LCP Ep 5: What to Include in Your Middle and High School Language Arts Study
What do you need to include during the middle school years in Language Arts to make sure your learner is ready to tackle high school work? What kind of Language Arts and English program would colleges be looking for and what can count as credit for the high school transcript?
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Join Katie Glennon as she discusses what skills and concepts you should include in your Language Arts study during the middle and high school years. Katie shares an outline with some specific areas to make sure you include them in your Language Arts study during these critical years. She will suggest and discuss curriculum resources she found useful in her homeschool when her sons were in middle and high school that work efficiently and effectively to meet English requirements and make sure your learner is prepared for the next step - moving from middle into high school or high school into college.
The Areas of Language Arts you should include in the Middle and High School Years
What-to-Include-in-your-Middle and High School Homeschool-Language-Arts-Study pdf (Printable for you to download)
Show Notes
The Areas of Language Arts you should include in the Middle and High School Years
Reading/Literature
For literature during these years, I recommend a mix of short stories, poetry, essays (non-fiction), drama, and novels. These can be found either separately or in the form of a literary anthology and additional novels to read alongside the anthology.
Along with the novels, you will want to use some kind of novel study guides (that will also assist you with suggested vocabulary words and various questions).
Suggested Homeschool Literary Resources to Assist you in your Literature Study -
Total Language Plus (novel study guide)
Progeny Press (novel study guide)
Mosdos Press Literature Anthologies
Skills and Concepts for Literature Study
There are a number of skills and concepts you will want to include in your literary study.
These skills include -
• Vocabulary – I recommend using words from your reading for your vocabulary words because it saves you time and money from using a separate vocabulary program or curriculum. Most of all, in my experience it is more effective. The words are in context of what your learner is reading and will be understood and remembered more effectively because it is part of a story they will remember. It also gives your learner the practice in figuring out what words mean using their context within a sentence.
• Comprehension and Higher Order Thinking Skill Practice
Recalling details
Comprehending and understanding what they read (being able to identify the “main idea” or “theme” of the story)
Application skills – using what they have learned from the reading to problem solve
Analysis – drawing conclusions, comparing this written work to another from the same author or another author,