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SeaStar Forum Moderator
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Posted: Sept 22 2014 at 3:20pm | IP Logged
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We are on the last chapter here of "From Sea to Shining Sea", which we use as a spine for history. The book ends at the end of the 1800's. The next book in the series, "All Ye Lands" goes back to ancient times. By the time the series gets back to American history, it is at a high school level, and I have grades 4-6 th here currently.
My dc- ds in particular- want to keep going through the world wars. I need a spine or some kind of plan for that. RC Connecting with history uses "An Introduction to the First and Second World Wars". It gets great reviews but is over 200 pages long.
My other option is to use SImply Charlotte Mason's "Stories of America Volume 2"- we like this series but I find it lacking in detail. We usually use these books as a supplement. I could use it with a lot of supplemental books, but I would rather have a core text of some type that's a little meatier.
Any suggestions? I need to cover from the late 1800's up through WWII, possibly Vietnam/Korea on a 4-6th grade level. I also don't want to buy another text and use only the last few chapters. Is there any hope for me?
__________________ Melinda, mom to ds ('02) and dd ('04)
SQUILT Music Appreciation
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Aagot Forum All-Star
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Posted: Sept 22 2014 at 3:51pm | IP Logged
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How about this from Beautiful Feet Books. It covers from 1860 to the present and looks great.
Here is the description:
For the first time since 2009 Beautiful Feet Books is introducing a brand-new study! The American and World History study will cover the American Civil War up to modern day for 5-8th grade students. It will be a perfect follow-up to those who have already completed our Early American intermediate course. This new study will utilize the second-half of A Child's First Book of American History by Early Schenck Miers as well as a host of new and classic literature. Characters studied over this year-long course include the Wright brothers, Teddy Roosevelt, Gladys Aylward, George Washington Carver, Frederick Douglass, Sergeant York, Jackie Robinson and a host of others. Your student will come to appreciate and understand the most tempestuous period in history through award-winning literature. The full-color study guide includes recommended supplemental literature, resources, activities, comprehension questions, and web links. This guide will take you and your intermediate grade student from the year 1860 to modern day while covering the Civil War, Reconstruction, the turn of the century, WWI, WWII, Civil Rights, Korean War, Vietnam War, and contemporary America. Organized into easily followed lessons, students (and parents!) will learn the modern history of our nation along with corresponding Christian principles, poetry, geography, character studies and much more!
For a limited time order this pack and receive a FREE American and World Modern Study Guide, in addition to the print-version included in the pack.
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Kelly Forum All-Star
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Posted: Sept 22 2014 at 3:56pm | IP Logged
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Hmmm that's a tuffy. Do you have Story of the World modern times. U cd easily pick up there in the 1880s or whatever to provide a spine-of course that's World History not American only...
Kelly in FL
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pumpkinmom Forum All-Star
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Posted: Sept 22 2014 at 4:07pm | IP Logged
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Seton my have what you are looking for. They have an 8th grade book that goes all the way to current time. I know they have others in the lower grades too. We haven't used them so my recommendation doesn't mean much.
__________________ Cassie
Homeschooling my little patch of Ds-14 and Ds-10
Tending the Pumpkin Patch
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CrunchyMom Forum Moderator
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Posted: Sept 22 2014 at 4:35pm | IP Logged
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Kelly wrote:
Hmmm that's a tuffy. Do you have Story of the World modern times. U cd easily pick up there in the 1880s or whatever to provide a spine-of course that's World History not American only...
Kelly in FL |
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This was my plan, at least for my younger set, when we do a year of modern history.
Have you seen Mater Amabilis' 20th Century History? It organizes a lot of materials into a plan but the key text is Peter Jennings's book The Century for Young People.
__________________ Lindsay
Five Boys(6/04) (6/06) (9/08)(3/11),(7/13), and 1 girl (5/16)
My Symphony
[URL=http://mysymphonygarden.blogspot.com/]Lost in the Cosmos[/UR
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SeaStar Forum Moderator
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Posted: Sept 22 2014 at 7:04pm | IP Logged
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These are all great ideas... gives me several options.
I am off to check them out- though I suppose I should have been on the ball with this sooner . I just checked and my library does have SOTW vol. 4, so at least I can get my hands on that quickly, probably by tomorrow, so I will definitely be able to carry on with history into the modern age if we finish STSS this week ( we take it slowly, so that probably won't happen).
Thanks!
__________________ Melinda, mom to ds ('02) and dd ('04)
SQUILT Music Appreciation
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SeaStar Forum Moderator
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Posted: Sept 24 2014 at 1:09pm | IP Logged
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This was my plan, at least for my younger set, when we do a year of modern history.
Have you seen Mater Amabilis' 20th Century History? It organizes a lot of materials into a plan but the key text is Peter Jennings's book The Century for Young People.[/QUOTE]
I really appreciate the note that MA has at the top of this plan- about how
most history books stop at the end of the 1800's. Texts that cover the 1900's are generally only suitable for high school age, leaving a big gap for the preteen group.
Yes! That is exactly how I feel. I am still researching my options. "This Country of Ours", which I have as an e-book, does cover some of this time frame...up to the end of WWI, so that is something, anyway. The library is being slow getting SOTW for me
__________________ Melinda, mom to ds ('02) and dd ('04)
SQUILT Music Appreciation
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SeaStar Forum Moderator
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Posted: Sept 24 2014 at 2:30pm | IP Logged
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I am serial posting...
Today at a used book store the owner recommended "America the Beautiful"
by Charlene Notgrass as a good book for US history. It is in two volumes, and the second one covers everything up to the 9/11 and the Twin Towers.
The author is Protestant and includes some bios about missionaries, etc, but other than that I really liked the format of this book. It has a conversational tone, lots of pictures, and covers many interesting topics, such as the national park formation, that are usually only given a passing mention. There is a special focus on how God has made our country beautiful, so there are many pictures of natural wonders, landmarks, etc.
It is set up as a full year's curriculum- I would only use the main text, though. Oh- and it is all linked to living books- lots of lists of suggestions.
Anyway, I was wondering if anyone has seen or used this book?
I would have to skip over the Protestant material, but other than that, I felt an instant kinship with this book
__________________ Melinda, mom to ds ('02) and dd ('04)
SQUILT Music Appreciation
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