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bensonduck

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Posts posted by bensonduck

  1. I was vegan for a while and made pizza with fresh tomatoes, basil leaves, spinach leaves (they get crispy when cooked at high heat...yum) and nutritional yeast. Taste wise I think most plant based cheeses are gross. And you’re right that they are often more processed than dairy cheeses. Nutritional yeast is a decent substitute if you want to experiment. It’s kind of salty, more like Parmesan. 

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  2. We tell the kids vomit is kind of like pee and belongs in the toilet. So we encourage getting to the toilet if possible.  We also give them an empty plastic trash bin to keep near just in case the person can’t make it to the toilet. I had one kid vomit while running to the toilet to vomit, slip in it, and bang their head. I felt so bad. I’d much rather have had them use the bucket. 

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  3. My go to gift for first birthdays is a tube of assorted bath toys, a personalized big bath towel, and a pair of cute pajamas in like 2T size so they are loose and comfy and fit for a while.  I used to wrap it up with a helium balloon attached to the package, but I had one little one year old who was very afraid of the balloon so I don’t do that anymore!

     

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  4. 4 hours ago, Amethyst said:

    I’m gonna go with brussel sprouts. Everybody keeps telling me how much they love them. I only had them a handful of times as a kid. I never fed them to my kids and they have discovered them as adults. My one dd says they must have changed since I was a kid! She LOVES them. I lump them in with peas and lima beans (which I have also avoided since I was a kid - I don’t wish I liked them though - I’m happy to continue to hate them). 

    They actually have changed since we were younger. Horticulturists have bred out some of the bitterness. 
    https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2019/10/30/773457637/from-culinary-dud-to-stud-how-dutch-plant-breeders-built-our-brussels-sprouts-bo

     

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  5. It takes me literally 0 seconds. I wake up and am wide awake, get dressed and out the door to run within 5-10 minutes of waking up. It drives DH crazy. I’m like, get up! Let’s go let’s go let’s go!!!  
     

    On the other hand, I like to nap in the afternoons and am fairly worthless in the evenings. I get tired early and don’t feel my sharpest after like 6-7 pm. 

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  6. DD has a smartphone. She is 12 and is part of a very close knit group of young people who are all competitors in a certain type of academic competition. The kids are from all over the US. Her friends have group chats on Google Chat, follow each other on Instagram, etc.

    Because she is 12, she is well aware that I may take her phone at any time and scroll through everything. She has been mostly responsible with it.  We have had a few hiccups but she’s generally pretty responsible. It helps that this group is very academically minded and they push each other. (The texts are like, “Do you think I should study Topic A or Topic B today? I heard So and So found a new way to work on Topic B. Did she tell you?”)

    Interestingly, DD does not text or Instagram as much with her in person friends. They will text to make plans to meet up or wish happy bdays or something but it isn’t this ongoing dialogue the way it is with her competition group. 

  7. I have such a range among my kids. 
     

    DD - she sort of intuited it on her own at around age 3 with very (VERY) brief explanation from me. Natural speller. 
     

    DS #1 - we used Saxon Phonics K to get the letters figured out and blending, then went to AAR, which he loved. He began reading fluently around AAR3.  Mostly a natural speller, needs to think carefully occasionally to get a correct spelling. 
     

    DS #2 - It took him forever to learn the letters (I used Saxon Phonics and then CLE KII). He understood blending very early but the letters and their sounds tripped him up. We tried Dancing Bears, helped a bit. Finally we used AbCeDarian and the I See Sam books and that got him “over the hump”. He’s not perfectly fluent yet but I think he’s about mid 2nd grade level. He will get there. He loves books and reads a lot in his free time, so he’s getting lots of practice. (Handwriting and spelling need work.)

    • Like 1
  8. 39 minutes ago, Not_a_Number said:

    How far up combinatorics do they go, if you don't mind me asking? 

    Not nearly as advanced as, say, AOPS intermediate C&P, which I just looked at the TOC online for. 
     

    i don’t have the algebra 2 here, but these are the section titles for 2 of the precalc discrete math chapters. (Last one is like limits, derivatives, integrals). 
     

    14-1 introduction to probability 

    14-2 words associated with probability

    14-3 two counting principles 

    14-4 probabilities of various permutations

    14-5 probabilities of various combinations 

    14-6 properties of probability

    14-7 functions of a random variable

    14-8 mathematical expectation 

    15-1 introduction to sequences and series

    15-2 arithmetic, geometric and other sequences 

    15-3 series and partial sums

    FWIW, DD is also currently taking a contest prep combinatorics class given by a local math circle. The Foerster stuff is nowhere near as hard as the hw for that class. She can do 2-3 sections of this a day and get most of them right. but spend 2 hours puzzling over a couple of the contest prep problems (and get several wrong). 
     

    But, the way Foerster lays it out is so clear that sometimes it gives her an insight. Today she realized while working on one of the Foerster sets that she did actually know how to solve one of the contest hw problems, and dashed upstairs to her hw papers immediately to write it out before she forgot. So we are keeping Foerster. 🙂

    • Like 1
  9. 40 minutes ago, wendyroo said:

    For Algebra, he made it through several chapters of AOPS algebra, and then we bailed and worked through Chuckles the Rocket Dog and the remaining sections on Alcumus (supplemented with Khan Academy and ProfRobBob videos on YouTube if he struggled with a concept).

    Then we took a detour for 6 months. He did James Tanton's Great Courses series, The Power of Mathematical Visualization, which he LOVED. There are problem sets in the Guidebook, so it kept him busy for a while. He loved James Tanton so much, that we then went straight into his Geometry course - which was a big hit, despite DS not really liking geometry. Then I got my hands on a library copy of Geometry: A Guided Inquiry which we kept for as long as we could to work through the explorations that interested us the most. Meanwhile, DS worked his way through the geometry topics on Alcumus and again supplemented with Khan and ProfRobBob to make sure he had a firm foundation in all the topics he needed.

    In the future, I think I will use Foerster algebra 1, Geometry: A Guided Inquiry (through Math Without Borders), Foerster for algebra 2 (this is what DS is using this year), and then either Foerster for PreCalc and Calc or Derek Owens courses.

    Foerster’s Algebra 2 and Precalc (the Key Press edition) both have very nice sections on combinatorics/discrete math with a variety of problems at different difficulty levels. DD has really enjoyed them. 

  10. Spelling is weird.

    There are some kids who just get it. They don’t need spelling lessons, they are just going to understand how to spell words. (I suspect many of them are pattern recognizers.)

    There are other kids who need to be taught the rules of spelling and would benefit from a program. (Spelling by Sound and Structure is my favorite). 
     

    Does your daughter write little stories? How’s her spelling on, say, a thank you note to Grandma? Does she want to write much yet? If she’s spelling decently on her own right now, you might have the first kind of kid and then just wait till she’s a bit older and see how her spelling progresses as she writes longer and more complex stuff.  If her spelling on her own is a mess, or she’s not yet writing a lot, I would wait till she’s 6-7, and look at it again and start a spelling program then if you think it’s necessary. You don’t need it at this age. 

  11. I don’t think my kids would want to deal with a thermos or something for the whole day. They are not good about keeping track of that stuff, haha.

    Here are a couple sandwich variations that are not “deli meat”. I second the idea of getting a big bun (like a hoagie or Portuguese roll style) and send 2 sandwiches. 

    - very thick layer of hummus, cucumber and tomato slices laid into it, basil leaves

    - cream cheese and green olives

    - pizza sandwich with tomato sauce and several mozzarella slices and whatever toppings your son likes (I usually do green peppers which add a nice crunch, but those are a favorite veggie around here)

    - leftovers, if you make a roast or pork chops or something, just slice the meat on the thin side and put it in the bread. 

    - will he eat smoked salmon? That + cream cheese + onion + lemon has been a staple for us all summer.

    • Like 1
  12. 1 minute ago, Emily ZL said:

    Actually, I guess I was exaggerating a little. If I say "Quid agis?" They'll say "sum pessime!!" and giggle hysterically. They just didn't keep as much as I did, and that's frustrating.

     

    In retrospect, I think the best use of young-child time for Latin is perhaps memorizing declensions while memorizing is easy and fun. It's amazing how chants can stick in young kids' brains, to be recalled and used later. I'm not a devotee of Dorothy Sayers and the neo classical model, but this is true, and something she mentioned. Though she also mentioned that if you can get them speaking and hearing it spoken, that really helps. I'm intrigued by Artes Latinae for that reason, but not sure if it's worth the money to go that route.

    Haha, we did one year of Classical Conversations in 2013 and I still use their Latin chant songs. 

  13. You could also have him do maybe 1-2 formal proofs per lesson, then 1-2 paragraph style proofs, and then the rest he could just verbally explain to you why it is so. 
     

    even though geometry is weird in that it is so proof-heavy, you’re definitely proving things in other HS math classes. For example, DD had a problem in Foerster precalculus today that was something like, “Show that the cross product of these two vectors is perpendicular to this other vector.” (I don’t have the actual problem in front of me and it was a couple hours ago, so I may be misremembering.) But there was a calculation piece as well as understanding the concept of cross products and how to show they are perpendicular. When she was done with the problem, it looked basically like a paragraph proof. 

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