Algebra 1
Skill Builders
ISBN: 1-932210-10-5
Megawords Book 4
ISBN 0-8388-1826-9
Teacher’s Guide and Answer Key 1
ISBN 0-8388-1825-0
Mixed Skills in Math
I started C. on this book after discovering the precision teaching folks and the concept of fluency. I'm using "Mixed Skills" to provide "slices," which I gather are very short blitz-type practice sets. (I don't know what slices are; I'm guessing from context.)
Basically I'm trying to do a form of fluency teaching with zero training and no materials. So we'll see.
ISBN: 1-56822-861-9
Spanish 1
Skill Builders
ISBN-10: 1932210148
ISBN-13: 978-1932210149
Spectrum Math Grade 7
(an instructivist recommendation, as I recall)
We're doing the entire chapter on decimal and percent; then we'll figure out what to do next.
ISBN-10: 0769636977
ISBN-13: 978-0769636979
Vocabulary Workshop Level A
(you don't need a teacher edition)
ISBN: 0-8215-7606-2
Skill Builders: all series
Spectrum: all series
also:
Saxon Math Algebra 1
We're doing all of the "percent bubbles."
Saxon Math 8/7
all of the fraction bar model problems (Saxon uses bar models for fraction problems in 8/7 & possibly in a couple of the other books)
I located Steps to Good Grammar: 169 Lessons, Exercises, and Tests by Genevieve Walbert Schaefer the other day (ISBN-10: 0825128765 ISBN-13: 978-0825128769), and we may start back with it - although I may decide to have C. do the Instructional Fair diagramming workbooks first (Walberg's book teaches diagramming, too):
Better Sentence Structure Through...Diagramming Book 1
by Mark Dressel & Greg Carnevale
ISBN 1-56822-175-4
ISBN-10: 1568221754
ISBN-13: 978-1568221755
Better Sentence Structure Through...Diagramming Book 2
by Mark Dressel & Greg Carnevale
Instructional Fair
ISBN 1-56822-176-2
ISBN-10: 1568221762
ISBN-13: 978-1568221762
I'm thinking about having C. do an Aleks assessment....
Last but not least, we are now doing sentence recombining and text reconstruction exercises.
update 7-15-2007: I just remembered. Saxon Math 8/7 has Fast Facts sheets.
summer supplement time, part 2 (2005)
summer plans 2006 (Carolyn J.)
summer school 2006
My old Warriner's (Rivised Edition with Supplement, Complete Course, Copyright 1969) is still my single source for writing and grammar. You could plan your whole course of home study from just the contents, although nothing beats having the book. The amazing thing about Warriner's is that in addition to having all the following information, it has hundreds of examples and exercises, all packed into this paperback size hard cover of 800+ pages. Here are the contents followed by some brief excerpts from the preface.
ReplyDeleteContents:
Part One: Grammar
Parts of Speech, Parts of a Sentence, Phrase, Clause
Part Two: Usage
Levels of Usage (Standard vs. Substandard English), Agreement, Pronouns, Verbs, Modifiers
Part Three: Composition: Sentence Structure
Sentence Completeness, Coordination/Subordination, Clear Reference, Placement of Modifiers, Parallel Structure (really important!), Unnecessary Shifts in Sentences, Sentence Conciseness, Sentence Variety, Effective Diction, Exercises in Sentence Revision
Part Four: Composition: Paragraphs and Longer Papers
The Effective Paragraph, Expository Writing, Language and Logic, Exercises in Composition, Research Paper, Letter Writing
Part Five: Aids to Good English
Information in the Library, Reference Books, Dictionary, Vocabulary
Part Six: Speaking and Listening
Discussion and Debate, Effective Speech
Part Seven: Mechanics
Capitalization, Punctuation, Manuscript Form, Spelling
Part Eight: A New Look at Grammar
Structural and Transformational Grammars
College Entrance and Other Examinations
Tests of Verbal Aptitude, Composition Tests
Supplement
Making Writing Interesting
From the Preface (citation above).
"The teacher of senior English occupies a difficult but challenging position. Because the course he teaches is in large part a summary of all the English courses that have preceded it, he feels obligated to review, or reteach, everything. Two thoughts impress upon him the magnitude of his responsibilities. The first is the image of the college English instructor lurking in the future of his college-bound students, ready and, it often seems, eager to find weaknesses in their high school preparation. The other is the even more sobering knowledge that for his terminal students the senior English class may be the last chance to master language skills that will help them meet the speaking and writing demands of a lifetime."
About teaching literature vs. teaching writing: "Relatively few college students fail because of inadequate preparation in literature compared to the number who fail because they cannot write."
About expository writing: "In teaching expository writing, a teacher must deal with four kinds of composition problems; the problem of the word; the problem of the sentence; the problem of the paragraph; and the problem of the longer composition."
And "The most important and perhaps most difficult thing to achieve in teaching expository writing is good organization. Organization can be most concretely taught through the paragraph which, in small compass, demands most of the important writing skills."
Interesting to note that author John Warriner taught English in junior and senior highschools and in college. Co-author Francis Griffith had a doctoral degree in education from Columbia University, and was for many years Chairman of English and Speech in a Brooklyn, New York, High School.
wow!
ReplyDeleteThanks!
I'll get that posted up front ---
I've barely dipped into the book, but I have a kind of "instinctive" admiration for it -----
it's strange---
Speaking of assessment....
ReplyDeleteI have been homeschooling my two kids for the past 3 years using Singapore Math. We began in 2A and have just finished 5B. I decided to give them the Saxon middle grades placement test to see how they scored and if there were any holes in understanding. Both kids placed into Algebra 1!