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ofthevine

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Posts posted by ofthevine

  1. My son would like to go into the medical field and has been successfully using Foerster textbooks. He will soon complete Alg. II. 

    The thought is to move onto his Precalculus book, but I can't offer a ton of help and the Math Without Borders videos don't seem super helpful, but that could be my boredom speaking. 😆

    We're also looking at Shormann, Mr. D Math, and Derek Owens (though it seems much more expensive...or I have to grade myself). 

    Thoughts on any of these programs vs. Foerster? Should we just continue with Foerster? Do the other programs offer enough rigor? Will the spiral nature of Shormann drive us nuts? Is Derek Owens really worth the cost? 

     

  2. Spectrum Chemistry vs. Jay Wile's Discovering Design with Chemistry: Which would you choose and why?

    Background info: My son currently desires to become a doctor (family physician or genetic counselor). He has completed Rainbow Science and will take Biology the following year with our co-op. He has completed Algebra I. Chemistry would be completed at home.

  3. On 4/2/2017 at 3:43 PM, SunshineMom said:

    I don't mean to hijack...my dd13 is also interested in medicine. She is taking a hs honors biology class this year and plans to take Anatomy and Physics in 9th. 10th will be honors chemistry and maybe homegrown genetics. Shes also planning to volunteer at the hospital and the Red Cross. She's attending a Neuroscience workshop next weekend at the teaching hospital. I want to expose her to the field as much as I can. I hope I'm directing her in the right direction.

     What is the genetics course? My son is thinking about becoming a genetic counselor.

  4. From what I understand, you determine this as you will. I have seen various syllabi where homework (daily work, in this case) counts up to 80%. I think it is important to give a balance and not just teach to a test yet also not skew our grades so that homeschoolers across the board can not be trusted. If they know the material and are putting forth effort, you'll know that.

    • Like 1
  5. Honestly, right now, I'm feeling it out. I am unsure if I could really teach a semester of each and want to talk to the parents to see if they want this to be a course that prepares them for CLEP or AP tests. 
    Two of my favorite high school classes were psychology and sociology. They were so fascinating and quite fun. I would like to show some videos, have discussion, and give them an introduction to each.

  6. On 12/31/2018 at 10:22 AM, Gil said:

    However, I recognize the effectiveness and benefit of a taking a "gap year" or even "gap years" during middle school are somewhat anchored by how much money or time the family can invest in enabling the childs interest, what level of access the child will have to a mentor, what kind of coaching/support they can get on an in-depth project, etc. Depending on the childs maturity and ability to self-regulate, he may need more/less parental support to make any progress with a particular project, no matter how interested he is in the field/subject in theory.


    Very good point. I'll have to make sure my dh, ds and I sit down to figure out a plan beforehand.

  7. My oldest son is very young for his grade (elsewhere he would be in a younger grade) but has always been accelerated in both reading and now math. However, I'm interested in having a type of gap year where he can pursue interests and maybe hone in on a future career option before we go diving into high school and requirements. Has anyone done this? Thoughts on this type of thing?

    We would continue to have him write papers on his experiences with due dates, etc.

  8. We used P4/5 and while it was a little light for my already-reading son who loved sitting and listening to books, we sometimes doubled up on the material or just added in other books to read as a family and for him to read alone.

     

    You can keep both children at their correct LA level and math level and I don't feel that you would be holding the oldest back in any way.  The books are good at stretching their ability to sit and listen, as well.

  9.  

    Put simply, TOG is more than I want or need.

     

    I haven't tried Biblioplan beyond printing the samples, filing them, and looking over the book list to see if I have enough to give it a good trial run. Frankly, every option leaves me dissatisfied which is the REAL issue (me).

     

     

    This.

     

    I was debating MFW/TOG/BP and will be going with MFW next year.  I will add in Sonlight read-alouds. 

     

    I requested every book I could get my hands on that BP had on their list for the year and did the same for TOG.  Then I checked out their samples in-depth. 

     

    TOG had an immense amount of stuff to do, but I don't feel like history is THE most important subject above all else.  If I did, I would choose TOG.  However, I think Bible, Math and LA are more important.

     

    I actually tended to like the BP books better for the grammar-aged students, but the Companion would have been over my kids heads, so what's the point?

     

    MFW looks like they have what I need. I'll try it for a year and check it out.

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