New and need help with placement for 4 of our children
Posted: Wed May 16, 2012 5:17 pm
Hello! I am new to HOD and am trying to decide on the best placement for 4 of our children for next year. I have read the placement info, but am still unsure. Here is some background on us:
We have seven children. Their ages at the beginning of next school year will be 8 months, 2, 10, 11, 13, 15 and 18. Our oldest is graduating this year. Our youngest is just a baby. I was thinking of purchasing something for our 2 year old, just for fun and to make her feel included, too. So, my focus for curriculum for next year is with our 5th grade son, 6th grade daughter, and 8th and 10th grade sons. I was thinking of grouping the two younger ones together and the two older ones together since our 8th grader would prefer to be placed with his older brother versus his younger siblings, but I want to do whatever is best for everyone. Having a baby in 2010 and then one at the end of 2011 has really thrown off our schooling, even more than it already was. I feel like a failure, but I will not give up so I am going into next year with high hopes that we will finally have found a good match for our family with HOD. I feel like I have kids here and there and everywhere across the board in regards to schooling and what levels they are at and what needs they have. We haven't done much work with writing assignments or diagramming with any of the kids and I noticed that both of those were mentioned on the placement charts. We also haven't done too much with cursive, although they have all done some cursive. A big problem we have is with the older boys staying focused. Although they are old enough to be independent learners, they do not stay on task or get work done on their own. I know that I have to get on top of this, but with a nursing baby keeping me rooted to my seat for a big portion of the day, and a busy toddler to keep up with, I just haven't managed to this year. I really like the looks of the HOD schedules and I think the way everything is easily and specifically laid out will really help each of us. Here is some other info about the kids:
Our 5th grade son was slow to start reading, but is doing well now. He has a harder time with writing. Writing seems difficult for him and he has trouble with spelling as well. Math concepts are easier for him and he was ahead of his grade level before this school year and is probably at grade level now, although we are not doing Singapore Math, which seems to be harder.
Our 6th grade daughter has dyslexia. She reads well, but struggles with punctuation and math concepts. I plan on working with flash cards and multiplication facts over the summer with all of the kids because they could all use a boost in this area, but the younger two really need it. She loves projects and is a natural artist. She loves to draw and paint and does well with both. She loves to write, but makes many mistakes with punctuation and spelling and gets tired of being corrected. I feel so bad when I read a letter that she has written because there are so many mistakes with run-on sentences, capital letters, periods, and spelling. She has gone over these things a million times, but it is just hard for her. I'm not sure what to even expect from her because of her dyslexia, but we just keep working on it.
Our 8th grade son doesn't seem to have much difficulty in any particular subject. He is the type who just wants to race through everything and get everything done as soon as possible so he can have the rest of the day off, in his mind anyway. He doesn't like grammar and still confuses things like adjectives and adverbs and such, but I wouldn't consider that out of the "norm."
Our 10th grade son has a very hard time focusing. I can spend all day telling him to do his work and him staring at it blankly. He doesn't seem to think it's too hard. I just think he feels overwhelmed anyway. This year he is working on Biology and Algebra, but he is way behind. He was working on history with the younger kids and I, but we pretty much stopped most of our lessons after the baby was born. He was doing Easy Grammar, but found it really boring as well.
I think all of our kids would do well with one-on-one attention and help, but I just don't seem to have the time. Some people say that it is "just a season" but I could very well have another baby every year or two, in which case that makes a very long season. I'm hoping that somehow we can make HOD work for us. I'm hoping that all of the reading will actually be enjoyable and perferable to our kids. So, now back to which curriculum is best for each child. Going by age and grade level, the younger two would be in RTR. My biggest reason for wanting them there is the fact that it has body image/design/puberty books for boys and girls in the devotional section, which I really like. If I did a younger set with them, then it would be kind of late to do these another year. However, I can't help but wonder if RTR would be too hard and maybe they would be better off in one of the younger ones. I think CTC might be better for them.
As far as the older boys go, they would place by age and grade into MTM, but I think I would rather use RevtoRev because we already own and wanted to use Exploration Education Advanced and "Who Is God? And Can I Really Know Him?." Is there a benefit to the older boys using the same curriculum as each other or would they be mostly "on their own" anyway? Would it be better to use RTR with all 4 and beef it up for our oldest? How much reading aloud would I need to do? If you group the kids together, do you need to buy duplicates of all the books that they would read on their own? Any help or advice would be appreciated. I've been homeschooling for five years and each year I am still struggling to figure out how to do things with kids who seem all over the board academically and with their personality and learning style. How much time do you think I would need to devote each day to get everyone done? Thanks for any help and advice.
We have seven children. Their ages at the beginning of next school year will be 8 months, 2, 10, 11, 13, 15 and 18. Our oldest is graduating this year. Our youngest is just a baby. I was thinking of purchasing something for our 2 year old, just for fun and to make her feel included, too. So, my focus for curriculum for next year is with our 5th grade son, 6th grade daughter, and 8th and 10th grade sons. I was thinking of grouping the two younger ones together and the two older ones together since our 8th grader would prefer to be placed with his older brother versus his younger siblings, but I want to do whatever is best for everyone. Having a baby in 2010 and then one at the end of 2011 has really thrown off our schooling, even more than it already was. I feel like a failure, but I will not give up so I am going into next year with high hopes that we will finally have found a good match for our family with HOD. I feel like I have kids here and there and everywhere across the board in regards to schooling and what levels they are at and what needs they have. We haven't done much work with writing assignments or diagramming with any of the kids and I noticed that both of those were mentioned on the placement charts. We also haven't done too much with cursive, although they have all done some cursive. A big problem we have is with the older boys staying focused. Although they are old enough to be independent learners, they do not stay on task or get work done on their own. I know that I have to get on top of this, but with a nursing baby keeping me rooted to my seat for a big portion of the day, and a busy toddler to keep up with, I just haven't managed to this year. I really like the looks of the HOD schedules and I think the way everything is easily and specifically laid out will really help each of us. Here is some other info about the kids:
Our 5th grade son was slow to start reading, but is doing well now. He has a harder time with writing. Writing seems difficult for him and he has trouble with spelling as well. Math concepts are easier for him and he was ahead of his grade level before this school year and is probably at grade level now, although we are not doing Singapore Math, which seems to be harder.
Our 6th grade daughter has dyslexia. She reads well, but struggles with punctuation and math concepts. I plan on working with flash cards and multiplication facts over the summer with all of the kids because they could all use a boost in this area, but the younger two really need it. She loves projects and is a natural artist. She loves to draw and paint and does well with both. She loves to write, but makes many mistakes with punctuation and spelling and gets tired of being corrected. I feel so bad when I read a letter that she has written because there are so many mistakes with run-on sentences, capital letters, periods, and spelling. She has gone over these things a million times, but it is just hard for her. I'm not sure what to even expect from her because of her dyslexia, but we just keep working on it.
Our 8th grade son doesn't seem to have much difficulty in any particular subject. He is the type who just wants to race through everything and get everything done as soon as possible so he can have the rest of the day off, in his mind anyway. He doesn't like grammar and still confuses things like adjectives and adverbs and such, but I wouldn't consider that out of the "norm."
Our 10th grade son has a very hard time focusing. I can spend all day telling him to do his work and him staring at it blankly. He doesn't seem to think it's too hard. I just think he feels overwhelmed anyway. This year he is working on Biology and Algebra, but he is way behind. He was working on history with the younger kids and I, but we pretty much stopped most of our lessons after the baby was born. He was doing Easy Grammar, but found it really boring as well.
I think all of our kids would do well with one-on-one attention and help, but I just don't seem to have the time. Some people say that it is "just a season" but I could very well have another baby every year or two, in which case that makes a very long season. I'm hoping that somehow we can make HOD work for us. I'm hoping that all of the reading will actually be enjoyable and perferable to our kids. So, now back to which curriculum is best for each child. Going by age and grade level, the younger two would be in RTR. My biggest reason for wanting them there is the fact that it has body image/design/puberty books for boys and girls in the devotional section, which I really like. If I did a younger set with them, then it would be kind of late to do these another year. However, I can't help but wonder if RTR would be too hard and maybe they would be better off in one of the younger ones. I think CTC might be better for them.
As far as the older boys go, they would place by age and grade into MTM, but I think I would rather use RevtoRev because we already own and wanted to use Exploration Education Advanced and "Who Is God? And Can I Really Know Him?." Is there a benefit to the older boys using the same curriculum as each other or would they be mostly "on their own" anyway? Would it be better to use RTR with all 4 and beef it up for our oldest? How much reading aloud would I need to do? If you group the kids together, do you need to buy duplicates of all the books that they would read on their own? Any help or advice would be appreciated. I've been homeschooling for five years and each year I am still struggling to figure out how to do things with kids who seem all over the board academically and with their personality and learning style. How much time do you think I would need to devote each day to get everyone done? Thanks for any help and advice.