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Guest2

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  1. I think it takes a few generations to get there. Kind of like that old story that a professor told the med students on the first day of class, He showed the slide of a relaxed student napping under a tree and told the med students that if they studied really hard, this could,be one of their grandkids.

    Look at the lifestyle of your grandparents. In most cases, I see a dramatic lessening in amount of work and physical difficulty of such. You help your kids . Sometimes that entails giving advice. My grandfather didn't get to see go to high school and made a huge impact telling his kids ," I hope you can have a job where you get to sit down ." His kids graduated high school and many of them went to night school to get a college degree. My generation gets to sit down as much as we want.

    • Like 4
  2. A few of the flagship schools in Texas do award credit for certain SAT subject scores. https://learningsciences.utexas.edu/studenttesting/exams?field_subject_area_tid=All&field_exam_type_tid=5&combine=

     

    This isn't helpful for OP as the physics credit is for two algebra based classes,which are not the physics classes required for engineering. If I had really prepped my daughter(Psychology major )having 8 credits of science would have been wonderful ( Psych majors need 21 science credits). I haven't heard of other schools doing this.

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  3. My family is big on hugs and kisses, and I didn't think about the school setting. My pre-K 4 daughter chased all the boys to give them kisses on the cheek. On the other hand, I didn't hear about it until much later, so I guess there were no issues, lol.

     

    My kids did attend school at these ages( my oldest did all but grade 4, dd did PreK4) and had a fantastic time. I don't think you teach these ages unless you love kids! Our experience was very positive . The teachers were kind and made the day fun. My kids couldn't wait to tell me all about it. If they serve a snack, that was always my first question. That was the most important thing for my kids.

     

    Lining up and keeping hands to self is pretty big, but all kids need work on this. Maybe not to throw blocks or play clothes even if you are not aiming for a person..no target practice. No throwing water from the water table or sand up in the air to see where it goes. I think the teacher always does explain all ot these things though. There may be bells or announcements that are a little loud( It helps to know this for some kids). They may only check out one book at the school library , not 10:).

     

    Is it a full day for your K? Tell your kids the hours, and what to expect. My son thought he was coming home when it got dark because it was all day school. Oops.

     

    Easy to open containers are super helpful if not having hot lunch. They will need practice.

     

    I would pray and go with that answer is for the forth grader. You probably have a

    first inclination /gut feeling about what to do.

     

    I don't know if this will help or not. But I would say that lots of successful, happy, close families here rotate between public school and homeschool. So I have seen lots of wonderful families who have kids in school and love it ,some who homeschool and love it, and others who do bothand also love it. Lots of families do options 1,2,or/and 3 at the same time.Whatever you do with His leading will be a great thing! A friend of mine reminded me recently how very stressful it is to plan out big spans of time. All you need to do is figure out this year. It sounds like you have! It will be great!

  4. I love a lot of the ideas, but didn't see the one thing I used about everyday. It was an infant car seat that you set in a stroller. I loved not having to wake a sleeping baby when I needed to go to the store/ library/ wherever.

    Congrats!!!

  5. My oldest is taking four accounting classes...two each five week session. He is hoping to change his graduation date to December. It would be nice to see him for a day or two!

    My oldest daughter is doing most of the caretaking/ driving for the family as I recover from surgery. It is her first summer without classes in a long time.

  6. Editing as I reread this. I don't think we will get all of this done.

     

    History/ Literature: Great Books Academy/ Angelicum Greek Year class discussions and discussion with Mom

     

    Writing to complete English Credit : only one short class at a time, either Bravewriter Intermediate, ( Expository 1 and 2)..,.Home2Teach Narrative2 (and possibly report, paragraph)..will decide which route to go after trying Bravewriter

     

    Math: Algebra2 through VT Algebra, (summer before and after 10th grade) MathUSee Geometry

     

    Biology: recorded Homeschool Connections class with Mom using Miller Levine Book and dissections and other labs, some Natural Science Museum dissections

     

    Grammar: SAT grammar books (10 minutes a day)

     

    Introduction to Computers ( live Homeschool Connections)

     

    Art: art class continuing with local artist

     

    Electives: The Animation Class(summer), Game design(summer)drivers ed

    Fun: leadership team youth group, PE at the y, teen homeschool group ( trying out the PE and New homschool group)

    Second semester: Python or homeschool Spanish Academy

  7. I wonder if you would like central coast California areas like Avila Beach or San luis Obispo. It was sunny almost everyday when we lived in the area and no heat or A/C needed for my family. Temps were pretty much 40/50 at night and in 70's with low humidity during day inland. It was expensive, but really beautiful. It was foggy in the mornings though. https://weather.com/weather/tenday/l/93424:4:US

    http://www.avilabeachpier.com/weather.html

    • Like 1
  8. Unless it has changed since my Engineering college days - Calc 3 was considerably harder than Calc 2

    Sorry, I wasn't clear. I was recommending finishing Calc 3 prior to admission to four year school. However, Calc 2 does have the repuation at our state flagship of being the most difficult weed out course. Whether it is because the work ramps up significantly or kids are starting at Calc 2 with AP or Dual Credit for Cal 1 I don't know.

    • Like 2
  9. We took core classes in the midwest when I went to school. I always thought it was the norm. Engineering students had less core curriculm.

     

    For most majors, in most schools, a person does not need to complete all 42 hours prior to tranfer. Look at the websites or google transfer and name of school. The majors drive the requirements needed pror to transfer, 24 is usually the minimum. The more competitive the progam, the more difficult to transfer in in both terms of GPA and number of coursework. Hth

    https://admissions.utexas.edu/apply/transfer-resources/tccn-transfer-guides

    https://admissions.tamu.edu/transfer/majors

    http://www.depts.ttu.edu/admissions/apply/status/transfer/

    • Like 2
  10. Fasting can be really healthy - there are fantastic health benefits from fasts. Dr. Fung's book, The Complete Guide to Fasting, is a great place to start.

     

    But, I think you'd lose a lot of the benefits of fasting if you're ingesting bone broth during the fast.

     

    I actually really like fasting. I can handle a four day water fast pretty easily. I'm always surprised at how much more energy I have when I'm fasting.

     

    Here's a great podcast on Balanced Bites with Dr. Fung - lots of great info on how fasting works and the different kinds of fasts you can do: http://balancedbites.com/podcast-episode-298-fasting-with-dr-jason-fung/

    Actually Dr. Fung recommends bone broth (homemade) during fasting.https://intensivedietarymanagement.com/practical-fasting-tips-part-12/

     

    I have never tried it as I only do short 16 hour fasts at this point, and i don't want that for breakfast! Totally agree with you on the rest ..I feel great when fasting, and enjoy Dr. Fung's free videos. Working out and eating better/less never worked for me for weight loss. This at least has helped me stabilize my weight until I am ready to loose more.

    • Like 2
  11. Hugs! These years are hard on us moms. Would he be willing retake English from the same teacher and humanities from a different/ better organized teacher? I think most schools will substitute the better grade.

     

    Would the disability services at his school recommend teachers who would be a better fit? I would guess they may not offically recommend them, but might be able to steer him the right direction.

     

    I hope you both have a great summer!

  12. We are doingHomeschool Connections recorded classes.https://view.publitas.com/homeschool-connections/recordedcatalog2016/page/78-79

    This course uses the Miller Levine Prentice Hall Biology book. It costs $30 a month for unlimited courses, but they are reordings , with no live interaction. It will be our lecture. There are free Prentice hall online activities by the publisher, and I have a used book from Amazon. The plan is to purchase the Kolbe homeschool lesson plans and lab manual. We are planning to do the experiments either at home or at the natural science musuem, depending on what is offered. If my DD likes this course, we may do their AP recorded advanced Biology .

    • Like 1
  13. Junior high is right across the street. Elementary is a little futher away. High school is walking distance. My house is the bus stop for elementary and high school. We drive past one of them everyday going to our acitivites or library. Every once in a while , i will point out the school that they could have been going to . Perfect locationfor a nonhomeschooler I think.

  14. At state schools around here, if he dual enrolls in Calc...it is only really a good idea if he can complete the sequence through calc 3. Calc 2 is the most difficult from all reports, and it would be a tough first semester. The state schools we looked at did not recommend taking AP credit for calc 1 either for that reason.

    Another perspective would be to look at what would most help his GPA in the four year school. My ds was pretty happy to have government and history classes to help balance the advanced Math. If he had taken them for dual credit, his GPA would have suffered.

    • Like 1
  15. She may also want to look into Occupational Therapy Assistant OTA programs. They often work in similar locations, similar clients. Here the PTA program has a data collection class. OTA has no no math required for the OTA coursework. They both require math as general coursework needed for the associates degree.

     

    Editted to add: Correction, I am not sure if additonal math is necessary for these associate degrees. There are no math classes listed on degree plan for OTA here. It might be something to check into. http://www.lonestar.edu/occupational-therapy-aas.htm They get paid a little more than PTAs as well.

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