Jump to content

Menu

Help me (pretty please?) build a US history program........


Recommended Posts

We have started using SOTW I and Activity Book with my group. (My 3 and another 9 year old and another 13 year old. I supplement the olders).

 

However, I feel the need to also do a unit on American History/Government between now and Nov.

 

I don't have my additional studends on Tuesday and Wedndesdays. I have their parents do work with them at home. I'd like to have American History done on those days. I'd like to do it "alone" with my kids. I also feel my client parents would feel the most confident and comfortable doing American History vs. nearly anything else.

 

I am going to use these http://www.epsbooks.com/dynamic/catalog/series.asp?subject=06S&subjectdesc=Reading+Comprehension+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++&series=1631M. What I'd like suggestions on are easy to find read aloud and read alone literature for US History to date. A book a month is fine.

 

My kids: 9-13

 

Client: 9 yob

 

Client: 13 yog

 

I will grade/assess notes, narrations, summaries and book reports for everyone. I think they are all old enough to keep a timeline as well.

 

I do not want to spend time/resources pulling together a curriculum which is why I am thinking the Story of the USA. If you have a better suggestion, I'm open.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Are you looking for a spine-type book and some particular history/biographies to go along with that OR are you interested in historical fiction OR are you looking for books written during each particular time period you will study OR some combination?

 

I thought I'd post this question to bump your post to the fore again. Maybe you'll get some other responses. I can help with a few suggestions once I know what you're thinking.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Are you looking for a spine-type book and some particular history/biographies to go along with that OR are you interested in historical fiction OR are you looking for books written during each particular time period you will study OR some combination?

 

Some combination. I found some good stuff at the homeschool store, though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some combination. I found some good stuff at the homeschool store, though.

 

not sure what you found so far, but for those ages, The Witch of Blackbird Pond, Across Five Aprils, and Johhnny Tremain are sound favorites here. I know there's more, but off the top of my head, those rock :-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I went to the website you linked, took some notes on the topics covered in the workbooks described there, and tried to organize my recommendations accordingly. Here goes:

 

Book 1, Explorers and Settlers --

  • Around the World in 100 Years, Jean Fritz
  • The World of Columbus and Sons, Genevieve Foster
  • Who Discovered America?, Patricia Lauber
  • Brendan the Navigator, Jean Fritz
  • Columbus, de Aulaire
  • Leif the Lucky, de Aulaire
  • Biographies of explorers by Ronald Syme, including Balboa, Magellan, Cartier, De Soto, Champlain, Hudson
  • A Lion to Guard Us, Clyde Robert Bulla
  • Pilgrim Stories, Margaret Pumphrey
  • Eating the Plates: A Pilgrim Book of Food and Manners, Lucille Recht Penner -- This one has recipes for a Thanksgiving feast, very cool
  • Squanto and the Miracle of Thanksgiving, Eric Metaxas
  • Who's that Stepping on Plymouth Rock, Jean Fritz
  • The World of Captain John Smith, Genevieve Foster
  • The Witch of Blackbird Pond
  • William Penn, Janet & Geoff Benge -- This is one of a series about heroes of history by these authors. All are good that I have read.
  • Sign of the Beaver, Speare
  • Indian Captive: The Story of Mary Jemison, Lois Lenski
  • Jean Fritz's books re the American Revolution (i.e., Can't You Make Them Behave, King George?; Where Was Patrick Henry on the 29th of May; etc.)
  • A Young Patriot, Jim Murphy
  • Matchlock Gun, Edmonds
  • Drums Along the Mohawk, Edmonds
  • Johnny Tremain
  • George Washington's World, Genevieve Foster
  • Gloria Phelan's histories re American Revolution, including Midnight Alarm, The Story of the Boston Tea Party, The Story of the Boston Massacre
  • Landmark Books -- Some of these have been republished recently, and many deal with the people and events during the American Revolution.

Book 2, Young Nation --

  • Sam Fink has illustrated the words to the Declaration and to the Constitution in a way that makes it both more fun to read and more understandable to children.
  • The Maestros, Betsy and Guilio (I think that's their names) have a series of books about the formation of the Union and the Constitution
  • Rhoda Blumberg's books about Lewis & Clark
  • Jean Fritz, Great Little Madison
  • Gloria Phelan's and Albert Marrin's books about the War of 1812.
  • Must read something about Davy Crockett, the Alamo, and the War with Mexico -- most of what I have is out of print so, although they are good, they don't meet your requirement that they be readily available.
  • The Great American Gold Rush, Rhoda Blumberg (for older)
  • They're Off, Cheryl Harness (about the Pony Express, for younger)
  • I have so many about the Civil War that I can't list them all. Here are authors to look for in the category of histories/biographies: Albert Marrin, Jean Fritz, F.N. Monjo, Jim Murphy
  • There's a fabulous book about a Civil War era submarine they just raised. I don't have the author's name or the exact title in front of me, but the sub was named the Hunley, and that name is in the title

Book 3, America Becomes Giant --

  • The Story of Thomas Alva Edison, Cousins
  • Tracks Across America, Leonard Everett Fisher
  • Across America on an Emigrant Train, Jim Murphy -- tells story of Robert Louis Stevenson's trek across America by train mixed with history of railroad, westward expansion in America, living conditions at the time

I can't really help you much from there, because that's where my boys and I are in history right now. We just finished Murphy's book about the emigrant train a couple of weeks ago. It was great. I sort of plan extra reading as I go, a week or two at a time, so I don't have any real nuggets to offer from this point on.

 

Good luck.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Modern U.S. lit:

 

The Yearling

 

Rifles for Watie, Harold Keith (gives western states' perspective on the Civil War)

 

Just a Few Words, Mr. Lincoln, the story of the Gettysburg Address, Jean Fritz

 

Mr. Lincoln's Whiskers, Burke Davis

 

Abraham Lincoln, D'Aulaires

 

Bull Run, Paul Fleischman

 

The Journal of James Edmond Pease: A Civil War Union Soldier, Virginia, 1863, Jim Murphy

(My Name is America series)

 

The Last Safe House, Barbara Greenwood (Underground Railroad into Canada)

 

A Picture Book of Thomas Alva Edison, David Adler

 

The Journal of Sean Sullivan, William Durbin (Dear America)

 

Call of the Wild, London and/or other Jack London short stories, such as Brown Wolf and That Spot, and/or White Fang

 

Caddie Woodlawn, Carol Brink

 

Elizabeth Blackwell: The First Woman Doctor, Francene Sabin

 

Louis Pasteur, Carol Greene (Rookie Bio)

 

Rachel's Journal, Marissa Moss

 

Black Beauty, Anna Sewell (DK Eyewitness Classic)

 

In the Face of Danger, Jean Nixon

 

My Name is America: The Journal of Otto Peltonen, a Finnish immigrant, William Durbin

 

The Amazing Thinking Machine, Dennis Haseley (set in the depression)

 

Esperanza Rising, Pam Munoz Ryan (set during the depression; touches on issue of deportation of Mexican Americans during that time period)

 

My Friend, the Enemy, J.B. Cheaney (set during WW II; touches on issues regarding handling of Japanese Americans at that time; ALSO treats little known issue of Japan sending airborne bombs to the west coast of America)

 

The Great Migration, Jacob Lawrence

 

You Want Women to Vote, Lizzie Stanton? Jean Fritz

 

Bud, Not Buddy, Christopher Paul Curtis

 

Flying Ace: The Story of Amelia Earhart, Angela Bull

 

The Gadget

 

 

That's most of what we've covered and enjoyed re: America this year, so far,

 

Regena

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...