1st Grade T/Th- Week 24- February 24 - March 2

1st Grade
Week 24
Tue, Feb 24Wed, Feb 25Thu, Feb 26Fri, Feb 27Mon, Mar 2Co-Teacher Notes
VirtueLove- "Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God." -1 John 4:7
BibleGP Week 5, pg 70-73GP Week 5, pg 74-76GP Week 5, pg 77-79GP Week 5, pg 80-82GP Week 5, Optional Fun Day, pg 83Big Picture Question: How does God accomplish His plan? God uses people for His glory and our good.

I will not be assigning GP Week 6, but feel free to cover it with your child if you have the time.
MathHIG pg 42-43; TB pg 40-41; WB Ex 28 pg 57-58Parent read HIG pg 42; Review HIG pg 43; TB N/A; WB Ex 29 pg 59;

Choose one or both of the subtraction games below to play (see Math section);

MM17 (last 10 problems)
HIG pg 45-46;
TB pg 42 & 44;
WB Ex 31 pg 66-67
Parent read HIG pg 45; HIG pg 47; TB pg 43 & 45; WB Ex 30 pg 64-65

MM 13 (yes, again!), last 10 problems
HIG pg 47 Reinforcement activity; TB N/A; WB Ex 32 pg 68-69;

MM 15 (yes, again!), last 10 problems

MM 6: one-minute timed drill; return to school on Tuesday
Pay close attention to page numbers this week!
SpellingLesson 23:

Review Sound Cards;

Review less common sounds of O and U;

Dictate last three sentences on pg 199 in spelling journal
Review/correct dictation from Tuesday;

Review a selection of Sound, Rule, and Word Cards from your card box;

Use Put It on the Grill activity (see Teacher's Manual pg 198) to review less common sounds of O and U
Lesson 23 written assessmentLesson 24, Second Job of Silent E:

Parent read pg 201;

Review a selection of Sound, Rule, and Word Cards from your card box;

Read through Word Banks for ER and Name Game Syllables Part 2 (pg 123 and pg 71 in activity book); review the sounds of C (pg 202)

Use letter tiles for New Teaching, pg 202-203
Lesson 24, Second Job of Silent E:

Review a selection of Sound, Rule, and Word Cards from your card box; read through Word Bank for Soft C (pg 147 in the activity book);

Student use tiles to spell several words you select from "Practice More Words" section, pg 204;

Dictate Word Cards 184-193 in spelling journal;

Dictate first three sentences on pg 205 in spelling journal
Check assessment from Thursday and add missed Word Cards to Review tab of card box; file Word Cards that your student has mastered in Mastered tab
GrammarFLL Lesson 81: Poem memorization: "Mr. Nobody," pg 132FLL Lesson 82: Capitalization in poetry, Copywork: "Mr. Nobody", pg 133-134FLL Lesson 83: Pronouns, Oral usage: "Is/Are," pg 135-136FLL Lesson 84: Oral composition: "Mr. Nobody at Our House," Copywork: "Mr. Nobody at Our House," pg 137 (reference "Mr. Nobody" poem on pg 132)Discuss "Mr. Nobody" as the lesson directs, but your student does not need to practice memorizing the poem.
WritingLowercase alphabet- neatness and speedCopybook pg 69 - Copying (step 4); Write neatly and accurately.Lowercase alphabet- neatness and speedCopybook pg 69 - Proof/ Correct and Illustrate (steps 5 and 6)
ReadingReview all phonograms;

SF Week 22, Day 1, pg 138-139

Review OU as /o͞o/ and /ou/, The Vowel Pair OU as /ŭ/ (OPG 130)
Review all phonograms;

SF Week 22, Day 2, pg 140-141;

OPG L131: Sight Words: build, built, Review Sight Words, pg 218;

"God's Good Rules" from The Early Reader's Bible, pg 107-113 (see decodable words below)
Review all phonograms;

SF Week 22, Day 3, pg 142-143;

Introduce Y alone as /ĭ/ (OPG L132)
Review all phonograms;

SF Week 22, Day 4, pg 144-145;

OPG L132: Y alone as /ĭ/, pg 219; Dictation: myth, gym

"A Calf of Gold" from The Early Reader's Bible, pg 115-121 (see decodable words below)
Review all phonograms;

SF Week 22, Day 5, pg 146-147;

OPG L133: Review of Vowel Pairs and Patterns for Short-Vowel Words, pg 220
Add "build" and "built" to review cards. All sight words that should be learned and reviewed thus far: the, I, a, of, have, give, to, two, too, was, said, do, who, friend, eye, buy, shoe, could, would, should, one, once, build, built
Read AloudThe Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, Ch. 13;

Aesop's Fables pg 99 - The Lark and her Young Ones
The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, Ch. 14;

Aesop's Fables pg 112 - The Fisherman and the Little Fish
The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, Ch. 15;

Aesop's Fables pg 96 - The Dog and His Reflection
The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, Ch. 16;

Aesop's Fables pg 76 - The Bull and the Goat
HistorySpecial Guest- Marine BiologySotW Ch 28 The Roman Empire, pg 215-225; discussion questions below

Optional:
Click here for instructions to build an edible model of a Roman road

Journal sentence: Ancient Romans built durable roads, many of which are still standing today.
The Greek Agora project will be due April 28th; Click here for project information
ScienceG&B/MB Lesson 6: Marine Invertebrates Part 1- Introduction to Invertebrates, Symmetry, and Marine Invertebrates Booklet Activity- Cnidarians only (stop at Echinoderms), pg 24-25;

Please complete Cnidarians (page 1) of My Marine Invertebrates Booklet that was sent home on Tuesday, then send booklet to school for your student to use tomorrow as well
G&B/MB Lesson 6: Marine Invertebrates Part 1- Marine Invertebrates Booklet (page 2)- Echinoderms and Sponges, pg 25-26Please send Marine Invertebrates Booklet to school on Thursday
GeographyEquatorial Africa- Due 3/5
Memory WorkSCRIPTURE: John 15:1-17 ESV (ongoing);
Books of the Old Testament - Genesis through Job- Due 3/12
MATH: Fact Flashcards (Ongoing)
QUARTER 3 POEM: A Child's Prayer - Due 3/10
GEOGRAPHY: Equatorial Africa - Due 3/5

*Note anything underlined in the table above or in the notes below is a clickable link for your convenience *

Key to Abbreviations:
GP- The Gospel Project- Home Edition
HIG- Singapore Math Home Instructor's Guide (click to print addition or subtraction cards)
TB- Singapore Math Textbook
WB- Singapore Math Workbook
EP- Singapore Math Extra Practice
MM- Mental Math (see appendix in HIG)
AAS- All About Spelling teacher manual (click here to print any missing phonogram cards)
FLL- First Language Lessons
SF- Sounds First Phonemic Awareness Program (click here and scroll down to Grade 1)
OPG- The Ordinary Parents' Guide to Teaching Reading (click here to print OPG sight words)
SotW- Story of the World
G&B/A- The Good and The Beautiful, Arthropods
G&B/MB- The Good and The Beautiful, Marine Biology 



COMING SOON...

Thursday, February 26- Spirit/Pizza/DOGS day

Thursday, March 5- Equatorial Africa map due

Tuesday, March 10- Q3 poem, A Child's Prayer due

Thursday, March 12- Books of the Bible (Genesis - Job) due

Tuesday - Monday, March 17-23- Spring Break


Dearest Parents, 

Can you believe we have just three weeks of school until Spring Break? The time has FLOWN by this semester. You and your students have put in a lot of time, thought, and effort, and the results are so rewarding. Keep persevering!
Love, Mrs. Kuhn


Math:
We have just finished teaching a tricky unit, and we've been working hard! Subtraction with renaming is one of the most challenging concepts in 1st grade math, so we will keep reviewing in class and I will ask you to do the same at home, even as we move on to other units.

Subtraction reinforcement games (choose one or both to play on Wednesday): 

Build a Number, then Subtract: Use two sets of number cards with numbers 0-9 (UNO cards, Phase 10 cards, playing cards with face cards removed, etc). From the first set, use only numbers 1, 2, and 3. Keeping the sets separated into two piles, turn all cards face down. Draw one card from the 1,2,3 pile- this is the tens number in a 2-digit number. Draw one card from the 0-9 pile- this is the ones number in a 2-digit number. Write down the 2-digit number. (Ex: 2 is turned over from the 1,2,3 pile and 9 is turned over from the 0-9 pile; the 2-digit number is 29). Turn over one more card from the 0-9 pile. Have your student subtract the number they turned over from the number they wrote down. 

0 or Bust: Use a 10-sided die or 4 sets of number cards with numbers 0-9. Players start with 40 points. Roll the die or draw a card and subtract that number from the start number. That difference is the new start number. Continue until one person hits 0 exactly. If a player's roll doesn't hit 0 exactly, they "go bust" and their turn is over. 

Our next unit is multiplication- so fun! At this level, we will be introducing it as repeated addition. Please note, as it says in the HIG: "Students should use mental math to do the repeated addition, not simply count on." We want students to be able to manipulate the numbers easily in their heads so that for 4+4+4+4 they are thinking "I know 4+4 is 8, adding another 4 gets me to 12, and the last 4 brings me to 16," or "I see there are two 4+4's. I know 4+4 is 8, so two 4+4's is the same as 8+8, and 8+8 is 16." This way of thinking about math, rather than simply counting, is so powerful! It opens up many opportunities for higher math functioning when children can manipulate numbers with ease, freeing up brain power for more complex computations.

Keep practicing math facts...yes, still! Again, less effort required in the recall of facts means more "brain power" available to use the facts in more complex calculations.

Flashcard Games for math facts (or phonograms!)

Spelling:
This week Lesson 24 introduces the second job of silent E, which is to cause C or G to make their soft sounds. This is another lesson that will be easier to teach if your student has been writing the silent E along with the vowel, then going back and filling in the final consonant sound between the vowel and the silent E. That approach makes it easy to see that if the final consonant sound is /s/, they should use C, since C spells /s/ before E, I, or Y (S before E usually makes the /z/ sound). Regularly reviewing the Word Bank for Soft C on pg 147 in the activity book will help your student recognize these words as well. 


Grammar:
For FLL Lesson 82, you will be using "Mr. Nobody" to point out capitalization in poetry. You do not need to read the stanza three times in a row or have your student repeat it along with you since we're not memorizing this poem. Also note that for Lesson 82 copywork in the grammar booklet, due to space constraints several words in the poem were omitted in order to demonstrate capitalization of the first word of every line. 

Reading:
Remember when teaching a new sight word, before showing your student the word, say it to them and ask them to think about and write down what sounds they would use to spell the word. For "build," they will likely spell b-i-l-d. Then discuss which parts of the word are regular (b, l, d) and identify the part that is irregular (the /ĭ/ sound is spelled with UI; this is a rule breaker because UI makes the /oo/ sound). Direct your student to underline, highlight, or use a different color to replace the i they originally wrote with ui, and remind them that this is the part of the word they will need to memorize. 

Decodable words in "God's Good Rules" (sight words in parenthesis): God's, good, (what), is, it, some, (said), the, a, big, they, but, (was), with, them, had, lead, take, them, to, this, place, told, go, up, on, he, (would), say, gave, tell, my, do, not, make, think, name, bad, way, rest, day, love, and, kill, wife, steal, lie, want, (have)

Decodable words in "A Calf of Gold" (sight words in parenthesis): A, (of), gold, will, you, do, (what), God, yes, (said), the, we, went, he, to, (was), long, time, come, back, some, must, (have), help, us, so, the, made, from, this, they, it, be, now, but, not, (one), day, came, did, like, please, came, (would), then, bad, died, sad, who, no


History:
This semester's at-home project will allow students to tap into their inner entrepreneur as they set up shop in a recreation of the central Greek gathering place and marketplace, the Agora. Project guidelines can be found here. This project will be presented by the students on April 28th

SotW Ch. 28 Discussion questions: How were the Roman roads different from most roads in the ancient world? Compare how ancient Romans took a bath with how you take a bath. Why do you think the Romans liked to watch men fighting? What is your opinon about a gladiator fight? Can you think of a different game that people today enjoy watching?

Journal sentence: Ancient Romans built durable roads, many of which are still standing today. 

Here is an idea for making an edible Roman road, if you're feeling adventurous!

Science:
Lessons 6 and 7 cover marine invertebrates. We will split each of those by covering half of a lesson at home, then finishing the other half at school. This week, you'll teach symmetry and the cnidarians page of the "My Marine Invertebrates" booklet at home, then we'll study echinoderms and sponges in class. Copies of the booklet will be sent home with your student on Tuesday, Feb. 24th. Please complete only the Cnidarians page of the Marine Invertebrates Booklet on Wednesday at home. Send the booklet to school on Thursday so we can continue with Echinoderms and Sponges. The process will repeat for Lesson 7 next week.

Geography:
Equatorial Africa map and song due 3/5; Students should be able to point to each country as they sing/recite the names.

Memory Work:
The Quarter 3 poem is due Tuesday, 3/10. Each child will present A Child's Prayer in front of the class. Let your child practice in front of an audience of stuffed animals to boost their confidence!
The books of the Old Testament (Genesis-Job) are due Thursday, 3/12.

1st Grade T/Th- Week 23- February 17-23

1st Grade
Week 23
Tue, Feb 17Wed, Feb 18Thu, Feb 19Fri, Feb 20Mon, Feb 23Co-Teacher Notes
VirtueLove- "Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God." -1 John 4:7
BibleGP Week 4, pg 54-57GP Week 4, pg 54 & 58-60GP Week 4, pg 61-63GP Week 4, pg 64-66GP Week 4, Optional Fun Day, pg 67-68Big Picture Question: Whom can we trust? We can trust God to take care of us.
MathHIG pg 40-41, TB pg 38-39 #6c and #7c; work MM 16 problems with base 10 materialsReview HIG pg 40-41; Review TB pg 38-39 #6c and #7c; WB Ex 27 pg 55-56; MM 16 (first 10 problems)Review 1Look over Review 1 from yesterday and have your student correct any missed problems;

Review HIG pg 40, do Reinforcement activity on HIG pg 41;

MM16 (last 10 problems)
Extra Practice book pg 68

MM17 (first 10 problems)

MM 5: one-minute timed drill; return to school on Tuesday
SpellingLesson 22:

Review Sound Cards;

Review OR;

Dictate last three sentences on pg 192 in spelling journal
Review/correct dictation from Tuesday (see Spelling note below);

Review a selection of Sound, Rule, and Word Cards from your card box;

Use Storks in Shorts activity (see Teacher's Manual pg 192) to review OR
Lesson 22 written assessmentLesson 23, Less Common Sounds of O and U:

Parent read pg 195;

Review a selection of Sound, Rule, and Word Cards from your card box; read through Word Banks for Find Gold and WH (pg 115 and 105 in activity book);

Use letter tiles for New Teaching, pg 196-197;

Teach Rule Breaker: who, pg 198
Lesson 23, Less Common Sounds of O and U:

Review a selection of Sound, Rule, and Word Cards from your card box; read through a selection of Word Banks;

Dictate Word Cards 174-183 in spelling journal;

Dictate first three sentences on pg 199 in spelling journal
Check assessment from Thursday and add missed Word Cards to Review tab of card box; file Word Cards that your student has mastered in Mastered tab
GrammarFLL Lesson 76: Initials, months of the year, days of the week, pronouns; Copywork: "Days of the Week," pg 125-126FLL Lesson 77: Abbreviations (Addresses), pg 127

Note: have student copy their address on the Grammar Journal page for Lesson 77
FLL Lesson 78: Introducing titles of respect; Copywork: "Titles of respect," pg 128-129FLL Lesson 79: Titles of respect, pg 130
WritingLowercase alphabet- neatness and speedCopybook pg 67- Copying (step 4); Write neatly and accurately.Lowercase alphabet- neatness and speedCopybook pg 67- Proof/Correct and Illustrate (steps 5 and 6)
ReadingReview all phonograms;

SF Week 21, Day 1, pg 128-129;

Introduce O alone as /ŭ/ (OPG L128)
Review all phonograms;

SF Week 21, Day 2, pg 130-131;

OPG L128: O alone as /ŭ/, pg 215; Dictation: from, ton, son (remember with OPG dictation to explicitly tell your student to use O alone for the /ŭ/ in these words);

"Going Out of Egypt" from The Early Reader's Bible, pg 91-97 (see decodable words below)
Review all phonograms;

SF Week 21, Day 3, pg 132-133;

Introduce O alone as /ŭ/, Sight Words: one, once (OPG L129)
Review all phonograms;

SF Week 21, Day 4, pg 134-135;

OPG L129: O alone as /ŭ/, Sight Words: one, once, pg 216; Dictation: dove, love, shove

"Something to Drink, Something to Eat" from The Early Reader's Bible, pg 99-105 (see decodable words below)
Review all phonograms;

SF Week 21, Day 5, pg 136-137;

OPG L130: Review OU as /o͞o/ and /ou/, The Vowel Pair OU as /ŭ/, pg 217; Dictation: touch, young

Read the
SPIRE reader, The Big Catch (assist your child with words we have not covered yet: are, what, were)
Add "one" and "once" to review box; All sight words that should be learned and reviewed thus far: the, I, a, of, have, give, to, two, too, was, said, do, who, friend, eye, buy, shoe, could, would, should, one, once
Read AloudThe Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, Ch. 9;

Aesop's Fables pg 68 - The Mouse and the Weasel
The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, Ch. 10;

Aesop's Fables pg 51 - The Vain Jackdaw and his Borrowed Feathers
The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, Ch. 11;

Aesop's Fables pg 36 - The Two Goats
The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk, Ch. 12;

Aesop's Fables pg 26 - The Farmer and the Stork
HistoryRead about Greek Agora marketplace and assign projectSotW Ch 27: The Rise of Rome, pg 209-213; discussion questions below;

Journal sentence: Roman legend tells of the twins Romulus and Remus who founded Rome.
The Greek Agora project is being assigned this week and will be due April 28th. Check your child's binder for packet and click here for project information
ScienceG&B/MB Lesson 5: Coral Reefs- Introduction to Corals, Photograph Observation, Types of Coral, Coral Reef Communities Video, Coral and Colors, pg 17-18 (skip Coral Design Activity);

Journal sentence: Coral is made up of hundreds of tiny animals called coral polyps. (Encourage your student to draw an example of a hard coral and a soft coral to go along with their journal sentence.)
G&B/MB Lesson 5: Coral Reefs

Read Aloud: The Coral Reef: Giant City Under the Sea;
Read, write, and draw coral reef booklet
GeographyEquatorial Africa- Due 3/5
Memory WorkSCRIPTURE: John 15:1-17 ESV (ongoing);
Books of the Old Testament - Genesis through Job- Due 3/12
MATH: Fact Flashcards (Ongoing)
QUARTER 3 POEM: A Child's Prayer - Due 3/10
GEOGRAPHY: Equatorial Africa - Due 3/5
*Note anything underlined in the table above or in the notes below is a clickable link for your convenience *

Key to Abbreviations:
GP- The Gospel Project- Home Edition
HIG- Singapore Math Home Instructor's Guide (click to print addition or subtraction cards)
TB- Singapore Math Textbook
WB- Singapore Math Workbook
EP- Singapore Math Extra Practice
MM- Mental Math (see appendix in HIG)
AAS- All About Spelling teacher manual (click here to print any missing phonogram cards)
FLL- First Language Lessons
SF- Sounds First Phonemic Awareness Program (click here and scroll down to Grade 1)
OPG- The Ordinary Parents' Guide to Teaching Reading (click here to print OPG sight words)
SotW- Story of the World
G&B/A- The Good and The Beautiful, Arthropods
G&B/MB- The Good and The Beautiful, Marine Biology 


Tuesday, February 17- School is in session (no President's Day holiday)

Friday, February 20- Daddy Daughter Dance

Saturday, February 21- Fortis Talent Show

Thursday, February 26- Spirit/Pizza/DOGS day

Tuesday - Monday, March 17-23- Spring Break


Math:
This is another important week in math that has the potential to be tricky. We will devote much of this week to subtracting ones from a 2-digit number within 40 with renaming. Teaching from the HIG before handing over the workbook is KEY! Allow your student to use manipulatives for as long as it takes these strategies to sink in and become fluid. Ask lots of questions to coach your child through explaining their thought process until they are able to explain the process to you on their own. Mental Math 16 and 17 will provide lots of opportunities to practice computation. 

Keep practicing math facts!
Flashcard Games for math facts (or phonograms!)

Spelling:
When you're reviewing Lesson 22 dictation from class this week, take note that I'll be changing the 5th sentence on pg 192. Because we haven't taught Bossy R words with a silent e (like in the word "store"), the sentence I give will say "He will sell corn at his home."


Composition:
I am noticing some students' handwriting is being hampered by poor pencil grip. We really want to correct that now, at the beginning of their writing careers, so that they can write comfortably, neatly, and without fatigue as they move on to more lengthy writing tasks. I'd like every parent to read this article, "Poor Pencil Grip" and observe whether your child is using the proper grip. If not, the author provides other links for ways to help your child, which I encourage you to follow up with. If you have any questions or concerns that I can help you work through, please reach out to me any time. 

Custom Handwriting Practice Sheets   

Reading:
This week in OPG Lesson 128, we will be teaching O alone as /ŭ/ (the 4th sound of O on our yellow phonogram card). Your student may ask you a very good question such as, "If the sound is /ŭ/, why not just spell it with the letter U?" The answer is, we used to! This O is called a scribal O because in times past, when scribes would write a word like "love" as "luve," the U and the V were very similar in shape and it made the word hard to read. In those words, they made the U into a more rounded letter which ended up looking like an O. Eventually the O was taken on as the standard, and is now seen in many words where the sound /ŭ/ is next to W, TH, M, N or V (love, shove, son, won, month, mother, etc.). Fascinating, don't you think?

We want to make sure your student is retaining the prior lessons along with learning the new ones, so remember each homeschool day to do "2 review and 1 new!"

While we do review the phonogram sounds each class day, please work on these at home as often as you can with the cards or the phone app, making sure to add new cards to your review as we cover them. 

Decodable words in "Going Out of Egypt" (sight words in parenthesis): God's, went, from, they, as, fast, (could), go, led, them, the, knew, that, (was), with, each, day, in, a, cloud, like, all, time, He, to, (one), came, big, sea, not, it, king, and, his, men, kill, but, made, dry, place, walk, on, side, too, took, (of), lead, slaves, so, sang, a, song

Decodable words in "Something to Drink, Something to Eat" (sight words in parenthesis): I, want, some, a, (said), we, too, but, is, no, slaves, in, now, find, then, ran, fast, he, see, all, the, went, to, get, they, (could), not, drink, it, good, cut, down, that, tree, God, put, did, eat, boy, food, will, (give), you, so, sent, bread, each, day, (was), their, like, but, gave, his, that, how, took

History:
This semester's at-home project will allow students to tap into their inner entrepreneur as they set up shop in a recreation of the central Greek gathering place and marketplace, the Agora. Students will create a product they wish to sell, a price point, and a sales pitch to entice their friends to visit their stall in the marketplace. Fortis students from other grades will be "window shopping" in our Agora before we buy and sell amongst our class (currency provided)! The complete instruction packet will be sent home on Tuesday, February 17th. Project guidelines can also be found here. This project will be presented by the students on April 28th. They are encouraged to wear Greek attire/costume to school that day to lend authenticity to their project. 

SotW Ch. 27 questions for discussion: Compare the story of Romulus and Remus to the biblical account of Moses. What is the same? What is different? Do you agree with Remus that it was unfair for Romulus to be king of the town they built together? How would you change this story so that both brothers were happy? What kinds of things did the Etruscans teach the Romans about Greeks? What idea did the Romans have to keep one man from gaining too much power? Do you think it's better for one person to be in charge or many people? 

Journal sentence: Roman legend tells of the twins Romulus and Remus who founded Rome.

Science:
If ever God's amazing array of dazzling colors were on display, surely a coral reef is the place. But did you know that coral are naturally colorless? A beautiful example of teamwork (symbiosis) is taking place which results in the fabulous colors we associate with coral.
 
Journal sentence: Coral is made up of hundreds of tiny animals called coral polyps.

Geography:
Equatorial Africa Map and Song due 3/5; Students should be able to point to each country as they sing/recite the names.

Memory Work:
Quarter 3 poem:  A Child's Prayer due 3/10. 

Books of the Old Testament: Genesis- Job due 3/12. Here is a link to the song we practice in class. The Old Testament will take the rest of the school year to master. This quarter we will focus on Genesis through Job. As always, if you or your child are already familiar with a different song, I'll assess that no problem, as long as the books are said in order.