VPK & A BEKA Programs

Updated on March 06, 2012
C.G. asks from Hollywood, FL
8 answers

Hello Mommies,

Looking for opinions & help on VPK curriculums. I was looking into a school that offers the A BEKA curriculum & one school that does not. I was told that the A BEKA program is not a approved part of the VPK program that is taught. A BEKA is more all hand writing & not much literacy & does not teach much math skills .

I like both schools (which are in Dade county) & I'm turning more towards the A BEKA curriculum. But before I make a final decision I would like some opinions on it from moms instead of the teachers or directors from the school.

Oh something that I forgot to mention that I don't mind that the A BEKA is a Christian founded based curriculum which I do not mind ( I'm Catholic) .

Also for those of you moms who did the private school with the A BEKA curriculum did you have to pay for book supplies ? The school I am intrested in charges $125.00 for the A BEKA book fees & $100 for the intuition even though the VPK program is free & he'll only be attending the school for the 3hrs of VPK. Does this sound over priced ?

Thank you !!!

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K.S.

answers from Miami on

My daughter went to First Prespyterian off young circle. They had vpk there. All I know is by the time my daugther graduated and went to kindergarden she was well advanced of the kids in the class. The first half of the year the kids were just still learning letters and my daugther was well into words thanks to her teacher in preschool. I know its under new management so I cannot say good or bad about the school. Probably still good though because many of the teachers are still the same.

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E.S.

answers from Dayton on

I don't know if this is of any help or not. Might be apples to oranges...
I am homeschooling my kindergartener using A Beka.
It is very focused on literacy and math skills.
So it may be light at the preschool level-but it is not at K.
Many private schools use A Beka...it is a good curriculum.
HTH! GL!

5 moms found this helpful

A.G.

answers from Dallas on

My boys went to a private school that used ABEKA, and when we transferred them to a public school in the 1st grade they were way ahead of the other students. We were very pleased with the ABEKA curriculum, and felt it gave them a good foundation. Good luck with your decision. :)

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E.B.

answers from Denver on

My personal opinion, formed after quite extensive experience with Abeka, is that it's pretty good in the very early years, but quite insufficient in the middle/high school years.

Abeka is a curriculum written by and for the Pensacola Christian College education program, and/or its founders. The Pensacola Christian College founders and administration also run a couple of schools (elementary, middle, high) that are private (Pensacola Christian Academy).

Here's my problem with it: Pensacola Christian College is very strict, and very firm in their beliefs. (That's not the problem, that is their right.) However, I felt that their strict adherence to their religious beliefs limited their curriculum in the older years. My son was in an Abeka school in for part of 6th and most of 7th grade, and when we moved and he transferred to a regular public school, he was extremely behind. Not only did he not know or have a mastery of the math the public school was doing, he had never even been introduced to some of the concepts. And in literature and history and social studies, he also was not up to par with the public school students. I learned that Abeka did not approve of some of the classic books (I'm not talking about a debate over Harry Potter, but things like basic Greek mythology and historical events that the Abeka authors omitted).

Another problem I have is that Pensacola Christian College is not accredited (they apparently are working towards accreditation with some agency but it's not the typical accreditation that a college can claim), and I worry about a curriculum written by a non-accredited institution (they admittedly say that they don't want the traditional accreditation due to their beliefs). It almost seems that the Abeka curriculum is designed to teach teachers to teach students in their own school, who will in turn grow up to attend Pensacola Christian College and repeat the cycle (that's not a fact, that's my feeling after doing a lot of looking into it).

And this is not a personal bias. I am a Christian, and I have an education degree (elementary ed) and my children have attended public schools and private Christian schools and private non-Christian schools, plus they've had some home-schooling, too (dh is military and we've moved a lot!) So I have seen all kinds of curricula. I just don't like the limitations of the middle and high school Abeka curriculum. And I don't like the fact that its written by and for a non-accredited organization. But in pre-kindergarten and kindergarten, even first and second grades, it seems ok.

It depends, I guess, on whether an Abeka curriculum is ok for you for a couple of years, and whether you're ok with transferring to a more standard curriculum once your child is in 2 grade or above, or whether you prefer to continue with an Abeka curriculum all throughout school.

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C.C.

answers from Orlando on

VPK is Voluntary Pre K that is offered in Florida for free for 4 year olds. Abeka is a type of curriculum taught.
My son was taught Abeka at a christian preschool I sent him to at age 3 he was there for a year and it was expensive. I switched him to a VPK program at age 4 and he was ahead of the others, could read and write his letters. He is in 3rd grade now in a public school and is earning straight A's.

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D.G.

answers from Houston on

I went to a private elementary school (K-5th) with the A BEKA curriculum and when I started a public middle school I kinda coasted for the next year and a half. Basically public shool was less advanced.

I don't know know about VPK so I can't really speak to that.

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F.B.

answers from New York on

Can anyone fill me in, what is VPK andwhat is ABEKA?

Thanks,
F. B.

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K.B.

answers from Tulsa on

A Beka was awful for my straight A student. Literally, repetitive paperwork that made her start to hate school. 20 problems? Let's do 50 because it is A Beka. I never thought I would hate a Christian curriculum but I do.

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