Sunday, July 27, 2014

My Very First Freebie - A Back to School History Freebie



Today I'm really excited to bring you something I've been working on for a long time - almost a year, in fact, off and on. And, in the spirit of homeschool mommy solidarity, I'm offering it totally free! It's my great big giant master reading list to accompany all four volumes of Story of the World, designed for Grammar Stage grades 1-4. This is something I keep in my curriculum planner for quick reference when I need to know what books to pull from for nightly read-alouds or writing exercises, what it bring to the library with me for reference, and what I check every time I get ready to make a book purchase. It's quick, it's easy, and it's (fairly) thorough. 


Download it here.

Last year, because it was our first year homeschooling, I had not yet discovered the Story of the World Activity Book and all the awesome resources it contained. Published by Peace Hill Press to supplement the study of the Story of the World series by Susan Wise Bauer (author of The Well Trained Mind), the Activity Books contain discussion questions, map work exercises, coloring pages, hands on projects, and loads of extra reading suggestions, all broken down by chapter to make your life easier. It's wonderful and really helps round out our history studies.

But I had not yet discovered that. So last year I did it all myself. All our reading and projects came primarily from other lists I found online, such as Classical House of Learning, IrishMum's excellent resource list on Airskull, and all the various rabbit holes Amazon has to offer. I also pulled from various Pinterest boards and good old fashioned Google searches, as well as projects I had done over the years in school or Girl Scouts, or just came up with on my own. It was a fantastic year and history has been our favorite subject, but it was also a lot of work! A whole lot of work. And keeping up with what books I should hunt down and in what order and from where became a challenge, because I was drawing from so many sources. 

And so my mega-checklist was born, complete with check mark columns for books we already have and books the library already has, so I don't purchase things I can already access. And when I took the plunge and acquired a copy of the Story of the World Activity Books this spring the list grew even bigger! Now it contains suggestions for every single chapter of all four volumes, geared toward Grammar Stage students in grades 1-4. The Activity Books themselves contain more suggested reading than I chose to include because I tried to pare it down to just what would be useful to my kids, who are all 7 and younger. If you're looking for resources for an older child you really must pick up the Activity Book, it is truly an invaluable resource!

I'd recommend only printing the pages for the volume you're currently using and printing it double-sided. For example, we're starting Volume 2 this year, which covers the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and printing on both sides of the page means there are only 4 pages taking up space in my planner or library bag. Far more compact than lugging the whole Story of the World Activity Book to the library with me! And if anyone would prefer an editable spreadsheet version that you can actually check off, just hit the "Contact Me" button and let me know! I'd be happy to email you a copy of the file! 

And a note of caution to the overwhelmed or overachievers: this is NOT intended to be a list to be completed! This is not a "to do" list. Think of it, as one mom said, as a buffet. Pick and choose what looks good to you, what your kids may like, what your library has available, and what you actually have time to read. It's a compilation of sources you can check when you have the time and want to delve deeper. Did we read everything on the a Ancients list last year? Not by a long shot! Did we even read half? Hah! We read maybe 10-15%, and that not even dispersed very evenly. We read most of the suggestions for the Greek chapters, but only a story here or there for Babylon or Assyria. Some chapters I around Christmas I was exhausted and we just read Story of the World and nothing else! Do I feel bad we didn't get through more material? Not even for a moment! So use this as a starting point, a springboard for helping your students really immerse themselves in the world and times you're learning about. Relax and enjoy your homeschool year!

***UPDATE!***

I completely forgot to mention that I decided to add a unit on King Arthur and Arthurian legend between chapters 3 and 4 of SOTW vol. 2! So if you spot the books for chapter 3.5 in the Medieval & Renaissance section, that's where my kids will be studying Arthur. You can do the same, scatter those books in throughout the year, or skip them entirely - it's up to you! But for us, pausing to study Arthur and his knights seemed like a good idea, since SOTW doesn't even mention him. The imagery of the egalitarian Round Table, the sword in the stone, Merlin in all his bearded mystery and power locked away by the sorceress Nimue, the Lady of the Lake holding Excalibur aloft over the waters, and Arthur slain and being carried on the magical barge to Avalon...these are part of the fabric of the Western imagination and something with which I want our kids to be familiar. They're as important (or perhaps even more important) to our culture as Beowulf and Robin Hood.




~ Krystal

7 comments:

  1. Thank you. We are starting our homeschooling journey this year and this will come in handy. Thank you again.

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    1. You're so welcome! Good luck with your first year! Take LOTS of pictures, it goes by quickly. :)

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  2. This is really helpful! We did Vol 1 last year, and, for whatever reason, I was reluctant to write notes in our activity guide about which books we read, which we liked best, etc. But I found we read WAY too many books to be able to keep a separate list--we easily have 75 checked out at one time, and many are for history. I will use this checklist to keep track of what we like, and may also add a few more of my own. Also, although there are many lists online, I find a lot of them are aimed at older children (late elementary to middle school). I'm excited to have a list for the younger ones. Thank you for sharing!

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    1. I'm glad this will help you! I did the same thing our first year, I made notes of books to check into for the future, but didn't make a note of things we found at the library or elsewhere as we went! So I'm certain the Ancients section is missing a few things that we read, but I believe I got most of them on there, and definitely all the ones we bought or loved!

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  3. Hi! I clicked on your download link and it said the file had been removed. I am wondering if you could email me your booklist to me. I have 4 avid readers and we love story of the world! Would love to have more books to read! Thank you!!
    My email is shopkobuta@ gmail

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    1. I didn't know how to make a private message so my email has a space and the .com is missing. Just wanted to let you know.

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  4. Does this Mega List for story of the world recommended reading still exist please? The links appear to be Broken 😞

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