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OnceUponAFullMoon

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Posts posted by OnceUponAFullMoon

  1. Do you mean the AOPS online Intro to Physics course? Kiddo just completed it. It was easy and lots of fun. You had to do some experiments and recorded them. Mine has a box of physics tools from HST but you can just use items from around the house. Some experiments are virtual/interactive. I heard it is a big jump from this course to Intro to Mechanics (AP course) though. 

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  2. I fell for a similar trap but with reading. I attempted to have mine read Matilda & Harry Potter at 6yo. He hated reading. It turned out his decoding was very uneven with his comprehension skill, and jumping into hard books too early discouraged him from reading all together. He still only likes comics books. I would say expose your kids to as many things as you can and let them follow their interests. Their interests may change over time too. 

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  3. 11 hours ago, Sergio said:

    Hi, I am a parent that homeschools a 14 yr. old and would like to know if AOPS courses such as Pre Algebra and Algebra are an option for homeschoolers and can be used towards getting a high school diploma (include in transcripts) or not. Thanks 

    As a homeschooler, you create the transcript and diploma yourself. You don't need to attend an accredited school. If you plan to send them back to public high school later, it is the high school's case-by-case choice whether to accept those credits or not.

    Regarding AOPS, you can teach them yourself with the books, or take their text-based online classes, or their in-person/virtual academy classes.

    The text-based classes are the cheapest, text only, no audio, no face time, very fast pace, has proof-based problems but no final exams. 

    The virtual academy classes are like zoom classes 

    The in-person academy is slower, spreading through the entire school year, has final exams but no proof-based problems

    All of those classes have letter-grade report at the end for your transcript. 

     

  4. I have been using Classical Writing-Homer. I have the main book, student workbook and teacher guide. It's hard to teach from it lesson by lesson. I went back and forth making my own lesson outlines . But there's just too much to do for my kid who struggles with attention. So I use it now only for the summary by scene and the 6-sentence shuffle. 

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  5. Did anybody take a good interactive/simulation personal finance class that they like, that are not Dave Ramsey? Having background in finance, I found a lot of Dave Ramsey's financial advices frown upon. My only option right now is to to teach my kid using my college finance textbooks. Has anyone tried GoVenture Life & Money simulation game and is it worth the price?

  6. I tried out some EIW videos briefly. 

    Pros: the videos are short and precise. It's less teacher involved. There is also an optional scoring service. 

    Cons: the lessons sound good in theory, but I just can never apply them to teaching my kid how to write.

     

     

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  7. Is there such thing as a self-paced interactive Spanish learning software, with built-in videos & games that teach vocabulary, grammar, and speaking? What would you suggest for something close to that for a 9-year-old? I need something more structured and not some random quiz, something like Song School Spanish/Spanish for Kids but online and less teacher intensive.

  8. On 4/9/2008 at 10:00 PM, Sarah CB said:

    Going through Aristotle's ten categories to find synonyms blew me away. I'm pretty good at coming up with synonyms myself, but to actually go through and think about something from ten different angles, writing every description that comes to mind, well, let's just say that we never end up with antiquated descriptions nor do we feel hampered or stifled in any way. If anything CW has blown the lid off of our writing.

    Sorry for resurrecting an old post, but where do I find the instructions for finding synonyms using Aristotle's ten categories? I know what those 10 categories are. TIA.

  9. On 10/19/2009 at 6:07 PM, Kfamily said:

    I created a CW notebook that has several dividers. One of my sections is labeled Across the Curriculum. I included Appendix E (p.126) which gives a quick overview of how to do this and all the blank sheets for vocab. analysis, weekly assignment checklist, Table for Analysis of Author's Emphasis, Aristotle's Ten Categories, Parsing Chart, Steps for the Six Sentence Shuffle and the blank for for the Six Sentence Shuffle and the Homer Editing Checklist. I've already picked 4 models from our history readings to use and will fill in the details using these forms as we get closer to this assignment. If all goes well I hope to expand this.

     

    HTH :001_smile:

    I know it is an old post, but where in Homer does it talk about Aristotle's Ten Categories? I know it briefly mentioned about finding synonym using those categories in day 2 skill 2, but how?

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