threegreatkids wrote:but has anyone ever used just right side HOD?
I've been wrestling all year with the issue of combining. I think it's a harder decision when dc are quite close in age. Dh and I have decided, based on our own family goals and some unique family dynamics, that for the next 3-4 years we need to combine dc for History/Bible/Read-Alouds. I won't bore you with all the details of why this is right for us, but there you have it. We really like having them separate for Science, Poetry and Bible Study in addition to math and LA, though.
I think HOD is the most amazing curriculum I've ever used or seen. I love the books, the sequential progression of skills, the spiritual training, the CM influence, the activities, EVERYTHING!!! But I can't figure out how to combine my kiddos for more than a year. I could do left-side Preparing with all 3 next year (grades 2,4,5) and just have my youngest skip the writing-focused activities but the following year seems impossible for combining.
So I'm considering using a multi-age curriculum for History/Bible etc. Mixed Feelings about this

but it seems to be where God is leading us.
So, do you think it would be possible to keep doing right side HOD?
One thing to consider - it's not that you can't combine your dc with HOD. HOD was written to allow multiple aged children to use one guide together. We just try to take each child into account when helping with placement.

The age spread you have is going to make combining and meeting individual dc's needs a challenge with any curriculum - not impossible, just a challenge.

Many curriculums say that they are for a very wide age range, and they are written very broadly to be so or really aren't so, which of course results in the same things you'd find with combining large age ranges with HOD - that not everyone is doing something right on their level.

The nice thing about HOD is it has extensions planned already for history, so that is already done for you beginning with Bigger Hearts on up. The things on the left side of the HOD guides are the things families most often enjoy combining, so that is another thing that makes combining easier with HOD.
Another curriculum I used for a year, which was said to be for a very large age range, had activities planned a good percentage of the time that were way over my ds's head, as he was in the bottom 1/3 of the age range. He couldn't do most of it, even though he was definitely within the recommended age range. I ended up summarizing a lot, tweaking even more, dropping/adding a ton over the year, and eventually dropping it for all but some good read-alouds. The hands-on was non-existent, as most of it was me doing it for him.

The activities were inconsistent, some taking a very long time to do, and some over in a very short amount of time. That was just my experience, but I would caution you to really look over curriculums that claims to be a good fit for very large age ranges, and see if they really do a good job of that. I am of course partial to HOD

, but I know that if you want to combine - even for age ranges partly outside of the suggested age ranges - HOD does it in the best way possible.

I've so enjoyed your presence here on the board, and would love for you to give it a go with HOD and see what you find. However, just continue praying about it, and you will know God desires you to do, which is better than any advice I can give.
In Christ,
Julie
P.S. Of course, you can certainly just use the right side of HOD - but it's ALL good - which is the point of view this post of mine is coming from.
