Anonymous wrote:Study guides from the teacher. Often they are posted on Edline.
I find it so surprising that people are hung up on text books. Our kids have these mega binders that are compiled throughout the school year. There are internet resources. There are the study guides that are posted. The teachers send home study packets.
Most of us have adjusted in our work lives to the fact that we type everything instead of writing longhand and having a secretary type it. We've gone from typewriters to computers. We've gone from mail to fax to scanning documents. We used to write checks and now we go onto our bank websites and type in a dollar amount to send to our creditor. But we can't adjust to the move away from textbooks?!
NP here. I still have have some of my full color, beautifully edited and photographed, appealing textbooks. I could read ahead, review past lessons and be fully immersed in the subject.
There is NOTHING COMPARABLE between my textbooks and the poorly photocopied, sparsely researched, black-and-white notes that my middle schooler receives. The internet resources are sometimes hastily thrown together by non-professionals.
So I buy books for him. He has a history of math, various history books, latin introductions, literature, books for physics, biology and chemistry. I can't follow the curriculum, of course, but I select books for their agreeable presentation and their informational quality. He loves them all. He doesn't love the school material.