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Truman School

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Posts posted by Truman School

  1. Out of all the units, ds liked ACGS the most. It is very humorous with eccentric characters. It really isn't difficult to follow their schedule for the 36 weeks. The weeks he wasn't just reading (which would get spread out during the week), he only spent 2 days a week working on the workbook pages. We skipped some especially the puzzles and extra challenge pages.

     

    ETA: Is that a bunny in your picture? We have 3 girls - Lightning (white), Thunder (black), and Stormy (brown & white).

     

    I agree, there is a lot of extra time scheduled into LL, so I don't think you'll have time getting through the book before summer, even only doing a 4 day week. She really spreads out some of the reading time, that you could possibly condense and you may not end up doing everything. We certainly only did some of the workbook pages. It is a fun book to read.

  2. Do you mean this one? My dd is using Boorstin, et al and keeps saying "I just read this in my book today." Not sure whether that's scientific enough :lol:

     

    Oh and I just noticed the price on Amazon :scared: I paid <$10 on Ebay. It's the teacher's edition but I told my dd to ignore the teacher's notes :001_smile:

     

    Thanks. Do you mind if I ask, what you are having her do with the text? Are there questions in she is answering, or is she just outlining? Will you have tests or do you feel discussion is enough? I just ordered the DVD so haven't received it yet. Are there notes/questions etc. that come with it?

     

    Thanks again!

  3. I agree with this also. We have been using it for 2 years now, and it is definitely thorough in grammar. It actually can take a fair bit of time to complete a lesson if you have your children do all the written exercises. We do 4 lessons a week of but did add in a seperate writing program that we work on, on the the 5th day.

     

    :iagree: I have not found R&S to be short or brief. We've used levels 3 - 7 and will be using 5 & 8 this year. R&S is very thorough.
  4. Was it Home Economics? That's what we called it when we took it in school a long long long time ago.:-)

     

    quote=Hazelt"nut";452493]Someone or many someones talked many months ago about including sewing, needlepointe, etc . in their homeschool. Ya'll gave it a name...but I can't remember what you called it so I can google up some info. It wasn't crafts..maybe something about handmade..anybody remember?

    Sheryl

  5. Honestly I'd perhaps speak to some students that have gone to the university your son is interested in. My oldest who went through public school and was not particularly strong in grammar or English has managed to achieve A's in all of the first two year's English classes in his Computer Science discipline at a high ranked state university.

     

    I'm using Rod and Staff 7 this year with my 9th grade dd and I know that it is going much deeper than anything my ds learned in public highschool.

     

    If you are both struggling I would definitely take a break and then maybe talk to a few who know what's required in your area. My dh is an engineer and couldn't diagram a sentence to save his life....lol

  6. that is not so dependent on parental involvement? Isn't that a terrible question? But honestly I am homeschooling a large family of various ages and while I know there are ways to tie it all together that's just not going to happen this year. I love Sonlight(we have used it previously), but I just know that this year there will not be enough time for all the discussions required for my ds if he does Core 7.

     

    I'd just love for him to be able to read the books, have questions to answer and then writing assignments to complete and maybe even a test or two, to be sure he's comprehending and learning the history parts. In a perfect world this wouldn't be necessary, but right now I think it is and I just hate to have go the totally dry text book path.

     

    Any thoughts?

  7. That's sort of what I was thinking. That doing copywork when you can't really read what you are writing isn't really helpful. I may have her just do a little copywork from the readers she can read, as she loves to print and save FLL and WWE until mid year.

     

    Thanks.

     

     

     

     

    I think that copywork will be more useful to her if she can read it. If she can't read the words, she'll just be "drawing" the letters. In other words, copying them without meaning. I would wait until she can read the words she is copying.

     

    I just started my 5 almost 6yo on FLL and WWE. They fit really well together with the copywork in WWE reinforcing the grammar concepts learned in FLL. We're just on the 2nd week and it's blending really well. You could start FLL and then do WWE later, but I like how they work together.

     

    HTH

  8. DD is 5, will be 6 fairly soon and I can't remember with my older kids whether I waited until they were reading before starting copywork.

     

    She knows her letters and most of her sounds, but is a beginning reader at this point.

     

    I have both FLL and WWE and am wondering whether to start them when we start back to school at the end of the month, or wait until mid year when she is reading better.

     

    What have you all done?

  9. Writing Strands (twice), Abeka, Rod and Staff(I love the Grammar, but there's just not enough writing in it) Put that in Writing, Lightning Literature, (again I like the literature part but there wasn't enough to teach or improve their writing)

     

    This summer I ordered "The Complete Writing Program" It's written for use by a classroom teacher or homeschool parent. I read it through, as well as his "Writing the Five Paragraph Essay" report. It not only taught me how to teach them basically step by step, but it taught me how to assess their writing and gave me examples to compare to.

     

    We don't do daily lessons in the summer, but I have started doing this with my 13,11,9 year old the last two weeks every morning and I feel like we are really really getting somewhere with writing. I'm excited!!!!

     

    I discovered that handing my kids a program like "Writing Strands" and having them read it and do the work just wasn't going to work well.

     

    I haven't felt this confident about my kids becoming successful writers since those early days of homeschooling. It's probably not for everybody, but it's working for us.

     

    I did just order WWE for my almost 6 year old to work through this fall and am hoping it will lay a good foundation for her.

  10. Thanks so much for all your effort. It's appreciated:-)

     

    K~

    Sorry! I've really had technical difficulites today.

     

    Anyway, you can call R&S at 606-522-4348 and place an order for your curriculum sample - which is free.

     

    I use the samples table of contents for my lesson planning.

     

    If you go to rodandstaffbooks.com you can see the curriculm samples online, but I like having my own copy. This site is run by Milestone Ministries not R&S.

  11. If you've used this in the elementary years before Omnibus, would you mind explaining to me how it works? I understand there are cards with facts. Is there more to the program then that, or is it basically just reviewing the cards?

     

    Also If you used Omnibus, can you tell me if the Primary Reading is difficult for a student that is just an average reader at this point. My ds is making progress, but he is definitely a more math oriented student and reading isn't something he loves.

     

    I appreciate all the help?

     

    K~

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