Reddit mentions: The best curriculum & lesson plans

We found 6 Reddit comments discussing the best curriculum & lesson plans. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 5 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

3. The Hobbit, Student Study Guide

The Hobbit, Student Study Guide
Specs:
Height11 Inches
Length8.5 Inches
Weight0.5 Pounds
Width0.15 Inches
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5. How to Read: a Kick-Start to Reading for Beginners of Any Age

How to Read: a Kick-Start to Reading for Beginners of Any Age
Specs:
Height11.02 Inches
Length8.5 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateSeptember 2017
Weight0.52 Pounds
Width0.17 Inches
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🎓 Reddit experts on curriculum & lesson plans

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where curriculum & lesson plans are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 4
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 3
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 3
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 2
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1
Total score: 1
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1

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Top Reddit comments about Curriculum & Lesson Plans:

u/Grave_Girl · 1 pointr/homeschool

It's not actually a homeschooling book, and I'm not terribly certain it will help from the student side (I think there's a good chance it will, or I would not be mentioning it), but Salman Khan's The One World Schoolhouse really was a paradigm-changer for me as a homeschooler.

Also, I bought a version of this for my kids (a 60-day version that was $15 and we're honestly going to be building our own once it's consumed, because that stuff adds up!). We just got it so I can't really say how effective it will be, but my oldest, who I strongly suspect has some form of ADD, is super excited at the very prospect. It's a library-based program, and self-paced and self-led. It's got all the nice literature-based study stuff parents love broken down in a way that makes it easily accessible to students. That page does say you'll need to add in a math program, but perhaps Khan Academy can suffice there for you.

u/Agrona · 1 pointr/brokehugs

Looks like it was Drout's Quick and Easy Old English, which has the advantage of being pretty cheap.

The Kindle version is OK, but a dead-tree would be nicer (I found myself using bookmarks pretty heavily to refer back to things.)

If you'd like to see a page or two, let me know what you want and I'd be happy to provide.

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bonus: All professors' websites are garbage.

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>Old English Wikipedia

of course that's a thing.

u/imnotgoodwithnames · 4 pointsr/TheHobbit

Very cool. Here is a pretty good inexpensive study guide that I'm using with the a book club I assist with at our church, though may be too simple for freshmen kids.

u/jmpsu23 · 3 pointsr/books

Not an adolescent, but when I was about nine a librarian recommended The Westing Game. Still one of my favorites.