More SciTech happenings

Here’s the latest that came via email:

This week only! Special Spring Break Hours!

Still thinking of things to do over Spring Break? 
SciTech has extended hours this week only starting Monday 3/28:
 
Mon-Friday: 10 am - 5 pm
Saturday: 10 am - 5 pm 
Sunday: 12 noon - 5 pm

Don't forget we have a TON of activities available over Spring Break!

1. Two Day Mini Science Camps:  We have a few slots available for last minute registration in
our Two Day Science Camps: Hours are 9 am- 3pm.  Before and after care is available. 
Brochures are available on our website: www.scitechmuseum.org. 

3/28 and 3/29 (Monday and Tuesday): 
Arrive just before 9 am on Monday 3/28. There are limited slots available for
 
Kitchen Chemistry, Pirate's Treasure and (almost full) Totally Ballistic. 

3/31 and 4/1 (Thursday and Friday): 
Only Totally Ballistic has openings available. 

If you have a group of eight or more children, 
there is still time to open another two day camp starting on the 31st. 
Choose from Kitchen Chemistry or Pirate's Treasure.  
We would need to know by Monday 3/28 if you wish to open a camp.
email: customercare@scitechmuseum.org or call 630-859-3434 ext. 218.  

2. The Great Egg Drop Contest at SciTech: Wednesday March 30th
Its time for kids to show off their Scientific Stuff and participate in the Great Egg Drop Contest at SciTech Museum. 

10 am- 12 Noon:  Material Tables will open up and children will engineer and create housing for their eggs to 
compete in a contest to see which egg survives the drop from our Mezzanine!  

At 12 noon- Egg Drop!      <
 /b>Regular admission is all you need to participate in the Egg Drop. 

3. Kids can enjoy Spring Break at SciTech with over 200 Interactive Hands on Exhibits: 

You don't need to participate in the organized activities at SciTech, just c'mon out  and 
let the kids learn, engage and explore SciTech's fun interactive exhibits.  Regular 
admission can get you a whole day of "Scientastic" Fun!!

We look forward to seeing you over Spring Break! 

Best Regards, 

The SciTech Museum Team.

TOS Crew Review — Big IQ Kids

Big IQ Title Banner

As my kids get older it is easy to focus on their core texts and let other, but still important, subjects slip a little. Just when I was grappling with how to keep on top of those little areas, Big IQ Kids came to my rescue.

This online program allows kids to learn independently in four essential areas — spelling, vocabulary, US geography, and math. They can just go with the flow of the program or you can customize it to their needs or your current academic focus. I was so grateful to be able to set it up initially, and then let my 6th and 8th graders run with it. I required them to do a lesson in spelling, vocab, and geography each day and it freed me up to work with my other kids knowing that these areas were covered.

Here is an example of the different levels of membership and what they offer you in just one area of the website:

My kids have really enjoyed using this and it takes little oversight on my part. They get excited about advancing and it has really helped my daughter’s spelling in particular. It was a great review of state information as well and has overall been a great fit to teach and review in the four areas covered on their site.

Product: Big IQ Kids

Details: An online program geared to kids K-8, and even adults. The program offers quizzing and lesson helps in spelling, vocabulary, math, and US Geography.

Price: Pricing has a lot of different options, see their pricing page for all the details, but basically, you can get the whole program for $19.99 per month, $99.99 a year. You can also purchase just portions of it for a month or year if you want to target learning in a certain area. Their full program for a full year is really the best price available.

What we loved . . .

  • Lots of free quizzing. Big IQ Kids offers some great stuff on their site that everyone can enjoy. You can have your child spend time quizzing on spelling, geography, math, and vocabulary. However, you cannot save their work or check their progress without setting up a membership that costs money. I think that’s fair. You can play around for free, but if you really want to track the progress and see the program become more customized to the user, you need to put in some money. To see if the premium options would be a good fit for you, you can enjoy a free 7 day full access trial.
  • Game rewards. My kids always love the games. In Big IQ Kids they earn coins for each lesson that they complete. The coins can then be spent in the “arcade.” There are a variety of games, some better than others, but both my kids that used the program found something they enjoyed and would willingly work toward the reward at the end of the lesson.
  • Email updates. Every time they take a quiz, pass a level, or do noteworthy work, I would get an email. It told me the percentage score and in many cases gave me specifics about what they missed. This was great to remind me to check in with them, to follow up on areas of struggle, and to praise them for the great job they were doing in the program.
  • Focuses on success. While the email updates did include their percentage and what they got wrong, it also encourages you to praise your child. My kids did not get discouraged by low scores, because they could repeatedly redo quizzes until they achieved the 100%. This was great. They weren’t stuck somewhere with a poor score, but continued to work hard to get to the next level or master the new content.
  • Great for independent learning. Both my kids that used the program did so with little or no help from me. I checked in with them a couple times a week, read the emails the program sent to me, and answered questions as they came up. I loved the simplicity of use for this and did not need to remind my kids once to get on the site to get their work done. They would even do extra work during their free time because they wanted to get to the next level in certain areas. I love programs that motivate the child to learn even when they don’t have to. 😉

Some considerations . . .

  • The site does contain ads. It may just be in the free portions of the site, but there are ads geared toward kids on the site in various places. Most of the ones that I saw were for games or vacation locations. I didn’t see any offensive ads, but there were ads.
  • The voice on the site is very computerized. At times we did have difficulty understanding some of their words, but most of it you could also read along, so it was not a problem to fill in the blanks left by the occasionally unintelligible host. In general this did not cause a problem, but it is something to be aware of.
  • More drill than instruction. My son commented that no matter how many times they asked him the vocab word he wasn’t going to get it right, because they didn’t give him any help in remembering the definition. They do tell the kids to write the words they get wrong and they do let them know their mistakes, but they try to teach it through repeated drills, not really teaching for understanding. This will be fine for some kids, but my son always needs to know the “why” so he struggled with this method of “teaching.” I was impressed that my kids were good about writing the words three times when the program told them to. However, it is really on the honors’ system that they follow through with this.
  • Might want to check the accuracy of state info. We live in Illinois, obviously, and so we know a bit about this state we live in. And, in the little blurb about our state in the geography section there was some less than accurate information. Just outdated stuff about O’hare and the building formerly known as the Sears Tower. Facts do change over time, and with how much information they carry I’m sure it is difficult to make sure it is all up to date. Well, I emailed them and within the next business day they had changed the information to reflect current data. They also recognized the need to verify the other state’s information. I definitely appreciated their speedy response and their desire to make sure their product is top quality.

We were quite pleased with Big IQ Kids in our home. It was a great fit for our current needs and I love the flexibility of pricing since you can just pay for what you want if you don’t want the complete package. It encouraged learning and really brought about improvement in the areas that it covered.  Love finding products like these that really fill a need.

For more TOS Crew reviews on this product, check out the TOS Crew blog.

Disclaimer: This product was provided to me free of charge through Big IQ Kids as part of my participation in The Old Schoolhouse Homeschool Crew. I received no additional compensation and the opinions expressed here come from my personal experiences and sincere thoughts.

Upcoming Creation Speakers

bio for Dr. Jonathan Sarfati Saturday, March 26, 2011, 9:00 am | 10:30 am | 1:00 pm | 2:30 pm
Dr. Jonathan Sarfati of Creation Ministries International
Grace Free Lutheran Church, 1121 S First Street, Dekalb 60115. (IL)
This is part of Dr. Sarfati’s Evolution: The Greatest Hoax on Earth tour
bio for Dr. Jonathan Sarfati Sunday, March 27, 2011, 9:30 am | 10:30 am
Dr. Jonathan Sarfati of Creation Ministries International
Design, Deluge and Dilemma
(pdf 5.5″ x 8.5″ flyer) and (pdf 11″ x 17″ poster)
Grace Free Lutheran Church, 1121 S First Street, Dekalb, IL
This is part of Dr. Sarfati’s Evolution: The Greatest Hoax on Earth tour
bio for Dr. Jonathan Sarfati Sunday, March 27, 2011, 7:00 pm
Dr. Jonathan Sarfati of Creation Ministries International
Topic TBA
Church of Christian Liberty, 502 West Euclid Avenue, Arlington Heights, IL
This is part of Dr. Sarfati’s Evolution: The Greatest Hoax on Earth tour
Click for info on Science Fair 2011 April 1, 2011
Illinois Regional [homeschool Science Fair
Rockford Radisson,
202 Bellschool Rd, Rockford, IL

Homeschoolers! Here’s YOUR chance to participate in a real, regional science fair!
Bonus: afternoon seminar will include MCF’s own Walt Sivertsen speaking on “The Heart and Core of the Creation/Evolution Issue” and Jim Ryan speaking on “Astronomy and the Glory of God.”

Richard Stepanek bio Midwest Creation Fellowship eventTuesday, April 5, 2011, 7:00 p.m.
Richard Stepanek of the Alpha Omega Institute
Astronomy and the Glory of God
Hampton Inn, Carol Stream, IL

No cost. Freewill offering accepted.

Mike Oard bio Midwest Creation Fellowship event Tuesday, May 3, 7:00 p.m.
and Michael Oard of Creation Ministries International
Ice Age Caused by the Flood
Hampton Inn, 205 W. North Avenue, Carol Stream, IL
What could have caused snow to remain year-round for so long that it built up into glaciers up to 2 miles deep, on up to 30 per cent of earth’s surface? What happened to those millions of mammoths who are now found frozen in permafrost? No cost. Freewill offering accepted.

You can see a full list of scheduled speakers on Midwest Creation Fellowship’s site.

Free HSLDA membership wrapping up soon

Time is running out to apply for
your free trial membership.
There’s only a few days left to apply for your free three-month trial membership and see how we help protect your right to homeschool, and the rights of homeschooling families for generations to come. This offer expires March 31, 2011.

Every day, parents like you are contacted by school and government officials, simply because they homeschool their children. Home School Legal Defense Association is a nonprofit advocacy organization that defends and advances your constitutional right to direct the education of your children. We give you the freedom to homeschool without the worry of facing legal threats alone.

Apply Now

Mother and child homeschooling


A Word From Our Members

Thank you HSLDA for giving me the peace of mind that I can still exercise my right to educate my own child. As primary educator of my children I feel like I should never have to give that up and I know you will be on my side if that is ever challenged.

— PL

*Offer good through March 31, 2011.

Illinois–Please Call Now to Oppose Compulsory School Age Increase

Dear HSLDA Members and Friends,

A bill that would place young people under compulsory education for an
additional year is being heard in committee today in Springfield.
Compulsory age in Illinois ends at age 17 right now.  Rep. Jehan
Gordon’s HB 2985 would raise it to age 18.

The committee will probably vote on the bill within a few days.  They
need to hear from you that making an additional year of a young
person’s life subject to state mandate is not acceptable.

REQUESTED ACTION:

1. Please call your representative if he or she is a committee member
(see list below). Use our Legislative Toolbox at
http://www.hslda.org/toolbox to find out who your representative is.
Even representatives whom you think already oppose the bill need to
hear from you.

2. If your representative is not on the committee, call the
chairperson, the vice chairperson and the minority spokesman (see
below).

3. Your message can be as simple as:

“Please vote NO on HB 2985. Parents, not state officials, know whether
their 17-year-old young adult should pursue formal education or some
other preparation for life responsibilities. The additional cost of
forcing unwilling young adults into a formal school setting should not
be added to the current taxpayer burden.”

This bill would undermine the freedom of all parents.  It is not
necessary for you to identify yourself as a homeschooler.

More details and contact information on HSLDA’s website.

In Home Homeschool Conference

The 2011 InHome Conference will be Thursday, March 24, through Saturday, March 26, at Pheasant Run Resort and Spa in St. Charles, Illinois. Registration is open.

Attend the Meet & Greet Event on Thursday!

Thursday, 7:00 – 9:00 p.m., in the New Orleans Ballroom, join the fun and make new friends! There will be something for everyone, from craft projects to ice breakers to cooperative games and a scavenger hunt. Win prizes! Choose one or two activities or do them all!

Registration and more contact info on their website.

This is coming quickly, so if you are interested in attending, jump on their website soon to register your family.

Sci Tech activities

It’s Raining Eggs at SciTech Museum!

It’s No Yolk! Over Spring Break on Wednesday, March 30th SciTech is going to have its

SciTech Egg Drop Contest!

Children will Engineer and Create housing for their eggs to compete in a contest to see which egg survives the D-R-O-P from our Mezzanine.
How do you say SPLAT?– or can the Kids keep their eggs intact?!

At 10-12 Noon the Egg Engineering Material Tables will open.
At 12 Noon will be the EGG DROP!

Regular Admission lets you in on the FUN!
General Admission: $8
Adults 60 and over $7
Kids 3 and under FREE!

Don’t forget, SciTech has two day Spring Break Camps the same week on
March 28 & 29 and March 31 & April 1!
Hurry! Only 20 kids per class, Camps are close to full!
Sign up Now!

  • Totally Ballistic
  • Pirate’s Treasure
  • Kitchen Chemistry

(Please call to register for the Science Camps- 630-859-3434 ext. 218)

We look forward to seeing you over Spring Break!

Best Regards,

The SciTech Team


SciTech Hands On Museum
18 West Benton St
Aurora, IL 60506

Will you follow me?

Just a quick request . . .

For those of you that do not already, would you take a minute to click on the “Connect with us here” icon in the sidebar. It will just take a minute, but it is a huge favor for me as it helps us have a more accurate picture of how many people are really connecting with resources, people, and information through our website. I hope that this website is a help to you as you homeschool and seek out resources to help you in that endeavor. Connecting publicly can be an easy way to say “Thanks.”

To those of you that already follow, thank you so much for doing so!

Thank you for taking a minute to show your support here.

As always, please let me know if there is anything I can do to help you out further. If you have suggestions or additions that you would like to see to the website, or events you think others would like to know about, please let me know. I love to hear from you about what you love (and what you don’t . . .) about this website and the resources posted here.

Thank you!!!

~Erin

Book sale and co-op open house

Straight from Homeschool University:

Homeschool University

invites you to their

OPEN HOUSE

Tuesday and Thursday, March 15th & 17th

Stop in anytime during the school day and visit.

Book Sale, Bake Sale from 9:30-2:00 p.m.

New Parent Meeting Tues, March 15th from 2:30-3:30 – Room 209

for directions and more info please refer to website.

Please feel free to pass this invite along to other homeschoolers and homeschool groups.

Administration

Homeschool University

They meet at:

Community Fellowship Church
28 W 240 North Ave.
West Chicago, Illinois

The main entrance is on St. Charles Road.

TOS Crew Review — Reading Kingdom

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Let me introduce you to a new friend of ours. My son named him Nate. This friendly owl is helping teach my kids to read and write, and doing a pretty good job of it, I might add.

Through Reading Kingdom, my 5, 7, and 9 year olds are interacting with letters and sounds in a brand new way. This program tackles more than just learning to read. It identifies six skills required for successful reading. The six skills are: sequencing, motor skills, sounds, meaning, grammar and comprehension. So, it doesn’t start with sounds, it starts with learning sequences. Kids also learn to type in the process since it is a computer based program and they must be able to type to interact with it.

After some time in the introductory levels, my son made it out of Letter Land. He was thrilled when he made it to the soccer field today:
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Reading Kingdom focuses on whole word recognition and alternating between clicking correct words and then typing them out to reinforce the word. This is a great integration of learning styles and keeps the kids as active participants in the learning process. Great for active learners and for kids who might also struggle with reversals. The word-focus is clear and builds one step at a time.

Product: Reading Kingdom

Details: An online program that helps 4-10 year olds learn to read through a third grade level.

Price: $19.99 per month or $199.99 for a year. Additional children are $9.99 each per month

What we loved . . .

  • Game based, but solidly educational. While Reading Kingdom involves games and game type graphics, it is all about learning the skills needed to read. Children interact with helpful cartoon characters to begin building their reading vocabulary.
  • Rechecks learning. The program naturally includes quite a bit of review and retesting. This helps them to confirm mastery of the topics and skills. It is brief, so I did not find it boring to my kids, but it did make sure that they were ready to move on.
  • Teaches the little words. One of the foundational principles for Reading Kingdom is that much of our language is made up of those little words that hold the sentences together, but early readers often miss. So, they focus on them and drill them, and repeat them, and make sure that the kids notice them, read them, and understand them. I think this is a great component of the program.
  • Short sessions. Because reading does involve some tedious exercises, they break it down into very small lessons. If the kids are having fun and want to continue they can easily do more. But, they are not pressed to continue for 45 minutes or more on repetitive lessons that are helpful, but sometimes not very exciting. My son would do one lesson in a sitting, my daughter would sit for three or four. It was nice to have that flexibility and not feel like they were leaving in the middle of something.
  • Excellent program for kids that rush or struggle with letter order. My 9 year old has a tendency to rush. Although she can read, she likes to skip things, filling in the mental gaps as she goes. This program won’t allow that. She has to click what they tell her to. She has to type the letters they ask for. She has to spend the time to slowly make the progress and show what she knows. In order to do well she needs to make sure that she gets letters in the right order and at the right time to move on successfully.

Some considerations . . .

  • Program can be touchy at times. This is my biggest beef with a program that we really liked overall. My 7 year old daughter was getting really frustrated and bored stuck in the training part of the program (Letter Land and Sequences) and she is already a good beginner reader, so I figure I would help her out. **Ahem** I know, I should let them learn and not step in, but I knew she knew this stuff, she just kept making little mistakes in the way she entered the letters. So, I stepped in to save the day. Well, after a few minutes, I realized she was better off without me. 😉 On one screen I would type too fast and it would not register my typing. Another page I would try typing instead of clicking the letters and would get it wrong. I was taking her backwards instead of forwards. After a session of failure I did start to have it figured out and began to improve. A few more sessions and I got her out of Letter Land. She is now much more happily and successfully living in the land of Reading and Writing Level 1. And, we both learned a bit in the process.
  • Sometimes I didn’t know where they were going. They have some interesting exercises. They show a sequence of letters and then kids need to pick it out of a longer sequence of letters. They teach apostrophes and quotation marks.  And, while I’m sure they have a purpose, sometimes they just seemed cumbersome to the kids. I understand why the sequences are important, but they just seem to need an awful lot of repetition to get their point across.
  • NOT phonics based. In fact, the author is quite clearly against phonics instruction. She makes some claims that I disagree with regarding phonics, but I guess she is entitled to her professional opinion. I can see the benefit to combing whole language and phonics, but I have worked with too many kids to discredit phonics based programs entirely. I do agree that there are bad phonics programs out there, and many of her criticisms would hold true in those, but there are also great phonics programs that her criticism would not hold up against. To hear all of the differences between this and other reading programs, check out this document.
  • Would be nice if it repeated words at times. This is just a personal preference I suppose. But, there were times when my child would be celebrating a right answer and miss the instructions for the next screen, or would not hear the word they were supposed to type. There was no way to go back and hear it again and so they were left to guess what they were supposed to do.

This was an interesting program, definitely different than other reading program that we have used in the past. Some things we loved, some things that left me sour. You can see for yourself if this program is a great fit for your kids with their free trial. It would definitely be worth giving it a try, and if you have a struggling reader in your home, this could be the key that unlocks the world of reading for them. I would definitely encourage a melding of this with a phonics program, but it can give kids a confidence boost to get them on their way.

For more TOS Crew reviews on this product, check out the TOS Crew blog.

Disclaimer: This product was provided to me free of charge through Reading Kingdom as part of my participation in The Old Schoolhouse Homeschool Crew. I received no additional compensation and the opinions expressed here come from my personal experiences and sincere thoughts.