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violin69

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Posts posted by violin69

  1. As a former violin teacher, I highly recommend trying and having her teacher check the instrument she gets. Bad violins waste lots of time and money. Ever minute spent on retuning and messing with a bad violin is time taken from lessons. Overall, Strunal violins are my personal favorite for beginning student violins but really it comes down to the individual violin. Many companies allow a trial period. Here are 2 websites, SHAR and Southwest Strings .

  2. I like Artistic Pursuits for their introduction to classical art and a practical project to match. We also have the Come Look with Me series..Other than these, I buy lots of materials and and some how to books (How Great Thou Art, Cook Books, Friendship Bracelet Books, Sewing Books...) to use as reference when dc need help. For Christmas, I bought a tool box for dd, and some special markers to decorate it. I filled it with art, and sewing things. We have 2 art boxes filled with paints, colored foam, googly eyes..., as well as sketch books, and paper. Art for them is to create whatever they want with the materials they have. I also allow them to "recycle". Once, dd's jeans were torn so badly, I couldn't repair them. She asked if she could recycle. She made a purse. Ds loves to take boxes and make cars, trains, and castles for his web kinz. At present, dd is making lots of friendship bracelets and drawing tons in her sketch book. I'm finding the advice an artist gave me to be true...the less I teach the better they do.

  3. Not really. That's a quote from my new neighbor whom I met this afternoon. Her son is a junior in high school, preparing for multiple AP exams next month. Her daughter is a sophomore at Harvard.

     

    I felt about an inch high and escaped from the conversation before she found out we homeschool, much less that my dd is at the *gasp* community college.

     

    Honestly, I am usually very happy with our decision to homeschool. But on a periodic basis something comes up that makes me wonder why I was thinking I could give my kids an education comparable to some of the excellent programs out there.

     

    Sigh.

     

    OK, I'm done beating myself up. Thanks for understanding. :)

     

    My brother got his Masters at Harvard and he's very supportive of our homeschooling and at present dc attending a foreign national school. Sometimes I get nervous around his Ivy League friends but many times without reason. At Christmas, he came all the way here to Slovakia so I could meet his Stanford grad girlfriend. We live in the blue-collar part of town in a tiny post-Soviet apartment! Believe me, I was sooo worked up over this visit but she turned out to be very sweet and down-to-earth. And yes I said stupid stuff but what can I say? God gave my brother the high IQ, not me.

     

    Also my other brother was together with him on whiz kid competitions during hs but he went to a state school and quit. Now, he's mainly self-taught and still just as bright as his brother. I'm proud of both of them. Both gifted but very different decisions in life.

     

    I've also seen the downside of a Harvard education. Lots of debt! My advice, be yourself and don't worry about it.

  4. We did SL K & 1 Science but switched to Noeo Science. Dc loved the books; Usbourne books are wonderful. We just had problems with the way the IG jumped around and that the experiments didn't go with the subject being taught. SL has changed their Science so maybe some of these issues have been addressed.

  5. I'm considering writing some curriculum-many friends with whom I've shared things I've written have said I should sell what I write. It would be fairly simple, nothing complicated, but I'd like to fill a need. I'm just tossing around doing this so far, not totally committed to it yet. What's missing in the homeschool market?

     

    I'd like a History of the Americas alternative to SL 3 and 4/WP American History. Something like SL Core 5 but about the Americas instead of just US history. As is I'm searching Brazilian websites for supplimental materials. SOTW for Latin American History would be wonderful!

     

    Also, IGs as ebooks. Shipping overseas is getting more and more expensive. Combine that with ever more restrictive weight limits on luggage.

  6. Way off topic, but I'm sitting in front of a Slovak poster from WWI that says:

     

    BOH DO KRIVDY HROMOM A JUNAK GUL'AMI....

     

    I could do all the accents, do you know what this means?

     

    Bill

     

    Literally it says "God thunder the injustice and young fighting boys with game balls." I asked my language teacher who says that it contextually translated is a cry to God out of complete desperation "God fight the injustices for the brave young fighting boys (drafted) who can't handle this on their own."

     

    Very interesting.

  7. I understand how passages as such strike a cord. We lived for a few years in Lithuania where dd was a brunette in a sea of blonds. Reminders of WW2 were all around us and on a street, we even witnessed a Rabbi being harrassed by a Lithuanian. After reading Twenty and Ten from SL Core K, dd, 5 at the time, started asking me if the Nazis were coming to get her. She thought they'd mistaken her for a Jew.

  8. This Country of Ours is laced with very bigoted characterizations of Native Americans, African Americans, the institution of slavery, and Mormonism.

     

    Bill

     

    I found too many references to this problem and think that this is not the book for us. How about the American History stories? I absolutely love the samples. Very much in the style of CHOW.

     

    (Also found that this site has Czechoslovak Fairy Tales which would be great for us to read as we live in Slovakia!)

  9. Obviously I'm in the minority here, but we hated WP American Story 1. This was a huge disappointment for us as we had never spent that much on one curriculum ever!

     

    It is a completely secular program. The perspective behind the books chosen overwhelmingly seemed to be, "All Native Americans were wonderful, peaceful people. All the explorers and colonists were evil who came in order to kill the Native Americans, steal their gold, and force them to convert." The Native American spirituality was presented positively and Christianity was presented negatively.

     

    I do think it is important to read both perspectives and try to get an overall impression, but the WP is definitely not a balanced program.

     

    And the crafts? Eh. From what I remember, they were mostly color/cut/paste or tape.

     

    That is certainly not what I got from the samples. The whole craft thing is of concern to me. Hmm.

  10. I think WP is basically academically watered down SL with a bunch of coloring. That being said, I have wanted AW for years and next year Im buying it to use with my 4 yo.

     

    I think WP has excellent elements but it isnt nearly enough books for me or my kids. We use SL and my kids probably read an additional 5 books each a week.

     

    I appreciate your input. It's giving me lots to think about. Would you mind explaining a little more on how WP is watered down? What's AW?

  11.  

    BUT, did you realize that the "American Crossings" package for 4th-7th graders don't use History of the US? At this point only the High School level add on includes History of the US.

     

     

    I'm not sure what you mean. I've looked at both American Crossings and American Set I. American Set seems better. Is History of the USA like CHOW for SL1 & 2? Are there other books that are needed but not included in the WP packages?

  12. Thanks so much! This year we will be doing SL Core 2 LW. Something caught my attention in another post and I began to look at various American History Curriculums. WP really does look like a better fit especially for ds. Your insights have been very helpful.

  13. Our children are in a bi-lingual Slovak school which isn't really bi-lingual until the older grades. The younger grades are taught in Slovak except for English class. So, dc are pretty much immersed. We have been here 18 months and dc have a good grounding in Slovak. We also spend time with Brazilian expats where dc are immersed in Portuguese. Can't say it has been easy but we have a peace that it is for good reason.

     

    For us, it has been a constant struggle to balance our children's emotional stability, academics, and their language acquisition. Our lives are very mobile and we need the freedom to take dc with us as we stay up late spending time with people (Slovak, Brazilian, American, Argentianian, Hungarian...whoever) without the hassle of keeping up with a school schedule. Dc need a real vacation during breaks not time doing afterschool. Dc need to spend time playing with other children instead of doing homework and afterschool work after a long day of immersion. Dc need to learn more portuguese without it being yet another stressful situation. Lordwilling, we will return to homeschooling this fall but will continue to have dc in the school's afterschool program so they can continue to learn Slovak by spending time with their friends. The afterschool program at the school is wonderful, so much more flexible and less stressful than class. IMHO, real immersion is spending more time with the people and less time in the books. Not that classes aren't important; dc needed the jump start that their Slovak school has provided. It's just a balancing act that we bath in much prayer.

     

    Come to think of it, our objective really isn't to learn a language; it's to connect with people. Language is just an instrument to connect. We want to learn Slovak bc we love the Slovak people and have so much to share with them. It means a lot to them and shows respect for them to learn their language as we live in their country. Our goal is not to just acquire a language (OR to homeschool) so dc can have an academic advantage, to be better than some other expat, or to somehow prove our love for the people or our work. Behind every langange is a person.

     

    From what I am hearing from you, you are seeking the best for your children. Whatever you decide to do, the immersion they have had this year will serve them in years to come. Whether they become fluent or not, this experience has given them some insight into people different than themselves. I'll also be praying for you! Welcome!

  14. Some of the characteristics of VSL apply to dd but she is a good speller. She's never been one to sound words out and we don't do a formal spelling program. She just naturally spells words by picturing and writing them. If she does spell something wrong, I write the correct spelling. She copies it and most of the time that's all she needs. Every 6 months, I test her with Spelling Power placement tests to make sure. I read so much about VSL being bad spellers but is that always true?

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