Thanks, Carrie, for the help! My daughter would be in 7th grade right now if she were in public school because her birthday is right after the cut off for school. I always hate giving a grade level to her because it feels confusing to me. lol We started her in Kinder (with LHFHG!) the fall she turned 5, though, so if we had stuck with it she would have done MTMM this year. Or maybe last year? Seriously, some years are a blur! This is her 9th year of school including K, so that would make her 8th grade, but we call her 7th grade for social activities, and to give us an extra year with her. She is extremely bright but has some other issues (ADHD, anxiety) that just make me feel better having that extra time with her being at home. We are not in a state where we have to report anything.
Right now with AO she is reading the majority of the reading herself, including Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and having great comprehension. She does written narrations in at least one subject every day, and does oral narrations on everything she reads that she doesn't have a written narration for that day. She's a super narrator. We are reading Ivanhoe and Birth of Britain together (alternating who is reading out loud) just because both of those are tough reads! She also is keeping a timeline for her history, doing mapwork, and drawing from Draw & Write Through History. Plus since it isn't all planned like HOD, the poor child is having to look if there's something to draw and decide what she wants to map on her own.
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Now that we have a routine, she's pretty great about it. For writing she is using Cover Story and doing the daily journal along with it. I also have her make a notebooking page for each week's current events, so she does some writing there. For grammar she is doing R&S 6. She keeps a copybook. She has written assignments in Spanish (we are using an old high school Spanish textbook). We aren't loving how literature is handled in AO and actually are about to add DITHOR back in at her request. I think Ivanhoe is actually considered literature, but she loves it so much we won't drop it.
She is planning to be a vet, so the science is super important to us. We are using what is scheduled in AO but also have added Apologia's elementary anatomy book. She does lab sheets for the experiments, which she largely does independently.
She is pretty independent overall, now that we've figured out a good system for her getting everything done. We are reading Fallacy Detective and Penny Candy together because the discussion is so fun! But we will probably stop reading those now that I know we will be headed back to HOD and both are covered in the guides. She has a list in Evernote of what she needs to do each day, and she checks them off as she does it. HOD has prepared her well for being able to work on her own. We did CTC last and she was basically completely independent with it. That's one of the many reasons we are going back to HOD. She enjoys being able to check off what she has done and see clearly what she has to do in a day.
I am concerned about her skipping 2 guides, but we've kept up a lot of the ... habits? ... that we learned in HOD. With music practice and Spanish, which I realize wouldn't be scheduled in these guides, she spends about 5-5.5 hours a day on school (sometimes more if she dawdles
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).