Classical School Solutions
Kindergarten - Sample Week
Day 1
1. Morning Report (pg. 2)
2. Reading (pgs. 3-4)
3. Handwriting (pg. 5)
4. Math-U-See or Right Start Math
5. History (pgs. 6-9)
6. Read Aloud (pg. 10) *Days 1-4 Read
“Danny the Dinosaur” Part 1 By Author
Syd Hoff
Day 3
1. Morning Report (pg. 18)
2. Reading (pgs. 19-20)
3. Handwriting (pg. 21)
4. Math-U-See or Right Start Math
5. History (pgs. 22-24)
6. Read Aloud (pg. 10) *Days 1-4 Read
“Danny the Dinosaur” Part 1 By Author
Syd Hoff
Day 2
1. Morning Report (pg. 11)
2. Reading (pgs. 12-13)
3. Handwriting (pg. 14)
4. Nursery Rhyme (pg. 15)
5. Math-U-See or Right Start Math
6. Science (pgs. 26-17)
7. Read Aloud (pg. 10) *Days 1-4 Read “Danny the Dinosaur” Part 1 By Author
Syd Hoff
Day 4
1. Morning Report (pg. 25)
2. Reading (pgs. 26-27)
3. Handwriting (pg. 28)
4. Picture Study (pg. 29)
5. Math-U-See or Right Start Math
6. Science (pgs. 30)
7. Read Aloud (pg. 10) *Days 1-4 Read “Danny the Dinosaur” Part 1 By Author
Syd Hoff
All rights reserved. This packet is intended for one student enrolled in our program and is not to be copied and shared with anyone else.
Read to the child: Circle the correct word or picture for each statement below.
There are 7 days in a week. Today is:
Circle one. There are 12 months in a year. This month is:
January
February March April May June
July August September October November December
Circle one. There are 31 days in most months. Today’s date is:
Now say it all together. Today is “Day” + “Month” + “Date”
Read to the child: Color the month we are in below. What season is it?
March April May June July A u gust F eb ruary January December November October Septemb e r
Draw the temp line for the child: Color the tempertature on the thermometer and write it below.
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds.
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds.
-Auditory Exercise-
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds.
Blending
Say to the child: I’m going to say four sounds. I want you to put the sounds together to say a word. Each time you say a sound, put one finger up. Then say the sounds together. The sounds are /b/, /l/, /o/, /b/.
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds.
• /b/+/r/+/a/+/d/ = brad
• /c/+/l/+/i/+/p/ = clip
• /f/+/l/+/e/+/x/ = flex
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds.
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds. /l/
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds. /b/
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word. 2
/o/ = blob
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word. 2 /b/
• /b/+/r/+/a/+/g/ = brag
• /b/+/l/+/o/+/t/ = blot
2
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word.
Review Last Week’s Sight Words
2 2 3 3 3
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word. 2
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word.
New Sight Words
Say to the child: Sight words are words that we use a lot and they might not follow common sound rules. You will be able to sound out some of these words. Remember when you see a number above the letter it tells you which sound the letter is making. Sly Y is very tricky. Sly Y pretends to be a vowel.
Beginning Blends c+l
Read to the child: Now we will work on more blends. Blends are two or more consonants that each say their own sound but say them very close together. Point to the first word below with the c+l blend and have the child practice saying the blend after you. Make sure they say the sounds the letters make together and not the letter names.
c-l-i-p clip
Read to the child: Practice reading the sentences below.
c-r-a-m cram
It is a ham.
c-r-a-b crab
It is a clam.
c-r-u-x crux
Trace the dashed lines.
Read to the child: Today we will practice slant stroke letters. Slant stroke letters begin at the midline and slant down to the baseline. Today’s Slant Line letter is W. W says /w/. Remember to practice the sound as you write.
Slant Stroke Letters
Slant Down
Trace and color the fish.
TWO BABIES OF LONG AGO.
Those two little baby boys! They were very, very welcome; yes, indeed. Pray do not think they were not. It was only that the cabin of the odd little vessel, the Mayflower, was so dark and cold and crowded. There was not very much room; there were no pretty little cradles, with soft white blankets ; nor were there any dainty little baskets, with tiny combs and brushes, and puffs and powders, all ready for the babies' use.

But after all, what did it matter? There were the loving mother arms, which are better than cradles, if a baby can't have both ; and there were the proud and happy papas, each one, of course, thinking his baby whole worlds sweeter than any other baby ever born.
And then the aunts and the uncles those two babies had! Every man and woman on board the vessel declared themselves aunt and uncle to these two wonderful new babies; and so anxious were they all to help take care of the little fellows and hold them on their laps, that even had they had the cradles and soft blankets, the babies would have had little time to use them.
How the sweet-faced, brown-eyed Priscilla loved to sit whole hours, crooning softly the quaint old hymn tunes - it was the fashion in those days to sing - looking down into the little baby faces all the while.
There was the bright-faced, gay-hearted Mary Chilton. She would trot the babies on her knee, pouring all the while such bright, funny stories into their baby ears, that young as they were, they would laugh back at her - at least, so the aunts and uncles used to say.

"What shall we name these babies?" asked the fathers and the mothers and the aunts and the uncles.
"Name them James," suggested one.
"What!"cried the two fathers. "Name our babies James! Have you forgotten that James is the name of the king of England? And have you forgotten that we are escaping from the injustice of that king towards us, and the cruelty of the English people?
"Have you forgotten that this very ship was built to bring us across this great ocean to the New World, that we may be as far
from that king and his law as we can be? Have you forgotten that it is he that has driven us from dear old England, to seek freedom for ourselves in this new country, that we have never seen?"
“No! No!" cried all the aunts and uncles. "Certainly the babies cannot be named after the English king."
"But the babies must be named," said one, soberly.
"Truly they must," said another. “But what shall it be?”asked another. At last, one day it came into the heads of the fathers to give their babies names that should forever keep in mind the fact of their birth upon the ocean while their parents were wandering about, driven hither and thither by the wind and tide, in search of a new home.

"I have been thinking," said Goodman Hopkins, "that since my little son was born out in mid ocean, I should like to name him Ocean. Still, it sounds rather odd as a name for a child."
"And I," said Goodman White, "since my little son was born almost in the very harbor, Peregrine White’s cradle, made in 1620 and brought by his parents William and Susanna on the Mayflower. It is in the Plymouth Hall Museum in Plymouth, Massachusetts
and so near at the close of our long wanderings, I should like to name him Wandering; still, as you say, it is a very strange name for a child."
"I think I can help you," said the minister, who had come with his little flock across the great, wide sea. "In the Latin I have learned, there are words that mean Ocean and Wandering, which will perhaps strike more pleasantly upon your ear. Those words are Oceanus and Peregrine."
"Peregrine; Peregrine; Peregrine;" said Goodman White, saying the word over and over, that he might grow used to the sound of it.
"Oceanus; Oceanus; Oceanus;” echoed Goodman Hopkins. "Peregrine White," "Oceanus Hopkins," murmured the mothers, the aunts and the uncles. The names were a little unusual; but these people, as you will learn by and by, were themselves unusual.
The names were rather heavy for little babies; but “pet names” were not the fashion two hundred years ago; and as to obey the minister, even in his slightest wish, was the fashion, it was settled at
6. Read Aloud -
• The read aloud book this week is “Danny the Dinosaur” Part 1 By Author Syd Hoff
• You may wish to stop and discuss the characters or have your child retell parts of the story.
• Have your child color the picture below.
Read to the child: Circle the correct word or picture for each statement below.
There are 7 days in a week. Today is:
Circle one. There are 12 months in a year. This month is:
January
February March April May June
July August September October November December
Circle one. There are 31 days in most months. Today’s date is:
Now say it all together. Today is “Day” + “Month” + “Date”
Read to the child: Color the month we are in below. What season is it?
March April May June July A u gust F eb ruary January December November October Septemb e r
Draw the temp line for the child: Color the tempertature on the thermometer and write it below.
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds.
-Auditory Exercise-
Phoneme Deletion
• blab - /b/ = (lab)
• clap - /c/ = (lap)
Say to the child: I’m going to say a word. Then I’m going to ask you to take away part of the word and tell me what is left. For Example: If I say “flip”, now take away the /f/ what is left? “flip” take away /f/, is lip. “Lip” is the answer.
• stick - /t/ = (tick)
• grip - /g/ = (rip)
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word. 2
• brag - /b/ = (rag)
Read to the child: Trace and fill in the missing letters below. Sound out the word as you write.
Read to the child: Rewrite the word crab below but leave out the /r/. Then read your new word.
Read to the child: Rewrite the word crib below but leave out the /c/. Then read your new word.
Read to the child: Rewrite the word club below but leave out the /l/. Then read your new word.
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word. 2
Beginning Blends c+r
Read to the child: Now we will work on more blends. Blends are two or more consonants that each say their own sound but say them very close together. Point to the first word below with the c+r blend and have the child practice saying the blend after you. Make sure they say the sounds the letters make together and not the letter names.
Read to the child: Practice reading the sentences below.
It is a crab. The crab is on it. The crab is in it.
Trace the dashed lines.
Slant Stroke Letters
Slant Down
Read to the child: Today we will practice slant stroke letters. Slant stroke letters begin at the midline and slant down to the baseline. Today’s Slant Line letter is X. X says /ks/. Remember to practice the sound as you write.

There was a little girl who had a little curl
Right in the middle of her forehead; When she was good, she was very, very good, And when she was bad she was horrid.
Oral Exercise — The word “horrid” means very bad, not nice at all. Have you ever been horrid? Have your teacher or parent read the first line again. Can you tell which two words rhyme?

What the Sun Told
Jim and Father got up very early one morning.
They were going fishing.
Father looked out the window.
“The sun is coming up,” he said.
“We must hurry, Jim.
Early in the morning is a good time to fish.”
They took a basket of lunch and got into the car.
“Where are we going to fish today?” asked Jim.
“In Blue Lake,” said Father.
“Blue Lake is east of here. Do you know which direction is east?”
“Yes,” said Jim. “The sun comes up in the east. It is in the east now.
So if we go toward the sun, we will come to the lake.”
“That is right,” said Father.
They started toward the sun and kept on going east until they came to the lake.
Then they began to fish.
Jim and Father caught many fish, and while they were fishing, the sun was climbing high overhead.
By and by Father said, “It is time to eat lunch.
It is noon.”
“How do you know it is noon?” asked Jim. “I did not see you look at your watch.”

“The sun tells me,” said Father.
“When the sun is high overhead, it is noon and time to eat lunch.”
Jim laughed and said, “I know it is noon because I am hungry.”
After lunch they caught more fish.
At last Father said, “We must go home. The sun is going down.”
“What direction should we go to get back home?” asked Jim.
“We came east to get to the lake,” said Father. “So we should go west to get back home.”
“The sun goes down in the west,” said Jim. “If we go toward the sun, we will be going toward home.
Let’s hurry, or we won’t get there in time to eat our fish for supper.”

Read to the child: Circle the correct word or picture for each statement below.
There are 7 days in a week. Today is:
Circle one. There are 12 months in a year. This month is:
January
February March April May June
July August September October November December
Circle one. There are 31 days in most months. Today’s date is:
Now say it all together. Today is “Day” + “Month” + “Date”
Read to the child: Color the month we are in below. What season is it?
March April May June July A u gust F eb ruary January December November October Septemb e r
Draw the temp line for the child: Color the tempertature on the thermometer and write it below.
Reading Warm Up: Have your child point to each phonogram and say the sounds.
-Auditory Exercise-
Alphabet Alliteration
Say to the child: I’m going to say a silly sentence. It is an alliteration. That means that most of the words will start with the same sound. I want you to listen to the words and then tell me what sound most of the words start with. Example:
• Dolly digs daffodils at dawn.
• Nelly nibbles neon noodles.
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word. 2
Silly Sammy steals seals. Silly, Sammy, steals and seals all start with /s/.
• Freddy found furry frogs.
• Paper pandas pet pink pigs.
• Red rabbits race rockets rarely.
Read to the child: Trace and fill in the missing letters below. Sound out the word as you write.
Read to the child: Rewrite the word crab below but leave out the /c/. Then read your new word.
Read to the child: Rewrite the word crib below but leave out the /c/. Then read your new word.
Read to the child: Rewrite the word club below but change the /i/ to an /a/. Then read your new word.
Sight Word Practice: Point to each word above and have the child say the sight word.
Read to the child: Study the picture below and then read the words in the box . Put a token (pasta, beans, coins etc.) on words that you can find in the picture.

Trace the dashed lines.