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How do you do SOTW w/a 6th grader?


newhsmommy
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I have a 3rd and 6th grader next year doing SOTW 2 at the same time. I'm "good" with getting reading material for the 3rd grader but, how do I make it challenging for the 6th...specifically the reading suggestions? The activity book is geared towards 2-5th grade.

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My suggestion would be to read SOTW together, then have the 6th grader do logic stage type study as suggested in WTM. Cross reference to Kingfisher or another History encyclopedia, complete an outline of the reading, write significant dates on the timeline and do outside reading, research etc. In WTM I believe she talks briefly about how to use SOTW in the logic stage, and extensively about how to study the same time period with different ages.

Mine are still both in grammar- so no BTDT- but that's how I *plan* to do it when mine are all in different stages! :)

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We used SOTW this year with 1st and 6th. We pretty much did it the way the previous poster described it. We would read the chapter together, discuss the reading together, did mapwork together, DD did a narration, DS filled out forms I made for Significant Men/Women of the Middle Ages, placed figures on timeline, read section from Kingfisher.... I would have had him outline but we were also doing Classical Writing: Homer and Omnibus II so I decided to let it slide. In addition to Omnibus readings, DS also read several suggestions from the AG. All in all, I think it worked fine.

 

SOTW provides the spine. Kingfisher and the further readings provide more information from different sources. Discussion and writing assignments get them to think and sythesize that information.

 

Blessings.

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If you're pulling books geared toward older kids, writing some about what you read, outlining some from a source book, perhaps even using the tests for SOTW, then I think you should be good. You could obtain a map skills book that's geared toward the middle ages if you want maps more complex than those used in SOTW, or create your own map work.

 

Here are some of the books I'm using along with our encyclopedia readings next year:

 

Review with “Fall of Rome†- 395 - 410 A.D.

 

Tales of King Arthur, retold by Felicity Brooks (Usborne - use who’s who at end for memory work)

The King Who Was and Will Be: The World of King Arthur and His Knights, Kevin Crossley-Holland (use Arthur books over course of first two weeks for lit and reading)

Lancelot, Hudson Talbott (simple)

Young Arthur, Robert D. San Souci (simple)

Magic in the Mist, Margaret Kimmel (Wales - simple)

A History of Britain through Art, Jillian Powell (4-7)

King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table, Sidney Lanier, ed.

 

“Early Britainâ€- c. 449 A.D.

(Celts, Barbarians, Beowulf)

 

Ancient World Leaders: Attila the Hun, Bonnie Carman Harvey

The Celts, Hazel Martell

Scottish Myths and Legends, K. E. Sullivan

Kings and Queens for God: Matilda of Scotland

Beowulf the Warrior, Ian Serraillier

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Intro I, Intro II, Ch. 1, Ch. 2, Ch. 3

read from History of the Kings and Queens of England, David Williamson

 

“Christianity in Britain†- c. 596 A.D.

(Augustine, Monasteries)

 

Augustine: The Farmer’s Boy of Tagaste, P. de Zeeuw

Watch “Cathedrals†video

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 7; 21; 25

 

“Byzantine Empireâ€

 

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 6

Anna of Byzantium, Tracy Barrett

 

“Rise of Islam†- 570 - 632 A.D.

 

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 8

 

“Great Kings of France†- 690 - 814 A.D.

(Charles the Hammer; Charlemagne)

 

Kings and Queens for God: Charlemagne

The World in the Time of Charlemagne, Fiona Macdonald

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 9, 10, 24

 

“Arrival of Norsemen†- 790 - 1000 A.D.

(Gods, Eric the Red and Son)

 

A History of Britain through Art, continue (8-9)

Explore-a-Maze, Robert Snedden - Leif Eriksson

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 12, 13

Viking Life, John Guy (w/ questions)

BBC Fact Finders: Vikings, Peter Chrisp

Leif the Lucky, Ingri and Edgar D’Aulaire (simple)

Inside Story: A Viking Town, Fiona Macdonald

If You Were There: Viking Times (w/ fold out game board), Antony Mason

Usborne Starting Point: Who Were the Vikings? (Simple)Jane Chisholm and Struan Reid

Usborne Illustrated World History: The Viking World, Philippa Wingate

Black Fox of Lorne, Marguerite de Angeli

The Story of Rolf and the Viking Bow, Allen French

 

“First English Kings†- 866 - 1066 A.D.

(Alfred, Battle of Hastings)

 

Augustine Came to Kent, Barbara Willard

A History of Britain through Art, continue (10-11)

Battles of the Medieval World, Kelly Devries, et al - Hastings

Kings and Queens for God, Carol Greene: Oswald, Guaire Aidni, Alfred the Great, Edward the Confessor

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 14, 15, 16, 18, 19

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

 

“England After Conquestâ€

(Language, Serfs, Noblemen, Stone Castles)

 

Eyewitness Knight, applicable sections

Eyewitness Castle (except specific countries)

Ultimate Explorer: Castles, Susan Churchill (w/ kit)

A History of Britain through Art, continue (12-13)

The Castle, A Pop-Up Fantasy, Tom Partridge

The Big Book of Knights and Castles, Barbara Weisberg

Castle, Struan Reid

Scottish Castles, Gordon Jarvie

Queen Eleanor: Independent Spirit of the Medieval World, Polly Brooks

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

 

“Knights and Samurai†- to 1560 A.D.

 

The World of the Medieval Knight, Christopher Gravett

If You Lived in the Days of the Knights, Ann McGovern (simple)

The Samurai’s Tale, Erik Haugaard

In the Time of the Knights, Shelley Tanaka (simple)

Exploring History: Ancient Weapons, Will Fowler

 

“Age of Crusades†- 1031 - 1099 A.D.

(Jerusalem, Saladin, El Cid)

 

Battles of the Medieval World, continued - Hattin and Arsuf; Constantinople

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 17

The Beduins’ Gazelle, Frances Temple

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

 

“New Kind of King†- 1189 - 1215 A.D.

(Richard the Lionhearted, John Lackland, Magna Carta, Robin Hood)

 

Living History: Fourteenth-century Towns, Ed. John D. Clare

The Legend of Robin Hood, Ed. Dami Editore (Barnes & Noble illus. edition)

The Canterbury Tales, retold by Geraldine McCaughrean

Understanding the Canterbury Tales, Clarice Swisher

The Canterbury Tales, Chaucer (Penguin Classics)

If You were There: Medieval Times, Antony Mason (w/ fold-out game board)

Magna Carta, Clyde Bulla (L)

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 23

The Adventures of Robin Hood, Roger Lancelyn Green

The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood, Howard Pyle (RD’s Young Readers)

Adam of the Road, Elizabeth Gray (and on tape)

Castle Diary: The Journal of Tobias Burgess, Page, Richard Platt

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

 

“Diaspora†- 70 - 1306 A.D.

 

Milk and Honey, A Year of Jewish Holidays, Jane Yolen

 

“Mongols†- 1167 - 1294 A.D.

(Genghis Khan)

 

Battles of the Medieval World - Leignitz

 

“Mysterious East†- 1271 - 1924 A.D.

(Marco Polo, Forbidden City)

 

Explore-a-Maze - Marco Polo

The World in the Time of Marco Polo, Fiona Macdonald

The Adventures of Marco Polo, As Dictated in Prison to a Scribe in the Year 1298, What He Experienced and Heard During His Twenty-four Years Spent in Travel through Asia and at the Court of the Kublai-Khan, ed. for the modern reader by Richard J. Walsh - primary source

 

“First Russians and Germany†- 860 - 1584 A.D.

(Ivan the Great and Ivan the Terrible; Holy Roman Empire)

 

Forests of the Vampire, Slavic Myth, Charles Phillips and Michael Kerrigan

The White Stag, Kate Seredy

Battles of the Medieval World - Peipus

Kings and Queens for God: Vladimir, Elizabeth, Jadwiga, Katarina, Anastasia Romanov

Famous Men of the Middle Ages: Ch. 4; 20; 22

 

“Ottoman Empire†- 1250 - 1566 A.D.

(Constantinople; Suleiman)

 

Battles of the Medieval World - Constantinople (198)

 

“Plagueâ€- 1320 - 1351 A.D.

 

Crispin: The Cross of Lead, Avi

 

"France and England at War†- beg. 1413 A.D.

(Henry V; Agincourt; Joan of Arc)

 

A History of Britain through Art, continue (14-17)

Battles of the Medieval World - Agincourt

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

 

“War of the Roses†- 1422 - 1485 A.D.

 

The Black Arrow, Robert Louis Stevenson

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

 

“Spain and Portugal†- 1419 - 1492 A.D.

(Ferdinand and Isabella; Henry the Navigator)

 

applicable pages from Columbus and the Renaissance Explorers, Colin Hynson (20-23)

Exploring Africa, Hazel Martell and Gerald Wood ( 12-21, carrying over into next two weeks)

Don Quixote

Around the World in a Hundred Years, From Henry the Navigator to Magellan, Jean Fritz

 

“Africa†- 1000 - 1526 A.D.

(Gold, Salt, Ghana, Mansa Musa)

 

Continue w/ Around the World in a Hundred Years

City States of the Swahili Coast, Thomas Wilson

History of the World: Africa (8th to 18th Century)

 

“Moghul Indiaâ€- 1526 - 1556 A.D.

(Akbar)

 

continue w/ applicable pages from Columbus and the Renaissance Explorers (24-27)

Explore-a-Maze - da Gama

Continue w/ Around the World in a Hundred Years

 

“Columbus, Vespucci and Magellan†- 1492 - 1520 A.D.

 

continue w/ applicable pages from Columbus and the Renaissance Explorers (2-15)

Westward with Columbus, John Dyson

Christopher Columbus: Explorer of the New World, Peter Chrisp

Magellan and the Exploration of South America, Colin Hynson (w/ questions)

Christopher Columbus: First Voyage to America, From the Log of the ‘Santa Maria’ - primary source

Explore-a-Maze - Columbus and Magellan

The Great Adventure of Christopher Columbus, a Pop-Up Book, Jean Fritz

Columbus, Ingri and Edgar D’Aulaire

Continue w/ Around the World in a Hundred Years

 

“Americas†- 600 - 1525 A.D.

(Mayans, Incas)

 

Pyramids, Anne Millard, pgs. 42-55

Looking at Aztec Myths and Legends: Land of the Five Suns, Kay McManus

 

“Renaissance†- c. 1456 A.D.

 

Watch “Masterworks of Western Art: The Northern Renaissance†video

Living History: Italian Renaissance, ed. John D. Clare

Eyewitness Renaissance

Read from Famous Men of the Renaissance and Reformation

 

Continue Renaissance (New Universe; Copernicus) - 1543 - 1609 A.D.

 

Continue Famous Men

 

“Martin Luther†- from 1509 A.D.

 

Luther the Leader, Virgil Robinson

Continue Famous Men

 

“Reformation and Counter-reformation†- from 1545 A.D.

 

Continue Famous Men

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

 

“England’s Greatest Queen†- 1547 - 1603 A.D.

 

A History of Britain through Art, continue (20-25)

Mary, Bloody Mary, Carolyn Meyer

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

 

“Shakespeare†- 1564 - 1616 A.D.

 

The Young Person’s Guide to Shakespeare, Anita Ganeri (w/ CD)

Shakespeare’s Theatre, Andrew Langley

Tales from Shakespeare, Charles and Mary Lamb

Shakespeare’s Globe, An Interactive Pop-Up Theatre, Toby Forward

Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare for Children, E. Nesbit

Shakespeare’s Stories: Comedies, retold by Beverly Birch

Oxford School Shakespeare: Hamlet, Antony and Cleopatra, Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Twelfth Night, The Tempest, and Much Ado About Nothing, all edited by Roma Gill

Macbeth, ed. Nicholas Brooke

 

“Exploration of Northern N. America†- 1534 - 1608 A.D.

(Cartier)

 

continue w/ Columbus and the Renaissance Explorers (16-19; 28-31, plus questions at end)

 

“Spain and England’s War†- 1588 A.D.

 

continue w/ Kings and Queens of England

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I have the sixth grader do an outline of his readings and do a timeline. He is reading Our Island Story along with SOTW vol. 2. He is doing a comparison of how the two are similar and different. Sometimes, the two books do not give the same information about the same character. That has caused him to question the two authors. He is now in the middle of going to the library to do research on history of the Angles and the Saxon because Our Island Story has a different account to SOTW.

 

I like doing it this way because it forces my sixth grader to think, but now he wants to do his own seperate study. He realizes that information is not always given the same and why that is.

 

Since sixth grade is logic stage, I think that it is a good idea to put another history text before them. Don't purchase another book. Get it from the library. Then have the child compare the two accounts of history. I like that because he started to question well which history account is accurate or why is one person saying this as oppose to the other is saying another. We look at what sources is each other using? From what perspective is that information being given?

 

It is just another way of developing the critical thinking in the child.

 

Blessings in your homeschooling journey.

 

Sincerely,

Karen

http://www.homeschoolblogger.com/testimony

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I have the sixth grader do an outline of his readings and do a timeline. He is reading Our Island Story along with SOTW vol. 2. He is doing a comparison of how the two are similar and different. Sometimes, the two books do not give the same information about the same character. That has caused him to question the two authors. He is now in the middle of going to the library to do research on history of the Angles and the Saxon because Our Island Story has a different account to SOTW.

 

I like doing it this way because it forces my sixth grader to think, but now he wants to do his own seperate study. He realizes that information is not always given the same and why that is.

 

Since sixth grade is logic stage, I think that it is a good idea to put another history text before them. Don't purchase another book. Get it from the library. Then have the child compare the two accounts of history. I like that because he started to question well which history account is accurate or why is one person saying this as oppose to the other is saying another. We look at what sources is each other using? From what perspective is that information being given?

 

It is just another way of developing the critical thinking in the child.

 

Blessings in your homeschooling journey.

 

Sincerely,

Karen

www.homeschoolblogger.com/testimony

:iagree:This is my plan.
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My favorite is notebooking. Have the student create a notebook page showing what he learned. My son does his on the computer, and adds Google images for maps, photos, etc. I feel like he "owns" the knowledge better when he does this. I guess it's a form of written narration. Outlining could do the same thing, I suppose, but I haven't gotten him to "engage" with outlining because he likes to narrate in humorous ways, etc.

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