool students. According to recent estimates, around 2 million children are homeschooled every year, and that number is growing(1). Many parents, dissatisfied with a one-size-fits-all approach to education, choose homeschooling in order to customize their child's curriculum according to learning style and preferred pace. Other families choose homeschooling in order to provide a safer learning environment, free from the distractions of drugs, bullying, and other social issues common in the school setting. Whether students need a faster pace with more of a challenge, a slower pace so challenges can be overcome, or just a distraction-free environment to aid concentration, Progress Academy makes homeschooling a viable choice for any family. Niqui Chatfield, co-founder of Progress Academy says, "We provide the curriculum and the support to enable parents to homeschool their children in a way that prepares them for a lifetime of academic success. Students work at their own pace, enhancing productivity by using the most innovative advances in educational technology. Products from the award-winning publishers, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, will be a great addition to our curriculum." About Progress Academy: (1) Ray, Brian D., PhD. "Research Facts on Homeschooling." 2009. National Home Education Research Institute. 22 March 2010 http://www.nheri.org/Research-Facts-on-Homeschooling.html. ### Progress Academy Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
Home-schooled teens get a prom Posted: 28 Apr 2010 07:55 AM PDT With the decor faux-enchanted forest and the dress code black tie and fancy gowns, the prom held Saturday night at a West Dundee golf club had many of the trappings of that quintessential high school rite of passage. The most obvious exception: an actual high school. This prom was for home-schooled teens only. Tickets were sold only for individuals, not couples; no king nor queen was crowned. As at many traditional proms, explicit music and suggestive dancing were forbidden. Unlike many high school proms in the Chicago area, there was no lavish after-party at a Magnificent Mile hotel or on a Lake Michigan cruise ship. "Meeting girls isn't the whole reason, but it is a portion of why I wanted a prom," said Mikel Dever, a home-schooled freshman from Lake Forest who had hoped "to look dashing" in the tux he ordered online and even took a dance class to learn some moves. Many home-schooling parents say they often feel put on the defensive about whether their children get an adequate social education. In fact, many home-schoolers regularly gather for group lessons and field trips, and the Internet has made it much simpler for like-minded home educators to find each other. Yet while such home-school get-togethers have for years included dances, and home educator networks are planning proms in several states this spring, according to the A to Z Home's Cool Homeschooling Web site, it's still not that easy to pull one together. The West Dundee prom, dubbed Fairytale Moonlight Masquerade, drew only about 40 teens, some who traveled from Indiana and Wisconsin to attend. As for most of them, this was the first prom for home educator Diane Keen, though the Crystal Lake mother has been coordinating social events for home-schoolers like her daughter Amanda since 2006, when Keen established IL Teen Activities. With an entry fee of $55 per person, the home-school dance cost less than most proms, where a single ticket this spring was running as high as $85 at Lake Forest High School and $125 at Batavia High School, according to those schools' Web sites. Dorothy Werner of Illinois Home Oriented Unique Schooling Experience, or HOUSE, a statewide support system for home-schoolers that posted Keen's prom on its Web site, said home-schooled teens "really need this service." Werner has seen the popularity of home-schooler proms grow in Illinois over the last decade. The Crossroads Area Home School Association also held a prom in downstate Bloomington Country Club this month, also attended by about 40 teens, said spokeswoman Shelly Nelson. Oak Lawn mom Renee Lerner, whose 15-year-old son Austin attended the West Dundee prom, said she "appreciated that the music and dancing were appropriate. It was important the children were in a controlled environment, but still having fun." Lois Kanter, 17, of Hebron, in McHenry County, called the prom "a magical moment that harkened me back to when I was a little girl always dreaming about being a princess." She's among about 2 million home-schooled children in the U.S., according to the National Home Education Research Institute in Oregon. Its president, Brian D. Ray, said the number has been on a general upswing since the modern home-schooling movement started about 30 years ago, growing 5 percent to 12 percent annually in recent years. The numbers are just estimates, since most states, including Illinois, do not track home-schooled children or require them to be registered. Yet many children who start out being home-schooled later end up enrolling in high school. Joseph Mangano, 14, of Marengo, who attended the West Dundee prom, said there used to be about 15 people around his age in his home-school group, which gets together three times a month for social and athletic activities. Now there are only about six. Likewise, the Chicago Homeschool Co-op, a group of home-schooling families that meets twice a week for classes, outings and group play activities, is made up mainly of younger children. "While we've tried to attract older kids, they generally don't come back once they realize there are not kids their age," said Alice Hollowed, one of the co-op organizers. Hollowed said she plans to home-school through high school, "but who knows what will happen? Often the kids also decide they want to try out school." Such is the case for Athena Parke. The 14-year-old from Oak Park attended the home-school prom but plans to enroll in Oak Park River Forest High School in the fall to get the "whole school experience" — not just prom, but pep rallies and football games. "With home schooling," she said, "my parents can't offer me these types of things." Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
Home-schooled get their own prom Posted: 27 Apr 2010 09:56 PM PDT With the decor faux-enchanted forest and the dress code black tie and fancy gowns, the prom held Saturday night at a West Dundee golf club had many of the trappings of that quintessential high school rite of passage. The most obvious exception: an actual high school. This prom was for home-schooled teens only. Tickets were sold only for individuals, not couples; no king nor queen was crowned. As at many traditional proms, explicit music and suggestive dancing were forbidden. Unlike many high school proms in the Chicago area, there was no lavish after-party at a Magnificent Mile hotel or on a Lake Michigan cruise ship. "Meeting girls isn't the whole reason, but it is a portion of why I wanted a prom," said Mikel Dever, a home-schooled freshman from Lake Forest who had hoped "to look dashing" in the tux he ordered online and even took a dance class to learn some moves. Many home-schooling parents say they often feel put on the defensive about whether their children get an adequate social education. In fact, many home-schoolers regularly gather for group lessons and field trips, and the Internet has made it much simpler for like-minded home educators to find each other. Yet while such home-school get-togethers have for years included dances, and home educator networks are planning proms in several states this spring, according to the A to Z Home's Cool Homeschooling Web site, it's still not that easy to pull one together. The West Dundee prom, dubbed Fairytale Moonlight Masquerade, drew only about 40 teens, some who traveled from Indiana and Wisconsin to attend. As for most of them, this was the first prom for home educator Diane Keen, though the Crystal Lake mother has been coordinating social events for home-schoolers like her daughter Amanda since 2006, when Keen established IL Teen Activities. With an entry fee of $55 per person, the home-school dance cost less than most proms, where a single ticket this spring was running as high as $85 at Lake Forest High School and $125 at Batavia High School, according to those schools' Web sites. Dorothy Werner of Illinois Home Oriented Unique Schooling Experience, or HOUSE, a statewide support system for home-schoolers that posted Keen's prom on its Web site, said home-schooled teens "really need this service." Werner has seen the popularity of home-schooler proms grow in Illinois over the last decade. The Crossroads Area Home School Association also held a prom in downstate Bloomington Country Club this month, also attended by about 40 teens, said spokeswoman Shelly Nelson. Oak Lawn mom Renee Lerner, whose 15-year-old son Austin attended the West Dundee prom, said she "appreciated that the music and dancing were appropriate. It was important the children were in a controlled environment, but still having fun." Lois Kanter, 17, of Hebron, in McHenry County, called the prom "a magical moment that harkened me back to when I was a little girl always dreaming about being a princess." She's among about 2 million home-schooled children in the U.S., according to the National Home Education Research Institute in Oregon. Its president, Brian D. Ray, said the number has been on a general upswing since the modern home-schooling movement started about 30 years ago, growing 5 percent to 12 percent annually in recent years. The numbers are just estimates, since most states, including Illinois, do not track home-schooled children or require them to be registered. Yet many children who start out being home-schooled later end up enrolling in high school. Joseph Mangano, 14, of Marengo, who attended the West Dundee prom, said there used to be about 15 people around his age in his home-school group, which gets together three times a month for social and athletic activities. Now there are only about six. Likewise, the Chicago Homeschool Co-op, a group of home-schooling families that meets twice a week for classes, outings and group play activities, is made up mainly of younger children. "While we've tried to attract older kids, they generally don't come back once they realize there are not kids their age," said Alice Hollowed, one of the co-op organizers. Hollowed said she plans to home-school through high school, "but who knows what will happen? Often the kids also decide they want to try out school." Such is the case for Athena Parke. The 14-year-old from Oak Park attended the home-school prom but plans to enroll in Oak Park River Forest High School in the fall to get the "whole school experience" — not just prom, but pep rallies and football games. "With home schooling," she said, "my parents can't offer me these types of things." Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
Posted: 28 Apr 2010 12:13 AM PDT I travel the country making presentations to various groups. I make myself very accessible, which means parents ask me lots of questions, usually of a "What should I do?" nature. The issues run the gamut, but most of the questions involve behavior problems. What strikes me is that our grandparents — our great-grandparents, most certainly — would not have asked such questions. They either would not have ever experienced the sort of problems today's parents find themselves dealing with (confrontational disrespect and disobedience, for example), or if they did, they would not have felt the need for "expert" advice. They knew what to do; in most cases what they did worked. I often point that out to the person asking one of these questions, and say, "What you really need to do is figure out why you feel the need to ask my advice about a problem your grandparents would have known how to handle. What do you think was different about your grandparents' approach to rearing children?" I'm becoming increasingly convinced that the "behavioral" solutions parents seek are not really solutions at all. More often than not, they're the equivalent of using a Band-Aid to treat hemophilia. In one of my favorite songs of his, Bob Dylan sings, "I'm gonna change my way of thinkin', get myself a different set of rules." He's referencing the fact that proper behavior is a function of proper thinking. That's true regardless of context.Today's parents are having problems with their kids because they are thinking very differently from the way their grandparents thought. Clever behavior modification strategies are only going to work for short periods of time, if they work at all. In order to get a permanent handle on their kids, parents need to change how they think about children and their responsibilities toward them. Take a homeschooling mother who recently asked me how she could effectively separate the roles of teacher and mom. I asked why they needed to be separated. Both teacher and mom are authority figures, are they not? Her confusion arose because she believes, as do a troubling number of today's mothers, that Mom really isn't an authority figure. Mom is a "nurturer." Her grandmother didn't limit herself with a self-definition of that sort. This mom's self-doubts are a function of faulty thinking concerning her responsibilities toward her children. She is attempting to play two roles with her kids when the two roles in question are simply two facets of one primary role: authority figure. Her grandmother would have known that. Contact John Rosemond at www.rosemond.com. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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