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LindaWood

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Posts posted by LindaWood

  1. I am teaching a discussion only literature class made up of fifteen junior high and senior high students, and we will be studying Tale of Two Cities in a couple of months.  Many of them are not accustomed to reading classic literature, but they have enjoyed reading and discussing Pride and Prejudice, Frankenstein, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and "She Stoops to Conquer" so far.  I have been really surprised at how the discussion format has really motivated students to tackle challenging literature!  Tale of Two Cities is difficult, so I thought about having the students watch the 1935 movie or 1989 BBC miniseries before reading the book (like I would do for a Shakespeare play).  I don't normally do this, but I am afraid some of them are really going to be lost.  Do any of you have any thoughts on this?

     

    Thanks!

     

    Linda

  2. Hello,

     

    I'm wanting to buy this used, and I would like the latest edition. From what I can tell from internet searching, the year 2000 seems to be the latest printing or copyright. I see some people say that it is a 2000 copyright, and some say it is a 2000 printing. If it is just a 2000 printing, then I could just get the earlier 1992 edition, but if it is a 2000 copyright, I will look for that. Could someone look and tell me what is on the copyright page?

     

    Thanks so much,

     

    Linda

  3. Hello,

     

    I have a decent piano background (took about 8 years) but have no degree in music and very little teaching in theory. I have taught all our children (five of them) using Faber Piano Adventures. I like it because it tells me exactly what to do and it coordinates all the books together. There are even more helps now, because Faber has a teacher book that goes with the primer level and maybe level one? I have not used the First Piano Adventures book. My 18 year old daughter progressed to a different piano teacher about 3 years ago.

     

    This same daughter taught herself violin through the Violin Book starting when she was about 14. It has been very thorough--there are checklists to complete to make sure that she is doing the right technique and so forth. She never really did squeak!

    Linda

  4. I use RS writing lessons that I like and then use other writing programs such as WriteSource and Format Writing. This year for my 7th grader and 4th grader I am taking some ideas from TOG (we used it several years ago in our family) and am doing a Civil War newspaper and a state notebook. I am adding in some RS writing and WriteSource. I'm still working on what to do with my 11th grader.

     

    Linda

  5. I would start now with what you have, so you can have more breaks throughout the year. That's what I am doing. The last couple of years I have started after Labor Day, and we have had so few breaks, that it has been stressful for me. And I don't want to go until the end of June, personally.

     

    Linda

  6. Here's some that I have used:

     

    A Child's Geography of the World

     

    Halliburton's Complete Book of Marvels (geography--wonderful)

     

    Your Rugged Constitution by Bruce Allyn Findlay 1952 (we read this every time we go through the history cycle)

     

    Linda

  7. I bought this as a stand alone program for my oldest son who was not succeeding in any math program--he was ten at the time. Now I realize he was one of those Bluedorn type children who don't catch unto math until age ten and then do fine after that. Trying program after program was not the answer.

     

    Mastery Mathematics was good, but I did not like having time and measurement in the teacher manual--I do better with a lesson by lesson curriculum.

     

    However, Mastery Mathematics has been great for a supplement program for all our kids (five of them--two are graduated now). I use it when a concept needs more work, and the games have been great too.

     

    Linda

  8. We do follow a chronological plan for history, and this year my 11th grade son is doing Civil War to modern times. However, we are also including world history in that. We are using BJU U.S. History for a spine for the U.S. History and Diana Waring's 3rd world history book (World Empires, World Missions, etc. can't remember the excact title--using 1st edition) as a guide for the world history. I just divided the page numbers by the number of school weeks for the BJU U.S. History.

     

    Linda

  9. Well, we use Rod and Staff, and the 6th grade has report writing instruction in it. Can't remember about the 5th grade. Also, Writesource books (the ones that have a book per grade) have report writing instruction in them too. I'm sure others could pipe in here. I found that my 10 year old daughter was not ready for the report writing for the horse guide, but she was able to other assignments.

     

    Linda

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