Hi Shandra! Thanks for sharing a bit more about your dc!

Placement is important, and it is so worth spending a little time on. It really helps us to give more sound advice when we know more about individual dc and families specifically. From what you've shared, I think you could actually very easily combine your youngest and your 7 yo in "Little Hearts for His Glory," using the first grade options for your 7 yo. You can then choose either "Bigger Hearts for His Glory" or "Preparing Hearts for His Glory" for your 9 and 10 yo - either would be a good choice!

Doing 2 programs with your 4 dc would make things sooooooo much easier. Your younger 2 dc would be doing age appropriate activities and skills, and I know they would love LHFHG! Your older dc would be able to soar in their older program, and they could truly be successful with the independence planned in the guide because they would not be having to wait for their younger siblings, nor would you have to take over activities meant to be "I" independent because your olders could do them on their own (whereas the youngers could not).
It is rare for 7 yo dc to do BHFHG, especially those who are new to HOD. It is a very meaty program!

Unless dc are somewhat advanced in LA and writing skills, or unless they have previously completed HOD guides prior to BHFHG, BHFHG is rarely the best placement for 7 yo dc. Carrie had this to say about BHFHG's writing in a previous thread...
Bigger requires more writing in the areas of a once a week history notebooking assignment, a once a week science experiment sheet and a once a week science notebooking entry, along with once a week copywork of a Bible verse, 1-3 vocabulary cards each week, cursive handwriting practice daily, and daily grammar instruction with written practice. It also provides a choice of spelling or dictation passages...
It is key to take into account the reading and writing in an HOD program when choosing, so here is a comparison of the writing in BHFHG and PHFHG...
Bigger Hearts:
Copywork of the poem (1 per week)
a Cursive program (daily)
R & S grammar (we wrote about 1/3 of it, doing the other portion orally, or on markerboard; daily; about 1/2 a page skipping lines)
Dictation OR spelling words (daily)
DITHOR Student Book (Level 2/3, approximately 2-3 workbook pages a week)
Science Notebooking (1 per week; approximately 2-4 sentences)
History Notebooking (1 per week; approximately 2-4 sentences)
Science Lab report (1 paper, 1 per week, not much writing - maybe 3-5 sentences with picture)
1-3 vocab. cards for history (1 time a week)
Bible Memory Verse copied (1 time a week)
*I'm pretty sure that's everything - I did it last year, but afraid to rely just on my memory (I'm getting older, you know ), I did double-check looking at the plans. If I forgot something, someone please post it.
Preparing Hearts:
R & S Grammar (we write about 1/3 of it, same as I said above, only more like 3/4 a page or so of writing, skipping lines)
Dictation (3 x a week)
DITHOR Student Book (if you do Level 4/5, approximately 3 workbook pages a week, with more writing on a page)
Science Notebooking (2 times a week, approx. 4 sentences)
History Notebooking (2 times a week, approx. 4 sentences)
Science lab report (same as above)
3-5 vocab. cards for history (1 time a week)
Common Place book (copy Bible verse, quotations, special things from reading, probably 3-5 sentences, 1-2 times a week)
Creative Writing of a poem using RLS's poetry as a model (approx. 4 stanzas, 1 time per week)
Written Narration with history (5 sentences, 1 x a week)
Science short answer (answer 5 questions, 1 x a week)
*I am hoping I didn't forget anything, but if I did ladies - please add in what I did. I am doing PHFHG now, so I think I have it all. I guess I didn't say "timeline" for both BHFHG and PHFHG, but that comes up 1 x a week and has very minimal writing, like a label.
As far as the reading, in BHFHG, you are doing all of the reading, other than "Drawn into the Heart of Reading" which is used for students' reading instruction. In PHFHG, dc are reading a portion of their history on their own, using the Self-Study Deluxe Package for the Newly Independent Reader. The parent is reading the other portion of history using the Economy Package's resources. Students are also reading their science books independently, which are listed in the Science Adder set. Here is a link to these resources so you can see the level of reading for each...
http://www.heartofdakota.com/preparing- ... ckages.php
I think you would really enjoy using LHFHG and either BHFHG or PHFHG!

I am currently teaching LHFHG and PHFHG (as well as MTMM), and we are LOVING our year! The HOD guides are a blessing to me. They are open and go, well-balanced, age appropriate, academically strong, yet spiritually saturated - I am excited for you to start using HOD too! But, what are your thoughts now?
In Christ,
Julie