Anyway, it was encouraging and I was so glad to be able to praise her--I have a hard time finding things sometime---I'm so excited about this year. I think we are both in a better place and are more prepared.

Thank you Carrie!! And Julie!
Gwenny - I'm so glad your start with RTR went well! As a mom planning for a successful school year, you did a lot of things right before you even officially started. Thank you for sharing and for encouraging others here, Gwenny!Gwenny wrote:I had my daughter start her RtR today and just told her to follow the order I gave her in her schedule and just get a few things done. (I set out an order for her and her sister because they are sharing the main books--they each have their own guide though) I wanted her to get some done before next week when we really start but we will have some of our older children home visiting. I also wanted to be free to help if she needed, etc. She did really really well. AND, she got all of the boxes done that were in the schedule. She was only to work on the independent items and I thought she would just get a couple of them done! I am having her fix some of her writing to be neater but that's about it. She seemed so happy and I know she felt good about herself. In the science box she was supposed to do a notebooking assignment. She had to come up with her own pneumonic phrase--I had read the instructions a few days ago so I knew they told her where the example was---she came downstairs and said she didn't know how to do it. I told her they gave her an example--she insisted they didn't---I made her go read it again and lo and behold she didn't come back saying it wasn't there! I think she only reads so far in the directions and then stops and doesn't complete them.
Anyway, it was encouraging and I was so glad to be able to praise her--I have a hard time finding things sometime---I'm so excited about this year. I think we are both in a better place and are more prepared.
Thank you Carrie!! And Julie!
These are great, doable ideas, rumkimom! I think you have done a super job of planning ahead for your dd and for what will specifically help her the most! Thank you for sharing, as this gives others ideas of how to plan ahead for success when special concerns are known prior to beginning. I have prayed for your dd as well, and will try to remember to pray for her again. How blessed she is to have a mother who is sacrificing much to homeschool her! That sacrifice deserves recognition.rumkimom wrote:Tami - we are doing LA & math everyday, but are splitting up the rest of the boxes (8 left) into 2 days. I plan to do everything on the left side except storytime on day 1, then will do storytime and the right side on day 2. If you are following the LA and math boxes (we are using something different due to learning issues), you can split it up by doing each page as a different day and then plan to go for 5 days a week instead of 4. Doing this for a few days may help your children not to get too overwhelmed. My daughter does not have problems reading, but does have problems with comprehending what she reads. She also has Expressive-Receptive language disorder so comprehension/narration/writing is very difficult for her....thus the reason I put her in a lower level for her age, but this is where she is at. I am sure we will have some tears of frustration especially when we first start next week. I will stay at 1/2 speed as long as she needs it.
Tami, you asked some good questions and have some good information going forward!Tami wrote:We've only done 3 days (which took us 4) and my kiddos are overwhelmed. I'm trying to decide how to handle it.
I know this is a silly question, but when you say you are "going 1/2 speed" what exactly do you mean? Are you doing the left page one day and the right page the next or do you divide things up differently?
My twins also have dyslexia so we are adding in additional time for remediation and for them to absorb the information. I don't want to slow down for too long (they are 14yo in 8th grade) because they really need to move forward as quickly as possible (emphasis on as possible). The first couple of days went well....yesterday, not so much.
I see such a benefit for my kids with this curriculum....my son already is feeling much more successful in his drawing (an area that he does not enjoy), and they now understand how the Medieval Writing Lessons work. Yay! I know it will work out in the end, I just am trying to to stress them out unnecessarily.
Thanks!
Thank you for sharing this approach, as it provides a window into how a schedule can be more of a routine with built-in flexibility and with specifics that plan for the differences in dc's learning styles and needs! I am so glad that you are finding a good rhythm with this approach, and I'm glad you shared it as it will certainly click with others who thrive with this kind of 'routine' too!MomtoJGJE wrote:I split it up differently because some of my kids are like me... they prefer math and science over history and English. Of course my others prefer English and science over math and history.So when I split it I do one of two things.
1 - I make sure they have at least one thing they like and one thing they don't like each day. So for my math/science kids we do math and history one day, then science, LA, storytime, etc the other day. Or some mixture like that. Or....
2 - This is the main way we do less.... I will set a time I want them to work. Generally for my older ones it's 1.5-2 hours and my younger ones it's 45min-1 hour. As long as they are working hard for that amount of time, they can be done wherever they get to for that day. Then the next day they work on the rest of the work for that day. If they finish, they start the next day's work. Sometimes it might take them three days to do one day in the guide. I'm ok with that as long as they are WORKING the entire time I've set for them. It evens out because some days have less reading (time consuming for my kids) and more written work or drawing. So those days they finish an entire day in the time set.
I've found that overall, when I just set an amount of time with my only "rule" being to work hard the entire time, they get more done and it sticks more than when I've said "ok we are doing these boxes today and those tomorrow."