It gets quite hot here.
I am, I hope, ready for school this year. Tentatively. I think.
Religion:
Once upon a Time Saints
More Once upon a Time Saints
Around the Year Once upon a Time Saints
A Life of Our Lord for Children
My Catholic Faith
Whew. That seems like a lot. But what all of these theology books have in common is utter charm. They are delightful books. I know many Catholic homeschoolers who use the Faith and Life series from Ignatius. I have the second grade catechism, Jesus Our Life, and I was unimpressed with the layout and writing. They are very much textbooks, which are a distant fourth choice on my list of educational materials. The above books are nothing like that. The saint stories are amazing, written like once-upon-a-time, just as the title says. Life of Our Lord is a biography of Jesus, which I hope will segue quite nicely into reading the Gospels after we finish it. My Catholic Faith is the best teaching catechism I have ever read - it was the book I read as a catechumen. It's like an expanded Baltimore Catechism. (The Baltimore Catechism is written like an FAQ for Catholics, for those among my readers who are unfamilliar with the work.)
Mathematics:
Kickin' it old school here. We're going to use the Ray's Arithmetic series. You can get them for free from Google Books or purchase a bound box set (Ray's Arithmetic Series 8 Volume Set
Science:
The Everything Kids' Science Experiments Book: Boil Ice, Float Water, Measure Gravity-Challenge the World Around You! (Everything Kids Series)
Nature Study every Friday afternoon
Literature:
The Random House Book of Poetry for Children
A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys
I think I've overposted again. Best be off to bed. I'll stop being Johnny-One-Note on the schoolbooks soon, I think!
Our friends:
[Ben Hatke](http://letflythecannons.blogspot.com/) and
[Ted Schluenderfritz](http://www.5sparrows.com/).
That looks like fun school! Love that you include religion. Illustrating poems reminds me of another comprehension method that can be used for any subject. After the story/lesson, fold a paper into fourths then unfold. Then they draw something in each square of what they recall or you can ask a specific question for each square. I loved seeing what the students drew. :)
ReplyDeleteI LOVE My Catholic Faith. We found an old copy of it at a thrift store a few years back for $1.98! What a bargain, huh?!
ReplyDeleteYour school plans sound wonderful. Would you like a few extra students? ;)