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Math curriculum for parent and child?
Posted: Sat Jul 01, 2006 8:51 am
by LK
I am really hoping to get some advice here. We have been HSing our 13 yr, old for 1 1/2 years and are suffering so badly in the Math area that she is talking about going back to school because it's to stressful.
The problem lies on both sides. I don't understand Math and never have and it seems she has the same problem. I knew this when we got started but my DH thougth he could help in that area and I was incourged by other HSing parents that I could still do this. Well, I am really starting to wonder. So amid tears of possible failer I am praying that someone here might know of a Math curriculum that would help us both learn it at the same time. I have looked into Math U See and thought that would be a way to go but then I read some posts here against it and heard that kids using it don't test well.
so PLEASE HELP! I am begging you!
Sincerly, Linda K
Re: Math curriculum for parent and child?
Posted: Sat Jul 01, 2006 10:36 am
by Theodore
Math-U-See isn't necessarily a bad program just because some people test badly using it (assuming they do). I think you should visit a local homeschool group and check it out before making a decision one way or the other. However, in answer to your original question, here's some
math resources. From personal experience, I highly recommend
Barnum Quartermile for basic math drill, and Saxon works well for textbook learning up through Algebra II or so. The resources listed also give you some options for if your child is auditory or you'd rather do your math online, and if your child is a hands-on learner, you can get some
Cuisenaire rods to supplement with.
Posted: Wed Jul 05, 2006 8:48 am
by LK
Change isn't always bad:
Posted: Wed Jul 05, 2006 10:39 am
by Theodore
Another approach?
Posted: Wed Jul 05, 2006 1:40 pm
by Moti
Have you tought about using a different approach? Rather than you being the math teacher, finding someone else, partnering with other homeschoolers in the area, using an online program, etc.?
My books are designed so you don't need a teacher, but alas, I'm only up to Decimal Fractions and while she might need remedial work on those topics that I cover [see my website], and my books would take care of that, she does need a good curriculum and at this point probably a good teacher to take her through some remedial work.
It is important that you make sure she fully knows past material since learning new material well is difficult if there are gaps.
Posted: Fri Jul 07, 2006 10:15 am
by Bob Hazen
Here's another option. The difficulty your daughter is having is not so much because of the homeschooling you/she are doing but far more likely because of poor explanations, poor teaching, poor learning, and weak mastery that occured before you pulled her out of traditional school.
This is what I suggest in situations like this (but without knowing where you live): go online and find Kumon Math. Kumon Math has tutoring centers in almost all major cities. Kumon's approach is to first pinpoint where a child has "holes" in their skill base, and then they go back to that particular skill and work forward from there. A friend of mine had a daughter taking Alg.2 and was really struggling. She went to Kumon, and after testing her, she started at 2nd grade subtraction! But she quickly mastered that and went on from there, building up a solid foundation of her skill base. Another friend of mine that I recommended to Kumon said that her son is now doing great in math and that my advice to go to Kumon was "the best math advice I've ever gotten." In Kumon, kids progress the old-fashioned way: by working hard and achieving mastery of the individually-identified skills. For what it's worth, my experience is that Kumon is FAR better than the other professional tutoring places (one of which I've worked for), such as Sylvan or Huntington, and also far better than finding a local tutor to work one-on-one. Kumon has a great plan, a great methodology, great results - and great prices, too - far less expensive than other tutoring sites.
Hope this helps.
Bob Hazen
Posted: Mon Jul 10, 2006 11:57 am
by babaika
I, honestly, would love to help--but I need more details on the nature of failures. If U don't mind I would be happy to talk, be it on the phone, MSN Messenger or Skype. If U need my coordinates--will be happy to provide.
Posted: Tue Jul 18, 2006 10:57 am
by Tabz
My mom wasn't that great in math (and I hated it) so my dad was able to help me through a lot of it. When they got stuck they ordered Saxon Math and then the problem solver workbook that went through how to find the answer. That helped a lot!
There's also a lot of resources online to explain concepts like:
http://www.webmath.com/
Posted: Tue Jul 18, 2006 1:58 pm
by babaika
Posted: Sun Apr 15, 2007 7:08 pm
by StellarStory
One year of standardized testing my son bombed on the math portion. I was stunned and upset to say the least. It took a while to figure out why. I knew he'd learned so much algebra but the thing was that algebra wasn't on the test, basic math was.
He is the sort of kid that doesn't retain stuff well unless he reviews it constantly. Instead of doing that we'd concentrated on algebra. It really sucked that I hadn't thought about teaching to the test a bit more.
Stellar
Posted: Wed Apr 18, 2007 7:26 am
by Dolly-VA
Posted: Thu May 03, 2007 8:03 am
by StellarStory