|
Homeschool Australia K-12 Curriculum
Save time and simplify
your homeschooling life...
Learn from experienced
homeschoolers how to write your own curriculum.
It really is that easy!
Use this website with Beverley Paine's Getting Started with Home Schooling - Practical Considerations to help you develop your own educational curriculum to suit your family situation, beliefs and lifestyle. The checklists can help you identify your children's current educational skill level in each subject area, as well as find any 'gaps' in their learning, plan what they need to cover or keep track of what has been learned.
Curriculum Pages Index
As you can appreciate this website is continuously under development... It's our aim to add pages on a regular basis in all curriculum areas: check back frequently. Feedback and comments welcome. We hope you enjoy the articles and activities and find the links and recommended resources useful.
Over the next year we will be working our way through each subject area and writing fresh, new content which will also be reproduced in a reasonably priced handy reference booklet from our Practical Homeschooling Series.
Advertise or Contribute to this website. |
|
"Congratulations on a terrific website. It's a great resource." Steven
"By sharing your experiences,
we are into our third year of homeschooling and enjoying it thoroughly." Marina
"Thank you so much for your wonderful website! I was getting quiet frustrated with finding appropriate information on homeschooling - thanks to your website we are now on the right track... Using your checklists for reassurance helped me to have the confidence to come up with my own programme that suits our needs." Rachael
"I'm a frequent visitor to your website... I gain valuable knowledge from your website, luckily recommended in the very early stages of our homeschooling journey." Geradine
"I checked out your website today and was incredibly impressed by it. I can tell it will be a great resource for our family for many years. THANKS for all the hard work that has gone into making homeschooling easier and much less isolating for families like us." Cynthia |

|
|
© Nidri 2003
Beading with kids is fun and creative and can be a powerful tool for teaching them the joy of giving simple handmade gifts. It is also another opening to teach our children about the world around them and the value of recycling.
Beading does not have to be about beautiful glass hand-blown beads purchased for a pretty price from a bead shop, although it can be if this is how you wish to do it. Beading can be about making use of nature's resources and recycling.
If you keep your eyes open, beads are not hard to come by. Op shops and garage sales are a good source for old necklaces and bracelets that can be cut and the beads reused. Just take care that the necklace has free moving beads as sometimes the beads are moulded to the string and cannot be reused. To find something special to hang from the bottom of your bead string, look out for earrings, charms, bells and natural objects - or make your own amulets and talismans. Nature provides an endless supply of beads, shells and pieces of coral often have ready made holes for stringing. You could be lucky enough to find a fairy stone. If you have a small drill, the skies are the limit with what you can utilise for beads. Timber rounds, seeds, shells, buttons, Chinese lucky coins, hand made paper beads, clay beads, metal washers painted with glitter pain - let your and your child's imagination go wild.
New beads can be obtained cheaply through discount stores both on strings and by cutting existing necklaces. Remember to keep all the clasps to re-use should you wish to string your own jewellery.
A simple way to introduce children to beading is to have them create their own bead strings for hanging -my 3yr old can handle this task with ease. Using a length of fishing wire, tie something unique to the bottom end of the string as a hanger and anchor. This could be a large bead or something special like a sea shell, bell, charm or amulet. Allow the child to string the beads until the desired length is reached, leave enough fishing wire at the top to tie a large loop for hanging and your bead string is done. How easy can it get?
If you wish to add a teaching element, you could discuss the origins of the beads, where the shells or seed pods came from. You can talk about any charms or amulets used. The colour themes and materials could be varied to suit the season.
Browse Our Curriculum Index
|
|
Please note: the information
on this website is of a general
nature only and is not intended as
personal or professional advice.
SEARCH this site:

CURRICULUM INDEX
Buy our BOOKS
 More questions?
JOIN the FORUM
 Time to spare?
Browse our extensive
ARTICLE
LIBRARY
Feedback is always welcome
on our websites!

Join the HEA in 2008
and receive 2 FREE Booklets!

A percentage of sales
goes to Trees For Life 
|
Unschool
Kidz!
FREE
ezine publishing
children's short
stories, poems, pictures, projects,
recipes,
riddles
and more...
Contributions
welcome!
|
We welcome
advertising inquiries
from educational suppliers.
Email

ALWAYS LEARNING BOOKS
ABN 17 503 397 443
Beverley and Robin Paine
PO Box 371 Yankalilla 5203
SOUTH AUSTRALIA 
Thank you for visiting!
|
 |
Pioneering members of the home education movement in Australia,
Beverley and Robin Paine
are passionate advocates of true educational choice for families.
They began homeschooling in 1986 and three years later started the
South Australian Home Based Learners
network. Beverley continues to write for homeschooling newsletters
and magazines as well as hosting several websites dedicated to promoting
and supporting home education in Australia. Her aim is to demystify the
education process and make it accessible to all parents. Enjoy Beverley's
wealth of practical knowledge, homeschooling and unschooling tips and
ideas through articles and books and online at
www.homeschoolaustralia.com.
Since the late 1990s Robin and Beverley have been building their home education
publishing business - Always Learning Books - from home with the help of their son Thomas.
"Education is not a preparation for life. Education is life itself." John Dewey
Please visit the following websites for information on homeschooling in Australia:
Homeschool Australia : SAHEN : Australian HS Curriculum : About the Paine Family
Text & Images on this site
Copyright © 1999-2008 Beverley Paine.
All rights reserved.
Help | Disclaimer | Copyright | Privacy
|