For 28 Years The Teaching Home Has Been Providing Families Information, Inspiration, and Encouragement from a Distinctively Christian Perspective. Cindy Short and Sue Welch, Co-Editors
Parental Rights
Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution
ParentalRights.org was formed to
protect children by empowering parents
through the passage of the Parental Rights
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and by
defeating U.S. ratification of the U.N.
Convention on the Rights of the Child.
Hear Michael Farris (on
youtube) explain why nothing but a
Constitutional amendment will suffice.
The Parental Rights campaign exists
to secure a constitutional amendment that
defends the rights of parents to direct the
upbringing and education of their children.
"Without secured parental rights, the
vital child-parent relationship is exposed to
the imminent danger posed by anti-parent
judges within the federal courts, as well as
to the risks of international law which seeks
to undermine the parental role." Read
more.
By placing current Supreme Court doctrine
into the express language of the U.S.
Constitution, the Parental Rights Amendment
will shield the child-parent relationship
from government intrusion. It will
ensure that parental rights are preserved as
a fundamental constitutional right. Read
more.
HSLDA offers homeschooling families
a low-cost method of obtaining quality legal
defense that gives them the freedom to
homeschool without having to face legal
threats alone.
Helping Couples Thrive
During Deployment
by Linda Montgomery
A new Homebuilders study, Making
Your Marriage Deployment Ready, helps
military couples who are facing deployment
learn to rely on God's power through their
separation.
Learn more about a major convention
in your state by linking to the sponsoring
organization's website below.
States A-H AL:
May 9-10;
AK: April
17-18; AZ:
July 17-18; AR:
May 15-16;
29-30; CA:
April 24-25 / July 9-11; CO: June
18-20; CT: June
12-13; FL:
May 22-23; GA:
April 30-May 2
States I-M ID:
June 12-13;IL:
June 4-6; IN:
April 3-4;IA:
June 5-6; KY:
July 19-20;
LA:
April 24-25; MD:
April 17-18;MA:
April 24-25; MI: May 15-16;MN:
April 3-4; MS:
May 15-16;MT:
May 15-16
States N-O NE:
March 27-28;NH:
May 22-23; NJ:
May 29-30;NM:
April 16-18; NY:
June 4-6;NC:
May 21-23; OH:
June 25-27;OK:
May 1-2; OR:
June 12-13
States P-W PA:
May 8-9;RI:
April 4; SC:
June 19-20;TN:
Various Dates;TX:
Various Dates; VA:
June 11-13;WA:
April 23-25; WV:
May 29-30;WY:
May 15-16
Canada AB:
April 17-18;MB:
March 27-28; NB:
June 5-6;ON:
April 24-25; QC:
May 1-2
Don't Miss a Newsletter!
We trust that you find this newsletter
informative and encouraging.
• See our archives
of more than 200 newsletters online.
• To change your
e-mail address, follow the “Update
Profile / E-mail Address” link at the
end of this e-mail.
• Add our e-mail
address publisher@teachinghome.com to your
address book, contact list, or safe
list.
Please Tell a Friend
• Encourage your
friends or support group to sign
up to receive this free newsletter.
• Use the link at
the end of this e-mail to forward it to a
friend.
• If this issue
has been forwarded to you, sign
up to receive your own free subscription.
The Teaching Home
Back Issues
Always-Relevant Teaching Home Back Issues
Fifty-one back issues are offered online
or by mail order.
The information, inspiration, and
encouragement packed into
each back issue never goes out of date. They
are always
relevant, applicable to your needs today.
Immerse your family in God's truth through
systematic reading and study of God's Word.
See The Teaching Home's Bible reading
schedule online at TeachingHome.com.
Christian Music Online 24/7!
Listen to beautiful traditional, sacred,
and inspirational conservative Christian
music (commercial free!) when you tune in to
Abiding Radio at www.abidingradio.com.
God's Love for Us
Because we have been separated from God by
sin, Jesus Christ died in our place, then
rose to life again. If we trust Him as
our Savior and Lord, He will forgive our sin
and give us eternal life.
"For God so loved the world, that
He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him shall not perish, but have
eternal life." (John 3:16)
"The Lord ... is patient toward you, not
wishing for any to perish but for all to come
to repentance." (II Peter 3:9)
Free Reprints
We encourage you to share our e-mail
newsletters in the following ways:
1.
Newsletter. Forward the entire
newsletter to your friends and support group.
2.
Articles. Reprint articles in an
e-mail or print publication.
3. The
Internet. Articles may be posted on
the Internet by observing the copyright
policies below and including an active link
to our website: www.TeachingHome.com.
Please observe the following copyright
policies when you reprint our material:
•
Editing. Reprint articles
unedited and in their entirety. Otherwise,
edited articles that do not change the
author's meaning, may be submitted for
reprint approval.
•
Byline. Include "by Cindy Short
and Sue Welch," unless another author is
listed.
•
Copyright Notice and Link. Add:
"Copyright 2009 (or year published) by
www.TeachingHome.com. Reprinted by
permission." (Or "Adapted by permission.")
Send Your Newsletter
by Constant Contact!
We use, and recommend, E-mail Marketing by
Constant Contact to send you this newsletter.
For information about how you can use this
service to send out your newsletter and to
receive a free 60-day trial, please use our
affiliate link to go to www.constantcontact.com.
Feedback
We need your help!
Please help us make this newsletter better
by letting us know what we are doing
correctly, where we need to improve, and
topics you would like addressed.
Use the Content of This Newsletter We encourage you to share the
content of our e-mail newsletters. See
Free Reprint information in sidebar.
Follow That Link! See something underlined in blue
type? Click it to find more information
and/or free resources.
Next Issue: Easter Unit Study
In This Issue
Achievement Tests, Part 2
Help Your Child Get His Best Score!
• 7 Test-Taking
Skills To Teach Your Child • Checklist for the
Day of the Test • Interpreting Test
Scores: Glossary of Terms • Applying the
Results
Recommended Resources
• Birch Court Books:
Key to ... Math • Hewitt Homeschool
Resources: PASS Test • Jean Welles
Worship Guitar Class
Greetings,
In our last issue we introduced the topic
of achievement tests and how to find your
state law's
requirements. We also covered:
• Standardized
Tests and the Christian Worldview • What
Achievement Tests Can and Cannot Do • Common
Standardized Achievement Tests • 3 Ways To
Prepare Your Child for a Test,
including practice tests and sources for
them.
If you missed Newsletter 238, you can see
it in our online Newsletter
Archives.
In this issue we offer you practical tips
for teaching your children how to do their
best when taking tests, as well as how you
can use test results in your children's
education.
May the Lord bless you and your family for
His glory.
Cordially, The Pat Welch Family, Publishers Pat, Sue, Heather, Holly, and Brian
The Teaching
Home is a home-school, family-run
business operated in our home since 1980.
Key to . . . Math: 7
Workbooks Teach math basics to all ages –
grades 3-12!
• Each series has 3-10 books–each
a complete text/workbook.
• Use full series or topics that need
more help and practice.
• One concept per page to aid
understanding.
• Simple vocabulary and reading
level.
• No lessons to prepare.
• Answer book shows step-by-step
solutions.
• Great for
review in preparation for standardized
tests!
• Low price. See
more information & order online.
Birch Court Books Quality Resources / Free Media Mail
Shipping www.birchcourtbooks.com
Free catalog. 800-655-1811 N7137 County Hwy. C, Seymour WI 54165
7 Test-Taking Skills
To Teach Your Child
There are
specific skills and strategies involved in taking
tests that can help your child do his
best.
1. Directions
• Always listen
to and read the directions carefully; don't
assume that you already know them.
Sometimes they change only slightly, but
significantly,
from one section to the next.
• Ask the
instructor to explain any directions that you
do not understand.
• Be sure you
know how and where to mark the answers,
especially if they are on a separate
sheet. Keep checking
to make sure you are marking the
numbered answer space that
matches the numbered question and for
the correct test
section (e.g., spelling, math
computations).
• Mark answers
carefully and neatly, filling in the blanks
completely so that it will be graded
correctly.
• Erase a wrong
answer thoroughly when changing your
answer.
2. Wording
• Watch out for
wording such as "Which of the following is
not
true?" or for answers that sound or look
similar.
• On a true or
false question, watch for the words "never,"
"always," "only," and "best."
3. Morale
• Relax by taking
several slow, deep breaths and changing your
position from time to time.
• Remember that
you know a lot of information and that you are
doing your best to show what you know.
• Ask the Lord to
help you remember what you learned and do
your best.
4. Pacing
• Since most
tests are timed, don't get bogged down on a
question that you can't answer or are
unsure about.
• Answer the
items you are sure of first. This builds
confidence, and you won't miss points on
easy questions by
running out of time.
• Skip difficult
questions and place an "x" by the number of
the question in the margin on the answer
sheet.
• If you are not
sure of a question, answer the best you can
and mark them with a "?" in the margin.
• When you have
answered all the other questions, answer the
questions with an "x" in the margin and
recheck questions
you marked with a "?".
5. Choosing Answers
• If you need to,
look back at the reading selection to check
facts and ideas.
• Try each answer
in the blank to help you decide which one
sounds right.
• Sometimes on
questions where you are to find mistakes, none
are to be found.
• On some
questions, two answers can be correct and you
must
choose the answer that includes them
both.
• When you are
not sure, eliminate answers you know are
incorrect and take your best guess among
the rest. Some
of your guesses will be right.
6. Math
• On arithmetic
test items, do a quick estimate with
rounded-off numbers. This will
help you
avoid "silly"
mistakes and may even help you locate
the only possible
answer.
• When you copy a
math problem onto scratch paper, line up the
numbers carefully and double check your
copying.
• Always check
subtraction problems by reversing operations.
• If you have
time, check equations by substituting your
solution for the unknown and check other
math problems by
reversing operations.
7. Timing
• Use all the
time allotted for the test; review your test if
you finish early.
• Recheck the
directions, questions, and your answers.
• Do not change
answers unless they are obviously wrong.
• Don't panic
when students start handing in their papers.
There's no reward for being the
first.
An In-home, Parent-administrated,
Low-stress, Untimed Alternative for
Achievement Testing
Hewitt Homeschool Resources Offers
The PASS Test for Grades 3 - 8
The PASS Test (Personalized
Achievement Summary System) was developed for
home schoolers and includes many great
features in addition to being
parent-administrated, low-stress, and
untimed.
Get complete information on our website
or call 1-800-890-4097, M-Th,
8:00-4:00 Pacific time.
At Hewitt, we hand-pick each book, because we
think it
is the best for that age and subject!
Home of Lightning
Lit.
Checklist for the Day of the Test
Plan ahead for a peaceful,
unhurried evening and morning
before the test.
Check directions to the
testing site and plan to leave and
arrive early to avoid stress before
the test.
Make sure your child sleeps
well, eats a healthy breakfast,
and gets enough water to drink.
Be prepared with necessary
tools such as extra pencils or
calculators if allowed.
If this is your child's first
test, you may want to be
present in the back of the room for at
least part of the time
to relieve his anxiety.
Be sure your child
understands what to do if he needs to go
to the bathroom during the test.
(Have him go right
before the test.)
Avoid conversations between
other students and your child
before a test; anxiety is contagious.
Pray with your child that he
will remember what he has
learned and do his best. Thank the
Lord that He promised
to always be with your child.
The spiritual lessons and experiences of
trusting the Lord
in everyday circumstances and working under
pressure can be a
much greater life-long benefit than the
actual test itself.
Interpreting Test Scores
Glossary of
Terms
These basic terms will help you understand
your child's test
results. For definitions of additional
terms
see Pearson's Glossary
of Measurement Terms.
Types of Tests
•
Criterion-referenced tests compare a
student's performance
to set criteria, such as state
standards, rather than to the
performance of other students.
• Norm-referenced
tests compare a student's performance to
a national reference group of students
at the same grade.
• Standards-based
tests assess students' knowledge and skills
in relation to the state content
standards.
National Percentile Rank
Percentile does not refer to the percent
of questions that
were answered correctly.
Percentile ranks individuals within a
group on a scale of 1
to 99 with 50 being average. A percentile
rank of 60 means the
student scored better than 60 percent of the
other students in
his comparison (norm) group, and 40 percent
scored as well as, or
better than, he did.
Stanine
This score shows a comparison of student
scores, from a low
of 1 to a high of 9. It may be thought of as
groupings of
percentile ranks.
Grade Equivalent
This is the most commonly misunderstood
term in interpreting
test scores.
The first digit represents the year of the
grade level and
the digit after the decimal represents the
month of that grade
level.
The grade equivalent is not an estimate of
the grade in
which your child should be placed! Rather it
shows that the
score your child achieved was the same as the
average score made
by students at that grade level who took the
same test.
For example a 2nd grade student scoring
4.7 on a math
subtest, scored the same as the average 4th
grade, 7th month
student did who took the 2nd grade test. It
does not mean that
the 2nd grade student can do 4th grade math
work.
Learn To Play Beautiful
Worship Guitar Music in the Comfort of Your Own Home!
"Play-as-you-watch process" is illustrated
in simple, step-by-step detail in this
Christian Guitar DVD course.
In just a few months, people will think
you've played for years – even if
you've never played before!
– Jean Welles
Jean Welles
Worship Guitar Class
Visit my Website
for • Testimonials
• Free Video of Lesson One
• Description of My 4 DVDs (with 4
Bonuses) • Sign up for my free
Newsletter full of tips.
Bob Jones
University Press presents the following
suggestions.
If your child receives a low score, always
compare that
information with your own observations. If
the low score is
consistent with your personal observation and
evaluation of your
child's skill, develop a plan to strengthen
this skill.
Your plan could include checking to see if
the skill was
taught, re-teaching the skill from a
different approach, checking
curriculum content and methodology, and
evaluating the
effectiveness of your teaching methods.
Reading Comprehension
If reading comprehension (inferences,
analyses,
interpretations) scores are low, but mental
ability and facts
scores are higher, make sure your teaching
and curriculum include
questions that require interpretation,
thought, inference, and
other higher levels of thinking as well as
literal-recall questions.
If math problem-solving scores appear low,
make sure your
teaching and curriculum include
visualization, meaning, and
understanding in addition to facts and
drills. Your curriculum
should provide adequate opportunities for
practice in solving
story problems.
See Newsletter
#38 for many ideas to use in teaching math
and how to solve story problems.
Math Computation
If math computation scores are low, check
for your child's
command of the basic facts and his
understanding of mathematic
procedures. Also, check for student
carelessness while working
problems and note how many questions were not
answered at all,
indicating your child may need to increase
his speed as well as
his accuracy.
Use "Holey
Cards" for timed speed drills of addition,
subtraction, division, and multiplication
facts. Drill facts in
related combinations of addition/subtraction or
multiplication/division. Use triangular
math facts cards or
use ordinary flashcards.
Spelling
If spelling scores are low, check for
evidence that your
child is convinced that spelling is
important. (This conviction
is developed by emphasizing correct spelling
in all subject
areas.)
Your methodology should teach your child
how to spell using
spelling principles, rather than just
memorizing word lists.
Employ a variety of ways to use each lesson's
words over the
whole week of study.
See Newsletter
#32 for information and ideas in teaching
spelling.
Maps and Diagrams
References and Study Skills
If these skills are low, check for whether
you are taking
time to read and interpret maps, graphs, and
tables in texts and
other sources.
Check that you are teaching library,
reference, and
dictionary skills.
Language Usage and
Expression
If aspects of language usage and
expression are low, make
sure you are teaching writing skills and
requiring frequent
written work. The proofing of writing
assignments is excellent
preparation for these tests.