Block it Out
By spending quality time on one subject and completing multiple lessons in a row, children can complete the same number of lessons each day, but in fewer subject areas, without feeling like they're bouncing from subject to subject.
- Daily Routine
- Shaking Things Up
- It's Okay to Skip
- Block It Out
Alison in South Carolina
Block
scheduling has been very helpful
since I found I was losing my son in
the transitions between subjects
(and I do mean “losing”—he would
literally vanish, and we would lose
valuable time while I discovered
which distraction had beamed him
away while he was supposed to be
getting out the next materials). It
is more difficult to block schedule
some upper elementary/middle school
subjects because of their “density.”
As a result, my son has gone back to
a more traditional OLS schedule,
which delivers math and language
arts first. Unfortunately, he
doesn’t always get through it all,
and the subjects which are listed
lower on the list can get skipped.
Our solution is to have
“upside-down” days once or twice a
week (usually we do this on Tuesday
and Thursday) in which we start at
the bottom and work our way up. He
seems to enjoy the novelty of this,
and we do more than one lesson if
needed to catch up.
If we have fallen behind in any of
the subjects, we plan a day devoted
to “fun” and make an event of
it—making tea or hot chocolate and
sitting by the fire to read, or
pulling out stuffed animals or
costumes and props that go along
with what we are studying. Right now
my family room is covered with
bones—my son is playing with every
human body and skeleton model and
kit that we’ve accumulated over the
years—as well as all of the
characters from Winnie-the-Pooh.
Trust me, it is quite a sight!
Amy in Minnesota/Wisconsin
We do modified
block scheduling a week at a time to
help my children feel more in
control and responsible. They get to
choose the order in which to work
the subjects and have a better
understanding of what type of work
their brains are ready for on that
day or moment. So they do all
subjects in a week, but choose the
order.
I give them a list for a week at a
time. Both of my children like to
work on a subject all at once to
stay focused on topics, so we try to
group things within a unit that go
together in a week, rather than
going into the next lesson and
having to refer back to a book they
read. We try to split some units of
math, history, and science evenly
out over a week, two, or three.
The advantages to us are that my
children feel more in control and
responsible for their learning and
understanding of their brains and
bodies. It also helps them stick to
one topic and be able to reinforce
it rather than waiting until the
next week to remember the concepts.
My fifth grader mostly likes to do
math all at once because she says
doing it over and over reinforces it
and keeps it fresh in her brain.
They are also learning their points
of overload and when to stop and
carry it on into another day.
