Jump to content

Menu

lamamaloca

Members
  • Posts

    271
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by lamamaloca

  1. Perhaps the above is overstated a bit?

     

     

    It is completely overstated. The US perinatal (baby just before, during and just after birth) mortality rate is right in line with those in Europe. The one single European country with a large percentage of homebirths, the Netherlands, has one of the highest European perinatal mortality rates and one that is higher than ours. They are now beginning to move away from homebirth for that reason. They have good research showing that their mortality rates for homebirth and hospital with a midwife are equal, but more recent research has shown that their low risk patients who are cared for by midwives have a higher perinatal mortality rate than the high risk patients cared for by OBs. They are definitely examining their system.

     

    The studies comparing home and hospital birth are mixed and conflicting, but the evidence seems to be that home birth is probably about as safe as hospital birth, for low risk women. Many of the catastrophic events occur too rarely to show up in the studies, due to the low population of homebirthers.

     

    There is always a very small, but real, risk of something going catastrophically wrong during delivery. So I do think that there is probably a slightly increased risk from an out of hospital birth, but for most women it is not an unreasonable risk IF they have competent medical providers, with established backup and good transport to hospital. Of course, you may not feel that way if you are the one the catastrophe happens to.

     

    FWIW, I've had two hospital births, a birth at an accredited birth center with CNMs, a birth at an informal birth center with CPMs, and I'm going back to the hospital. My best experience was definitely with the CNMs. I started reading and looking at the whole of research, and both sides of the story, and I feel that the best option for me is in the hospital, although I know the "experience" won't be as nice. If there was a birth center run by CNMs in town, close by the hospital, I would feel comfortable choosing that.

  2. I personally wouldn't get the additional phonogram cards or the word builder cards, until you see how you like the program. They really are more extras, IMO.

     

    I invested a lot (some money, but lots of time) into making Spalding work, and ultimately couldn't cut it. I wouldn't buy too much to start off, until you know how it works for you.

  3. . Before they got the idea to protest military funerals (I believe the Phelps' logic behind this is that America is sinful and accepts homosexuality and thus, its military is evil), they would protest things like a play starring a Canadian actor because Canada permits gay marriage.

     

    They used to protest at the Catholic churches in Topeka on a rotating basis, since the Catholic Church is a f@g church, you know. (They may have protested outside other sorts of churches, I don't know). We saw them once when we visited my brother-in-law's parish, and they were protesting across the street while the first communicants were lining up outside to process in. They were there on a regular basis.

     

    They recently protested at our parish and all churches of all denominations in the same town. The reason? It was the "birthplace of the Patriot Guard."

     

    They are equal opportunity offenders.

  4. I'm thinking of getting some kind of home binding system, whether comb or coil or thermal, I don't know. Does anyone have any experiences or recommendations to share? We weren't happy with using pronged folders or three ring binders for our printed off workbooks, but if anyone has any other suggestions I'd love them!

  5. With Math Mammoth, you're basically handing the child a worksheet, reading instructions and they do the work.

     

    I disagree that this is how MM is intended to be used. I think that Math Mammoth does need to be actively taught AND the author expects the homeschool teacher to actively teach it. If you just hand your child the workbook, you will likely not have good results. If you need lots of guidance on how to teach, another program may work better for you. I admit that I am a mathy person and have been through education classes and have had teacher training, and I like Math Mammoth because I don't have to consult a teacher's manual, rather I use the instruction in the book as a jumping off point for teaching the material. I understand why someone who liked more specific suggestions for teaching would want to use another program.

  6. I know this is a tangent, sorry!

     

    You can see Kolbe's catalog here, although it is the one from last year:

    http://www.kolbe.org/catalog/

     

    Here's a bit of info on the elementary literature program: http://www.kolbe.org/documents/catalog/ElementaryLiterature.pdf

    It is $150 for course plans that cover 3 years of elementary literature, from 4th - 6th grade.

     

    but there is also a study guide set available (I found it under their fourth grade books section):

     

    "Elementary Literature Study Guide Set

    3 Book Set

    NEW FOR 2009—Elementary Literature Study

    Guide Set. Includes detailed chapter by chapter study

    questions and vocabulary lists for each of the 41 books in a 2 book

    set—a student book and a teacher book with answers—and a separate

    glossary for looking up the vocabulary words. This set is good for all three

    years of the elementary literature program!

    3 Book Set T3930 $30.00"

     

    This would be designed to be used alongside the course plans, but perhaps it could be used on its own?

  7. It's something like $150 for each of the study guides and they have a no-resale policy so you have to purchase it new. That's a lot for a single course.

     

    I think it is $150 for the course lesson plans which cover three years. They also have a set of study guide books, without pacing information, that is quite a bit less. I'd give them a call to check for sure.

  8. One of the reasons that we're homeschooling is that I felt the primary grades, K-2 or so, were TOO academic in the local public and private schools. They seem to push doing "flashy" things like oral reports early on, yet don't do a great job building a solid foundation in the basics. I prefer to allow my little ones more time to play, with short "tutoring" periods in the three Rs.

     

    The schools don't seem far ahead by late elementary or middle school. That early academic push really doesn't help and is developmentally inappropriate, IMO.

  9. Boeing also has a large facility in Witchita...I would think it would be built there or in Seattle.

     

    Most of that facility was sold, although Boeing does still own pieces of it. The other portion is now a separate company, although they do still mostly just supply Boeing.

     

    Wichita could use some jobs, (Where couldn't?) so we'd be thrilled if they were built here.

  10. She can also do cc for a year or two and work and save $$.

     

    I want to comment on the CC issue. It is actually often much harder for a student to transfer into a private college after completing a couple years at a community college than to get in as a freshman, and there are often far fewer merit scholarships available. CC may save money the first couple years, but it may also means forfeiting many scholarships and help the last couple of years. CC is not an answer for everyone, especially someone who plans to go into academia or a scientific field or medicine where the name of the University they graduate from WILL make a difference in future education and earning opportunities.

  11. Audrey, this is incredible! When I was in this situation, I asked myself if I could be resposible for ripping apart the Pastor's family. If I had gone forward with criminal charges I would carried the knowledge of the pain that particular scenario caused his kids.

     

    You would not have been responsible for ripping apart his family! His criminal behavior would have been what was responsible, even if you had pursued full justice under the law. This kind of thinking is what allowed my Father-in-law to molest girls FOR YEARS before he finally ended up with a criminal prosecution and jail time.

     

    Ripping apart a criminal's family is NEVER the fault of the one reporting a crime and pursuing justice. EVER.

  12. This was more towards the beginning if the whole NCLB thing and up until then those kids had just been passed through the system which is why at age 16 they could NOT write sentences. But the pressure to pass this test motivated them and me. We saw it as a challenge and we met it head-on and those kids were high-fiving each other as they left the testing room because they were so proud of themselves.

     

    The biggest problem that I see is that testing is supposed to be a sample of the student's learning, it isn't supposed to cover every thing that they have learned or be an exhaustive summary of what knowledge they have. Testing just can't do that (from a psychological, "science of testing" background). Standardized testing in particular isn't a good test of the student's higher order thinking skills. There is so much that is important to learning that just doesn't come across well on a standardized test. If the test is all that they are focused on, then the teaching will be truncated and inadequate for some subjects. You can be taught how to read a passage and pick the right answers from multiple choice questions, without doing significant mental processing of the passage. There really isn't quite the equivalent short cut on a writing test, although teaching formulaic writing may be similar. On the other hand, once you get good at formulaic (five paragraph) writing, that can be a basis for branching off into more varied forms of writing. Multiple choice reading questions don't seem to be the same platform to moving into higher order thinking. From what I've seen subbing in elementary schools, there is a fair amount of time spent on test taking strategies, which don't actually teach to the underlying knowledge that the test is supposedly looking for, but just teach how to test well.

     

    There are so many shortcomings to tests, and we went over them thoroughly when I was in my elementary ed classes. They have an important role in assessment, but they aren't the only or best kind of assessment. What is best is a wide variety of assessment strategies, both objective and subjective. This is what research into educational assessment shows, and what educational experts know, but that knowledge doesn't get into the educational legislation. Even as homeschoolers, most of us feel there are shortcomings to tests, that they don't always portray our children's actual knowledge, and we prefer to use tests as only a small part of how we assess our children's learning. I think a simple discussion of a passage can show more about what the kids understand about their reading, than does standardized test style questions.

  13. My problem with it is this--we have state content standards, which dictates what needs to be taught each year in the classrooms. And the tests are structured around that content as well. So shouldn't the teachers be able to teach the content all year, and that will naturally prepare the students for the test? If they have to switch gears and teach something different, then what have they been teaching all year?

     

    A lot of time the test prep focuses on *how* to take standardized tests, rather than the actual content that is supposed to be mastered.

×
×
  • Create New...