Your Year Complete

A Year of Learning

Literacy Every letter by name and sound
Mathematics Counting, adding, and explaining their thinking
Cultural Studies A portfolio that shows a year of real growth
Practical Life Independent routines & celebration planning

Month Overview

Your child now knows every letter by name and sound, counts confidently past 20, writes their own name and simple sentences — and, most importantly, thinks of themselves as a learner. This guide closes your Koala Grove year with a portfolio review, a What I Know Book, and a celebration they will never forget. It does not test what the child knows. It reveals how far they have come.

Key Literacy

Full alphabet, reading fluency, writing — a celebration review

This is not new content. It is celebration content. Spread the year's work out in front of the child and watch their face — children are the most accurate assessors of their own growth. They know, immediately, how much has changed.

Key Mathematics

Number sense, all four operations introduced, measurement

A child who can count reliably past 20, add and subtract within 10, and explain their thinking aloud has built the mathematical foundation that will carry them through primary school. This final month confirms they have it.

Key Celebration

Reflection, self-advocacy, transitions and big feelings

Closing a year is emotional as well as academic — and both deserve attention. The child who learns to name their growth, feel pride without prompting, and face transitions with curiosity is developing something rarer and more lasting than any academic skill.

A Note for You

You made it through a full year of home education. Whatever it looked like — messy weeks, brilliant days, stretches of doubt, moments of pure joy — the fact that you showed up and kept going is the thing. You did not need to be a teacher. You needed to care enough to stay. You did. It was enough. It was more than enough.

↓ Setup & Planning — readiness, materials, zones & daily rhythm

Weekly Plan

Week 1 Looking Back

Week 1 is the great review — spreading out the year's work, walking the alphabet, counting what the child knows, and seeing growth in their own handwriting. This is not assessment. It is celebration and evidence. What the child notices about their own learning says more than any test.

What You May Need 12 items
Portfolio Review
Then and Now Portrait
Year of Discoveries — Science Review
Alphabet Journey — Our Year of Letters
Learning-Readiness Number Bond Game
My Writing Journey
Weekend extension

Ask the child to choose one piece of work from the year that makes them proud and display it somewhere in the home.

  • Sit quietly with the portfolio and choose one item that feels most special. Talk about why.
  • Go through alphabet cards and sort them into two piles — instant recognition and still-learning.
  • Look at the earliest piece of writing you saved alongside something from this month. Notice one thing that changed.
  • 💭 If you could only keep one thing you made this year, what would it be — and why is it the most important?
  • 💭 Is there something you investigated this year that you still do not fully understand?
  • 💭 How did your hand know how to write that? What changed since the beginning?
  • 💭 What do you think your beginning-of-year self would think if they could see you right now?

If your child can move fluently through most of the alphabet, count confidently past 20, and point to visible growth in their writing, they are carrying a strong academic foundation into the next year.

Skill Builders

Short, low-prep activities that reinforce what your child is learning this month. Slot them in between core experiences or use them on lighter days.

Week 1 2 activities

Alphabet Review A–M Literacy

Revisit the letters A through M using matching games, quick card checks, and playful repetition.

Show guidance
What to say Try: 'Let's see how many of these letters you know straight away — go through the cards and name every one you recognize instantly.'
What to look for Speed and fluency through A–M. Letters that feel automatic signal true consolidation; any hesitation points to what still deserves a little more time.
Connects to: Literacy, full alphabet recognition
Number Sense Review Mathematics

Count to 20, revisit addition and subtraction within 10, and play a quick problem-solving game using familiar manipulatives.

Show guidance
What to say Try: 'Count as far as you can — let's see where you get to. Then we'll try a few adding and taking away puzzles with the bears.'
What to look for Fluency, range, and confidence compared to early sessions. A child who counts well past 20 and adds within 10 quickly and without objects is showing genuine number sense.
Connects to: Mathematics, number sense, operations

Week 2 6 activities

Alphabet Review N–Z Literacy

Revisit the letters N through Z, celebrating the full alphabet with songs, games, and partner reading.

Show guidance
What to say Try: 'These are the final letters — let's race through them together and celebrate every one you know without even thinking.'
What to look for Confidence and momentum through the trickier second half of the alphabet. A child who powers through N–Z without hesitation has truly internalised the full set.
Connects to: Literacy, full alphabet recognition
Everyday Words Review Literacy

Review the everyday words covered this year using word cards, building sentences, and reading them in context.

Show guidance
What to say Try: 'Go through the word cards and pull out every word you know by heart — no sounding out needed. Let's see how big that pile gets.'
What to look for How many words the child recognizes automatically versus with effort. A growing instant-recognition pile shows real reading fluency is forming.
Connects to: Literacy, reading fluency
Reading Celebration Literacy

Share a short book or reading strip together — not as a test, but as a celebration of how much the child can now decode and comprehend independently. Let them lead.

Show guidance
What to say Try: 'You choose the book — and you lead. I'll just listen and enjoy.'
What to look for Engagement, pride, and willingness to take the lead. What the child chooses to read and how they carry themselves through it reveals how they see themselves as a reader.
Connects to: Literacy, reading development
Problem Solving Review Mathematics

Tackle a few familiar problem-solving challenges using strategies developed across the year — a satisfying demonstration of growth.

Show guidance
What to say Try: 'Here's a puzzle — tell me how you're thinking about it, not just the answer. I want to hear your mathematician brain.'
What to look for Whether child explains their reasoning aloud and applies strategies confidently. Speed matters less than self-assurance — a child who talks through their thinking has really grown.
Connects to: Mathematics, reasoning, mathematical thinking
Year Map Display Cultural studies

Create a timeline on the wall with one item or drawing from each month of the year, arranged in order. Let the child place each one.

Show guidance
What to say Try: 'You get to place every piece — it's your year, and you decide where each one belongs on the map.'
What to look for How the child moves through the year as they place each item — pride, memory, and sense of personal journey. Any spontaneous storytelling about a piece is rich observation.
Connects to: Cultural Studies, time, memory
Certificate Ceremony Cultural studies

Present the child with a certificate of completion with real ceremony — they have earned a moment of recognition.

Show guidance
What to say Try: 'This certificate is for you — because you showed up, you tried, and you grew. I am so proud of you.'
What to look for How the child receives recognition — whether they take it in with genuine pride. A child who holds the certificate and beams has internalised their own accomplishment.
Connects to: Cultural Studies, celebration, transitions
Setup & Planning

Readiness

This guide is about what the child can do now. Observe and celebrate rather than test.

Ages 3–4
  • Recognizes name in print and most familiar letters
  • Counts to 10–15 reliably
  • Names emotions with words rather than just behavior
  • Has developed learning routines and some self-regulation
Ages 4–5
  • Recognizes most letters and their sounds; beginning to blend simple words
  • Counts to 20 reliably; beginning to understand simple addition
  • Expresses emotions with words and is developing strategies to manage them
  • Engages with learning routines and can describe what they are learning
Ages 5–6
  • Reads simple sentences with phonetic support
  • Counts to 30, adds and subtracts within 10
  • Writes their name, common everyday words, and simple sentences
  • Talks about learning with pride and specific examples

Set the Stage

Learning Zones

Morning Circle

Use the final weeks' Morning Circle to revisit rituals from the year — the weather chart, the calendar, the gratitude share. Notice what is automatic now.

Reading Nook

Add the child's own books from the year — the All About Me Book, the story books they wrote. They belong in the library. Add books about transitions, starting school, and new beginnings.

Creation Table

Set up the What I Know book work and celebration planning. Let the child help design their own year-end display.

Discovery Station

Create a 'Year Map' or timeline on the wall: one item or drawing from each month, arranged in order. Let the child place each one.

Daily Rhythm

Match the session length to your day — everything else stays the same.

Full Day 75–90 min
  1. Morning Circle (revisit year rituals)
  2. Portfolio or Book Work
  3. Academic Review Activity
  4. Read-Aloud (transitions)
  5. Celebration Preparation
  6. Closing Ritual Reflect on the session, tidy up, celebrate one win
Short Session 30–40 min
  1. Morning Circle Gather, greet the day, and preview what's ahead
  2. Portfolio Work
  3. Read-Aloud A picture book connected to the week's theme
Low-Energy Day 15 min

Pick one:

  1. Look at one piece of work from the beginning of the year together. Ask: "Do you remember making this?"
  2. Flip through the year''s portfolio and choose one favorite. Talk about why it mattered.
  3. Read a picture book about starting something new. Ask: what are you proud of this year?
Just Life no schedule needed

These are not learning activities — and that is the point.

  • Meals & snacks together
  • Outdoor free play
  • Rest or nap time
  • Screen time (if used)
  • Errands, chores, and everyday life
Month Reflection

Progress Tracker & Reflection

This tracker is for your own quiet observation — not a report card. Mark what you notice. Three levels are available for each milestone: Exploring (just starting to engage), Growing (doing it with some support), and Flying (doing it confidently and independently). There is no wrong answer. Every child moves at their own pace.

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