Lesson Plans and Homeschool
How important are lesson plans in homeschooling? They depend a great deal on the personality of
the parent who is homeschooling, but most see the great benefit of well-structured lesson plans.
Lesson plans will enable parents to provide the structure that is needed for children to learn and
apply the information being taught. In teaching reading, for example, the structure and sequence
are far more important than most may realize.
A study conducted at Harvard by Dr. Jeanne Chall concluded that about 70 percent of individuals will
learn to read regardless of the method employed, but 30 percent will not. This is because roughly
30 percent are accessing a different part of their brains when dealing with language. Reading
instruction done systematically is a more effective way for any reader, but for that 30 percent,
it is a necessity. These learners already have an issue with processing language, even verbal
language sometimes, and putting information in sequence is difficult for them. "Naturally this
will affect their ability to read and spell correctly. After all, every word consists of letters
in a specific sequence. In order to read one has to perceive the letters in sequence, and also
remember what word is represented by the sequence of letters in question"
( http://www.audiblox2000.com/dyslexia/sequencing.htm).
As they struggle working linearly, left-to-right, they often sound out the word, pronouncing letter
sounds out of sequence. Sequence is something that must be taught and practiced for these learners
to find success.
The National Reading Panel has found that programs that teach phonics systematically and
explicitly are the most effective. Systematic phonics instruction is an organized method of
teaching children the letter-sound relationships in a manner that starts with the simplest
concepts and builds to the more complex. Some of us may have been taught this way when we were
younger, but even so, most of us do not remember the sequence or how we were taught. Dr. Sally
Shaywitz has said, "What is so critical and so unique about learning phonics in this way is that
it allows the reader to apply his accumulating knowledge to deciphering and reading words he has
never seen before. No other method of teaching reading can make this claim" (Shaywitz, Overcoming
Dyslexia, p. 200). If we want to give children this systematic, explicit phonics instruction, we
need to have a solid resource that helps us teach this information in the most effective sequence.
This is where lesson plans become vital in helping with our instruction.
Reading Horizons offers scripted lessons plans in easy-to-use manuals that help parents know what
to instruct and how to instruct this invaluable information. The practice pages, games, and
software are all correlated to the manual to support the sequence. The software also teaches the
sounds and skills in the same explicit fashion. This program follows all that research has said
is essential to produce efficient readers. The few minutes it may take in preparing the lesson
will pale in comparison to the return of confident, empowered readers.
How it Works - Learn more about the program and its systematic method.
learn more about our software and direct instruction products and how they can help with your homeschool classroom.
|