To be honest, when I was approached about writing a review for K5 Learning, I was going to pass. We just haven’t liked any online sites that we have tried. I decided it was only fair to give it a quick look before saying no, and my five-year-old was immediately drawn into the site. I responded to the request with a yes.
We started with the recommended learning assessment, to see where my son scored on grade level, so the program could correctly place him to start the program. The assessment has a variety of levels given within it. Some answers will be too easy, others too hard. This is the only way the program can know where your child is in his learning. However, I wish there was a button for parents to choose “does not apply”, as my son correctly answered some questions he had no clue about, just by chance. Once the assessment is over, the parent can log in to see where your child was placed. Evan scored 1st grade, and he is in Kindergarten. (I thought he was reading above K!) After the program knows where your child’s skill level is, you are ready to learn.
The layout is attractive and inviting. Evan has really enjoyed learning his lessons with this program. I wanted to share with you a few examples of the curriculum in action, to give a better idea of what a lesson looks like.
The pros:
These lessons aren’t full of games and a little education, your child will really learn:
- phonetic awareness, phonics, sight words, vocabulary and reading comprehension.
- numbers and operations, geometry, measurement (including time and money), algebraic thinking and data analysis.
- basic addition, subtraction, multiplication and division facts. (with monitored progress for mastery)
- spelling-you can even assign your own word lists.
Other positives:
- works for special needs learners.
- parents have access to learning reports to track progress.
- the lessons adjust to your child’s individual learning automatically.
{my favorite part of the lesson}
- Each lesson also has a preview of sorts that explains what you are about to learn and how to answer. I really like that about the program.
{this math lesson was challenging, but enjoyable}
{we apparently needed this, as Evan asked if dragons were real!}
The con:
This online curriculum has some great positives and I am glad we were invited to try it. I do have one negative to give, however:
When we went to work on the math facts for mastery, we found they are timed drills. Drills makes sense for older children – but Evan is five, with little keyboard skills. He never could get fast enough to pass, even though he answered all of the questions correctly.
As you can see, 0 were answered quickly enough, but all were correct. It had nothing to do with knowing the facts. I do wish the curriculum had thought of smaller children with little hands and no knowledge of why the numbers don’t go in order on mommy’s computer pad. Evan couldn’t understand why he didn’t pass when he knew all of the answers.
The rest of this site is great, so we will likely just be skipping this section unless that aspect is changed. Overall, it is a great program with true learning as the star. It is just fun enough to keep Evan from feeling overwhelmed, but this isn’t busy work. I would definitely recommend this if you have any interest in computer learning.
Purchase info:
- After the trial ends, the monthly subscription for one child is $25 or you can purchase one year for one child for $199. K5 Learning has a free 14 day trial that doesn’t require your credit card to begin. (I love that.)
- I would recommend giving the free 14 day trial a try. Evan has really enjoyed this in the few weeks he has been using it. If we had the extra $25 in our budget, I would continue on when our subscription expires. I wasn’t expecting to enjoy K5 Learning this much. It has been a great addition to our day.
Jessica Moore says
Thanks for taking the time to do these reviews. I just stumbled across your site and am so excited to read more! 🙂
I have a question about this one.
So K5 Learning is a complete curriculum for reading and math? Any other subjects? And how long would a child sit at the computer each day to complete his work?
Would we also need to do Math and Reading work away from the computer? As in, is this meant to just be supplemental to our other curriculum?
Thanks for your thoughts!
Jessica
Sam says
In my personal opinion, I always view computer work as supplemental. We still do living math and read books everyday. I do think that this is the best online curriculum we have ever tried though, and Evan really enjoys it. We limit our children’s time with anything like this, so the most he ever does is 30 minutes.
Erika says
I’ve used K5 for 2 years with my soon to be 7-year-old son and it has worked wonders. We started out when he was in Kindergarten but soon moved up to the first grade and second and is now working on 3rd and 4th grade. I have no idea how he’s mastered multiplication already.
Anyway, there’s a way to change you speed drills time. When we were working on kindergarten I set it up to 6 sec but now I have it set to 3 sec. I think that’s plenty.
Anne says
This is good to know!! I too have a 5 year old that knows these facts, but can’t pass because of speed. We are doing 14 day trial. I like it. They needed something to supplement homeschool curriculum. Older son has done Connections Academy, and this program is the missing link since we left that program…without being too overwhelming! I love that we can still do Story of the World and Science of our choice. Great addition! I’ll probably pay the entire year ahead for both…it seems it was cheaper this way?
Alyssa Christgau says
I used K5 for my son when he was in 2nd grade and after testing he was on a 4th grade level. I loved it. We homeschooled him due to issues with his current school. So when we moved to a better school we lutbhim back and honestly I’m wishing I never did that. He’s now in 5th grade and he struggles with things because of so many kids in class. K5’s one on learning and fun activities keep their attention. I’m contemplating pulling him out for 5th grade and just doing it at home but I’m not to sure since 5th grade is a lot more work than 2nd these days. I’m not sure how easy it is for the parents to understand and be able to help the child learn. It’s a great program would highly recommend it!
Chantal Warren says
I am a homeschool mum and wish to use K5 learning. I have tried to find access to the 14 day free trial but have had no success. Could you please help me.