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Karen_OK

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Posts posted by Karen_OK

  1. If your son is taking AP classes at a public school, the difficulty will depend on how it is taught. I believe that AP teachers are supposed to receive special training to teach the subject at a higher level. However, our experience has shown that it depends on the teacher's commitment to actually teach the class at a higher level. My oldest is finishing his senior year and has taken as many AP courses as possible throughout high school. His results on the tests have corresponded very closely to his opinion of how well the course was taught, i.e. high scores from great teachers, lower scores in the classes that weren't taught any differently than a regular class.

    Having quite a few basic credits out of the way when he starts college will hopefully give him some flexibility to actually finish in four years. Most state colleges I've looked at give credit for a score of 3 on an AP test. Many private schools only give credit for 4's or 5's.

     

    Karen

  2. We use prepaid cellular. That way when the minutes are gone, they are gone. ... The big kids and I each have a Tracfone. .

     

    We've gone to Tracfones too. It has worked well for us. We buy the initial minutes, an amount we think should easily last one year if used for the purposes we intended. If they run out of minutes before the year is up (which has happened twice with our oldest), they purchase additional minutes with their own money.

  3. I think I figured out the answer to my own question. At least on FOR SALE posts, I paid closer attention and was able to edit for one week and then the edit button is no longer available. At that point, if I want to continue posting and have the option to edit my post, I cut and paste my content into a New Thread.

     

    Karen

  4. When our children were very young, their grandparents and great grandparents were all still living. For the great grandparents, we called them Grandma and Grandpa followed by their last names. Then for grandparents we asked if our parents would mind being called Grandma and Grandpa followed by their first names. So we had Grandma Joyce, Grandpa Harold, Grandma Jo (for JoAnn), Grandpa Virgil, and then all the greats. One Great Grandpa wanted to be called by his first name, so he was Grandpa Pete.

  5. We've loved the Focus on the Family radio theater of Chronicles of Narnia.

    We love that one too. Also, we used to check out tapes for the Boxcar Children from the library. I don't know if they're still available. Those might be more appropriate for the younger ones. If you don't mind cassettes, I saw some for Anne of Green Gables really cheap on Library and Educational Services website.

  6. 1 lb. ground beef, browned

    1 can spaghetti sauce

    24 oz cottage cheese

    1 egg

    8-10 lasagna noodles, uncooked

    2-3 cups mozzarella cheese

     

    Combine ground beef and spagetti sauce.

    Combine egg and cottage cheese.

    Layer half of the ground beef mixture, the dry noodles, cottage cheese mixture and the mozzarella cheese in the slow cooker. Repeat layers.

    Cover. Cook on high 4-5 hours or on low 6-8 hours.

     

    To make this even faster to prepare, I usually buy large quantities of ground beef, cook it all at once, and freeze it in approx. one pound portions in freezer bags. When I'm ready to make lasagna, chili, tacos, sloppy joe's, etc. I just grab a bag of cooked hamburger out of the freezer.

  7. 8 slices white bread, cubed

    1 lb Italian sausage links, casings removed and sliced

    2 c. shredded sharp cheddar cheese

    2 c shredded mozzarella cheese

    9 eggs

    3 cups milk

    1 teaspoon dried basil

    1 teaspoon dried oregano

    1 teaspoon fennel seed, crushed

    Place bread cubes in a greased 13 X 9 in baking dish; set aside. I large skillet, cook sausage over medium heat until no longer pink; drain. Spoon sausage over bread; sprinkle with cheeses.

    In a large bowl, whisk the eggs, milk and seasonings; pour over casserole. Cover and refrigerate overnight.

    Remove from the refrigerator 30 minutes before baking. Bake, uncovered at 350 for 50-55 minutes or until golden brown. Let stand for 5 minutes before cutting.

     

    I have served this to my family and they loved it. I used regular ground sausage rather than links and I didn't have fennel seed. I fixed it for supper once and only refrigerated it for a few hours in the afternoon.

  8. :iagree:Thrift stores are great. I took my 16yo daughter shopping for a dress for the Christmas Ball. We found a very nice one for $16.50 and I found a beautiful dress for myself for $10.00!!! My husband loves it when we find what we need at a thrift store. In the past we have found jeans, suits, exercise equipment, etc. for great prices.

  9. We've had good experience with HSA's. My husband's company even makes a generous first-of-the-year deposit in the account to encourage people to use the HDHP. Unexpectedly, we've actually met our out of pocket maximum for two years in a row. The timing of how things happened made it impossible to choose any other option, but according to my husband's calculations, we still came out ahead because of the tax breaks. Once we did meet the out-of-pocket maximum, it's been a blessing to have everything covered at 100%. We also have an FSA, but those are hard to plan for and we have to meet our deductible (not the entire out of pocket max) before we can use any money from that account. We chose the HSA again for next year. Hopefully, we'll be able to start accumulating rather than spending it all.

  10. My 14 year old is writing the Christmas letter this year. It's part of his English assignment since he was learning about letter writing. I'll have to do some editing, but overall he's doing a great job. We don't send a letter every year, but I enjoy getting letters from others. Some are very creative. In fact, a creative letter we received last year has provided inspiration for my son as he has been working on our letter this year.

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