![]() ![]() ![]() This is no bother to me and I am very satisfied with our progress in the Memoria Press plan! Personally, we had a skills hiccup that we opted to spend more time on and as of now we are and only three weeks off from “our plan”. Following this schedule loosely we still had plenty of breaks and time off as we chose or needed. Lastly, on this same schedule, it takes you onto an Easter read at the end of March or beginning of April, with spring reads that then take you and your student through May. As the plans are written they are for a Labor Day week start date (beginning of September), early October Christopher Columbus theme, late October for pumpkins, late November Thanksgiving, three weeks of a Christmas theme, and in my opinion three weeks of nocturnal reads for January, and then a groundhog’s story for early February. The plans could essentially start at any time of year with a few tweaks to when you use which Enrichment week. Having it in a spiral, now I can flip it back and do the half a week at a time without worrying about the pages coming out and that is delightful. The Kindergarten plans are with a week on a two-day spread so everything is clear and well seen. I’m purely ecstatic about Memoria Press moving to spiral bind their lesson plans!!! My original copy is is comb bound, and the newest release is with a blue spiral. Memoria Press Kindergarten Lesson Plans are written for a 5-day week for 33 weeks. *Now back on task!* Part I of the Memoria Press Kindergarten Review series. (And FYI, I hear in the forums that Level 1 and 2 are in the works and soon to be released in the Simply Classical Leveled Curriculum for Special Needs!) (For more severely challenged children, these levels correspond to mental ages.) Each level has a separate book list and skills list. Level A will be suited for children approximately ages 2-3, Level B ages 3-4, Level C ages 4-5. Seek to encourage delight, wonder, basic skills, and a love of stories while strengthening your child’s ability in each area. For all three levels, there is an online list of readiness skills in fine-motor, gross-motor, oral language, social/emotional, and cognitive areas, so one will know where to begin Levels A, B, and C. (I have opinions on this one to share soon… feel free to ask me more.) Both Level A and Level B will be “pre JrK”. The plan, to my knowledge, is “to unveil the first three levels of the new special-needs classical curriculum packages this summer: Readiness Leves A, B, and C.” (Update: These three levels are now available and listed on the Memoria Press Website, more levels to come in the future.) Level C is comparable to Memoria Press Junior Kindergarten but adapted for special needs. JrK is written as a 2-day week for 33 weeks, recommended for the general 4-5 year old range.Īlso, for your information and a side note, Memoria Press is in the process of releasing a leveled pre-JrK program designed for special needs. Please head back to read my several part review on the Memoria Press JrK Curriculum if you’re interested. This year follows our K3 year with the Memoria Press Junior Kindergarten and prior to that Tot School with various preschool printables and Sonlight P3/4. At this point we are within a handful of weeks to completetion, possibly days. ![]() (I cannot believe we are already halfway through the next year, these memories seem like yesterday!!) These Lesson Plans are written out for one year. I am working to fix all my links, but it is a work in progress! So, while I work on updating things, please do use my link if you’re off to buy!Ģ013-2014 was our K4 year and our main curriculum has been the Memoria Press Classical Core Curriculum for Kindergarten. Hello friends! As of January 2019, I have an affiliate account with Memoria Press. ![]()
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