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Diviya

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Posts posted by Diviya

  1. My 12 year old read Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice right after To Kill a Mockingbird and really loved them. She is also currently working her way through the Wizard of Earthsea series.

    I will say that she has always self censored, and while she used to be a very sensitive reader, she is not now! She has recently read and enjoyed The Book Thief, The Fault in Our Stars, the Hunger Games, the Maze Runner series to give you an idea of how not sensitive she is now :)

    I'm reading the suggestions in this thread with interest also.

    • Like 1
  2. It's possible I'm not thinking of this the right way, but I think only the corner small cubes on the big cube have three painted faces.  All the other small cubes would have only one or two painted faces.  So, eight corner cubes total - they told you none with 3 red faces, so that also means none with three blue faces, so all eight will have both red and blue?  Make sense?  Can anyone corroborate?

     

     

  3. There were about 40 kids at our site, an elementary school.  There were all levels 1-5 I think, except for my 7th grader.  My girls had fun with the test.  I also was able to get an answer that stumped both of them - very gratifying!

    4ofus, last year, the coordinator at the test site sent us a list of who made the state and national lists.  For the actual scores, at some point you can go on the website to get them.  It takes an unreasonably long time for the scores to be posted, given it's a scanned answer sheet.  I want to say about two months.

    Well, phew, I think that's it for the math contests for this year.  DD12 is taking the SAT on May 2 though - I'll be interested to see how that goes!!

    • Like 1
  4. You could absolutely try Algebra first - I did that and it was obvious she wasn't ready for it.

    But....I really love the Prealgebra book - you may be able to go through some chapters pretty quickly, but I don't think it will feel like needless repetition.

    For what it's worth, I think the AOPS pretests are ridiculously easy, and to me they seem to have no actual relation to whether your child actually is ready for the course, unless you know you have a super self-motivated child!  The post tests are more useful, as Kathy mentioned above.

    Generally speaking, I would think an 11 year old could manage the online class for Prealgebra, but not the Algebra if it's her first time doing AOPS. Mine took the Algebra online class at 11, but she had already worked through that part of the book on her own the year before.  She took the class to review and solidify.

    I don't think you were thinking of the online classes, but my kids both enjoy them, so it may be worth thinking about.

    Sorry, probably this was incoherent, but hopefully there is something useful in there.

     

  5. I went through AOPS pre-algebra with my oldest, and now my younger one is taking it online and working with me on it.  I would say, in my opinion, you should definitely not make the call on whether it is right for you after a chapter or two.  I would say it took a good 5-6 chapters before my kids started "getting" it, and even enjoying it.  There were tears, there was a lot of hand holding.  We skipped some of the really tough challenge problems.  Some chapters, especially early on, were more direct instruction than discovery method - it says right in the front of the book that you can tailor this to the child you have.  The important thing is to not be a slave to the curriculum!  If some of the problems are ridiculous, skip them!  If they need help, work through some problems with them!  I have to say, for my own purposes, that sticking with it was the best thing I have done for them so far.  My oldest has totally blossomed - she can't get enough AOPS now - it's kind of taken over our lives LOL.  And there are still some problems we have to leave behind.  And that's ok. She takes all the classes online now, works totally on her own, and she decides when to pursue help on a difficult problem from her classmates or instructor.  

    I totally agree with those above who say AOPS is not the only or best way to get "there."  It was the only and best way for US.  My only message is to give it a fair shot.  Oh, and the pace was painfully slow at first - my younger one actually dropped the class half way through, and then started over a month or so later.  But the pace picked up quite a bit as we went through.  So you can't really project how long it will take. 

    Hope that helps.

     

  6. Is there a side of the house where you can sit and they can't see you?

    Or a spot where you can open a window and sit next to it?

    Or maybe you can listen to a book on tape while standing in the garden "pretending" to weed?

    Or as a last resort, find some particularly tall weeds and hide behind them with your book. Will require taking something to sit on.

    I am sending hugs.

  7. Soak some cottonballs in mint extract and leave them in your car (after you've caught mama if you want to save the babies). I have read (and have some anecdotal evidence) that rats can't stand the smell of mint. I'm not promising though...

    :)

  8. Agreeing with Sparkly Unicorn. Can you just go faster through MM? I wouldn't necessarily worry about him forgetting. Mine do that too. We just go over it again when it comes up. MM may actually have too much repetition for him. Get it done, and then move on to the fun stuff. He sounds like someone who would benefit from AOPS pre algebra.

  9. May I say that as I am from CO, we have seen more problems that authorities were not prepared for after legalizing marijuana. Many of the problems have been from the sale of goodies baked with marijuana and kids not able to tell the difference. There have been a definite increase in kids hospitalized from eating goodies dosed with pot.

     

    Make sure you think of the side consequences before you jump in and support legalized marijuana. I don't particularly enjoy prepping my kids to check labels and ingredients for pot .

    Huh. You got me curious so I looked it up. I'm still in favor of legalizing. :)

  10. I re-read several of my favorite Jane Austen books while we were in transit. It gave me a craving for more literature set in that period. So I've been reading a number of Georgette Heyer books. They were written mostly in the 1950s, but retain a sweet quality that is missing from a lot of modern historical fiction.

     

    I've also picked up 1491 again as I'm thinking through what history to do with my older kids next year. I'm still waffling between US History and European History.

    Huge Georgette Heyer fan here! Which one is your favorite?

    I have way too many books. Who knows what I will actually end up reading. I'm currently reading Why Don't Students Like School, recommended here. Just finished Robinson Crusoe and How to Fail at Nearly Everything (really enjoyed both). Also working on How to Read a Book, and Teaching as a Subversive Activity. On deck is Angry Conversations with God; The Liberal Arts Tradition; The Up Side of Down; Food and Western Disease, and whatever my dd11 picks out to read next.

    So many books, so little time...

  11. In my opinion, you can't really skip problems in AOPS. None of the problems are the same. You can choose to skip the challenge problems for now, and come back to them later.

    With my older daughter, we would do a section in two days at first. At some point she picked up speed and got more interested, so we could do a section or even two in a day. The summaries typically took 3-5 days.

    It is totally worth it to spend more time on it in order to get everything out of it. We found it transformative.

    Hope that helps.

  12. I'd love to talk about the larger problem (because I think about it all the time), but I'm barely coherent tonight, so I better not.

     

    In my opinion, the problem with a younger kid going into a "regular" algebra class has to do with the textbook and the pacing. You would need to look at the number of problems they would be expected to copy and work, the amount of repetition and the amount of review. All of those things would have simply crushed my dd's spirit at an age when she was ready for algebra. ONLY AOPS would work for her, because the pace is right, and the number of problems per section is just right. No review, no repetition - just incremental difficulty. Looking at a page in Dolciani made her hyperventilate.

     

    Ok, not sure that was coherent, but hope it helps.

  13. We don't school year round, but we've never had everything end tidily at the end of the year! We just start new books when the old ones end...I do try to have specific goals of how much I want to cover, but that gets revised a few times over the course of the year as I get a sense for what is going faster and what is going slower.

    This year is even messier than usual, as we have added some online classes midyear, and shelved some things that weren't working. Overall, progress is definitely being made!

    I find that each year, we delink a little more from what a traditional school would look like. Haven't been able to give up having the summer off though!

  14. I really like Learn to Read Latin, by Andrew Keller and Stephanie Russell. I haven't had time to work through more than a few chapters yet, but it is extremely thorough and well thought out. (There is also Learn to Read Greek). There is a text and workbook, and you can get an answer key from the publisher. Wheelocks would be fine too. I don't think you'd need something before it.

    For reference, I took through AP Virgil in high school plus an additional semester of literature in college. I've been able to keep up with the kids so far, even without the refresher. The refresher has been working along with them! And my memory is not so great, and my last latin class was over 20 years ago...I would definitely need to study more as they get further along though.

    Hope that helps!

  15. I was recently researching Italian programs, and decided to purchase Living Language Italian. It had great reviews and is not expensive. There is a book and CDs. We just started using it, so I can't give you any feedback on it, but it does seem very user friendly. I'd be curious to know if anyone else has used this. The company has other languages as well.

    ETA: while I would normally look for a program with a strong reading component, in this case I was looking primarily for spoken.

  16.  

    Three separate quotes from "The Meaning of a Liberal Education" by Everett Dean Martin

     

    "Education is emancipation from herd opinion, self-mastery, capacity for self-criticism, suspended judgement, and urbanity."

     

    "...it is never information which transforms a person, but the persistent effort put forth to acquire it. "

     

    "When all is said, the ignorance and folly of men are things that institutions cannot cure. Each must discover the path of wisdom for himself. One does not "get" an education anywhere. One becomes an educated person by virtue of patient study, quiet meditation, intellectual courage, and a life devoted to the discovery and service of truth. "

     

    From "Teach Your Own" by John Holt

    “We can sum up very quickly what people need to teach their own children. First of all, they have to like them, enjoy their company, their physical presence, their energy, foolishness and passion.

    They have to enjoy all their talk and questions and enjoy equally trying to answer those questions. They have to think of their children as friends, indeed very close friends, have to feel happier when they are near and miss them when they are away.

    They have to trust them as people, respect their fragile dignity, treat them with courtesy, take them seriously. They have to feel in their own hearts some of their children’s wonder, curiosity and excitement about the world.

    And they have to have enough confidence in themselves, skepticism about experts, and willingness to be different from most people, to take on themselves the responsibility for their children’s learning.

    But that is about all the parents need.â€

  17. At one point I posted a really long winded explanation of our early math journey. Here is the summary version (which is still long winded). My oldest finished sm6 just before starting third grade, around when she turned 8. We flailed around trying lots of stuff like Singapore NEM, New Math Counts, Key to Algebra, AOPS Alg, probably others I am forgetting. Nothing really clicked. Beginning of 4th AOPS came out and we did that, even though it initially felt like a step back. It was a real struggle at first, but once she got the hang of it she was hooked. (She was 9) She went through the book in about 6 months. Algebra has been slower. My younger daughter finished Singapore 6b around the same time, but I did some beast and other stuff with her in third and beginning of 4th. She just started the AOPS Prealgebra online class about a month ago. She will be 10 in a couple of months.

    If there is any point to this, it's that the AOPS Prealgebra is great, but the wordiness is hard for the younger kids. However a traditional textbook would be much harder. I haven't done MUS or LoF, but those sound like they might be better options given his age, or stick with Beast.

    Hope that helps.

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