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TrixieB

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Posts posted by TrixieB

  1. If your friend needs to print out schoolwork, check your local library systems.  One of ours lets each cardholder print out 75 pages per week for free.  Also they offer 2 hours of free computer time per day.  She could use the library computers and save documents to a thumb drive (or two, in case one stops working). 

     

    Do you have a homeschool consignment store anywhere nearby?

     

    Or a local homeschool group whose members might be willing to donate materials they're no longer using?

    • Like 1
  2. Cursive and printing. 

     

    I don't know how reading was taught, because I could read before I started school.

     

    Also I think some of the P.E. teachers did a pretty good job (different teachers came and went).  One year the teacher arranged to borrow roller skates, archery equipment, and gymnastics equipment from the district supply.  Not that we could learn many gymnastics moves in the two weeks that we had the equipment, but we got to try.  Roller skating and archery were super fun.  In fact I think we got the roller skates two or three different years.  Also I remember a Bruce Jenner poster in the P.E. portable. :)

    • Like 1
  3. We don't budget, just buy as needed.  One kid has a job and buys their own clothes (doesn't like to go thrifting, so it's a good thing they have their own income).  The other kid and I like to thrift and get most clothes that way.  Dh doesn't like to go clothes shopping.  Fortunately, he's not hard on his clothes and he doesn't have to dress up for work. 

  4. Kinda boring but my parents now give their adult kids, stocks. I love it because no clutter, no faking about a horribly ugly sweater and our little nest egg grows.

     

    I like this idea! 

     

    Another thing I read about somewhere -- you can contribute to your child's (Roth? or maybe regular?) IRA but I don't know what the age limitations are, or contribution caps, etc. I believe the child has to have earned income.  One of my relatives wants to do this for my kids so I guess I need to read up on the rules.  Anyway, it's definitely a clutter-free option :)

    • Like 1
  5. When my older child was in 9th grade, I outsourced only a couple of classes... band, science, foreign language.

     

    Fast forward a few years.  My current 9th grader's classes are all outsourced, except world geography which may or may not get done this year due to  circumstances I can't entirely control.  Next year will be similar, and then probably DE for 11th & 12th grades.

     

    All but one of my senior's classes are outsourced.

  6. When I was in 11th grade we got uniforms at my public school. Hated it. Hated it. Hated it. Did not save money since it required Mom to buy new shoes, shirts, pants, shorts, skirt, cardigan...

     

    but that dress code is so ridiculous you might as well have a uniform.

     

    Ok I will admit a couple things about the uniform weren't awful. But I really don't like khaki and red together and most of the school chose to wear those together :thumbdown:

     

    Those kids were totally ready to go get hired on at Target - no need to buy new work clothes.

    • Like 5
  7. Shirts below the waistline must be tucked in.  Leggings may only be worn if the shirt is long enough to fully cover the bottom. 

     

     

    This makes NO sense.  :willy_nilly:

     

    You can wear leggings if your shirt is long enough to cover your bottom, but if your shirt goes below your waistline, it must be tucked in, which means it won't cover your bottom... yet you can wear leggings if your shirt covers your bottom.

     

    I think if the administration has so many rules, they should just require uniforms.

    • Like 15
  8.  

     

    "Inexpensive?"  Let's see... it was $11 for breakfast, $18 for the Riesling, $9 for the cheese curd, $25 for the jams, salsa, & chow chow, and $2 for the pretzel.  How much did we save again?"   :lol:

     

     

    And $$$ for the plane ticket so I can check this place out! 

     

    Looks like a fabulous market with a great community service screenings to boot, but I would definitely not save myself any money by flying there to check it all out. :)  

     

    It would be a fun vacation, though! 

    • Like 1
  9. I am debating the K'nex "Simple Machines" sets.  My boys are in 5 & 7th graders and I really disliked the Thames and Kosmos Physics set - too many parts, needless complexity and rudimentary instructions.  But I fear the K'nex sets will have a short life. Need to know these sets will not frustrate me and will last a few years for $100 (also looking at the T&K Wind Power). TIA.

     

    K'nex Education lists Simple Machines for grades 3-6.  My kids did play with the sets outside those grades. 

     

    We (kids and I) didn't like the couple of T&K sets we tried. 

    • Like 1
  10.  

    I bought the K'nex Education - Intro to Structures: Bridges set when my kids were small, and we got a lot of mileage out of that set.  Just in case any of you are on the fence about it... :)

    • Like 1
  11. Do you mean plastic "invisible" earrings?  For example, if you didn't want to wear obvious earrings but you didn't want the hole to close up?

     

    In that case, maybe something like this?  Except it would be noticeable up close.  Perhaps the front of the earring could be removed and the post sanded smooth.  Then you could wear just the post without the back and it would probably stay in place okay since there'd be no weight pulling on either end.  If you didn't cut the post too short, a bit would stick out of the back of the lobe and it would be easy to remove.

     

    If you want actual tiny gauges, maybe Claire's or a mall kiosk sells them.  Or the local piercing studio?

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