Anonymous wrote:How much time do you spend supplementing? They’re already in school for so much of the day and then have to do homework. Kids do need some downtime!
Wish MoCo would just switch to the Core Knowledge curriculum. Anyone know if they’re considering it? It worries me that the same dude that screwed up last time still plays a major role in this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again.
(phew...third post on this thread!)
1) For Science, Social studies and ELA. I would suggest http://www.kidsdiscover.com/ - buy all their print titles. They are amazing source of information. I also am an avid reader of these magazines and they are excellent. Well presented, well written, very well explained, very entertaining information on any one topic. It is like a seminar by several professors on one topic that will make you understand most everything about that topic. Brilliant.
Then, I suggest you look at the teacher resources associated with those and other online resources on the their website. I will repeat again. It is a brilliant magazine.
2) Another choice (in my opinion though, nothing comes near kids discover), age and interest appropriate magazines from the Cricket magazines website. https://shop.cricketmedia.com/all-childrens-magazine-subscriptions.html We started when they were very young and continued till they were in 6th grade.
These were the only two magazines that while age-appropriate, were not gimmicky or dumbed down ( Ranger Rick and Nat Geo Kid is too juvenile and dumbed down in the guise of an kid's magazine)
The kidsdiscover magazines look great!
I think I'm going to start buying the ones that correspond to what DD is learning in school. THey often have to do writing assignments about topics, but the online resources are abysmal!
OP here. They do correspond to common core as well.
If you can afford it - buy all of them over a period of time. It is around 150 titles and each cost around 5 bucks. I created a spreadsheet and would buy titles on sale (around 2 bucks) and cross them off. I can assure you that these are addictive and something that you keep going back to.
I used them as a curriculum guide and text and the kids had to finish one a week. I would also print out the teacher supplemental resources and they would tackle those too. In 3 years, they can be very well informed about a lot of topics. I suggest use it during middle school years because the quality of education in MCPS (and the country) is very poor in MS.
Would these be appropriate for a younger age? I have a child currently in K—is this the sort of thing I could read to her, or would I need to wait a few years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again.
(phew...third post on this thread!)
1) For Science, Social studies and ELA. I would suggest http://www.kidsdiscover.com/ - buy all their print titles. They are amazing source of information. I also am an avid reader of these magazines and they are excellent. Well presented, well written, very well explained, very entertaining information on any one topic. It is like a seminar by several professors on one topic that will make you understand most everything about that topic. Brilliant.
Then, I suggest you look at the teacher resources associated with those and other online resources on the their website. I will repeat again. It is a brilliant magazine.
2) Another choice (in my opinion though, nothing comes near kids discover), age and interest appropriate magazines from the Cricket magazines website. https://shop.cricketmedia.com/all-childrens-magazine-subscriptions.html We started when they were very young and continued till they were in 6th grade.
These were the only two magazines that while age-appropriate, were not gimmicky or dumbed down ( Ranger Rick and Nat Geo Kid is too juvenile and dumbed down in the guise of an kid's magazine)
The kidsdiscover magazines look great!
I think I'm going to start buying the ones that correspond to what DD is learning in school. THey often have to do writing assignments about topics, but the online resources are abysmal!
OP here. They do correspond to common core as well.
If you can afford it - buy all of them over a period of time. It is around 150 titles and each cost around 5 bucks. I created a spreadsheet and would buy titles on sale (around 2 bucks) and cross them off. I can assure you that these are addictive and something that you keep going back to.
I used them as a curriculum guide and text and the kids had to finish one a week. I would also print out the teacher supplemental resources and they would tackle those too. In 3 years, they can be very well informed about a lot of topics. I suggest use it during middle school years because the quality of education in MCPS (and the country) is very poor in MS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again.
(phew...third post on this thread!)
1) For Science, Social studies and ELA. I would suggest http://www.kidsdiscover.com/ - buy all their print titles. They are amazing source of information. I also am an avid reader of these magazines and they are excellent. Well presented, well written, very well explained, very entertaining information on any one topic. It is like a seminar by several professors on one topic that will make you understand most everything about that topic. Brilliant.
Then, I suggest you look at the teacher resources associated with those and other online resources on the their website. I will repeat again. It is a brilliant magazine.
2) Another choice (in my opinion though, nothing comes near kids discover), age and interest appropriate magazines from the Cricket magazines website. https://shop.cricketmedia.com/all-childrens-magazine-subscriptions.html We started when they were very young and continued till they were in 6th grade.
These were the only two magazines that while age-appropriate, were not gimmicky or dumbed down ( Ranger Rick and Nat Geo Kid is too juvenile and dumbed down in the guise of an kid's magazine)
The kidsdiscover magazines look great!
I think I'm going to start buying the ones that correspond to what DD is learning in school. THey often have to do writing assignments about topics, but the online resources are abysmal!
OP here. They do correspond to common core as well.
If you can afford it - buy all of them over a period of time. It is around 150 titles and each cost around 5 bucks. I created a spreadsheet and would buy titles on sale (around 2 bucks) and cross them off. I can assure you that these are addictive and something that you keep going back to.
I used them as a curriculum guide and text and the kids had to finish one a week. I would also print out the teacher supplemental resources and they would tackle those too. In 3 years, they can be very well informed about a lot of topics. I suggest use it during middle school years because the quality of education in MCPS (and the country) is very poor in MS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again.
(phew...third post on this thread!)
1) For Science, Social studies and ELA. I would suggest http://www.kidsdiscover.com/ - buy all their print titles. They are amazing source of information. I also am an avid reader of these magazines and they are excellent. Well presented, well written, very well explained, very entertaining information on any one topic. It is like a seminar by several professors on one topic that will make you understand most everything about that topic. Brilliant.
Then, I suggest you look at the teacher resources associated with those and other online resources on the their website. I will repeat again. It is a brilliant magazine.
2) Another choice (in my opinion though, nothing comes near kids discover), age and interest appropriate magazines from the Cricket magazines website. https://shop.cricketmedia.com/all-childrens-magazine-subscriptions.html We started when they were very young and continued till they were in 6th grade.
These were the only two magazines that while age-appropriate, were not gimmicky or dumbed down ( Ranger Rick and Nat Geo Kid is too juvenile and dumbed down in the guise of an kid's magazine)
The kidsdiscover magazines look great!
I think I'm going to start buying the ones that correspond to what DD is learning in school. THey often have to do writing assignments about topics, but the online resources are abysmal!
Anonymous wrote:Op again.
(phew...third post on this thread!)
1) For Science, Social studies and ELA. I would suggest http://www.kidsdiscover.com/ - buy all their print titles. They are amazing source of information. I also am an avid reader of these magazines and they are excellent. Well presented, well written, very well explained, very entertaining information on any one topic. It is like a seminar by several professors on one topic that will make you understand most everything about that topic. Brilliant.
Then, I suggest you look at the teacher resources associated with those and other online resources on the their website. I will repeat again. It is a brilliant magazine.
2) Another choice (in my opinion though, nothing comes near kids discover), age and interest appropriate magazines from the Cricket magazines website. https://shop.cricketmedia.com/all-childrens-magazine-subscriptions.html We started when they were very young and continued till they were in 6th grade.
These were the only two magazines that while age-appropriate, were not gimmicky or dumbed down ( Ranger Rick and Nat Geo Kid is too juvenile and dumbed down in the guise of an kid's magazine)
Anonymous wrote:Op again.
(phew...third post on this thread!)
1) For Science, Social studies and ELA. I would suggest http://www.kidsdiscover.com/ - buy all their print titles. They are amazing source of information. I also am an avid reader of these magazines and they are excellent. Well presented, well written, very well explained, very entertaining information on any one topic. It is like a seminar by several professors on one topic that will make you understand most everything about that topic. Brilliant.
Then, I suggest you look at the teacher resources associated with those and other online resources on the their website. I will repeat again. It is a brilliant magazine.
2) Another choice (in my opinion though, nothing comes near kids discover), age and interest appropriate magazines from the Cricket magazines website. https://shop.cricketmedia.com/all-childrens-magazine-subscriptions.html We started when they were very young and continued till they were in 6th grade.
These were the only two magazines that while age-appropriate, were not gimmicky or dumbed down ( Ranger Rick and Nat Geo Kid is too juvenile and dumbed down in the guise of an kid's magazine)
Anonymous wrote:The Core Knowledge Curriculum is excellent. I know homeschooling families who use it. Engage New York school curriculum is actually Core Knowledge.