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kanagnostos

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Posts posted by kanagnostos

  1. I used Lost Tools of Writing I (4th edition) with my son. The comparison essays did not come until the very end of the program. I'm not sure if that is different in the new 5th edition.

     

    For the first several essays, the writer would choose a character and an action that the character did or decision that the character made and write an essay about whether the character should have done that (for example, whether Bilbo should have gone with the Dwarves to The Lonely Mountain). Each essay took 3 weeks. The first week was devoted to Invention. The second week worked on Arrangement. The third week focused on Elocution.

     

    Unless the new edition is different, you can start off right away using books that your child is reading. I personally let my son choose his own topics, but you could brainstorm different ideas with your child if that's helpful to get started.

  2. How much writing are your kids doing? Per day? Per week? What type of writing? Within a writing program or separate?

     

    We used LTOW last year and had great success with it, completing an essay every 3 weeks using issues pulled from whichever of the Great Books ds15 was reading at the time. He really did no other writing. I want to ramp up his writing in the upcoming school year, but I really don't have an idea how much is appropriate or how to fit it in. Looking for thoughts and ideas from the hive...

     

    Thanks!

  3. Ds15 has completed Discovery of Deduction this year and wants to continue formal logic next year.

     

    Me: What?!? You're joking... WHY?

     

    So, I have been looking a Traditional Logic 1 and 2. Having completed DoD, would he start with Traditional Logic 1 or go to Traditional Logic 2?  The sample chapter of TL1 on the website looked like things we have already covered in DoD.

  4. I'm using 180 hours per school year as a benchmark for a credit. Although ds doesn't have a clear idea regarding college at this point, I have checked into the admissions requirements for some of the local universities. Most don't seem to have any specific requirements at all regarding PE, so I'm not really concerned about this. As Momto2Ns indicated, I could consider the time he spent on these activities either way, and certainly, he would have at least 1 credit over the course of 4 years if needed.

     

    Any other potential gaps in our 9th grade plan?

  5. I would think that it depends on where you are and your state/provincial requirements. I don't see PE, music and second languages as extra-curricular. They are requirements for grade 9 in my province (for building school, not homeschool). Looks like a strong academic plan, though I think your PE looks thin. Any team sports included or health? 

     

    The public school requires 1.5 credits in PE for graduation. Ds really isn't into sports, except sabre fencing, but he does do workouts at home 2-3 times per week in addition to the 2 hours spent fencing, and he may develop interest in other sports over the course of the next few years. All in all, I'm estimating that I'll have 1.5 credits over the course of 4 years.

     

    We are planning to cover health another year.

     

    Music and foreign language are not required at all by the pubic school for graduation, although they do require 8.5 credits in electives. I'm planning for 1 credit over 4 years for music, although I could just keep that as an extracurricular?

  6. Ancient History:

    History of the Ancient World

    Great Books, as many as we can get to using Omnibus I and IV as a resource

    Lectures from the Great Courses which correspond to the above

     

    Math:

    Saxon Algebra I (he's a little more than halfway through this and we will move on to Algebra 2)

     

    Biology:

    Miller Levine Macaw Edition

    Labs using LabPaq and Illustrated Guide to Home Biology Experiments

     

    Language Arts:

    Lost Tools of Writing

    Analytical Grammar High School Reinforcement

    Introduction to Literary Analysis using Teaching the Classics followed by Windows to the World (Jill Pike syllabus)

    free SAT vocabulary lessons from National Math + Science Initiative

     

    Logic and Rhetoric:

    Art of Argument followed by Discovery of Deducation

     

    PE

    2 hours of sabre fencing per week plus home workouts 0.5 credit?

     

    Music

    Guitar 1 to 1-1/2 hours per week 0.25 credit?

     

    Spanish I at the public high school

    Intro to Tech & Engineering at the public high school

     

     

    Too much? Missing something?

  7. What I like about MFW AHL is that it integrates Bible, Literature, and History. But from the threads I've read, it might do that too well...to the point that it is difficult to change it up. It seems to be a meaty program, and I also like that it's written to the student for learning more independently. I think I'm going to try to get my hands on just the lesson plan portion and have a look.

     

    Dina, thank you listing all your resources! I'm taking a look at these and especially like "Bible in World History"

     

    Thanks ladies!

  8. First, there are other resources that I'm interested in implementing. For example, I thought I'd like to use Teaching the Classics + Windows to the World for lit analysis this year. However, I've read posts indicating that the daily time commitment for MFW AHL is around 3 hours per day, which makes me really hesitant to add more to the English component and also probably eliminates the possibility of adding in some Great Books.

     

    We're also halfway through Lost Tools of Writing, and I'd like to finish that program but I don't know how easy/appropriate/adviseable it would be to substitute LToW for the AHL writing assignments.

     

    Finally, I'm not thrilled with Notgrass as a spine.

     

    The other options I'm considering are WTM approach or Omnibus with HOAW or Spielvogl as spines.

     

    Can anyone familiar with MFW AHL offer some advice??

  9. Chiming in late -- It may not be just too many topics. There's a lot of added content per topic between Macaw and Dragonfly. It's probably easier to do the whole book if you are using the older edition. (This is anecdotal evidence, so take it with a grain of salt, but Dragonfly was chosen by the moms at my co-op this year. They didn't feel they could do Macaw in a once-a-week setting.)

     

    I've been reading a lot of high school bio websites to steal schedules and ideas: Miller & Levine is used for honors as well as regular biology. It's not AP level, but it is considered pre-AP by a lot of schools.

     

    In addition to the amount of content, there are many, many activities that correspond to each lesson, especially if using the interactive features. Just this evening I was looking over the very first lesson, Lesson 1.1. In addition to just reading the lesson content and any discussion utilizing the information in the teacher's guide, there are 3 videos you can watch, at least 6 different activities, 2 different projects, 4 study guide pages, 2 vocabulary activities including flashcards and a crossword, and 2 different assessments. I may have even missed a few things. Obviously you can't do everything...but you feel like you want to because so many of the activities tie directly into the lesson content. I can easily see spending 2 weeks on each chapter, which would make it impossible to cover the entire book.

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  10. Thanks, everyone, for your comments. I did end up purchasing a microscope because ds expressed interest in it. He also wants to "grow things." :) 

     

    I still haven't decided what lab program/package to go with, though. I do know that the LabPaq kit comes with its own portable microscope, so if we end up going with that we'll be more than covered in the microscope department.

     

    Still researching so if anyone has more tips/advice/favorite biology labs, I'm all ears!

  11. Ds13 is grade 8/9. We're using Miller/Levine macaw edition for biology. We have the virtual lab package that came with the interactive digital path, but I'm exploring options for live biology labs to go along with this curriculum just in case the virtual labs are not interesting for him. Two in particular that I'm really considering are LabPaq and Illustrated Guide to Home Biology Experiments...not that I wouldn't consider others. I'm in the process of researching them and would like to get the hive's opinion. Can anyone compare/contrast or make any recommendations?

     

    I'm reading through the Illustrated Guide right now, but I'm deep in microscope territory (which is making my head spin). And LabPaq lists the experiments but not much else. Are these similar programs...or very different? In terms of cost, they seem similar assuming I buy the kit  from Home Scientist. (Of course, then there's the microscope...which is an entirely different thread I could start :lol: )

     

    Any advice?

     

    Thanks!

    Katie

  12. We are a Christian family but not evangelical, and are we using Core F this year. The core uses some biographies from the Christian Heroes Then & Now series. Those books are easily omitted or, if the person is someone you think should be read about, easily substituted with a more secular book. If I remember correctly, that is the only part of the core that is overtly evangelical. I'm traveling right now so I don't have it in front of me, but I'll be home tomorrow so if you have other questions feel free to ask. I don't really feel that the core's "central purpose" is promoting evangelism, although Sonlight may state in their literature that it is. My son has learned so much about geography and other cultures, and he has really enjoyed the books. Honestly, I think you'd be able to use the core pretty much as-is with just a few substitutions.

  13. Hydrothermal Vents and Creatures That Live in Them

     

    A deep ocean hydrothermal vent is a fissure between tectonic plates on the ocean floor where water shoots out at high temperatures. Scientists hypothesized that these rifts existed, although no such rift had been discovered before 1977.

     

    In 1976 scientists sent unmanned craft down into the Galapagos Rift. These craft fetched water which had strange mineral content. As a result an expedition was launched in 1977. A manned submarine dove down into the rift to a depth of 2500 meters. They discovered hot springs in the ocean floor which were actually hydrothermal vents. Scientists called the vents "lush oases in a sunless desert...a phenomenon totally new to science."

     

    As I dive down into the ocean deep, I splash and feel the cold water washing over me. Now I will endeavor to search for some hydrothermal vent creatures. First, I see some giant mussels! I observe their shells are yellow, and they feel rough like stone. I understand their food is bacteria they get from the seawater. The next species I encounter is the giant clam. Freaky! Now these have white shells and red flesh, the cause of which is their oxygen rich flesh. I measure one of these monstrosities, and it is a whopping foot long! I move on to the white crab. These are the predators of the giant mussels, but they also eat tube worm stalks. Tube worms have white stalks protruding from the ground and red plumes filled with a substance called hemoglobin. Sometimes they can grow very long. They only get energy from the bacteria inside of them. They have no mouths or digestive systems. Now that I have seen some of these vents and creatures and their habitats, I will return to the surface, for I am quite out of oxygen!

  14. If you take a photo of a flower (or plant, animal, insect, mushroom, bird, etc.) and submit it to Project Noah (app from iTunes store), someone usually will identify it. I've even had comments about my photos with other possibilities that it could have been and reasons why this identification was chosen over that one. It's been fascinating! Ds12 loves to go on nature walks now and shoot photos for Project Noah.

  15. I am new here, so I hope that I'm not over-stepping by jumping in on this thread with a question. My (really ignorant) question about using KISS on the IPad, is *how* do you do it? Do you do the lesson plan/workbook activities/the online activities and just mock underline, etc., or is there some way to actually mark on the pages? Someone said something about converting. I didn't see an app for it. I'm probably over-thinking, but as you can tell, I'm also new to the IPad. :)

     

    When you download from the KISS Grammar site, the file will be in .doc format. So, you'll want to get CutePDF, as others have mentioned, which will allow you to convert this .doc file to PDF format. Once you've downloaded your file from the KISS Grammar site, you're going to print it...only instead of printing it to your printer you'll print it to CutePDF, which should appear as another printer option. Doing this will not physically print a hard copy of anything. It basically just makes a PDF copy of the document on your computer. You'll be asked to save it to a location on your computer.

     

    The next step will be to transfer this PDF file to your iPad. We use Dropbox. I have Dropbox installed on my PC and on my iPad. Just drag the PDF file you created into Dropbox and give it a few minutes to sync. Then open Dropbox on your iPad and voila!

     

    We also have PDFexpert on the iPad, which allows us to draw on/write on/make lines all over the PDF. So, if you have that (or some other app that allows you to do this), you'll then open the PDF in Dropbox and send it to PDFexpert (or other app) and you can do the lesson right on your iPad.

     

    HTH

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