Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Groundhog Day Unit Study

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Please see my suggested resources.

February 1, 2019 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

February 2nd is celebrated as Imbolc, St. Brigid’s Day, Candlemas, and Groundhog Day.

We certainly want to see the end of winter!

The kids loved making crafts and playing with light and shadows.

We like to watch the groundhogs on TV, if he’ll see his shadow. We read books about groundhogs.

We have a family of groundhogs who live near a pond by our house and they really do come out of their burrows at set times every day. They are fuzzy potatoes.

Groundhog Day Activities

  • DLTK Crafts
  • Edhelper
  • Groundhog.org
  • Scholastic
  • Kids Activities Blog
  • Danielle’s Place
  • Easy Peasy and Fun
  • Pioneer Woman
  • The Educators’ Spin on It

Groundhog Books

  • Groundhog Weather School: Fun Facts About Weather and Groundhogs by Joan Holub
  • Groundhog’s Runaway Shadow by David Biedrzycki 
  • Substitute Groundhog by Pat Miller
  • Groundhog Gets a Say by Pamela Curtis Swallow
  • Groundhog’s Dilemma by Kristen Remenar 
  • Groundhog’s Day Off by Robb Pearlman
  • Grumpy Groundhog by Maureen Wright
  • Groundhog Day! by Gail Gibbons
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Year 4 History Resources

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January 14, 2019 By Jennifer Lambert 7 Comments

Year 4 History: 1900-Present Day

It becomes really fascinating when you study world history chronologically and see how interconnected everything is, all the causes and effects.

We use Tapestry of Grace for book lists, but I also peruse Ambleside Online and other lists for a well-rounded history curriculum. I want all sides and perspectives.

We use this history text as a guide: The Story of the World: The Modern Age. 

I typically look at the unit overview and make a checklist of books, topics, and movies. We don’t follow the weekly plan exactly.

I go to the library about every week and get what I can.

I shop thrift stores, yard sales, half-price and used bookstores to get books we love to read again and again.

We love poetry and literature, and I’m always adding to our collection. I want to read them all!

Other books we use throughout our history studies – over several years:

  • This Country of Ours by HE Marshall
  • Our Island Story by HE Marshall
  • The Struggle for Sea Power by MB Synge
  • The Story of Mankind by Hendrik Willem van Loon
  • Magic Treehouse
  • If You Grew Up…
  • American Girl Collection and Real Stories From My Time
  • The Royal Diaries
  • Dear America

We love Netflix and Amazon Prime for streaming. We sometimes view YouTube.

See how we do history.

Year 1

Year 2

Year 3

I’ve read these books to help me educate myself:

Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong by James W. Loewen

A People’s History of the United States by Howard Zinn

Books we read as spines for Year 4:

The Century for Young People by Peter Jennings, Todd Brewster, and Jennifer Armstrong

A History of US by Joy Hakim 

I wasn’t thrilled with how the units were divided in our history curriculum for year 4.

It didn’t seem to give us enough time to cover WWII. Korea and Vietnam were skimmed over. Very little discussion about South America or Africa. The last unit was scarce with literature or history selections and I’m sorry but I think lots has happened in the world during my lifetime.

Great literature has been written in the last century. So much history has happened. It’s hard to connect the dots for kids since we have to look at the origins of the conflicts that could be hundreds of years ago. For church history, we discuss harm missionaries often cause to indigenous peoples or misusing the Bible and wrong doctrine. We like to read other accounts and texts from many religions and faiths.

A wonderful thing is we can actually talk to living people about their memories of recent historical events.

I have the freedom to do my own research and take as much time as we want on different topics of interest.

Unit 1: World War I

Literature

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

The Call of the Wild

Five Children and It

Pollyanna

The Railway Children

Anne of Green Gables

The Wind in the Willows

Robert Frost poetry

Letters from Rifka

The Great Gatsby

Peter Pan

Winnie the Pooh

The Burgess Bird Book for Children

History

Topics:

Henry Ford

Teddy Roosevelt

Albert Einstein

post-colonial South America

Immigration

Titanic

Jazz music

Temperance Movement in USA

WWI

Russian Revolution

Harlem Renaissance in USA

Books:

War Game

Where Poppies Grow

In Flanders Fields

The World Wars

Harlem Stomp!

Activities

Any museum, site, or exhibit

– See My WWI unit study. We visited Flanders.

Paper Dolls

Music from this period

Art from this period

Church History

Amy Carmichael

Fanny Crosby

Billy Sunday

Eric Liddell

Movies

Rough Riders

American Experience: America 1900

Titanic

The Wizard of Oz

Lawrence of Arabia

Doctor Zhivago

Chariots of Fire

Unit 2: World War II

Literature

Mary Poppins

Our Town

Bud, Not Buddy

Madeline

Mr. Popper’s Penguins

The Red Pony and The Pearl by John Steinbeck

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

Heidi

The Hundred Dresses

The Snow Goose

Thimble Summer

Homer Price

Lord of the Flies

Swallows and Amazons

Pippi Longstocking

Maus

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay

Brave New World

History

Topics:

Disney

The Great Depression – see my unit study

Dust Bowl

Prohibition in USA

FDR

Eleanor Roosevelt

Photography

WWII

Stalin

Mao

Communism

Jewish History and Customs

Books:

Terezin

The Cat with the Yellow Star

Night

A Father’s Promise

We Will Not Be Silent

Mercedes and the Chocolate Pilot

Sachiko

Activities

Any museum, site, or exhibit

– See my WWII unit study. We visited Prague, the Anne Frank House, Dachau, and Normandy.

Paper Dolls

Music from this period

Art from this period

Church History

Gladys Aylward

Corrie ten Boom

Richard Wurmbrand

Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Simone Weil

CS Lewis

Movies

Annie

Bright Eyes

Our Town

The Inn of Sixth Happiness

The Sound of Music

White Christmas

Life is Beautiful

The Boys from Brazil

Unit 3: Civil Rights and Conflicts in Asia

Literature

One Grain of Rice

The House of Sixty Fathers

Homeless Bird

The Empty Pot

My Side of the Mountain

The Hardy Boys: The Tower Treasure

Nancy Drew: The Secret of the Old Clock

Old Yeller

Where The Red Fern Grows

Onion John

The Cricket in Times Square

The Phantom Tollbooth

Fahrenheit 451 (see my unit study for this book!)

James and the Giant Peach

Langston Hughes poetry

To Kill a Mockingbird

The Watsons Go to Birmingham – 1963

Lilies of the Field

The Lotus Seed

History

Topics:

Civil Rights

Communism

The Cold War

Cuba

Korea

Vietnam

Cambodia

Space Race

Books:

So Far From the Bamboo Grove

Mission Control, This is Apollo

Activities

Any museum, site, or exhibit

See my units: China, Vietnam, Korea, Diversity here and here

Paper Dolls

Music from this period

Art from this period

Church History

Ida Scudder

Jacob DeShazer

Nate Saint

Jim Elliot

Billy Graham

Brother Andrew

Movies

Ghandi

The Manchurian Candidate original and remake

MacArthur

Cry, the Beloved Country

Lilies of the Field

To Kill a Mockingbird

Malcolm X

Selma

Ray

Mississippi Burning

The Help

Loving

Unit 4: Cold War, Terrorism, 9/11, Current Events

Literature

James Herriot’s Treasury for Children

Have Space Suit – Will Travel

I, Robot

The Breadwinner

Tasting the Sky

Citizen of the Galaxy

Tunnel in the Sky

The Hobbit

Fly Away Home

The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

The Indian in the Cupboard

The Littles

Falling Up

Maya Angelou

Raising Dragons

History

Topics:

The Cold War

Communism

Berlin Wall

Computers and Technology

Internet

The Middle East

Arab Spring

Cambodian Killing Fields

Rwandan Genocide

Yugoslavia

9/11

Rise of Terrorism

Popular Culture

Civil Rights

The Fellowship Foundation

Enron, WorldCom, Lehman Brothers

Central Park Five

Black Lives Matter

#MeToo

Books:

Red Scarf Girl

Tales of Persia

The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain

Countdown

Revolution

Anthem

Activities

Any museum, site, or exhibit

Paper Dolls

Music from this period

Art from this period

Church History

#ChurchToo

#Exvangelical

Mother Teresa

Elisabeth Elliot

Richard Wurmbrand

Bruchko

Joni: An Unforgettable Story

Dorothy Day

Oscar Romero

Movies

The Neverending Story

Remember the Titans

Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

The Indian in the Cupboard

The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

The Hobbit

Mr. Holland’s Opus

Hotel Rwanda

Wreck-It Ralph

When They See Us

I’m still adding to my list. There is still so much being learned about recent events and I love researching and learning with my kids.

See my Pinterest board for Year 4 History:

Follow Jennifer’s board Modern History on Pinterest.
History of Modern Times Notebooking Pages
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My Educational Influences

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January 12, 2019 By Jennifer Lambert 14 Comments

Education is supposed to influence us.

And it does.

I have never let my schooling interfere with my education. ~Mark Twain

Don’t confuse education with intelligence.

Education is not preparation for life; education is life itself. ~John Dewey

Looking back, I realize that I was so isolated as a middle-class suburban white girl. When I went to college in downtown Atlanta, it was eye-opening. So many different people from different backgrounds. It helped me to grow and learn about the world. 

When I became a teacher, I grew some more as I learned along with and about my students and fellow teachers. 

When I became a mother, I wanted more than public and private schools could offer my children.

When we travel, we learn even more, expanding and shaping our views.

My Educational Influences

Past Teachers

Most of what I learned in school is negative.

Of course, I learned to write and multiply,  but mostly to bend the rules.

I learned to avoid punishment. I was scared of my teachers. I was scared of bad grades.

I had teachers who yelled, tied students to their seats, gave detention for silly things, shamed and ridiculed, refused to allow bathroom passes, threw chalk and erasers and koosh balls, flirted with students…and lots more.

I was a good student. I learned to be invisible. I made good grades.

I had few positive teacher influences. Mostly, I learned what not to do as a teacher.

University Teacher Training

I got a bachelor’s degree in English literature. Yeah, pretty useless in any job market. If I had it to do over, I would at least have gone with journalism. It’s like having a degree in reading.

I earned a master’s degree in education with a 14-month urban education program to get quick teacher certification. And a job.

The program was kinda a joke. Pedagogy and methodology classes. The professors were out of touch with real schools and classrooms. The assignments were irrelevant. Most of what I was taught wasn’t feasible in an actual classroom when I got teaching jobs.

The other dozen students or so in the program were idealists who thought they were going to change the world. Most went to get teaching jobs in wealthy suburban white schools and districts.

Teachers don’t have a lot of autonomy in their classrooms.

We were taught how to manage students with punitive coercion such as humiliation and threats.

Administrators cater to parents and the school board. It’s very political. There’s lots of standardized tests that don’t really mean much.

Students are just seen as numbers and not as living, breathing, changing, growing human beings.

A poignant quip:

Someone asks: “What do you teach?”

Teachers respond: “English.” or “Science.” or “Math.”

A wise teacher responds: “Students.”

Homeschooling opened up a lot of doors for me as I did my own research into the world of educational philosophy.

I had to slowly unlearn everything I had experienced and been taught as a student and teacher.

My Favorite Educational Philosophies

The Well-Trained Mind and Classical Education

The Well-Trained Mind was the first homeschooling book I ever bought. I don’t remember how I found it, probably in an online forum as a great place to begin.

And it was.

Part of the school dilemma results from an over-focus on testing results; home educators are free from that pressure, so you won’t have to decide between test prep and expository writing. ~Susan Wise Bauer

I began homeschooling in 2005. My eldest was almost 5 and I was pregnant with my second. Number three followed a year after number two.

I liked the classics outline and resource lists for each year. It appealed to the intellectual in me as I set about developing a classical education for my daughter.

I loved the foundation on literature and history and still do. We all learn Latin together.

We never focused so much on a lot of memorization and writing early. I don’t like all the rules and scripts in CC.

The Well-Trained Mind was a perfect jumping off point for me as a new homeschool mom and offered us a good transition from school ideas to homeschooling freedom.

Charlotte Mason

I soon learned about Charlotte Mason after our first year of homeschooling.

It seems a softer side of classical education.

I love the idea of living books and nature study, art and music appreciation and history.

I’ve always felt these subjects are so important.

Education is an Atmosphere, a Discipline, a Life. ~Charlotte Mason

Ambleside Online is a great resource but I needed more structure for our growing family.

We love notebooking.

We began to acquire an extensive home library.

Maria Montessori

When my son was born, I encouraged him with self-directed activity, hands-on learning, and collaborative play – from birth.

Montessori has five key areas of learning:

  1. practical life
  2. sensorial
  3. mathematics
  4. language
  5. culture

Never help a child with a task at which he feels he can succeed. ~Maria Montessori

I included my middle girls and son in all aspects of our lives and schooling. It’s amazing how autonomous kids can be if we let them.

Rearranging our school room and providing many opportunities for practical play with small real tools helped our household dynamics.

Rudolf Steiner and Waldorf Education

Waldorf education is independent and inclusive. It upholds the principles of freedom in education.

Waldorf or Rudolf Steiner education is based on an anthroposophical view and understanding of the human being of body, soul, and spirit.

I love the holistic ideals of Waldorf.

Art and music are so important to me and I love all the fun, natural materials in the Waldorf community that encourage learning this.

I love the focus on imagination.

We love nature and the outdoors.

It helped me become a gentler parent. We flow.

Summary:

I learned how to incorporate ideas and lessons that worked for us.

I believe in playtime and lots of informal, natural learning – especially outside – until the child is about 7 or 8 years old.

We work in a nice flow with the seasons, taking breaks frequently to enjoy the weather or rest when we need it.

I think there are lots of benefits to many different educational philosophies.

I love that, as a homeschooler, I have the freedom to pick and choose this and that for my children to learn best as individuals and different stages – practical Montessori, imaginative Waldorf, nature-y artsy Charlotte Mason, Latin and history classical.

It takes courage to do things differently.

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Vietnam Unit Study

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January 7, 2019 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

There’s so much more to the history and culture than what the news shows us.

I want my children to understand Asian history in our chronological studies of world history. I don’t want their education based on American stereotypes.

Our {evangelical and expensive} history curriculum was a little disappointing after WWII, so I had to research and find my own material to teach my kids about history that happened in my parents’ lifetime.

Vietnam Unit Study

I want to learn real history along with my kids, not just an American or white perspective.

There’s so much more to Vietnam culture and history than the conflict that the United States participated in during the 1960s and early 1970s.

Vietnam War Veterans Day: March 29 is a fitting choice for a day honoring Vietnam veterans. It was chosen to be observed in perpetuity as March 29, 1973, was the day United States Military Assistance Command, Vietnam was disestablished and also the day the last U.S. combat troops departed Vietnam.  In addition, on and around this same day Hanoi released the last of its acknowledged prisoners of war. 

Vietnam Unit Study

Topics:

  • Indochine colonialism
  • Vietnam War
  • Vietnamese Independence

Activities:

  • Eat in a Vietnamese restaurant
  • Learn to read and write in Vietnamese
  • Watch Vietnamese cartoons
  • Watch films about Vietnam or in Vietnamese and discuss
  • Visit a museum to view Vietnamese art
  • Visit a Vietnam War Memorial
  • Read about Vietnam
  • Learn Asian geography

Printables and Lessons:

Vietnam Conflict from The Homeschool Mom
Vietnam War from The Homeschool Helper
Vietnam Lapbook from Homeschool Share
In The Hands of a Child Vietnam Curriculum
Vietnam and the Water Buffalo by Write Bonnie Rose
Vietnam Geography and Culture Notebooking from Notebooking Pages
Vietnam Flag from Activity Village
Vietnam from National Geographic

Book list:

Water Buffalo Days: Growing Up in Vietnam
Inside Out and Back Again
Escape from Saigon: How a Vietnam War Orphan Became an American Boy
Going Home, Coming Home/Ve Nha, Tham Que Huong
Cracker! The Best Dog in Vietnam
Weeping Under This Same Moon
Goodbye, Vietnam
The Lotus Seed

Films (use discretion):

Indochine with Catherine Deneuve
The Scent of Green Papaya
The Purple Horizon
Tam Cam
Green Dragon
Rescue Dawn
Uncommon Valor
We Were Soldiers
Full Metal Jacket
Forrest Gump
Hamburger Hill
Soldiers of Change
Platoon
Apocalypse Now
Born on the Fourth of July
Good Morning, Vietnam
The Deer Hunter
Flight of the Intruder
Casualties Of War
Tigerland
The Killing Fields

Country Study Notebooking Pages

What stereotypes did you learn about Vietnam?

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How We Do PE

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October 29, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 9 Comments

Physical education is so important, but often overlooked by homeschool families.

I want my kids to be healthy inside and out, and being active is a part of a healthy lifestyle.

In this world of planned playdates and scheduled activities, I want my kids to have fun and freedom to play and learn how to stay active for the rest of their lives.

I have to model healthy activity if I want my kids to be active.

I can’t just tell them to go outside while I sit at my computer or watch Netflix. I often go for a walk while they rollerblade or scooter or we all walk as a family after dinner. I plan hikes in the woods or a local nature center. I don’t force my kids to play team sports, but I try my best to offer that option. When we have bad weather or it’s very cold, we stay active in more creative ways.

How We Do PE

How We Do PE

Outside Play

I encourage my children to spend time outdoors at least 30 minutes each day, no matter the weather. Sometimes, this is hard…and other times, I have to drag them inside to eat or bathe or go to bed.

We’re thankful we live in a neighborhood where they can roam and be kids.

They like to rollerblade, ride bikes, and scooter around the neighborhood.

They play with hula hoops and jump ropes.

We have wiffle balls and scoops and frisbees.

We sometimes do fun things like obstacle courses.

They often wander the woods behind our house and play in the creek and come home with ropes and ropes of daisy and clover chains.

Their friend down the street has a pool and they learned to swim this summer.

Team Sports

I’m not big into sports, and my kids have tried almost all of it, with varying results.

The kids used to do gymnastics. My eldest participated in Civil Air Patrol and they have a PT program.

Currently:

My youngest daughter is playing recreational soccer.

My son loves baseball, and plays on a rec team in the fall and spring. He tried out for some elite leagues, but isn’t quite strong enough yet.

Family Activities

We love to go hiking and exploring and do nature study at local parks and playgrounds, state parks, and natural areas.

We often go bowling, usually for free summer bowling or for celebrations.

During bad weather, we often join a homeschool group at a trampoline park.

The kids have gone ice skating each winter.

We’ve gone snow sledding during the winter. Climbing back up is a workout!

We love homeschool park and gym days.

My teen daughter and I used to go the base gym each week.

Our local YMCA offers great deals throughout the year on classes and events for families and homeschoolers.

I was a part of a family workout group one year for moms and kids and that was super fun. Stroller fit is a good one for moms with young kids.

Family Time Fitness offers lots of PE options for families.

Inside Play

I try to make sure my kids get outside a little while every day, but still, it’s sometimes cabin fever in the winter or rainy season.

We have a Wii with active games like Sports and Just Dance.

I often turn on a Spotify playlist and have a dance party or do a big house cleaning.

I feel it’s super important to model healthy activity to my kids so we’re all leaving a healthy legacy.

How do you stay active year round?

Also, check out Health for High School Homeschool Credit.

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Favorite Halloween Books

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October 22, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 14 Comments

I chose some of our favorite Halloween books, approved by my young son as not scary, just spooky enough for the season. Many are sing-songy rhyming fun books. Most are just cute or silly.

The chapter books at the end of the list are family read-alouds or approved by my older girls.

Some of our favorites are multicultural because we love learning how others celebrate holidays around the world.

Also, check out my book lists about pumpkins and fall and Thanksgiving.

Favorite Halloween Books

50 Halloween Books for Kids

  1. ABCs of Halloween by Patricia Reeder Eubank
  2. Stellaluna by Janell Cannon
  3. The Halloween Kid by Rhode Montijo
  4. What Was I Scared Of? by Doctor Seuss
  5. The Little Old Lady Who Was Not Afraid of Anything by Linda D. Williams
  6. Room on the Broom by Julia Donaldson
  7. The Berenstain Bears and the Spooky Old Tree by Stan & Jan Berenstain
  8. The Monster at the End of This Book by Jon Stone
  9. Scary, Scary Halloween by Eve Bunting
  10. It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown by Charles M. Schulz
  11. The Hallo-Wiener by Dav Pilkey
  12. A Tiger Called Tomás by Charlotte Zolotov
  13. Creepy Carrots by Aaron Reynolds
  14. Creepy Pair of Underwear by Aaron Reynolds
  15. Monster Trucks by Anika Denise
  16. Behind the Mask by Yangsook Choi
  17. Monster Academy by Jane Yolen
  18. Spooky Pookie by Sandra Boynton
  19. My Monster Mama Loves Me So by Lauren Leuck
  20. Where is Baby’s Pumpkin? by Karen Katz
  21. Shy Mama’s Halloween by Anne Broyles
  22. The Closet Ghosts by Uma Krishnaswami
  23. The Pomegranate Witch by Denise Doyen
  24. Shake Dem Halloween Bones by Mike Reed
  25. Just a Minute: A Trickster Tale and Counting Book by Yuyi Morales
  26. Halloween Bugs by David A. Carter
  27. Flashlight Night by Matt Forrest Esenwine
  28. Boo-La-La Witch Spa by Samantha Berger
  29. Skeleton Hiccups by Margery Cuyler
  30. Halloween Hustle by Charlotte Gunnufson
  31. Ten Timid Ghosts by Jennifer O’Connell
  32. Bonaparte Falls Apart by Margery Cuyler
  33. The Spider and the Fly by Mary Howitt
  34. Día de los Muertos by Hannah Eliot
  35. Where’s My Mummy? by Carolyn Crimi
  36. It’s Raining Bats & Frogs by Rebecca Colby
  37. How to Catch a Monster by Adam Wallace
  38. Halloween Loooong Dog by Jessica Neal
  39. Sweet Dreams, Little Monster by Caroline Bennett
  40. Día de los Muertos by Roseanne Greenfield Thong
  41. The Day of the Dead / El Día De Los Muertos: A Bilingual Celebration by Bob Barner
  42. Ghosts for Breakfast by Stanley Todd Terasaki
  43. Los Gatos Black on Halloween by Marisa Montes
  44. Peter Rabbit and the Pumpkin Patch by Beatrix Potter
  45. Bunnicula: A Rabbit-Tale of Mystery by Deborah Howe
  46. The Witches by Roald Dahl
  47. The Secret of the Old Clock by Carolyn Keene
  48. The Halloween Tree by Ray Bradbury
  49. The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
  50. Coraline by Neil Gaiman

What’s your favorite Halloween book?

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Korea Unit Study

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Please see my suggested resources.

October 8, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 6 Comments

We hear a lot about Korea in the news lately.

There’s so much more to the history and culture than what the news shows us.

I want my children to understand Asian history in our chronological studies of world history.

Our {evangelical and expensive} history curriculum was a little disappointing after WWII, so I had to research and find my own material to teach my kids real history and culture.

Korea Unit Study

I grew up watching M.A.S.H. with my parents and we own the complete DVD collection.

I want to learn real history along with my kids, not just an American perspective.

Korea Unit Study

Topics:

  • Communism
  • Korean War

Activities:

Eat in a Korean restaurant
Learn to read and write in Korean
Watch Korean cartoons or films
Visit a museum to view Korean art

Printables and Lessons:

South Korea unit
Studying South Korea
Resources about Korea
How to Study Korean
Studying Korea (scroll down)
South Korea Unit
South Korea Homeschool Unit Study for the Winter Olympics 2018
South Korea For Kids
Read Around the World with South Korea
Winter Olympics Unit Study Resources…And Free Notebooking Pages

Book List:

So Far from the Bamboo Grove
Echoes of the White Giraffe
Year of Impossible Goodbyes
When My Name Was Keoko
Seesaw Girl
A Single Shard
The Korean Cinderella
My Name Is Yoon
Yoon and the Jade Bracelet
The Name Jar
Halmoni’s Day

Films (use discretion):

Heartbreak Ridge
Pork Chop Hill
Battle for Incheon: Operation Chromite
The Long Way Home
Welcome to Dongmakgol
71 Into the Fire
The Front Line
Tae Guk Gi – The Brotherhood of War
Last Princess
Red Family
Princess
Masquerade
Snowy Road
Manshin
The Royal Tailor
Ode to My Father
The Manchurian Candidate
In Love And War
A Little Pond
Steel Rain – Netflix original
Northern Limit Line
My Way

Have you traveled to or learned about Korea?

Country Study Notebooking Pages

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How We Do Music

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October 1, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 8 Comments

Music is very important to me.

I want my kids to understand and enjoy all kinds of music.

Music is such an important part of our lives. We use music to celebrate, worship God, hum to comfort ourselves, and to express sorrow. Nature creates wondrous music with insects, birds, and babbling brooks.

“Without music, life would be a mistake.” ~Friedrich Nietzsche, from Twilight of the Idols

How We Do Music

How We Do Music

Music History

We learn about concepts and themes and innovations in music as we study our chronological history.

I like to learn about music history. I love teaching my kids various musical genres that go along with our history studies. We listen and discuss and find new likes!

This is an important music topic that must be addressed and discussed thoroughly and delicately. We can’t just sing folk songs without knowing where they came from and how they are offensive. They are not just cute little kids songs. These songs have a history that cannot be ignored.

Music Appreciation

We listen to all kinds of music. I don’t like censorship. Music is a form of performance art that should be heard and I want to expose my kids to it all and we discuss it as a family.

We’ve attended operas, ballet, symphonies, musicals, and concerts as a family. I think it’s important to attend live musical events as often as possible, as early as kids can sit still quietly throughout the performance, perhaps about age 5 or 6. We love matinees.

Many venues offer freebies or discounts to military families, homeschoolers, during dress rehearsals, or other special field trip events. Our city has free weekend concerts at parks in the summer.

I feel it’s important to expose my kids to world music, and all the genres of American music. Music is so emotional, and plays a huge part in culture and history.

We love almost all kinds of music.

Music, of course, helps with math.

Favorite Books about Music

We love getting biographies from the library about musicians and composers.

  • The Gift of Music by Jane Stuart Smith and Betty Carlson
  • The Vintage Guide to Classical Music by Jan Swafford
  • Great Musicians Series
  • Mike Venezia books
  • Iza Trapani books
  • Do Re Mi: If You Can Read Music, Thank Guido D’Arezzo
  • Story of the Orchestra
  • Welcome to the Symphony
  • Poppy books by Magali Le Huche 
  • Polar Bear, Polar Bear What Do You Hear?
  • Blue Moo! and others from Sandra Boynton
  • The Real Mother Goose
  • Peter and the Wolf
  • The Story Orchestra: Four Seasons in One Day
  • The Carnival of the Animals
  • Moonlight on the Magic Flute
  • Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin
  • 88 Instruments
  • The School of Music 
  • Can You Hear It?
  • The Jazz Fly
  • Squeak, Rumble, Whomp! Whomp! Whomp!: A Sonic Adventure
  • Mozart: The Wonder Child: A Puppet Play in Three Acts
  • I, Vivaldi
  • Becoming Bach
  • The Music in George’s Head: George Gershwin Creates Rhapsody in Blue
  • Ada’s Violin: The Story of the Recycled Orchestra of Paraguay
  • Never Play Music Right Next to the Zoo 
  • I Know a Shy Fellow Who Swallowed a Cello
  • M is for Melody: A Music Alphabet
  • Tito Puente, Mambo King/Tito Puente, Rey del Mambo: Bilingual
  • When the Beat Was Born: DJ Kool Herc and the Creation of Hip Hop

Notebooking and Unit Studies

Writing about music and composers helps us to understand their importance to history and societal influences. Notebooking a great way to synthesize information we learn.

  • The Stories Behind the Music
  • The Music of Doctor Who
  • Nursery Rhymes
  • Preschool Music Math
  • Singalong Time

Music Appreciation Lessons

  • Zeezok
  • Harmony Fine Arts
  • SQUILT
  • Easy Peasy Music
  • Maestro Classics

Listening

We stream lots of music as we do our studies.

We create Spotify playlists. My middle daughter would win at Name That Tune!

We often listen to classical or instrumental music during cleaning, meal time, or quiet work.

  • Maestro Classics
  • Classical Kids: Collection 1 and 2 overviews
  • Classical Kids – composers
  • Beethoven’s Wig: Sing Along Symphonies – 5 volumes
  • Wee Sing!
  • Putumayo Kids

Playing

My husband can play piano and trumpet.

I never learned an instrument and I regret it.

When my kids were babies and toddlers, we did KinderMusik and Music Together. I think it’s super important to expose young kids to music and allow them to make their own and explore sounds.

Two of my girls have taken piano lessons for years though we’re on hiatus with that right now.

My middle daughter took guitar lessons for a year.

My teen daughter is teaching herself electric guitar.

I can barely play the radio.

How do you teach music in your home or homeschool?

Famous Composers Notebooking Pages
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How We Do Art

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September 17, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 9 Comments

Art is very important in our home and homeschool.

My parents discounted and disapproved of my love of art and I was only allowed to take one semester in 10th grade. I still have that portfolio.

I loved and still love viewing art, but I believed that creating was a waste of time because my parents drilled that into me for years. I’m learning to overcome that now.

I want my kids to appreciate and understand art, and love creating.

We often hike in nature to celebrate the artistic beauty of creation. We learn art history, visit museums, read books about art and creativity, take classes, and create some of our own projects!

Art History

We learn about the major art themes and techniques along with our regular history studies. It really helps tie everything together for us.

My eldest is considering majoring in art history.

Art Appreciation

Like literature, I want my kids exposed to art and learn to appreciate it. Some we love and others…we just don’t.

We celebrate the human body and achievements of great artists.

We go to lots of museums. My kids beg to go to museums. Almost all our European travels revolved around viewing art and churches.

  • Städel Museum in Frankfurt, Germany
  • Paris
  • Florence, Italy
  • Rome
  • Venice
  • Netherlands
  • Greece
  • London
  • Ireland
  • Bruges, Belgium
  • Dayton Art Institute in Ohio
  • Art Institute and City Art in Chicago

25+ favorite books about art and creativity:

We buy books at the museums we visit so we can remember our favorite pieces.

I collect art history textbooks (there’s a free bin at our library).

We love living books about art and artists and often check them out at our library.

Picture books often have stunning illustrations.

  1. Draw Write Now series
  2. Draw and Write through History series
  3. ARTistic Pursuits series
  4. The Story of Architecture
  5. Sister Wendy Beckett art books
  6. The Annotated Mona Lisa: A Crash Course in Art History from Prehistoric to Post-Modern
  7. Gardner’s Art through the Ages: A Global History 
  8. David Macaulay books
  9. Art: A World History
  10. A World of Art
  11. The Usborne Introduction to Art
  12. The Children’s Interactive Story of Art
  13. Child’s Introduction to Art
  14. Discovering Great Artists
  15. Art Lab for Kids and Drawing Lab and Paint Lab
  16. Drawing With Children and Drawing for Older Children & Teens
  17. Storybook Art 
  18. Great American Artists for Kids
  19. Ed Emberley drawing books
  20. Catherine V Holmes drawing books
  21. Global Art
  22. The Day the Crayons Quit and The Day the Crayons Came Home
  23. Monsters Love Colors
  24. Mouse Paint
  25. Little Blue and Little Yellow
  26. The Dot
  27. Herve Tullet books
  28. Anholt’s Artists Books For Children
  29. James Mayhew books
  30. Mike Venezia biographies

Notebooking and Unit Studies

Of course we love notebooking and this is a great way to synthesize our knowledge about art and artists.

  • Michelangelo
  • Bernini
  • van Gogh
  • Art Journals
  • Creating Books
  • Impressionism Study
  • Leaf Nature Study

Projects and Crafts

We’ve done some arts and crafts to go along with our science and history studies. We also create just for fun sometimes.

We’re all about the process.

As soon as kids are past preschool age, I recommend purchasing the best supplies you can afford so kids get used to using real art tools.

  • Tie Dye Shirts
  • Writing Cuneiforms in Clay
  • Illumination Initials
  • Dragon Puppets
  • Henna Hands
  • Ancient Greek Vases
  • Birds Nest Chalk Pastels
  • Spring Chalk Pastels
  • Scrub Jays Chalk Pastels
  • Leaf Critter Crafts
  • Leaf Rubbings
  • Fall Tree Crafts
  • Halloween Crafts
  • Exploring Texture with Paint
  • Rain Painting
  • Ice Painting
  • Snow Painting
  • Abstract
  • Snowflake Resist Painting
  • Winter Nature Drawing

Classes

Sometimes, outsourcing education is the way to go. Yes, it’s expensive and time consuming, but my knowledge and abilities are limited. Also, I don’t have to gather supplies or clean anything up.

I taught stART (Story+Art) one year at a homeschool co-op in Utah.

My eldest took some amazing art classes at ARTWorks in San Antonio, Texas, for our first two years homeschooling.

We’ve been taking classes at SPARK Art Studio in Kettering, Ohio, the last couple years.

Local YMCA and community centers often offer art classes.

My kids like the Notability app. They love playing with the Home Design app.

Computer programs: Inkscape, Tux Paint…all the Adobe creation apps and programs (I haven’t paid for yet).

Drawing and Painting lessons from Easy Peasy Homeschool.

This art curricula list from The Homeschool Mom.

Drawspace – 15% of the content on Drawspace.com is free.

Atelier art lessons online. Arts Attack Publications has stood for superior quality in art instruction for decades now and is exclusively devoted to developing and publishing high quality, easy-to-teach, video-based visual art lessons for children.

Homeschool art from Schoolhouse Teachers.

Sparketh offers different levels of online art classes.

Art curricula reviews from Cathy Duffy.

You Are An Artist online lessons:

Artist Clubhouse Video Art Lessons Sampler

How do you study art in your home or homeschool?

Famous Artists & Picture Study Notebooking Pages
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9/11 Unit Study

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September 11, 2018 By Jennifer Lambert 1 Comment

I hesitate to write what I really think and feel about today.

I don’t like that it’s called Patriot Day. I don’t like what the word patriot has come to mean.

Living in Europe the last three years changed my perspective on what it means to be an American. Often embarrassed to be associated with American politics, I dread being considered a loud and arrogant fool that many consider Americans to be. The last couple years, events in the USA have further upset me and my family and we don’t want to fly Old Glory over our garage or wear Old Navy Tshirts with flags.

We’re not proud.

Everyone on social media, TV, the radio is talking about where they were the morning the towers were hit with airplanes.

I was in my classroom, preparing to teach English to 10th graders.

I remember my thoughts flew immediately to my parents, working in the FORSCOM federal government building in Atlanta, then to my daughter, not quite one year old, in daycare.

What would I tell my toddler when she grew older and could understand? What do I tell my four kids?

It was surreal.

I am poignant.

I am so grateful and proud of our first responders. I am so heartbroken with those injured and lost and the families who mourn.

But I’m also angry.

I’m angry at terrorists and our own politicians and officials.

Our nation reacted.

Many flocked to places of worship, embraced family and friends, cried out in sorrow for those lives lost, for families in agony over lost ones.

Too many closed their hearts, expressing hatred for an entire race, nation, religion, blaming anyone and everyone associated with it for a tragedy, an act of terrorism.

Our nation returned evil for evil. We’re still at war.

The events of September 11, 2001, are woven into the American tapestry. It is our history. It affects our future.

Every individual who lived to remember that day has a choice to make. A choice to love and move forward and forge bonds or a choice to hate, fear, and sever ties.

I choose love.

I love this prayer for the 9/11 anniversary. A wonderful perspective on 9/11 and the aftermath.

9/11 Resources

9/11 Resources

Book list – something for every age:

Nine, Ten: A September 11 Story by Nora Raleigh Baskin
Fireboat: The Heroic Adventures of the John J. Harvey by Maira Kalman
Eleven by Tom Rogers
Bullyville by Francine Prose
Time Riders by Alex Scarrow
The Memory of Things: A Novel by Gae Polisner
Towers Falling by Jewell Parker Rhodes
All We Have Left by Wendy Mills
What Were the Twin Towers? by Jim O’Connor
Saved by the Boats: The Heroic Sea Evacuation of September 11 by Julie Gassman
America Is Under Attack: September 11, 2001: The Day the Towers Fell by Don Brown
The 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation by Sid Jacobson
We’ll Always Remember the 11th of Septemberby Jamie Franklin Rowe
I Survived the Attacks of September 11th, 2001 by Lauren Tarshis
My Dad Survived 9/11! by Baby Professor
The Survivor Tree: Inspired by a True Story by Cheryl Somers Aubin
September 11, 2001: Then and Now by Peter Benoit
The Man in the Red Bandanna by Honor Crowther Fagan
Sirius, the hero dog of 9/11 by Hank Fellows
Just a Drop of Water by Kerry O’Malley Cerra
The Little Chapel that Stood by A. B. Curtiss
September Roses by Jeanette Winter
14 Cows for America by Carmen Agra Deedy
Shooting Kabul by N. H. Senzai
Falling Man: A Novel by Don DeLillo
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer
with their eyes: September 11th: The View from a High School at Ground Zero by Annie Thoms
Small Wonder: Essays by Barbara Kingsolver
With Every Mistake by Gwynne Dyer
Against All Enemies: Inside America’s War on Terror by Richard A. Clarke
The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 by Lawrence Wright
Jesus for President: Politics for Ordinary Radicals by Shane Claiborne
9-11: Artists Respond by Will Eisner
911: The Book of Help (Authors Respond to the Tragedy) by Michael Cart
On That Day: A Book of Hope for Children by Andrea Patel
We All Fall Down AND United We Stand by Eric Walters
September 12th: We Knew Everything Would Be All Right by Masterson Elementary School Students
The Man Who Walked Between the Towers by Mordicai Gerstein
Each Kindness by Jacqueline Woodson
Be Kind by Pat Zietlow Miller
One Green Apple by Eve Bunting

Resources:

  • Brainpop
  • 9-11 video
  • How to talk to your kids about September 11: An age-by-age guide
  • Scholastic lessons
  • 9/11 resources from The Homeschool Mom
  • 9/11 Memorial Website and lessons
  • Homeschool library of links
  • PBS lessons
  • Teach Mideast
  • Apples 4 the Teacher
  • Edhelper
  • Living Montessori Now
  • Ben and Me Middle School Resources
  • His Mercy is New

What do you say to your kids about 9/11?

Let’s not confuse nationalism with patriotism.

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