Jennifer Lambert

A Sacred Balance

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Civil War Unit Study

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August 6, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 10 Comments

Growing up in Georgia, I learned the Civil War is important history.

Many museums and historical sites commemorate the Confederate events and battles that took place and they’re all very accessible for day trips or short vacations.

But how they do glorify the Confederacy.

You don’t see any Nazi memorials in Europe except in appropriate museums to show what never to do again…

It’s exciting to see statues and monuments coming down that glorified the Confederacy.

As a child, I attended reenactments of battles at Stately Oaks Plantation, a replica of the house in Gone With the Wind. My family took vacations to visit Andersonville, Fort Sumter, and Chickamauga, along with plantation home tours.

I think every Southern state has a Civil War museum, mostly glorifying the Confederacy and perpetuating the “Magnolia Myth.”

I feel it’s very important to teach my white children real history.

We learn about all sides to the story. I feel my Georgia public school education was rather sloppy and often told incorrectly, even by black teachers who were at the mercy of the curriculum and administrators.

It’s so important to talk about history and to discuss race and current events, cause and effect. 

This book helps me teach better: Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong by James W. Loewen 

We learn about the Civil War with Notebooking, Field Trips, Books, and Movies.

Travel:

  • National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
  • Springboro, OH, Underground Railroad Walking Tour
  • Stone Mountain, Georgia
  • Stately Oaks in Jonesboro, GA

Civil War States Info (most States have a historical site)

  • Ohio Civil War
  • Civil War in Texas
  • The Civil War in Georgia
  • Virginia 150 years
  • North Carolina 150 years
  • Pennsylvania 150 years
  • Battle of Mobile Bay
  • Tennessee Civil War

Topics:

  • Causes of the Civil War
  • Missouri Compromise
  • Foreign aid to Confederacy and Union
  • Dred Scott
  • Abraham Lincoln
  • John Brown
  • Underground Railroad
  • Reconstruction
  • Racism
  • KKK
  • Jim Crow Laws

Resources

  • Adventures in Mommydom American history lessons
  • Lapbooks and notebooking pages
  • Homeschool Share lapbook
  • Stone Mountain and The Cyclorama 
  • Civil War for Kids
  • Battlefields.org
  • PBS The Civil War
  • Slavery Unit from Our Journey Westward
  • Lapbook from Homeschool Share
  • Resources from the Homeschool Mom
  • Addy American Girl Unit from Fields of Daisies
  • War Between the States from Tina’s Dynamic Homeschool Plus
  • Unit Study from Susan Evans
  • Resources from Creekside Learning
  • Pages from Bonnie Rose
  • Lapbook from Jimmie’s Collage
  • Practical Pages
  • Productive Homeschooling $
  • A Journey Through Learning Lapbook $

Movies

(use viewer discretion)

  • Glory
  • Gettysburg
  • North and South
  • Cold Mountain
  • Gone With the Wind
  • Ride with the Devil
  • The Red Badge of Courage
  • The Civil War by Ken Burns
  • Friendly Persuasion
  • The Birth of a Nation
  • An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
  • Shenandoah 
  • Little Women
  • Andersonville
  • Gods and Generals
  • Lincoln
  • Journey to Shiloh
  • North and South
  • The Blue and the Gray
  • Roots
  • The Beguiled 1971 and 2017
  • Ironclads (1991)

Books

  • Civil War for Kids
  • The Patchwork Path: A Quilt Map to Freedom by Bettye Stroud
  • Show Way by Jacqueline Woodson 
  • Follow the Drinking Gourd by Jeanette Winter 
  • Unspoken by Henry Cole
  • The Secret to Freedom
  • Henry’s Freedom Box
  • Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt
  • The Drinking Gourd
  • Under the Quilt of Night
  • The Last Safe House
  • Light in the Darkness
  • Before She Was Harriet
  • Cause: Reconstruction
  • Forty Acres and Maybe a Mule by Harriette Gillem Robinet
  • 40 Acres and No Mule by Janice Holt Giles
  • Freedom School
  • The Monitor
  • Shots Fired at Fort Sumter
  • Across Five Aprils
  • The Red Badge of Courage
  • An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
  • Welcome to Addy’s World
  • The Journal of James Edmond Pease: A Civil War Union Soldier, Virginia, 1863
  • When Will This Cruel War Be Over? The Civil War Diary of Emma Simpson, Gordonsville, Virginia, 1864
  • A Light in the Storm: The Civil War Diary of Amelia Martin
  • My Brother’s Keeper: Virginia’s Civil War Diary Book 1
  • After The Rain, Virginia’s Civil War Diary Book 2
  • A Time To Dance, Virginia’s Civil War Diary Book 3
  • Abraham Lincoln’s World
  • Abraham Lincoln: A Nonfiction Companion
  • Civil War On Sunday
  • Abe Lincoln at Last!
  • The Perilous Road
  • Freedom’s Wings: Corey’s Underground Railroad Diary Book 1
  • Flying Free: Corey’s Underground Railroad Diary Book 2
  • Message In The Sky: Corey’s Underground Railroad Diary Book 3
  • You Wouldn’t Want to Be a Nurse During the American Civil War! A Job That’s Not for the Squeamish
  • You Wouldn’t Want to Be a Civil War Soldier!

How we do history…

History Series:
American Revolutionary War
Civil War
World War I
World War II
Iraq and Afghanistan

We use Tapestry of Grace for our main history studies. You might also like: Raising Readers and How We Study History.

My girls especially love the living books and literature selections. They have a government supplement that is wonderful for high school. Four learning levels means the whole family learns together. Each unit has Internet links to relevant sites (most I’ve never heard of). The Revolutionary War begins at the end of Year 2 (from Byzantium to the New World) and the beginnings of our new nation is in the first unit of Year 3 (from Napoleon to Teddy Roosevelt).

Year 1

Year 2

Year 3

Year 4

Do you have resources or memories to add?

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Revolutionary War Unit Study

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August 5, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 7 Comments

We learned about the Revolutionary War with Books, Notebooking,and Movies.

We plan to make some trips soon!

History Series:
American Revolutionary War
Civil War
World War I
World War II
The Gulf Wars

The military has always been a part of my life. My father is retired Army. My grandfather retired from the Navy. My husband is in the Air Force. I’ve never known a time where the men in my family didn’t go to work without a uniform or I couldn’t go to the commissary. Also, we’ve been at war in the Persian Gulf since I was a kid. It’s a scary world. We are proud to serve.

War is not glamorous, no matter what the movies portray. Long ago, it was a very personal thing to kill a man in battle with bayonets and swords and guns. Now we do it with rockets and bombs from faraway on computer screens and it’s very impersonal.

Revolutionary War

American death toll was about 25,700. Historians estimate 7,200 Americans were killed in battle and approximately 8,500 wounded. About 10,000 others died in military camps from disease or exposure. Another 8,500 died in prison. Another 1,400 MIA. The soldiers received little to no pay during service and most came out of the war penniless.
British military deaths were about 10,000.
Congress was granted power of taxation in 1788 and paid off most of the war debt by the early 1800’s. Britain’s economy was strained. France was nearly bankrupt, which was a catalyst for their own revolution in 1789.

American military forces

The American colonies had no army or navy. Our fighting forces consisted of militia units who were white men from age 16-60.
American leaders such as George Washington along with foreign war veterans: Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette and Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben fought long and hard to beat the disciplined English army and navy.
Congress established the Continental Navy in 1775. Captain John Paul Jones raided the coast of England in 1778. He allegedly coined the phrase, “I have not begun to fight.”

Travel

We went to Savannah on our honeymoon. Fort James Jackson is a restored 19th-century fort located on the Savannah River, two miles east of the city of Savannah in the U.S. state of Georgia. It is a National Historic Landmark and the oldest standing brick fort in Georgia.

Resources

  • Unit study
  • U.S. History unit from Mom’s Mustard Seeds
  • Ultimate Guide to early U.S. History
  • American Revolution Unit Study
  • Lots of history lapbooks and notebooking pages
  • July 4th crafts
  • Johnny Tremain and Scholastic reading guide and unit study from Homeschool Helper (also a great resource for free printables here)
  • Pledge of Allegiance notebooking
  • American History resources and printables from Adventures in Mommydom (it’s pretty amazing!)
  • Homeschool Share lapbook
  • Notebooking Nook Unit
  • Unit and Activities from 123Homeschool4Me
  • The Homeschool Mom resources
  • Tina’s Dynamic  Homeschool Plus resources
  • Earth Mama Lesson Plans
  • Lapbook by Jimmie’s Collage
  • Productive Homeschooling $

Resources for U.S. history and Government

  • iCivics computer game
  • Kids Discover magazine – Revolutionary War
  • Kids Discover magazine – The Constitution
  • Kids Discover magazine – George Washington
  • Kids Discover magazine – 1776
  • TLC July 4 article
  • Junior General
  • Revolutionary War 101

Movies

Use discretion. Everyone has different standards.

  • The Patriot
  • John Adams
  • April Morning
  • The Devil’s Disciple
  • Revolution
  • The Crossing
  • Liberty’s Kids

Trivia

  • 1776 trivia
  • PBS: The Road to Revolution
  • Alpha Trivia

Books

  • The American Revolution for Kids
  • Guts & Glory
  • The Star-Spangled Banner
  • Let it Begin Here!
  • Johnny Tremain
  • George vs. George
  • Revolutionary War on Wednesday
  • Paul Revere: Boston Patriot
  • American Founding Fathers in Color
  • A More Perfect Union
  • We the People
  • If You Were There When They Signed the Constitution
  • Liberty or Death
  • The Winter at Valley Forge
  • America’s Paul Revere
  • Paul Revere’s Ride
  • You Wouldn’t Want to Be at the Boston Tea Party! Wharf Water Tea You’d Rather Not Drink
  • Sam the Minuteman
  • Yankee Doodle Boy
  • The Revolutionary Period

How can you support our military and veterans?

  • Pray. Check out this ministry site.
  • Contribute to the Wounded Warrior Project.
  • List of military charity organizations.

How we do history…

You might also like: Raising Readers and How We Study History

We use Tapestry of Grace for our main history studies.

My girls especially love the living books and literature selections. They have a government supplement that is wonderful for high school. Four learning levels means the whole family learns together. Each unit has Internet links to relevant sites (most I’ve never heard of). The Revolutionary War begins at the end of Year 2 (from Byzantium to the New World) and the beginnings of our new nation is in the first unit of Year 3 (from Napoleon to Teddy Roosevelt).

Year 1

Year 2

Year 3

Year 4

For elementary kids, we like the spine book Story of the World! Year 3 which covers 1600-1850. It’s listed as a core text in Tapestry of Grace.

Follow Jennifer Lambert’s board US History on Pinterest.


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Middle School Art and Music

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May 7, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 4 Comments

Middle school is tough.

Art and music in middle school is really tough.

I like to teach art and music along with history from year 1 and we cycle through every 4 years, digging deeper each cycle.

This unit was our 3rd time through for my eldest.

How I teach art and music:

  • Listening
  • Fundamentals, Theory, Vocabulary
  • History
  • Practicing and/or Performing

We listened to Haydn’s Farewell Symphony.

It was part of our classical history studies with Tapestry of Grace Year 2 and the book was on the girls’ list of reading, but we read it together as a family and was delighted and then I found the whole symphony on YouTube. It is magnificent.


Liz finally broke out her acrylics and painted this as she listened:

middle school art

She loves abstract art.

I love her representation of the musicians’ candles. She explained which parts of her painting meant which emotion from the symphony.

Brilliant.

We often create and complete notebooking pages with music and art.

Check out these great Haydn notebooking pages.

Famous Artists & Picture Study Notebooking Pages
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: art, Charlotte Mason, classical, history, middle school, Music, notebooking, Tapestry of Grace, teen

Teaching an Artist

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February 8, 2013 By Jennifer Lambert 5 Comments

We discovered these Katie books at a consignment shop and have been lucky to collect quite a few in the series. Of course, my Katie loves them! They are delightful books that follow the imaginative adventures of Katie into the world of art and historical places.

Every day, Katie asks if we can do art first.

Every day, I tell her we have to do math and reading and history and science first.

Currently, Katie’s other favorite thing is Song School Spanish. Review coming up soon!

Art is her favorite subject! I use this as an incentive to get her to cooperate with the other subjects. We try to incorporate arts and crafts into everything we do for her since she loves it so much.

Here’s a picture Katie drew the other day with markers of my cherry limeade drink. Even though the straw is floating, I was impressed by the 3D lid.

We got Katie and Tori a guitar for Christmas. They’d been begging and we’re going through the lessons on Schoolhouse Teachers. Katie is also teaching herself to play piano. We use the KinderBach app and My First Piano Adventure. I am amazed at her musical ability. She’s always singing or humming.

guitar

Little brother Alex wants to do everything his sisters do. Here, Katie and Alex are painting with watercolors. These two don’t often get along.

painting

Alex also joined his sisters here with their Harmony Fine Arts lesson. They drew Giotto angels with chalk pastels.

art time

Everything Katie does, she does it with style. Vacuuming is so much easier when you’re wearing a princess dress!

princess vacuuming

Katie is our free spirit. She thinks outside the box. She excels at everything she does. She can already read chapter books and she’s not even 6 yet. She soaks up knowledge. I pray that she grows up and does radical and amazing things for God.

All About Reading Reader

She is a delightful child and brings us so much joy.

Famous Artists & Picture Study Notebooking Pages
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Geography Notebooking

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November 18, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

I used our Geography A-Z book for definitions of the bodies of water.
Geography Narration
Liz and I wrote the definitions on the board for Tori and Katie to copy.
Geography Copywork
It was a practice in patience. Katie hates copying sentences. or definitions. or anything really.
Geography Writing
Elizabeth’s completed page:
Completed Notebook Page
I plan to review some geography terms and the bodies of water this week as we go over the story of Thanksgiving in detail. It fits well with our history studies of exploration during the Renaissance.

Country Study Notebooking Pages
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Medieval Feast

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October 17, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert 3 Comments

We didn’t do so well on unit celebrations for our Tapestry of Grace studies last year.

It was all new to us and honestly, I just didn’t plan them.

We planned a medieval feast as our first history unit celebration this year.

It coincided with Elizabeth’s 12th birthday. She said it was the best birthday ever. Points for mama!

We had a great unit about the middle ages, learning about knights and castles. Tori got to try archery. We read lots of books.

Thank you, Costco, for the awesome knight and princess costumes!

Alex tried on his costume and immediately wanted it off. Yeah, I can’t imagine eating in shining armor either.

 
Little Knight

Mercy, no dressing these two alike anymore! I can barely tell them apart!

Princess at Our Medieval Feast

Little Princess

I had this costume from a party years ago and now Liz can wear it. My, she’s getting tall!

Birthday Princess
Medieval Feast Menu


Here’s a copy of our Medieval Feast Menu I made. You can download a copy too!

Here’s the best picture I could get of the table.

We set it with our fancy stuff! We don’t have any pewter plates and I wasn’t using bread trenchers!

The flowers were for Liz’s birthday.

Medieval Feast

We kinda dug into the “subtlety” after lunch. It was her birthday cake!

We checked this book out from the library. It had lovely examples of medieval menus and recipes galore! We especially loved the copies of actual recipes in Old English and art depicting cooks during the period.

We had cream of vegetable soup.

Tori and Katie loved this and asked for thirds and fourths!

Vegetable Cream Soup

Cedar plank grilled salmon filets.

Glazed Salmon

We put brown sugar on top and they were delicious!

Roasted herb chicken.

Roast Chicken

We used Jamie Oliver’s recipe. It is delectable!

Creamed spinach.

Creamed Spinach

This is Aaron’s mom’s recipe. Liz and I love it, the others, not so much. But it has BACON!

Recipe: chop bacon and fry it up with some chopped onion. After that’s cooked, add chopped garlic and fresh spinach and turn off the heat. Fold it in until wilted. Splash lemon juice and sprinkle a tiny bit of nutmeg. Drizzle a couple T cream or half and half and stir. Serve immediately.

Big Glass of Grape Juice

Alex wanted to be like Mama and Daddy and have his grape juice in a big glass!

We’re excited to start our Renaissance history studies! Already working on what we can do for our unit study in 9 weeks. This one will be hard to beat!

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Natural History Museum of Utah Field Trip

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October 2, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

We went to the new Natural History Museum of Utah to explore.

It’s a HUGE place with so many exhibits and collections.

Alex really liked all the skeletons of animals.

animal skeletons

Katie loved seeing the bugs. Especially since these weren’t alive.

Bugs under glass

Sweeping for fossils.

Sweeping for Fossils

This was a huge gravel pit outside on a patio where the kids could sweep and uncover an entire dinosaur skeleton.

Finding Dinosaur Bones

Giant sloth…Sid?!

Giant Sloth

Alex loved looking through the magnifying glass to see the brine shrimp, er, sea monkeys.

Brine Shrimp

Way to knock out some of our Tapestry of Grace projects at the field trip!

weaving, plied cordage, twining.

Ancient History Weaving

A model of layers of an archeological dig of a hut.

It was a playground!

Exploring an Archeological Dig Site

Just a cute pic of my babies.

Royal Little Lambs

Watching wind erosion inside a tunnel.

Watching a Wind Tunnel

Alex was obsessed with these fact wheels. He just wanted to spin them.

Nature Facts Wheels

How cool is this? They offered notebooking pages in their science lab for museum attendees to write about their experiences.

Tori drew roly polies and said she likes them. Katie drew beetles and said they were pretty. I love it!

Notebooking Pages at the Museum

Alex was so exhausted that he fell asleep right as we were pulling into the PF Chang’s parking lot. He did wake up for the rice and noodles though!

Visit the Natural History Museum of Utah:
 
Daily, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m., Wednesdays 10 a.m. – 9 p.m.

Adult $13.00

Senior 65 and over $11.00

Young Adult 13 – 24 $11.00

Child 3 – 12 $9.00

Child 2 and under FREE

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Fourth of July Unit Study

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July 8, 2012 By Jennifer Lambert Leave a Comment

Independence Day is a fun holiday, but most of the festivities are late at night for young kids.

We often have a fun meal with our little family, maybe some friends.

I’ll get sparklers and popits for the kids to play in the driveway.

As the kids get older, I want them to understand history and not just think of US holidays as fun days for BBQ and parties.

I want the kids to learn the history of the USA and our flag, the Constitution, and Star Spangled Banner.

I want my kids to realize their privileges and understand their rights.

A privilege is a certain entitlement to immunity granted by the state or another authority to a restricted group, either by birth or on a conditional basis. By contrast, a right is an inherent, irrevocable entitlement held by all citizens or all human beings from the moment of birth.

I want my kids to know what independence, liberty, and freedom means.

“Freedom” is predominantly an internal construct. Viktor Frankl, the legendary Holocaust survivor who wrote Man’s Search For Meaning, said it well: “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms – to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way (in how he approaches his circumstances).”

On the other hand, “liberty” is predominantly an external construct. It’s the state of being free within society from oppressive restrictions imposed by authority on one’s way of life, behavior, or political views. The ancient Stoics knew this and so did our Founding Fathers, who wisely noted the distinction between negative and positive liberties, and codified that difference in the U.S. Constitution and Bill of Rights.

The distinction between negative and positive liberties is particularly important, because an understanding of each helps us understand these seminal American documents (plus it explains why so many other countries have copied them). The Bill of Rights is a charter of negative liberties – it says what the state cannot do to you. However, it does not say what the state must do on your behalf. This would be a positive liberty, an obligation imposed upon you by the state.

We study world history and US history throughout our homeschool cycles, especially the hard moments and events that are most eye opening. They ask great questions and I often don’t have any answers.

When we moved to Germany, obviously no one celebrated American Independence Day. It became a day that came and went like any other. The base didn’t even really do much due to budget cuts. Now that we’re living back in the States, in Ohio, we still don’t do much even though it’s often a 3 or even 4-day holiday. We catch up on household chores and grill food and play in the yard. We avoid the crowds at local lakes, pools, parks.

I loved celebrating holidays with themes when my kids were young!

I made a Fourth of July sensory bin and the kids loved it!

July Fourth Sensory Bin

A flag bucket, star ice cube trays, some red bowls, sparkly pom poms, jewels, an eagle beanie baby, some ribbons and bows made for lots of happy independent sensory play time.

Fourth of July Sensory Bin

Alex loved putting the pom poms on the spots

Pom Pom Play

Alex loved the most: covering up the Ff’s for fireworks.

I was so impressed he knew both the capital and lowercase F’s!

ABC Pom Poms

Fireworks displays don’t begin until 10 or 10:30 PM so we didn’t go for years because the kids were so young.

The girls saw fireworks over Pearl Harbor one year when they were very little. We could walk to the water from our house so it’s wasn’t too bad with a wagon.

We could watch fireworks from our driveway when we lived in Utah.

Alex didn’t see fireworks until he was 5, because he would always fall asleep between 7-9 PM.

We went to our friends’ house to celebrate Rhine in Flammen in 2015:

My kids are older now. The girls are all teens! We play with sparklers and popits and watch fireworks from our yard or local parks.

Now that my kids are older, we learn about colonialism, American Independence Day, the Revolutionary War, and all the differing stances of that time period. Most history books and shows really dumb it down.

We still go watch fireworks in our town, usually from a local park so we can make it back home sooner.

Fourth of July Resources:

  • History Timeline
  • Constitution Facts
  • A Nation’s Story: “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?”
  • Video “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?
  • As A Black American, I Don’t Celebrate The Fourth Of July
  • Revolutionary War Unit
  • Homeschool Mom
  • iHomeschool Network
  • The Homeschool Scientist
  • Time 4 Learning
  • Homeschool Creations
  • In All You Do
  • Year Round Homeschooling
  • Crafty Classroom
  • Real Life at Home
  • Only Passionate Curiosity
  • Gift of Curiosity
  • Forging Iron Hearts
  • Teach Beside Me
  • 3 Dinosaurs
  • 1+1+1=1

Books

  • The Sign on Rosie’s Door by Maurice Sendak
  • Blue Sky White Stars by Sarvinder Naberhaus
  • The Fourth of July Story by Alice Dalgliesh
  • Story Of America’s Birthday by Patricia A. Pingry
  • Give Me Liberty!: The Story of the Declaration of Independence by Russell Freedman
  • Happy Birthday, America by Mary Pope Osborne
  • Fourth of July Mice! by Bethany Roberts
  • Apple Pie Fourth of July by Janet S. Wong
  • Pie Is for Sharing by Stephanie Parsley Ledyard
  • George Washington’s Teeth by Deborah Chandra and Madeleine Comora
  • This Land Is Your Land by Woody Guthrie
  • America the Beautiful by Wendell Minor
  • Mr. Pipes Book Series
  • Independence Cake: A Revolutionary Confection Inspired by Amelia Simmons, Whose True History Is Unfortunately Unknown by Deborah Hopkinson
  • Founding Mothers: Remembering the Ladies by Cokie Roberts
  • Sybil Ludington’s Midnight Ride by Marsha Amstel
  • They Called Her Molly Pitcher by Anne Rockwell
  • What Does It Mean to Be American? by Rana DiOrio and Elad Yoran

Movies

  • Independence Day
  • Independence Day: Resurgence
  • Jaws
  • National Treasure
  • The Sandlot
  • Captain America: The First Avenger
  • A League of Their Own
  • The American President
  • Air Force One
  • Mr. Smith Goes To Washington
  • Glory
  • Forrest Gump
  • Born on the Fourth of July

How do you spend the Fourth of July?

Independence Day Notebooking Pages (FREE)
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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: history, July, sensory bin, summer, unit study

Salt Dough Maps

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April 9, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We finally took the plunge and bought Tapestry of Grace, Year 1. We love it! We love how it integrates all subjects and is Biblically based. Elizabeth cannot argue with the assignments list that I print out for her. She gets to help make decisions about what we read, write about, and projects.

Here is Elizabeth making a salt dough map of The Nile River Delta. (Please excuse the kitchen…)

Salt Dough Map

The completed map. She painted it and added props!

Nile Delta Salt Map
Salt Dough Map of Nile River Delta

She’s finishing up Singapore math 5B and Latina Christiana II.We will soon continue with Singapore 6 and Apologia Science.

We’re transitioning into {gasp!} what society calls Middle School.For me, that means I need to rev up on the writing. High school is just around the corner!

Hello, I was an English teacher in my past life! Praise the Lord that she’s such an advanced reader and has no trouble with spelling or grammar. (She’s just like me and my mom and finds errors in grammar and spelling everywhere…how horrified we are by the atrocious lack of consideration others have for good grammar! It is painful to us.)

Elizabeth has shown quite a jump in maturity these past couple weeks. I am grateful for that, for now I am contemplating military school I’m so stressed out.

Also see this salt dough map of the Nile River Delta. Check out no-bake cookie dough maps and chocolate chip cookie maps.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: geography, history, Tapestry of Grace

Cookie Play Dough Maps

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April 8, 2011 By Jennifer Lambert 2 Comments

We’re studying Ancient Egypt with Tapestry of Grace year 1.

We made cookie dough maps of The Nile River Delta.

Making Edible Maps

Complete with colored sprinkles for the river and fertile plains!

Cookie Dough Maps

 What fun do you have with geography?

Also see this salt dough map of the Nile River Delta.

Check out our chocolate chip cookie maps.

Print

Edible Cookie Play Dough

Ingredients

  • 2 cups nut butter
  • 2.5 cups powdered milk
  • 2.5 cups powdered sugar
  • 2 c white corn syrup
  • colored sugars or sprinkles optional

Instructions

  1. Mix ingredients together until smooth.

    Decorate with sugar or sprinkles. Have fun!

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Filed Under: Homeschool Tagged With: geography, history, recipe, Tapestry of Grace

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