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#18827 - 07/01/08 08:30 PM
Re: Using a Teacher for Homeschooling
[Re: Kriston]
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Member
Registered: 12/14/07
Posts: 508
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Kriston is right, Dottie. If you know any homeschoolers see if they would help you to get the info out. If not contact the hs group coordinator and see if she would post your info in a newsletter or on the mailing list. I just helped a friend of mine to get her ad into our newsletter. You may also try to offer group classes and see if people are interested.
Good luck
_________________________
LMom
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#18838 - 07/02/08 06:38 AM
Re: Using a Teacher for Homeschooling
[Re: incogneato]
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Member
Registered: 11/24/07
Posts: 604
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Thanks, Incog. I have someone wonderful. I just don't know what to pay her and we haven't discussed it yet. Just wanted to get an idea before we do.
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#18842 - 07/02/08 07:07 AM
Re: Using a Teacher for Homeschooling
[Re: Kriston]
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Member
Registered: 05/26/07
Posts: 266
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I am glad you asked this question because I have been thinking about this also, but I think what my son really needs is a math "mentor", possibly a college student who really, really likes math. I have always wondered if my attitude toward math has somehow affected my son's attitude the subject. He has always learned math concepts very quickly and he always liked to find other ways of coming up with the answers, which I think is probably a good thing, but I was often impatient with him when he did this. I was only taught one way of doing math and I felt like I didn't really understand math inside and out the way I needed to. There were too many times that I told him "why can't you just do the problem the way I showed you or the way the book shows it and get it over with?" With science, history, literature, everything else, we spent lots of time discussing the subject because we both enjoyed these subjects, but math was a different story and I wish I could take back all those times when I was tired and cranky and not helpful at all when he wanted to discuss math. As a homeschool mom I sometimes feel a little guilty about this.
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#18844 - 07/02/08 07:17 AM
Re: Using a Teacher for Homeschooling
[Re: Lori H.]
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Member
Registered: 11/24/07
Posts: 604
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Lori, have you looked into Johns Hopkins CTY and/or Stanford EPGY? They both include tutors in their classes and some have virtual classrooms where the kids listen and speak via the computer. They're expensive, but they might offer assistance.
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#18977 - 07/03/08 03:45 PM
Re: Using a Teacher for Homeschooling
[Re: questions]
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Member
Registered: 05/26/07
Posts: 266
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We might try those in the future. He used Aleks for a while and did well enough with that, but I just don't think he will ever like math the way he does all the other subjects and I just wonder if it is my fault. He enjoys learning about every other subject, even through the summer, but he reminds me that it is summer break if I try to get him to do anything math related. I just wish that he could find a friend or mentor that really liked math, and could convince him that math was actually fun.
He does have one friend his age who is in the gifted class at the public school and this kid says he likes math, but they don't let kids work above grade level at this school so my son is doing higher grade level math than he is. His other gifted friends don't really like math as much as other subjects.
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#19013 - 07/04/08 06:57 AM
Re: Using a Teacher for Homeschooling
[Re: Dazed&Confuzed]
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Member
Registered: 05/26/07
Posts: 266
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We haven't tried any of the Zaccaro books and that sounds like something my son would really like. Thanks for the suggestion. I think I need to work with his love of science and technology to get him more involved with math.
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