Units
Unit Studies
A unit
study is taking a theme or topic (a unit of study) and delving into it
deeply over a period of time, integrating language arts, science, social
studies, math, and fine arts as they apply. Instead of studying eight or
ten separate, unrelated subjects, all subjects are blended together and
studied around a common theme or project. For example, a unit study on
birds could include reading and writing about birds and about famous
ornithologists (language arts), studying the parts, functions, and life
cycles of birds and perhaps even the aerodynamics of flight (science and
math), determining the migration paths, habitats, and ecological and
sociological impact of birds (social studies), sketching familiar birds (art),
building bird houses or feeders (hands on activities) and so forth.
Strengths
of Unit Study Approach:
-
All ages
can learn together
-
Children
can delve as deeply into a subject as they like
-
The
family's interests can be pursued
-
Student
gets the whole picture
-
Curiosity
and independent thinking are generated
-
Intense
study of one topic is the more natural way to learn
-
Knowledge
is interrelated, so is learned easily and remembered longer
-
Unit
studies are fairly easy for the teacher to create
Weaknesses
of the Unit Study Approach:
-
Planning is
necessary so that there are no educational 'gaps'
-
Hard to
assess the level of learning occurring
-
Record
keeping may be difficult
-
Do-it-yourself
unit studies require planning
-
Too many
activity oriented unit studies may cause burn-out of teacher and student
-
Subjects
that are hard to integrate into the unit may be neglected
Copied with permission from
Elijah Company
Related
Links:
http://www.gomilpitas.com/homeschooling/methods/Units.htm
http://www.unitstudyhelps.com/software.htm
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