Post
by Nealewill » Sat Apr 30, 2016 10:24 am
Well, I think this is quite a conundrum worth pondering. There are so many moms on here who love having co-op but who also really prefer the HOD products over other products that are available. Where I live, there really aren't enough users of HOD to make a co-op only dedicated to this. Plus, HOD is meant to be very independent as the kids get older so I definitely don't need a co-op to help teach most of the subjects.
What I have done is I try and teach one or two subjects at my co-op and I use one of the HOD products to teach it. So far, next year my oldest dd will take the science and writing from RevtoRev at co-op. This is wonderful for me and I am not even teaching it! I have showed other moms that books that wanted to teach those two subjects and they are on fire about it. I like this opportunity because my kids can still take something at co-op, see their friends, and use the product I am planning to use anyway. For my younger kids, it is a bit more challenging because they are reading a lot more living books or their lessons are much shorter and I can't really have the co-op take anything off of my plate there. I have also taught DITHOR at co-op as well. My co-op does offer an IEW class every three years. I could have had my dd take it this year at co-op but I ended up not doing it. It didn't cover the same number of style activities as the Medieval had nore did it include the vocab. Co-op was offering the Student Intensive Level B and not a theme based writing program. In hindsight, I probably should have had my dd take it since it is very similar and just had her do the vocab portion from this level at home. I could have had her target those words and use them in her written narrations. But all in all, we only did a half day of co-op this year because I needed a break so we ended choosing a different class at that time slot
But in general, that is my recommendation. I would personally try and have the co-op teach something for you that you were going to use already. All in all though - for us, co-op is one day a week. If I can't find anything that meets this requirement, then my kids take electives that have no homework. This way they can still learning something fun (for example - next year I am teaching chess and business math - both fun with minimal to no homework) and then we have 4 days a week to do HOD. IMHO, I find that I can start planning to teach classes for co-op based on the level my kids are in. And when co-op isn't in session, we usually do school 5 days a week to get done earlier if we can.
Below is a list of classes I would consider letting my co-op teach as long as they used the same curriculum books that I am using. And my co-op meets on Mondays for 24 weeks total - 12 in the fall and 12 in the spring. It wouldn't necessarily line up completely like the HOD material but they would at least learn the same material and enough of it.
Levels Bigger - MtMM - DITHOR. This one is great because you can just read 4-6 books over the year depending on the wants of the other parents and I even let my kids choose between a boy and girl option
CtC - Write With the Best, Land Animals Apologia Book (I would just have my child do the science out of order for when co-op is not in session - like the bird book or the plant book), Water color paintings and poetry. You could possibly do the geography book and/or the Genesis book but I really liked keeping those lessons short and sweet and personally would prefer to do those at home.
RtR - IEW Writing; multiple or individual selections of the science book for the year- Astronomy Book, Geography, Exploring Planet Earth; Boy or Girl Study
RevtoRev - US Study, Signer Study, Story of Clssical Music study with the Composer Study, Exploring Education, or the Exciting World of Creative Writing
MtMM - President Study, Nature Study, State Study, Write with the Best 2, Evolution - The Grand Design
WG - Mapping the World by Art, Logic, Essentials in Writing, Integrated Physics and Chemistry.
WH - Old Testament Survey, Pilgrims Progress, one of the items from the Fine Arts Package, Essentials in Writing, Total Health, Biology
US1 - New Testament Survey, A Noble Experiment, Constitutional Literacy, In their Sandals, Chemistry
US2 - Financial Peace University, Selection from the Economics Items, I Don't Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist, Science, Writing, maybe another elective (? - not sure what else since the curriculum hasn't been fully divulged yet)
Honestly, I have been pondering how to make co-op work from my family for a while. I truly don't need it but my kids love it. Above is my personal plan on topics I would consider teaching at co-op so that if I wanted to, I could get a few educational classes in while still using same books as HOD. One thing to note is that if I did teach science in the lower levels at co-op, I would not necessarily assign the work using the HOD manual. For example, I won't be using the manual to assign notebooking activities and questions to answer. I would instead have my students get the notebooks that go along with the text books and have them do the journaling, answer questions, and the likes based on the schedule provided by Apologia. It wouldn't be exactly like HOD necessarily but it would use the same book. And my kids could then do some of the activities, like experiments, with the other kids in the class. If there were things I wanted them to do from HOD - like the specific notebooking Carrie assigns - I would have my kids draw and write that stuff in that journal specifically. Also, the items and books I listed were chosen because they could be done very stand alone-ish. As I pondered what I could teach at co-op (or have someone else teach), I wanted materials where you could easily set a schedule without worrying about using anything that is copyrighted from HOD. The only thing that I listed that is directly from HOD is the DITHOR material. I did make all of my students get their own student workbook and they had to work through that. In addition, because our co-op only meets 24 weeks a year, there may be some classes where the students need to do some of the work before the class starts, they will be doing some work over the break and they may have to finishing the course up after the co-op finishes meeting. This would mainly pertain to the high school courses such as writing and science. But in general, other things chosen won't necessarily save you huge chunk of time because they already aren't things that take up a lot of time already. Some of the courses would be chosen purely because many of the kids at co-op need that course anyways and it is an easy way to make the hour in the co-op class count for something. This would be the classes like boy/girl study, US study, state study, president study, mapping, logic, art, finance, economics, and the likes.
Daneale
DD 13 WG
DS 12 R2R
DD 10 R2R
Enjoyed DITHOR, Little Hearts, Beyond, Bigger, Preparing, CTC, R2R, RevtoRev, MtMM