Demonstrating Responsibility through Accountability in the Homeschool Journey

As a parent of four magnificent children, this is something I wish I would have known when I began our homeschool journey some 10+ years ago. The thought of using accountability to create responsibility may be something we naturally do as parents, but we can have a greater impact with intentional goal-setting in this area. According to the Bible, everyone is accountable to God and some sub-structure here on Earth: children to parents, wives to husbands, employees to employers, students to teachers, etc. Have we ever thought about how accountability can set the parameters for our lives? Accountability builds intention and demonstrates responsibility, and through consistent feedback, we sharpen our responsibility in all said areas.

It’s no different with our children! The hearts of our children need shaping and accountability is the tool that will produce responsibility. The Bible puts it this way,

“Keep your heart with all diligence, For out of it spring the issues of life.” ~ Prov 4:23

One thing that I love about homeschooling, is the privilege to speak to their hearts consistently through reasoning, life examples, quiet conversations, and more. I am able to speak to their souls when I ask questions about their decision-making and the possibilities for better insights in the future. As God continues to show me both the letter and heart of His ways, I have devised 7 goals for accountability in my homeschool this year.

  1. Lead by example and hold yourself accountable first.
    As a parent, our children watch EVERYTHING we do. If we want to build accountability and responsibility in the hearts of our children, how are we the lead learner in this endeavor? Are we being intentional about the way we are first accountable to the commitment to homeschool in the effort and preparation? For me, it took a few years to figure out my rhythm and what I was willing and not willing to do. I am not an artsy mom, so any curriculum that involved arts and crafts with ubers of supplies and planning was not for me. Once I figured that out, I was no longer in denial about it; but owned it and moved forward with curriculums that suited my strengths as a teacher. Customizing the type of curriculum to my children was a breeze then.
  2. Set goals. (spiritual, emotional, social, and physical).
    About 5 years ago, this was a game-changer for me as a Christian, wife, mom, and educator. When there are not goals in place, there is no vision, and
    “where there is no vision, the people perish.” ~ Proverbs 29:18
    So now I loosely set goals for each part of the child. I often journal areas that need sharpening so I can look for life opportunities to teach and reflect.
  3. Consistently give feedback.
    Don’t we all do better when we know the areas that need strengthening? I have found that one of our jewels has a real hard time with accepting feedback; but thanks be to God, where I lack, God gives abundant grace (2 Cor 12:9). Now that I am aware, I can take frequent opportunities to gently give feedback.
  4. Create a culture of two-way feedback.
    This has been a pretty new phenomenon in our homeschool. I think I have been of the “old school” philosophy of “do what I say because I said so.” There are few occasions where that still holds true, because children should always respect the authority of their parents (Eph 6:1) but training our kids classically, as they increase in wisdom and wonder, I have found that it is much more valuable for them to respectfully interject ideas, questions, and reasoning into the discussion. This has fostered better practice in critical thinking for them and me. Instead of shutting down questions and supposed disrespect, try using questions to foster conversation, allowing them an opportunity to discover truth, beauty, and respectful communication. It’s a consistent work in progress and intention. Patience and persistence is key for teaching the beauty of logic, the ability to reason well.
  5. Make accountability a habit.
    Accountability can be defined as an obligation or willingness to accept responsibility or to account for one’s actions. There must be a heart of willingness to accept that responsibility. Our children demonstrate that responsibility through consistent practice. At times they are rewarded, and other times they must accept good for goodness sake. If we take away the consistency, we confuse them and perhaps teach a conditional reward system versus a biblical one that pleases God.
  6. Keep track of your commitments and hold each other accountable.
    One would agree that it is irresponsible to make a commitment and not keep it. This is far different than not accepting a commitment because of too many prior commitments. Time management is an essential element so that teachers and students alike can understand the abilities and constraints. This is a trait that we must execute well as adults, and we see its beginnings reared in childhood. When we are not able to keep our commitments, other obstacles like tardiness and procrastination arise. As parents and lead learners in the homeschool journey, we must model proficient time management, consistently aligning our motives and actions with this verse:

    “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, 24 since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.” ~ Colossians 3:23-24
  7. Use accountability as your structure for life lessons.
    Accountability is everything to our homeschool. God continues to teach me this lesson as I humbly submit to His will and His ways for my life. Our children learn as they humbly submit to my authority as a Christian, mom, and educator. They will forever be accountable to someone, and it’s a truth we must all get used to and accept. Pride has a funny way of showing up when we don’t accept this truth.

    **Bonus: hold others accountable by supporting and encouraging one another
    This is the bonus rule for our homeschool. As mom submits to Christ, the kids submit to mom through Christ, therefore encouraging and supporting one another. The more Bible we all learn and practice, the more our hearts are shaped through action, thought, and deed. It’s a constant sharpening, a fluid grace, and forward-thinking that helps us as teachers and students through this magnificent journey.

    Be encouraged as you lay your victories and worries at His feet and move through knowing for certain,

    “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” ~ 2 Corinthians 12:9

To God be the Glory

Teach to the WHOLE child

“Do you realize that if you push a child too hard it can do a lot more harm than a poor grade!” ~ Ms. Crump, Opie’s Teacher, Andy Griffith 💖

This quote came up in my memories today. As a homeschool family, I have always known that grades aren’t everything in the scheme of learning. Spiritual health, emotional health, physical health, social health, and academics all have unique characteristics in each of our children. How we balance assessing these areas is equally important.

Interesting reading this nugget from Ms. Crump with the lens of a college sophomore, 8th grader, and two 5th graders. Our diamonds all have different seasons, different needs, and different abilities, yet God requires parents to do the best they can, equipping and training them in all. Defining the how’s, why’s, when’s and what’s of “push” is the key to developing a great relationship with our children in every season. Pray for God’s guidance as we grow in executing these areas without leaving others undone!

Nuggets from Andy Griffith 💖

As we contemplate 🤔 another school year under new “pandemic” 😷 circumstances, let us not forget that our “students” are still children and need a fair balance of academics, play, problem solving, conflict resolutions, and discussion⚠️. Being at home will never replicate a 6-hour day of public school📆; instead, it should be rich with reading📚, writing📝, discussion📢, critical thinking 🤔, and more. Change your thinking 💭 about what learning looks like‼️Homeschool won’t fit into the 6-hour box that most families are used to 🤣. Seize smaller moments of in-depth conversation as your students (big or small) mature right before your eyes. Time waits for no one 🕧, so make the best of those small opportunities 💖. Before you know it, these precious moments add up to a lifetime of love, learning, memories, and growth 🤓💕! The children are learning from us how to persevere or how to give in🤓! Which will we choose to be our legacy? #togodbetheglory#deut6#parentteacher#conversationsbuildmemories

Homeschool Curriculum 2022-23

Over the years, homeschool planning has been pretty simple since we use Classical Conversations as our spine. Automatically, I spend the summers, combing through online sources to add diversity and inclusion using the different learning methods: auditory, reading/writing, & kinesthetic. Here is what we have for the upcoming school year:

5TH GRADE TWINS

MATH:
Saxon 5/4
My Math Assistant. Game changer for me! Grading site created by a homeschool dad that grades their work, provides videos for extra assistance and keeps a running tally of assignments, tests, and facts practice!

ENGLISH & WRITING
Classical Conversations Grammar
Students learn how to parse the English language, focusing on all the parts of speech and how to recognize them. This includes an excellent practice of diagramming one sentence 4 days per week.

Editing
Learning how to use punctation correctly, recognize spelling and grammar mistakes is an essential part of the language process. They edit a paragraph of Scripture 4 days per week.

Writing
We use the IEW writing process that introduces structure and style to writing. Students write about historical events.

Presentations
Students do weekly presentations. Since our homeschool lacks in people of color and female contributions, my kids tend to enlighten their classmates with notable characters that enhance historical contributions.

PACES CURRICULUM
Paces is an Easy-To-Implement, Rigorous and Biblically-Centered Workbook Curriculum For Grades Prek-12. We use them for Bible Reading, Social Studies, and Science.

Bible Reading
This year focuses on the life and parables of Christ.

Social Studies
PACES Social Studies. I love these books because they are easy, informative, and keep God as the focus. Students learn about all kinds of careers.

Science
PACES Science. This year’s focus is on water, matter, and gas.

Art
Usually, I rely on the 6-weeks dedicated to the basics of art through Classical Conversations.

Health
Horizons Health

PE
Mateo – Soccer
Inez – Tennis

8TH GRADE CURRICULUM

Classical Conversations – Challenge B
Classical Conversations has been our core for over 10 years. When a student gets to the Challenge years (7th – 12th grades), the work becomes more rigorous and uses a classical Christian process for learning. Essentially subjects are used to teach a skill. For example, Math is used to teach Logic, Latin is used to teach Grammar, etc. Following is the 8th Grade curriculum for this year:

LOGIC – Math Saxon

GRAMMAR – Latin

RESEARCH
1st Semester
History of Astronomy. 15 weeks of researching different Scientists that have left on mark on modern society. We include black inventors and the origins by which Greek scholar acquired their info.

2nd Semester
10 weeks discussing the Creation/Evolution debate w/ the last 5 weeks devoted to chemistry and how to use the periodic table.

REASONING
1st Semester
Introductory Logic

2nd Semester
Intermediate Logic

EXPOSITION – Literature & Writing
1st Semester: Reading the following books, discussing w/ me, and write papers on each:

  • The Phantom Tollbooth
  • Little Britches
  • Where the Red Fern Grows
  • Hiding Place

2nd Semester:
Students transition to the adult reading level recommended in the higher Challenges by studying short stories from various famous writers they will encounter in Challenges I–IV. Students take the entire semester at home to write a short story of their own.

DEBATE:
1st Semester
The American Experience Storybook
Additional reads and discussions w/ mom and dad:
-Bible
-A People’s History of the United States
-Digging Deeper Document I created to add diversity and inclusion to the discussion

2nd Semester
Mock Trial

HEALTH: Horizon’s Health

PE: Basketball

ART: Free MOMA Class
Course: Reimagining Blackness and Architecture (FREE CLASS)

  • Charles Davis on the expansive field of architecture
  • Adrienne Brown on the Reconstruction era
  • Kara Walker on 40 Acres of Mules, 2015
  • Deana Lawson on Nation, 2017

This is the plan for the year. Our big girl is in college, so I’m down to three at home. Always make time for emotional check-ins, one-on-one time, field trips, and fun!

Jamia E.
Christian. Wife. Mother. Educator. Model. Actress.
Lord, give me the wisdom to navigate through this life all to your glory. 
James 3:13-18

10 THINGS I LEARNED ABOUT HOMESCHOOLING

10 Things 18 years of homeschooling has taught me:

(1) I could never have done it without leaning on God’s strength📖🙏🏾;

(2) Patience is needed and cultivated with each day, but some days it’s lacking 🤪;

(3)There are moment-by-moment victories & mistakes 🥴; so don’t be a helicopter parent…God isn’t 🙏🏾📖! Grace and mercy coupled with the Word sow seeds in their hearts, which make for sincere change!

(4) While life is happening (births, death, trauma, sickness, moving, family turmoil, delays, etc.), learning is still taking place😉;

(5) Kids learn from your example (the good with the bad, & the things you THINK they are clueless about🤣);

(6) Trust the process – growth happens in baby steps, not overnight;

(7) Trust that learning is happening even in “failure/mistakes” for parents and children; 😎

(8) It’s better with a village of support than without💕;

(9) Discussion is the BEST assessment tool 😉;

(10) NEVER compare! Just don’t do it! It hurts everyone involved! Individual achievements build up our children! Celebrate accomplishments and work together to provide tools for improvements. Don’t “fix” mistakes, instead teach how to recognize them, then provide resources and guidance so they will learn how to be successful 🙏🏾💖.

This HS process is always evolving. Be warned that everyone doesn’t know the labor you are pouring into your children. You May even run into naysayers 😏! Learn to rest in God’s approval and not necessarily the approval of all those around you🧐. Sometimes labor is not evident to onlookers🤓. But because growth is a process, know that your labor will never be in vain, 💕🙏🏾💖and the fruit is the real evidence 💖!