
I've been doing some research on curriculum lately, and on methods, mostly to answer some of my friend's questions on homeschooling (she's new to it!


Thank you so much for your thoughts. . . . .

The dictations don't build incrementally like Carrie's do in Bigger, etc. The first one in PLL starts off with a paragraph, if I remember correctly. It was the first time I had taught dictation and the first time my ds had done it. He was a great reader in early 2nd grade, but it was definitely beyond his spelling ability. It was hard! The grammar was more gentle than R&S, but I wouldn't say it was easier. I remember the 9th lesson or so teaching to, too, and two. Another lesson taught 'a' versus 'an'. So in that way it is more gentle. It doesn't teach nouns or verbs if my memory serves correctly. I wouldn't say my son found that easier though. Retention was definitely lower with PLL for us. The copy work is longer than R&S 2. In some ways PLL dives right in: longer dictations of 4 - 6 sentences with punctuation, grammar that comes and goes, copy work that is longer, etc. The picture studies though are delightful and fairly easy for a student to do. Well that was my experience! I was using it though with a 2nd grade boy whose strengths are reading & math and who has been more of a reluctant writer; so I am sure that impacted our experience. PLL was fine, but I wouldn't necessarily choose to use it again. I actually have found R&S 2 to be a more gentle introduction to copy work and grammar. Carrie's dictations in Bigger are wonderfully incremental, which I have found helpful as well for a solid dictation introduction without overwhelming my children.momtofive wrote: I wonder though, for a child that's not ready to start R&S yet, would PLL be a good option as just a very gentle introduction to this?