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brendafromtenn

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Posts posted by brendafromtenn

  1. We approached MR two ways.....

     

    1) Pre-Algebra course in 7th followed by MR in 8th(This is with my mathy son. He was ready for Algebra in 8th grade.:001_smile:This is the same son who has said that he will send Mr. Firebaugh an invitation to his high school graduation.)

     

    2)Pre-Aglebra course in 8th followed by MR in 9th.(This was for my artsy-crafty girl who would rather be knitting or sewing than doing her math. But she LOVES Mr. Firebaugh just the same as her big brother. Go figure!)

     

    Here is the thing, though. Make sure that your student is SOLID in their basic skills before moving them into Algebra. At the high school level, there is no review of Decimals, percents, fractions, and ratios.(unless you make a plan for it.) So, if you have ANY doubts in your mind about those skills, then take a year to do a good pre-algebra course. Only YOU know if your student is ready to move on to higher math.

     

    Whatever you do, don't rush them through to Algebra in 8th grade because you feel like they will be "behind" or because "everyone else is doing it." Each child is different and you have to make that decision based on them and not on what everyone else is doing.

     

    Just my two cents,

     

    Brenda:001_smile:

  2. That was exactly one of the reasons that we liked Firebaugh's Math Relief...The whole lesson, including the video portion, took about an hour, give or take a few minutes. It was just what we had alloted for our math at 8th and 9th grades.

     

    So, I was looking for something for geometry that didn't have a 45 minutes lecture AND THEN an hour more of problems.

     

    We needed something more of "short sweet and to the point."

     

    Thanks Grace, that was just what we needed!

     

    Blessings,

     

    Brenda:001_smile:

  3. Thanks Martha! We found the same thing to be true with Firebaugh's Math Relief: Algebra I and II. DS did VERY well on the Algebra portion of the ACT, AND can explain Algebra all day long....in other words, he gets it.

     

    But Firebaugh has not completed his Geometry section, and I was looking for a Geometry course, that would be DVD in nature, and cover things as well as Firebaugh did with Algebra. So, that the child will KNOW geometry. That is my goal. Not necessarily looking for the most rigorous course out there. That is not my goal. I want them to understand the subject matter.

     

    Thank you SO much for the information.

     

    Blessings this Christmas season!

     

    Brenda:001_smile:

  4. I was a music education major. I think the most important thing, in this day and age, if you are going to be a music major, is what job skills do you have when finished with your degree.

     

    I had skills when I got out of college. I had a teaching degree. However, my friends, who were performance majors, went into other fields when they graduated. For them, there wasn't a lot they could do with that major. Not always the case, but for them, that is what happened.

     

    I too agree with all that was said by the wonderful ladies who have posted above me.....Great job, guys!:iagree:

     

    If I had it to do all over again, I think I would major in HISTORY EDUCATION!;)

     

     

    Blessings,

     

    Brenda:001_smile:

  5. No Finalist here either, but we are please with ds's score. Our junior got a 183 @90th percentile.

     

    Not bad for a little boy who didn't even know the difference between a noun and a verb in 3rd grade when we "brought him home". :001_smile:

     

    That writing portion is still bringing us DOWN. AUGH! What to do...what to do....Hmmmm......We'll just have to think about that, now won't we!

     

    Have a great weekend, ya'll!

     

    Blessings,

     

    Brenda

  6. That is one of the things we do for Bible on a daily basis.;) Mom reads them too!

     

    One for every day of the month!:D

     

    Heard Marcia (TOG founder) talk about this a LONG time ago at a TOG conference. I have been reading Psalms and Proverbs daily now for several years and last year encouraged my teenagers to do the same. WOW! I can not say enough about this.

     

    I am a support group leader and I encourage my ladies to do the same.

     

    Thanks for the information!

     

    AND

     

    HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!

     

    Blessings,

     

    Brenda:001_smile:

  7. Faithe we are right there with you! I have been using the WTM for a LONG time, with some TOG and Teaching the Classics thrown in for good measure....But our family REALLY needed some STRUCTURE thrown into our classical reading program.

     

    Along came CLE.....On the advice of a friend, HI JETTA,:seeya:, I decided to try CLE. OH, MY GOODNESS!!! It was just what we were missing in our WTM method.

     

    We use CLE for reading. For each 9 week quarter, I do the first 3 weeks with a Light unit from CLE and then leave the other 6 weeks for reading whole books and discussing them using either TOG classic or making a story chart using Teaching the Classics. WHAT A BLESSING!

    CLE READING HAS FILLED IN ALL THE GAPS IN OUR READING PROGRAM!

    (Sometimes I switch this up and do TWO light units in a quarter(6weeks) and then leave the last 3 weeks for whole books.)

     

    I can not say enough about CLE reading....GREAT PROGRAM!

     

    Blessings,

     

    Brenda from the great state of Tennessee!

  8. Yep, Lori, we read that one last year....just well, because I said so..... AWESOME book. I could not put the book down. Was really neat to read just prior to him planning his Eagle Project...;)

     

    I love your lists. How you have organized them. Great titles too. Some I had not thought of for a while...

     

    And I have seen Seven Men Who Ruled from the Grave over and over again in TQ....But I never bought it. May have to check it out now.

     

    Thanks!

     

    Brenda:001_smile:

  9. O.K. going to just take the time to do this: Some years were more academic than others. Used WTM, Omnibus, and TOG to lead discussions along with Invitations to the Classics. PLEASE DON'T LOOK AT MY SPELLING. DIDN'T HAVE TIME TO PROOF!

     

    8th: Ancients(Working our way into high school by the end of the year....)

     

    Gilgamesh the Hero

    Golden Goblet

    Tales of Ancient Egypt

    Tales of Ancient India

    Tales of Ancient Africa

    Tales of Ancient China

    Black Ships Before Troy

    Wandering of Odysseus

    Edith Hamilton'sMythology

    Oedipus

    Julius Caesar

    The Bronze Bow

     

    9th grade Middle Ages

     

    Beowulf

    Conn. Yankee in King Arthur's Court

    Song of Roland

    MacBeth

    Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

    Robin Hood of Sherwood Forest

    Selections from Canterbury Tales

    Dante

    Imitation of Christ

    The Prince

    The Faerie Queen

    Shakespeare Poetry

    Hamlet

     

    10th grade

     

    Don Quixote

    Pilgrims Progress

    Herbert/Donne

    Paradise Lost

    Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin

    Rousseau's Confessions

    Gulliver's Travels

    Pride and Prejudice

    Wordsworth

    Coleridge

    Shelley

    Keats

    Oliver Twist

    Frankenstein

    Short Story unit

     

    11th grade(Some of this has not been completed. A projected list... Also working on Eagle project.)

     

    Red Badge of Courage

    Huck Finn

    Emily Dickinson

    Robert Frost

    Animal Farm

    The Great Gatsby

    Steinbeck something....still thinking through this

    To Kill a Mockingbird

    The Hiding Place

    The Crucible

    1984

    The Chosen

     

     

    12th grade.....?????

     

     

    There you go!

     

    Brenda

  10. We will have our first senior next year. And I'm starting to collect ideas for literature that we would have him read before he leaves our home. While we have been reading the great books all along, and we have been discussing those truths from a Christian perspective, I just feel that this last year, should be MORE of a focus on Truth and Wisdom, that in the past.

     

    Here are a few ideas we have so far....Note these are just ideas right now....

     

    How Should We Then Live

     

    Mere Christianity

     

    The Scarlet Letter(Missed this one due to sickness in our 4 year history cycle.)

     

    Moby Dick(Husband threw this into the mix.:w00t:)

     

    Also, have CLE's 12th grade lit study called "Perspectives of Truth in Literature."

     

    Any other ideas for imparting Truth and Wisdom to a 12th grader? or a Great Book that you saved especially for the 12th grade?

     

    Blessings,

     

    Brenda:001_smile:

  11. My 14 yo has started sewing on her own. However, she has been using my Kenmore, but I would like to get a machine of her own for Christmas.

     

    Should I stick with a Kenmore from Sears, or go with another brand?

     

    Hancock fabrics will have some on sale on Friday of this week. Here are some they will have on sale:

     

    Janome 3128

    Singer 7422

    Brother LS-590

     

    All of these are listed for $79.99 except the Singer which is listed for $129.99.

     

    Any thought?

     

    Blessings,

     

    Brenda

  12. This was just want I needed! I can not thank you enough.

     

    Just to give you a background, we have been grinding our own grain for 6 years. But now all of the sudden, I am having trouble digesting them. So, someone suggested that I soak the grains prior to cooking them.

     

    But I just could figure out how....

     

    NOW, I get it!

     

    And I LOVED the article on the Bread of Idleness.....Awesome

     

    Thanks again,

     

    Brenda

    P.S. Raw milk is great! We have used it for years too. Find a farmer that you trust, and you shouldn't have any trouble at all.

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