Eeyore's Girl
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2002
- Messages
- 405
So...Why do some of the other homeschooling discussion boards have a Disney attitude? 


karisbell said:Anyway, DS (4) is learning to read. He knows all of his letter sounds and can read short vowel, three letter words, but he has a hard time distinguishing between the lowercase "b" and "d". He knows the sounds of each when I tell him what it is, but he mixes them up when he sees them. Does anyone have a creative solution to help us sort this out? We are not using any particular curriculum, just workbooks from Sam's and bits and pieces of an old "Hooked on Phonics" someone gave us. Thanks for any suggestions!
gssmks said:Hello everyone! I just found this thread and it happened at the best time. I am not home schooling my DD, but I am strongly considering it. She is in the second grade and I just am not satisfied with the public schools. She is doing fine academically, but I feel that I have done most of it at home. By the time her school gets around to teaching something interesting, we usually have already studied it at home. I go to book stores and teacher supply stores and purchase workbooks for her
I have a huge problem. I work and it's not an option. I am divorced and my income is the only income in the house. What do you guys think about me doing my DD schooling in the evenings insteading of morning and afternoon? Also, I have talked with a retired teacher who lives in my community about paying her to babysit/school for me while I am at work. She was a wonderful teacher, who tought for almost twenty years passed her retirement year "just because she loved it". She already has a good relationship with my child. My DD calls her Granny. Do you think that this would be a good schooling situation for my child?
Some kids spend zero time with schoolbooks, and some spend as much or more at home with school books as they do in school- What can make ALL these situations so great for the kids is they have parents who know their own families,circumstances, and childrens needs better than anyone else. So read a lot, and do what your heart tells you! 

Mommaof3 said:Hi! Just found this thread. We are in our 12th year of homeschooling. I have a daughter in 12th grade and twin boys in 8th grade. I have 8 years teaching in public schools so I've seen both "sides" of the coin. I would be happy to answer questions if I can.
Melisssa![]()

disneymom3 said:I am not above asking again....![]()
Does anyone have any good resources for studying Colonial America?
Thanks.

