Tardis Girl Posted November 21, 2013 Share Posted November 21, 2013 I just started reading through the exercises and was planning to start this pretty much right away. I'm wondering if those of you who love/use this book have your kids write out every exercise, or do you just have them talk through them when it's an exercise that lends itself to that? I guess more to the point, do you think that much of the VALUE of the exercise relies on the actual "putting pen to paper" to help really solidify the skills and actual point of the lesson? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SunnyDays Posted November 21, 2013 Share Posted November 21, 2013 We aren't very far into this, but so far, I'm picking and choosing. Some we discuss together, some he writes out. I think there's value to writing out many of the exercises, but mine is a bit pencil-averse, so I'd rather focus, for now, on working with the words and how they fit together well, if that makes sense. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tardis Girl Posted November 21, 2013 Author Share Posted November 21, 2013 Thanks, SunnyDays! We did the first practice set orally today, then they wrote out the 2nd practice set of 4 sentences. I haven't really looked through more than 1/4 of the book, so I should probably do that. ;) Anyone else care to chime in? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roadrunner Posted November 22, 2013 Share Posted November 22, 2013 I had my DS8 write out almost everything. Merciless, I know. Wanted to add that we found great value in copy work, which is what some of those assignments resemble. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
abrightmom Posted November 22, 2013 Share Posted November 22, 2013 We do what Sunny Days does: pick and choose. I find no value in asking my kid to write out what can be learned orally. Depends on the kiddo, I am sure. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Clear Creek Posted November 22, 2013 Share Posted November 22, 2013 The combining exercises are done orally, the imitation sentences are written out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThatHomeschoolDad Posted November 22, 2013 Share Posted November 22, 2013 Wait....did I misread that topic line? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chrysalis Academy Posted November 24, 2013 Share Posted November 24, 2013 At first we did it orally. I didn't think it was sticking, so I switched to having her write out the sentences. I'm much happier with this. It's good practice, and it makes the models "stick" better. We're using Grammar for Middle School, btw. It is a much better book than Sentence composing for middle school, much more straightforward exercises. They are definitely redundant content, but GfMS is much better in that it uses the grammatical terms. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cosmos Posted November 24, 2013 Share Posted November 24, 2013 We do it orally, but we discuss a lot and don't follow the book precisely. When he comes up with one he particularly likes, he records it in a notebook. Usually in a session, he orally composes lots of sentences and writes down 1-3 of them. (We do the same thing with the copia exercises in WWS. We try to spend 10-20 minutes on this kind of sentence work -- Killgallon, WWS copia, or exercises of my own -- most days.) He's accumulating quite a nice collection of sentences in his notebook that might inspire a story in the future. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.