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jcross222

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Posts posted by jcross222

  1. I am using these books by Syl Sobel with my lower-mid elementary age kiddos this yr. The Declaration of Independence , How the US Governmnet Works, The Bill of Rights, and Presidential Elections.

     

    I found each of them on Amazon for around $5-$6. You can see inside many of them there too. Each is around 35-40 pages and is recommended for grades 3-5.

     

    For my 8th graders, I am primarily using icivics.org materials. :001_smile:

  2. I agree, they're pricy. My 7 yr old just flew through the first book. Although she really liked it, I don't think she learned much from it. Maybe some of the later ones might challenge her, but I don't know that I want to spend $16 a book to find out. I may look at the table of contents of each book, if possible, and skip to one that looks like it would cover new material for her. I wouldn't bother at all, except she really liked it and wants to keep going with them.

  3. Do you have to do the test, or is something important riding on it? Because if the test is optional, I would ignore a low computation score due to speed. There are so many more important things to worry about in this world. In real life, people use a calculator for the sort of questions that get put on a computation test at this level. At least, I do --- Do *you* do your tax return calculations by hand?

    __________________

     

    This is exactly what I told my daughter. It's always nice to hear someone else say the same thing. Thanks.:)

  4. I have 2 rising 8th graders who just finished their pre-Alg course. They did well enough, but I am concerned about their retention. Although they certainly learned a lot this year, I feel like they only understand certain topics at a very superficial level.

    I was thinking that maybe I would take the summer and maybe the fall semester reviewing things and looking at topics from different angles, so to speak, before beginning Alg I over the second semester of their 8th grade year. If I do that, Alg I will most likely spill over into 9th grade.

    I really like and understand math myself and just feel like if their foundation for higher math isn't rock solid, they may run into problems later on.

    Am I doing them a disservice for college entrance if they don't get to Calc in high school? Should I just move forward and expect deeper understanding to come with age and experience? They are not math lovers themselves at this point, so I am concerned about moving ahead to more difficult topics killing any chance for their opinions about math to improve.

    I guess I'm trying to decide if my desire for deeper understanding to the point of complete mastery beyond that chapter's test is reasonable. Do your kids remember topics learned well past the time when they were first learned? In other words, can they simply handle certain math problems from chapter 5 even though they are now on chapter 12? The amount of times I have seen blank stares looking back at me when discussing a topic I KNOW they knew at one time is disturbing. It makes me think that if we stretched out the material and dealt with each idea a little longer and a little deeper maybe the blank stares would cease.

     

    Thanks for sticking with me through such long ramblings.:001_smile:

  5. My dd (rising 8th grader) took the CAT test online and scored below average on her math computation section (39%). She said the time ran out when she still had nearly one third of the questions still unanswered. When I looked at her raw score, it looks as if she got nearly all of the questions correct that she did answer.

    I know it is not a math facts issue, as we have done timed games with these and she is fine. I think she just took too long to think about each problem. All her thought processes were right on, just too slow.

    I reassured her that this is the first time she has ever done a test like this so now we have a benchmark to work from.

    Does anyone have any recommendations on how we can improve her computation speed beyond just math facts. Any test prep workbooks that may be helpful to use as "timed" worksheets to practice with over the next year? I'd like to not have to reinvent the wheel if possible, but I suppose I could just come up with problems out of my own head and make my own.:tongue_smilie:

    Thanks.

  6. I have 2 rising 8th graders. I am beginning to think about coursework for high school. I would love some BTDT comments from anyone who has used FLVS (Florida Virtual School). How did you use them? For which classes? General impressions?

    Any information would be more than I have now.:001_smile:

    Thanks.

  7. I have just finished working with my 7th grader ds and I feel like I've just gone 15 rounds. First, we are using Winning with Writing and are working on the persuasive essay. His position is that smoking is a nasty and dangerous habit, so no one should smoke. He came up with a few well thought out details supporting his position, but his essay in general is very weak. He has written in complete sentences and his grammar is generally fine, but the composition itself leaves much to be desired.

    Here's a little taste of how it went:

    ME: This is a good idea here but I think the sentence itself is too vague. How else could you word this to make it sound more specific?

    DS: I don't know.

    ME: Let's make a rule to no longer use the words stuff, things, good, or bad.

    DS: Then I got nothin'.

    ME: Do you remember what a metaphor is?

    DS: Yeah. (he then correctly defines one for me)

    ME: Can you think of a metaphor that might be appropriate here?

    DS: (After much pause) No.

    I then find myself leading him along with MANY open ended questions that eventually get us to a better sentence with regard to word choice.

    When we are finally finished with the essay rewrite, he says to me, "Mom, I know it sounds better now, but I don't know how to come up with these kind of sentences myself. I need you to help me think of them. My brain is just empty."

    I really feel for him, because I know he is trying.

    How do you help you child edit and improve their writing without essentially rewriting it yourself? I could never just ask him to work on improving sentence A or sentence B on his own. He'd just sit there blankly for hours.

    He understands concepts like sequence words, metaphors, similes, hyperbole, alliteration,descriptive words,strong verbs, etc. He can pick them out of things he reads, but to ask him to then come up with some in his own writing, is like asking him to jump the Grand Canyon.:confused:

    Advice, anyone?

    Thanks.

  8. My dd is a rising 8th grader. She has been turned on to meterology lately and has begun talking about maybe pursuing broadcast meterology as a career(I realize she's only 12, but she's very excited at this point).

    She just completed Pre-alg, and did just fine. I would guess her to be a B+/A- student, but she complains about not being good at math and math being too hard almost daily.

    I know that if her interest in meteorology continues, she is looking at a couple of years of Calc and calc-based physics down the road.

    Have any of you had children who complained about math early on but got "turned on" later in high school? She is not really math intuitive, and I certainly have never heard her say, "Yea math!".:)

    I will do everything I can to make her math learning as rigorous yet achieveable as possible, but I wonder if this will be an uphill struggle for her the whole way. She is a science nut, however, but again, we haven't really done any advanced science that requires any significant math yet.

    I am a math lover and have always been, so I am in uncharted waters here.

    I really can see her having a great career in this field, so I am hoping that the interest continues.

    Someone please tell me that they have had kids who were once like my dd but went on to have great success in advanced math and science!

  9. For my 8th grade twins Lit next year:

    Call of the Wild

    Johnathan Livingston Seagull

    Flowers for Algernon

    The Giver

    Biography of their choosing

    a dozen or so short stories

    a dozen or so poems

     

    They'll most likely read another 5 or 6 non-fiction titles for civics and science.

     

    I decided to include short stories for the first time next year. Usually we read 8-10 books for Lit and another 5 or 6 for history/science each year.

  10. My 7th grade twins will be finishing their pre-alg course with Derek Owens in a little over a month. I am looking for something to add on for the rest of the spring/summer before they begin Alg in the fall. They are not very mathy kids, so I want to find something that will force them to use their skills and continue to mature over the summer.

     

    We tried Life of Fred Fractions in the past, but neither one liked it very much. We have used MUS from the beginning until this year when we switched to Derek Owens. They enjoyed it ( as much as I think it is possible for my kids to enjoy math). I have no experience with any other math programs, so I'm all ears from the Hive.

  11. For inventors, you could look at this book http://www.amazon.com/Thomas-Edison-Kids-Ideas-Activities/dp/1556525842/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1333370946&sr=8-1. There are also books like this for Galileo, Da Vinci, the Wright Brothers, Ben Frankin. Just scroll down the page to the "customers also bought" section.

    For composers, I have been drooling over this one for a while now http://www.homeschoolinthewoods.com/HTTA/AP/Composers.htm

    HTH!:001_smile:

  12. I am looking for any good resources for my 7th grade twins when we discuss plays in our literature studies. I would like to find something that was 2 person (3 person including the narrator). It can be a scene from a longer work or a small one act skit/play. Any suggestions?

    I suppose another idea would be for them each to perform their own monologue. Again, any ideas?

  13. My kids are very sports and car-minded. I found these videos to be particularly interesting to explain physical science concepts http://www.nbclearn.com/portal/site/learn/science-of-nhl-hockey

     

    Also my kids love the show Top Gear on BBC. It has brought about several discussions regarding combustion, fuel efficiency, drag, etc.

    I have this book on my wish list, I intend to use it in the fall when we start our year of physical science http://www.amazon.com/Car-Science-Richard-Hammond/dp/1405364068/ref=wl_it_dp_o_pC?ie=UTF8&coliid=I36TYZ6Q329FS4&colid=2HBHNY9D6GKCO

     

    Otherwise, we joined the lego club on currclick and participate in the montly lego challenge here http://legoquestkids.blogspot.com/

    We have exhausted all Magic School Bus books and videos and are still working through the list Bill Nye videos.

     

    Math has been MUS for all from the start. My 7th grade twins are using Derek Owens for Pre-Alg this year with great success. I have just purchased some daily word problem books during scholastic.com's dollar days sale that I plan on starting soon.

     

    Finally, I am on a never ending look out for a good combustion engine model for the kids to put together. All I've seen so far have not had many good reviews.

  14. I think I read somewhere that it is possible to take the CAT/5 standardized test online. Has anyone heard of this? If you have used the CAT test in the past, from where did you purchase it?

    I will be testing my 7th grade twins this year. This is their first time taking any sort of standardized test. Any other recommendations from those who have BTDT would also be appreciated.:)

  15. Well I started in my 2 little girls' bedroom this morning around 11. I stopped for lunch and then had to take my 2 boys to hockey. Now dinner is wrapping up, and it still isn't finished.:tongue_smilie:

    I intended to just reorganize their closet and toybox. It soon ballooned into cleaning out their dressers, weeding through clothes that are too beat up or too small, and sorting the toys into their "proper" bins.

    It's almost 8 o'clock and now I have to hurry and at least get the piles cleaned off their beds for sleeping tonight!

    I guess I already have my task for tomorrow.

    Oh well. Once it's done I'll be sooooo happy.

    Off to clean.

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