Taking an Online Class For the First Time

So are you thinking about an online class but you aren’t sure if it is right for you? Well, no worries. Here are some basics you need to know.

First off, online classes can be scary when it is new, but remember that they are just like taking a regular class, only with internet.

Most of the time, you will be given a link through email that once clicked upon, takes you directly to the online class. Other times, you will be given a phone number so that you are able to see the class happening online but you hear the audio over the phone. Whatever their set up, you should receive several emails once you register for the class that walks you through how to take the class, where to click, and who to call if you get stuck or have questions.

Once you are in the class, you will participate just like if you were in a classroom. You will be able to ask questions, and you will be able to hear and see what the teacher is talking about. Sometimes you are able to see the actual teacher, but that is not always the case.

Whenever in doubt, though, get a contact. Talk with someone else who is signed up or contact the people hosting the online class. There is nothing wrong with questions, and reputable people will love helping get you the answers you need so that you can be just as comfortable in an online class as you would in a traditional classroom.

Technology can be new and sometimes challenging, but it is also a great way to bring great minds from all over the world right into your living room.

Enjoy your classes!

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MIT uses same textbooks as AskDrCallahan

One of our customers contacted us today because he took our Calculus 1 course. He wanted to take Calculus 2, but since AskDrCallahan didn’t offer a DVD course for Calculus 2, he decided to take it at MIT.

We loved the fact that MIT was second to us in his list of options. Ha!

Anyway, he was emailing us because MIT’s Openware courses (which you can view here) were saying that they used the same textbook as we were using, so they contacted us about whether or not that is the book we would use.

If you’re interested as well, YES we would. The book we chose for Calculus 1 actually contains enough material to teach Calculus 1-3. Different schools break it up a little differently, so it depends on what school you’re dealing with as to what they consider the “division points” for each course, but we think it is pretty neat that MIT chose the same thing we did. :)

Their openware courses are actually a great option for parents if you’re interested in teaching Calculus 2 or 3 in high school. (and yes, some people do!)They don’t do video, but still it is MIT at home. We thought it was a cool option.

MIT seems to follow a course plan of

18.01

18.02

18.03

You can look at it here. Just extra material to support your effort!

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Psychologists attribute high scores on standardized tests to “home schooling”

I just thought you guys might like this article. Click Here to Read.

The article was published in Psychology Today and it takes a look at not only how the adult mindset towards education has evolved over the years, but also makes some suggestions about what we should really be valuing in our kids’ education. Personally, I was surprised to learn that math teaching across the board (whether in affluent sections of town or the poorest ghettos) was equally pathetic. The article attributes the higher scores of affluent kids on standardized test to the “home schooling” parents provided for them. Interesting read, but do you agree with their findings? What are your thoughts about “modern” education?

Kind of sad, really, that parents think extra education is needed, when really if we would just put home school standards in the classroom to start with, students could be well educated AND have fun evenings instead of extra work.

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Homeschool Elementary Math that Prepares Kids For Highschool Algebra and Beyond

Grade school math prep for higher math is actually quite simple. Children
need to see math more than do math.  The basics needed are;

Addition
Subtraction
Multiplication
Division
Fractions
Geometric shapes
Time
Space

Granted that can include a lot of stuff such as mastery of addition includes
knowing the placeholders of base 10 number system. The one’s place, the
ten’s place, etc. Fractions are going to take you into the 1/100 place and
such. But still its addition, start simple and grow.

Basically, all of those concepts can be taught at home without purchasing much at all. Paper, pencil and a clock can get you a long way. But doing math as you go throughout the day gets you a lot further. We wrote a lot on chalk boards and made lots of games out of numbers and shapes and time. We are always noticing shapes and calling them by their correct names. We add as we go along -”We counted 10 steps. There are 5 floors. How many steps are
there to the top?”

One thing we do that I haven’t seen in any curriculum for grade school is to use the alphabet for blank spaces to make formulas.  Use the word ‘formula’
and use X, Y or something else. This is critical to make the move to Algebra easy. Such as

1+ X = 2

Write this on your chalkboard (we wrote it on the driveway), and say something like “what do you need to add to 1 to get 2?”

Out on the driveway it’s a game and a mystery, then when they get to the course called Algebra, they have already done it. We were always told that
children had to reach a certain age to understand this abstract notation. I have found this is not the case. My son could do this as soon as he could
and 1 and 1. I just wrote it with a blank first  1 + ____ = 2 and later with the X and told him the X was the blank. He got that. I left all sorts of
mysteries on the driveway or large cardboard boxes and the chalkboard. He had a blast figuring them out.

See this picture:

This is our son learning sums and geometry. Some of the math is more than he currently comprehends and he has no idea that he’s learning, but when he gets there it won’t scare him or look odd.

We did math this way only through the 2rd grade. Our cover school requires taking the SAT beginning in the 4th grade (each cover is different), so we
decided 3rd grade was a good time to begin expressing math on paper. So after looking around a lot, we finally picked http://www.mathmammoth.com
worksheets. It does a great job of moving into new techniques and concepts as well as continuing to enforce prior skills. It approaches problems in a
common sense way so that the math can easily be applied to the real world. For example, it teaches to add in a way that can be done in your head not
just on paper. Such as adding 16 and 20 you don’t just pull down the 6 on the right side and add the 1 and 2 to get 36.  You add the tens and get 30
and the ones and get 6 for 36. That can be done in your head and is useful for adding in life when paper and pencil and desk are not always readily
available. We do these sheets and still do the activities as well as pointing out math everywhere we see it.

Think of math like you think of language. First you learn to speak it before you read and write it. Kids should be able to speak math and understand it

before they are reading and writing it.  Its not just an activity, it is a language that explains a lot of things in this world that words just can’t do.

Don’t get bogged down on when to move children to Algebra. If they understand the basic math concepts outlined above, then they can go on to
express math in algebraic terms. Its just a more sophisticated way of expressing math. The higher you go in math the more detailed you can express how something in this world works.

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AskDrCallahan Scholarship Program: Making Sure Every Student is Well Prepared for College and For Life

When you want to give your kids a quality, college preparatory education, you shouldn’t have to cut corners just because money is too tight to swing the cost of good materials. Yet, several times a year we are contacted by families that are in just that situation. They want to give their kids the quality education we offer at AskDrCallahan, but for various reasons they cannot afford the cost of buying our materials.

To try and help out, we  have opened the

AskDrCallahan Scholarship Program

This program exists to help parents provide a quality, college-preparatory education to their kids no matter what their income, financial situation, or hardship situation might be. In these economically difficult times, the need is especially great and as stewards of our gifts and talents here at AskDrCallahan, we feel that we need to do what we can to make sure all kids get a solid academic preparation for their futures.

We have several options available to families who need the scholarship program from discounted materials, to free stuff, and more.

To find out what options are available for your family, please contact us. support@askdrcallahan.com

If you’re not in need of a scholarship program, you can still help. Consider spreading the word, selling back your textbooks, or donating to the program.

For more details on how you can help, please contact us. Support@askdrcallahan.com.

We will be glad to talk with you.

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Making Your Books Last for Several Kids

Many homeschool parents have multiple kids, and they don’t want to buy new books every year just because it’s time for the next kid to take 5th grade science.

So here are some tips on things you can do to make those textbooks survive the family.

1. Run copies of workbooks and turn them into worksheets. That way you have a blank work sheets for many students (and you preserve the binding so that you don’t wear out the book)

2. Have students that are close in age work through the course together.

3. Use a textbook cover (the classic paper bag cover allows for creativity and personalization with your students so they can be “unique”). :) Covers protect the book and increase longevity.

4. Consider ebooks, these you can reprint and save as well as replace when things like the dog eats them, or you spill koolaid on it. :)

What things have you done to make your books last a long time? Post comments for other parents so they can use your ideas too!

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Setting Academic Goals, and Being ok Changing them

As we are preparing for the Fall we are looking at what courses to take. Some students will be taking Algebra, and others will be starting Calculus. Still others will take something in between.

I focus on Algebra and Calculus because both of those courses typically represent a turning point for many students. Algebra is where students move from elementary arithmetic into applied math, with abstract thought, variables, constants, and true equations and expressions. Many students who struggle here do so because the transition to logical math is something of a leap. Not because students are not good at math, but because simply children’s brains develop at their own unique rate and while many kids are able to handle logical thought at around 14, I’ve seen several students who needed to wait until way after 14, while still others were masters at Algebra much younger.

The point here, though, is to realize that everyone goes at a different pace. I know as my 10 month old son is now starting to stand and say phrases, it is easy to compare him to other kids his age and wonder if he is ahead or behind other kids. Whenever there is a child that is doing something my son isn’t yet mastering I want to blame myself for not preparing him right, or be concerned that he has some developmental issue I need to fix. I can only assume that I will be this way when he starts school, and I know other parents are this way with their school-age kids, because they call and email me at the support line with their similar concerns.

My blanket advice (as far as math education–I’ll probably need to call some of you to ask about raising a boy!)  is to chill. If you start something like Algebra or Calculus and you are concerned that your students won’t be able to handle it, relax in the thought that we are homeschoolers. If you get a couple months into the curriculum and you can see that either a slower pace, faster pace, cooperative class, online class, study sessions, supplements, or different curriculum all together is what is called for, you have the freedom to change. You are never stuck with your choice, and you don’t always have to re-invest hundreds of dollars to buy a new set of math materials.

If you get into Algebra, for example, and you find that you need a slower pace, then go slower. You may not even have to follow the book at all. Find a concept in the book that your student needs to learn and bring it out of the textbook. Find a connection to something real and tangible, and do that day’s lesson only on that one thing. You don’t have to cover the whole lesson in one day just because that’s how some other kid did it. This is your kid, and you get to decide how to educate him/her. That’s why you signed up to be the homeschool parent. You signed up to be the educator, which means not only that you have to put in the extra work to supplement when that’s called for, but it also means you get to decide what constitutes a day’s lesson and you get to dictate what is acceptable for your student.

So don’t worry! You’re in control, and you can do it! And if you ever forget that you can handle it, call or email us, and we’ll be there to help and encourage you.

support@askdrcallahan.com

205.790.2617

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Teaching to the Test: This philosophy will bite you later

Many parents ask us about our curriculum and specifically our method of testing. They wonder at how we don’t teach our students to memorize formulas, nor do we drill them over and over on how to work the problems that will appear on the test.

We do ask our students to study the concepts that will be addressed on an exam, but the difference is just that: we focus on concepts.

The overall goal of any education is to learn. We want to be smarter at the end of things, knowing how to do something better than we did before because we went through an edcuational process to be more academically astute.

In the case of mathematics, we study math so that we can function in society as educated individuals, being able to accurately pump gas, buy groceries, build bridges, measure medication, and so on.

Yet, despite all these examples of how math will be essential to students once they leave their K-12 educational haven, parents are still approaching the teaching process as if memorizing and garnering an “A”, will be all their students need for their futures.

My apologies to all of the nice old ladies who taught me 5th, 6th, and 7th grade math, but I just can’t accept the memorization philosophy at the high school level. Not meaning to step on any toes, but that is just a mediocre way to look at things. The bigger goals need to be teaching students HOW to do something, WHY to do something, and checking to be sure they understand. And the way to do this is not to drill students, and certainly not rote memorization. I’ve seen too many students come through my tutoring center who are able to work problems, and get the right answer, but they have no idea what they are doing and if you gave them a real world example (Begrudgingly known as “word problems” among the student population), they will be lost and confused. Even though the “math” they are doing is exactly the same in both situations.

So I encourage you, as you approach your next exam in math, make sure your students understand the concepts behind what they are doing. If you have to let them re-take the test and correct their mistakes, great! That is a learning process. Don’t be afraid to take the time to learn well the first time. Everyone will be grateful for your efforts–and better educated— in the end.

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Looking For Feedback

Have you taken an AskDrCallahan course? Did you like it? What would you change about it?

We are putting together some customer comments and we would love to know what you thought about our homeschool DVD math courses.

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Explore DVDs For Teaching Home School Math

When you sit down to teach math to your home school student, you probably reach for all the helps and resources you can get.

To help things run smoothly, many parents turn to DVDs. But what are you really getting with a DVD education? Well, let’s take a brief look at teaching homeschool math with DVDs.


DVD instruction is essentially where a teacher is filmed teaching each lesson from a textbook. All of this information is recorded onto a DVD which parents can show to their students before their students study their lessons for that day.

A typical day with a DVD education system might look like this:

  • Open DVD
  • put DVD in player
  • navigate to section being studied that day
  • watch clip, following along in the textbook
  • Read textbook section
  • work practice problems
  • work homework problems as assigned
  • Review DVD as needed.

Click Here to view some sample video clips of DVD lessons by AskDrCallahan

Parents/Students who might want to use a DVD course include (but certainly isn’t limited to) those who:

  • haven’t studied math in a while and need some help remembering the concepts
  • independent/ teach themselves
  • want a classroom experience, but who want to customize the pace for what makes sense for them
  • enjoy/require visual preparation and review resource
  • things just make more sense when you can watch someone else work the problems on a board before attempting them yourself

There are many reasons and benefits to getting a DVD course. You can probably think of others that I didn’t list above. If you have a DVD course, why did you decide to go that route? Would you recommend DVD courses to other homeschooling families? Why?Why not?

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