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A Fun Way For My Struggling Readers To Learn: Reading Kingdom . . . A T.O.S. Review

I wasn’t sure how well the online program Reading Kingdom would go over with my twins “Mr. Loquacious” and “The Puzzler” when it came to us for review, but so far, they are really liking it!

Reading Kingdom is an online subscription program that is individualized to each student, so your child will not be competing with his or her siblings, rather, they will move along at their own pace and ability level.

While it is not as flashy and exciting as other educational games they have used, they are enjoying the process of moving along at their own pace. “Mr. Loquacious”, however, does have a strong competitive streak, and frequently tries to get me to tell him where his twin is in the program, most likely because “The Puzzler”, being more interested in reading, has, on his own, taught himself a lot of reading just by pushing himself and asking for help, even before we began this review. “Mr. Loquacious” would rather just be read to, and often pretends he cannot read.

Here are some of the things your child will see at different points in the Reading Kingdom program:

I really have always liked phonics based reading programs, but have come to agree with Reading Kingdom in believing that more than just phonics are needed. The American English language is not the easiest to learn, considering that so much of it has roots from so very many other languages! Add to that the fact that the phonics “rules” simply don’t always apply, and there are a significant number of words which cannot be “sounded out” using those phonics rules, well, it proves that phonics just isn’t enough for many people.

Reading is a NECESSARY skill, for anything one wants to do in life. Therefore, why not use whatever will help our children get there without the frustration often associated with using a solely phonics based program?

Here is a snippet of information from the Reading Kingdom website about their approach to learning to read:

“It’s because of these problems with phonics and whole language that schools across the nation show only 30% of children reading at a “proficient” level, while a staggering 35%-40%, across all socio-economic backgrounds, are failing to master this crucial skill (Source: US Dept. of Education) and those who are succeeding are taking longer to learn than they need to.”

My husband and I both grew up reading for pleasure. In fact, the first purchase we made together when we were getting married were bookcases, to hold our many books, after which, we also had to go through and cull out all of our duplicates! I mention this only to explain why it is so important to me that my children learn to read, not just foe educational purposes, but also for pure enjoyment.

When we first received our login information from the Reading Kingdom company, I got the boys all set up, and they were chomping at the bit to get going.

When a child first begins the program, there is an assessment phase, which helps the program decide where to place him/her. This program is completely customized to the individual student, beginning with the Skills Survey:

“This customization process begins right at the beginning with the Skills Survey. It assesses each student’s skills in reading and writing, and based on the results, the program places each child at the point that is just right for his or her skill level. This prevents students from becoming bored and wasting time learning something they already know or being frustrated by tasks that they are not yet ready for.”

Interestingly, considering that “The Puzzler” has actually pushed himself to read, while “Mr. Loquacious” has mostly resisted learning, the skills survey actually put “Mr. Loquacious” further along in the program. Upon further investigation, I discovered that this is because “The Puzzler” needed help with keyboarding skills, so the program started him in the “Letter Land” format. “Mr. Loquacious” was also placed in Letter Land, but progressed out of it rather quickly, while “The Puzzler” is at this point, 84% completed with this level. I’m fairly sure it’s mostly because “Mr. Puzzler” is developmentally much younger than his twin, so he isn’t quite as quick when it comes to these skills. “Mr. Loquacious” is currently in “Reading/Writing Level 1, with 14 % completed in this level.

By the way, there is another great thing about this program, the online (and emailed!) reports for me, the parent! You see, the program information states right away that other than helping the student get logged on, the parent/teacher is to stay hands off, and not help in any way, other than technological assistance. I like this aspect, and so do the boys, although at first, “Mr. Loquacious” did not, wanting me to tell him if he had the right answers before he would type them in. 🙂

According to the information from Reading Kingdom, their program is “the only system that teaches the following six skills. When children are taught all six skills, they easily master both reading and writing. By focusing on these skills, Reading Kingdom teaches children 4-10 years of age how to read and write at a third grade level. So teach a child to read today and give the gift that lasts a lifetime.”

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Reading Kingdom offers information on their site to help you decide if your child is ready for this program, with topics such as early readers, accelerated readers, and struggling readers.

To learn more about how Reading Kingdom is fundamentally different from other reading systems available today, you can download this very informative pdf

My twins are enjoying Reading Kingdom very much, and frequently ask to do it. In fact, “Mr. Loquacious” often asks to continue on after his official session is done! This is a win/win for me, since he, especially, doesn’t like to stick with one thing for very long.

If you’d like to check it out, there are tons of sample lessons here, including part one and part 2 of the skills survey. There are also a good number of other resources, including printable worksheets to help re-enforce what your child is learning.

Reading Kingdom is an online, subscription based program, which can be purchased for $19.99 per month. You can get the entire year at once, for $199.00, and additional students are $9.99 per month or $99.00 for the whole year.

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Furthermore, for those who truly cannot afford it, Reading Kingdom has a scholarship program! To apply, go here.

Other Schoolhouse Review Crew Members are using Reading Kingdom with their children as well . . . to find out what they think of this program, please click below.

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As always, I would love it if you follow my blog via email! Never miss an update by clicking on the “sign me up” button at the top of the page and entering your information. Hope to have you join me for all of my “Journeys Through Life”! 🙂

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New blog fan page!

Well, I have just set up a Facebook page for sharing this blog. If all worked the way the directions say it should, this post should auto-share to my new Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/MyJourneysThroughLife?sk=info&edit=eduwork. I hope, if you’ve not yet done so, that you’ll go and “like” the page, and keep updated as to what’s happening here at My Journeys Through Life! It would also help a lot, if you like the blog, if you would please go ahead and click the email subscribe button at the top right of this page. 🙂

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Annual Church Homeschool group Picnic . . .

I rested with my feet up all day so I could go with the family for the annual home school group picnic. Was lots of fun, good food, and the kids got in a lot of play time, but my poor feet are definitely done in for the night. We are home now, and my feet are properly elevated, but they still hurt some, so I think they will be resting up a lot tomorrow, too. They were sort of elevated at the park, but now I am on the couch with two pillows under my feet.They do hurt quite a bit, but I’m still glad we got to go. 🙂

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what a wonderful time we’re having . . . NOT!

So, now, not only am I laid up from surgery, still having to have my feet elevated most of the time,  3 of our 4 kids have some kind of (hopefully short!) Stomach bug. 😦  We were gifted with a gift card to a great pizza place that’s close to us (yay, Dion’s!) by one of our wonderful deacons and his wife (yay, Butch & Peggy!), however, in the interest of not doing something as wastefull as using it while half the house is sick, we’ll save it for another supper. I may ask my husband to stop on his way home to buy some Mrs. Grass soup mix with real chicken broth, and some crackers. That was my mom’s “go to” meal when we had a stomach bug, and now it’s mine, too. My kids find it comforting, too. My dear husband felt so bad that he couldn’t stay home to help today, but 1, he has no sick days left, 2, there was no same day vacation time availabel today & 3, he has a four hour training that he must attend today. 

Yesterday, my husband was sick at work, and we just thought that the lunchmeat had gone bad because we didn’t use it up fast enough. So he had me throw it out. Now, though, I’m wondering if HE didn’t get this stomach bug first? Oh well, he seems well  enough now, so hopefully the kids will feel better quickly, too! I’m hoping so, because there’s literally not much I can do for them right now, so we’re just struggling along together. 

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Going To Church Tonight! :-)

So, this coming Wednesday, it will be two weeks since I had surgery on my toes. I spend most of my time on the couch, with my feet elevated. I went to church Sunday morning after the surgery, but when my surgeon found out at my first post-op after that Sunday, he said it was too long to be with my feet down, even though I was in a wheelchair borrowed from church. So, I’ve been good ever since, and I get to go to church this evening! 🙂 I hate missing church, ever, so it’s not been easy. “The Artist” is staying home with me, as my husband worries. 🙂 My next post-op is in a week, and my husband says if the doc OK’s it, I can start going Sunday mornings after that. Plus, the day after my appointment we have the picnic for our church’s homeschool group (and my husband’s birthday!), so I’m hoping to do that, as well. Wish me luck!:-)

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“T” is For . . .

Testing and trials . . . I think God is putting me through tests and trials again . . . there are things going on in my life that are hard to deal with right now, and I’m having a difficult time trusting God because of them. There are days when I wonder if He really cares . . . I’m trying to have faith, but it isn’t always easy . . .

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Sacagawea (Brave Explorers Every Child Should Know) . . . A TOS Review

For the past several weeks, my children have been enjoying a wonderful read aloud using Sacagawea (Brave Explorers Every Child Should Know), by Karla Akins, published by Knowledge Quest.

This is our first experience with this company, but I doubt it will be our last! Knowledge Quest is well-known for a wealth of geography and history materials, but I didn’t know they also had published e-books such as the one my children have just completed.

Sacagawea (Brave Explorers Every Child Should Know) would be an excellent book in and of itself, but the way Knowledge Quest has published it goes beyond just giving us a book. This is an interactive book, so it has links all through the story. It is available from Amazon.com for $4.97.

Sacagawea (Brave Explorers Every Child Should Know) is a very well written book, in which we learned a lot more than we ever knew about Sacagawea. We also gained more information about the Lewis and Clark Expedition as a result of reading this book, and plan to go back and add in a free CD unit study about that expedition which I have had for a few years, and simply had not yet gotten around to using.

This book is written for children age 10 and above. My kids are above age 10, but they (most of them, anyway) really liked it. In the case of “The Batman”, he was frequently wanting to be done with it for the day so he could go back to something that interested him more, but he’s all about his sports cards, Nintendo 3DS, and the Hardy Boys series right now . . . )

In the book, Sacagawea is telling the story to her son, Pompey, although at times, it seems as though it switches to a different perspective. For example, sometimes, instead of speaking TO her son, it’s as if she is telling the story about Pompey to someone else.

Most people likely know the basics of Sacagawea’s story, she was stolen away from her Shoshone tribe, and taken to be with the Mandan Tribe. She was given to a trader as his wife, and eventually went as a translator and guide on the Lewis and Clark Expedition. We found out a lot in the story about her relationship with her son, and her relationship with her husband, as he treated her like one of his belongings. I believe, through hearing my kids reading this book, that Sacagawea got to learn what it was like to be treated with respect when she went on the expedition with Lewis and Clark. It was amazing though, how much more detail we were able to get from this e-book, and the interactive links! Although the author did have to take literary license in order to create dialog, it is still a very educational read. It is what many who teach with the Charlotte Mason method would call a “living book”.

I asked “The Artist” to read this book out loud to the other three boys, which at first, although “Mr. Loquacious” and “The Puzzler” were into it, “The Batman” was definitely NOT. Until, that is, they started seeing the links in the story. When there was a link, “The Artist” would click on it, taking them out of the e-book to see a picture, or a description of what was being talked about in the story, or sometimes, it would simply be more information about the person being referred to in that part of the story. THAT perked up “The Batman’s” interest, he seemed to enjoy it when they got “more to the story” that way.

My kids thought the description in chapter 15, where the men were jumping from the cold river to the hot springs, and back again over and over, was really funny, and went to look at the link. Another one that they were really excited about was when “Man With Red Hair” (Clark) did the following: “On the side of the rock he wrote his name beside other pictures drawn by the ancient ones“. They were so excited, they called me to the table to see, because we have been to the National Petroglyph Monument Park, here in New Mexico.

I myself found the following note by the author, at the end of the book, to be of great interest, as I did wonder about the different spelling of Sacagawea’s name, different from the one I grew up seeing:

“Some may wonder why I have chosen to spell her name with a “g” instead of a “j.” One reason is because that is the way it was spelled in the Corps’ journals. Another reason is because that is how it was pronounced when Captains Lewis and Clark met her. Her name in Hidatsa language means “bird woman.”
The “j” spelling occurred after the editor of the 1814 narrative of the journals, Nicholas Biddle, transcribed it as a “j” instead of a “g.” No one knows why. He had never met Sacagawea and therefore did not know that she herself pronounced her name with the hard “g” sound in the middle.
While some historians have tried to prove that the “j” in the name is a Shoshone word meaning “boat pusher,” Dr. Sven Liljeblad, professor of linguistics, emeritus, at Idaho State University in Pocatello, analyzed the word “Sacajawea” and concluded that “it is unlikely that Sacajawea is a Shoshoni word….The term for ‘boat’ in Shoshoni is saiki, but the rest of the alleged compound would be incomprehensible to a native speaker of Shoshoni.”

Here is a video of “The Artist” reading from Sacagawea (Brave Explorers Every Child Should Know)

Overall, we really liked the interactive e-book Sacagawea (Brave Explorers Every Child Should Know), finding it to be a fun way of being educated further about Sacagawea, Lewis and Clark, and the time in which they lived. We think that Knowledge Quest is a company that is well worth exploring for our future home-school endeavors!

Many of the crew members reviewed this e-book, while others reviewed the Timeline Builder App, also from Knowledge Quest. Please, click below to find out what they all thought, too!

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“H” . . . Home Run!

We are going to see the Albuquerque Isotopes Baseball Team play tonight! It’s a minor league farm team for the Los Angeles Dodgers. I haven’t been to a baseball game in a LONG time! One of the ladies in our church (who just happens to be the wife of our Youth Pastor, and one of our pianists) is singing the National Anthem for the game, and we were able to get a block of discount tickets to go and support her. We will be, I understand, in very good seats! I sure hope we see a bunch of Home Runs . . . and that they are made mostly by the Isotopes! 🙂

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Church, Cane, Cosmetics

Well, with the help of my family, and really good medication from the doctor, I was able to make it to church this evening. So, my words for day 3 of the Blogging from A to Z April challenge . . .

. . . are Church, Cane (which I borrowed from my husband), and Cosmetics (which were extremely minimal tonight, so I wouldn’t have to stand too long in front of the mirror. 🙂

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Agony . . .

I just today signed up the Blogging from A to Z April Challenge . . .

. . . and then, I shortly thereafter twisted wrong while cleaning and really hurt my lower back. So, my “A” entry has just become the word “agony”. My lower back has not hurt like this for a really, really long time. I took prescription pain medication, prescription muscle relaxer, AND a Xanax. and it is still hurting very badly. So, now I am moving very gingerly, because I still have much work to do. I am in the middle of doing laundry and making dinner for my family (roasted turkey with rosemary/garlic, in case you’re interested). I really do not have time for this, I have schoolwork to do with my kids, we have a lapbook we need to get completed, as I have a review due on that. So, I’m trying to get my work done, and to rest in between like my husband asked me to do.

In the meantime, I am in AGONY!

I hope to feel better tomorrow, and have a better entry for the letter “B”.

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