Intentional Blogger eBook Launch

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Are you a Christian?

Are you a blogger?

Are you an intentional blogger?

~For 48 hours only~

(starting at 8am EST on Wednesday, April 24, and going through 8am EST on Friday, April 26)

They are offering 50% off to weekly newsletter subscribers. When a reader signs up to receive the weekly newsletter, they will receive instructions on how to receive their 50% off discount, which makes the book an incredibly low price of just $8! Check out more details on the Intentional Blogger page.

I’m joining @christmomblog for a Twitter Party next Thursday at 9PM EST! #intentionalblogger –> TWEET THIS!

HWT Wet Dry Try app Review

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Alex told me: “You do it. I can’t.”

HWOT Wet/Dry App Title page
That pretty much sums up Alex’s portion of the review for the Handwriting Without Tears Wet-Dry-Try app. $4.99

I was so excited to have the opportunity to review this app. I have never used a formal handwriting program and I have heard such great things about this handwriting style. I was thinking this is a great Montessori app that Alex can do to get started on forming his letters.

But it’s so sensitive that he got frustrated and gave up.

Even I got frustrated and told my husband that it was futile to try to make Alex practice more than 3 letters on the app because he and I both were almost to the point of tears.

The narrator demonstrates the letter with a piece of chalk and then the child is supposed to erase the chalk and then wipe it with a wet rag and then write it again himself with chalk.

Sounds fun!

If the child strays from the line even the slightest bit, the narrator instructs him to start over. We were ready to throw the iPad across the room, but it’s an expensive toy to replace over one app.

Here is the rationale behind the sensitivity from the Handwriting Without Tears website:

TRACING AND APP SENSITIVITY

At HWT, we believe in always giving a correct model for a child to copy. Students should not copy from their own writing, because they end up copying from their copy, and then copying from that copy, and so on. Their writing can get worse because they don’t have a good model. Here are a few answers to questions you might have about the sensitivity of the Wet-Dry-Try App:

1)     Why is the app so sensitive?

After testing, we landed on the degree of sensitivity that is most helpful for preparing children to write well. It is a little technical, but here is the reasoning behind our decision:

  • What makes the mark?

When your finger touches the tablet and engages the writing instrument, the app is tracking a center point (imagine a pencil point). The mark left by the sponge, towel, and chalk is much wider than the center point of the mark.

  • Why did it cause a mistake when my “dry” mark was clearly on top of the “wet” mark?

This is the part that makes the teaching tricky. We want to help children with the correct sequence of strokes, but also with steadiness and neatness. The child’s “wet mark” can be wider than the original chalk mark by a little bit and still be “correct.” However, the app is set up to encourage the child the travel on the original chalk mark, not the “wet mark.” Each step off of the original chalk mark could end up further and further away from the correct model, and result in poor formation habits.

As long as the center point of your tool (sponge, towel, chalk) is traveling on the original chalk mark then it is correct. If a student goes too far off three times in a row, Marcy will demonstrate the correct spot again to re-establish it in the child’s perspective.

  • Why did it cause a mistake when I was doing the little curves of the B?

Each stroke has to be completed all the way to the frame of the chalkboard (you’ll hear a hollow ding once you have finished the stroke) to make sure there is no space between strokes. Depending on how the child has made the first stroke, sometimes it will appear he or she has gone far enough but may actually not be tracing the original chalk mark. This is similar to the student copying from their copy rather than copying the original well.

All that “technical stuff” is well and good, but if it’s so frustrating that my child doesn’t want to continue, then that’s not success in my book. I’ve never placed much emphasis on perfect handwriting. The app is recommended for ages 4+ and Alex is only almost 3.

HWT Letter F

Alex was so good to keep trying the letters in the app for Mama. He was so confused that his efforts weren’t good enough. He traced A and B over and over again…and then I looked at the settings to see if I could change the sensitivity. Nope. He’s a busy boy and his fine motor skills do need work, but he wasn’t interested after a few minutes of being told he was wrong, wrong, try again, sorry.

I noticed they have what they term “winning order” which is learning letters in their company’s approved easiest order. It makes sense to write the letters in order their way. I wish the app had lowercase letters too.

We tried F and E. More frustration. Then Alex was done.

A couple days later, Tori came and showed me the app and told me she loves it! She’s 6 years old. We don’t even do manuscript handwriting with her much anymore. She’s beginning cursive already and her handwriting is gorgeous.

She was able to maneuver the chalk, sponge, and wipe on the app rather well because she is such a perfectionist. But she still veered off a bit here and there. And that narrator told her so. Tori didn’t get too frustrated, but she did ask me if she wasn’t doing it right and I could see her confusion. That B is the toughest letter on the app, I think!

HWT app

The idea is awesome, but I wish they gave the option of setting the sensitivity levels, even with all their research saying their way is best. I do respect the research. I wish they included lowercase letters too. Perhaps older preschoolers or even school-age kids would be able to succeed with this handwriting app with less frustration. This app wasn’t right for my almost 3 year old son. Tori liked it, but she’s a little beyond needing to practice handwriting.

Handwriting without Tears Logo

 

Photobucket

Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this product through the Schoolhouse Review Crew in exchange for my honest review. I was not required to write a positive review nor was I compensated in any other way. All opinions I have expressed are my own or those of my family. I am disclosing this in accordance with the FTC Regulations.

Logic of English review

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I was so excited to meet Denise Eide at Allume and sit with her at dinner one night! We both share a love and fascination for language and she offered her curriculum, Logic of English, to me to review.

This is an extremely comprehensive program and I am very impressed with all the research and hard work that Denise and her family put into this. It is quite amazing.

As a former English teacher, I can tell you: this program is all you’d ever need for a language arts program with your students or children. It covers reading, spelling, handwriting, grammar, the works!

Read about how the curriculum is structured in three parts at their website.

While my girls are at different stages and we can’t utilize some aspects of the program at this time, we do love some of it right now and I plan to use the games and supplements with Tori and Katie next year.

Elizabeth is mostly beyond most aspects of the curriculum, but the grammar cards are perfect for her Latin review. I love how advanced some of them are! They cheer this little grammar girl’s heart! Here is Liz reviewing advanced noun cards.

noun grammar cards

Tori and Kate’s favorite aspect of the program right now is the cursive workbook. They practice the directions with their fingers and then practice the letters with a pencil. The directions refer to baseline and midline. They really get it. Better than any other cursive workbook I’ve found. We like simple.

cursivehandwriting

The reading program is a bit advanced for them (especially for Tori) right now and we’re already halfway through another curriculum this year, so I plan to hold off and pick it up when we’re finished with that other one. I love that the curriculum uses phonetic symbols on the flashcards. Kate can read the cards on her own and understands them and loves it! I plan to introduce the grammar cards to the girls very soon and get some basics down for them.

Alex and the girls love the book Doodling Dragons! Even though they already know their letters and sounds, it’s fun!

I am extremely impressed with all aspects of this curriculum. It works with classical and Charlotte Mason style education perfectly, with memorization, dictation, and narration aspects. I look forward to utilizing it to the fullest extent.

 

Also, check out these new products!

Foundations

 

 

Phonics With Phonograms

 

 

A fun, effective phonics recognition game that eliminates exceptions and provides a complete picture of the phonograms needed to read and spell!

Introducing the Logic of English Phonograms App

Buy the Phonics App!

Top Ten Posts of 2012

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I’ve never written a top ten post before. I can’t believe the changes that have occurred this last year, for me personally, and for my blog.

new year


You may notice that I just switched to WordPress, like yesterday. Please let  me know if a link doesn’t work properly or something.

I have learned so much about social media and blogging effectively over the last couple months. I can certainly tell the changes when I look at posts from several months ago compared to really recent ones.

I was thrilled to attend Allume in October.

My husband’s famous vlog: Mission Hack: RLL.

Then, I helped my husband launch his blog! Visit Camo Dad Cooks. We’re foodies and our kids like to eat good, real food. He includes them on his cooking adventures. Home ec for homeschoolers, right?

Our most hit post EVER: Reader Notebook.

I’ve actually gone a bit away from the original plan. I need to do more lit notebooking with Liz. And the girls are pretty much fluent readers now! I can begin with their primary reader notebooks next semester. Ugh, that’s like in a week!

Math Journals have been great fun this year. I love doing something rather unconventional and everyone loves it and there are no more tears with math from Liz. We love Life of Fred and all the fun activities I find to go with our themes.

math journals

Please read my testimony on using essential oils and cod liver oil. It really has made such a difference on behavior and academics.

peace and calm

Here’s my post begging for money. Not sure how other bloggers get sponsored to attend conferences and ads on their blog sidebars. I don’t have any patrons. {whine whine}

Our most controversial post: On Halloween.

I was surprised to see how popular this post was: check out our review of this Christmas Around the USA unit.

Take another look at our ever changing homeschooling spaces. It’s been pretty successful this year! I worry what will happen to our space when we move in a couple years. Surely, we won’t have all this lovely room to spread out!

Alexander Bubba is ever the favorite. He has no attention span and quite a mind of his own, but he’ s so darn cute! These three tot school posts made it into the top ten. Look for lots more Bubba School posts in the new year. Y’all asked for it in my recent survey.

Bubba School

Tot School

2 Years Old!

bubba

Also, if you or someone you know is a military wife, please take a moment to complete my survey about my upcoming eBook!

 

 

May your coming year be filled with magic and dreams and good madness. I hope you read some fine books and kiss someone who thinks you’re wonderful, and don’t forget to make some art — write or draw or build or sing or live as only you can. And I hope, somewhere in the next year, you surprise yourself.

~Neil Gaiman

Why I want to go to BEECH Retreat

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I just recently attended the Allume conference. It was overwhelming. My mind and heart are still reeling. And now I want to attend BEECH Retreat. I know it will be God if I get to go because it was certainly God who got me to Allume.

I love how intimate BEECH is supposed to be, with only 80 attendees. So I can probably actually interact with everyone whereas I was lost at Allume among 400 ladies.

And who wouldn’t love to go to Florida in winter? When there’s snow on the ground here in Utah, I can be in sunny Florida at the BEACH. BEECH. Love it!

I would be so excited to be able to be around other homeschooling moms. Adult conversation. To eat a {warm} meal without having to cut anyone’s food or clean up spills. No dishes! No laundry! I would love to fellowship with other homeschooling moms about curriculum, kids, methods, ideas…

I love that the sessions will be intentional, giving us the opportunity to work out what we’re learning. For kinesthetic learners and mommy brains, this is perfect!

I hope to win a ticket to BEECH Retreat, but here’s my sponsor page.

Just in case.

Prioritizing When You Home Educate

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Carisa from 1+1+1=1 spoke with much wisdom at Allume during her session Homeschooling and Blogging.
The most important concept for me came in the priorities she set for herself.
These priorities were an affirmation for me. I need to be reminded every few days, it seems like, to reevaluate priorities and discipline myself. We all tend to be selfish and prideful. My family keeps me accountable.
I’m over at City Chick in the Country today, discussing the impact priorities have for me on homeschooling and blogging. Come on over!

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