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hearts4homeschooling

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Posts posted by hearts4homeschooling

  1. I currently use Biblioplan Year 1 for Ancients (both of my kids) and am concerned that Year 2 high school materials will not be ready by the time we start our school year. What other options are out there for a program that will have both history and literature planned out for me? Year 1 ends with the fall of Rome.

     

    It would be great if it would provide plans for both of my children (10th and 4th next year), but high school is my biggest concern.

     

    Unless you are starting your new school year very soon, the Biblioplan level should be ready by fall. Have you contacted them directly? I did recently, and this was their answer to my question about the schedule of coming updates:

     

    "Year 2 is being tweaked right now. Year 1 and 4 are completely updated, and Year 3 will not be updated until the fall of 2012."

     

    The publisher is extremely helpful, and they answer all emails promptly. Maybe they could sell you a few weeks of the schedule if the whole thing isn't totally ready.

  2. It's scheduled by unit in Biblioplan, but I still have to assign which sections to read during specific weeks. It hasn't been difficult to line up with BP. I could email you the table of contents.

     

    "It" above is referring to Glencoe World History text.

     

    I am wondering which year of Biblioplan it is scheduled in by unit. I have the newest edition of Ancients and am not finding it.

     

    Thank you.

  3. AAH has a Student Activity Book:

     

    Also, in the TM, there is a section entitled "Adapting This Curriculum for the High School Student". The author suggests 4 ways to make a high school credit:

     

    * Assign the majority of the For Further Study projects

    * Assign some of the Activity Ideas

    * Require the use of some of the optional forms in the SAB

    * Compile the For Review questions for tests

     

    Hope this helps!! :)

     

    This does help. Thanks for pointing me to the TE for more info.

     

    I used AAH for high school, both books. It is too much to do all of the further study questions if you do both books in one year. You are really booking it through. I wrote to the publisher and got guidelines, I picked one of the further study questions every 2-3 chapters, and used the review as a test. Dd also completed most of the study book. You can try doing all of them, just realize it may be too much.

     

    I wondered if doing both in one year was too much. We do want to get through US History in one year for grade 11, leaving grade 12 for Economics and Government.

     

    I have given my son samples of AAH I and II and Notgrass Exploring America, along with other books I already have - a BJU US History text and A Patriot's History of the United States - to see which one he prefers. He already knows a lot of US history, so I want him to pick the one that has more in-depth information and which is written in a way that is most enjoyable to him.

     

    Any other US history curricula with worksheets, mapping and/or notebooking included?

  4. http://www.codeacademy.com

     

    Looks great for around 12 yrs on up (maybe even a little younger than that). I can't wait to show my ds tomorrow. He's going to love it!

     

    Thank you so much! We were going to go with Homeschool Programming's TeenCoder series next year after finishing KidCoder {these are on sale this month through the Homeschool Buyers Co-Op} this year, but I will first be checking out the site you've mentioned. Free is good!

  5. Audio CDs are awesome! You can listen to SOTW or MOH on CD while playing with Legos or drawing or washing dishes or driving, etc.

     

    I wouldn't worry about Science too much at their ages other than getting lots of fun nonfiction picture books. My kids at 16, 13, and 10 really like these books just to putter through on their own, but your kids are younger. Maybe dad can read them outloud? Or they could just look at the pictures.

  6. ...do you get the hardcopy or e-book?

     

    Pam

     

    I prefer e-books for the consumables, but for sure a hard copy for the Companion. The Ancients Companion is 300+ pages long! It is color-coded to what age group should read what sections, and a black printer just doesn't work well to make these delineations clear. Also, the pictures are much more enjoyable in color. I have the e-book Ancients Companion, and I am seriously thinking about purchasing it again in hard copy for the reasons stated above. It is a textbook in itself.

     

    Thanks everyone! I think I'll look into Early America.

     

    Early America Year 3 is being revised and is due out in the Fall of 2012. I'd seriously recommend you wait to purchase until that time because the new versions are much improved. I have owned the older version of Year 3 and a new version of Year 1, and there are significant improvements that make this a true K-12 curriculum. For example, the new version of Cool History comes in three different age levels, MOH is incorporated into the schedule, and the Companion is expanded; among other things.

  7. We are using BJU Spanish 1 this year, and it is a great fit for us. We are really enjoying Sr. Cancino as the teacher in Spanish 1. I am doing the class with my children and am learning an amazing amount! We plan to work through BJU Spanish 1 through 3 over the next few years.

     

    We tried Rosetta Stone in the past, but none of the three kids liked the picture association approach and really prefer the BJU teacher approach much better. The DVDs contain a lot of teaching and practice, and I cannot imagine doing the textbook alone without them.

     

    They are worth the money IMO. If your family is only taking it to gain credits and not real fluency in the language, I might look for a cheaper program, too. It seems all foreign language programs are pricey, though.

     

    Maybe you could have more than one kid work through them together? They are rated for 8-12 grades, and my 8th grader is doing fine with them.

  8. Here are several links to sites that guide you through taking credit by exam tests, like the CLEP, Dantes, and DSST, and UExcel.

     

    College Board that administers the CLEP tests - http://clep.collegeboard.org/

     

    CLEP Prep - http://clepprep.tripod.com/cleplessonplans/index.html

     

    Get College Credit - http://www.getcollegecredit.com/

     

    Homeschool College USA - http://hcusa.weebly.com/

     

    UExcel, College Credit by exam - http://www.uexceltest.com/

     

    Yahoo group - ClepForHomeschool - this is a very active group with many posts every day and lots of encouragement and ideas.

     

    A homeschooling blog - http://chapmankids.net/blog/clep-test-prepartion/

     

    CLEP REA exam preparation books on Amazon - http://amzn.to/wzm9M4

     

    Here is a list of colleges that accept a lot of credits done by credit-by-exam:

     

    Charter Oak - http://www.charteroak.edu/

     

    Excelsior College - https://www.excelsior.edu/

     

    Thomas Edison State College - http://www.tesc.edu/

     

    I'm curious to see other sites you all have found.

  9. The Sonlight Cores for World History (used to be Cores 6 & 7) have a set of corresponding timeline figures that you could purchase separately. These Cores use SOTW volumes 1-4, so I'm sure the figures line up nicely, though I haven't used them myself.

     

    I have the Pandia Press timeline (without figures), and it is beautiful.

  10. I wrote a blog post about learning the multiplication table on my blog, Hearts For Homeschooling. You can read the post HERE. It explains the book Multiplication Facts in Seven Days which worked well for us.

     

    Math facts are something that public schools teach very well - my boys learned them there before coming home to school (one boy knew all of the tables, even multiplication, by the end of 2nd grade). My daughter has never attended PS, so it was my privilege to teach her.

  11. Aahh! Of course, the one I am planning to use won't be ready until the fall :glare: I hope by "fall" they really mean early August or at least sometime before the next school year begins. If you get a firm date on the release, please post it here!

     

    I received an update from Rusty at Biblioplan today. This is the latest news regarding updates of Biblioplan:

     

     

    Year 2 is being tweaked right now. Year 1 and 4 are completely updated, and Year 3 will not be updated until the fall of 2012.

     

    Looks like good news all around!

     

    Their updated versions really do have a lot more information in them. The Year 1 Ancients I recently purchased has a lot more meat in it than a previous version we had, and the Mystery of History has been added to the grid. The Companion is a textbook in itself - 332 pages long, full of interesting info and perfect to round out the program for a high schooler {and for a mom who wants to learn lots, too!}.

     

    Another thing regarding the Biblioplan Companion - I know it costs twice as much to buy a print copy, but when I buy another year, I will buy a print copy over the PDF since I don't have a color printer. It comes in color, and the pictures and text boxes would be much more interesting in color, especially for a student to be reading it on their own. In fact, I might go back and buy the hardcopy of the Companion for the year I already own.

  12. I picked Biblioplan as well. I think they are in the process of redoing the years. Someone on this forum told me to wait to purchase until March. Maybe they will incorporate MOH better this time around. I'm sure you could email or call and ask the about it. love the schedule for Biblioplan, and you can't beat the price!

     

    I emailed the company today, 01/28/2012, and received this reply:

    "Year 2 is being tweaked right now. Year 1 and 4 are

    completely updated, and Year 3 will not be updated until next fall." I am awaiting his reply as to what "next fall" means.

  13. Here is Timberdoodle's blank planner:

     

    http://www.timberdoodle.com/v/pdf/schedules/TimberdoodleBlankCurriculumSchedule.pdf

     

    If you type in the books and total pgs on the annual planner it breaks them down for you on the weekly planner automatically. Then you can have your child check off the boxes. HTH!

     

    Lovely!! Thanks so much!

     

    Just FYI other users, I could not get this to work in Google Chrome but did work in Internet Explorer.

  14. I LOVE filing everything. For me, it's been the best thing I've ever done in my homeschool planning. I don't file dd's because she is high school, but I still plan on paper. I've even gone to some friends' homes to teach them how to file and helped actually do it. I enjoyed that so much, I think I could plan other families' schoolwork for a living.

     

    Mind coming over?? :D

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