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momto3innc

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Posts posted by momto3innc

  1. Note the date and watch for signs of illness in 10-14 days - slight fever, over sleepy. It may be hard to tell in such a little baby. The spot will probably be red for a while. When my 4yo ds had a tick borne illness last month, he complained of headache and was very fatigued. I also noticed the lymph nodes near the bite were pretty swollen. It responded well to antibiotics and now he's fine. Hope it's nothing. Most of them are.

     

     

    As someone with lyme and 3 other tick borne diseases, it is important to keep an eye out for the next 2 weeks or so--fever, fussiness, etc... If for some reason the area got a "bulls eye" rash that is a definitely indication to take him right in even with no other symptoms. Or if he has symptoms and no rash, same thing.

    In the future, you should keep the tick in a ziploc in the freezer so that if symptoms do develop they can test the tick. If it had just gotten on him and you took it off so quickly, it really should be fine. The longer they are on, the more likely they are to impart diseas.

  2. We added a bunch of "around the world" type books like these (the top being mine and my kids absolute favorite):

     

    http://www.amazon.com/Families-Around-World-One-Time/dp/0789310090/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1310752288&sr=1-2

     

    http://www.amazon.com/Houses-Homes-Around-World-Morris/dp/0688135781/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1310751746&sr=8-1

     

    http://www.amazon.com/Bread-Foods-World/dp/0688122752/ref=pd_sim_b_3

     

    http://www.amazon.com/Children-Just-Like-Me-Celebration/dp/0789402017/ref=pd_sim_b_1

     

    http://www.amazon.com/Around-World-Tales-Saviour-Pirotta/dp/075345999X/ref=sr_1_25?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1310752042&sr=1-25

     

    I also added in the sequels of many of the read alouds as we tended to finish them much faster than they scheduled. The Bible, read alouds, and science were great. I just felt like the history was a bit lacking with too many weeks of just I Heard the Good News Today. The book is fine but not really up to being a history spine in my opinion. That was why we added in these others. We also looked up every internet link in the internet linked encyclopedia. That led to looks of good discussions and your older son could maybe jump off of some of those things into good narrations, projects, etc...

  3. What we do is this:

    MWF: HWT, about 10 minutes

    T/TH: WWE (we do 2 days worth, 2 days a week which completes their 4 day week. My son wants to do the narration story every time we do it so that is why we do it that way. I would say 20 minutes tops for 2 days worth. Spread out over 4 days-10 minutes a day)

    We do FLL all 4 days, 1 lesson a day. It only takes about 5 minutes.

     

    So...it may not be as bad as you think. They are teacher intensive but short. HWT is not as teacher intensive once you make sure they are forming the letters the right way. My rule was, since the lessons for HWT are so short, it MUST be your best. If not you redo it. That made it much less teacher intensive and they would most of the time try their best.

  4. Well, this may be no help, but I looked at both of them...and am doing a hybrid of the two. SOTW 1 book and activity guide are my core and then I added in most of Core B (except CHOW). So basically it was the novels that matched up and Usborne History (which SOTW tells which pages of that to do). We started a couple weeks ago and so far it's worked well--I feel like they're liking the different aspects of each program a lot.

  5. I think I look at my ultimate goal...for them to be children and then adults who enjoy learning. I think this means that they need to enjoy school. Now that does not been that it is a laugh a minute with constant entertainment, but I do make an effort to choose curriculum that they will enjoy and benefit from more than others.

     

    I think of my own life. There are things I enjoy and things I don't. I gravitate towards the things I like but I also must do the things I don't (laundry!!!). I want my children to learn to do things that are hard but I also want them to have an overall positive attitude about school. A lot of this for me stems from someone I know who homeschools and is of the "school is hard and rigorous and that's just the way it is" camp. Now that her children are older they hate school and as an offshoot hate reading and learning in general. They are an extreme, for sure, but I want to try to guard against that as much as I can as my children grow up.

     

    So...what does that look like? Well, my children would hate Saxon but tolerate Singapore/Horizons very well. They dislike flashcards, but "love" flashmaster. I bought Happy Phonics to make an otherwise rather dry phonics program a more enjoyable and let them choose a decent amount of their readers about topics that they enjoy. They love read alouds so we use a lot of Sonlight--they would never think it was school. We use SOTW (they love it) and I try to do a decent amount of the activities in the activity guide.

     

    We do a good amount of field trips/play dates with friends on Friday afternoons and in general, I do want them to be glad they are homeschooling instead of in traditional school. I don't bend over backwards to make them happy all the time but I certainly think about making our day enjoyable. I mean...why not? We're together all day...we might as well like it!!:001_smile:

  6. My son loves the flashmaster. Now, we don't have any hand held video games so this seems REALLY cool to him--maybe it wouldn't be that way if he had "real" electronics. I love that he can do addition, sub., mult, and div. on it in all different levels, types, amounts of time, etc...

    He can do it totally on his own which means it always gets done (as opposed to be holding up flashcards). He loves to try to beat him own time or his own score.

    It has worked great for us!

  7. Well, my son is pretty severely dyslexic so what we did may not apply. Last year (when he was 6/7) he did a Orton-Gillingham reading clinical 3 days a week for an hour (this was with 1 other child so it would have been shorter with just him). I worked with him an additional 20 minutes a day those days. On the other two days for about 30-40 minutes.

     

    I just became orton-gillingham certified so I could do it myself this year and not have to pay others. I'm planning on about 45-60 minutes 4-5 days a week. For me, I would prefer not to wing it. We have seen dramatic process using O-G multi-sensory methods and scope and sequence. I don't think you have to do what we did but it worked well for us.

  8. I really need to save money around here, so what I usually do is buy all of the books from the core used (either here or ebay or homeschool classifieds) and then I buy the IG new plus any books I could not get used or just want new (say if it is a new version or a consummable). I personally do not use the library to get the books because I really want them there when I need them and many books are used throughout the year. Plus, my kids really like to have them around to continue to look at and read again.

  9. My youngest was 3 this last year and desperately wanted to "do school". She is also my most high maintenance child. Here's what finally worked for me:

    -I got her a cheap math workbook from Barnes and Noble. She could use it as she wanted. I did not directly instruct her in it--she got stickers when she finished a page and was a happy camper. I also got her the same Handwriting without Tears book as my middle son. These were two books she could do (somewhat) quietly at the table and made her feel like she was a part of things.

    -She was actually great for all read alouds if she had a big snack:001_smile:. She got to snuggle in my lap and eat and have a sippy cup. This got us through a lot too.

    -I got a bunch of Kumon workbooks (cutting, pasting, easy mazes, etc...), new pladough, her favorite coloring sheets, mini dry erase board and markers, mini chalk board and chalk, sticker books, lots of watercolor paints, beads, etc... When she really wanted to be at the table or just needed something to do, I pulled one out. She could only do them when I got them out so they usually kept her attention for a bit.

    -During reading instruction time, she got to watch Leapfrog videos.

    -I also taught her to use Starfall.com and she got to do that with headphones--a big hit. At first it was disruptive because she kept needing help but when she really caught on, it was her favorite thing to do. (and pbskids.org)

    -We have those tag reader pens. She would do those with headphones.

     

    Overall, we took looks of breaks and tried to keep up with art and science experiments that she could be a part of. Now that she's about to be 4 in a couple weeks, it's starting to get better.

  10. This may not count, but what came in my mind was The Murder of Rodger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie. It may be a murder mystery but her books are hardly gory. The main problem would be (spoiler alert!!) that while it is narrated by the murderer, you don't know that until the end of the book (true Agatha Christie style), so it may not work for what you're looking for. I believe it is the only of her books like that.

  11. I always liked MFW K but I've never used it because for me I didn't like that the math/phonics were integrated. Everything else about the program was where my kids were/are at but they were ahead in those two areas. That, for me, was why I went with Sonlight. I could use all their readers/activities but have my kids at precisely the right math/phonics level for them. As far as cost goes, I usually get the vast majority of SL books used so the cost really has been comparable to MFW. I only buy new for consummable books (like Explode the Code, math, Developing the Early Learner).

  12. Well, I was planning to use Core B next year but was also torn about SOTW because I love it...so we're doing both. I am going to do SOTW with the activity guide (just not all of it...we're pick our favorites). Then I'll read the coordinating SL books with it. I'm basically going to pick the best of both and try to make them fairly cohesive. Someone on the SL boards has a schedule of how they can match up. I plan to use that to help make it work.

  13. Well, I have two of your three items and I am obsessively organized...the other end of the spectrum :001_smile:.

    I got the desk apprentice at the beginning of the year. I have liked it a lot. On the four corner things, 1 is scissors, 1 pencils, 1 markers, 1 dry erase stuff. The little holder on top holds a pencil sharperer, glue sticks, pos****, and tape. I have heavy duty hanging folders that hold writing/construction paper, etc... and then I have all our constant use books all around the sides with a few in the middle. It has worked very well, I think because my kids are young and don't have tons of stuff yet.

     

    I also have the trofast and I personally think it is the best thing that ever happened to my kid's toys. The boys have one and so does my daughter. I have VERY careful to get the right size bin to fit the correct toys and ONLY those toys go in that bin. I get a picture of the toy and tape it to the box so they never get confused. It works get because the kids will go get "the firetruck box", "the car box", etc... It makes clean up very easy and they can easily chose a box to get out, play with, and then put away.

     

    As far as the bunk beds go, I would not get one with a full bed on the bottom...it just takes up too much floor space. We have a traditional twin bed. We put the bottom one up as high as it would go and we have the long plastic bins underneath that holds things we don't use all the time (out of season clothes, sports stuff they're not using, etc...)

     

    Good luck!!

  14. With my ds, our VT doctor gave him a set of glasses (his vision is 20/20) that basically let him zoom, converge, and track (his 3 problems). Basically they are a crutch for him until the muscles in his eyes catch up. For us, we saw an immediate change with the glasses. But we are going to be in VT longer than 20 weeks so this allowed his reading/writing to improve while we plug away at VT.

     

    Good luck!

  15. My oldest ds with by in 2nd next year. This year in 1st we did:

     

    WWE 1, FLL 1: finishing both in the next week or two, both went well

    Sonlight LA1: We picked/chose out of this just because I happened to have it. What we did was fine.

    AAS 1, half of AAS 2: Went fine

    Orton gillingham based phonics/reading: He is dyslexic but made huge improvements. I believe he's basically reading on "grade level".

     

    I'm planning on more of the same next year (WWE 2, FLL2, AAS 2/3, and Orton Gillingham based phonics/reading)

    BUT I looked over Sonlight LA 2 and am not planning on buying it...I think there is too much overlap with what we are already doing and I don't really like the rest of it. So...is there anything else I should add in? Are there gaps that you see that are needed to be filled for 2nd grade?

     

    Thanks!

    Jenny

  16. For me, I find it incredibly helpful. On the days we do it (we do 2 days at a time), I just open the book to the copywork and he starts. When he's done we read the associated story and do the narration. He has LOVED the stories she has chosen and it has led us to end up reading several of the stories because he wanted so much to know what happened next. While I could do it all myself, it crosses copywork/narration/dictation off my list (not that we don't do it anywhere else, but this way I KNOW it's done) with almost no effort on my part. I think it is totally worth it. I buy the workbook for the ease as well, no printing, just get out the book and go.

  17. Just thought I'd mention since someone from this group would probably be more interested. I am selling this book:

    http://www.visiontherapyathome.com/product_p/PRT-1001.htm

     

    It is vision therapy at home, the primitive reflex training book. We had to go through primitive reflex therapy BEFORE the more traditional vision therapy. We did most of it at home using this book. For us, it was very helpful. It has full pictures/explanations and comes with a DVD. For us, we noticed a big change in our ds gross motor, general clumsiness, hand/eye coordination after this.

     

    So anyway, I'm listing this and thought I'd let you know.

    Thanks!

  18. My ds is going into 2nd grade. For K we used Horizons K with a lot of manipulatives (I just added in on my own). He did very well and it was very simple for him, so this year we did all of Horizons 1 plus Singapore 1A/1B, the textbooks and the workbooks. It was also a good year but I think next year I want to make Singapore the main deal with Horizons on the side.

    Has anyone done this and if so, what did it look like for you? We like Horizons chiefly due to the spiral nature. He LOVES the variety each day...it suits him well. He is severely dyslexic and has some memory retention issues so the spiral suits him extremely well. However, I prefer the methodology of Singapore and the way it makes him think. Since I was just supplementing, I did not use the HIG, Intensive Practice, or the other extra book (can't think of the name). Obviously if it became the main deal, I would use the HIG and probably one of the extra books in addition to the textbooks/workbooks. Then Horizons would bring in extra practice as needed (although we would probably pick and choose).

     

    I guess I'm just wondering if someone else has done this and what it looked like for you-or if it sounds terrible to you:001_smile:. He is very good at math and doing two programs allowed it to take the whole year instead of finishing mid-year and going on to the next grade.

     

    Thanks!

  19. I had the same reaction as you. We did it for awhile and it just didn't work for us. My kids HATED reading the books five times, even though they did love the stories the first couple times (and then again, say a week or two later). And these are kids who love to be read to--I was really surprised how upset they were by Thursday when I pulled out the same book:001_smile:. "MOM! We are so many other books. Why do you keep reading that one?"

    It worked well for us to read them two times a week (say Tuesday/Thursday) and do several activities those days. This worked best for us although still not as well as I would have hoped, but kept it enjoyable and fun.

  20. Thank you for all the thoughts. I'll check out the other threads/links which I'm sure will help a lot. Yes, combining my younger two was what had me leaning towards A-my dd will be 4. This particular ds gets bored easily which is what had me leaning towards B. I'll keep thinking...

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