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Marsha SC

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  • Biography
    Have a wonderful husband, two beautiful girls, one hyper dog and NOW nine cats. Whew!!
  • Location
    South Carolina
  • Interests
    I love to read, when I can. Gardening has recently become a passion. I find pulling weeds relaxing.
  • Occupation
    Homeschool Mom and Taekwondo Instructor
  1. I'm wondering if you also got the extra Worksheet book. We have used them throughout. The worksheets are just extra work for specific lessons. They just help cement the idea. Hope that helped a bit. Marsha
  2. I thought the Kingfisher History Encyclopedia was no longer in print, though you may be able to find it on e-bay. But for the record, we use the Kingfisher and I like it. :001_smile: Marsha SC
  3. This year I finally figured out how we can finish a book in year. At least, it will work for us with the way we do history. We do a little history every day. We are trying out a four-day school schedule for the core subjects, so history looks like this: Tuesday-read first section of chapter, write narration Wednesday-read second section of chapter, write narration Thursday-(if there are no other sections)do map work, read in Kingfisher History Encyclopedia Friday-take test If there is a third section (we are in Book II, so there are not that many with more than two sections), then we push the map work, etc. to the test day and do it all at once. We choose one extra reading book, per chapter, and do that as reading. We alternate the reading book list in TWTM with a history book. My girls have always finished their reading lists early, so this should help spread out their reading until the end of the school year. We just completed week three of our school year and so far this schedule is working wonderfully! Hope that helps. Marsha
  4. We have used R&S our entire time homeschooling (oldest will be in 6th). I love it; my oldest hates it. But, that being said, she knows so much! Every year they cover the same topics, but dive deeper into them. The repetition is great. We use the worksheets and the test booklets too. Hope that helps somewhat. Marsha
  5. I have an Excell spreadsheet, one for each month, for each child. I create a folder for each school year. I tend to plan out at least two weeks, so I can order books from the library to have them when I want them. Our girls are free to pick any books they want for fun reading. My spreadsheet has the date on the left, the subject and what is done in the middle, then I also keep record of how long it takes to accomplish each task. The time is for me. If either of them is taking more than an hour to do a subject, then we need to change something. Math is the easiest, for us, to plan. We use ABeka; they complete a lesson a day (no skipping of anything!). They will either have a lesson with a drill, or a quiz with a lesson. Tests are their own lesson number, so they are done by themselves. Spelling is a little harder. Note: We are going to try something new this year, so this is untested. I hope they will do a pretest and write definitions on day one. Day two will be the first two pages (we use Spelling Workout) of the lesson. Day three will be SpellingCity.com and the third page. Fourth day will be the fourth page and a test. I am hoping this will work, but honestly I won't know until we start in a couple of weeks. We are going to a 4-day school week this year. Other subjects are trickier. When I first started homeschooling I made a spreadsheet of what I wanted each child to do in each of their subjects. I referred to it often (daily) to remind myself. Just focus on what you want them to accomplish, make a list, then see how it works. Good luck! Marsha
  6. I suppose this is why my friends call me "the mean mom". I started giving my girls tests in kindergarten (spelling and math). One of the few things my husband was worried about was making sure, even though we homeschooled, our girls could face something like a test without stressing. Our oldest will be in 6th next year, and does not even flinch when a test is mentioned. Marsha
  7. My youngest daughter was the same way in Kindergarten. She would write with her left, then eat with her right. Now, at eight (almost nine) she writes with her left, and eats with her right. In taekwondo, she dominates on the right side, but some kicks are better with the left. When she crotches, it is with her left hand. In tennis, she prefers to be right handed...mostly. She works with both sides. We call her a lefty, but she is more than that. She is herself. Let them decided what is more comfortable. They will be happier in the long run. Marsha
  8. Oh! Books!! I loved the Benedict series (can't wait to read the newest, that I picked up from the library yesterday!) Savvy (and its follow-up Scumble); I made my oldest read it for school and she loved it so much she bought herself a copy and waited anxiously until Scumble came out last summer. The Narnia Series (in order, as he intended) ;) There are so many more books to read! Marsha
  9. We, our 2 dds and myself, teach/take taekwondo twice a week. But lately I've wanted to add more (beside general outside play). Recently, I've added "field day" on Fridays. We are learning tennis, playing kick ball with some of our group members, and whatever else I come up with. Now, we'll have three days where we are doing something a little more formal. Marsha
  10. We schedule school around DH too. He is off every other Monday and works the first weekend every month. He also gets a good bit of vacation days, that he spreads around. We take all of those days off, unless we have something scheduled with our HS groups. We also have school one day during the weekend he works, but we just do the core subjects. :) Marsha
  11. We are not religious types, but I've always taught our children about different religions. We've used R&S English since the beginning. Now, our oldest dd is going into 6th grade. She now knows, from practice, Biblical names and places. She is now helping her sister (a rising 4th grader) to learn the same things. I think religion (those that are not your own) is its own subject. In time, you begin to understand the other point of view and you recognize things that are not "normal" to you. Doesn't mean you agree or disagree, it just means the student is growing. :thumbup: Marsha SC
  12. For my oldest, it was the book Savvy. She loved it so much she saved her allowance to buy herself a copy. She did the same thing when the second book, Scumble, came out. Marsha
  13. I always like looking at EducationalLearningGames.com. SO many choices! Shapes Up! is one of my favs. My girls love 10 Days in the US and any of the Professor Noggin games. Have fun searching! Marsha
  14. We went to the zoo for fun on Monday (DH was off), then our oldest developed a double ear infection along with a sinus infection. I just couldn't bring myself to make her do work. :001_smile: Marsha
  15. We have used Spelling Workout since we started homeschooling. We like it. I are now in G and E. I have found they spell better than I do. :lol: Your schedule looks a lot like ours did then. I think you did a good job. Enjoy it! Marsha
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