I think Sonlight's philosophy is to give a smorgasbord of books and information, hoping that children will catch something in the process. I did enjoy reading and discussing the books but it was short on review and activities.
At least for the Apologia Botany book, there is reading, activities/experiments for you to explore what you learned, and various minibooks to create to review the concepts you learned. There is a lot of scientific vocabulary to learn but I think the kids like the challenge and I don't expect them to remember everything. I am learning a lot myself! We have been going outside a lot to study the plants, which has been fun. There is a little repetition when they ask you to review the concepts (answer questions, crossword, minibooks) but the kids don't seem to mind this since there is variety. You get to study one subject in detail instead of various subjects that don't relate like in Sonlight.
I am also adding some Sonlight D curriculum that relates to botany. We will try to do the TOPS corn, beans, and lentils experiment.
I don't know how the other books are in Apologia but unfortunately, I had already bought Sonlight science books for next year so we will use them and maybe try to add some lapbooks to review some concepts or focus on a few concepts in more detail. Then, maybe the following year, we will try to do Apologia Anatomy.
I would recommend Apologia for third grade and up, but I heard people use it for their young ones as well. They have junior Apologia notebooks as well for younger children. The notebooks are expensive but the kids really like them and it saves me time.
This a comment from Kristi:
ReplyDeletegreat job Vivian! We are doing the Apologia Anatomy and LOVING it. It's great fun. I think I will add in some TOPS books next time though too. I love all the experiments in TOPS but this is way better than Sonlight. It's great how they really connect God in seamlessly and not awkwardly. I have already had several ah-ha moments! =)
thanks for sharing.