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Your learners are living in their present, and not in your past. They value what they see you doing now, and not what you did five. ten, or fifteen years ago. If they see you watching soap operas, doing household chores, and chatting on the telephone while they are studying, they will know that such things are more important than learning. But if you see you hard at work on your own study plans—even just 30 minutes a day—and if they see you laboring over their lesson plans for the next day, they will realize the value of learning.

The following programs are intended for you, the homeschooling mentor. Find a topic that is important or interesting for you, and then approach it with the enthusiasm and tenacity of a serious student. Keep a learning journal, take lots of notes, look up supporting resources on the Web, discuss your work with your family and your home school learners. They might not understand your work in detail, but they will certainly pick up on your enthusiasm and determination to succeed by learning.

 


The very best resources we can find around the Internet.

 

Art

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The Art of Teaching the Arts
Video tutorials from Annenberg Learner

Literature

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In Search of the Novel

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Researching American Literature

History

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World History

bullet An Outline of American History

Science

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College Prep: Biology

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Anatomy & Physiology

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The Habitable Planet

Psychology

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Discovering Psychology

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Essentials of Child Psychology

Mathematics

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Perspectives on Algebra

 

David L. Heiserman, Editor

Copyright ©  SweetHaven Publishing Services, LLC
All Rights Reserved

Revised: May 21, 2012