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krisperry

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Posts posted by krisperry

  1. Good starter list of skills that I will teach both my boys and girls :tongue_smilie: Here are some others:

     

    • Basic car maintenance: changing oil, tire, and probably a few that aren't too difficult like changing brake pads...
    • Gardening and seed saving
    • How to purify water
    • Starting a fire
    • Basic yard work - raking, pruning, edging, mowing...
    • Basic card games - Spades, Hearts, Bridge...
    • Like 2
  2. I have a good friend, an elementary school teacher, who would like to move to Scotland. She would like to find a teaching job and is looking for any resources to help her in her quest. I figured some of you guys might have some information.

     

    If nothing else, inspirational pictures can be forwarded to her :laugh:

  3. Another one here - it is very reassuring to read this thread! I identified with all the posts but in particular with Kathy in Richmond.

     

    Sometimes I get down right envious of some of the other homeschool moms in our group. They seem so.... content in all that they do. I can't seem to be settled for more than a few days without "reviewing my process". It is frustrating. Even when I don't allow myself to shake things up to much, I still seem to always need to review, reassess, reorganize even if it is just mentally.... Blargh!

    • Like 1
  4. This book is pretty cheap and does a great job teaching you how to design websites: http://www.amazon.com/Head-First-HTML-CSS-XHTML/dp/059610197X/ref=pd_sim_b_1

     

    The newest version is here though it is not yet reviewed:

    http://www.amazon.com/Head-First-HTML-Elisabeth-Robson/dp/0596159900/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&qid=1346981576&sr=8-9&keywords=html

     

    The book has assignments in it so it would be easy to grade.

  5. Ack! That was my crazy thread *blush* Here is what I ended up with and I feel good about it for 9th grade.

     

    EHE - ALL of it. Some of the questions I turned into essay questions. All the projects have to be bigger ones. (no animal reports :tongue_smilie:) She is not allowed to use the World Book. She has to find the information on the internet/ in books and cite the resource. She learns quite a bit more than just what is in the EHE with the open ended research (rather than being restricted to one source)

     

    Mapping - I beef this up a bit by copying the mapping pages before she fills them out. She is quizzed on the mapping section using my blanks.

     

    Tests - I choose some of the information from the EHE and have her complete my own tests. One per section studied.

     

    Since I have younger children, she reads aloud any of the nonfiction readers to the younger kids. We do Sonlight secularly so I've dropped any mission stories.

     

    To the nonfiction read-alouds, I've added for her (so far):

    Material World

    Women in the Material World

     

    She watches quite a few Netflix documentaries and is require to give me either an oral summary or written summary. For the Pacific Islands, she watched Pururambo

     

    She is required to watch Student News / News. 3 times a week she gives me oral / written reports. Extra credit is earned if she can relate a news story to anything she is currently learning.

     

    We discuss a LOT. I was an anthropology major though and find it quite fun.

     

    Literature:

    I ended up keeping quite a bit of my list. But I found a wonderful World Literature book & Teacher's Guide that is full of short stories (none are abridged). They are placed in historical context and the critical thinking and essay questions at the end of each are superb. I decided to use half novels and half of the World Literature book. Here is my schedule:

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AtefHkOTSNcmdFBUUVU0czBET3ZpSE0zQXpvQ0JXalE

     

    For an additional credit, she is also completing a World Religions course:

    World Religions (2009): A Voyage of Discovery, Third Edition

    Other than the introduction, the Catholic publisher has been fine. I'm impressed with the book.

  6. Eyes bugging out to the point that I wonder if they will go back into place....

     

    It has several variation

     

    1. "Stunned disbelief" - these bug eyes are usually accompanied with a gaping mouth

     

    2. "I'm the most wronged person on the planet" - Manages to make bug eyes squint too and mouth is in a snarl.

     

    3. "Excited" - Over the top excitement which is accompanied crazy flapping arms and some inhuman shrieking

  7. We are secular homeschoolers. We used it for a year. I think it is extremely well done but it was just too over-the-top. We got through the year fine but it was too much for me to continue year after year after year....

     

    We ended up with Galore Park and MCT as our winning combination.

     

    (I do use other Christian materials such as Sonlight year after year.)

  8. My husband is black and I'm white. Maybe the wording of the scholarship would determine how I'd view my kids and what they are eligible for? Not sure.

     

    OTOH, we did have a "one-drop" law. It is a law adopted by most states less than 100 years ago. Rule unconstitutional in 1967 by the US Supreme Court. More information here:

     

    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/jefferson/mixed/onedrop.html

     

    http://blackhistory.com/content/63228/one-drop-rule

     

    Interesting topic.

  9. I recommend A Discovery of Witches and the sequel, Shadow of Night. She writes great. The series has been called Harry Potter for grown ups. I piced up A Discovery of Witches last summer and read it all in one day. I could not put it down. Second is just a good, if not better.

     

    Here's a link to the author's site:

     

    http://deborahharkness.com/discovery-of-witches/

     

    Downloaded this to my Kindle last night on a whim. Was up way later than normal ;) Thanks for the rec!

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