Jump to content

Menu

Amateur Actress

Members
  • Posts

    280
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Amateur Actress

  1. The sooner you get him independent, the better, IMO. In a few short years, he is away at college and completely on his own and he needs to know how to keep his life together without mom nagging at him. He may need to sink a few times and deal with consequences, but better that happens at home than on his own. I would sit down and have a big conversation with him about it. Ultimately, it's his life and he has to decide what's important and what's not.

    • Like 3
  2. At the PS here, Earth Science is the 9th grade science class. At the Christian school we took our son out of at the semester, Physical Science is the 9th grade science class. Either is a fine high school class. The PS here requires EITHER Chemistry OR Physics to graduate, but not both. For her 4th year science at the PS next year, dd is taking Physiology. So my dd's high school science sequence is:

    9th-Earth Science; 10th-Biology; 11th-Physics; 12th-Physiology.

  3. I found a few free online personal finance courses...moneyskill.org and foolproofteacher.com, practicalmoneyskills.com. As far as the math involved, I have no idea, but at the local public high school here, they require 4 years of math to graduate and have several options for senior year math for the non-math kids, of which personal finance is one. So assigning a math credit for that shouldn't be a problem.

    • Like 1
  4. I would suggest Tapestry of Grace. We are in our 6th year with it and love it. It has the history, literature/writing, and Bible/church history (also fine arts & activities, and government and philosophy, though you only need to use what you want.) I get a lot of books from the library, though I have also picked up some books from used book sales and Anazon over the years. There are discussion questions for history, literature, and Bible for the kids (and outlines for you to lead discussion). Timelines, maps, important people lists, vocabulary. It's nice because all kids using it are studying the same thing.

  5. We have successfully used Tapestry of Grace for 5 kids (7 years apart between oldest and youngest) going on 6 years now. I don't believe it's exactly meant for all the kids to have all their classes together, but to be studying the same time period at the same time. So everyone's history, literature, church history, fine arts, geography is all about the same time frame (say, Ancient Rome) but they have different books to read and assignments, according to their level. Makes prep a lot easier on the parent. And you may combine ages if you want, if they are close in age, but you don't have to. So yes, it has been entirely do-able.

    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...