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Bloggermom

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Posts posted by Bloggermom

  1. He also does it while playing with his siblings, watching a movie or at the computer.

     

    He does it with all subjects and even when he is in a very happy-go-lucky mood so I don't think it is anxiety driven.

     

    It's really difficult when I am trying to teach him a lesson or have a conversation with him and he starts to do it and goes into his own little world. This is confirmation to me that homeschooling really is his best situation, I don't think any public school would really be an option for him.

  2. Not trying to sound mean, but your oldest is 11 and you are giving advice on how to accelerate into high school by 15? Good luck. Let's talk in a few years' time when you have btdt.

     

    I am not trying to sell you a book of "how I did it" type of thing, just sharing my plans. You can take them or leave them. I am not preaching that my way is the "way to go". If I cannot share my plans and thoughts on this board, what is the point of coming?

  3. BloggerMom,

    While a CBE degree may be the least expensive option for many students, for some very strong students it may actually be quite a lot more expensive than a traditional education with a large merit scholarship.

     

    Hope something there is helpful. And, bravo for looking to the future when your kids are still young and you have lots of options available.

     

    My oldest (who is going through this first) doesn't want to do any CLEP. He wants to take independent study courses through BYU independent, LSU and other regionally-accredited universities. What he likes is that he will be able to work at his own pace and cherry-pick the courses and schools he wants to take them from. We are doing some ACE credits for general ed courses, but not for any "major" courses.

  4. That is why I go this route. It is extra light, but gives us that "paper". That way we can focus on our own classical studies. I am also having them do Teaching Textbooks math through Algebra 2. We like doing our own thing for literature, Latin, Greek, lectures from the Teaching Company etc... all of which is not accelerated but done along side the American School.

     

    That is precisely my understanding of the General High school track of AS. "Essential math" would not even be considered high school level by any normal college; only algebra 1 would be. So, in most states this would not meet the graduation requirements for high school (Yes, I do understand that homeschoolers are not always bound by them.)

     

    That is why I am having trouble understanding why one would want to accelerate by doing the most lightweight program possible that does not prepare the student for any normal college work. I can see this program being appropriate for a student who is a struggling learner and not able to go to college - but why would I settle for this little just to be done a few years early?

  5. OK, so I hope you don't think I'm picking on you...but in your blog, you say that your kids don't read aloud to you after 2nd grade. That was a huge issue in our homeschool a few years ago. I started having the kids read aloud to me every day and I caught so many reading errors (that I didn't know they were making). I even have my 5th grader read aloud to me for a few minutes every day. If they're reading something that's above their reading level, they'll encounter words they don't know the meaning to...or they'll mispronounce things (actually, my kids mispronounce names often).

     

    They do read aloud to me during our daily scripture study, and those words can be quite big. :)

  6. We enjoy it! The kids aren't complaining and love the challenge. Our goal for them is to have a bachelors degree completed by the time they are 18.

     

    Not all of them will be that accelerated since we are going at their pace. We are LDS so our sons will go on a 2 year mission when they turn 19. So if we went the traditional route they wouldn't really be able to start college until they were 21.

     

    Doing it this way they will be done with college, go on their mission then they can come home and start a career and get married.

     

    If I had a child who did NOT want to accelerate I wouldn't push the issue. We are not accelerating our Latin and other classical studies... we are taking it nice and deep in those areas.

  7. I wanted to share my latest blog post. We do accelerated classical homeschooling, which means my kids start High School and then College a lot earlier than normal.

     

    They are not "gifted" kids, they are average learners, but the way we do things allows them to accelerate without getting overwhelmed. This is how we accelerate Language Arts -

     

    http://www.acceleratedhomeschooling.com/accelerating-language-arts/

    I am more than happy to answer questions. :)

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