Meliss and Karen, you are most welcome – happy to share! And happy to hopefully help anyone along the way who may have experienced something similar and can benefit from a shared perspective. I thought LONG and hard about this decision to move to TT because, while we can all appreciate “keeping math in perspective” I most certainly didn’t want to move to a program that I would later be questioning in terms of quality, level of complexity, rigor, etc.
On this, I’ll share one more point. As I went about my research I actually contacted Seton Home School Study (an accredited American institution – gr.1-12 – founded in 1980 with an enrollment of over 10,000 homeschool families) to ask about math. As an accredited school I knew that they would give me the botton line …the true story….the real skinny ….on course credibility. Here’s the bottom line: a full high school diploma can be issued by this accredited institution if the student has completed one of the following ….
a)Saxon b) Math-u-See c) Teaching Textbooks
For me, this news was golden.
I completely understand that TT is not for everyone. For my family, it brought consistencey to our math routine (math never gets missed now…we do it six days a week, 48 weeks a year and only ever miss a day if the STUDENT is really sick….when Mama is sick, it doesn’t make a difference in the least). For my family, it has lifted a tremendous weight….Mama’s workload is less and more importantly my kids LOVE math and NEVER complain about it. Often, the biggest problem is the arguing about who gets to do math first (no – I’m not kidding).
I see some mention by other posters that the TT lectures didn’t resonate with their child. Well, to each his own, I guess; every child is different; teach the child, not the curriculum, as Sonya would say! I guess every person needs to give it a try before they “know” whether a program works. Personally, I found Math U See more difficult to embrace because it is so very different from how I learned math. My children have found the TT lecture format remarkably more straightforward than any other program we’ve tried. They found MUS often had information that they didn’t really “need” but was just added to the lecture to provide “an extra” angle…. to ensure ALL kids would “get it”. (if you pay attention, you’ll see that this fact is commented on in many of the lectures).
When we did MUS – this overdoing-the-explantation drove one of my sons CRAZY. Now again, every kid different: my first son was patient and totally okay with it. But my second son just wanted to hear “what he needed to know” in the shortest explanation possible. MUS really turned him off math! He looks back on it now and remembers feeling that he thought himself a real failure in math during the time he was using MUS. He’s now on TT and feels smart, independent, empowered and describes himself as a person who enjoys math and is excellent in math (yay!) Is he a “grade level behind?” Well, sure, maybe. But who cares, really? We’re doing math every day (easily and happily) and he will soon be a 5th grader doing TT6, and then a 6th grader doing TT7. Maybe by the time we get to Algebra we’ll supplement here and there and do something more “rigorous” …but maybe not. All I really care about is that my children stay positive about math, and that they HAPPILY do it every day. I just can’t imagine that any kids truly “gets” it unless they are in at least some form of positive mindstate while they are learning!!! Seriously, does ANYONE learn when they are in any way miserable, lacking in calm, or otherwise feeling despair?
In summary: the short lectures, spiral apporach and consistencey in doing math every single day, year round that comes with TT has made math a JOY around my house. My kids are happy; as a result they are retaining more than they have in any other program. This fact, along with my finding out that a credited institution confirms the strength of TT, is enough for me.
(it was nice to see TT in the TOP 101 Picks by Cathy Duffy, too).
Good luck, everyone!
blessings, Angie