I’ve been thinking more about this. the thing about LLATL that is definitely working for me is the all in oneness. No scheduling, no planning, no transition time between all the LA parts. It’s gentle, but does eventually cover everything if I stick with it. So that’s one less thing to worry about. And it teaches writing by imitation and letting the student find their own voice, rather than by formula. All pluses.
But there is some busy work in it. And I am afraid that it will use up all of my writing-phobic-son’s writing endurance each day, leaving none for written narrations. we have only recently started these, what we were studying in science leant itself well to this, but that part is over and I am trying to figure out how to keep doing it. My sons oral narrations are short, almost summaries (his younger sister gives long detailed narrations, using a lot of the same words as the author. This is what narration should be like, right?). His written narrations are two sentences. So I’m trying to think if there’s a way to do more CM style LA, but keep it simple enough for me.
Hearing and speaking: we do these parts.
Reading: I do need to work on this part. Since we do everything as a family I’ve struggled with knowing which books to have him read himself. They have to be good books, but not so good that I feel like my other kids are missing out by not hearing them. Lol.
Writing: this is the part that I need the most help with. Copy work/dictation could be covered with selling you see (I already have level E unused). Written narration, This is what I’d like to have time to focus on and why I’m considering not using LLATL next year.
Grammar and growing his composition skills: this is the part I’m totally lost on! I don’t know what ‘growing his composition skills’ even means. Lol. Does this mean teaching the various forms of writing like research, expository, etc? I don’t know what all the forms are or how to teach them. And grammar… Everything I look at seems to be meant to be done daily, which I don’t feel up to. Plus I’m afraid that, again, it will crowd out written narration for my writing phobic kid. I am not going to do Latin (do want to do word roots, but not for a few more years).