I see that you are 19 and you have a job. You need to move out. Find a cheap place, or a roommate, and don't let your family pressure you to continue living with your parents. Right now, living with them is not good for you. I won't lie and say that all this easy, or that they won't shun you. But no matter how hard it is, remember that the defect is theirs and that you are a good person who deserves happiness.
finally awake
JoinedPosts by finally awake
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13
Avoiding Homelessness
by magotan ini'm falling apart here.
the false teachings of the jw enrage me; we started covering the information for the jeremiah book, and i was outraged at how they twist up the scriptures to meet what they want to say.
my dad wants to consider the "god's love" book during family worship evening.
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36
No Child Left Behind Testing
by skeeter1 inaround the us, 6th graders (and alot of other grades) are preparing for this spring's standardized testing.
when "we" grew up, the standardized tests were straigh forward math problems.
the standardized math test is now only 16 questions long, but they are all long, drawn out word problems.
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finally awake
Skeeter, I agree that this problem seems too advanced for the average 6th grader to really understand. if it has to be literally drilled into a kid's head, is s/he really understanding the concepts? My other point is simply what else is expected to be taught in middle school or high school? I've never heard of a public school that offered a math class beyond first level calculus. None of the schools in my area even offer that - no money to put on a class that only a tiny handful of kids would take. Very few career paths require the kind of math you took in college - I started out as a physics major and decided that wasn't the lifestyle I was looking for. I ended up with a degree in accounting, which is a pretty good fit. But the only math I need is basic arithmetic and a little basic algebra once in a while.
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36
No Child Left Behind Testing
by skeeter1 inaround the us, 6th graders (and alot of other grades) are preparing for this spring's standardized testing.
when "we" grew up, the standardized tests were straigh forward math problems.
the standardized math test is now only 16 questions long, but they are all long, drawn out word problems.
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finally awake
ABible Student asked "What school did you go to?"
I don't know who he meant this for, but I'll chime in. I went to Anna Junior High and Anna Jonesboro Community High School. I graduated in 1988. I *know* I didn't learn anything this complicated until my sophmore year of high school. Mrs. Travis was my geometry teacher and I distinctly remember very similar word problems that I had to carefully pick apart to get to the correct answer. Prior to that year, math problems were much simpler one or two step affairs.
Now, was my education deficient? I don't think so. I passed my AP Physics exam without studying for it, I medalled in state level academic competitions in high school (yes, nerd, I know), and I graduated college with honors. I can't imagine what high school student needs to learn more math in high school than I did.
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finally awake
daughter of the sea is by Mira Zamin. I've only read a little of it so far - it's set in the ancient Roman empire.
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24
Hard Wood Floors
by MrFreeze indoes anybody have any tips on keeping hard-wood floors clean?
seems like 10 minutes after i clean them they are a mess again.
at least with carpet it was harder to notice all the little doodads that wind up on the floor.
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finally awake
a hepa type air filter will cut down immensely on the dust. everything else that gets tracked in on shoes and clothes can be picked up with a swiffer pad. or you can use a microfiber cloth on the swiffer pole instead of the disposable pads.
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finally awake
Daughter of the Sea
A Pact For Life
Something Witchy
The Secret of the Stones
The Story of Ab
Under the Stairs
All free e-books for my Kindle. I like free.
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36
No Child Left Behind Testing
by skeeter1 inaround the us, 6th graders (and alot of other grades) are preparing for this spring's standardized testing.
when "we" grew up, the standardized tests were straigh forward math problems.
the standardized math test is now only 16 questions long, but they are all long, drawn out word problems.
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finally awake
Kids who attend Montessori schools are probably a self selected group of high achievers - not a random sample of kids, or a group of all kids born in a certain year and living in a particular school district. I know some kids who are just plain not very bright, some who are average, and some who are smarter than I'll ever be. Public schools don't have the luxury of booting out kids who don't measure up, nor can they raise tuition as needed.
I agree that all kids can learn, and probably nearly everyone can learn algebra, but not all at the same pace and the same timetable. Is it really critical that kids learn this stuff in 6th grade? What are they supposed to learn before finishing high school that I missed out on?
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36
No Child Left Behind Testing
by skeeter1 inaround the us, 6th graders (and alot of other grades) are preparing for this spring's standardized testing.
when "we" grew up, the standardized tests were straigh forward math problems.
the standardized math test is now only 16 questions long, but they are all long, drawn out word problems.
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finally awake
A problem like that sample item could be a useful assessment tool, if it were graded on how the student went about solving it and not just on whether the student got the correct answer. A student could do the steps correctly, but make a computational error, and still be way ahead of a student who simply guessed at the correct answer on a multi choice test. The first time I looked at the problem, I attempted to solve for the length of the angled side, because visually it should be the longest side. I realized later that the picture wasn't drawn to scale and the longest side was the top edge.
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36
No Child Left Behind Testing
by skeeter1 inaround the us, 6th graders (and alot of other grades) are preparing for this spring's standardized testing.
when "we" grew up, the standardized tests were straigh forward math problems.
the standardized math test is now only 16 questions long, but they are all long, drawn out word problems.
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finally awake
We homeschooled our older kids for several years - through 6th and 8th grades respectively. Neither of us has any training on how to teach. I ended up teaching basic algebra long before it was formally discussed simply because it was the most efficient way to solve the problems. However, my kids really didn't grasp the idea all that well. Now, when they went to public school, they both scored several years ahead of their grade levels on every asssessment test they took.
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36
No Child Left Behind Testing
by skeeter1 inaround the us, 6th graders (and alot of other grades) are preparing for this spring's standardized testing.
when "we" grew up, the standardized tests were straigh forward math problems.
the standardized math test is now only 16 questions long, but they are all long, drawn out word problems.
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finally awake
it's 50 inches, but it took me a minute to figure it out. I know I wasn't taught such geometrical reasoning until sophmore year of high school