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VA6336

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Posts posted by VA6336

  1. Lunchtime. Hands and mouths are busy. I snack while fixing their lunch and then eat a "real" lunch after they've gone down for resting/reading time in the afternoons. I'm one of those crazy moms who doesn't care how old they are or whether or not they want to sleep: everyone goes to their bed and stays there quietly. The older girls read they own chapter books or plays with their little bitty dolly toys and the youngest sleeps. Anyway, I read to them from longer books (right now it's Dr. Doolittle, next up is Little Britches) during lunch and sometimes during an afternoon snack.

  2. Thanks for all the replies so far. I did notice the first night that there was a $50 discount for signing up that day. The next day the discount had gone down and I'm sure by the time we actually DO sign up it will be gone. :001_smile: C'est la vie.

     

    Has anyone ever used their Snapshot discount? It seems like a good thing, if you're not an aggressive driver. Has anyone actually every gotten the discount from using it?

  3. We have homeowner's in our previous state because we still own our home there and are comparing renter's insurance rates in our new state as well as auto. With State Farm the renter's insurance was fairly cheap, but Progressive's renter's insurance (same coverage limits) was 4 times as much! SF's auto is 50% more expensive than Progressive for us. So, I'm going to call SF back tomorrow and get a renter's only quote. It's definitely an odd thing, but maybe having the policies from two different companies is the way for us to go.

     

    Thanks for contributing your positive experiences so far. That gives me much greater confidence in this possibility. All I've ever known about Progressive is from their commercials!

  4. My gas oven is supposed to work when the power goes out. When we came through for our final walk-through, the previous owners actually showed us how to use a long match to light the pilot for the oven and also the stove burners. Fortunately we've never had to try it out. The rest of my family REALLY likes fluffernutter sandwiches, so I think I'd be good with not having to cook for a week or so.

     

    What's a fluffernutter sandwich??

  5. Well, that gives me a good start. So, your major components are:

     

    Memory Work - using CCM

    Science -are the leaders making it up or are you using something?

    Fine Arts - same question as science

     

    Two moms lead each class

    One director and an assistant

    Fine arts leader

    Science leader

    -all volunteers-

     

    How long are you meeting? How often? What is the age spread of the students? Was there a supply fee to cover the costs of the science and fine arts materials? What about a facility donation?

     

    I'm starting a co-op using CCM in October and am eager to NOT reinvent the wheel!

  6. If this is your first year of Foundations, you might want to pull out the English grammar memory work from your Foundations guide and drill all three cycles instead of just cycle 3. I know it's extra memory work, but it will really give her a leg up next year in Essentials. In addition to that, you might want to find a way to watch the TWSS dvds (maybe with the Essentials parents in your community-ask your director!) and start implementing some of those skills with your daughter at home. That will give her a more solid foundation of grammar as well as some of the simpler writing tasks.

     

    Good luck!

  7. My favorite Starbucks drink delivered to my front door by a friend who ordered me into the shower/bathroom/bedroom for at least 20 uninterrupted minutes while she dealt with whatever my kids were in the middle of, after which she handed me a clean baby and a contented older child and told me she'd be back at the same time tomorrow and then left.

     

    Now THAT would have been awesome. :D

     

    (I'd have been delighted at Starbucks home delivery, though)

  8. I've had a couple of ruptured cysts, been to the ER for both of them, but now have permission from my gyn. to stay home and take vicodin when it happens again (I have two more, just waiting...). Just make sure you take your temperature, if you develop a fever then go to the ER right away (means it's your appendix that's burst or for some reason you've developed an infection). You might spot a little bit, that's normal. Your body should absorb most of it, though.

     

    So sorry you've had this happen, it SUCKS.

  9. In college was my first exposure to Russian, and I know now that my professor used a phonetic approach, at least in the very early stages. We were not allowed to progress until we had memorized/mastered the sounds that each letter makes. There was a simple chart with each letter and it's sound written in familiar script. To this day, I can "read" Cyrillic by sounding it out as I go (sounds impressive to a non-Russian speaker, but horrific to someone who actually knows the language!), just like a native English speaking child could sound out words, without knowing correct emphasis or cadence, etc.

     

    The book I still have on my shelf from my college days is V puti! (only not the newest edition!) for grammar. I kept the "language/culture" text that we used bits and pieces of, but as a whole it was not a good approach to language: Nachalo. My professor used it occasionally (mostly for the multi-media component), but for the most part she taught us the way she had been taught as a child, which was phonics and parts-to-whole. We had separate classes for conversational Russian, even at the early levels, later we took formal linguistics.

  10. Do your children sound like the people they spend the most time with? My kids are "Southern" due to birth and having lived here their entire lives, but they sound like me, their very Yankee mama. If they had gone to school, they would have picked up a Southern accent from their peers and teacher, easily. In fact, my eldest spent time in a PDO and came home drawling like her teacher. It was cute, but we corrected it. :D

     

    So, OP, if your children sound like whoever they spend the most time with, then I wouldn't worry about it. If they sound different, then yes, I'd probably go for an evaluation. As long as they are enunciating clearly and it doesn't bother you or them, I might not actually do anything about it. Just good to know what it is.

  11. Someone already mentioned that just because he's majoring in composition doesn't mean he won't be required to take music history, a variety of performance-based credits, electives within the department that don't count toward his composition requirements, not to mention the general ed classes he'll have to take in other departments of his college/university to satisfy the "liberal" part of his liberal arts degree. :001_smile:

     

    My husband was an organ performance major for his BA because that's what his scholarship was for. He has always worked in sacred music and continues to do so, regardless of that specialization. If the scholarship is an issue, your son can always minor in composition to satisfy his desire for mastery of that subject.

  12. These are GREAT ideas. For me, it is the daily packing that is a drag. My solution? Prepare several days of food at once and put in baggies or reusable containers. So, if you would need 3 servings of watermelon balls for 1 outing, maybe make 9 servings at once to cover 3 outings. Bag up a ton of pretzels, etc. Then it becomes MUCH easier to grab and go.

     

    Me, too, on the daily packing. If I know we'll be out a lot that week, at the beginning of it I will make fruit salad (just a bunch of chopped up whatever is in season thrown together) and then split it up into various sized containers for the fridge. I put yogurt into smaller containers (I buy tubs usually, if the individuals are as cheap I'll buy them if I know we'll be out). We do the cheese/cracker/pepperoni thing a lot, too, so I cut up a bunch of cheese and make sure the pepperoni is in decent size bags (we buy the 5 pound bag from Sam's). I'll bring deli turkey or roasted chicken for mine. Crackers we just grab a box or a sleeve, depending on the cracker. I'll buy a big bag of pretzels or pita chips and divvy them up into smaller bags/containers. Nuts of almost any kind are a hit with my crew, but you couldn't give them to your 1 year old.

     

    Anyway, ditto on the ready-to-go containers at the beginning of the week!

  13. I don't know, Lara in CO...if I tell my girls we're moving to a place called "Castle" anything, I think their expectations might be a little too high! :lol:

     

    Honestly, though, we're going to Denver because my husband is a finalist for a job and this is the final stage of the interview process. I'm looking forward to seeing what is reputedly a beautiful part of the country. We're not looking at specific houses at this point, but hoping to get an idea of which neighborhoods we'd want to live in for cost of living/salary negotiation purposes and because the turnaround time won't be much if he does accept the position. I think Castle Rock would be too far from his job site, though, which is actually in Foxfield, if that means anything to you. We want to be within 10 minutes' drive regardless of what time of day it is (in our current town rush hour STINKS).

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