Jump to content

Menu

Bocky

Members
  • Posts

    319
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Bocky

  1. HS sounds scary but you can do it! Farrar is totally right that you don't need an accredited HS diploma in the US. There are options for getting an accredited HS diploma though if it helps - like NARHS, North Atlantic Regional High School. I enrolled my high schooler in NARHS because she needed an accredited HS diploma to enter university in my (non-US) home country.
  2. Building off JazzyMom’s breakdown Has English 1 and 2, needs: English 3 (you are thinking Shakespeare), English 4 – Creative Writing? (Could use the Nanowrimo High School workbook). Or a genre-based course – mysteries, sf, dystopias… Has 1 CR Algebra and 0.5 Geometry, needs 2.5 CR more. Recommend that you get a really good in-person math tutor and work through Lial’s or similar at M’s pace Needs 0.5 CR Personal finance Has all 3 science Has PE and health Has 1 social science (govt), needs 1 CR World Geography? Something super-simple like Simply Charlotte Mason’s Visits To…, or Cooking around the world, or pick a selection from the smorgasbord of Guesthollow’s World Geography and Cultures? Alternatively, Modern History – use Build Your Library’s World War 2 unit study. It’s scheduled for a whirlwind 9 weeks but has 3 read-alouds and 3 complex novels, could be spaced into a meaty but doable credit. 6 electives – has 1 or 2 Spanish, 1 or 2 music (are there enough hours to have a credit of piano and a credit of choir?), 1 or 2 credits art (again are there enough hours for a credit of drawing and a credit of painting?) Possible other elective credits, if needed: Zoology, Culinary Arts, Photography. Could M be a teaching assistant for choir? My older student had 1 CR from being a teaching assistant in the ESL math class at her high school.
  3. Sorry - late responding to your question here. I am a planner - but my plans always flexed and changed as my daughters kept changing too (laughing at myself here). My carefully curated booklists adapted. I did very deliberately decide not to include works that had despair, indifference, or cruelty as major themes for 9th and 10th grades. I found it helpful to think in terms of literary genres - so 9th grade was about heroes - the hero's journey, epic, mythology, which shaped the themes we covered - what it means to be human, to be mortal, to excel (or not!) et cetera. For American Lit later in 11th grade, we started with Dark Romanticism - which led very organically to a focus on the Other, racism, and queer lit. Back to your original question - what about looking at fantasy literature? It's arguably the most significant modern genre. In addition to Tolkien, there is Lord Dunsany, The King of Elfland's Daughter; Peter Beagle, The Last Unicorn; TH White, The Sword in the Stone, and so many others!
  4. If you end up needing to do it yourself, Memoria Press has literature courses with excellent teacher's guides, with answers for all the questions, including discussion questions. We used their The Divine Comedy course for literature this past year in 12th grade. The teachers guide had everything - even lecture notes for introducing and contextualizing Dante. The rubric for writing essays was very clear for both my student and myself. Hewitt's Lightning Literature guides also cover their chosen literature thoroughly with good teacher helps. Both Memoria Press and Lightning Literature have a range of different works or periods to choose from, and are the closest to actually being open and go I have found.
  5. You might like Build Your Library Year 1. Build Your Library is very much a more feminist take on classical education. You can see the full booklist at Purchase: Level 1 curriculum - Build Your Library
  6. I’d like to put in a plug for continuing to read the classics. I think continuing in your course of reading works that are well-established cultural touchstones and feature complex literary language is an excellent support to your partner’s homeschooling. You are doing bedtime read-alouds to dd13 and dd10. This is a great time to read books that might be passed over later in high school but that you haven’t read yet. For example: Treasure Island, RL Stevenson Hound of the Baskervilles, A Conan Doyle A Christmas Carol, C Dickens Anne of Green Gables, LM Montgomery (because Canada!) The Jungle Book or Kim, R. Kipling Wind in the Willows, K Grahame The Hobbit, JRR Tolkien When my students were 13 years old, I also felt pressure to engage with twentieth century works that seemed too depressing and dark. The best thing I did was put off US literature until 11th grade, when we were ready to engage with it and could discuss some of the mature themes intelligently. Your dd13 has lots of years of development and high school to come. There is time for Elie Wiesel later. OP, I also gently encourage you to reimage how you think about heavy themes in literature. You maybe got a little too emotionally invested in Oliver Twist? Feeling things deeply is a good gift! But not necessarily while reading aloud. (Confession: I was fired as a reader-aloud during my girls’ elementary because I cried reading Molly, an American Girl. My partner did an excellent job, and often picked things I would not have but that have become wonderful memories and part of our family culture.) Fairy tales are full of child abuse – but we read them to young children, who love the gruesomeness of Cinderella’s stepsisters getting their eyes pecked out! Bad things do happen in Dickens, but there is also justice, redemption, love, and hope.
  7. I used all these books in middle school. The excellent illustrations and geographic focus worked really well for self-designed courses. Especially liked the volumes on Africa, China, South Asia, and America and the Primary Sources volume. The assignments in the OUP Teacher's and Student's guides will be too light, in my opinion, for a high school world history credit; I agree with HomeAgain that you would need to design more on-level thinking/processing and output. If you love teaching about material culture and primary sources, these books are excellent entry points for a student to start making how and why connections while looking at what actually survives as historical evidence. If on the other hand you need something more open and go, SWB's The History of the Ancient World is excellent. The Teacher's Guide and Student workbook are really well done and easy to use.
  8. Update: thanks everyone for the thoughtful and helpful responses. It encouraged DD17 to reach out to her admissions counselor, who was super helpful. She wrote a short letter, sent it to her admissions counselor who passed it on. The deferral was granted within 24 hours. Now we can concentrate on unpacking and finding new doctors in our new state...oh, and finishing up senior year 😄
  9. DD17 would like to defer her entry to her chosen school, a small, liberal arts college, for a semester or year in order to get a persistent physical health issue diagnosed and treated. What's a good way to approach the school? Email? Call? Admissions counselor or academic counselor? How much should she disclose? If you have btdt, what was your experience? Thank you!
  10. High school literature picks being too depressing was an issue for us too. One thing that worked well was to pair the dense, difficult read with a lighter piece that tackled the same themes from a funnier and/or more uplifting perspective. Short stories that satirized the genre of the chunky work really helped us discuss literary elements as well as themes. I paired Lord of the Flies with O Henry's short story Ransom of the Red Chief - the ruthlessness and lack of mercy of Johnny (and his father!) and the narrator are balanced by the comedy - it's very funny - and satisfying comeuppance. Another great suggestion from LoriD's list - The Full Cupboard of Life by A McCall Smith. I would pair this with Pride and Prejudice - both comedies of manners, women and men maneuvering against each other. The Full Cupboard is very funny, and set in modern Africa. For Poe, you could pair a story or two with Oscar Wilde's The Canterville Ghost which satirizes Gothic horror. Some other not-depressing classic literature not mentioned yet: G Eliot Silas Marner - short, serious, dense 19th century language and moralism. Lord Dunsany, The King of Elfland's Daughter - lovely fantasy literature, lyrical language, often shoved aside in favor of Lord of the Rings (which is great but very long!) And I have to put in a plug for DD17's favorite, The Journey to the West, one of the four great Classic Chinese novels, usually titled Monkey in English-language abridgments. DD started with the very short abridgment Dear Monkey. For Shakespeare, have you considered analyzing the Sonnets instead, and just watching several plays for cultural literacy? Live is amazing but there are great Shakespeare movies out there too... I would second Clarita's suggestion of Hamlet, or if adventure stories are of interest, what about Henry V? We struggled more with the Shakespearean comedies than the tragedies, because the abuse of women (Hero!) was central to the humor.
  11. Since most of the linked threads are older, here's my 2 cents. Getting info: Is the school planning to have an info night or open house event for the IB program? Dd19's HS did an info session at their fall back to school night and a separate info session as well. They laid out the basics of the program and you could meet teachers and current students. The IB director at the school might be willing to meet with you and ds too. There was also a good description of how their IB program was implemented in their student courseguide online. Pre-IB: DD's school has a world languages focused IB program. There was only one feeder school with a pre-IB (French dual immersion) but a lot of schools in the large local district with dual immersion programs in various languages. The HL level language classes were 90% students who had come up through the dual immersion classes from K. The 10% were native speakers and returned exchange students. Study skills: At Dd's school, these were taught in a required 9th grade class which taught notetaking, research, and presenting skills. The core of the IB program is taking the Theory of Knowledge class (which will help with study skills in terms of critical thinking and essay writing), three exams in 11th and three exams in 12 grade, 150 hours volunteering over 11th and12th, and the research essay. There were 2 or 3 year class sequences leading to the HL exams - for example honors Chemistry in 10th, IB Chem 1 in 11th and IB Chem 2 in 12th if you wanted to take the HL Chemistry exam. SL exams could be taken after 1 or 2 years - for example Environmental Science SL was a popular non-sciency student science exam taken in 11th or 12th after one class. If Bio and European history are your 9th grade classes, I would expect the IB classes to be on other topics because you can't take IB exams until end of junior year - so perhaps no Biology HL class is available. Homework: IB classes functioned as a rigorous honors track. Science classes did have a lot of homework. Students who were taking 2 IB sciences definitely were super-stressed. Humanities-focused students really thrived. As a senior, Dd was taking IB Math Studies (the easiest math track), IB Global Politics SL and IB Spanish HL - homework was about 90 minutes a day. When looking at college credit, it seemed more US universities granted AP credit than IB but that affected the more obscure classes (like IB Global Politics!) A high exam grade for most classes got the same credit as the high AP score. Things to consider: Is it an open program where all students in the school are encouraged to take as many of the IB classes as they want or do you have to be full IB to get access? Do they have the right HL classes for your student's interests? (Maybe a Music HL class?)
  12. What jumped out to me is that you have stepped back and are just grading his work. When my dd was taking Algebra 2, I imagined she would be able to teach herself using Derek Owens. It didn't work - she needed a live teacher working with her on the math when it got tough. Perhaps your ds needs a live teacher or tutor now? With teaching support, he might be able to finish MUS Algebra 2. Is it divided into units like other MUS levels? If he has 4 lessons left, is he in the final unit for the course? If his grades are okay for the previous units (I think MUS says 88% or up?) then could you start from the beginning of the last unit with teaching/tutor support? For the asd kids I know, "failing" Alg 2 or going back to the beginning would be a big, huge deal - so I would work hard to help the student finish the MUS course as a first step.
  13. DD 17 read a lot of fiction and lit, especially through 4th to 8th grade. We did First Language Lessons and MCT in elementary, and dabbled in languages including Latin. This language rich environment (channeling Julie Bogart here) probably helped her develop her strong natural abilities. When I realized that the SAT might not be cancelled (after a year of cancellations) I had her go over some English sections from the official book of practice tests so that she'd understand the format. I definitely recommend at least prepping by working through a couple of practice tests. DD got a 760. For learning grammar specifically, I have come to think it is best learned through using a new language - not one that is native to you. This can be done with Latin, but it's harder because you're not speaking, and you're doing very little writing. Both my dds became interested in really understanding grammar to improve their chosen foreign languages.
  14. Fafsa done. My docs done. Common app profile done. Next up : entering her colleges... . @Arcadia my oldest's EFC was something like $176,000. We were glad we did the fafsa though as she did get scholarships, including WUE.
  15. Gil's Academy for the Dangerously Gifted in Erudition and Technology Gil's Awful Dungeon of Grievous Educational Torture - just kidding!
  16. What are your favorite containers for storing cut vegetables in the fridge? Also, favorite jars for homemade pickles? Thanks!
  17. I lightly edited the longer version of the description from the website. It has pasted a little off - the chapter topics should be in 2 columns in order to keep it all to one page. I also included a table with all my student's homework, test and exam grades. This course will cover the topics normally covered in a second year course in high school algebra. The course was originally based on the book Algebra 2 by Larson, Boswell, Kanold and Stiff, published by McDougal Littell, 2001 edition. The topics covered in this course correspond closely to the topics covered in this book, although the explanations in the lectures are expanded over those in the book, at times significantly. All of the course content comes from the video lectures and the Student Workbook. Assignments will consist of Practice Problems from the workbook, instructional videos online, and written assignments. Homework assignments and tests are printed from the website, completed, and turned in for a grade. One final exam for each semester will be taken in class at the end of each semester. Students will receive a numerical grade for each semester and for the year. The grade is calculated based on tests, graded homework and the final exams. The instructor: Derek Owens graduated from Duke University in 1988 with a degree in mechanical engineering and physics. He taught physics, honors physics, AP Physics, and AP computer science at The Westminster Schools in Atlanta, GA from 1988-2000, and taught physics while heading the Satellite Science Program at Duke. Since 2006, he has been a full-time teacher for homeschoolers in the Atlanta area. (Description source: www.derekowens.com/course_info_algebra2.php) Course Outline These topics comprise the material normally taught in a high school Algebra 2 course. Chapter 1: Equations and Inequalities Chapter 2: Linear Functions and Equations Chapter 3: Systems of Equations Chapter 4: Quadratic Functions Chapter 5: Polynomials and Polynomial Functions Chapter 6: Powers, Roots, and Radicals Chapter 7: Exponential and Logarithmic Functions Chapter 8: Rational Equations and Functions. Chapter 9: Conic Sections Chapter 10: Sequences and Series Chapter 11: Trigonometric Ratios and Functions Chapter 12: Trigonometric Graphs, Identities, and Equations Text: Algebra 2: Student Workbook and Lecture Notes by Derek Owens
  18. Also recommending classicalU.com. It has a series of short courses in classical learning and also in pedagogy. I participated in a 6 week book club with authors Clark and Jain reading their book The Liberal Arts Tradition: A Philosophy of Christian Classical Education this summer - most of the other participants were directors of schools - through CAP. Science and math teachers who have changed careers from engineering are valued. Check out the careers of John Mays, author of the Novare Science curriculum at Classical Academic Press, or Derek Owens.
  19. Dd16 does math through Derek Owens - Alg 2 last year and now Precalc. It's working very well for us, and I would definitely recommend it. The 9th grade Physics class in our local school district (which abuts yours) correlates to Derek Owen's Physical Science class rather than his Physics class. I think your 9th grader might struggle in his Physics class since she has not completed Algebra 2. I pm'ed you. 🙂
  20. Bumping to update: SAT test sites are closed here. We will try for March 2021, I think, since fortunately she is a junior. Thinking of parents of seniors! Good luck everyone!
  21. It can be hard to get a good picture of conditions in a distant city in our current news climate. @Lanny this article from AP news https://apnews.com/c6667f34cbafe73c36be32d41a3b8325 may provide a better picture of Portland, OR. I live very close the main protest site downtown. I would not go to the 2 blocks around the Justice Center between the hours of 10pm and 3am unless I wanted to participate in protests, but life here in Portland is normal and not dangerous. @AEC If the spike of violence at the protest activity in Kenosha is driven by non-locals, it may stop quickly. Keep an eye on the news - I see there is an arrest for the shooting - but unless your dc has an interest in participating in the protests, they are easily avoided. In my experience so far this year, the bigger question is how long your student's university will be online only, and if the surrounding community will be very restricted. My dd18 had a mix of in person, online and hybrid classes when she arrived at her college. She just finished her 14 day mandatory quarantine - in time for a stay at home order for her city. All classes had switched to online before they started on August 24th. It is worth talking through with your dc what it might be like to be on a mostly closed campus with all classes online. @Lanny I would love to hear what your daughter says about her experience with this. Would she advise current freshmen to move in their dorms with all online classes and a mostly closed campus?
  22. Hugs! It will be okay. What helped me with the overwhelm of 9th grade - Reading Teaching from Rest and rebooting 9th with a ruthlessly trimmed workload (I love to design courses that have 50 hours reading a week - blush!), deliberately scheduling margin into every day. Recognizing that 9th grade is meant to be a step up from 8th, not a ginormous leap into college level work. Reading the wise words of forum folks whose students aren't radically accelerated. I love that we have a population here whose students are doing amazing things! But I do need to step back sometimes and remind myself that most 9th graders are doing geometry or algebra, not calculus. Spending a half an hour to an hour or so every day just hanging out with each teen. One likes walking or playing together. One likes drinking tea or cooking together.
  23. Back in December I had no idea that driving 7 hours to take a test would be anything but laughable... I guess this could be plan C 😄
  24. Thanks for the suggestion to check with the school about SAT testing. I'll make a note to call them when (if?) they reopen. High schools here close completely over summer, so no-one answers the phone before mid-August. I looked up my nearest CLEP center - Mt Hood Community College. They are mostly online for fall but have a handful of in person classes currently scheduled, so testing might be happening. CLEP hasn't been on my radar, as DD prefers home-designed courses. Maybe CLEP Precalculus could substitute for SAT Math 2?
  25. Math: Derek Owens Precalculus - the only class not taught by me Science: Biology - using Oak Meadow's new high school biology as a spine, tweaked to allow a deep dive into the deep ocean and octopuses English: Finishing Byline (Clearwater Press) for an easy US literature credit. Homemade Chinese literature study of the 4 great novels History: East Asian history using Ebrey and Walthall, East Asia as a spine Foreign Language: Japanese using Genki as a spine, and probably italki for conversation practice Art: Okay I don't teach this either. This is DD's passion - she spends at least 2 hours every day learning, creating, challenging herself
×
×
  • Create New...