Jump to content

Menu

SOTW or CHOW? Differences?


talltexan
 Share

Recommended Posts

I am enjoying using Sonlight right now for Kinder, but I am looking ahead at first grade and I see that SL uses CHOW. Is it as high quality as SOTW? I have read so many great things here about SOTW, but nothing about CHOW. Your opinions are appreciated!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I loved A Child's History of the World. It was extremely readable and interesting. I think it's a little lighter in content than Story of the World, but since you're supplementing with USBORNE and other resources, you still get plenty covered. (Plus, some of the stuff included in Story of the World seems a little random, if you ask me.)

 

Sonlight does implement SOTW for their second run through world history.

 

Let me give you a warning--Sonlight Core B (1) starts off very slow, with Usborne's People and Places of the World, which was my son's absolute least favorite resource. Feel free to actually do some of the activities it includes in order to spice it up, and don't even try to do any narrative activities with it--it's just too chaotic, in my opinion. (I wish I'd been confident enough to just read the introductory paragraph and have my son pick out the pictures he was actually interested in. It may have gone over a lot better that way.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My dd and I really enjoyed CHOW when we did SL B and part of C (one of my regrets is that I got distracted trying out something else and never finished Core 2/C). She also listened to the SOTW 1 and 2 CDs and enjoyed them, as extra history. :) I learned things from CHOW I didn't know that enriched my cultrual/historical understanding. I did do some editing/explanation of the the first few chapters (which SL does not schedule) and Biblical references. I would recommed previewing it, though, as different people have different tastes. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I loved A Child's History of the World. It was extremely readable and interesting. I think it's a little lighter in content than Story of the World, but since you're supplementing with USBORNE and other resources, you still get plenty covered. (Plus, some of the stuff included in Story of the World seems a little random, if you ask me.)

 

Sonlight does implement SOTW for their second run through world history.

 

Let me give you a warning--Sonlight Core B (1) starts off very slow, with Usborne's People and Places of the World, which was my son's absolute least favorite resource. Feel free to actually do some of the activities it includes in order to spice it up, and don't even try to do any narrative activities with it--it's just too chaotic, in my opinion. (I wish I'd been confident enough to just read the introductory paragraph and have my son pick out the pictures he was actually interested in. It may have gone over a lot better that way.)

 

We are doing Core B right now. I wholeheartedly agree that Peoples of the World was unpleasant. In the future I'd probably just drop it or let the kids peruse it and ask questions from the pictures. I think the whole goal at this age is to find ways to spark interest in how people live and lived in our world.

 

I wish we had more hands-on activities like some of the other programs offer. Sonlight has great literature, but I feel that the activities are what help cement what they learning into memory. Sonlight does provide a CD for extra activities but I don't have that. SOTW also has a activity guides which I *almost* purchased last night but changed my mind since I need to cut back on spending and buying more curriculum!!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

DD states that she prefers CHOW over SOTW. I think the content is disperse enough that it would warrant using them both. It is the conversational tone of both that I find appealing. I feel that CHOW speaks more to the child. SOTW is story-like. CHOW is very talkie,talkie. LOL ( I am making up new vocabulary!)

 

In this instance, it would certainly depend on your child.

 

Did this help? I sure hope so. I am laughing at my abastract decsriptions!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I haven't done more than look at the online samples of SOTW yet (plan on using it in the coming year), but I CANNOT STAND CHOW. Obviously, lots of people love it. Apparently I'm a freak:lol: because so many homeschool catalogs describe it as 'conversational' and even 'grandfatherly'. Personally, I thought it was condescending, and my son never tried to sneak it and read ahead, which is what he usually does. He didn't put up a fuss over it, though. We didn't even finish it because I couldn't read it without rolling my eyes. :rolleyes:

 

Not very technical, I know, and frightfully judgmental of me;), but there's my freakish opinion anyway.:D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We read from both. I think ds6 prefers CHoW, but he also likes SotW. He will listen to anything history related though so maybe it wouldn't matter what we read for history :)

 

It's funny you say that, Kertie. I felt that way too about CHoW, but I got used to it I guess. My ds6 does giggle and such sometimes when we're reading that one, he finds it entertaining.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wish we had more hands-on activities like some of the other programs offer. Sonlight has great literature, but I feel that the activities are what help cement what they learning into memory. Sonlight does provide a CD for extra activities but I don't have that. SOTW also has a activity guides which I *almost* purchased last night but changed my mind since I need to cut back on spending and buying more curriculum!!!

 

So, let me tempt you into buying more curriculum.

 

Sorry, it's just that I was reading an ancient WTM forum thread on Sonlight today, and I discovered that Handle on the Arts has made activities e-books specifically intended to work with Sonlight (Cores A-C, it looks like). Here's the one for Core 1 (now known as B), for instance, which, according to its table of contents, has 66 projects. (That second link is a .pdf file, by the way.) It tells you which week (and even which day, although how that works with the five-day and four-day schedule options, who knows?) to do each project, and gives you the shopping list for the items required. (These range from "toilet paper tube" at the one extreme to "four yards white fabric" at the other, although the vast majority look extremely reasonable.) (I got all of this from the free sample.) And it's only twenty dollars!

 

Wow, now I feel like a curriculum pusher. It's only twenty dollars, and it'll make you feel reeeeeeeeal good, man! I will say that I'm not buying this, because my son is just not that into arts and crafts, and I hate trying to figure out what to do with the detritus.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, let me tempt you into buying more curriculum.

 

Sorry, it's just that I was reading an ancient WTM forum thread on Sonlight today, and I discovered that Handle on the Arts has made activities e-books specifically intended to work with Sonlight (Cores A-C, it looks like). Here's the one for Core 1 (now known as B), for instance, which, according to its table of contents, has 66 projects. (That second link is a .pdf file, by the way.) It tells you which week (and even which day, although how that works with the five-day and four-day schedule options, who knows?) to do each project, and gives you the shopping list for the items required. (These range from "toilet paper tube" at the one extreme to "four yards white fabric" at the other, although the vast majority look extremely reasonable.) (I got all of this from the free sample.) And it's only twenty dollars!

 

Wow, now I feel like a curriculum pusher. It's only twenty dollars, and it'll make you feel reeeeeeeeal good, man! I will say that I'm not buying this, because my son is just not that into arts and crafts, and I hate trying to figure out what to do with the detritus.

 

sold! This is exactly what I'm looking for! Thank you :)

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...