Showing posts with label Favorite Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Favorite Books. Show all posts

4/22/09

The Heart of Wisdom Teaching Approach

A couple of months ago, I decided to buy a copy of The Heart of Wisdom Teaching Approach by Robin Sampson. I just have to say this is one of the best homeschooling books I have ever read and I have read a lot of homeschooling books thanks to the wonderful inter-library loan system through my town library. This book had been on my Amazon.com wish list for some time and I finally ordered it. I am so thankful I did! I have a very eclectic style of homeschooling. I love using Charlotte Mason methods, a four year chronological history approach incorporating the Bible, timelines, hands on projects, lapbooks, and unit studies. Robin Mason has managed to combine all my favorite educational methods in one book while teaching me a whole lot about the Bible at the same time. I felt like Robin had gotten inside my brain and written a book just for me.

The Heart of Wisdom Teaching Approach incorporates the following teaching methods.
1. Bible First
2. A Return to Biblical Hebraic Education
3. A Four-Step Cycle (Excite, Examine, Expand, Excel)
4. Delight-Directed Learning
5. Charlotte Mason's Philosophy and Methods
6. Unit Studies
7. Lifestyle of Learning
8. Writing to Learn
9. Notebooking

The Heart of Wisdom Teaching Approach has inspired me to put Bible first in our day and this has been a blessing for our family. In a future post, I will share some of the great Bible resources and character building books we have discovered through a number of sources. At the end of The Heart of Wisdom Teaching Approach, you will find a wonderful extensive list of books covering history (from creation to the present times), science (general, creation, physical science, meteorology, oceanography, botany, earth science, astronomy, marine biology, and more), wisdom, missionary biographies, classics by grade level, and more.

This has been a great year of homeschooling for our family but I still felt as if something was missing. I usually pray daily for wisdom concerning how to best teach our children. God directly answered my prayer by pointing me in the direction of a book with the answer in the title and more importantly in the content of the book. This book wrapped up the loose ends of the teaching approaches I was already using. If you would like to download a free 70 page excerpt from the book, then head over to the Heart of Wisdom website. You can download excerpts from other Heart of Wisdom Publications and print free Old Testament Bible Worksheets and New Testament Bible Worksheets there as well.

2/17/09

What the World Eats and Owns: Eye Opening Books

I have just finished reading two fascinating books by Peter Menzel. The first one called What the World Eats has large photos of individual families around the world posing with a weeks worth of groceries laid out around them. The book tells a little about each family and includes information about the cost and quantity of food they eat each week. It was so interesting to see the differences and similarities in what different families around the world eat compared to our own family. I like to cook a number of international dishes so our diet was a mix of many of the families profiled and not so much like the average American family.

The second book called Material World: A Global Family Portrait has large photos of families from around the world surrounded by all of their possessions. According to the Amazon book review "Photographers spent one week living with a "statistically average" family in each country, learning about their work, their attitudes toward their possessions, and their hopes for the future. Then a "big picture" shot of the family was taken outside the dwelling, surrounded by all their (many or few) material goods." Reading these two books was the next best thing to taking a trip around the world. Jacob and Rosa really enjoyed looking at the photos in each of these books and it was very eye opening to see the difference in possessions and diet among the families profiled. I highly recommend these two books for both parents and children!

12/27/08

A Trip Around the World for Parents Who Love Learning

The New Year is almost upon us and I thought it would be a good time to share some of my favorite books with parents who love to learn right along with their kids. I enjoy traveling a great deal but don't have the time or money at this point in my life to travel very often. Traveling to China to adopt our daughter was my first real trip outside of the United States besides trips to Canada and a day long visit to Mexico. Books have allowed me to go to all the places I have wanted to visit and someday I hope to visit more of these places in person and with my children. I also love learning about people's life experiences in different parts of the world. A number of the books I listed below are about truly inspirational people who have made our world a better place. If you like to travel, learn about other countries and cultures, or be inspired, then check out some of these great books!

The first stop on your trip around the world is Haiti. The book Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, A Man Who Would Cure the World is one of the most inspiring books I have ever read. A review of the book by Jonathon Harr really sums up how I feel about the book. “The central character of this marvelous book is one of the most provocative, brilliant, funny, unsettling, endlessly energetic, irksome, and charming characters ever to spring to life on the page. He has embarked on an epic struggle that will take you from the halls of Harvard Medical School to a sun-scorched plateau in Haiti, from the slums of Peru to the cold gray prisons of Moscow. He wants to change the world. Certainly this luminous and powerful book will change the way you see it.”—Jonathan Harr, author of A Civil Action

The next book which I highly recommend is Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace... One School at a Time. This book takes you to Pakistan and Afghanistan and will give you new insight about the Middle East. According to the book description, "Anyone who despairs of the individual’s power to change lives has to read the story of Greg Mortenson, a homeless mountaineer who, following a 1993 climb of Pakistan’s treacherous K2, was inspired by a chance encounter with impoverished mountain villagers and promised to build them a school. Over the next decade he built fifty-five schools—especially for girls—that offer a balanced education in one of the most isolated and dangerous regions on earth. As it chronicles Mortenson’s quest, which has brought him into conflict with both enraged Islamists and uncomprehending Americans, Three Cups of Tea combines adventure with a celebration of the humanitarian spirit."

The third book I recommend, River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze, will take you on a memorable journey to China. According to the book description: "In the heart of China's Sichuan province, amid the terraced hills of the Yangtze River valley, lies the remote town of Fuling. Like many other small cities in this ever-evolving country, Fuling is heading down a new path of change and growth, which came into remarkably sharp focus when Peter Hessler arrived as a Peace Corps volunteer, marking the first time in more than half a century that the city had an American resident. Hessler taught English and American literature at the local college, but it was his students who taught him about the complex processes of understanding that take place when one is immersed in a radically different society. Poignant, thoughtful, funny, and enormously compelling, River Town is an unforgettable portrait of a city that is seeking to understand both what it was and what it someday will be."

A book that is a very interesting read and could have you on the road to good health is The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer From the People Who Have Lived the Longest. This book will take you to Costa Rica, Italy, Japan, and Loma Linda, California. According to the book description: "With the right lifestyle, experts say, chances are that you may live up to a decade longer. What’s the prescription for success? National Geographic Explorer Dan Buettner has traveled the globe to uncover the best strategies for longevity found in the Blue Zones: places in the world where higher percentages of people enjoy remarkably long, full lives. And in this dynamic book he discloses the recipe, blending this unique lifestyle formula with the latest scientific findings to inspire easy, lasting change that may add years to your life."

The End of the Spear is another great book which takes you on an amazing journey to Ecuador. This book and Mountains Beyond Mountains are two of my favorite books. According to the book description: "Steve Saint was five years old when his father, missionary pilot Nate Saint, was speared to death by a primitive Ecuadorian tribe. In adulthood, Steve, having left Ecuador for a successful business career in the United States, never imagined making the jungle his home again. But when that same tribe asks him to help them, Steve, his wife, and their teenage children move back to the jungle. There, Steve learns long-buried secrets about his father's murder, confronts difficult choices, and finds himself caught between two worlds. Soon to be a major motion picture (January 2006), End of the Spear brilliantly chronicles the continuing story that first captured the world's attention in the bestselling book, Through Gates of Splendor."

There is No Me Without You takes place in Ethiopia where you will meet an inspirational but also very human woman who has devoted her life to helping orphaned children. According to the book description: "There Is No Me Without You is the story of Haregewoin Tefarra, a middle-aged Ethiopian woman of modest means whose home has become a refuge for hundreds of children orphaned by AIDS. It is a story as much about the power of the bond between children and parents as about the epidemic that every year leaves millions of children, mostly healthy themselves, without family. Originally a middle-class woman with a happy family life, Haregewoin fell into a deep depression after the death of her recently married daughter. But then a priest brought her two children, AIDS orphans, with nowhere to go. Unexpectedly, the children thrived, and Haregewoin found herself drawn back into daily life. As word got out, an endless stream of children began to arrive at her door, delivered by dying parents and other relatives who begged for her help, and, pushing against the limits of her home and bank account, she took more and more in. Today, Haregewoin runs a school, a daycare system, and a shelter for sick mothers. Without medication for her charges—some HIV-positive, some uninfected, and some infants trying to fight off the virus, but almost all of whom come to her terrified and malnourished—she forges on, caring for as many as she can handle. Increasingly, she also places them for adoption with families like that of journalist Melissa Fay Greene, who has two children adopted from Ethiopia. In Haregewoin Tefarra’s story, Greene gives us an astonishing portrait of a woman fighting a continent-wide epidemic."

The last book, I'm Proud of You: My Friendship with Fred Rogers, brings you back to the United States and follows the friendship between journalist Tim Madigan and cultural icon, Fred Rogers. The story of their friendship is truly uplifting and a book not to be missed.

Studies have shown that parents who read in front of their children are more likely to have children who are interested in reading. This is all the evidence I need to make sure I take the time to sit down with a good book as often as I can.

12/19/08

Hanukkah Books and Activities

We just finished studying ancient Egypt, Moses, and the Exodus. I thought it would be a good time to take a Christmas break from our World History Unit Study and learn about Hanukkah. This fits in nicely with our study of the Israelites and the Old Testament. I found some wonderful books and crafts to help my kids learn more about Hanukkah. The National Geographic book Celebrate Hanukkah with Light, Latkes, and Dreidels gives a very nice overview of Hanukkah and has pictures with captions showing how people around the world celebrate the holiday. Festival of Lights is another good book which gives a more detailed historical account of the first Hanukkah celebration and the miracle which occurred. We also enjoyed the book Hanukkah by Roni Schotter which is a sweet story of how one family with five children celebrates Hanukkah. This story held my preschoolers attention while the other books were more geared toward children a year or two older.

We have the December Idea Book from Scholastic which has coloring pages, crafts, and activities related to Christmas, Hanukkah, and other holidays in December. We love this book and will be making our own paper menorah and dreidel from the book. In addition, we will be cooking up some latkes to enjoy with sour cream and applesauce. You can find free Hanukkah crafts and latke recipes on-line.

Paper dreidels can be found at Enchanted Learning and DLTK. You can print a paper menorah craft at DLTK as well.

Family Fun has a recipe for latkes.

Hanukkah begins on the evening of December 21st this year. Happy Hanukkah!


12/2/08

Favorite Christmas Books

I love Christmas time and one of my favorite family traditions is getting out all our Christmas books the day after Thanksgiving. We only have our Christmas books out until the end of December and then they go into storage until the next year. When you save Christmas books just for Christmas time, it makes them extra special. I still remember being read my favorite Christmas stories and I have gone searching on-line for the ones which are out of print so that my children can enjoy the same Christmas books I loved as a little girl. Below is a list of my favorite books in print and you can read more about them by clicking on the titles.

The Christmas Story
An Orange for Frankie
Gingerbread Baby
The Christmas Miracle of Jonathon Toomey
Christmas Farm
The Polar Express
The Trees of the Dancing Goats
The Night Before Christmas
The Nutcracker Ballet

11/18/08

Highly Recommended Education Book

I am an avid reader of books, mostly nonfiction, and I would guess I have read over a hundred books about education, educational theory, and homeschooling. I recently checked out of the library one of my favorite books to read again and I am so glad I did. I wanted to share this wonderful book because it is a book that many parents my age probably have never heard of. The book is called Marva Collins' Way and it first came out in 1982. Inside the cover of this book you will find a wonderful story about an amazing teacher and the teaching methods she used to transform her students.

This book tells the story of how Marva Collins created the Westside Preparatory School, an inner city school in Chicago. She took on students that no one else wanted with a multitude of learning disability labels and helped them achieve amazing academic success. She used a classical approach to education and was a strong proponent of teaching children to read using an intensive phonics program. The results of her educational methods are impressive. Alex Haley stated in the forward of the book that fifteen years after starting her school "every one of that grammar school's graduates is today either attending some outstanding prep school on full academic scholarship or has gone on to an outstanding college or university" (Collins 2).

What I like best about the book, Marva Collins' Way, is that it discusses the methods that Marva Collins used to teach the children in her school. The book is easy to read and allows parents to glean many ideas on how they can help their own child succeed academically. This book emphasizes over and over the importance of teaching children to believe in themselves. I want to include a couple of paragraphs from the preface of the book which really sum up Marva Collins' philosophy.

"Westside Preparatory has no monopoly on quality teaching. There are thousands of excellent teachers in the country with valuable techniques of their own. What all good teachers have in common, however, is that they set high standards for their children and do not settle for anything less. The academic program at my school consists simply of the three R's in the context of a total program that teaches each child that he or she is unique, special, and much too bright ever to be less than he or she can be. My teachers live by the credo, "I will never let you fail".

We must begin focusing on our children again. We must reevaluate our perceptions of them and learn to recognize that they can be motivated to achieve their potential, whatever it may be. It is too easy and too convenient to conclude that bad students are poorly motivated or stupid. This conclusion is a poor excuse, and it runs counter to the truth. A good teacher can always make a poor student good and a good student superior. The word teacher has its roots in the Latin word meaning to lead or to draw out. Good teachers draw out the best in every student; they are willing to polish and shine until the true luster of each student comes through" (Collins 6)

This book has been a great inspiration to me as a homeschooling parent. I want to draw out the best in my children and let the essence of who they are shine through. Some days I fall short of this goal but reading books like Marva Collins' Way inspires me to keep working on being the best teacher that I can be and helping my children to be the best they can be. I am not the only person who has been greatly inspired by this book. It receives 35 reviews on Amazon.com and all of the reviewers give the book five stars.

You can read more about Marva Collins here.

Collins, Marva and Civia Tamarkin. Marva Collins Way. New York: The Putnam Publishing Group, 1982.

10/27/08

Favorite Fall Book: "Pumpkin Circle"

We recently went on a field trip to a local pumpkin farm where they take the kids on a hay ride out to a pumpkin field to pick their own pumpkins. It was Rosa's first time getting to pick her own pumpkin and she loved it. All the children were told to pick only pumpkins that they could carry themselves. Jacob, of course, picked the biggest pumpkin he could get to the wagon but could not get it to the car on his own. Mom was left to carry a large and medium size pumpkin to the car. We had grown three pumpkin pie pumpkins in our own garden and a friend gave us two adorable mini pumpkins so now we have seven pumpkins in all.

All of these pumpkins has reminded me that I should share about our favorite fall pumpkin book called Pumpkin Circle: The Story of a Garden. This book tells how a pumpkin starts out as a small seed and grows over the summer into a large pumpkin which is carved into a jack-o-lantern in the fall. Then the jack-o-lantern is left in the garden to decay back into the earth leaving pumpkin seeds behind. The photos in this book are captivating and the rhyming verse teaches children the life cycle of a pumpkin in a very charming way.

We will be carving our large pumpkins and roasting the pumpkin seeds. The pumpkin pie pumpkins will be used for pies and muffins. We also plan to do a weighing activity with all seven pumpkins for math to see which is heaviest and which is lightest. Sometimes we paint faces on our pumpkins too. I would love to hear about other people's ideas for pumpkin activities!

10/13/08

Favorite Picture Books













Here is a list of our favorite children's picture books. Most of these books can be found at the Kids Love Learning Store or through the library. Some of the books are out of print and can only be found at the library or gotten from an on-line used book seller.

"Little Tim" (series) by Edward Ardizzone
"Max’s Words" by Kate Banks and Boris Kulikov
"Children of the Forest" by Elsa Beskow
"The Quilt Makers Gift" by Jeff Brumbeau
"Stellaluna" by Janell Cannon
"A House for Hermit Crab" by Eric Carle
"Miss Rumphius" by Barbara Cooney
"Click, Clack, Moo: Cows That Type" by Doreen Cronin
"Giggle, Giggle, Quack" by Doreen Cronin
"My Bible Friends" by Etta B. Degering
"Olivia" By Ian Falconer
"Whoever You Are" by Mem Fox
"How Are You Peeling? Foods with Moods" by Saxton Freymann and Joost Elffers
"The Oxcart Man" by Donald Hall
"Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse" by Kevin Henkes
"James Herriot’s Treasury for Children" by James Herriot
"Toot and Puddle" (series) by Holly Hobbie
"The Seven Silly Eaters" by Mary Ann Hoberman
"All About Alfie" (and others in series) by Shirley Hughes
"Fairy Houses" (and other Fairy books) by Tracey Kane
"Froggy Gets Dressed" (and other Froggy books) by Jonathon London
"You Are Special" by Max Lucado
"George and Martha" (series) by James Marshall
"Roxaboxen" by Alice Mclerran
"Martha Speaks" (and other Martha books) by Susan Meddaugh
"Beatrice’s Goat" by Page McBrier
"Ship of Dreams" by Dean Morrissey
"The Church Mouse" by Graham Oakley
"Caboose Who Got Loose" (and other books) by Bill Peet
"An Orange for Frankie" by Patricia Polacco
"Baby in a Basket" by Gloria Rand
"Chicken Soup With Rice" by Maurice Sendak
"The True Story of the Three Little Pigs" by Jon Scieszka
"Sylvester and the Magic Pebble" by William Steig
"Dr. Desoto" by William Steig
"Minerva Louise" books by Janet Morgan Stoeke
"A Camping Spree with Mr. Magee" by Chris Van dusen
"Down to the Sea with Mr. Magee" by Chris Van dusen
"Owl Moon" by Jane Yolen

10/7/08

How to Create a "Book Addict"

I have been an avid reader since I was a young girl. Reading is one of my favorite past times. I believe one of the reasons I did well in school was because I read so much. When we adopted our son Jacob at two years old, I set out to turn him into a lover of books. We started by reading him board books for 10-15 minutes before nap time and bedtime. Then we progressed to picture books with more words once his attention span had grown and increased story time to 15-20 minutes twice a day. I bought a book called Honey for a Child's Heart by Gladys Hunt as well as The Read Aloud Handbook and made lists of good books to look for at the library. I eventually discovered that our library had an on-line interlibrary loan program where I could sit at my computer at home and order books from all over our state and they would be delivered to our town library. This was like telling a kid in a candy store that she could have as much candy as she wanted. I started ordering up to 15 children's books at a time for Jacob. When I ran out of great book recommendations from Honey for a Child's Heart and The Read Aloud Handbook, I started looking for books on Amazon.com and reading book reviews trying to find the best books available. I created an Amazon.com wish list which grew and grew and I would use that as a reference when I ordered books via interlibrary loan. Jacob in the mean time was loving all these books and I enjoyed getting to read them almost as much as he did. He was learning so much from the books I had chosen and his father and I were learning lots of new things as well.

When Jacob was four years old, we started reading him short chapter books. The first book we read him was The Cricket in Times Square by George Selden. We allowed Jacob to play with toys quietly on the floor while we read him a chapter or two out of this book at a time. The second chapter book we read him was Three Tales of My Father's Dragon by Ruth Stiles Gannett. This book was a huge hit and it is the book I would recommend for boys as a first chapter book to read out loud. I have heard from friends that girls also really enjoy this book. At some point during this time we picked up The Magic Tree House audiobooks by Mary Pope Osborne. Well that was the beginning of The Magic Tree House addiction. Jacob wanted to listen to these audiobooks over and over again until he had them practically memorized. He still enjoys listening to "The Magic Tree House" books two years later and has listened to a countless number of additional audiobooks, chapter books read by us, and picture books. One of his favorite activities now at age six and a half is to play with his playmobil, legos, or knex while listening to an audiobook in his bedroom. We have successfully created a book addict and Jacob is progressing well with learning how to read on his own and likes to read simple stories to his sister.

We are now working on turning Rosa into a book addict as well using the method described above. She loves story time and the kids like to argue over who gets to pick which book we read first. My parents read stories to me as a child and my mother read us chapter books, usually on long car trips. I have very pleasant memories of being read to and I enjoy creating these memories for my own children as well.


Favorite Toddler Board Books

All of these great books are available through the Kids Love Learning Store or print this list and check some out at your library.

"Duck in the Truck" by Jez Alborough
"Bear in a Square" by Stella Blackstone
"Bear on a Bike" by Stella Blackstone
"Barnyard Dance" by Sandra Boynton
"Moo, Baa, La La La" by Sandra Boynton
"The Going to Bed Book" by Sandra Boynton
"The Mitten" by Jan Brett
"Goodnight Moon" by Margaret Wise Brown
"The Very Busy Spider" by Eric Carle
"The Very Hungry Caterpillar" by Eric Carle
"Dr. Seuss's ABC" by Dr. Seuss
"Hop on Pop" by Dr. Seuss
"Time for Bed" by Mem Fox
"Where's Spot" by Eric Hill
"The Snowy Day" by Ezra Jack Keats
"Miss Spider's Tea Party" by David Kirk
"Peek a Who" by Nina Laden
"Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See" by Bill Martin Jr.
"Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear" by Bill Martin Jr.
"Guess How Much I Love You" by Sam McBratney
"Good Night Gorilla" by Peggy Rathmann
"Owl Babies" by Martin Wadell