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How To Measure Your Child’s Progress When Homeschooling

2–3 minutes
Tips That Will Help You to Get Your Child Motivated with Schoolwork

How easy is it to assess your homeschooled child? Even more, what systems are in place to check for progress? As of March 2021, an estimated 5 million kids received their education at home. It’s only logical that you’d want to know how well you’re doing with your child. For more details on this, please read further to find out.

Focus on actual progress and not percentage scores on a test

For many years, the education system has always equated high test and exam scores to student academic progress. Today, newly developed learning systems prove them otherwise. Education experts believe that a child’s academic progress is deeply rooted in quality and not quantity. So, just because your child scored 60 percent in a test does not mean they didn’t understand what they learned.

Indeed, children who get these scores berate themselves for not getting higher scores. They do this because they feel you expect more from them. But when you communicate quality over quantity, they will understand not to feel too bad. This approach has been widely accepted by new teaching systems propagated by the Teach for America organization. If you’re unsure of their approach to teaching and learning, check out their Teach for America reviews. These reviews will confirm their works.

See your kids’ learning process

How do your kids react when you’re having a homeschooling session? Do they pay rapt attention to you or get distracted by another activity? Even better, do they ask questions relating to what you’re teaching? Indeed, these are effective indicators to assess or measure your child’s homeschooling progress. When children learn new things, they automatically grasp the concept taught. This triggers questions in their young brains, which aid proper understanding.

So, when your kid asks questions triggered by things they learned, it shows a significant cognitive role. This role is one that students are expected to have. It’s why you are encouraged to accommodate their questions, no matter how many they are. Apart from this, you should also assess your children’s immediate reaction. Pay attention to them when they do not have an answer to a question you posed to them. Do they show signs of anxiety or at once refer to a material or resource which has the information? The latter is indicative of progress.

Let them apply knowledge to projects

Have you tried giving your homeschool kids projects to work on? This is a way to see how well they apply acquired knowledge to tasks. These projects should be fun, engaging, and created to build interest to satisfy their curiosity. Here are some engaging tasks to assess their progress:

  • Map out a route for a road trip
  • A recipe that requires them to measure ingredients for baking.
  • Design a tool to carry out a task (for 12 year-olds and above)

In conclusion, efficient and effective knowledge application is an excellent way to confirm progress in your kids. Avoid relying solely on quizzes and tests to evaluate their cognitive functions. After all, teaching and learning must be fun for kids, depending on how you go about it.

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