Cuando en duda, Pregunta

By: Keith

 

  

Sobre el transcurso de los últimos dos años he pasado por varios programas de matemáticas con mis hijos.  Cada uno ha sido, de alguna manera, imperfecto.  Hooked on Math (de las personas que hacen Hooked on Phonics) es bueno, pero no es un programa completo.  También he utilizado DK math el cual me gusta, pero tampoco es muy extenso.  Lo que yo verdaderamente quiero es un programa que sea todo en uno con un buen manual para el maestro y lecciones de calidad.  Yo creía que lo había encontrado en Saxon Math cuando escuché a muchos padres que educan en el hogar decir maravillas sobre este.  Pero no, tampoco sobrevivió mis estándares y requisitos.  Es demasiado repetitivo, confuso, y el manual para los maestros parece que fue imprimido en papel periódico.  Por lo que pagué por el paquete, no valió la  pena.  ¿Qué rayos, me pregunté, puede ser tan difícil el hacer un programa de matemáticas completo para aquellos que educamos en el hogar?

 

Yo soy un tipo razonablemente platicador cuando decido serlo así que decidí preguntarles a las mujeres que se sientan en las bancas en la clase de gimnasia.  Y quién contestaría mi pregunta sino una madre que vino a ser la organizadora del curso de matemáticas extracurricular para niños dotados en una de nuestras escuelas primarias locales.  ¡Bingo!  Ella mi hizo todo tipo de preguntas acerca del tipo de estudiante que Neil es, qué tan confidente se sentía estudiando matemáticas y qué tan buenas eran mis propias habilidades en matemáticas.  Entonces ella me dio una recomendación – Singapore Math.  Yo fui a su sitio web para revisarlos.  A diferencia de Saxon, Singapore tiene exámenes de localización.  Yo he imprimido el de segundo grado, y lo voy a administrar a mis hijos mañana.  Yo espero que esta sea la respuesta que he estado buscando.

 

La moral de esta historia es clara.  Puede que seamos padres excelentes, pero no lo sabemos todo.  Tú nunca sabes quién ha estado sentado junto a ti por los últimos 6 meses con toda la información que necesitas, pero tú estuviste muy ocupado tratando de arreglártelas por ti mismo como para preguntar.  Yo me hubiera ahorrado cientos de dólares y el tremendo dolor de cabeza si solamente hubiera hecho la pregunta hace 6 meses cuando empecé a buscar por programas.  ¡Cuando en duda, Pregunta!

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  2. Cómo es que yo educo en el hogar
17 Responses to “Cuando en duda, Pregunta”
  1. Sara January 8, 2010 at 1:30 pm #

    Just to let you know, Saxon does have a placement test. I’m not sure how Singapore’s is so I can’t tell you the difference between them, but Saxon does have one. =-D

    • Keith January 8, 2010 at 4:14 pm #

      Sara. I must have totally missed their placement test I guess. I didn’t know that but thanks for correcting me. The one thing I’ll concede to Saxon is that it’s VERY thorough. It just seems to repetitive and overly complicated to me. I guess that can be attributed to my teaching style, and Neil’s learning style. I suspect that Saxon is probably a great program in the right hands. Those hands are clearly not mine though :-) Thanks so much for the visit!

  2. suburbangranola January 8, 2010 at 1:59 pm #

    I would highly recommend using Math-U-See….we have honestly tried and hated just about everything out there. It has a video that you watch (or your kids can just watch it) that gives instruction for the lesson. The amount of problems is appropriate according to the development and level of the child…my youngest is in the primer and it started with 3 problems and adds more as they progress. Math-U-See has placement tests as well and a great website with additional (free) materials and help. I have even called them on the phone once and they were fantastic.

    • Keith January 8, 2010 at 4:16 pm #

      Suburbangranola, Math-U-See. That’s one this lady touched on too. There was another she said that was sort of like that (and of course I can’t remember the name – it began with a “c”). Anyway, thanks for adding that. I would encourage anybody reading to check out all these various programs mentioned. It’s becoming clear to me that there are as many programs as there are personalities :-) I guess that’s good. But we do have our homework cut out for us!

  3. Brian Simpson January 8, 2010 at 9:13 pm #

    So true, Keith. We all can learn from this post. Sometimes all it takes is asking someone question. Google can’t solve EVERY problem or answer EVERY question.
    .-= Brian Simpson´s last blog ..Coming soon =-.

  4. beth January 9, 2010 at 7:40 am #

    Math has been a thorn in our sides too. Now I’m having to do ALGEBRA! GAH! We used Calvert Math, which you can purchase separate from the rest of the Calvert material. There is a placement test. It used multiple methods to approach each unit so that kids who learn in different ways could be engaged. Some I skipped knowing that either my kids don’t learn that way or I don’t teach that way. But since I hadn’t signed up for the the teacher support program (in which one of the teachers at the actual Calvert school grades their work and keeps records) I didn’t have to do what I didn’t want to do. Anyway, it’s just another option. You know, I think math is like reading literature in a way. Everyone gets it on a different level. Math either comes easy or it doesn’t. Me, I’ve always had to struggle. Hope you find the perfect program. (Also, try Brightstorm and Purplemath online for help with difficult concepts. I’ve found this very useful!)

  5. BigLittleWolf January 9, 2010 at 7:56 am #

    Absolutely right. Help is often next door or a phone call away.

    I’m curious though. My impression is that this is one of the ways in which men and women differ – women generally are more willing to ask for help (for directions when lost), or venture a question of another person.

    Think that’s the case?
    .-= BigLittleWolf´s last blog ..Where do women stow their violent selves? =-.

    • Keith January 9, 2010 at 8:38 pm #

      Wolf, that’s a great question. My opinion is that, yes, men don’t ask people for help enough. But, my personal experience is that I’m the opposite of that. I tend to ask people when I’m having a hard time with something (usually), while my wife is the one who refuses to ask anybody anything and insist she’s always right. The classic in the car asking for directions thing is reverse for us. But, generally speaking I’d say you’re spot on.

  6. Jody January 9, 2010 at 2:40 pm #

    I am not a huge fan of Saxon math myself, but it is built on the concept of spiral based instruction. This was really popular in the 1990′s when I got into teaching. The idea is that you are teaching to mastery over a long period of time, so you keep spiraling back to old concepts for review, adding new snippets of related information as you go. I looked into Singapore for my children, but I just couldn’t fall in love with it. I decided to go totally in the opposite direction from Saxon, and went with Right Start Math for this year. I love using the abacus with my kids. I am pleased with the foundational skills it teaches. We are only on Level A, so my daughter is not yet up to arithmetic, she is still working on number recognition and number sense with lots of geometry thrown in for good measure. Good luck with your search.

  7. Melissa Cesarano January 9, 2010 at 9:03 pm #

    Hello, I am a big fan of Saxon. It does a placement test and is every accurate. I do like the idea of sprial learning in math, it allows for review of concepts. Saxon can get repeatative and if kids don’t need it – you can just do the “blue star” questions and you are not doing over kill.
    Singapore math is great – but my son did the entire year’s curriculum in about 2 weeks. I don’t think it was thorough enough.
    I like the way saxon has alot of story and real-world problems. The more exposure to those type questions the easier Algebra will be. :)
    In my humble opinion.

    • Keith January 10, 2010 at 11:23 pm #

      Melissa, you’re right. Saxon does have a placement test. When I ordered the material months ago the test was not obvious. Almost like they were hiding it or something. I don’t like that. After I get my Singapore stuff I’ll do a review of it. Let’s hope I have more success there. Thanks for the comment!

  8. Stephanie January 12, 2010 at 4:36 pm #

    Singapore Math. I’ll have to remember that when we “officially” start homeschooling in a few years.

    I was homeschooled through 8th grade and used Saxon Math for most of those years. I don’t have anything particularly wonderful or horrible to say about it, but…I can say that math wasn’t/isn’t my favorite subject. ;)
    .-= Stephanie´s last blog ..8 Things I Love About Working From Home =-.

    • Keith January 13, 2010 at 9:04 am #

      Stephanie, that’s cool. I didn’t know you were home schooled. You seemed to have turned out pretty well balanced :-) I get that alot. People telling me my kids will be freaks. You aren’t, so that’s a good sign!

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