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Lori in MS

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Posts posted by Lori in MS

  1. My son is in the 6th grade. He has dyslexia. He has 2 older brothers that do not have dyslexia. I am hoping to eventually use the same curriculum with him that they are using but am unsure if he will be able to do it.

     

    How do you handle the high school years? Do dyslexics ever get to the point that they can do regular high school work?

     

    He is in 6th grade and is currently doing:

     

    Advanced Language Lessons

    Writing with Ease 4 week 15

    All About Spellling 4

    Singapore Primary Math 5A

    Elementary Apologia Zoology 2

    MFW Creation to Greeks

    English from the Roots Up Greek roots

     

    I plan to have him do all of the AAS books

    Writing With Skill once he completes WWE

     

    I read the history and Science books to him. He reads fairly well. He is currently reading Where the Red Fern Grows but he is listening to the recording from Learning Ally as he follows along in the book. I have him do the audio books for some books and others he reads on his own.

     

    I was hoping to eventually have him do Saxon Math, Apologia Science, and regular high school. But wonder if he will need to start a year later (or more) than his brothers did.

  2. I haven't used many of the SWI/SICC courses (I led a workshop that used SWI-B, but I've not used it at home,) but I think from SICC-B you go to SICC-C, right? I would keep using those, as you would be past the theme-based books by the time you have done an SWI and SICC, imho.

     

    Jill on the Yahoo group recommended doing The Elegant Essay before doing SICC C. I was also thinking of using Writing With Skill with him but won't know about that until I see samples.

  3. It is preferable to just use the TWSS, imho. The other products were created later for parents who didn't have the time or desire to learn the program and teach it from the TWSS. I think the theme-based lessons are less than wonderful compared to the rest of the program, personally (and I have taught two of them to classes - not by choice.) If a parent absolutely can't learn the TWSS and teach it, I think the SWI series is the next best way to go.

     

    I'm actually glad i started using IEW before all the other stuff was available. It was so much easier when "IEW" meant "TWSS," and there were no choices. ;)

     

    Why do you say that the theme based aren't as good? I haven't used one but am trying to decide what to do with my 8th grader next year. He has done SWI B and is doing SICC B now.

  4. They how have pdf schedules to download which tell you how much of the dvd to watch and what to assign for writing. It also contains all the student handouts needed. It it enough for 20-30 weeks of lessons. They had several scheduling options but SWI and SICC combo could take 2 years or more.

  5. We live in a very small town. 2 of my sons love baseball and would like to play at the high school level. They are in a city league right now but that ends at age 15. What have your athletes done while homeschooling? I want to homeschool through high school so putting them in school is not an option at this point. What are your experiences with homeschool leagues, travelling teams, etc? Has anyone been able to play at the public or private school without attending classes there?

  6. We live in a very small town. 2 of my sons love baseball and would like to play at the high school level. They are in a city league right now but that ends at age 15. What have your athletes done while homeschooling? I want to homeschool through high school so putting them in school is not an option at this point. What are your experiences with homeschool leagues, travelling teams, etc? Has anyone been able to play at the public or private school without attending classes there?

  7. I recommend All About Spelling for anyone who has struggled with reading and spelling. You need to start with level 1 even though it may be easy. My 11 year old started with level 1 last fall and is now beginning level 4. They give tips on their website how to teach teenagers to spell. My son has never been able to spell even the most basic words but has made great progress with this program!

     

    http://www.allaboutspelling.com

     

    For Grammar he could continue with Analytical Grammar or try SWB's new grammar program.

     

     

    For writing I would recommend the Instructor's book for Writing With Ease. It has 6 weeks of lessons for each of the 4 levels. I had my older children just do the lessons in the book. They took the placement test. I think they both started at level 3. Then you could start WWS when it is released.

     

    Another option would be IEW. I like SWI B and SICC B for his age group.

  8. This is exactly my dilemma. I want to find something to stick with for longer than a year moving forward at this level. The only somewhat luxury I have is that my son just turned 9. So another year of FLL (ALL) and then switching wouldn't be a huge deal. But still...

     

    What were you considering if you weren't going to use ALL?

     

    I was considering Analytical Grammar as that is what my older boys are using. But the ds that is doing FLL 4 right now struggles with language arts but had done beautifully with FLL and WWE. If SWB will post 2 weeks at a time this fall I will be doing ALL.

  9. I am trying to decide which phonics program to use with my son in the next year or two. He is only 4.5 now and is not ready at this point. I have 2 children with dyslexia but do not know if my youngest is or not. He is not showing strong signs of dyslexia at this point.

     

    I already own Barton Reading and Spelling, Phonics Pathways, and All About Spellling. Would these work with a child who is not dyslexic? It seems like he would need to know the sounds before beginning Barton. Money is an issue so I would like to use what I have.

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