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rbk mama

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Posts posted by rbk mama

  1. We've been out of the US for a very, very long time and are now moving back.  My oldest is graduating.  We definitely want to have a graduation party for him with at least our immediate families (which is already a fairly large group).  What I'm unsure about is all the other friends we have in the area who have kept in touch with us over the years - some of whom are very close to us.  What I DON'T want is for anyone to feel like we are somehow asking them for money.  On the other hand there are families who have gotten to know our son when we were back in the US for an extended period a year ago, and I know they wouldn't feel that way.  How do you decide whom to invite??  I wouldn't want anyone to feel badly that they were not invited, but, again, I wouldn't want anyone to feel like we are asking them to give money.  I also feel very out of the loop about these things, etiquette-wise.  Are there general rules to follow about this?  Could I add something about "no gifts" or is that strange?  TIA!

  2. Where:  Cornell University College of Engineering

    Why:  He will be a Rawlings Cornell Presidential Research Scholar which means he'll get his own funding for research and be part of a small group receiving faculty mentorship for basically any area of research he is interested in.  DS has stars in his eyes.

    Major:  Right now he is thinking Electrical Engineering, though Engineering Physics is also appealing.

    Other info:  We just received the reply today to our financial aid appeal (we have an unusual situation), and they came back with an unexpectedly generous package, which brings the total to far less than our EFC.  DS was also selected to be a Jacobs Engineering scholar.  Party in our house today!! 

    • Like 26
  3. Excited to say that DS has been invited to be a Rawlings Cornell Presidential Research Scholar at Cornell University.  We had never even heard about this program before, but if we had we would never have imagined that DS could be chosen; he has zero research experience.  It makes me think that someone took his essays seriously, and they were worth all that effort!  It looks like an incredible opportunity, and he is very excited about it.  We're happy he has some great options; will be so relieved when the decision is finally made!

    (Have been having difficulty logging in and it just got fixed!)

    • Like 25
  4. I love Dickens - nearly every one.  PP was my least favorite.  I think Our Mutual Friend was maybe the most fun read (and there is a decent BBC movie version).  I remember reading ATOTC in high school and not loving it at the time, but I was unaware of the relevant history.  DH was forced to read Great Expectations in 8th grade and detested it so much that hearing "Dickens" makes him nauseas.  I feel the timing is sensitive - you need to gauge your student's interest/readiness.

  5.  

    ETA:  If your boys attend (as they should, of course), be sure they take a t-shirt from a school they declined to orientation (or something similar that happens right before classes start).  The admissions office has a "give one/get one" table where they take the t-shirts from rejected schools and give you a GT shirt in exchange.  They LOVE showing off all the schools kids wisely turned down to attend Tech.

     

    Hilarious!!  :laugh:  That's awesome.

    • Like 4
  6. So in reading through that CC thread it seems that if a student takes the ACT cold, with little prep, and then digs in and preps a LOT before taking it again, they need to understand that a large increase in score will necessitate them retaking the test a third time.  There seems to be no record of a student actually winning a challenge of the cheating accusation (by providing documentation or character references or whatever)- they need to retest and get a score within a few points of that flagged score.  This seems important information to spread around about the ACT.  Don't take it without prep, and if you do work hard for a retest, understand that you might need to take it again to prove your score increase.

     

    DS has a good friend who didn't prep and got a 28.  He retook it 3 additional times, with the last score being a 34.  We both thought that he was foolish for actually retaking the test so many times when he could have just taken multiple practice tests.  But his score increased incrementally, so now he won't be accused of cheating.  If he had done what we thought was better - just practice testing and prepping on his own more, his last score of 34 would have been flagged.

    • Like 4
  7. Athena's Academy looks great!  I wish she were interested in all things reptilian because that would be too cool if she took the class taught by your daughter, Dmmetler!  My boys would have loved that.  Sigh.  Anyway, I love the look of their community.  Do you happen to know how their Minecraft courses work? (Or even how to find the ones that use Minecraft?  A simple "Minecraft" search doesn't work.)  Thanks!

    • Like 2
  8. Oh one thing to keep in mind is that many on-line classes do class interaction through a chat function so a student needs to be able to type.  Some also have live video interaction but many teachers limit that or don't have it at all, especially for younger kids because they tend to get off topic quite easily.  

     

    Does your daughter type?

     

    She's working on her typing - it's definitely not up to the level where she can do it easily.  I would probably need to help her if she needed to respond real time to something.

    • Like 1
  9. I am uncertain if you are looking for something right now, something in the summer or something in the fall but a source you might consider for right now is Outschool.  Some classes are self-paced but some are live and include discussion.  I don't guarantee there would be direct interaction with the other students.  Some have them and some don't  There are many Outschool classes that are of shorter duration and inexpensive so if it didn't work out as well as you had hoped then no big deal.  If it did and your child liked the teacher they will probably offer other classes, too.  Most have more than one offering.

     

    https://outschool.com/#abjcxfy110

     

     

    My daughter's art and art history classes at Excelsior have all been interactive, in real time, with the teacher and the students but I think those classes start with 8th graders.  Other teachers at Excelsior would be using the same platform so they may allow a lot of interaction, too, and some of those classes are for 6th graders.  The fall schedule is not out yet and Spring has already closed.  The fall schedule will theoretically be a lot larger than what they currently have listed for Spring.  I don't know if they will offer summer classes nor do I know when they will release their schedule for this coming school year but you could glance through for an idea of what they offered this Spring.

     

    http://excelsiorclasses.com/#slide1

     

     

    Classes through Open Tent Academy are frequently interactive at least during part of the class.  They don't have their fall schedule out, which will be much larger than what they have up for their Winter (what some call Spring) classes currently listed (and already closed) but you might keep an eye out.  I think they may release their preliminary schedule for fall sometime in February.

     

    http://www.opententacademy.com/

     

     

    If I think of anything else I will post.

     

    ETA: Outschool has classes starting up all the time (Most classes don't go by a standard PS schedule.)  Sometimes teachers will allow suggestions for a time/date for a particular class.  If enough other people agree to sign up for that time/day of the week (usually 5 students) then you can have it at a convenient time/day for you.

     

    WOW, Outschool looks AMAZING!  And some of the classes haven't started yet.  Since I only started looking now, I was assuming most options would be for this Fall, but if we can find short classes for this semester, that would be great.  I love their classes, too - they look very fun and right up this kid's alley.  Looks like the other two you mentioned are more traditional in terms of timing, but I will go through them while making plans for this Fall.  Thank you!!

    • Like 1
  10. Just found this today and can't wait to try it.  It integrates mind mapping, phonemic spell checker, text to speech, speech to text, dictionary, photos for vocabulary words...

     

    This ten minute video does a great job of explaining what it is https://drive.google.com/file/d/1thzqR-XF88ftzEX9Wgwshjiz6PgFT0Az/view

     

    http://donjohnston.com/cowriter/

     

    Timberly, have you started using this yet?  I feel like demos always look great, but I'd love to hear from people who are actually using it.  

     

    The link you included says that it is Read & Write - does that come with Co Writer?  Have you used the reading function on it, and do you like it?  The writing functions look awesome as well - would love to hear how your DS is using this.  

    • Like 1
  11. Snap N Read works pretty well. My DS has been using it for 4 years now. It doesn't do well with numbers and symbols, and small fonts, but once the size of the letters are enlarged it gets most word. It does pronounce some words incorrectly, so I would not expect a younger student, or an extremely low level reader, to use it completely independently of human assistance, but my son can usually identify when an individual word is mispronounced.

    It does have OCR, so it can read PDF, web pages, online textbooks- basically anything with letters. It is still the robot, computer voice, so we don't use it for novels if at all possible.

     

    When I bought it 4 yrs ago, I paid $149. This was after trying anything I could find that was free to low cost. It came on a CD, and I put a copy on a USB drive so he can use it on any computer that he happens to use.

     

    Kurzweil 3000 is like the gold standard of text to speech, but it is very expensive. When I looked a few years ago it was around $3000 but it does much more that just text to speech.

     

    I'm using Snap N Read now on my computer and on DS's.  I LOVE that it can scan text in a PDF or any image.  It's a bit buggy sometimes, but overall it's the best I've found.  Thanks!  I think I learned of it from a post you made on a different thread about it.

  12.  

    So I just realized that have something that will read Word documents already, but not something for PDFs or other online text.

     

    I watched the video from Timberly's post and see that it is actually Read&Write, which is one of the numerous things I've already tried - their free version, which has extremely limited functionality.  I need to hear from people who are actually using it before I spring for the full-priced version.  I've found that the demos always look so good, but the trial versions are terrible.  So then I'm hesitant to pay for the full version.

  13. I don't know how to run my DVD player and am resistant to learning new technology. But I find CoWriter! intuitive.  It reads PDFs.  It has text to Speech and Speech to Text for Word documents, Facebook, emails, blogs...  It works with Mac or Windows.   You can take a picture of a flyer and it'll read it.  

     

     

    That sounds awesome, but I don't see that mentioned on their website - it only addresses the writing features (which are really cool).  I don't see any mention of CoWriter READING for you.  Do you have a link to that info?

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