Saxon Math 7/6: Homeschool Edition
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| List Price: | $39.95 |
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Average customer review:Product Description
Customized for homeschooling, includes investigations and an illustrated glossary. 120 lessons. Each lesson includes warm up activities, teaching of the new concept, and practice of new and previous m
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #296919 in Books
- Published on: 2004-06-30
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 744 pages
Customer Reviews
Simple steps to math
The book is good for a simple way to explain math lessons.there are many, many practice problems in each section. Usuailly I read it and do the problems myself and my mom just checks my answers but sometimes I also have to ask her to show me. I dont have to use the tests but if you want to they have them. You dont have to be home schooled to learn math from this book. It really helped me be more confident in math, and I guess I'm already pretty good at math.
this is the SOLUTIONS MANUAL!!!
Saxon math is a great product, however with all the listings, unclear specifics...it's hard to get the right book. This listing is for the "solutions manual" only. You will need that anyway for the correct answers to the assignments. Just don't expect the homeschool manual.
This is ONLY the Student/Teacher book, not the complete kit
You should purchase this book if you already have one complete kit and you are teaching more than one student, like I do.
The 3 stars are not targeted at the content, which is FIVE STARS in my view, but at the VERY CONFUSING marketing of these items. The cover of this book says Saxon Math Homeschool (sic!) but this is ONLY the Student/Teacher Text. You will not be able to teach your child math if all you buy is this book.
There should be THREE items in a complete package: a Student/Teacher manual (this one), the Solutions manual and the (reproducible) Tests and Worksheets. If you have one kid, buy the COMPLETE kit. If you have 2 or more kids, you should buy one complete kit and as many extra student/teacher books, such as this one, as you may need. If you do not have the ability to copy the worksheets, which is LEGAL, then you should also order additional Tests and Worksheets books. However, for one child, you will end up paying A LOT more if you bought these items individually.
Having 2 kids, and this is my experience for the past 5 years, from 3d to 7th grade, I order the complete kit from an education bookseller or from Amazon if I could find it here and an extra textbook from Amazon or one of the alternative sellers supported by Amazon.
By the way, Saxon's Math works. I am not a home schooler because I have a full-time job but I've been using it with my kids since 3d grade as a Math booster and I am happy with their A's. Besides math, children acquire some discipline, study skills, test-taking skills and, me having 2 'students', they learn to compete as well.
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On the Saxon method:
A one-year Math cycle is comprised of 120 lessons, 12 investigations and 23 review tests.
Each lesson begins with a quick daily test where certain skills such as addition or multiplication are drilled. Following that, there are warm-up activities that ask the students to perform mental math and solve a problem. The body of the lesson follows, where one or sometimes 2 topics are discussed. The lesson practice that follows asks students to answer/solve a number of questions related to the subject matters covered by the lesson. Finally, the 'mixed practice' asks students to answer/solve 25-30 questions that could be on EVERYTHING covered by Saxon Math up to that point. Each individual question has references to the lesson(s) which the students may want to review if they are having trouble with the answer/solution.
After every 5 lessons, beginning with the 10th, there is a 20-question test that covers material covered up to 5 lessons prior to that test. For example, the test given after lesson 25 will cover everything up to lesson 20.
Every 10 lessons there is an Investigation. Investigations are in-depth and largely 'hands on' studies of specific and important topics such as 'calculating odds' or 'measuring liquids'.
The expectation is for each lesson to last for about one hour. In practice, with 2 kids, I found that we spend anything from 60 to 90 minutes per lesson. At this point - doing 7th grade math - the children are capable to work on their own and my role is limited to reviewing the tests, 'teaching' the new topics and helping them with whatever questions or clarifications they may need.




