Do the accelerated lesson plans accelerate the pace by skipping some of the lessons?
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Accelerated Fable and Narrative Lesson Plans
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Accelerated Fable and Narrative Lesson Plans
Cheryl, mom to:
ds 26, graduated
ds 25, graduated
dd 11th Grade
dd 8th Grade
ds 6th GradeTags: None -
Re: Accelerated Fable and Narrative Lesson Plans
No. The accelerated plans just do the work at a faster pace beginning in 3rd grade. Our accelerated 3rd grade program does Greek Myths, Latina Christiana I, States & Capitals, and Christian Studies I in one year. Our regular package spreads this work over two years, giving students an opportunity to adjust to the stepped-up 3rd grade work - a slower transition from primary school to grammar school. Our accelerated 4th grade for Latin, history, geography/modern studies, and Christian studies is the same as our regular 5th grade. The accelerated program is just a year ahead in these subjects. Math and spelling stay on the same grade level - accelerated and regular 3rd graders both complete 3rd grade math and so forth.
Tanya -
Re: Accelerated Fable and Narrative Lesson Plans
No. The accelerated plans just do the work at a faster pace beginning in 3rd grade. Our accelerated 3rd grade program does Greek Myths, Latina Christiana I, States & Capitals, and Christian Studies I in one year. Our regular package spreads this work over two years, giving students an opportunity to adjust to the stepped-up 3rd grade work - a slower transition from primary school to grammar school. Our accelerated 4th grade for Latin, history, geography/modern studies, and Christian studies is the same as our regular 5th grade. The accelerated program is just a year ahead in these subjects. Math and spelling stay on the same grade level - accelerated and regular 3rd graders both complete 3rd grade math and so forth.
TanyaCheryl, mom to:
ds 26, graduated
ds 25, graduated
dd 11th Grade
dd 8th Grade
ds 6th GradeComment
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Re: Accelerated Fable and Narrative Lesson Plans
I am so sorry! I do this all the time. I didn't look at the heading of your post. I just read the post itself and thought you were asking about the curriculum packages. So let's try again:
The accelerated Fable/Narrative plans take you through half the Fable and half the Narrative. So you will skip some lessons. It really doesn't matter which lessons you do since they are all formatted the same and have you doing the same work. When you move on to other Stages, you will begin each year with a review Fable lesson and a review Narrative lesson, so you need to keep those books with new lessons in them for review.
Is that a more appropriate response?
TanyaComment
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Re: Accelerated Fable and Narrative Lesson Plans
I am so sorry! I do this all the time. I didn't look at the heading of your post. I just read the post itself and thought you were asking about the curriculum packages. So let's try again:
The accelerated Fable/Narrative plans take you through half the Fable and half the Narrative. So you will skip some lessons. It really doesn't matter which lessons you do since they are all formatted the same and have you doing the same work. When you move on to other Stages, you will begin each year with a review Fable lesson and a review Narrative lesson, so you need to keep those books with new lessons in them for review.
Is that a more appropriate response?
TanyaCheryl, mom to:
ds 26, graduated
ds 25, graduated
dd 11th Grade
dd 8th Grade
ds 6th GradeComment
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Re: Accelerated Fable and Narrative Lesson Plans
Oh, how fun that she wants to do them on her own! I'd be tempted to let her do the Fable ones and just use the Narrative for review. They are so similar that it won't matter if she only reviews the Narrative in later years.
TanyaComment
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Re: Accelerated Fable and Narrative Lesson Plans
I'll let her know, but I think now that she knows she will be doing them in the future that she's happy. This week she started Narrative and is really enjoying it, and really enjoying the DVD (says she likes the background better than the first and loves being able to see when things are highlighted on the menu). After watching the DVD and then reading through the lesson in the book (she likes to read through it once she is done), she said, "I am so glad that Memoria Press has DVDs, because the teacher manual isn't nearly as easy to follow." I had to chuckle, because that pretty much sums up my feelings as well.Cheryl, mom to:
ds 26, graduated
ds 25, graduated
dd 11th Grade
dd 8th Grade
ds 6th GradeComment
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