Teaching a sub science. (Full Version)

All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Ask a Master



Message


Tinkerer -> Teaching a sub science. (3/12/2013 2:12:34 AM)

I recently began a D/s relationship with a very, very close friend of mine. One of the many goals of this relationship is to push him to learn high school math and science in an effort to patch a gaping hole in knowledge left by poor homeschooling. Since science and math are two strong points of my own, it's not the material I'm unsure about, but rather how to teach it.

I think math is going to be really easy for us. For the most part it's just communicating an idea, then practicing it like heck, then building of that idea with another idea, and repeat. Reward good, honest effort. Punish slacking. Da.

But science is different, in that some of it really requires hands on experience. To my advantage, my boy finds science very interesting, but I don't exactly have a full school lab to demonstrate different things. Physics might be easy to do at home, but since his math is lacking right now I was going to start with Biology. Has anyone had any experience teaching this at the kitchen table?




AthenaSurrenders -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/12/2013 2:29:55 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tinkerer

I recently began a D/s relationship with a very, very close friend of mine. One of the many goals of this relationship is to push him to learn high school math and science in an effort to patch a gaping hole in knowledge left by poor homeschooling. Since science and math are two strong points of my own, it's not the material I'm unsure about, but rather how to teach it.

I think math is going to be really easy for us. For the most part it's just communicating an idea, then practicing it like heck, then building of that idea with another idea, and repeat. Reward good, honest effort. Punish slacking. Da.

But science is different, in that some of it really requires hands on experience. To my advantage, my boy finds science very interesting, but I don't exactly have a full school lab to demonstrate different things. Physics might be easy to do at home, but since his math is lacking right now I was going to start with Biology. Has anyone had any experience teaching this at the kitchen table?


No experience but it sounds like good fun. I'd love to have a project like that with my dom.

Depending on what kind of level he is at, you might be able to download high school level revision booklets which might give you some sort of structure to work from. In the UK the BBC has a site called 'GCSE bitesize' which has lots of little quizzes, animation demonstrations and little chunks of revision work. It might be a bit childish for him but if nothing else it will give you a different way of practising things between lessons and suggest what type of topics you might cover each time.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/

GCSE is the level of exams British school kids take at 15/16 to give you an idea of level, so biology will cover things like plant cell structure, osmosis, basic genetic diagrams.

Depending on what kind of topics you want to cover, I would think there are quite a lot of experiments you could do at home for biology. Can you get a cheap microscope for looking at cells? Grow bacteria from swabs around your house in improvised petri dishes? Use potato chunks and various concentrations of sugar-water to demonstrate osmosis?




UllrsIshtar -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/12/2013 2:43:50 AM)

I'd suggest googling around for a decent secular home school program. There are several free sources out there, as well as paid ones. You'll have to sample them and see which ones you like best.
Most college bookstores also carry prep-books for the GED exam with basic science.

I personally HIGHLY recommend http://www.khanacademy.org, they have free independent courses on a broad number of subjects, and include a whole series of math exercises you can do to test yourself.

It's possible to make a teach account and keep track of your pupil's progress, and it would also allow you to let him do a little bit more of the work independently; alternatively, you could use their courses and videos to brush up on subjects you're a little rusty on yourself.




MAINEiacMISTRESS -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/12/2013 3:22:32 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tinkerer

I recently began a D/s relationship with a very, very close friend of mine. One of the many goals of this relationship is to push him to learn high school math and science in an effort to patch a gaping hole in knowledge left by poor homeschooling. Since science and math are two strong points of my own, it's not the material I'm unsure about, but rather how to teach it.

I think math is going to be really easy for us. For the most part it's just communicating an idea, then practicing it like heck, then building of that idea with another idea, and repeat. Reward good, honest effort. Punish slacking. Da.

But science is different, in that some of it really requires hands on experience. To my advantage, my boy finds science very interesting, but I don't exactly have a full school lab to demonstrate different things. Physics might be easy to do at home, but since his math is lacking right now I was going to start with Biology. Has anyone had any experience teaching this at the kitchen table?

Go HERE:http://www.amazon.com/Biology-Coloring-Book-Robert-Griffin/dp/0064603075
and scroll down to "Frequently Bought Together" section for more helpful books. These are high school/college level books and fun to work with. You'll need coloring pencils, not crayons, lol.
Also, this GED book w/CD-rom will help with lessons and tests. I've got one of My subs working on his.
http://www.amazon.com/McGraw-Hills-GED-CD-ROM-Complete-Reliable/dp/0071451994/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1338389136&sr=1-1

Have fun!
--MM




MAINEiacMISTRESS -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/12/2013 3:35:57 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: AthenaSurrenders


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tinkerer

I recently began a D/s relationship with a very, very close friend of mine. One of the many goals of this relationship is to push him to learn high school math and science in an effort to patch a gaping hole in knowledge left by poor homeschooling. Since science and math are two strong points of my own, it's not the material I'm unsure about, but rather how to teach it.

I think math is going to be really easy for us. For the most part it's just communicating an idea, then practicing it like heck, then building of that idea with another idea, and repeat. Reward good, honest effort. Punish slacking. Da.

But science is different, in that some of it really requires hands on experience. To my advantage, my boy finds science very interesting, but I don't exactly have a full school lab to demonstrate different things. Physics might be easy to do at home, but since his math is lacking right now I was going to start with Biology. Has anyone had any experience teaching this at the kitchen table?


No experience but it sounds like good fun. I'd love to have a project like that with my dom.

Depending on what kind of level he is at, you might be able to download high school level revision booklets which might give you some sort of structure to work from. In the UK the BBC has a site called 'GCSE bitesize' which has lots of little quizzes, animation demonstrations and little chunks of revision work. It might be a bit childish for him but if nothing else it will give you a different way of practising things between lessons and suggest what type of topics you might cover each time.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/

GCSE is the level of exams British school kids take at 15/16 to give you an idea of level, so biology will cover things like plant cell structure, osmosis, basic genetic diagrams.

Depending on what kind of topics you want to cover, I would think there are quite a lot of experiments you could do at home for biology. Can you get a cheap microscope for looking at cells? Grow bacteria from swabs around your house in improvised petri dishes? Use potato chunks and various concentrations of sugar-water to demonstrate osmosis?

Earlier this winter I incubated a rubbery white coffee grounds fungus that had the power to dissolve the old fashioned aluminum coffee percolator it was left in (actually eroded a big hole in the thin aluminum drip cup)
...I probably could have gotten MILLIONS for it from the military...but then hubby washed the dishes and now it's LOST FOREVER!!!!




OsideGirl -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/12/2013 8:26:30 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: UllrsIshtar

I'd suggest googling around for a decent secular home school program. There are several free sources out there, as well as paid ones. You'll have to sample them and see which ones you like best.


I was going to say close to the same thing. There are homeschooling programs with guides that would help.




breagha -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/12/2013 1:22:45 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: UllrsIshtar
I personally HIGHLY recommend http://www.khanacademy.org, they have free independent courses on a broad number of subjects, and include a whole series of math exercises you can do to test yourself.

It's possible to make a teach account and keep track of your pupil's progress, and it would also allow you to let him do a little bit more of the work independently; alternatively, you could use their courses and videos to brush up on subjects you're a little rusty on yourself.



Excellent suggestion... such a great site!!




LillyBoPeep -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/13/2013 1:18:35 AM)

I was also going to suggest a good homeschooling program, but it's been said like 18 million times now.

SO NOW I will just chime in in solidarity and express how awesome I think this is. ^_^ Super awesome, that's how!

Good luck and have fun. ^_^ There's never an end to learning. ^_^

(I'm actually irrationally excited by it, but I'd rather not come off like a total nutball.)




DesFIP -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/13/2013 4:34:19 PM)

http://www.insiderpages.com/b/3714701835/education-world-parent-teacher-indianapolis

Parent teacher resources. They'll have books and experiments. And your local community college should offer a lab only course over the summer. Also remedial courses for people like him.




RochesterDomme -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/17/2013 6:00:29 AM)

I would also look into G.E.D. Programs. You can get study books and practice tests at almost any decent bookstore. Each book is usually just one or two topics, so you just have to buy the math and science books. If you have your sub take the tests first, you should give you both an idea of where the weaknesses really are.

If you do an Internet search, you should find a few online free tests that grade as you go.




DesFIP -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/17/2013 1:22:12 PM)

@Mainiac Mistress" :http://www.amazon.com/Biology-Coloring-Book-Robert-Griffin/dp/0064603075
I remember this. My daughter's high school bio class used it.




ToSirWithLove13 -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/17/2013 4:23:23 PM)

I would suggest renting MythBusters. Its fun and educational and as they delve into myths they expound alot of science. If you pause the program and discuss exactly what they are doing and how it works you can impart alot of info in a fun way. I do this with my niece and she seems to pick up alot.

Hope this helps




graceadieu -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/17/2013 8:34:49 PM)

That sounds really awesome and a great project. All these books are great suggestions. Another option might be to enroll him in remedial science classes at a community college, where they would have a lab etc.




IsaNova -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/25/2013 9:49:36 PM)

I'd highly recommend reading a bit about the different ways people learn, and spending some time with him trying to figure that out. I don't remember em all, but I know some people really pick things up by experimenting and doing it themselves, but this can be incredibly difficult and frustrating for others. Personally I learn best from lecture/discussion that emphasizes why I am doing Step X, not just how to do Step X (like Alton Brown teaching cooking in Good Eats episodes for a good example) I don't recall all the ways but this can be a big difference in teaching and help cut a lot of frustration for both people




Tinkerer -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/27/2013 9:27:01 PM)

A plethora of information and resources. Thank you to all of you! I'm having a lot of fun going through all of them, and I think there are a lot of good suggestions. Mythbusters is a good idea, but they glance over a lot of stuff too. Maybe I'll try and dig up those old Bill Nye episodes too.




tazzygirl -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/27/2013 10:01:15 PM)

quote:

But science is different, in that some of it really requires hands on experience. To my advantage, my boy finds science very interesting, but I don't exactly have a full school lab to demonstrate different things. Physics might be easy to do at home, but since his math is lacking right now I was going to start with Biology. Has anyone had any experience teaching this at the kitchen table?


http://phlebotomytechnicianschools.com/52-totally-awesome-science-experiments-you-can-do-at-home

http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/40-cool-science-experiments-web

http://reekoscience.com/Experiments/

Google "adult basic science experiments" I came up with a whole bunch. Hope that helps!




MasterOfMindoll -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/29/2013 11:06:45 AM)

I'm not sure if they are still in business, but years ago I worked at a company callled Science Kit, that made various experiment/teaching kits, up to college level... if they are still around, they will have a web site, I'm sure.




mstrj69 -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (3/30/2013 11:14:21 PM)

I am a CPA and can carry on a discussion with anybody I know. I had high school biology for one semester. That was the extent of my science. So I am not sure why the push for science and math. Math is considered a science, or it was when I attended school.

If you feel it necessary to push it, make sure it is fun for him. I am not sure about schools in your area but here remedial science and math are taught at the junior college level. The school library should have copies of the needed book. You could possibly get one of the professors to give you a copy of his syllabus to work from. Maybe your friend or you could explain the situation to a counselor for incoming students and he or she could give you suggestions that will help you.




MrRodgers -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (4/2/2013 12:42:45 PM)

I'd start with earth science as it is easiest I think to make it more interesting and fun. That way he's stays interested and looks forward to the next lesson. Math too but it is very hard not to be repetitive there. Good luck.




Tinkerer -> RE: Teaching a sub science. (4/2/2013 8:14:52 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: mstrj69

I am a CPA and can carry on a discussion with anybody I know. I had high school biology for one semester. That was the extent of my science. So I am not sure why the push for science and math. Math is considered a science, or it was when I attended school.

If you feel it necessary to push it, make sure it is fun for him. I am not sure about schools in your area but here remedial science and math are taught at the junior college level. The school library should have copies of the needed book. You could possibly get one of the professors to give you a copy of his syllabus to work from. Maybe your friend or you could explain the situation to a counselor for incoming students and he or she could give you suggestions that will help you.



Well, he wants to go to school for vet. medicine, so strong science a requirement.




Page: [1]

Valid CSS!




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy
0.046875