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Krista in Colorado

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Posts posted by Krista in Colorado

  1. I've been homeschooling for several years, and although I don't necessarily recommend this, I've tried 3 different math curricula. (Case in point that "nothing works for everyone." :001_smile:) After trying both Saxon and Singapore with my older girls, we have finally landed on MUS. My almost 6-year-old ds is loving the hands-on approach and using the manipulatives, and we both love watching the videos with Mr. Demme.

     

    I'm not familiar with RightStart, but it's clearly a popular choice as well.

  2. What worked for us was starting our week at 4pm on Sunday evening. I tell them the weekend world ends at 4pm. We have to clean our rooms, do our evening chores and all games, friends, or weekend activities are over. We pull out our planners and look toward the next week. After all of this, the house is calmer and its easy to have dinner and head to bed, just like a school night. Since we started this, the world has changed.

     

    The other thing is make sure he's getting enough activity during school days...7 year olds are wiggly things, especially boys :) So, maybe you could start your Monday with a walk around the block, or two...

     

    happy trails!

     

    I love the idea of beginning things (and changing the mindset) on Sunday night.

     

    We used to begin every school day with a walk around the block. It's a great way to make a clean beginning to the school day . . . and it burns that extra energy. My kids were always a little subdued after that walk. Thanks for the reminder, Tina! :001_smile:

  3. I tried SWO for a couple of years with dd7 and nothing stuck. [it's quite possible that it's just my daughter :glare: and the poor thing will simply never be able to spell.] What I found was that she could (and loved to) complete the workbook pages, but she wasn't learning how to spell. It was just busywork.

     

    We're currently using (and making some progress) with Spelling Power.

     

    Personally, I loved SWO. It was easy, not teacher-intensive, and laid out well. It just wasn't effective for my dd.

     

    BTW, dd9 is a natural speller so I couldn't tell if it did anything for her or not. :rolleyes:

  4. Not sure how to insert a link (sorry), but if you go to Tapestry's website, to their "Store", you can pull up the "Resource List" and specify which Year, Unit, and Levels, and it will show you all of the books used for those specs.

     

    Hope this helps! :001_smile:

  5. I just switched from Singapore to MUS . . . for this reason (and perhaps it will give you some insight into the difference between the two):

     

    Singapore has a strong emphasis on mental math. If you are strong in math, this should not be a problem. If math is not one of your strengths, it is difficult to understand even the teacher's manual. :001_huh: (Math is not my strength, so I would not feel comfortable teaching 8th grade math with Singapore.)

     

    My kids have not enjoyed math to this point either, but they are all very excited about MUS (to begin this fall). And I am excited to have someone else (Mr. Demme) teaching my kids math. (I do plan to sit with them and watch the videos. Perhaps I'll learn a thing or two, also! :tongue_smilie:)

     

    My only concern about MUS is the apparent focus on one skill for the year, but I'm comforted by what appears to be good and regular reviews of all skills. I also plan to supplement with drilling those math facts. :001_rolleyes:

     

    Hope this is helpful.

  6. I am trying to get my TOG Year 4 stuff organized to start when ready. For the lapbooks, where do you guys get the paper at a good price? I thought I had the card stock, but I wasn't thinking about the paper needing to be larger than standard. And that you also need other colored paper for the cutouts.

     

    Thanks!

     

    If you're doing TOG4, does that mean you've already done TOG1-3? Have you always done the lapbooks? Is this something your son enjoyed? How much time (per week, maybe) do you spend on lapbooking? Anything else helpful that I should know?

     

    I'm trying to decide if that supplement is worth the money . . . oh, and do you use the kit or the digital templates?

     

    Thanks in advance! :001_smile:

  7. Past and present Apologia users, what do you like (particularly about zoology) and what do you not?

     

    Also, is the Notebooking Journal a valuable resource? (read "worth the money") And I'm assuming I would need one for each child? Or is this something we can create at home with a 3-ring binder and some fun paper?

     

    Thanks in advance for your feedback! :001_smile:

  8. I would look at Helen Taylor's Little Pilgrim's Progress. It's absolutely WONDERFUL. They could draw their own pictures as they listen. I read it to dd ages ago and keep wanting to do it again. :)

     

    :iagree: We read it aloud as a family some years ago, and I was as equally enthralled as my kids.

  9. I checked out a book from the library on teaching cursive, copied the letter order, and I, too, made my worksheets with StartWrite. It worked marvelously teaching my oldest daughter, and I plan to do it again with middle daughter beginning this fall. No need to buy a workbook! :001_smile:

  10. It's hard, when the weather is nice, to keep them sitting and doing bookwork (unless it's outside ;)).

     

    My plan for this summer is to continue drilling math facts and "playing" with c-rods. My dd9 will learn to touch-type. And I really want to do a special summer-long unit study in Geology. (I bought WinterPromise's Rock Around the Earth for last fall and we haven't gotten to it yet. :001_rolleyes:) My kids have been chomping at the bit because it looks so fun. And then, of course, I'll keep them reading with frequent trips to the library. Nothing too structured, though.

     

    I take intentional breaks from math books, grammar and spelling, composition, etc.

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