View Full Version : Do you use a scheduled/prepared curriculum or do your own thing?
Free Indeed
01-20-2008, 03:52 PM
Besides this year when we went with ECC, I have always done my own thing. We are going back to doing our own using MOH/SOTW combo and Apologia science. What about you? What do you use?
awanama
01-20-2008, 03:59 PM
I would love to find a prepared unit study that fit our family but I just can't. Part of the problem is probably because we love SOTW and Apologia so much. Also, I have found a lot of the prepared curriculums really lack in the science area. This is a strong point for my kids and it feels like we would have to supplement so much that it isn't worth having the prepared program.
I love the looks of Heart of Dakota's materials (we'd skip the bible activities) but they are to young for my kids. I think by the time someone makes something that would suit us, we'll be done hsing.
St. Theophan Academy
01-20-2008, 04:31 PM
We follow much of LCC plan - but I still feel it is a do our own thing plan! What I love about homeschooling is the freedom to take the best from everything and put it all together to make the best fit for us! We have been using Apologia Astronomy this year, and enjoy it but still do nature study and other science related activities. We follow LCC for bible, latin and math, but for history I have created my own plan - based on some of the LCC suggestions, and other books I have found we like. I doubt there is a program out there that would ever make me completely happy (though I am often tempted by TOG :) Anne Marie
Closeacademy
01-20-2008, 04:35 PM
I even write my own curriculum when I need to. I use Singapore math without the HIG, SWR, and use the library.
I do make detailed lesson plans each year and adapt programs and read and research what I want to teach and adapt it so that it will meet the needs of my own children.
Night Elf
01-20-2008, 04:39 PM
In our home, scheduled programs are a necessity. In our 6 years of homeschooling, I've learned I'm great at researching and planning OR implementing materials, but not both! I also tend to curriculum hop when I'm using a variety of materials because we can get a little bored with something and it's so easy to change it. And once I start changing one subject, I get antsy to change the rest.
We've been with K12 for my son since last May and have no plans to change anything. It works great for him. When my dd9 returned to homeschooling in September, we did a mix of stuff while we decided which way to go. Sonlight fits her best right now, and it's going great.
BarbaraL in OK
01-20-2008, 04:42 PM
We follow much of LCC plan - but I still feel it is a do our own thing plan! What I love about homeschooling is the freedom to take the best from everything and put it all together to make the best fit for us!
Same here. We use a lot of LCC, though I tweaked to catch my 12yo son up in the foundational literature (this is his 2nd year HSing), and I brought in some of the Ambleside Online recommendations for literature and history reading. I don't ever remember what aspect of my plans are LCC vs. my own, LOL.
prairiegirl
01-20-2008, 04:43 PM
I do my own thing for my oldest two. This year now, as I get ready for my youngest, I have decided to go the curriculum-in-a-box road for K. I was just too tired and busy to think up something for as well. I chose Oak Meadow. It is not workbook based but discover based. It is a very gentle intro to learning. I really like it. (I never thought I would write those words in regards to a packaged curriculum :) ) I will not use OM for first, though. I will go back to making up my own. But it is a nice change.
Julia
mom of 3 (8,7,5)
Jenny in Atl
01-20-2008, 04:49 PM
I do both... a little of everything!:eek:
Narrow Gate Academy
01-20-2008, 05:19 PM
We have always done our own thing so far. My two main issues with boxed curriculum are the cost and the fact that I would still have to adapt them to make them work for us. Currently we're using Truthquest for history, Apologia for science, and a lapbook I created for US Geography. It's more time intensive for me to create the lesson plans, but I'm more satified with the results.
I'm pretty much pulling together things myself. Every time I've sat down with lists from various boxed programs (Sonlight, Calvert, etc) I kept thinking of other things I wanted to add that I felt were missing or books I'd rather use. I use LCC and AmblesideOnline as general guides for what to cover and then go from there to choose particular materials and schedule them myself.
Jami
GreenKitty
01-20-2008, 05:42 PM
My own thing.
3lilreds in NC
01-20-2008, 05:48 PM
Well, right now we're using a mix of a lot of things. I have My Father's World 1st grade for my 1st grader, and used the math and LA for my 2nd grader last year. I wanted to use the LA, Bible and science this year, but we just started with them after the holidays. Before that, we were using R&S 1st grade math, FLL, read-alouds, and I'd like to say something else but I can't remember what. I'm trying to add in All About Spelling and Drawing with Children in addition to the MFW stuff, FLL, and we've switched to Professor B math. I'm really tempted to switch to something boxed, though, because with the baby, I'm having a hard time getting it done using my own (lack of) a schedule. I thought it would be easy enough to go one subject at a time and just do each thing, but somehow, it's not been working that way.
Blue Hen
01-20-2008, 05:50 PM
I do my own thing and love the flexibility of it all. I have looked at many of the programs out there but as secular hs'ers many do not meet our requirements of being secular.
Trivium Academy
01-20-2008, 05:50 PM
I've done both for the last two years' I've created our science lessons, I'm looking forward (yet dreading) to using Living Learning Books Chemistry next year. Science in the grammar years is the worst area for me to be dependent on someone else, the curriculums are either too hard, too easy, have expensive experiments or the something else that would make me want to run for the hills.
This year I also realized that TOG has done what I do (to an extent) for me, which is including church history, world religions, missionary study, into our history lessons and selecting wonderful books. I'm really in love with TOG because it truly FITS us and the long range plan is what I had in mind before I even understood what TOG was.
I'm satisfied with what we have now, finally. I see math and science in the higher grades areas that will be frustrating too but what can you do?
LunaLee
01-20-2008, 06:07 PM
The problems is I am very picky about things, and when I set my mind to something nothing else will do. So alot of times I just pick and pull from a variety of things to make a curriculum that fits each one of my kids and their different styles.
Wendy in ME
01-20-2008, 06:10 PM
We do mostly LCC for lit, Bible, Latin but I make up our own science and history
Wendy
mcconnellboys
01-20-2008, 06:39 PM
I've always done my own thing! Wouldn't homeschool any other way!
Have fun,
Regena
Mama Lynx
01-20-2008, 06:43 PM
I start with someone else's plan, and then do my own thing with it.
Karen in CO
01-20-2008, 06:45 PM
I have tried to use prepared curriculum of all sizes and curriculum guides of all types but it hasn't worked for me. I like to be actively involved in the teaching of my kids so I end up changing things. I can't just use things as they are. There is always something more or less or different. I like to think of it as a customized education.
momofkhm
01-20-2008, 06:51 PM
We use something mostly planned out. I'm just a tad intimidated by the whole thing. We use TOG. The books are all planned out. All I have to do is figure out what pages to read each day. I even found a schedule on-line for my oldest dd Apologia General Science, so I don't have to plan that out either. The rest of the stuff is a do the next lesson type (math, grammar, etc).
Cadam
01-20-2008, 07:27 PM
I found that MFW had so many of the things I was looking for (SOTW, Apologia, integrated Bible...) that it made sense to go with that rather than reinvent the wheel. I do make Latin and Math the center of our day after reading LCC. We really enjoy the Unit and I think it is great for us.
Kristiana
01-20-2008, 07:35 PM
Right now (1st grade) I'm following what is recommended in TWTM as far as subject matter. I feel like I'm relearning everything along with my son and am not knowledgeable enough to pull a course of study together on my own just yet so we use the recommended spines, but then I add as much as I can find from the library and internet sources to enrich our studies. I like having an outline of study set out for me that I can flesh out and I'm sure as I homeschool more I'll do more of my own thing. That's just the way I am.
Teresa in OR
01-20-2008, 07:46 PM
A couple of times I've tried to follow a set program, but I always end up tweaking it so much that it isn't worth it.
susie in tx
01-20-2008, 08:02 PM
I've tried several boxed programs. One lasted 9 weeks. By the time I threw it out, I had revamped the entire thing. The second lasted 20 weeks. By the time I decided to switch things up again, I was reorganizing that one until it was unrecognizable as well. I don't mind doing that so much, but if my kids aren't learning what I want them to learn, even with my tweaking, then it's not working.
I'm trying yet another boxish program. We'll see how it goes. I'm hopeful that it does what I was already doing with program number 2.
There isn't a program out there that fits everyone 100%. It's nice to have many options and truly be able to make our curriculum fit our children and family style.
Dawn E
01-20-2008, 08:02 PM
This is only my first year, and I only have the one dd (K5), but I have really enjoyed doing my own thing. When I first decided to homeschool, I thought about a boxed curriculum because I am not the most organized person. I didn't want to get started and then flounder because I had put too much on myself. However, I am very glad that we pushed through. Dd is able to do some 1st grade work in certain subjects. I am able to pick and choose between all the resources, and pull together a plan that works best for her. I'm able to offer challenge in the areas she is ready to grow in without pushing her in the areas that she is not. Down the road we may look into some, but for now this works well for us.
PinkInTheBlue
01-20-2008, 08:09 PM
We do our own thing here. Saxon for math, R&S for grammar, Writing Strands for writing, we're doing a self-made president's study for history, Apologia for Astronomy, Spelling Power for spelling (considering R&S), LC for Latin and Rosetta Stone for Spanish. I'm sure I'm missing something...
Pamela H in Texas
01-20-2008, 08:12 PM
I've always put together things for my kids until October of this year for my 7th grader. He joined a virtual academy so is doing their program now. My 15yo is still doing our homemade curriculum (actually, she did Abeka DvDs in 7th grade, now that I remember).
I like putting it together, allowing them materials best for them individually, etc. But we really like the K12 curriculum also and I could see using that sooner with another student if I had one.
Ann in IA
01-20-2008, 08:24 PM
We also do our own thing. I really appreciated the WTM as a guide with the suggestions for each grade and learned alot from those resources.
We've tried many things and hoave settled on this for now:
9yr old son:
-HWT
-Horizons math (almost done with bk 2 and will move to 3)
-Spectrum phonics
-GWG 3
-copywork
Will be starting Sequentional Spelling soon.
6yr old DD:
-HWT
-Plaid Phonics K
-MCP math K (starting this spring)
-copywork
-lots of games
We were going to do Winterpromise American Story 1 this year with both of them but found out we were moving this fall. We've forgone formal history for now and will start it up this spring after the move.
We will start with SOTW 1 next year for both kids.
txbloobonnet
01-20-2008, 08:26 PM
home many of you do your own thing. I used Sonlight the "right way" one year out of our 13 years of homeschooling. Other than that I have put my own curriculum together using many different resources. I have always tried hard to make things fit us instead of making us fit the curriculum. That, and I have a ton of books on my shelves that I feel like I should use instead of buying new books so I love to substitute.
Ellie
01-20-2008, 08:30 PM
and scheduled it myself. IOW, I'm not smart enough to write everything :-) so I bought Easy Grammar and KONOS and whatnot. I did not, however, buy a box of all-the-same-grade-level books from a single source and follow the company's schedule.
Julie in MN
01-20-2008, 08:31 PM
I love having found a program that someone *else* has set up for *me*! When I found MFW, I knew this was what I was trying to do on my own.
Having gone thru one child with an entire public school education, and another child who has spent 5 years on a homeschooled high school education where I created my own thing, I probably am more enthusiastic about this "great discovery" of a complete curriculum than most LOL!
I have realized only too well how much time I am saving, how much more time I spend with my child rather than in research/preparation, how much more they like it when mom isn't going on forever to make sure they know every single detail that *I* as an adult think is quite interesting, how much more time we have for character and practical skills, and how much further we get in our academics!
That's how it looks from here :o)
nukeswife
01-20-2008, 08:31 PM
We tried SL this year and it was a disaster. I like picking the things I think my kids will enjoy and sometimes that means different companies for different kids.
This is our 2nd year hsing. The first year I pulled things together on my own because the cost of the big box programs was just too much. This year we had the funds for the big box and went for it, only to find out it's not our style.
We love picking out curriculum, I love the research of it as well as the planning.
Lori in MS
01-20-2008, 08:37 PM
I use MFW and tweak it to suit me.
I love the lesson plans and the book list. It gives me a framework to work with rather than coming up with everything.
Lori in MS
Daisy
01-20-2008, 08:53 PM
I'm using MFW Adventures this year and the hyper structure is driving me nuts. I'm tweaking it to death. So I'm going back to my own thing next year. Although I did buy ECC used so I can rip it apart and add it to my own history studies. I just like to plan my own rabbit trails.:rolleyes:
Rebecca in GA
01-20-2008, 08:59 PM
We use Sonlight 5 for our 11 yo and Ambleside Online for the 8 and almost-7 year-olds. A Beka math for the eldest and Rod & Staff for the littles. Works for us, in this season, at this age.
JFS in IL
01-20-2008, 09:10 PM
With math - Teaching Textbooks - we will follow the program. Other items, like SWO, WriteShop, and Wordly Wise have schedules that are easy to follow. Science, history, reading, grammar - we do 3,4, 5 days per week, as much as seems reasonable. I do not have one overall curriculum or guide. Each day I scribble out a notebook page of what dd needs to get through the next day.
nitascool
01-20-2008, 09:23 PM
We do mostly old edition WTM suggestions Grammar stage with my 6yo and Logic Stage with my 7yo (almost 8). We also do Amberside online. My 6yo is about to finish year 0 and my 7yo just finished Year 2.
Chris in CA
01-20-2008, 11:33 PM
As my girls become older, I will move more into prepared curriculum
Laura Corin
01-21-2008, 12:08 AM
Besides this year when we went with ECC, I have always done my own thing. We are going back to doing our own using MOH/SOTW combo and Apologia science. What about you? What do you use?
We use a bunch of things (see siggy) that I have discovered to be best for my kids. They are all over the place in grade level and I've never found a package that would work for us.
Laura
WTMindy
01-21-2008, 12:19 AM
I do a little of both. I like to pick and choose pieces out of already existing stuff. :)
Polly
01-21-2008, 12:31 AM
www.learning-adventures.org
You can pretty much make it what you want it to be. Our favorite years of homeschooling were doing LA!
Michelle T
01-21-2008, 01:08 AM
But I will be using Oak Meadow as a history spine this year, so I guess I'm in for a change.
I'd love to find a science curriculum all laid out for me, but haven't found a suitable one yet.
Michelle T
Cindyg
01-21-2008, 01:16 AM
But I do my own thing within that spine. And I do customize it a LOT!
I like to use a history guide such as TruthQuest, or Sonlight, as a base and branch out from there. I like having a loose list of topics but lots of freedom within that. We do our own science thang using a mix of resources.
I love the freedom! I don't like to follow other's content plans -- it is easier to follow my own.
dangermom
01-21-2008, 01:49 AM
I mostly do a lot of WTM recommendations, and pick and choose each subject. I make my own schedule, such as it is. I use a lot of library books.
Lux Et Veritas Academy
01-21-2008, 05:01 AM
I do my own thing- I love to blend it with their interests and what I have available to work with- I am also big on textbooks for Science- I love to create and design what works with them.
Good Luck
Lizzie in Ma
01-21-2008, 09:05 AM
If it's working I leave it, if it isn't I tweak it.
Sticking with the SOTW into MOH w/TQ which has worked out well and I love.
Having at last found Christian Light Education for math and language arts I am sticking with it at least til 8th. We bailed from Rod and Staff. Thinking about Lial's after that for high school and dual enrollment classes.
Have never found a science I was all the way happy with so we have mixed and matched for years. At present we are doing Apologia Zoo 2 with a lapbook for 1st and 6th. 7th and 8th I really need to step it up a notch, may see what the local ps is using, don't know. Guess we are doing all right so far, she tests insanely high on the Stanford 10 in Science.
Latin we have jumped about but only because I love Latin and own tons of stuff. Used LFC A and B but heavily supplemented it due to its extreme lack of practice and reading (and the readers were abysmal). Loving Latin Prep series for 6th grader and Lively Latin for 1st.
R&S Bible and intend to stick with it, it is solid and pick up and go.
Things that have always worked and I have never tweaked are few but Troxel's Geography Songs and States and Capitols are on that list. Abeka cursive worked for us from pre-K on. Typing Instructor Deluxe. R&S Bible and intend to stick with it, it is solid and pick up and go for grades 5-10. Golden Bible with Intro to Classical Studies for 1st-3rd. I think those are the only things I never had to tweak so far.
elegantlion
01-21-2008, 10:23 AM
For the last 3 years we used a boxed curriculum. This year I hand picked each subject, it's been so freeing! I even wrote my own American history lesson plans for 4th grade. I've found certain publishers that I plan to use but will continue to do my own schedule.
Nancy in SoCal
01-21-2008, 03:47 PM
The researching and planning is my favorite! :D
godpoetry
01-21-2008, 03:59 PM
I pick out what I think will work and usually end up changing before it is over.:rolleyes: I have a SN child so I try to keep things that work for him.
Strawberry Queen
01-21-2008, 06:59 PM
There are many programs that are good for part of the program, just not the whole thing. My biggest problem is US history. There are soo many great publishers that have US history as a major focus of their program for at least a few years. Being Canadian makes this problematic:)
I sometimes wish I lived south of the border, just so I could use some of those programs. Oh well, I'll just have to hope that someone up here writes something wonderful-like TOG
Mekanamom
01-21-2008, 08:01 PM
It's a great fit for us.
We've been all over the place with curricula... we've done our own thing, we've done K12 via a charter school, we've followed TWTM...
We are enjoying our lessons and getting a ton done with Calvert. :) The price is an issue, though.
K12 was ok, but I had terrible problems with online lessons and an assigned teacher who thought I could grab my kids, all their school stuff, and a laptop to do school at Starbucks when our internet connection was down for a week. :eek:
We had enough internet connectivity problems to make me decide that an online school is perhaps not for us at this time.
I very much enjoyed pulling my own chosen curricula together ala TWTM, but drove myself nuts trying to put together a secular program.
Calvert pretty much has everything I was looking for, all nicely packaged and integrated... so for us, it's great. I supplement where needed. Oldest dd is using Jump In for writing in addition to her Calvert assignments. And Youngest dd is using Ordinary Parent's Guide to Teaching Reading in addition to her Calvert lessons.
We do not use the Calvert Math... we're about to start Singapore (materials just arrived!)
Jenny in Florida
01-22-2008, 11:49 AM
Well, there are some subjects--math, especially--for which I like to find something all laid out. But for history and literature, which I consider the core of our curriculum, and for arts and anything else I can connect with history, I tend to pull togehter lots of different resources.
--Jenny
karensk
01-22-2008, 12:36 PM
I have the same problem!
I end up changing things so much that it's not worth paying for something that's already scheduled out for me (w/weekly schedules, etc.). So I have to schedule it out myself. Still, I love being able to customize things for the kids.
Scarlett
01-22-2008, 01:52 PM
I'm not surprised that most on the WTM boards would be putting together their own thing. I did for K after I found TWTM book and fell in love with the Classical concept. My dh is not one of those '100% supportive of homeschooling' spouses and thus my compromise to keep him happier is using a Virtual Academy. Our State is using K12. I have no complaints about K12. I think it is a fine program. I can see if you ever had internet problems it could be a big issue. Also, the price if I had to pay for it.
I do pick and choose a lot of K12 and have learned to not stress over getting every single paper completed because my ds doesn't require it to master the material. Sometimes reading on these boards I long for the freedom to use ONLY what I want to use. For the most part though I'm happy with K12.
Mekanamom
01-22-2008, 02:13 PM
Scarlett- I agree... K12 is a fine program for sure! We didn't have any issues with the education (well, except the math! When we were in the charter school, we did use use the K12 math because we *had* to, but I supplemented with Abeka.)
I'm hoping that by the high school years, we'll have a better internet connection.
Calvert through 8th, K12 (hopefully) for high school and concurrent enrollment in the local JC... lol, prepared curricula all the way!
4pillars
01-22-2008, 04:08 PM
We use MFW's Rome to the Reformation. I love having everything laid out and planned for me. I do have the option of adding more if I want to though! I do plan my own Language Arts though...which consist of Rod and Staff English, Daily Paragraph Editing and Spelling Wisdom; all of these programs are just a do the next lesson kind of thing:)
Mommyfaithe
01-22-2008, 04:24 PM
I have really tried to follow a boxed or planned curriculum and failed with them every time because I had to tweak it so much. This year, I have come up with a plan based on subjects and levels so my kiddoes can work their way through our homeschool both at their own pace and my discretion.
I really love how this is panning out...so much better than being totally frustrated and feeling like a total failure in implementing someone else's plans.
~~Faithe
Cadam
01-22-2008, 04:41 PM
I use to do my own thing and put it al together. Now I use MFW but of course I have to add LA to that. We also do MUS and LFC.
Mom2GirlsTX
01-22-2008, 05:17 PM
Our first year we did Calvert, but then I found TWTM and we went with our own mix. Using SWB recommendations and checking out what Cathy Duffy reviews are, we have put together our own...and I like it that way!:)
pamjk
01-22-2008, 05:48 PM
This is a great thread! I've been visiting the WTM boards almost daily for about 7 yrs now, but I'm not a regular poster. I like this new forum, but I have to get used to it!
My oldest is 10 and we've just about everything you can imagine! For "boxed": most of Calvert grade 2, Sonlight book lists and the new 3-5 LA
Maths we've tried: Saxon, Rod and Staff, RightStart, Miquon, Scott Foresman, Calvert, Spectrum
This list is embarassing enough so I'll not finish the list of everything else we've tried. :(
10yoDS is a "late-blooming, reluctant-reader student" so I have continued to search out just the right things for him. Needless to say, I've spent 100s of hours every year doing research and have spent tons of money. And he's still not catching up to "grade-level." No surprise there after all the curriculum-hopping. I'm finally coming to the conclusion that the "right" thing just doesn't exist.
So this year I found out about Time4Learning from an old homeschool friend in MA. At first, I was horrified at the idea of sitting kids at the computer for schoolwork. But then we tried it and it was perfect for us! The kids love it because they have more control over their lessons. They love the games(lessons) and they actually remember more because they enjoy it and it catches their attention. I sit with them and we actually enjoy working together at school time.
I thought for sure this was to good to be true, so I printed out the lesson plans and compared them to our state's standards. I found that Time4learning goes way beyond what is covered here in my state. Now I recognize that is not what most classically-minded folks would use for comparison, but I have to go with what works for us, right now. I love WTM, but all my grand ideas for how it'd work in our house have proved to be failures. Just because WTM spells out how *I'd* like to learn, doesn't mean it's the best for my kids. This has been a very hard lesson for me.
I will still supplement with SL Core 3 history, reader lists and read-alouds, handwriting, science experiments, and maybe IEW next year. But T4L has lightened my load tremendously.
I wrote this long post with the thought that maybe someone else in the Hive Mind has felt this way and may benefit from my reassurance that it's ok to do the best you can, even if it's not the most popular(or even close to what you expected)way of homeschooling.
PamK in NC
ds10 and dd7
But I have started incorporating some K12 courses into my children's schedules. The older one uses K12 Life Science and the younger one uses K12 Language Arts, History, and Art.
Next year, I plan to have the older one do K12 Physical Science, World History A, and Art and have the younger one do K12 Language Arts, History, Science, and Art.
OneRoomHomeSchool
01-29-2008, 11:29 PM
For the past 2 years I had used 2 different boxed curriculums. We did the first one, but switched thinking it was the curriculum itself, only to find out that the second didnt' work any better. :rolleyes:
So...I am now pulling together my own things and so far, so good.
Tia in Wa
01-30-2008, 01:08 AM
I do my own thing based on suggestions from WTM. I love it. I have a friend who has BJU and it dosen't look like something I would like.
Pster
01-30-2008, 07:47 AM
what is LCC? not....coming...to....me.....
but then again ..it's early ~
Free Indeed
01-30-2008, 09:24 AM
I think it is Latin Centered Curriculum from other post I have seen.
rivendellmom
01-30-2008, 09:30 AM
LCC= Latin Centered Curriculum
Sandy in Indy
01-30-2008, 01:35 PM
We've always done an eclectic mix of things, even before I picked up TWTM. I just don't think any one publisher does all things well, and there are sooooo many wonderful things out there from which to choose.
JenniferVA
01-30-2008, 04:10 PM
I do a mix of pulling stuff together (Science, History) and using prepared plans (Math, Latin). I'm in my 6th year homeschooling, and I've discovered that I really dislike boxed curriculum or following someone else's philosophy completely. My homeschool curriculum stew has bits of TWTM, LCC, VP, and Logos School in it.
Jen
Mom to 4 boys
6th, 5th, 3rd, and 1st
cricket1178
01-30-2008, 04:14 PM
I do a little of both, too.
freethinkermom
01-30-2008, 04:44 PM
Mostly we do our own thing.
Rich with Kids
01-30-2008, 04:52 PM
Ugh! This is why I'm a curricuholic. I have to justify my addiction by actually teaching what I buy. So, we are very eclectic.
BarbaraL in OK
01-30-2008, 09:54 PM
Oops, sorry Pster. Yes, LCC is the book The Latin-Centered Curriculum: Homeschooler's Guide to a Classical Education, by Drew/Plaid Dad.
I think sometimes those of us who like LCC also use it as shorthand to refer to the type of classical education the book champions. That would be... what was considered the standard for education until the 1940s?; Latin centered, of course; a focus on a few areas done deeply; the selective areas of study probably including Latin, math, foundational literature, and music study.
More info at the Web site, LatinCentered.com (http://www.latincentered.com/).
Kimber
01-31-2008, 12:23 AM
We used to strictly do our own thing, except for a few workbooks. But then I found Biblioplan, and I even though I tweak 50% of it, there is a huge advantage to that 50%. Next year, we'll be using TOG with the VP cards. I'll be tweaking the daylights out of them both. :)
JeanM
01-31-2008, 12:27 AM
I pull most stuff together myself. I've been thinking more about boxed curriculum lately though. It is a lack of energy thing on my part.
Jean
Laurel T.
01-31-2008, 01:13 AM
We are so new at this I don't know what I will end up doing. But, I really have the planning fever and its great to see what all of you are doing. I think I will end up getting something basic (packaged) and then making it our own.
Laurel
Linda in NM
01-31-2008, 10:30 AM
we pick and choose and pull together from a CM perspective...we use Trisms as a base for history, IEW writing lessons, VideoText algebra, Rainbow Science, Latin Prep, Rosetta Stone for German, some supplemental language arts stuff, Mapping the World by Heart, Total Health, and lots of living books!
SandraDumas
01-31-2008, 10:42 AM
Next year we are going back to Covenant Home.
Mom2boys
01-31-2008, 11:47 AM
I really enjoy researching and choosing curricula, so we are pretty eclectic too. I have learned though that I am better off tweaking someone else's plan, than creating my own from scratch. Currently we are using Sonlight Core 6, spread over two years, so that my first and fifth graders can use Story of the World Ancients together. My 5th grader does the Sonlight reading, while my 1st grader uses the SOTW activity guide. TOG is really tempting me, but I am not sure if it would be worth the price after I was done tweaking it.
clane
02-07-2008, 12:40 PM
We are currently enrolled in a VA, and use K12 for our DS (9). I am weighing the options for next year (DD1 will be 5).
Linda in NM
02-07-2008, 01:14 PM
We schedule, too, but we "pick and choose" for our scheduling. For example, we do our Trisms (HistoryMakers) work in the morning, interspersed with Mapping the World by Heart or Total Health (depending on the day). We do Videotext Algebra in the afternoons (except on Mondays, which is music day), followed by Latin, logic, and science (Rainbow) on Tuesdays and Thursdays and German, typing, and PE on Wednesdays and Fridays...works for my 13 yos sports boy.
Frontier Mom
02-07-2008, 02:38 PM
I like using different things. I started CLE for middle ds's after Christmas break but hating it already. I think the curriculum is great but the boys just don't like the "workbook" feel. I let them do it independently and take a test when the unit is complete, but it just isn't working well.
I like the reading part and think I might just use that part and "revamp" the rest. Next year I am already planning on using TOG 2 Redesign as I bought it before the price increase. I just need permission to dump what I spent so much money on!!
This thread makes me realize I am not the only one that can never find the right thing. Problem is, it takes me a while to discover what doesn't work.
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