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Posts posted by Parkway Academy
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VERY helpful, CTVKath, thank you! :-)
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My soon to be eight year-old daughter wants to be a zoologist or naturalist when she's older. My house could be a bookstore and we do have some related books, but I'm looking for favorite suggestions :)
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Is there a significant difference between the first and second editions of Saxon Math 54, 65, and 76? Does anyone have a preference? I bought the used hardback student editions a couple of years ago. My daughter has been working through 54 and is on Lesson 32. I had been checking her work by working through the problems myself, which is easy enough, but to save time I recently bought a used teacher's edition for checking her answers. I noticed today that my manual is a second edition and my daughter's is a first edition. They mostly match, but some of the problems are different and her first edition has more problems per lesson. Going forward, I need to get teacher's editions to match her student editions. We currently have a mix of first and second edition student copies.
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Art History for Kids walks you step by step through a month of art history and art projects, with subjects changing each month. You can subscribe or purchase past bundles.
Here is her sample guide: http://www.arthistorykids.com/sample-lesson/
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I would go with 76 given the above information.
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SOTW on audio always gets "read" because it can happen while I'm making breakfast/lunch, doing dishes, or driving. At a minimum, we talk about it, but we also always make time for read-aloud picture books or chapter books, so those are often books that correspond with our SOTW chapters. My kids love the map work, so we do that as often as possible, but there are several chapters where the paper maps get skipped and we just look at the wall map. We also almost always do the coloring pages and some sort of narration/copywork from what we've learned, even if it's only a sentence due to time constraints or moods. We aim for one SOTW chapter per week.
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I would include him. We included my kinders. If he's pre-writing, he can still enjoy the coloring pages while listening to the chapters, participate in hands-on activities (of which there are many in Ancients and in Medieval), and narrate to you anything that catches his attention. Even very simple one-sentence narrations could be spoken by him and written by you.
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My fourth grade daughter will continue with intensive classical ballet training, introductory violin, piano playing, poetry writing, reading lots of books (Right now she's powering through Jane Eyre! Her choice.), contemplating nature, drawing through a ream of paper every couple of weeks, and providing sunshine to our days.
In addition, I have scheduled:
Daily Morning Basket - Literature read alouds, Shakespeare tidbits, poetry selections, etc.
Teatime Thursdays - Poetry and art history readings
Music Mondays - Beautiful Feet's History of Classical Music
Grammar - First Language Lessons 4
Writing and Spelling - Brave Writer's Partnership Writing and The Arrow
Ancient History (second time through) - SOTW 1 with History Odyssey
Human Anatomy - R.E.A.L. Science Odyssey OR Guest Hollow (still contemplating)
Math - Saxon 5/4 into 6/5
Latin - undecided, but possibly Song School 2 so that she can stay with younger sister
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BRAVE WRITER. Extremely gentle ease into writing. Child focused. The writing level you want is probably their Partnership Writing guide (linked to BW site for details and samples, but buy for a significant discount at Homeschool Buyer's Co-op), possibly Jot It Down, but I would also look into individual copies of their Arrow guides, which contain copywork passages and literary elements, and can work in conjunction with Partnership Writing. Don't buy the year-long subscription. Your reluctant writer is going to go slowly at first, and chances are likely that only a few of the subscription books will appeal to him.
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The Indian in the Cupboard - It isn't really historical fiction, nor is it a biography, but it is an engaging story for that age group and there are several references to pieces of history upon which you could expand.
Wonder - Just a fun read with a beautiful message about life.
Watership Down - It sounds like your son likes stories with talking animals? My husband and his reader guy friends can't say enough good about this book.
By the Great Horned Spoon - A historical fiction my son enjoyed in fourth grade.
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MEMORIA PRESS has meaty literature with guides tied into history. Here is an example of one of their literature sets: Eighth Grade Literature. This is a history specific set: Famous Men of Rome.
BEAUTIFUL FEET has a few different literature-centered history programs, such as their Ancient History Intermediate Pack.
With both of these companies, the teacher's guide, student's guide, and schedule are all pre-made if you choose to utilize them.
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Rod & Staff Grammar is THOROUGH, and you can do as much or as little as necessary for your particular child.
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The Penderwicks
Dory Fantasmagory
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Following because I've toyed with the idea of switching to MCT.
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I think you can definitely repeat, with the older kids writing more detailed narrations and reading more difficult extension books the second time around. That's what we are planning after we finish SOTW 4 this year.
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:hurray: Congratulations!
Your prize is a change in your Bee Level status!! (Although your status last changed at 750 posts and won't change again until 2500 posts.)
Here is a list of the Bee Levels:
Just Visiting for the first 10 posts
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Here's how to change your Bee Level:
• On the top right of the screen, click on your screen name and choose My Profile
• Click on Edit Profile (Black Box on right side of screen)
• On the My Settings page, in the Profile Information section, you can change your Member Title
I'm past the "Just Visiting" number of posts, but haven't been able to change my member title. Thank you for posting this!
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Thank you.
Do you have something like that for SOTW 1-3?
Attached is my list of the books and activities I scheduled when we studied SOTW 3.
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I don't yet have these organized by chapter, but here are pictures of our leveled readers, easy chapter books, and picture books for SOTW 4. I know I have more, but they are still in boxes. At some point I will try to organize the books into chapter lists.
Some of these overlap from the last couple of chapters in SOTW 3, but they are chapters that I want to extend into 4.
Shared album on Google Photos: https://goo.gl/photos/4979vchn5asU3hUo9
I just want to add that I really, really love Number the Stars by Lois Lowry. My eight year-old daughter has read it independently once or twice, and listened to it as a read-aloud twice. It's a short novel with a poignant message and many discussion points. I highly recommend it for even your youngest. My six year-old was able to meaningfully participate in our discussions the last time we read it (last autumn).
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Last year, I had three kids (my daughters and a neighbor girl) from age six through age 10 who LOVED using Song School Latin 1 from Classical Academic Press. The DVD was a must, the flash cards not so much. The student workbooks come with song CDs inside.
This year we are going to use Prima Latina, even though I previously bought everything for Song School Latin 2. Gah!
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I'll try to go through and find all the picture books I have thus far.
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We're also covering SOTW 4 this year. My girls will be 7 and 8 when school begins, so I purchased the supplemental coloring pages PDF from Peace HIll Press: https://peacehillpress.com/p/story-of-the-world-vol-4-coloring-pages-pdf/
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Is this the list you already found?
http://lextinacademy.blogspot.com/2015/07/book-list-story-of-world-volume-4.html
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I have used HWT, but didn't care for it. I haven't used LOE.
We like Memoria Press' cursive program. https://www.memoriapress.com/curriculum/penmanship/new-american-cursive/
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We've used ETC all the way through for three very different kids. It's an excellent phonics supplement (we also started with Ordinary Parent's Guide to Reading and BOB Books), with some printing practice. I love the mostly independent aspect of the program. How many books you go through depends on your child. My 6 yo daughter is in book five now, having done one lesson per week (two pages per day) for the last year and a half.
Almost always, Christianbook.com has been the least expensive place for me to buy ETC. Better than Amazon or Rainbow Resource. Right now there is a free shipping over $35 deal, so even better. Use code HSFREE16 through July 12th. Here is the link to their ETC page: http://www.christianbook.com/page/homeschool/language-arts/explode-the-code?kw=explode%20the%20code%20phonics&mt=b&dv=c&event=PPCSRC&p=1018818&gclid=CKeh4P7k5M0CFcVbfgodba4PKw
I don't think it matters too much which edition you choose. I used first editions with my son, and second editions mostly with my daughters.
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Saxon Math test forms? test masters?
in K-8 Curriculum Board
Posted
The only difference is in the page numbering and layout. Same content.
"Math 76 (3rd or 4th Ed): . . . Either the hard cover 3rd edition or the newer soft cover 4th edition can be used. As with the previous two math courses, there is no difference between the math content of the hard cover 3rd edition and the softcover 4th edition textbooks."
- From mathematician Art Reed's September 2016 newsletter