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idnib

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Posts posted by idnib

  1. I wondered about that...so where do you keep yours???

     

    I'm a classical homeopath so I keep the majority in my office in the closet. For home use I also keep kits in the closets, on the top shelf. The bathroom gets too damp, I think.

     

    Electrical devices, strong odors, keeping them near TVs, microwaves, etc. inactivate remedies. So do temps over 120F. Nobody really knows why, except that at potencies over 6c you're basically talking about energetic medicines and having energetic fields interfere with them is not helpful.

     

    It's not the end all and be all, though. I've taken remedies through x-rays at the airport (in a foreign country) and had them work at the other end. In the US I usually ask for a hand inspection.

  2. You can buy bullet boxes at sporting goods stores and place the tubes in there. If you have a lot, buy a cabinet with lots of little drawers and label them alphabetically.

     

    A cheaper alternative it to take a box, cut some styrofoam to fit in it, and then cut holes for the tubes and insert them. Leave some space between the current holes for new ones if you want alphabetical order. You can also buy round labels, add the remedies' abbreviations to them and stick them on top of the tubes so you don't have to pull them out of the styro to see what they are.

  3. I found a black widow crawling on DS when he was 2! It was just walking around. I was about 20 feet away from him in the yard. :scared:

     

    I really have a huge fear of spiders but I will say that it's probably true they don't bite unless cornered. This spider was content to hang out on DS's arm for awhile, as my mom and I heard him say, "Look, bug!" a few times before we came over. Sigh.

  4. It's an amazing and wonderful oil. A book I would recommend is The Coconut Oil Miracle by Bruce Fife.

     

    I use coconut oil in soups, chili, for frying, and I add a spoonful to my tea to help my thyroid. If you add to tea, try something fruity and herbal as it tastes terrible with black tea. Also, beware that the oil on top of the cup can burn you, so let the tea cool a bit and also stir well before drinking.

     

    I buy different brands in bulk so I'm not much help there.

  5. Yes, YA books have their place. However, that place is not in an AP English, college-prep class. The literature circles were part of class time and by her own admission, she avoided the classics and was only forced to use them when they took her own YA selections away. She has apparently also deliberately avoided mentioning the fact that she was teaching AP classes. Gee, I wonder why.

     

    From http://vereloqui.blogspot.com/:

     

     

    I can see both sides so I'm not disagreeing with the gist of what you're saying and I did read the vereloqui blog before I even saw your post. We ought to note that the teacher did say, "And I’m remembering how just last week I cried again, selfishly, when I allowed myself to consider all the horrible things people were probably saying about me and my “pornographic†literature and what it did to their precious test scores and how YA is nothing but fluff and has no place in a college-bound curriculum."

     

    So maybe she could have been more explicit about the nature of the class but I'm not sure in her emotional rant she was necessarily trying to hide anything, either.

  6. We're just geeks and we set one up for each of the kids. We run our own mail servers so it was just a matter of giving them accounts.

     

    OK, prepare yourself for ridiculous Silicon Valley geekiness: :tongue_smilie:

     

    We also gave them web pages. Because we wanted to post nice pictures and such? No, that would be too normal.

     

    The reason for the web pages is that search engines such as Google have very complex proprietary algorithms in order to determine the placements of search results. Often they give better placement to sites that have been in place longer (to downgrade junk spam sites) and that have more items linked to them (to demonstrate better content). My DH, who's a journalist and completes for Google placement on certain topics, and is even geekier than I am, figured we could give the kids a head start on whatever they wanted to publish later by giving them a history with the search engines. And he got his friends to link to their sites to increase their "juice".

     

    Yes, this is a true story. You don't know what I live with. :D

  7. Where we used to live, all the school libraries were closed, except for the one at the elementary school. The schools refused to let parent volunteers keep the libraries open.

     

    They did this to shock people into voting for higher taxes to benefit the schools. It did not work.

     

    What happened after the tax did not pass? We're going through the same thing here. The tax did not pass this summer and now they're going through a list of closures/consolidations and administrative cuts for next fall, but because they're putting a modified tax proposal on the ballot again in June I can't tell if this is a real plan or an attempt to shock people into passing it next summer in time to "save" everything. If they were planning to throw up the exact same proposal next summer I would say they are obviously using shock tactics, but they are modifying it so it's hard to tell. (The proposal only lost by fewer than 200 votes, so the new proposal isn't that different, just tweaked.)

  8. Not only would I not send the letter, I would seriously limit MIL's time with the kids if she couldn't keep her mouth shut. You just know she's going to undermine your work and affect your kids' confidence by making snarky remarks when you're out of earshot.

     

    And in general outside of this topic, she just sounds toxic and you should protect your kids from her.

     

    And whatever you do, don't homeschool around her. It's not worth it for you or for the kids. How will they feel when they hear her snotty remarks or snorting? She doesn't even have the insight to realize that the kids may not realize her remarks are meant for you and not for them and their work. Pitiful, really.

  9. Are you thinking of Islam: Empire of Faith?

     

    http://www.pbs.org/empires/islam/

     

    That's an excellent documentary.

     

    I'm not sure how much money you want to spend, but here's an 8-CD set that would be really good:

     

    http://www.sandalaproductions.com/Products/89-vision-of-islam.aspx

     

    I'll try and dig up a few others today and I'll post this thread on another thread you might be interested in:

     

    http://www.welltrainedmind.com/forums/showthread.php?t=187337

  10. Wow. I knew colleges had remediation because I was a math tutor for that type of program at my university. But at the time (around 1990) the remediation was definitely a special program for kids who had a lot of promise and potential (high IQ) but who had been in crappy inner-city schools and had been recruited to the university. It wasn't for your average high school student.

     

    This is depressing.

  11. I don't think it's been verified but several other teachers (and students!) have chimed in to say they are not surprised and/or they have had similar experiences. Some participants are urging the OP to go to the media and if he does we may be able to get verification that way.

     

    Wow, that whole situation is crazy-making. It makes me scared for the future of our nation. :mad: And what about those kids who make it to college? What's going to happen to them when they find out how unprepared they are? :crying: (Or will they just dumb the colleges down to accommodate the new reality?

  12. This link was in another thread I can't find now:

     

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/07/health/views/07mind.html

     

    It seems relevant to the discussion so I thought I'd post it.

     

    (We always do schoolwork in the same place. It would drive me crazy to have the books, pencils, crayons, etc on the couch anyway, but DS likes the table and it's easier with all the writing work. And I think it's become ingrained. The article does make me wonder if we should change, though.)

  13. We've been using Singapore Math and it has worked quite well for my son. One of the things that attracted me to it in the first place was that it was similar to the curriculum approved by the Singapore Ministry of Education (according to Rainbow, anyway.)

     

    I'm now looking at science programs and am wondering if the science materials are also based on actual programs in Singapore, or if they are a similar style to Singapore Math but not linked to the country of Singapore's science standards. (IOW, is it just branding?) It's funny because Rainbow doesn't say anything about any actual connection to Singapore.

     

    Anyone know?

  14. Hmmm...maybe this is my chance to ask about Everyday Math.

     

    We do Singapore and we love it, and I've never seen Everyday Math or even heard of it except on WTM. There is an assumption on on WTM forums that everyone knows what Everyday Math is and why it's so terrible.

     

    Can someone fill me in? What makes it so bad? (I want to be able to catch on with threads like this!) :D

  15. As far as curriculum choices, my husband leaves it all up to me, including the research and spending.

     

    As far as teaching...

     

    For K last year, he had some idea of what we were doing but mostly stayed out of it except reading aloud. This year I am going to definitely have him more involved, as I've developed this fear that if something were to happen to me both he and the kids would be completely lost about where this is all going and bad things would happen as a result.

     

    So I'm putting the lesson plans online and giving him the password. I'm also going to go over all the materials and how they work and why they were chosen. We'll review at the end of the month, else I'll get a blog going. I'm going to have him do more reading aloud, mostly because I have a thyroid problem which makes my throat really tired and sore if I read aloud for too long, but also because while I love to read, I really don't enjoy reading to other people. I'm also going to have him do the science materials on weekends. We're both science majors, but he has more tolerance for messes and he enjoys weekend projects.

     

    Shhhh...I have a secret plan to have him do Latin when we get to it. :tongue_smilie:

     

    He really only has one rule and that's that the kids don't use computers. He's a geek (actually we both are) and he strongly believes peoples' relationships with computers would be much improved if they understood how they worked and controlled them before using them. So in a couple of years he and DS will build a Linux box from scratch and we'll go from there. That will be mostly up to him.

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