10 Education Resources in San Antonio Every Homeschooler Should Know About (part 2: 6-10)
Some education resources are obvious, some are under utilized by homeschoolers, and some just don't make the average homeschooler's radar.
6. Scholastic Warehouse Sale
Every
December and May
Scholastic has a warehouse sale for Book Fair
volunteers, school employees, and teachers--that includes
homeschoolers. Everything is discounted up to 80% and there will be
thousands of items less than a dollar. The selection will include
everything from cookbooks to craft kits to atlases to science fair
books to classics to trending celebrities. Be prepared to spend
a lot of time browsing the aisles of the warehouse. It is a warehouse
so make sure you go early in the day during May. There really isn't
any good way to describe the selection and prices--you just need to
go!
7. Children's Fine Arts Series
San Antonio is incredibly
fortunate to have the Children's Fine Arts Series. The series
began as a community project by the Judson Montessori School in 1982
and became an independent non-profit in 1988. The goal of the program
is provide an introduction to the arts through a series of quality
programs designed for children. The programs are no more than
an hour each and have included puppets, theater, music, and dance. The
programs are at the Charline McCombs Empire Theater or Trinity's
Laurie Auditorium. The website includes
study guides for the various
programs as well as recommend ages for attendance. Group rates
for ten or more for daytime shows are only $4.00 each. Many of the
local homeschool groups have someone who coordinates the group
purchases each year.
8. The Witte Museum
The Witte is my
favorite museum to visit. It's a perfect combination of natural and
cultural history packaged for San Antonio and south Texas. The
immediate interest for homeschoolers is the HEB Science Treehouse. I don't think you're ever too old to learn about simple machines. Then there are the more traditional exhibits of Texas ecology,
dinosaurs, ancient Texans, mummies, and more. But perhaps the resources
most underutilized by homeschoolers are the
environmental workshops.
These are workshops geared to students in grades four to eight and
are held in the Witte's lab classroom. In "From River to Sink, What's
in My Drink?" students investigate water chemistry and learn lab
skills. There are also history and art workshops available. The cost
is $2.50 per student for the 2.5 hours workshop. It would be nice if the
Witte would simply set up programs for homeschoolers like the
Houston
Museum of Natural Science does, but they don't so you'll have to have
someone organize a group to take advantage of the workshops.
9. Dual Credit
Home
school high school juniors and seniors are eligible to take
dual credit college classes at the Alamo
Community colleges. Currently, students
can enroll in two classes and pay only for books--their tuition will
be waived. This is a great deal since in other community college
districts, homeschoolers have to pay half or even full tuition.
Students must have a qualifying Accuplacer score, submit the
application by the deadline, and provide a notarized transcript. The
deadlines and courses available vary by school so you need to check
with each school. Also be sure to check on your ability to have
transcripts sent to colleges. Some homeschoolers have not been allowed
to request transcripts until they have actually graduated from high
school which obviously does not meet most college application
deadlines. You can take these classes on campus or online. You
can take classes at other colleges, both public and private, as dual
credit but you will probably pay regular tuition. If you find
the class selection at the community colleges limiting, you can enroll
as an early admission student which will allow you to take any class
and you'll go through the regular registration process. However, you
will also pay the regular tuition.
10. San Antonio Zoo Home School Classes
Once a month, the San Antonio Zoo
offers programs just for homeschoolers. The
home school programs are for grades kindergarten to five and
include biofacts, animal presentations, themed activities and a topic
related tour. Parents are not required to stay. Last fall the zoo
offered an overnight program for homeschool familes. The zoo offers
other programs that homeschoolers would be interested in although they
are not designed specifically for homeschoolers. Students can learn
conservation and natural history as part of the zoo's
Jane
Goodall's Roots and Shoots Chapter (Ages 8 to 12). S.A. Fari Kids
is for kids ages 5 to 7 to explore animals around the Zoo while
building relationships and skills. The advantage of these zoo
programs is that it doesn't require someone to organize a group for
the program.
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