Earlier this year, while my son and I were doing math, my daughter asked to do math, too. He is five. She is three. I use Singapore Math Earlybird Kindergarten with him and I really like it, by the way. But alas, Singapore Math does not publish a preschool workbook. What’s a homeschooling mother to do?
For a while, I printed worksheets for my daughter from the internet. When I got tired of it, I investigated around and found the Rod & Staff Preschool Workbooks. They come in two series: one for ages 3-4 and the other for ages 4-5. Since my son was still in preschool (technically speaking), I ordered both series.
My daughter loved her workbooks from the start. She finished one in two sittings. It was almost scary. She kept turning the page saying, “One more.”
She seems to be a natural pen-and-paper learner but, of course, she still likes hands-on activities, too – and we do plenty of those. As a younger sibling, she has been learning new concepts by osmosis on a daily basis. I work with my son and she plays nearby, within earshot. She absorbs information without realizing it.
I was amazed at how much she already knew as we worked through these booklets. The whole experience felt like a review of material I never covered with her. But it did not feel like a waste of time. We practiced important study skills like following directions, working on a page from top to bottom and from left to right, and stopping when the attention span wanes.
It also felt like the perfect way to ease her into the role of student and me into the role of teacher. For three years, I have been mommy. Now I am her teacher, too. We uncovered a new layer in our relationship.
The publishers have included cut and paste activities throughout, not just matching, drawing lines, coloring and tracing. The black-and-white format does not catch the eye, but it does the job. My daughter never objected to it in the beginning. However, after a few weeks of sitting next to her brother, who was working through his colorful Singapore Math workbook, she asked for a book “like his.” I told her she would get one “like his” when she gets to kindergarten.
I believe three-year-olds are too young to trace neatly. We skipped the tracing pages or, if she asked me to do it, I traced to show her the motions, by saying out loud, for instance, “To make a one, we go from top to bottom.”
As to my son, the workbooks for four- and five-year-olds never appealed to him, probably because (1) they were below his level and (2) Singapore Math offers tactile practice before asking a young child to show understanding of an abstract concept with pen and paper. So my daughter may inherit the Rod and Staff books for the next level.
Don’t you just love homeschooling? Things don’t always go as planned, but they work out in the end.
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I use rod and staff preschool for my 5 year old and thinking about buying the 3-4 year old program. My daughter is 3 also and wants to do what her brother does. I use rod and staff for all my kids so the color factor isnt a problen. My 5 year old son turned 5 august 22 so he wasnt quite ready for kindergarten level. The reason rod and staff was below your sons level is rod and staff believes what i do, children are being pushed too much too young. They are mastery based. So kindergarten is preschool and reading and addition really is mastered in their first grade curriculum. Which for my son is perfect because of when his birthday is. He is doing great with it. My 9 year old aslo uses rod and staff. Yes, its not full of colors but it is the best in my opinion because it makes sure concepts are thoroughly taught and understood. What people say is repetitive is actually working in the childs favor because the constant reminders and practice means they will not forget it. We had to pull our 9 year old out of public school because he was falling 2 years behind and it was bad. He has almost caught up to just being a year behind now. I highly recommend rod and staff over others that just graze over topics