Thinking about homeschooling Algebra?
By Marco Villegas
Before you begin homeschooling Algebra, you’ll want to know about
two critical, foundational skills your child should master first.
I’ll review these skills next, but first I’d like to offer you a word
of encouragement, parent to parent.
It is not unusual for parents to feel hesitant about homeschooling
Algebra for the first time. A seemingly common concern I hear
from parents is that they feel unprepared for it. If you’re
about to home school Algebra, please don’t feel this way. You may be
more prepared for it than you may realize. You CAN home school
Algebra, especially the traditional first part of it, often called
Algebra 1 at the high school or middle school level.
Consider this: as a homeschooling parent, especially if you’re a
member of a support group, you are engaged in practical, real-life
applications of Algebra concepts. You use Algebra as part of
your planning and budgeting, either to plan ahead, or, if you’re like
some of us are, to figure out what in the world happened to the time
and money you thought you had! The point is this: you DO
Algebra, so why couldn’t you home school it?
On the other hand, we know that homeschooling is about our children
and not about us. With so many of today’s outstanding homeschooling
resources, our personal background may not be as significant in our
children’s learning process as their own wonderful and sometimes
surprising learning capacity can be. A good teacher may lead the
way, but a great one knows when to get out of the student’s way.
God has equipped our children with a remarkable learning capacity.
Point them in the right path, and they will be able to thrive on it
given the opportunity. Train up a child in the way she should
go, especially in Mathematics.
So please relax. You are surrounded by many other supporting
parents, and you can access countless learning resources. You
CAN home school Algebra.
With this in mind, here are two of the critical, foundational
skills your child should master before beginning an Algebra course.
The first skill is the ability to perform operations that include
negative numbers, particularly addition and subtraction; for
example,
-3 -4 = -7
The second skill your child should master is the ability to factor
numbers and expressions, which includes an understanding of prime and
composite numbers; for example,
the numbers 2 and 5 are factors of the number 20
You can help your child continue to succeed through the high school
and college levels by ensuring that your child achieves mastery of
these two skills early on. Of course there are other critical,
foundational skills your child should master, but these two are an
excellent start, since they are a part of just about everything your
child will encounter from now on, beginning with Algebra.
As I work with high school and college students, among those few
who struggle, it is evident that one cause of their difficulty with
Mathematics, Algebra in particular, stems from not being able to
perform operations with negative numbers, or from the students' lack
of skills with factorization, or both.
When these skills are not truly mastered, the deficiencies become a
source of a negative, subtle domino effect that carries through a
student’s academic career, causing unnecessary difficulty for the
student in every course beginning with Algebra. Case in point,
from time to time I help college students in a Business Mathematics
course. The students who ask for help often struggle initially
because, among other issues, they are not able to perform operations
with negative numbers, or to factor numbers and expressions.
Since this particular course is essentially an application of
principles from both Algebra and Calculus, the situation seems
surprising at such a level. Sadly, however, this doesn't seem to
be an isolated matter. It seems that many college students have
similar struggles, according to faculty and staff.
Thankfully, you don’t have to worry about your child. Before
you begin to home school Algebra, you can help your child excel rather
than suffer through his academic career by ensuring that your child
achieves mastery of these skills, which, by the way, are relatively
simple to learn. Once learned, you child can achieve mastery
through correct, continuous practice.
Here are some simplistic (and I do mean simplistic, not simple nor
simplified), but practical and effective ways for your child to
acquire these skills. These techniques rely on practical,
working results without a need to know more advanced Mathematical
theory.
read the entire
article at My Texas Tutor
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Mr. Marco Villegas and his family own MyTexasTutor.org and for a
limited time are providing free, live, expert tutoring for
homeschooling families in Texas. You can view a video clip of a
tutoring session by visiting
www.mytexastutor.org.
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