Reposted from last year.
I really enjoy reading the freestyle assessments I receive. They are
so interesting. People often ask me for some ideas on what to write
and send. The following is what I have shared with them. Hopefully it
will help you as well.
I have seen freestyle
assessments written in many different ways. The key thing is to show
the progress your child has made from last July/August to now. Ohio law
says the child must make progress within their ability. So when I do
this for my kids I try to think through the following questions. How
have they changed? What can they do now that they could not do a few
months ago, several months ago, and a year ago? What do I have
demonstrates this? (pictures, samples etc.) Lastly, what can I share
that communicates this?
As far as writing up the
assessment, I have seen them set up by subject, by project, and just
sharing progress. The following are some ideas to get you started. I
think once you get started you will be surprised at how much you have to
share.
If you write by subject you might write about
the following. I am going to give many examples to choose from. Please
do not feel you need to use all of them. These are to spur your
thinking about your year.
Reading: Share the
books your child has read or you have read to them. Maybe share a series
they are into like the Boxcar Children, Arthur, or Henry and Mudge.
What magazines do they enjoy reading? Is there a web sites they enjoy
visiting and reading? What your child is reading now versus the
beginning of the year communicates the progress they have made.
Writing/Handwriting
If your child is writing tell me what they are writing. Tell me if they
are making lists, writing their name, writing stories, labeling
pictures, writing letters etc. If they are older, tell me about their
creative writing, poetry, or journaling. Send me a sample. Do they
write a blog, email letters to Grandma, or maybe record in a nature
journal? Tell me about it, send me a link, or take a picture of it.
Math:
Share how your child is telling time, working with money, adding or
subtracting, multiplying or dividing, using percents, and/or measuring.
Tell me about activities your child participates in like cooking,
grocery shopping, or building with blocks or LEGOS
©.
Share games with me that you play that involve math. If you happen to
do any worksheets you can always send in one from the beginning of the
year and the end.
Science/Social Studies/History/Art/ Music/PE:
For younger kids you might share experiences to demonstrate progress.
You write about the museums you have visited, zoo visits, park trips,
neighborhood walks, nature walks, music lessons, and any sports your
child may participate in. Do you attend the YMCA to swim each week? Do
you attend an art class? Tell me about books they have read or you
have read together, if they have completed any projects, or art work
your child has created. This is a great place to include pictures.
For older students share what they have learned this year, a class they
have taken, and/or a research project they have been working on. Having
your child write a summary of what they have learned is a fantastic way
to demonstrate progress.
Another way share your
student's progress is to write up your assessment by project. For
instance you worked on a community or family garden together. You
discuss how you preplanned by getting books from the library and
reading about plants, your internet research, the garden store you
visited, how you measured the rows, how you prepared the soil, did you
count the plants, if you sold them the skills you used, and anything
else that your child learned. You might include pictures of your child
working in the garden, some notes your child took while researching, and
a list of books your child read. You might share the 1-3 projects that
your family used to facilitate learning for the year. Then maybe you
share about trips, nature walks, park visits, any type of lesson, and
art you do.
Recently, I have had families submit Power Point presentations to me. They take pictures and write up the progress their student has made. For instance, a stack of books their student has read, pictures of the art they have made, pictures of a math program or their student cooking with an explanation of the learning happening, or videos with their child playing an instrument, working on a project, or accomplishing a hobby. Just an idea if you are proficient with Power Point.
You are trying to showcase what your
child has accomplished this year. Usually when I sit down and think
about all we have learned, I am excited about the progress my kids have
made. If you are working on learning most days you have made
progress. This is your chance to celebrate by sharing it with me.
If I can help you in anyway let me know.
Link to Freestyle Assessment
Becky
ohiohomeschool@gmail.com