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Paul's Gal

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Posts posted by Paul's Gal

  1. We are a bilingual homeschool family (Spanish/English), following the OPOL (one parent/one language) method. I speak Sp, DH Eng. The children (5 boys, 1 girl - ages 6 to 16) respond to us in our specific language. They also do book work in both in order to be biliterate as well as bilingual. We study Latin and Greek daily with exposure to other languages. It's crazy at our house quite often (and loud, loud, loud!). Although Spanish is not my native language, it is my "first" in that I speak it almost as well as I do Eng. I'm following a form of Dual Ed. that I observed while finishing up my M.Ed. in Bilingual Education.

    I'm pleased with how the children have turned out, but it has required consistency on both parts to achieve the level of fluency we now enjoy.

    We also live (south Georgia) in an area with thousands of migrants (Hispanic and Haitian), and we're in the camps during the week to interact with the workers and practice. www.meanolmama.blogspot.com

  2. I'm Tonya, wife to Poppins (who's practically perfect in every way). We have six children (ages 6 to 16: 5 boys, 1 girl), live in south Georgia, and have homeschooled them from the beginning. We encourage multi-language development, manual labor, independence, and hard work.

     

    I'm been a lurker here for quite a few years, and I post every once in a great while. DH drives cement truck, and I teach English in the evenings at the local college.

     

    We're simple folks with complex lives. www.meanolmama.blogspot.com

  3. We have a very busy, interesting, challenging life. We're not perfect, but we're peaceful and productive. My kids are really neat people, and my husband is incredibly well-balanced, fun, and visionary. Perfect combination. Of course we have our weak spots and hard days, but generally it's just a daily rotation of balancing precariously and hanging on for the ride of our lives.

     

    Chris in VA:

    As per causing controversy, I like the following thought:

     

    You have no enemies, you say?

    Alas! my friend the boast is poor-

    He who has mingled in the fray

    Of duty, that brave endure,

    Must have made foes! If you have none,

    Small is the work that you have done;

    You've hit no traitor on the hip;

    You've dashed no cup from perjured lip;

    You're never turned the wrong to right-

    You've been a coward in the fight! Charles Mackay, 1814-1889

     

    I'm so glad you enjoy the blog, Chris. Thanks for your kind words; I would love to be on your team, too, when we make our foes!

     

    Tonya

    www.meanolmama.blogspot.com

  4. I'm tired of the fact that my College students are sooooo miserably undereducated and without any vision for their lives. Meanwhile, my 6 darlings at home don't yet seem to grasp the concept: "bad attitude = dismal future". Fortunately, they ARE beginning to see how poor grammar/writing skills will influence a person's future much more negatively than...[...ahem...] lack of "socialization". Thank you, dear College students, for that painful, sad lesson...

     

    Tonya the Mean Ol' Mama

    www.meanolmama.blogspot.com

  5. We're a bilingual (Eng/Sp) family working towards multilingualism. The kids and I speak only Sp to each other, Eng to everyone else. They do their subject areas in both Eng & Sp, which takes double time because the books are different in each language (eg: the Eng science for 4th is different subject matter than the Sp science for 4th). They also are working through Henle/Wheelock, Mounce/Hey Andrew, and French (of a sort...). It's hard to juggle sometimes, but I think it's going to pay off in the end.

    Tonya

    www.meanolmama.blogspot.com

  6. We have a bit of a problem here in our home. The kids will sometimes put a Latin verb ending on a Greek verb, will add a Latin word to negate a Greek sentence, add a Spanish preposition to a Latin phrase, etc. I don't think that the languages are "running together"; rather, I believe that they're combining languages for sake of ease. Perhaps. Hmm...

    Anyway, any suggestions? We speak and school only in Spanish, but they will occasionally say something like, "No quiero hacer dividing esto con el". I know that's sheer laziness on their part, to avoid a more difficult word. Thoughts?

    www.meanolmama.blogspot.com

  7. Thanks for all of your replies. I'm looking for upper-level Spanish only materials (7th and up). I'd really like some high school grammar books. We already speak Spanish, and the kids have schooled 95% Spanish only from the beginning, so we're DOING Spanish, not learning it. I have about decided to purchase classic readers translated into Spanish and try to pull vocabulary/grammar from them, unless someone else on the board has another suggestion. I'm hoping to avoid paying huge shipping fees from out-of-country. Any thoughts?

    Tonya

    http://meanolmama.blogspot.com/

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