OK so I blogged a couple times about going to the Midwest Homeschool Convention this weekend. Well, last night we loaded up the girls to stay the night with grandma, and then Scott and I drove down and got a hotel room for the night so we could attend today. We slept in, then had breakfast and got to the convention right around 10am. I just wanted to go into the vendor's hall, as I knew what I wanted to get and look at, plus I wanted to explore some new stuff. So, we did for 4 hours before my hip and leg started to give out. In that time, we looked at several different science programs and picked one!!! YAY!!!!! We also managed to get the following other items:
All About Spelling levels 1 and 2 (from the company itself)
Math-U-See Beta with 2 student books, an Alpha student set, a second set of blocks, and the wood storage case (all sold out so they will ship to us)
Real Science 4 Kids Pre-Level 1 Chemestry, Biology, and Physics bundles
Write Foundations books 1.1 and 1.2 times 2 kids (will ship free to us)
Mathematics standards K-12 guideline book (badly needed for my own reference here!)
a book for me to enjoy
Hands of A Child Complete packs for Ancient Mesopotamia and Ancient Egypt
a new Sonlight catalog that isn't all torn up so I can read it plus a discount code for my next purchase
Now, I just have to comment on some of this. The Write Foundations books for Missa and Liddy are a spontaneous purchase, and part of my plans for the upcoming school year to try and get them writing more on a daily basis. I walked by their table at the convention, and something made me stop and look. So, being the faithful person I am, I decided to. What the heck, I can learn about something new right? Obviously I liked what I saw and heard, because I got it for 2 kids. I have no clue if it will work well for us, but hopefully it gets them started to thinking about the writing process a bit and starting to write more in general.
My decision to get Real Science 4 Kids came after we looked at several different programs. I've tried so hard to like Sonlight science, I really have, but I just don't like it. Sorry, Sonlight, but it is the truth. It is too random and jumpy for our family, moving from topic to topic and too many books to read from each week. It is a great program overall, but is not the right choice for our family. So, we put science research at the top of our list. I'm familiar with several programs already, so I wanted mainly to get Scott's opinion of the different options. How it worked was...... He looked at Apologia's science books and got this look on his face like he had seen a fat man in a skintight micro-miniskirt with fishnets, heels, and all that nasty stuff. He was horrified by it, and refused to let me even consider it. I have to agree, it wasn't a good fit for our family's needs (and his opinion wasn't based on the religious content either, he read through part of a chapter and was horrified at the way the material was presented and said that it made him want to cry at how terribly it was written with so much misinformation, I didn't bother looking at it myself because I won't use a program without his agreement). A few others we looked at were poorly laid out, or too parent-intensive for finding materials, or too much time in front of a computer screen, so we ended up right back at the Real Science 4 Kids table at the end making a purchase. We are hoping to use all 3 books in the next two years with the girls combined into one big group, and just have fun with it before we move up to level 1.
Now, I'm sure you saw on this post that I bought All About Spelling from the company itself. I was planning to buy from Sonlight, but I wanted Scott to take a look at it before I bought it. So we headed over to the table, and then after he got a look at it and listened to their speil about the program he suggested that maybe we should buy it today. I agreed, and then decided that since I got it today that poor Missa will start it most likely on Monday. My hands are still tingly and sore from cutting up all the letter tiles to put the magnets on them.
Now, I also hear you asking why I would get just a new Sonlight catalog and a coupon code from them. Well, my new catalog was damaged by the USPS in shipping and it arrived on Monday. I decided that it would be better to just grab a new one at the convention instead of asking Sonlight to ship me another one and risk the post office damaging it too. And that coupon code will come in VERY handy here soon, as I am planning to place an order this weekend for the next set of readers that Missa needs and that package is priced high enough for me to use the coupon code. :)
Oh and the lapbook units. Yes, we use Sonlight for history, but we also add in History Pockets, the k12 history 1 student pages that apply, and lapbooking to our Sonlight to give it a much better hands-on appeal for Missa. That gives her another way to absorb the material, and I noticed in the past that when we lapbook she is engaged and interested and actually retains information better. So yeah, I use 3 curricula to teach the same material. No big deal. We are also adding a lot of depth to our core program (the Sonlight) with these added materials, giving Missa the extra that she craves. We chose to repeat ancients this year despite doing it just last year with k12 because she loved it so much and I wanted to dig in deeper to fuel that interest. So we take 2 or 3 weeks sometimes to finish a week of core work, but its ok because other weeks we may bust through a couple weeks of our core work in this subject. So there you have it, we tweak and modify to encourage the maximum potential of each child in their learning and that includes doing lapbooking, history pockets, and the occassional worksheet (for Liddy's sake, she's my worksheet kid).
So, my very first convention was a blast. I'm hoping that next year Scott can get convention week off work so we can go the whole thing, then I'll be able to explore every vendor they have there and go to some of the workshops. I can't wait, I have my list of this year's vendors and I plan to spend the year researching the ones I'm unfamiliar with to see if they are worthy of my investigating further.
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