Posted on 03/30/2002 3:56:22 AM PST by Caipirabob
Be shure to pre dril befor nailing.
That is so sad I can't even qualify it as funny.
1. For homeschooled children all words must be 10 letters or more. Example: chrysanthemum.
2. For privately schooled children, words of 8 letters or more.
3. For public school children, words of 6 letters or less.
4. For public school children from an economically disadvanted area, words of 3 letters or less. Example: cat.
They have unwaveringly supported their union, the National Education Association, and liberal democrat politicians which have wrought much of the problems facing schools today. They've made their bed - now they can lie in it.
Hmmm. If public school kids were winning spelling bees over the home schooled kids, do you think the NEA would be saying, "Having public school bee champs does not show the superiority of public schooling."
As for higher science and math, it's important to point out that parents who aren't proficient can supplement such subjects with tutors or co-ops, entrance into the ps high schools, or community college classes.
You just haven't been creative enough or done enough research if you think homeschoolers are limited by being home even in athletics or higher math and science. This just isn't the case and the beauty of homeschooling is once high school years hit and a child shows an obvious talent or proficiency for something, they can devote more time and attention to it, actually making them the superior candidates in the long run. Just a few random thoughts;-)
I suppose if I remembered my calculus, I could remember how to construct an infinite series that would allow me to calculate pi to any desired degree of exactitude. But I don't remember enough to do that.
Idiotic educrat policies, take 2: Governor O'Bannon (IN-D) wants to be the 'education governor' (dont they all?). He addresses Indiana's weak standardized testing scores (usually in the low 40's out of 50 states) as the main indicator. His lame solution, as with so many others, is to change the test (as if that changes the amount of learning, or the quality of students produced). The moronic part: he decides that we should have 'the highest state standards in the nation'... making the test more difficult... which will, of course, result in lower standardized test scores. The educational process for children remains unchanged, and the test scorres will go down as an inevitable result of his own plan. Yep, that's MY governor! *sigh*
Actually, I haven't done one whit of RESEARCH on this. Therefore, it all falls under the heading of my far-reaching, agile CREATIVITY of mind. (I speculated on this...LOL.)
Nonetheless, my frau is a high school teacher. I've watched the distance courses in higher subjects, and they simply don't work.
A co-op IS an institutional school. Why institutional schools were devised in the first place.
I've been a long-time fan of high school athletics. There is no community or pick-up league that even comes close to the competitive opportunities granted kids in the state high school athletic associations.
I'm not saying that local little league isn't a good thing, but baseball is far, far and away the best of the available athletic opportunities outside of highschool athletics. Nothing else compares to it. But it grows out of baseball having been our "national" sport for years with great interest at every level.
And if a homeschooler puts their kids in high school athletics, then they're turning again to institutional education. I don't mind that. I just think we should call it what it is.
The most common method was memorizing a chunk of 15+ numbers each day, and adding it to the prevoious day. My favorites were the "poems" (some are available online, going as far as 740 places, others were actually made by my students). The trick is that the first word has 3 letter, then next has 1 letters, then 4 letters, then 1, then 5... "Did I pass a truck Wednesday?" gives 3.14159. Memorizing the poem seemed much easier for those who tried it. (Most of the boys were turned off by the idea of reading poetry, of course, LOL). The most creative I had was a the girl who went to 245 decimal places (tops for that class). She wrote a song (the tune was akin to a military cadence), but it contained several groups of explicit numbers, references to addresses, zip codes, area codes, musical groups, etc. I'm still not sure how some of her associations worked, but they worked for her, and that's all that's important.
"...there has obviously been some wretched breakdown in communication between the 3rd-5th grade math teachers, because I would be willing to bet that 75% of my kids do not know the 12x12 multiplication tables by heart. I have been including it in as many lessons and quizzes as possible, but they simply use fast addition to fill in the chart (add 4 to every subsequent number in the 4x column, etc), rather than actually memorizing the products."
I've seen that myself! I tutor inner city kids (K-6) in an afterschool care program and you are right - about 75% of 4th and 5th graders do not know their multiplication facts. Actually many don't even know addition and subtraction facts and do a lot of counting on their fingers! I and the other volunteers are working on this problem, but it's slow going. Of course the kids always want to use a calculator (we don't let them).
My daughter, (homeschooled since the 4th grade and about to graduate HS)was visiting a youth church service with a friend, and after about an hour the youth pastor asked her if she was a "homeschooler". He said he could tell because of her politness, her speech and actions compared to the other teenagers, that are in public school. He said he can usually spot the homeschooled teenagers.
My family is fortunate because my husband is brilliant in math and science. He teaches my son in the evenings. He and my son enjoy this interaction. My son scored a near perfect on his SAT's regarding those subjects. (My son just turned 14.) We know homeschooling parents that aren't as proficient in math and/or science, but their kids do just fine by utilizing used textbooks, the internet, software programs, science museum seminars or hiring a tutor. (My husband tutors one of my son's friends in math.)
My husband was never that keen on biology so he has our son attend a Santa Rosa Junior College course. My son will probably take a chemistry course next year even though he and his Dad have set up a pretty good lab in the garage.
Of course, not all homeschooling families can afford tutors, expensive software or internet courses, but somehow they manage. If their child is motivated and talented in certain subjects, all sorts of options (and blessings in regards to funding) open up! I've seen this happen time and time again.
You disagree with what? That there will be separate spelling bees for "school" students and homeschoolers?
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