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If you had $3k extra for supplements...


blondeviolin
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What would you get? We are trying a homeschool charter this year. They are paying for music lessons and swim for my son. We are all set curriculum-wise. We will be buying two new computers and some books. After that, we'll have about $3000 to spend on supplementary items. I'm thinking things like science kits, Little Passports, and FUN things. We have more tablets than we do kids so I don't need anything like that.

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Make sure you know the fine print. My experience is that non-consumable materials (ie. materials meant to be re-used) bought with these funds have to be returned to the school, so don't use the funds for non-consumables that you hope to keep forever and ever. The flip side of this is to ask your assigned teacher-person if they have something you're interested in already available because someone else bought it - then you can borrow that and use your funds on something else.

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search for the thread, if you had $5K....

 

1 of everything from hometrainingtools.com?

 

I especially love from there:

Thames and Kosmos kits

snap circuits

robotics kit

alnico magnet

physics introduction kit

deluxe hydronomics

gears and pulleys

 

And then, based on the ages of your children:

 

young scientist kits

 

a good set of reference encyclopedias

 

stuff from montessori print shop

 

materials for continent boxes

 

all kinds of at home gym equipment: wobble board, therabands, kid exercise dvds, etc.

 

 

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Make sure you know the fine print. My experience is that non-consumable materials (ie. materials meant to be re-used) bought with these funds have to be returned to the school, so don't use the funds for non-consumables that you hope to keep forever and ever. The flip side of this is to ask your assigned teacher-person if they have something you're interested in already available because someone else bought it - then you can borrow that and use your funds on something else.

Anything under $200 will be ours to keep.

 

We have brainPop as a school subscription. We have a laser printer, pro-clock, and laminator. I need some fun ideas!

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search for the thread, if you had $5K....

 

1 of everything from hometrainingtools.com?

 

I especially love from there:

Thames and Kosmos kits

snap circuits

robotics kit

alnico magnet

physics introduction kit

deluxe hydronomics

gears and pulleys

 

And then, based on the ages of your children:

 

young scientist kits

 

a good set of reference encyclopedias

 

stuff from montessori print shop

 

materials for continent boxes

 

all kinds of at home gym equipment: wobble board, therabands, kid exercise dvds, etc.

Oh, I will look there! The kgym equipment could be fun. :)

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Anything under $200 will be ours to keep.

 

If you can keep for current and future use:

 

Brock microscope

Snap circuit SC-750R $123

Make: Electronics - the Complete Collection $185

Graphing calculator for future use e.g. TI-84 Plus C $104

Scientific calculator

 

If you have space in your home:

Drafting table

easel in a box (for nature/outdoor drawing. It is something like this http://www.dickblick.com/products/jullian-original-french-easel/)

 

ETA:

If your kids like geocaching, the entry level geocaching gps is under $200.

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The Make stuff referenced above is awesome....we've dabbled in bits, but I would love the whole kaboodle!

 

Here's one of my favorite websites on continent boxes. Their printables came from the Montessori print shop I referenced above: http://www.1plus1plus1equals1.com/WorldGeography.html

 

If you get a microscope, get a bunch of slide kits too. My 8yo loves looking at premade slides!

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Kits from Science in a Nutshell or ASK

Snap Circuits 750R

Zometool (the big kits aren't under $200, but smaller kits are)

Microscope - I've seen the Brock suggested, which I've heard awesome things about, but with a young child we went with the Carson Zorb so DD can very easily work it herself and see the image large on a computer screen

Lego Education kits

Foreign language stuff - books, curric, tutor

Board games like Chess, Scrabble, Bananagrams, Toss Up!, and others

Shopping spree for good fiction and reference books

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Misc. stuff that comes to mind:

Snap Circuits

Some Cricket Magazine subscriptions for their ages groups

RightStart games; generally, I love the idea of educational games, I'd search here, check amazon for good reviews, etc.

c-rods

Magic School Bus videos set

I'd buy some great picture books--choosing from Caldecott, Newberry, Five in a Row books, etc.

 

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Well, if they'd let me, it would become a down payment on ds's ballet. Argh. Expensive.

 

I'd gear up for science... Brock Magiscope, mentioned above, better binoculars, more things to dissect...  I don't really enjoy kits very often.

 

I'd buy more math games and strategy games. I have many, but you can always have more, right? Muggins Math makes several that are really good but pricey so that would be one possibility, but there's many out there.

 

What else...  Um... I'd buy all the fun supplemental books that I hold back on and buy bit by bit like the Horrible books, fun living math books, fun reference books, etc.

 

Better art supplies. Really good markers. More art ideas books. I really like the Art Lab series.

 

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can i just say how jealous i am? my poor kids don't get to do many extras because we just don't have the money. i, personally, would love for each child to do an athletic extra and an "artsy" extra (sewing, cooking, art, music, etc). we are also delving into world geography this year and i would love to have all the 10 days in... games and the geopuzzles. i would also love passes to epcot for me and my oldest so we can "visit" the country we're studying.

 

definitely more snap circuits and a good microscope.

 

i am also almost desperate for an ipad. what about a netflix subscription?

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My kids are about the same ages as your older ones, so here is what I would do:

 

- Microscope

- Telescope

- PE equipment (tumbling mats, small balance beam, handspring trainer, balls, etc.)

- Swim lessons

- Tennis lessons

- Homeschool choir fees

- Quality art lessons

- Flower press

- Lots and lots of books!

 

Lana

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We are with a charter and I just buy a ton of fun stuff to go with our history and science. We are doing anatomy so I got the squishy science kit, my body book to make a life size human body. History I am doing american history while going through the american girl books. We are buying craft kits that go with each time period like a flower press, hoop to make a sampler, scrapbook box (decoupage), gardening (victory ww11 garden), composting, tie dye, sand art and I'm thinking of ordering time capsules and having my girls fill them with current event things. We buy most of the curriculum ourself so I use our money on fun stuff that will add to what we already have. My younger daughter also has asked for some rock kits so I'm ordering that for her. I also bought some games and time tales (dvd to help memorize multiplication). Oh and ink and paper. You can never have to much of that.

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I am jealous. I want to live in your state! 

 

At your kids' ages, I really can't think of anything that I would buy for the academic subjects that would cost 1,500. I could spend it easily in extra-curricular activities. 

 

Can you use it for field trips? It could be really cool to go to a bunch of parks and museums and get to sign up for their special classes. Depending on where I lived, I'd go to Jamestown, Williamsburg, Philadelphia, DC, and similar places for early American history, I'd visit the Grand Canyon and Glacier National Park for geography, I'd go to Dinosaur Monument and visit the Anasazi ruins, visit the Redwoods and Sequoias, and see the Everglades. It would be fun! 

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Heh.  We live in Alaska, so there isn't much option to do historical field trips.  That would be neat, though!  

 

I definitely think we're going to go with some simple machines Lego Duplo, some PE equipment (for sure a good few jump ropes), snap circuits, maybe a good microscope (might do that next year), some chemistry sets, definitely tickets to the symphony.  We have plenty of math manipulatives (as we homeschooled previously and bought those with our own money).  Luckily for us, they will also pay for swim team and piano lessons.  

 

I'd love a few things to go along with our history time period: Early Modern.  Any good resources for American History kits (besides books)?  We have the Easy Make and Learn AND History pockets.  Is there anything FUN that I could order?  Like hands-on projects/activities?

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Membership to the science center, museum, historical fort etc.  Online classes.  Science kits are great.  I bought a bunch of wooden model kits for the different kinds of bridges and siege weapons that we will have fun building this year.  Life science supplies (incubator to hatch eggs, or the various kits you can get for ladybug farms, work farms, etc) I am jealous of those kits because we can't get them here in Canada.  Be careful of capital purchases (aka nonconsumable, large purchases) most charters expect those back when you leave their school, so look into that before buying anything.

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Makey Makey

Squishy Circuits

LittleBit

Audio Books

Logic games and puzzles: Rush Hour Jr. or Regular, Chocolate Fix, Games by ThinkFun and SmartGames

Jigsaw or 3D puzzles

Nice wall maps

Globe

Top Secret Adventures

Mathmania

Uncle Goose has some cool educational building blocks (Periodic Table, US Flag, etc)

Rory's Story Cubes

Lollipop Logic

Dixit Game

 

 

Spend some time on the Maker shed site for some more science ideas. Check out DIY.org. Might be fun to gather supplies to do some of the projects/activities featured there.

 

Also, check out ForSmallHands.com Fun stuff on that site.

 

HTH!

 

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A nice telescope or sky binoculars. You have to have amazing star gazing up there! It doesn't matter if you are formally studying astronomy or not - it would be a wonderful learning tool! 

 

I would go to as many performances as I could manage time-wise. 

 

Audiobooks galore.

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