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A Beka Book Review A Beka Book offers a “complete” curriculum for children of nursery school age through high school, all from a Christian perspective. This A Beka Book review has information on A Beka's philosophy, curriculum, accredidation, reviews by customers, and more. Philosophy Besides the fact that they start from a Christian point of view, A Beka Book’s philosophy can be gathered from their description of their materials. In the FAQ on curriculum, they refer to phonics, seatwork, penmanship, activities, labs, textbooks, oral review, scope and sequence, tests, and quizzes. These descriptors help us gather that A Beka Books offers a program that combines a variety of approaches to student learning, but one grounded in traditional skills. Memorization is also used. There are three A Beka options for home schoolers:
Complete materials for grades 1-12 cost more than $1000 per year for the Video option, while the traditional program costs $750 per year. A Beka also offers a graduation ceremony for students who complete the accredited high school program. Students who complete the program in the same year are considered a graduating class, are assigned a class rank based on their grade point average (GPA), and receive a diploma. Subjects To graduate from A Beka’s high school program, the following minimal coverage (from A Beka supplied materials) are required:
Available electives include:
Coverage While the science curriculum clearly touches on recent developments with topics such as “Quantum Theory,” “Light in Modern Technology,” “DNA,” “Genetics,” and “Ecology,” the U.S. History curriculum in eleventh grade seems to end with “The 1990s.” The Language Arts curriculum refers to the Twentieth, but not the Twenty-First century, and despite this, refers almost entirely to authors from the Nineteenth century and earlier, the notable exceptions being Robert Frost and Carl Sandburg. Samples I’m willing to bet that some of A Beka Book’s materials have not been reviewed for some time. In their sample phonics material, I see two cartoon pictures of Native Americans (labeled “Indians”), which are likely to cause offense to at least some. This is even more striking because the choice of the word Indian, in which one i is short and the other spells a long e sound, is an extremely odd choice for a word to represent a short vowel sound from a pedagogical perspective: I speak from my training as a reading clinician. Ink would have served much better, as well as fit in more appropriately with the length and type of other words used, such as cat for c and dog for d, in which the use of the letter for a particular sound is unmistakable. In addition, this word directly contradicts the instruction given for long vowels that “When here are two vowels in a word, the first vowel says its long sound, and the second vowel is silent.” This is not true for Indian. Accreditation Accreditation is a review given by an outside and approved agency to an educational publisher, certifying its material as meeting standards and qualifications. Accreditation is different than a program review, in which an institution decides which (if any) credits from earlier educational instruction it will accept. That is, using an accredited program is not a guarantee of having one’s credits accepted. A Beka Books offers both accredited and unaccredited versions of its programs. The accredited program is recognized by three agencies:
You should always check with your state’s education department before purchasing materials to make sure that they will meet your state’s requirements. Reviews Several complaints have emerged about A Beka in the past year. These are from Internet reviews, and I am only reporting what I have read. One complaint is that the DVD material is too repetitive, boring, and long-winded. The other is that for at least one parent, a large number of the DVDs did not work properly and A Beka did not replace them. Others have indicated that the A Beka material moves too quickly for their children. Sources http://www.abekaacademy.org/accreditation.html http://www.homeschoolreviews.com/reviews/curriculum/reviews.aspx?id=6 http://www.abeka.com/OurHomeSchoolOptions.html http://www.abeka.com/Resources/Default.html http://www.homeschool-how-to.com/abeka-review.html http://www.abekaacademy.org/ Related Article: Best Homeschool Curriculum >> |
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