Mama2four
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Location
Texas
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Interests
Reading, buying books, homeschooling
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Occupation
SAHM
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We still have her on ice packs and my daughter is giving her fluids (she is a vet tech).
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Took our sweet kitty to the vet today and was told she has pneumonia. Her temp was 107. The vet gave her antibiotics and put her on ice packs to help cool her down. Sent her home and told us to keep an eye on her temp. It went down to 103 earlier, but is now back to 107. The vet said if it doesn't go down, that could be a sign of her kidneys failing. She was also dehydrated because of being outside all day (she is an outside cat) and I didn't know she was sick until about 3:00 this afternoon. Please tell me if you've had a cat survive this ordeal.
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Teaching a young child to read
Mama2four replied to Mommy to monkeys's topic in K-8 Curriculum Board
I used Phonics Pathways with my daughter when she was a little over 3 yo. If working from the book itself is too much, you can use magnetic letters or a dry erase marker board. -
He still had difficulty distinguishing between the short vowel sounds of i and e. It doesn't help that we have Texas accents, lol. But I do the "think to spell" way. He will almost always use the wrong vowel every time.
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My 13 yo son has always, always struggled with spelling. I mostly taught him to read with Phonics Pathways, and only used SWR and now AAS for spelling. He is on level 2 AAS step 6. I've done everything as instructed, segmenting sounds, open & closed syllables, finger spelling. Here is how he spelled bonus: bouns. He spelled depend as dpent. He knows what vowels are and every syllable has at least one vowel. He can tell me how many syllables a word has most of the time. When he was younger, he had a difficult time with rhyming, and he didn't become a good reader until about a year ago. He wants to rush through his work, and he doesn't like to listen to me dictate the words SWR style, but he doesn't want to use the AAS tiles either. Any advice on what to do would be greatly appreciated.
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To young children. I saw it recommended by Denise Eide on her forum. It is called wordywormreading.com. I could only afford to purchase the My First Phonogram Book at this time ($29.99), but there is a package for $129 & $179. It is cute, colorful, and has songs for each phonogram and its sounds. I plan on using it with a 4 year old.
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I am intrigued by what I have been learning about the Miquon program by watching all the videos recently posted by Rosie (I hope I got her name right). I was wondering if the MUS blocks could be used (since I already owned them) instead of the cuisenaire rods. Are the colors the only difference? Also, thank you Rosie for all the time you've spent making the videos! They are very helpful!!
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Thanks for the suggestions. I definitely want to keep the lessons short and fun!
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I am planning on using AAR Level Pre-1, Kumon workbooks, lots of read-alouds and fun things like playdough, puzzles, sing-alongs, games, etc. He loves numbers and math. Are there any other suggestions as far as curriculum goes? What are some good math workbooks for 4yo active boys? Thanks. It's been a long time since I've taught one this age. :)
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Thanks everyone. Seeing the scope & sequence for Barton's was very helpful. I think we'll stick with AAS since it's mostly spelling that he has a hard time with.
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Thank you. It seems like my son will take 2 steps forward and 1 step back. Just when I get excited about his progress, he throws me for a loop.
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My son struggles with spelling greatly. His reading has greatly improved. I own AAS 1-4, and he is making slow progress. Before AAS, I wanted to try Barton's with him but couldn't afford it. My question is are these 2 programs similar? If I'm using AAS with him now (just started level 2), wouldn't Barton's be redundant (assuming I could afford to purchase it)? For those who have used or seen both, which is better iyo? Thank you.
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I understand, that's why I switched. Some days the teaching process of SWR drove me crazy, but now that I don't have it anymore I miss it. Crazy huh?! But I attribute LOE to helping me understand how SWR works because it is all laid out for me and I don't have to wonder if I'm doing it right or enough. And LOE has an assessment every 5 lessons, which I really appreciate.