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Ting Tang

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Posts posted by Ting Tang

  1. 8 hours ago, 8filltheheart said:

    I don't get the bolded. At all.  I don't think that is an objective for any educational methodology. Struggling suggests material beyond ability. Additionally, there is a distinction between offering appropriate level challenge vs all work being challenging, too.  Appropriate level work means the successful building of skills plus laying the foundation for additional skills to be mastered.

    I've probably watched too many CM videos.  I was alluding to "not dumbing down" material for children simply because they are children.  Sometimes I think reading books that I know are challenging for him is helping as his reading has improved, but then I see him struggle with reading words I think he should know how to read by 5th grade.  

  2. 23 minutes ago, Masers said:

    What do you mean with your last sentence?

    We did their language arts and math for a couple years. I didn’t find it to be anything impressive, and certainly not rigorous, but they had no trouble shifting over to other curriculum later on.

    And no, I don’t think it’s all that bad. I also don’t think kids need to struggle in every class. In public school, I had some challenging classes, and some super easy blow-off classes. Even in college, it was like that. I personally focus on language arts and math now, and let everything else be pretty easy/fun—at least for right now. I know I’ll pick up the pace as we get closer to high school. 😕

    I have my eye on the Masterbooks science/engineering course, though. I think Masterbooks works well for some kids, or during some periods. We also LOVE the history podcast that Angela O’Dell does! (Real Cool History for Kids) And I’ve had friends really enjoy the history and bible curriculums. After listening to her podcast, I would consider looking into the history for sure!

    In the end, it’s about you and your kid and what will serve your family best. 

    Well, with MP there is a classical writing sequence, history, and grammar is paired with Latin. They have nice curriculum manuals, but everything depends on the previous year. It’s really hard to step back into. 😞 I think Master Books history/geography looks fun. They have an applied engineering course that looks interesting. Language arts may not be intense, but it might be good for my struggler. I also think about TGTB sometimes, but I read too many bad reviews despite liking the ELA in samples. 

  3. With the exception of math, is Master Books all that bad?  I've been thinking about my struggling learner.  Classical and CM people might be up in arms about this, but I don't feel he needs to "struggle" in every class.  And the format might be easier for me to implement.  Every curriculum has its flaws.  When we did the math, he did two levels in one year and actually liked it (even though it was below grade level).  

    Master Books also has some neat series I think would appeal to my oldest.  

    Sadly, with many other "package curriculums," such as with Memoria Press, once you are off their track, you can never really get back on the planned grade schedule with their full curriculum manuals.  

     

  4. We're doing This Country of Ours and The Story of Canada. They pair well together.  For TCO, I use a guide from Mater Amabilis, which helps us discuss the way our history is told in a more modern way.  It points out bias and offenses that may be present in the writing. It's a great way to discuss how things were perceived then and how we view them now.

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  5. Veering away, what is the US to do with the influx of migrants? Chicago is now fining buses, so migrants are being dropped off in the suburbs. Chicago citizens are mad. And they are not of the elephant party.  Our county is rural and is discussing a policy, if it even can. Friends, our local schools are failing. We have no hospital that is local as two recently shut down. What do we do? No, from a human standpoint, we don’t want people to die. I totally understand the desire to be here. We have always been the shining city on the hill, but are we even more? I read so many here not even wanting to live in America anymore. Would you take in a migrant family? Our home doesn’t have room for our family, let alone a stranger’s. Housing migrants in schools for bad weather… I don’t think we’re ready. One of our small towns already has homeless in the park. So, what should happen? Sorry, maybe this needs a new post. a human topic, not political. 

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  6. 7 hours ago, Lilaclady said:

    We have a set of brothers in our former homeschool group who are now ranked junior players both playing for their universities. I will say golf can be a solitary as well as group game. Take him to the range and there will be lots of people- mostly retired men who will be interested in teaching him and playing. The indoor ones are different from the outdoor real golf ones. 
    If he is still interested as a teenager, he can work as a caddie to pay his own way. It’s a rich person’s game so they pay and tip quite well. 

    Everything feels like a rich person’s game, but I get the impression the indoor stuff isn’t a requirement? 

  7. I guess I figured golf is competitive since it is a game, lol.  But I guess people do go play by themselves?  He is considering taking lessons and maybe doing a clinic, so I just wondered if you had a child who really got into it, what would it be like?  

    When I look at the cost for youth to play, it doesn't shock me.  I am looking locally.  But these indoor things, they look pricey in my area.  But I am finding far too often, there is no longer a happy medium with so many things.  And honestly, I would love for him to be around other kids his age, but I don't want to put him in a toxic environment, either.   Like him feeling left out because we don't do expensive indoor golf.   I do find some things to be more prone to toxicity than others.  For example, my son's tae kwon do---not toxic.  Daughter's stuff---lots of great things, but it has many spoilers.  

    I was thinking a little sports knowledge in general would be helpful, even professionally.  My husband has a set of golf clubs but found the game very frustrating, but at least it is something he has actually played.  My son's uncles and male cousins play, and I think that might make it good for him, too.  

  8. My 10 year old son got a putting green for Christmas.  He's been having fun with it.  I've always been interested in having him try this sport because I thought it might suit him.  I've read it can be a great sport for kids on the spectrum.  There is a somewhat reasonable golf course not too far away that offers lessons, has a kid course, etc.

    But I'd really love to know what it is like to have a kid who plays and competes in this sport.  Nowadays, we have indoor golf facilities.  The one nearby is more than playing real golf.  Do the competitive kids spend time at these facilities?  I've never been to one.  Thus, is this one of those sports that claims to have a season but really is year-round?

    Do you ever feel emotionally and physically exhausted supporting your child in this sport?  How is the culture?  Do the costs never end?  Will I ultimately end up miserable if this ends up being his thing?

    I kinda feel that way about my daughter's stuff.  Joy has been sucked out.  Kinda wanting to avoid any more of THAT.

     

  9. I've read the scope and sequence for MUS varies from traditional curriculums.  If we were to switch, I felt the pre-algebra would be too challenging for my son in our environment.  He's rather go shovel 20 feet high snowdrifts than do school work, lol.  Three years ago, I was planning our next school year at this time.  Last year, I decided to wait.  I am getting worried about next year. He will be in 7th grade.  Part of me wants to return him to normal school. I feel I am running out of time to teach as the kids get older.  We can read awesome history books and literature (which he loves), but when it comes to subjects that can give them good-paying careers, I am worried.  We've been reading book 1 of the Learn Math Fast system. At least something mathy is getting done!

  10. I live in rural Illinois, and I could totally understand those with a household net income of $100,000 living paycheck to paycheck.  Though we are self-employed, our health insurance alone is over $3,000 per month.  Braces for the 2-year plan cost us $215, and it would've been more if we did those in two phases for one kid.  

    Yes, I believe most people live paycheck to paycheck.  I am blessed, and honestly, I wonder how so many do it, actually.  

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  11. Botox (or Dysport) and fillers. I get a little Dysport but not fillers. I could probably use more, but I only get it in my worse sport where I have a horizontal line between my eyes. I also use PCA brand skincare products—ex linea tightens the skin.  Nothing is a miracle but can help. The bad thing about needles in the face is it is expensive, snd it’s another appointment often… congratulations on your weight loss.  We do lose collagen as we age. I’m curious about home micro needling! 

  12. I know.  😞  We certainly do not want it to have a prison feel, but I am not sure what can realistically be done to protect them anymore.  I feel they are very much unprotected---I still feel like these shootings could have been prevented with interventions with these individuals.  

    Have any mass shootings occurred in any inner-city school?  

    It's sad when logistics can't justify keeping kids safe.  😞  

  13. This story really hasn't gotten much coverage.  I saw pictures of the poor little boy who was shot 3 times. 

    The school shooter had a lot of problems.  He was going through things with his sexual and gender identity, visiting voyeur groups.  He made strange videos, acting out the TX Chainsaw massacre and Jeffrey Dahmer.  Did anyone see some of the videos of him with his friends?  It looked like they were all alone, not an environment with adults present; that was just my impression--I haven't read much about his familial circumstances.  

    He was bullied relentlessly, and the bullies involved his sister.  I don't think anyone deserved to die or get hurt.  Many people are bullied and don't do that, but these days, bullying does not stop when you leave school.  Once again, there were obvious signs.  Things were not right in his life.  I'd say too many adults failed him.    

    Why aren't we stopping guns from getting into schools, at the very least?  Would it just take too long for the kids to get into the buildings?  Too expensive?  We've got money for a lot of things.  Schools are soft targets, and they are also places where kids can either thrive or places where some kids get lost, become depressed, and get mistreated.  

    My daughter told me she never wants to go to a school again.  Yeah, I told her what happened.  It's scary, but it is our reality.  

  14. @Malam and @Teach05 thank you!   I read about Denison after "Learn Math Fast."  I decided to buy the Learn Math Fast books.  I know curriculum isn't the main issue, but I don't think I want to fiddle around with MM right now.  

    Math-u-see intrigued me, too.  And I am going to keep that as an option in the future, too. The LMF books had a set from basic 3rd grade to pre-algebra.  I know it isn't in-depth, but we're going to see if this is just a little more helpful for right now.  

  15. Thank you all so much for weighing in. The other day he asked for some information from me, so it caused me to wonder if he was doing things on the straight and narrow after all.  But I do believe he was dishonest with my aunt, so it is hard to know.  My father did not have a will but did communicate with me about my brother and I being beneficiaries and to split whatever there was; also, he did not have life insurance.  

  16. On 1/1/2024 at 7:42 PM, Nm. said:

    I was going to buy this but then realized I could sum everything up that I wanted them to know at this point in their life in a few short sentences lol.  Was it awkward? Yep but it was short and to the point.  It also didn’t cost me anything.

    Good thoughts.  lol   I don't really want to discuss pornography, and I do think it is part of this curriculum.  I feel like it'd be a vast surprise to them.  And if it is here, they can easily grab the book and read it.  I realize kids come across images rather easily these days, but I don't think my kids know the extent of it.  I dunno.  I just feel they should learn about their bodies and upcoming changes. 

  17. I come from a dysfunctional family, and my parents divorced quite some time ago.  My father just passed away, and he left very little.  I'm estimating $20,000 in cash and $20,000 in stock plus a small checking account for daily life.  When my father died, my brother and his wife took his computer and was able to access it all.  My father told me my brother and I were beneficiaries on his accounts.

    It was my brother's idea to have a visitation with viewing, and he told me it was about $9800.  I never saw a bill, but he signed his name to the contract.  I never said I didn't want a viewing, which did increase the price, but in my mind I knew I couldn't say anything if my brother felt it was important to see my dad again.  

    Anyway, my husband and I are not rich with four kids, but we are comfortable.  My brother is married, and though I know they are not well off, I thought they were getting by.  My brother said our dad had enough in his accounts to cover the funeral.  My well-off aunt and her husband ended up sending my brother a $10,000 check to cover the costs.

    A few days after the funeral, my brother told me they used the money to catch up on car payments, etc.  He said money was coming into his business to replace it.  Then the story changed.  He was then going to use my dad's money to pay the funeral home.  He said he had 30 days.  Well, that date has passed.  And he recently told me he "did nothing" yet with anything.  So...if you're following me...if he has done nothing with the accounts, then the funeral home hasn't been paid.

    I really wanted to pay my aunt half of it back from my dad's money, but I'm growing skeptical.  Could my brother be using my dad's accounts since he has access and whatnot?  I've not told my aunt anything.  I haven't gotten a death certificate.  I'm afraid to cause a problem if things are getting taken care of...  Now my dad had an apartment and should have gotten a security deposit back.  Where is that money?  My brother pulled money out of my dad's checking somehow to make sure no more payments could come out of that after death---not sure where that is.  

    I'm guessing I won't see a penny of that money.  My husband and I are okay with that.  My husband just wants to make sure we aren't paying twice on a funeral between my aunt and us.

    My aunt and uncle said they didn't want to be repaid.  I suppose we could go into our own funds and pay her back.  My dad's mom is still alive, too, and both she and my aunt couldn't come due to their health---but they didn't think it was wise to spend this money and said my dad wouldn't have wanted that.  I know my brother struggles in life, and sometimes I feel sorry for him. He had cancer, which I'm sure didn't help their finances when he couldn't work, but I'm just wondering what I should do at this point.  Nothing? 

     

    • Sad 10
  18. Thank you all.  Yes, it seems I am going to need to prioritize this situation.  He charms us by reading a lot and avoiding math lately...  I'll look forward to a fresh start after our break.  My husband has been very hands off this year.  He tried to help my daughter with her Singapore Math, and he couldn't do it.  So I think he's put me in charge, though he does make it clear privileges will be taken away if school work isn't complete.  

  19. 2 hours ago, forty-two said:

    Going to disagree here.  Something that the Bible calls a *curse* is in fact something that the Bible is calling *bad*, not promoting as a good.  And if you are talking about Numbers 5:27 (part of the order of bitter water laid out in Num. 5:11-31), while the NIV has "miscarry", the Hebrew itself has "womb will swell" and most English translations (as well as the Septuagint) have either "belly will swell" or "womb will swell" - nothing at all suggesting miscarriage.  Combined with the next verse ("But if the woman has not defiled herself and is clean, then she shall be free and shall conceive children"), the clear meaning is infertility, not miscarriage (especially since the test was for women suspected of adultery, not of being pregnant).  As well, the Mishnah (first collection of Jewish oral tradition) talks about how women who are pregnant or nursing are not to drink the bitter waters.

    See, I am not a Biblical scholar, so when I come across materials, I don't always know exactly what they mean.  We are raising them as Christian and prefer a wholesome approach.  But certain topics in a curriculum would concern me.  I think they should learn about the human body and their develpment.  I don't really want to talk about abortion and porn.  Maybe that makes me bad, lol.  That wasn't part of my sex ed.  

  20. @HomeAgain  I would read it more closely before purchasing.   For me, it seems like a lot, especially a section on pornography, as in maybe they are too young.  I find it hard to "skip" things when materials are within arm's reach.  I also feel abortion is an older person's topic, and I kept finding logic courses with it as a topic.  If you tell a child abortion kills a baby, the child will think it is wrong.  But we know it is far more nuanced than that.  Maybe I'll take a look at NOEO because I also feel it is time for a round of human anatomy again.  I just get really queasy reading about body parts (a career in medicine was never for me).  

  21. 1 minute ago, LauraClark said:

    Are there consequences if he doesn't (assuming he understands what you've asked him to do)? Especially if he isn't doing any probably at all. 

    Re: feeling overwhelmed: I started having my 12 yo just do math for one hour (which includes instruction time). If he gets done, great! If not, put it aside to work on something else and then come back to it at the end of the day. I'm also only assigning the evens (we use a different curriculum, so not sure that's an option with yours). 

    Not as of yet. And I hate to get mean about it. But I know he needs to finish some kind of curriculum this year. MM does say doing all the problems isn’t necessary, but I don’t know how to pick and choose. They are all so different from each other so far. 

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