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hsingscrapper

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Posts posted by hsingscrapper

  1. Well is this private school a christian school, catholic school, something different? She should have textbooks. Look at them and see who the publisher is.

     

    :iagree: There are a lot of private schools that take a bite of the federal apple for funding. Here that means they use the state curricula which homeschools are exempt from. I found this out during a scout meeting when I saw ps textbooks in a catholic school classroom.

  2. I have days like that. Days where I just do *not* want to get out of bed or deal with my dc more than to make sure they have food in their bellies and dry pants for the youngest.

     

    On those days, I get myself out of bed. I don't rush them out of bed. I grab a cup of coffee and breathe deep. On days when the frustration sets in during school, reading time is very thoroughly enforced and I get, if Mr. P is napping, an hour to unwind.

     

    Maybe instituting a post-lunch time of reading or quiet play would help. I also send the bigs to church on Sundays. That buys me time with just the toddler and dh or just dh if the little sleeps in.

     

    Stand your ground! Make an hour gap between their latest bedtime and yours. Get "chip faced" on your favorite ice cream.

  3. I didn't include the teacher stuff I've picked out. Here's what I figured out for my Rainbow budget.

     

    Math: cuisenaire rods as we have math through Pre-Algebra and then CK12 Flexbooks after that

    Writing: Wordsmith Apprentice

    English: 7th & 8th grade CGE (Fury changed his mind and likes it)

    History: Patriot's History of the United States (and the reader) and Story of Mankind

    Geography: Geography Coloring Books (Wynn Kapit) for both big boys

    Science: Marine Biology coloring book and Zoology coloring book

    Language: Getting Started with Spanish

    Handwriting: HWOT Cursive Handwriting

    Literature: Children's Homer

     

    I feel like I'm missing something. Any ideas?

  4. I haven't been the most religious about the 4 year cycle.

     

    I would like to get back on track and have run into a snag. The boys haven't read the early elementary versions of the Iliad and the Odyssey.

     

    I'd like a version that is in plain English but written at an upper elementary and beyond level. My 9yo decodes like a high schooler but comprehends at a 5th or 6th grade.

     

    What's your favorite? What would you suggest?

     

    I am also looking at adding a version of Jason and the Argonauts as well as some more, if not all, of the Greek myths to our home library. I would not be opposed to a collection.

  5. This is the idea once I get the books ordered.

     

    Mr. Picky Pants: Letter and Number awareness daily (we practice recognition and hunting for letters and numbers. He loves it!)

    Dragon still has handwriting to perfect. Other than that, he and Fury have the same schedule with age-appropriate math and language:

     

    Daily: Math and US History

    M-W-F: grammar, world history, and textbook science

    T-Th: geography, writing, and trading off marine biology and zoology.

     

    The geography, marine biology, and zoology books are highly detailed coloring books. The boys will take turns with the science coloring books but will each have his own geography coloring book.

     

    I'd love to hear the Hive's thoughts as we have been doing nothing but math, grammar, and reading for the last two years for various reasons.

  6. Well, we go through about 2-3dozen a week, and eggs last at least a month, so I'd just not buy eggs for a bit. We scramble them, fry them, devil them, hard boil them, stir-fry with them, etc. Crustless quiche, frittata, huevos rancheros, deviled eggs, egg burritos, egg casserole and egg salad are all popular dinner options around here if you prefer not to eat them for breakfast. One egg-based dinner would use up at least a dozen for a family of 6! We prefer farm-fresh also but don't particularly have a problem with Walmart or whatnot. If that's what I had on hand we'd eat 'em.

     

    Would you be willing to share your recipe for crustless quiche?

  7. "DD" is "dear daughter".

     

    As for having her tested, I'm not sure about that. She may just be in need of some remedial work in those areas. Teaching to a classroom means the teachers may have missed her having troubles.

     

    I had to play catch-up with Fury when we pulled him after First grade. The school's "Plan B" was just to shove more of "Plan A" down his throat. I wish I had known about OPGTTR then. It might have saved us a lot of grief.

     

    Above all, follow your motherly gut. If it's your intention to send her back, plan on at least a couple of years with her at home. Things may progress quicker but don't rush it.

     

    My boys will probably not see the inside of a classroom again until college.

  8. Christina Pirello

     

    Google her. She has a show on PBS called Christina Cooks. I can't remember which foods it she mentioned. I remember an episode where she was talking about ditching sugar cravings *without* feeling deprived.

     

    I'm sorry I can't remember more but maybe it might give you some ideas for satisfying her sweet tooth and maybe help her health at the same time.

  9. I started Dragon on reading instruction via OPGTTR shortly before his 4th birthday. I couldn't read without him pestering so it was time.

     

    He spent from August to December in a formal classroom and was sooo bored. We pulled him and Fury (struggling in 4th) out and brought them back home. I immediately dialed Dragon back to basics as his handwriting was almost non-existent.

     

    I would definitely stick with the basics of reading, handwriting, and as much math as is tolerable. Remember that your dc's reading may be easier than handwriting. Don't lump them together.

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