And welcome StolenCubicle!
Jayne ,'Out Of Gas'
Spike's Bitches 32: I think I'm sobering up.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Also, I sent tissues, nice hand soap, and nice whiteboard markers. When they send a wishlist I send stuff.
Oh, whiteboard markers....you are a goddess among parents, Laura!!
Also, you know if you ever need homework help in English, or even history, you can ask here, right?
And welcome StolenCubicle!
Damn! I was trying to sneak in without a Buffista welcome.
Edit: Also, how could you tell? Did I flash my trace amounts of innocence? Is the lack of porn on my desktop that obvious? Did my lack of innuendo give me away?
Resistance is futile, SCube
Sounds like a good first week, Gris.
Also, I just remembered that I'd promised you an email about some graph theory lesson plans. I'll get to that soon.
I just had a salad with blueberry stilton and sliced apples on top. It was yummy. (I also just had a quesadilla, which was also yummy, but much less interesting-sounding.)
I discovered yesterday that Trader Joe's sells plastic bags of pizza dough, both regular and whole wheat. I'm having all kinds of, "Oooh, I could make some mini-calzones and take them for lunch!" plans.
Brendon was classified by his gifted team last year as exceptional and unmotivated. He understands everything. He tops every test that comes his way. He doesn't study. He hears it or reads it once and he gets it. He absolutely does not care about anything. He thinks he is going to be an NBA star. Last year his testing 99%tile on everything. Reading scores and vocabulary out of sight. He ended the year with a 1.5 gpa. 100 on most of his tests. Zero on most of his homework. This is why he is my very special project this year. We basically have a deal. Money bribes for good grades and no life without his homework done. I sit with him like a 1st grade student and go through his backpack every day. We go over every class. I've told him he really has no other option than success this year.
Bobby is a whole other issue. He is bright enough, but he has a hard time learning. Huge attention issues. He has been classified ADD so he gets extra time for his tests and goes out of the classroom so he can better focus. He does very well in math, and he loves science and history. Language is pure torture for all of us. I can't get him to write an entire sentence without a trip to the bathroom, a snack, he has to tell me something, etc. He can't spell. He wrote his address last week as Laik instead of Lake. He's 12.
I have his father working with him since he is just as ADD and somehow they work better together. We have him writing on the computer so he can see his spelling errors easier, but sometimes he is so far off that Word can't help. We have voice recognition software and I am considering using that because he can spew out a 500 word story with ease but he can't write it out. I think he might find it fun to watch the words printing out on the screen. His teachers don't care how he gets the work done. They are very flexible that way.
Parenting, very tough. Any suggestions on helping this bright child learn to write are more than welcome.
Also, how could you tell?
Hee, I mouse over your user name and see your number. It flashes Newbee. You may see that I am sweet 16 by doing the same.
Laura, I'm no ADD expert, but I know kinesthetic learning is best for kids with ADD. The voice-recog software is a great idea.
What about applying magetic paint to a wall in his bedroom and getting a shitload of the Magnetic poetry kits? That was, maybe he can stand and physically arrange words into sentences, and then copy them down. Gets him off his ass, and doing stuff with brains AND hands. I'd make areas for the different types of words, too; you know, CONJUNCTIONS, ADVERBS, VERBS, NOUNS, etc, so he can also learn the parts of speech and not waste time looking for the right words. Then, at the end of each lesson or homework assignment, he has to put the words back into the correct category, so it would reinforce parts of speech. And since the words are already pre-spelled, it would reinforce spelling, too.
Magneticpoetry.com
Also, what does he LIKE to do? Sometimes, you can come up with really creative ways to learn paired with activities that kids love to do anyway.
Throw me a couple, and I'll see if anything pings.