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LMCme

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  1. Not with a 12 year old, but I work 2.5 days per week at a pretty demanding job, and for me the big shift was realizing that the days I'm at work are not going to work as homeschool days. After a lot of stress and frankly a little bit of anger at the person who in my mind was "supposed to" be doing school on those days, we just don't try to do school on the days I'm at work. Is there a way you can do school in the 4 days you are home? And if he misses fun things due to having to do school on what is a day off for the majority of the world, it might be a good time to point out that he can do his work while you are at work, and be able to play soccer on Saturday with the rest of the world, you know? BTW, the sitter thing is difficult. It sucks to be paying someone to hang out with your 12 year old who just isn't doing the work to check up. On the other hand, I'm not sure changing sitters will help. It is really hard to find a good sitter, much less sitter-tutor. Hope you figure out something to restore peace in your home... sounds like a lot on your plate.
  2. While CC tends to do Henle really young, it was, as far as I understand, meant as a high-school-level, four-year course. So if Henle is overwhelming, you might try a different curriculum. Latin gets overwhelming for younger children when there are multiple parts of the mechanics that aren't totally solid yet, e.g. conjugating the verb, declining the noun, getting the vocabulary, getting the word order, then actually writing all that down. Spending more time getting automatic with the basics with simpler seat work, as is done in the curricula for younger kids, tends to help a lot. If you are committed to Henle, you can take him through each sentence step by step -- first vocab for each word in the sentence (complete entries for nouns and verbs, and for pronouns what case the pronoun takes, etc). Then take him through the verb noting the entire conjugation (e.g. laudo/laudare/laudavi/laudatus would be vocab, then for conjugation you would say first person present active indicative, then 'translate' what that means in normal English). The verb clues you in to the noun that is the subject, so then jump to that noun (remember you should already have the vocab done for this) and you state that it is singular/plural and what case. And so on. But this is a far more teacher driven approach than just sitting him down with a sentence to translate all at once using a grammar table, which is hard even for high school and college students.
  3. We like the Candlewick Press Illiad by Gillian Cross.
  4. They seem to have it in their heads that your job is to make it fun. Don't get me wrong, it's nice when it's fun, but at the end of the day your job is to make sure they learn what they need to know to be well educated adults, not to entertain them every day. Lots of moms get wrapped up in the idea that it's supposed to be entertaining, but if your kids are just rejecting everything then it's time to tell them what they are going to do (bored or not, having fun or not) and then do it. Once they are used to doing as you ask without complaining, you can go back to including more fun stuff. It can be helpful to have an outside observer go through what you're doing and your kids reactions if you are worried your kids might be right, or unsure of what needs to be covered (the other parent can help with this sometimes). Best, l
  5. Rod and Staff does it as part of grade 1. They emphasize drilling until math facts are a no brainer. That said, they build up to this with manipulatives. The approach is fact familiies (e.g., addition family 3 is 0+3, 1+2, 2+1, 3+0). Very traditional, but my son really enjoys it. LMC
  6. I agree with a lot of what has been said above -- if you have a fever, vomiting, or diarrhea, you get the day off. Otherwise, we start doing school. And sometimes, I'm wrong -- which is okay. We can always stop after starting, or do easy/fun subjects that require less consistent attention than math. LMC
  7. Blending is usually a developmental skill rather than taught. There are methods for teaching blending, though. Check out Bearing Away from Sound Foundations, which is usually used for children with severe learning disabilities but could conceivably be used for your child. My advice would be, though, to give it a year and meanwhile if she is truely despirate, let her sound out the letters one by one, then you blend it for her slowly, then have her say it fast: e.g, Mom: okay, lets do this word, [point] Child: "buh" "aah" "tuh" Mom: Good, "baaatttt". Say it fast! Child: bat. Mom: good, next word [point]. At the end of the sentance, go back and read it to her so to model fluency. Best, LMC
  8. We use Image of God for our young children but will likely switch to Faith and Life as they get older. We do bible verse memorization -- we live in a very protestant area so being able to rattle off bible verses is kind of de rigeur. We talk about saints, read little kid books about saints as they come around, etc. We do religious "stuff" around holidays (e.g., talk about Halloween as All Hallows Eve; make sure we do advent stuff during advent, continue Christmas through the Christmas season). They go to CCD where they use "Seeds" for the littles. For us it is less about doing religion class and just making sure it is something built into everyday life -- my kids know the sign of the cross because they make it multiple times during the day, not because they learned about it in "catechism class". Best, LMC
  9. We tried it out and it is pretty enjoyable. My 5 year old seems to be getting a lot out of it, although some of it is over his head. I'm not committed enough at this point (as we are moving) to get materials together for the experiments. And once I regain my commitment, the screens will once again be banished from our household... so not a long term Science solution for our household. But good brain candy. LMC
  10. Maybe try it out and see what happens? Probably won't be the end of the world in any case. Part of being in community with others is sometimes going along with things that might not be your first preference, giving it some time to work and, if after a while it really isn't working to then respectfully approach whoever is in charge of such things and let them know what is going on. LMCme
  11. Depending on where your child is at educationally, the CLE readers for their Reading series feature children who are generally well behaved, with some kids not behaving and then you can discuss what was wrong with the behavior. If you get the teachers manual for Reading 1 as well as the reader (I Wonder) it will guide you through having the discussions. The discussions are biblically based, so if you are not Christian it may not work all that well. Best, LMC
  12. If the price for AAR is too much, consider Dancing Bears, published by Sound Foundations. It helped my DS a lot with reading more carefully and fluently. It is only to learn decoding and does teach common site words. You can see the entire book and flashcards at their website. It is O-G, so the phonemes learned are likely very similar to AAR and Montessauri. To warn you, as it looks a bit bland at first, it is lists of words to practice phonograms with a built in review on the list of words. Because they use a cursor (basically a business card sized piece of cardstock with a corner cut out that you drag accross the word to reveal it phoneme by phoneme), it allows you to control the pace and avoid the student rushing. We did 1-2 pages per day unless we came up to a story, which my son always wanted to read as soon as he saw it. If you are interested in a true reading curriculum (i.e., reading skills other than decoding), we like CLE Reading 1, but make sure you look at the previews to make sure that your child is going to be able to read at that level; Reading 1 is second term of first grade, after a decoding course. Best, LMC
  13. I'm homeschooling a 5 year old, so the stakes are a lot lower, but I didn't do school for a good month or two before delivery and then started back probably 6-8 weeks after. And then went back slow. My only regret is that I didn't take off the last three months of pregnancy... I wasn't a great teacher and was a bear to deal with those last couple of months. LMC
  14. Hi, First off, realize that with a 4 year old, you don't need to do anything formal. If you want to do something academic, I'd prioritize teaching phonics. At 4 years old, that could either be writing each letter on an index card and spending a few minutes per day learning the most common sounds they make (i.e., short vowel sounds only, hard c) or you could get a book (e.g. the Ordinary Parent's Guide to Teaching Reading, one of the Dancing Bears books from Sound Foundations). If you want to add handwriting, you can either learn one of the most common handwriting types (Getty Dubay, D'Neilian, or Zaner Bloser) and teach it to your child by just writing the letters on some handwriting paper and letting him copy them, or by getting a workbook with one of those methods. If you want to add math, you can either DIY (counting, skip counting, money, clocks are common topics) or you can get a Kindergarden math program (Saxon K works for a 4 year old). If you want to do more of an enrichment type thing, check out Five in a Row. All in all, don't stress too much at this point! Have fun :) Best, LMC
  15. We did Saxon Math K and Phonics every day. DS was very energetic at that age, so we did about 10 minutes of Phonics, during which he was allowed to fidget, wiggle, stand on his head, jump on the bed, and literally climb the walls as long as he could read while he was doing it. Saxon math he loved, but it couldn't be done while his toddler brother was about because toddlers + manipulatives = explosions. Other than that, we read aloud (I found Five in a Row helpful for figuring out what we could discuss as well as their book lists and sometimes activities, but we didn't do it religiously). We played. Our total "school" time was about 30 minutes per day. As far as whether he missed out, I feel like a lot of the stuff they do at preschool is a way to fill up time with academic-y things. Your kid is just fine with playing freely, moving freely, etc. Best, LMC
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