robinwilson wrote:I have looked at the placement charts and that is how I chose the placement in my original post. I mainly based it on their reading and writing abilities. I don't know about keeping the 6 yo and 8yo together. There is a fair amount of sibling squabbles between those two already. I think they would both flourish having "their own" time with mom. My question is really... would I have time to do it all?
My 16 yo has already completed his world geography credit using Abeka. He has also done a year of church history as well. So he needs civics, world history and us history. He has done physical science and is currently finishing up biology. So he will need chemistry and physics as well.
I am enjoying reading your replies. I am finding your opinions helpful. I desperately want to switch to a more literature based method. I want my kids to enjoy school, not just endure it.
~Robin
Hi Robin, and welcome to the HOD Board! The ladies are doing such a great job of helping, and as you can see, there is much to consider in placement, which is why this dialogue is so good!

From what you've shared so far, I'd combine your 6 and 8 yo in Beyond Little Hearts for His Glory. You can have your 6 yo do phonics, and your 8 yo do the Emerging Reader's Set (which was a favorite set of beginning books with all of our sons

). Your 6 yo can do Spelling List 1, and your 8 yo can do Spelling List 2. Your 6 yo can do Singapore Math 1A/1B with the hands-on activities planned in the Beyond guide, and your 8 yo can do 2A/2B with the textbook/workbook approach from the Appendix. Beyond is not a hard guide to teach - it takes about 2 hours or less. So, even if this little duo is not the happiest pairing, they only need to be paired for a short amount of time, they'd be doing different spelling/LA/math for part of that time anyway, and the amount of time it will save you in teaching is worth it. In the scheme of choosing guides for a large family, combining is often necessary for the best overall day for everyone, and this duo seems the most natural.

I think they will love Beyond..., and I think you will too!
From what you've shared so far, I think the next duo to combine would be the 6th and 7th grader. I would try to have them do Resurrection to Reformation together, but do check the placement chart and first week of plans to be sure. RTR is targeted toward 10-12 yo dc, so this would fit their age and maturity better than CTC. For your 9th grader, I'd look closely at World Geography High School, and see if he can do that. Since he is a strong reader and writer, it would be wonderful if he could do the WG guide, as he could do the 4 HOD guides for high school as they are written, with no tweaking/adding/etc. on your part through his high school journey. MTMM can be used as a 9th grade guide, and there are many wonderful ladies doing just that happily with their high school dc. However, with a larger family I think it is necessary to make decisions based on what is best for the overall family, for the dedicated busy homeschool mama, and for the realities of many blessings to teach within a day! Not having to add/tweak things in the MTMM guide because you are using the WG as is would be nice; however, that being said, if you look at the WG High School guide and first week of plans and find yourself thinking it's way too much for your 9th grade ds, and it's going to require you stepping in and helping a lot in areas that are supposed to be independent... well then, MTMM would be better.
Finally, the World History High School guide makes good sense for your 11th grader. He has already had WG, and he needs WH, so that is the logical guide for him to do. That being said, HOD is breaking up US History over 2 years in 2 high school guides (US1 and US2), so that will be something to look at next year. But, for now, WH makes total sense, sounds like a good placement, and is an awesome guide (we just finished it recently with our eldest).
If you get the chance to look at the first week of plans for these guides and have more to share about your thoughts then, please do share! Sometimes placement advice changes as more information comes to light. However, based on what you've shared thus far, these are the placements I'd suggest. On a side note, I think you will truly learn to love HOD! It is an incredibly satisfying way to go about schooling our dc at home! We've used HOD with all of our dc from the start, and our oldest is now 16 yo and at the start of the US1 High School guide. What an incredible journey it has been, and one that I'd repeat again if given the chance to start over in a heartbeat! It is education of the mind, heart, and soul at its best. I'm truly excited for you to begin, and once we get through this placement process and you get into a good routine with your guides (usually a few months in for me), you will probably look back at this time we spent on placement as some of the best time invested in your kiddos' lives ever. Looking forward to getting to know you here!
In Christ
Julie