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Anne in Saskatchewan

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Posts posted by Anne in Saskatchewan

  1. In the evaluation of Writing With Ease 4, it says that the student should be able to take dictation exercises of around 25 - 30 words. Then it gives a dictation for evaluation purposes that is 61 words long. Can anyone explain why this is?

     

    My son, who is 10, has a great deal of trouble remembering the dictations. He can do the narrations and summaries beautifully, but it's very difficult for him to remember long passages.

     

     

    Ideas anyone??

     

    Anne.

  2. Peter Dennis reading Winnie the Pooh has been listened to every day for 7 years at our house :-)

     

    Also,

     

    The Wind in the Willows

    Farmer Boy - or any of the Little House series

    Dr. Dolittle

    Anything read by Jim Weiss (sp?)

    Just So Stories

    The Tales of Beatrix Potter

    Classical Kids series - Beethoven Lives Upstairs etc.

     

    We also spend a lot of time listening to BBC 7 - Big Toe Books which you can get online. They read children's stories on the radio. Awesome.

  3. I once heard a speaker say (in response to a question about how much handwriting to force boys to do) that there are two types of handwriting in men - very messy, or else the little block letters that draftsmen and engineers use. But, he said, you still have to teach boys to read and write cursive letters, because they will need to be able to read notes from their wives. :-)

     

    My 10 yo son does dictation and copywork each 2x/wk in cursive. Everything else is on the computer (he started a good typing tutor program when he was 8) except where it's not practical - like diagraming sentences or something like that.

     

    IMHO there are more important things to stress about.

     

    Anne.

  4. In the Well Trained Mind, the series Critical Thinking in United States History, is recommended for third and fourth year Logic stage history. I am wondering if anyone has found anything similar to this for Canadian history? The series looks awesome, but I don't want to spend that much time on American history.

     

    Any suggestions?

     

    TIA

     

    Anne.

  5. Hello everyone:

     

    We homeschool 3 boys (9, 6, and 3) in a very small town in Saskatchewan, Canada. I have limited access to other homeschoolers, so I enjoy reading all of your posts, althought I don't often have time to post and participate more fully.

     

    My husband found TWTM when we first began researching homeschooling (gasp!) 6 years ago. Our approach has been to try the suggested curriculum first, and if it's not working out, start looking for other things. This has saved us a lot of time, and we are quite happy with our curriculum choices.

     

    We are a pretty normal, struggling family. My oldest boy can't get enough hockey, my middle boy is into dance, and my baby would just like to be older.

     

    Personally, I like reading and am working my way though Jane Austen this winter. I like movies - we have Bringing Up Baby ready to watch this weekend with the boys. And I volunteer on our local library board.

     

    Thank you everyone for the time you put into these boards, for the information and inspiration you share.

     

    Anne.

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