| Homeschool Program | ||
Rock-it Science has a special relationship with homeschool families. Our laboratory is also our homeschool classroom area. Here, surrounded by fantastic gadgets and exotic equipment, our Director, John McChesney (“Mr. Mac”), develops new lessons and test-drives them with homeschoolers. In this fascinating place, our innovative, exciting, project-oriented curriculum covers a wide variety of science topics such as electricity and magnetism, engineering, potential and kinetic energy, chemistry, and physics. See our facility. Our laboratory contains equipment that we don’t take to regular schools, so homeschool students often have the chance to do experiments they would usually never see until college, including exploding bubbles, million-volt lightning bolts, chemistry with real chemicals, and hundreds of other experiments that have been created in our lab. Many of our homeschool lessons are different from the ones we present at regular schools, because they are still being developed and fine-tuned. As a result, Mr. Mac often departs from the planned curriculum to adapt to the responses of the students. He may create a new experiment just hours before a class, or fabricate a new story on the fly, incorporating story elements suggested by the students themselves. So there are often delightful surprises and unexpected discoveries in these classes.
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We encourage parents to observe the classes and take notes if you’d like to explore the topic further at home. For the students themselves, however, there’s no note-taking, no memorization, no homework, and no tests. In this stress-free environment, they get to try things, make mistakes, make corrections, and discover how to solve problems, without the risk of being “wrong.” This develops and maintains their enthusiasm for science, which is our primary objective. Learn more about our unique method of teaching. Classes begin on time, so be sure to arrive on time. In the first ten or fifteen minutes of the class, we introduce the basic concepts of the lesson, followed by the story, then the hands-on experiment. If a child is late and misses the introduction, they will still enjoy and learn from the rest of the lesson, but they may not understand the context, and they may miss important instructions about the experiment. Afterwards, it may take some time for a child to process what they’ve experienced during the lesson, so please resist the urge to test your child’s retention of facts or concepts following the class. Instead, invite them to draw a picture about what they did in the lesson, or write a story about it as if they were writing to a penpal. They may also wish to write their own ending to the “Jack and Jill” story from the lesson. |
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Currently-registered homeschool students receive priority when registering for the next class series. Join our email list to receive announcements of future classes, programs, and videos. |
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