I meant to post something about this over the summer and I completely forgot! Yesterday I received an email from a fellow mom that I would consider a veteran homeschooler, she writes:
"Amanda, I have been struggling over math for this year. I have dragged my feet. I must make a decision today to get something here asap. I am considering Math U See and Teaching Textbooks (for algebra 1). Do you have any input? Or can you recommend someone that might have some advice??"
Here was my response, I hope it might be of use to someone!
So, I have a friend that used Math U See for several years. Her son really struggled with math in part because of the curriculum. She asked me to help tutor him for a little while and what I found in his pre-algebra and algebra CD was rather disappointing because they were teaching him tricks to get the right answer without the why and the how. Bob Jones uses spiral learning, so seeing lessons covered one time and move on is not how we have ever learned - the MUS curriculum may linger on a topic for a week or so, but then they move on and the student did not retain what they had learned.
I would not use this curriculum for this reason. Because there is limited written instruction, they do not cover topics in a way that encourages a thorough understanding. I have seen a young man really struggle with it. My friend switched to Teaching Textbooks, and her son is not planning to go to college, so it worked out for them.
I have two other friends who have used Teaching Textbooks. Their complaints were similar to my experience with MUS, the information is learned and forgotten because of the manner of teaching. Mastery is never achieved. I had one friend's son in my Physical Science class 2 years ago and we were working on 7th grade fractions with the physics portion of this course. Her son was very upset that he could not complete these problems and embarrassed in class. I talked to her about it and she said she had used TT and felt she had fallen farther behind.
The other friend posted her review of TT online a few weeks ago on her Facebook page. While her kids like the easiness of the text and the lack of repetitive 'busy work' she said the same thing - the kids never achieved mastery of the topic and so she was not happy with the curriculum because she had to constantly add to it. Without spiral learning, I don't know that mastery can be achieved in any subject.
So, we use Saxon Math with the DIVE CD. The Saxon math is repetitive because it uses the spiral method of learning. This really isn't a bad thing, although students may complain about it. Your brain is a muscle, you have to work it out to gain strength - you can't work out 1 time and then go win a race. Students add skills all year, without losing the skills they learned previously. This is exactly what we are looking for because math is the language of science, engineering, and any other technical/engineering/scientific type of job. This is where Macguines is gifted so we want to encourage and support him in a way that will allow him to have a GREAT foundation in Algebra - this is the building block to higher math, which is needed in many professions. Macguines' plan is to go on to college and study nanotechnology.
One concern that many people have with Saxon math is that their newer texts they are aligning with common core. This is true and I would not purchase a 4th edition text as they are full of errors and nonsensical, unproven methods. I would, however, purchase the 3rd edition . This edition is widely available, is well researched, edited(free of errors) and is proven to be a very good text.
On a typical day Macguines watches the DIVE CD lesson. He then completes the lesson in the book. The lesson is 30 questions. If Macguines is showing me that he isn't missing anything, and he completely understands the concept, I let him do only the odd ones (so 15 questions) but most of the time he does all 30.
Macguines will watch the video - about 10-15 minutes, and then complete the questions - about an hour - so Math takes about 1.5 hours, 4 days per week. There are 120 lessons and in a year he will spend about 180 hours on math.
I hope this helps!
Amanda
So commit yourselves wholeheartedly to these words of mine. Tie them to your hands and wear them on your forehead as reminders. Teach them to your children. Talk about them when you are at home and when you are on the road, when you are going to bed and when you are getting up. Write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates, so that as long as the sky remains above the earth, you and your children may flourish in the land the Lord swore to give your ancestors. Dueteronomy 11:18-21
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Friday, August 16, 2013
Our Home Educating Journey: Growing up
Chapter 10
Growing up
I was talking to someone about homeschooling last week and I
said “I was just a baby when we started this!” and my hubby, charming male that
he is, laughed at me!
But, truth be told, I WAS just a baby! I wasn’t even 30 yet!
I am thankful that when I was a child my parents took me to
church and made me participate in programs like AWANAS and that when I
misbehaved I had to copy chapters of the book of Proverbs. I
have hidden your word in my heart, that I might not sin against you, Lord.
Psalms 119:11. I was in my late
20’s before I understood what was meant by a daily quiet time, but I am so
thankful for the mission leaders that taught me, and my husband, to do a daily
quiet time. I was given some great tools to grow up in the Lord.
More than that, and building on that, I am thankful for the opportunity to home educate my
children. When we discussed
homeschooling we saw it as a way to take Godly instruction to our children to
the next logical step. Homeschooling has been a wonderful way to grow up some God loving kids.
Every year, about this time, there are tons of commercials
and pictures that show sad faced children returning to school and mothers
jumping for joy. Until I started
homeschooling I was one of those mom’s who looked forward to when my kids would
not ‘bother’ me with their questions and need for fun and games. Homeschooling grew in me a deeper love for my
children and a deeper appreciation of the people that they are and someday will
become!
And then one day, something totally unexpected and odd
happened.
Even though I had been completely engrossed in their
schooling, I missed when they grew into young men.
We went from a house of little kids to a house of older
elementary and middle school kids!
My kids were getting older.
My heart started to break a little bit.
My oldest was yearning for a challenge, stretching out. Growing
a boy into a man is quite the task. How
many conversations did we have about respect and humility…. How many did we have about love and
hatred…. How many did we have about
applying the principles of the Bible to how you act every single day, and not
just pulling these out on Sunday? How do
you teach these things?
There
were times when my son would ask a question that was so hard that I didn’t know
how to answer him and through this the Holy Spirit would give me the words to
say. More than anything it took a lot of
patience and a lot of explaining every concept, every principle, and using the
Bible to explain why I was asking him to help with the dishes, or to talk about
a crush, or his frustrations. Through
all of this, we leaned on the Bible and what God has to say about life.
So many things that stress us out, make us worry, cause us
pain, are matters of the heart. If our
heart is right, fully surrendered to God, we can find Grace in every
situation. How to teach this to
children? How to stay calm enough to
teach this when the dishes aren’t done and everyone needs clean socks and who
knows what we are going to eat for dinner and… the list is endless. How can you teach matters of the heart when
you are so stressed out that you can’t think strait? Pray. Grow up.
Be a person. Pray. Talk it out. Pray.
Cover it in Grace. Move on. Pray some
more!
A book that I love The
Power of a Praying Parent by Stormie Omartian helped me keep some
sanity.
Another book helped my hubby keep some sanity. Together Drason and oldest son worked through
the book ‘Preparing your son for Every Man’s Battle ’ and it was a huge blessing to see the
Lord working in their lives. Their
weekly guys only meetings helped Macguines to understand the man that his
father is and how to become and a Godly man himself. It also helped pave the way in some father
son conversations that can be difficult to get started.
This year Mac turns 14. He has grown so much that I have to look up at him to look him in the eye. He is very proud of this, as every young man is, but I am most proud of the man he is becoming and how he is growing into a Godly man I admire.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)