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rainbowmama

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Posts posted by rainbowmama

  1. Both of my kids who play instruments do this, and I don't really understand why. They will play a piece very well a couple times a week very well for months and then all of a sudden we'll review the piece and they've forgotten huge chunks of it. Generally, the next time I ask them to play it, they play it perfectly. Why does this happen? It doesn't happen super often, but when it happens, they often get very frustrated and discouraged. How do you handle this during your kids' practices?

  2. My 7 year old is reading the pathway books for his reading and that is about all we are doing. He is in the first grade 2 book, each chapter we read he struggles with 1-3 words. When we come to a word he doesn't know I help him sound it out. My question is should he be doing something else for reading? I sometimes have him narrate as well.

     

    I'm mainly asking because my 6 year old is going to start AAR level 1. He can read cvc words and most words containing 4 letters, as long as they can be sounded out phonetically

    (No blends yet like 'er' or 'oy' ). He needs extra help with reading and 100 easy lessons just didn't work for him.

     

    Should I purchase level 2 AAR for my 7 year old or just keep reading books with him? He is also doing AAS 1, FLL 1 and WWE 1.

     

    I personally think phonics instruction is really important. However, All About Spelling teaches phonics through spelling. My oldest learned to read fluently very young, so we only did phonics through spelling. My second learned to read at a more traditional age. I personally chose to finish a reading phonics program with him first and then switch to AAS. I know AAL recommends doing phonics work through both reading and spelling concurrently, but I personally do not want to devote that much time to phonics. I'm not familiar with the pathways book, but I would say that if he's reading, I would be tempted to just work through All About Spelling and see if he is able to apply the phonics rules he's learning for spelling to reading before adding another curriculum.

  3. I recently bought it at a discount (maybe 70 vs 90?) I use it everyday. I find myself now "noting" when I'm anxious and I'm more aware of "present moment" since using it. It helps that I use it everyday which solidifies those lessons. I'll be honest, I wouldn't have bought it at the original price, so I'm glad they had the discount. From what I remember, it will renew in one year at the discounted price too. I found out about the discount through an email so make sure you sign up for emails. With the holidys coming, maybe they'll have another offer.

     

    That's very helpful. I'm not on their mailing list nor did I realize that it sometimes went on sale like that. I'll sign up and wait for a good deal. Thanks.

  4.  

    Also, maybe look at RightStart's placement test. The sheer amount of repetition and review is what did us in for RS C. Then, when I looked at the placement test again, she would only have missed placing into E by one concept/question. If we had stuck with RS, I would have skipped D entirely. Not worth that type of money for one concept.

     

    This is definitely a concern of mine. We've skipped quite a bit in RS C, because he doesn't need that level of review, but as a result, he did A, B, and part of C for kindy. I suspect that if we stick with RS, it'll mean buying D and E both in the same school year. That's a lot of money to spend on math for one year.

  5. Does anyone use Headspace App? I finished the free trial; I like it better than the other meditation apps I've tried; but I'm waffling on the price of the monthly subscription. If you use or have used it, do you feel like it's worth it? What paths have you used? Have your kids tried any of the paths directed at kids? Thanks.

  6. With my oldest child, I never switched curricula unless it wasn't working. Why fix something if it ain't broke, right? My second child is thriving with Rightstart. Math is his favorite subject, and I think a lot of it is because of how Rightstart is designed. However, it's pretty parent intensive and expensive. He's also mathy like his sister, already working on level C though he just started first grade. I already have all the Beast levels published, and I like the rigor of Art of Problem Solving. I'm really struggling with dropping $110 to get level D for him, when we already have a great math curriculum. He's been reading the Beast Academy guides, but he insists that he wants to stick with Rightstart Math. Any advice on selling him on Beast? Or should I just suck it up?

  7. Why does it matter, as long as it works and they don't get finger strain?

     

    I held my pencil with all five fingers into adulthood. I changed it when I started working on fixing my oldest child's finger grip after a year of kindergarten where they didn't bother fixing it. Holding it with all five fingers smudged the writing as I wrote. I wish someone would have corrected it when I was younger.

    • Like 3
  8. We decided to try Writing Strands, starting with level three. After spending a year of watching her so frustrated, I feel so relieved to see her work through her writing mostly independently and without complaint. My library actually has IEW's Teaching Writing Structure and Style, so I'm putting that on hold to think about. 

    • Like 2
  9. I'm pregnant with what I hope to be my fourth living kid. I've suffered through multiple miscarriages and recently a stillbirth. I desperately want to have a child I get to keep after losing my baby so close to term, but the stillbirth devastated our family. Hopefully this one last rainbow baby and then, despite how long I've fantasized about having five kids, we are done. The risk is too much.

    • Like 3
  10. My daughter struggled with Writing With Ease Level Three all of third grade. Of course she failed the test at the end of the year. She just doesn't have a good enough working memory for the narrations and the dictations. As much as I like the idea of narration and dictation for language arts for the early years, it's not working for her. I prefer something secular. Any suggestions about what to try for fourth grade?

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