Carrie wrote:
So, my recommendation would be to shift him down to Beyond. Due to his age, I would keep Rod and Staff English 2 to do daily along with Beyond. I would make sure that he writes a small portion on paper each day for English to practice getting comfortable writing on paper. Since he's on the upper end of the age range for Beyond, I would also be sure that he completes several lines of copywork of the poem from Beyond each day, striving to copy the entire poem by the end of the week. Then, I would be sure to daily do the Emerging Reader's Set (if that is where he is) or do DITHR. With DITHR, when you get there, you can do some writing for him at first and/or also write on a marker board for him to copy on his paper later. Eventually, move toward having him do more of the writing in DITHR in preparation for Bigger.

...With boys, it is especially important to give them every chance to mature into the needed fine motor skills. I taught third grade for many years in the public school, and it was easy to tell which kiddos needed a bit more time to mature (and most often they were boys).

So, give your little honey the gift of time to grow into needed skills. Don't worry about adding to the science, as he will still get twice weekly science lessons in Beyond. Just worry about the 3R's right now and gently ease him into those needed skills daily, along with all of the other excellent skills found within Beyond. Doing all of Beyond well, rather than randomly skipping things or downsizing within Bigger will help your son be more prepared for the next guide the following year.
This is what I was thinking as well. He sounds like he fits squarely in Beyond Little Hearts, and so why not get to enjoying it?!?

I love this idea for many reasons for your ds, which have already been shared, but I also love it for YOU - a busy mama this year!!!

Next year, half-speed LHFHG, Bigger Hearts, and RTR will be a very nice year overall too. I also taught 3rd grade for many years, and what Carrie says is right on target.

Ds will probably have a huge growth year next year, and this year can be all about strengthening reading/writing skills, building confidence, yet keeping a solid balance to his day with all of the subject areas in Beyond. I'd be sure to do the hands-on activities. Children learn much from the hands-on activities, and cognitive abilities and even physical fine motor skills abilities are strengthened along the way, which impacts learning in all subject areas. My dh comes to mind. He lived for the chance to show what he knew in school with hands-on activities. They were an area in which he shined! Many boys are the same, which is why ps is so hard for many boys -there are very few if any hands-on activities used as assessments. I'm so thankful for the few teachers my dh had that encouraged him like that.
I remember when he first got his sales job for telecommunication materials. He was handed a lot of books and manuals. (He is a good reader and speller actually, though he dislikes writing.) He came home pretty downtrodden, wondering if he could really do that job, overwhelmed at the prospect of training for his new job by reading a lot of books and manuals. I suggested going to work alongside the guys putting in the telecommunication materials on the job sites. His eyes practically lit up, and he was off and running!

Now, whenever someone calls and needs help with what to put together for a job, he is the best person to talk to! The whole layout is in his head because he worked on it hands-on himself. He still loves to go to job sites when he can! He also loves to have reps bring new products to sell, and show him and his customers how they work by using the products themselves in demonstrations. Many of his customers comment on how much they appreciate being able to actually 'get their hands on the stuff' rather than having to look at a picture in a catalog to try to figure out how it works. I'm so proud of my dh. He has worked his way up to an excellent position he is good at! All of this has been due to God's grace, and also to his being able to use his hands to learn and to show what he knows. I personally begged Carrie long ago not to take the easy way out and let go of writing hands-on activities in the HOD guides, even at the upper levels. How easy it would have been for Carrie herself to skip writing these! They by far take the most time to create, write, and edit. However, 7 boys between the 2 of us spurs us on... that and (for me) the picture in my mind of my dh as a student not feeling very bright in school sitting at his desk with a pile of textbooks in front of him. Just had to share the thought and heart that goes into each and every single word of plans that makes it onto that finite space of 2 pages of plans in each guide.

It all has a purpose and is worth doing IMHO.
In Christ,
Julie