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ChocolateMomster

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Posts posted by ChocolateMomster

  1. I'm so happy to read this! I was already wondering why they were struggling so much, and was actually browsing through the R&S book to find some help with teaching it, but alas...couldn't find it, because they don't teach it yet at that age. R&S was ultra boring, but it worked.

  2. After having used R&S for some time, we got really bored and fed up with it. It took ages to just get to the point, and I had to wade through the book to find something to learn for my boys. We went ahead and printed out the first book (I believe it's level 1 - grade 2) from the KISS grammar website. First few lessons were great, but we're now completely stuck on complements. Is this basic grammar for this age or is it advanced? Any tips on how to get over this hurdle? We really, really do like KISS, and it gets done, but they just don't get what a complement is. We watched a few YouTube videos and I tried to explain it in different ways, but no success.

  3. 1st - Moving House

    2nd - Nothing, he came on due date

    3rd - 2 weeks late, finally got things started with litres of fresh pineapple juice and clary sage (aromatherapy)

    4th - 1 week early, red raspberry leaf tea and clary sage.

     

    Good luck, I'll be in your position in a couple weeks time. It's hard!!

  4. We've had the same Dyson for 7 years now, and it works still as well as when we first got it. We only had to replace the HEPA filter, but we have a dust allergy so do that more often than some others might.

  5. One more book for this week -- I feel like I'm the last person to finally read The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up by Marie Kondo -- also a library loan, after being on the waiting list for months. Finished it today and thought, "wonderful, but THAT is not happening!" but I still am glad I learned how to fold my clothes back when I first heard about it.

     

    I haven't read it yet. It's in my basket on Amazon, but I keep spending my book budget on other books...books that don't make me have to tidy up.

     

    • Like 10
  6. I haven't been here for weeks, or better said: I haven't been here since week 2. We moved house and I hardly got any reading done, and now I'm nearing the end of my pregnancy and my brain has turned to mush. I've been binge watching Prison Break. I'm nearly done and need to get back in the reading mode. I need something a bit more simple, any suggestions???

     

    Currently I'm reading:

    • War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy (I hate this book with a passion, but I'm reading it with a friend, so I'll just have to keep on going. Note to Self: Never ever read with a friend again)
    • Utopia, by Thomas More
    • My Family and Other Animals, by Gerald Durrell
    • Birth of Britain, by Winston Churchill

    Finished so far:

    • The Fellowship of the Ring, by J.R.R. Tolkien
    • Hamlet, by Shakespeare
    • Beatrix Potter, a Life in Nature, by Linda Lear
    • How to Read a Book, by Mortimer Adler
    • The Disappearing Spoon, by Sam Kean
    • The Martian Chronicles, by Ray Bradbury

    Books I've given up on for now:

    • The Imitation of Christ, by Thomas A Kempis
    • My Utmost for His Highest, by Oswald Chambers
    • Paradise Lost, by John Milton

    Oh my, we love the Murdurous Maths books. We own them all!I'm not too sure how much they really picked up from the books, though. :p

    • Like 10
  7. I'm not sure if you heard this tip, but this is what I did, on the advice of someone from the bfsu yahoogroup.  

     

    You can take the book to an office supply store, and often they will charge a couple of bucks to slice off the binding and 3 hole punch the entire book.  Then I took that home and stapled the individual lessons together and put it all into a 3 ring binder.  That way, I could pull out individual lessons as needed, sometimes 2 or 3 to plan ahead.  

     

    This also makes it easier to go through several lessons and make a shopping list of materials so you'll be ready to go when your each that lesson.  

     

    But here's another lesson that I learned the hardway.  Don't purchase elodea (freshwater plants for a bio lesson), put it on your shelf for several months, and then plan to use it later.  By the time I retrieved my "elodea" from my science supplies shelf...it was dead and brown, lol!  

     

    PS, there are still folks on the yahoogroup, but it isn't as active anymore.  Most bfsu fans seem to have migrated to a similar facebook group, and they seem pretty active.  

     

    Lol, thanks for the warning not to order anything living ahead of time :lol: I could totally see myself doing something like that!

     

    I can't seem to find the Facebook page you mention. :confused1:

     

    There's also a website where Dr. Nebel is posting online resources for each lesson.  I have found it to be very useful.  http://www.bfsucommunity.com/

     

    Thanks for that, it does look very helpful and time saving.

  8. Thank you so much! This is really helpful, I didn't even think of ordering it online. I could just order all the supplies at the start of the year and have them ready for the lessons. It sure does look like a lot of fun!

    • Like 1
  9. Looking at the samples, I really like what I see of the second and third book. The first lesson from the first book is not my cup of tea, but well...I can see where it's heading. So, yes, overall it does look awesome!

     

    Question regarding the supplies needed: Looking at the third sample, I was a bit shocked/surprised. For one lesson you need: a stereo or radio speaker, discarded motor, discarded generator, and a hand-crank generator. :mellow: :huh:

    I mean...I don't mind hunting supplies, but this is kind of crazy :glare: How's the rest of the book? I've found a list for volume 1 and nothing is being mentioned I can't get my hands on quite easily.

     

    Thanks!

    • Like 1
  10. We moved from The Netherlands to the UK, a minor change, but even so with lots of cultural differences. Also, remember, that even though you'll make friends overseas, you don't have family nearby, and friends just don't replace family. The longer you're abroad, the more the people from your home country will forget you. There have been a lot of lonely times for us, even though our home country is so nearby. I'd go for a prolonged holiday, if it's not your intention on staying in the country.

    • Like 4
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