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What are your kids reading this year?


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Ours is what we will be reading with Sonlight Core 6.

 

Also we will be reading

The Edge Chronicles book 1,book 2, book 3

Septimus Heap book one Magyk (this will be a read a loud)

Chronicles of Ancient Darkness Book one Wolf Brother

 

This is our books so far. We will be adding more as we find more.

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We're on the ancients this year, and my son is 10. (LTH is Learning Through History magazine, by the way.)

 

Aesop's Fables

Ancient China (Nature Company Discoveries Library)

Bible Selections

Boy of the Painted Cave

Cat of Bubastes

Chi’Lin Purse

Children’s Homer

Cool Facts About the Ancient World

D’Aulaire’s Greek Myths

Dar and the Spear Thrower

Detectives in Togas

Eagle of the Ninth

Exploring the Ice Age

Gilgamesh the Hero

Golden Goblet

Horrible Histories: Rotten Romans

How to Be a Roman Soldier

How to Be an Ancient Greek Athlete

LTH: Ancient China

LTH: Ancient East

LTH: Ancient Egypt

LTH: Ancient Near East

LTH: Mesoamerica (Maya info)

Mystery of the Roman Ransom

Place in the Sun

Tales from China

Tales from India

The Golden Goblet

The Way of Alexander the Great

Theras and his Town

Top 10 Greek Legends: Zeus on the Loose

Tusk and Stone

Twenty Jataka Tales

Walking the Bible

Way of Alexander

Well of Sacrifice

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Rip Van Winkle and Legend of Sleepy Hollow

Age of Fable

Anne of Green Gables

Robinson Crusoe

Hans Brinker

Midsummer Night's Dream

Puck of Pook's Hill

Children of the New Forest

Double Life of Pocahontas

Poetry from Longfellow, Tennyson and Kipling

 

HTH:001_smile:

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For MOH:

Dd is reading

the Bible

The Golden Goblet

Mara, Daughter of the Nile

Hittite Warrior

God King

The Trojan War or Iliad and Odyssey for Boys and Girls??

D'Aulaires Book of Greek Myths

Archimedes and the Door to Science

Aesop's Fables

Detectives in Togas and Mystery of the Roman Ransom

I Marched with Hannibal

The Bronze Bow

 

Other Reading:

 

I'm hoping to start some kind of reading club in my homeschool group this year. I'd like to do books made into movies, get together discuss the book, watch the movie, then discuss the differences. I'll have to see how much participation there will be.

 

The City of Ember (entire series, we've finished the first 2)

Found by Margaret Peterson Haddix (a favorite author)

 

Still looking for additional reading for this year. I hope I'll find some good ideas here.

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Here's our list of books that we will be formally studying. It does not any include independent reading.

 

I realy like your idea of formally studying fewer works together in order to go into greater depth with each one! I'd like to try doing that, too.

 

I've been working on our formal-study lit list for the year, trying to make it reasonable/doable. One thing that's making this challenging for me is that I've made separate literature lists for my two kids, who are at very different reading levels. Two books are on both lists (read-alouds), but everything else is different.

 

I'm in the process of figuring out what to do with each book. For example, for one book, I'll read it aloud to both kids, we'll have some discussions, and I'll assign written work to ds11 only -- some copywork/dictation and narrations. On another book, I'll have ds read it independently, do some discussions, and have him outline parts of it (or help him outline the whole book). But this feels so weird and kind of vague to not be using a literature guide!

 

What kinds of things will y'all be doing with the formal-study books? E.g., will you read all of them aloud to all three children, or will you assign some independent reading from these books? Do you already have some discussion questions in mind, and if so, have you made notes of your discussion questions/outline? Will you assign any written work on the books? If so, how are the assignments different for each child?

 

How many school days do you expect to spend on the formal-study books? I think that it'll be unrealistic for me to work on our top-tier formal-study books on a daily basis with both kids, since they have separate lists. It looks like I'll be able to do it ~2/3 of the time. (Trying to decide on the scope is gettin' to me!)

 

In case it helps for you to see what I'm doing...here are our 3 categories of books on our literature lists:

 

  • Top-tier formal-study: Works to study with in-depth discussions and written assignments; some will be read aloud, others independently. The only works that both kids will do (as of now) are: Hamlet and The Pied Piper of Hamelin. The remaining works in this category are different for each child.

  • 2nd-tier formal-study: Works to study with brief discussions and written assignments (2nd-tier formal-study); all will be read independently.

  • Informal study (secondary reading): Works to read independently with no planned discussions.

 

I'd love to hear any of your thoughts on this (either here or on your blog)!

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Any compiled book lists would be appreciated, as well.

 

We're doing TOG this year, so some of the selections are from TOG's dialectic & grammar-level literature lists.

 

Ds11's lists:

 

top-tier formal-study list

The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood by Pyle

The King of Ireland's Son by Padraic Colum

The Story of Rolf and the Viking Bow

The Pied Piper of Hamelin by Browning

various poetry

Poetry for Young People: William Shakespeare

The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark (and selections from the original)

 

second-tier formal-study list

Medieval Myths, Legends & Songs (a TOG lit book)

Aladdin and Other Tales from the Arabian Nights

The Black Arrow by Stevenson

Men of Iron by Pyle

The Canterbury Tales (retelling)

Adam of the Road

 

secondary reading

Augustine Came to Kent

Beowulf retelling

Beorn the Proud

The Story of King Arthur and Other Celtic Heroes by Padraic Colum

Robin Hood by Green

The Lantern Bearers and a few other Sutcliff books

Saint George and the Dragon (retelling by Hodges)

Otto of the Silver Hand

The Yellow Fairy Book by Lang

The Green Fairy Book by Lang

Grimm's Household Tales

Son of Charlemagne

If All the Swords in England

The Hidden Treasure of Glaston

The Red Keep

The Lost Baron

 

Ds11 will read other books for history, as well.

 

Dd8's lists:

 

top-tier formal-study list

The Cottage at Bantry Bay by Hilda van Stockum

The Wheel on the School

King of the Wind

The Adventures of Pinocchio

The Silver Chair

The Light Princess by George MacDonald (the tale, not the whole book)

The Pied Piper of Hamelin by Browning

LLATL-Orange Book -- poetry unit

Hamlet: For Kids (and selections from the original)

(A Little Princess - tentative)

 

second-tier formal-study list

Saint George and the Dragon (retelling by Hodges)

The Boy Who Held Back the Sea

Brigid's Cloak

Leif the Lucky by D'Aulaires

Robin Hood by Neil Philip

The Minstrel in the Tower

The Door in the Wall

fairy tales

Old Mother West Wind

The Sword in the Tree

 

secondary reading

Patrick, Patron Saint of Ireland

Aladdin and Other Tales from the Arabian Nights (DK reader)

The Making of a Knight

St. Francis by Wildsmith

The Squire and the Scroll

Marguerite Makes a Book

Bard of Avon: The Story of Shakespeare by Diane Stanley

Thunderstorm in the Church

Caedmon's Song

Castle Diary: The Journal of Tobias Burgess

I, Juan de Pareja

The Story of St. Patrick

The Night Before Christmas: A Visit from St. Nicholas

Saint Valentine

The Legend of the Persian Carpet

Saladin, Noble Prince of Islam by Stanley

Chanticleer and the Fox

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We'll end up doing:

- 1 per 6 weeks = a longer work together

- 1 per 3-4 weeks = for literature, a novel, short story or poetry

- 1 per 4-5 weeks = a at-or-below reading level work to go with history

 

 

Here's our list:

 

Together, in depth:

1. Beowulf (The Great Books study guide)

2. Macbeth (Parallel Text Shakespeare study guide)

3. All Quiet on the Western Front (Spark Notes and Glencoe study guides)

4. Diary of Anne Frank (Portals to Literature study guide)

5. To Kill a Mockingbird (Garlic Press Publishers guide)

6. Windows on the World (IEW's new program on short story literary analysis) -- we will use a little of this each year over 3-4 years of high school

 

 

10th grader:

(We designed our own lit. course and are calling it "Worldviews in Sci-Fi and Horror")

1. Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde (Progeny Press guide)

2. Frankenstein (Progeny Press guide)

3. Farenheit 451 (Progeny Press guide)

4. The Giver (Garlic Press publishers guide)

5. Brave New World (Spark Notes; wikipedia)

6. Animal Farm (Spark Notes; wikipedia)

7. selected short stories from Cosmi-Comics

8. A Canticle for Leibowitz

9. Portrait of Dorian Gray (Spark Notes; wikipedia)

10. a unit from the Progeny Press guide on poetry

 

 

9th grader doing Lightning Lit 8:

- 3 short stories ("A Crazy Tale", "Wakefield", "The Mirror")

- 3 units on poetry

- Treasure Island

- A Day of Pleasure

- A Christmas Carol

- The Hobbit

- My Family and Other Animals

(- To Kill a Mockingbird -- will be done above, all together)

 

 

solo reading:

historical fiction to go along with our 20th century history; we will have 8 "units" and they will choose ONE book from each "unit" and so read 8 books on their own that are at or below their reading level; here are the choices:

 

1 = 1890-1910

- Summer of the Monkeys

- The Great Brain

- Little Britches

- The Good Earth

 

2 = 1910-1930

- Endurance Shackleton's Incredible Voyage

- The Road From Home

- Albert Einstein and the Theory of Relativity

 

3 = 1930-1940

- Story of the Trapp Family Singers

- When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit

- Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

- Bud, Not Buddy

- A Year Down Under

 

4 = free choice from any "unit"

 

5 = 1940-1950

- Winged Watchmen

- Escape From Warsaw

- Endless Steppe

- House of Sixty Fathers

- Great Escapes of World War II

- Farewell to Manzanar

- After the War

 

6 = 1950-1970

- Warriors Don't Cry

- I Am David

- The Cay

- God's Smuggler

- Red Scarf Girl

 

7 = 1970-present

- Maniac Macgee

- Pushcart War

- View From Saturday

 

8 = free choice from any unit

 

 

They also tend to have something they're reading at bedtime just for pleasure, but that's not assigned.

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For reading aloud, we are finishing Peter and the Shadow Thieves and Peter and the Secret of Rundoon before we decide on our next ones -- we like series. I'm leaning toward Redwall, though.

 

Individually, they will work through:

 

Shiloh

My Side of the Mountain

Caddie Woodlawn

The Hundred Dresses

In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson

Johnny Tremain

Dragonwings

Star of Light

Little House on the Prairie

Henry Huggins

Charlotte's Web

Sarah, Plain and Tall

Li Lun, Lad of Courage

Island of the Blue Dolphins

Across Five Aprils

The Cay

Timothy of the Cay

A Wrinkle in Time

Catherine, Called Birdy

Jacob Have I Loved

Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

The Cricket in Times Square

Call it Courage

From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler

The Incredible Journey

Anne of Green Gables

 

(My boys are ages 7/third grade and 12/seventh grade and my little girl is almost 9/fourth grade. Each chose from a selection, and I didn't separate them according to child in the above list.)

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dd,age 7 grade 2-readers from Sonlight's readers 2 advanced program along with some books from the intermediate list as well.

 

dd,age 12 grade7- (tenatively planned and subject to change depending on availabilty)

Beowulf

Anno's Medieval World

Outrageous Women of the Middle Ages

Adam Of the Road

Catherine Called Birdy

A Proud Taste of Scarlet and Minever

Puck of Pook's Hill

The Sword in the Stone

Matilda Bone

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

Bard of Avon

The Dark is Rising

Sea of Trolls

The Shakespeare Stealer

The Forestwife

Black Horses for the King

The Samurai's Tale

Tuck Everlasting

The Birchbark House

Hatchet

Where the Redfern Grows

The Phantom Tollbooth

A Single Shard

I, Juan de Pareja

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This is some of what we're doing related to history for this year.

 

L's Reading and Writing:

 

Week 1

The Stone Age News

Painters of the Caves, P. Lauber

Usborne Who were the First People?

Usborne Living in Prehistoric Times

Prehistoric Peoples, Troll

 

Write paper regarding early mankind

 

 

Week 2-4

from Ten Kings: Hammurabi

The Crystal Pool, pg 18

Bronze Cauldron, pg 1 (Hittite)

Cities of Splendour: pg 22

(revisit) Gilgamesh the King, The Revenge of Ishtar, The Last Quest of Gilgamesh,

all by Ludmila Zeman (LOVE them)

read book about Lugulbanda

 

Write a report on Hammurabi in week 2. In weeks 3 and 4, write a summary of one myth read each week, pointing out some of the literary elements we’re studying.

 

Week 5-6

The Waters of Life, intro pg 4 and pgs 22-25

The Crystal Pool, pg 50

 

Write about one myth each week, pointing out some literary elements.

 

Library Books:

How Would You Survive as an Ancient Egyptian? Jacqueline Morley

Secrets of the Mummies, Harriet Griffey

 

 

Week 7

David’s Songs: His Psalms and Their Story, Colin Eisler, Jerry Pinkney

Moses in Egypt, Brad Kessler (Rabbit Ears CD)

from Ten Kings: David

Young Heroes of the Bible, Kirk Douglas

Bronze Cauldron, pg 41

Cities of Splendour pg. 26

Mighty Mountains pg. 16

 

Write about King David.

 

Library Books:

The Flower of Sheba, Doris Orgel, et al

Queen Esther the Morning Star, Mordicai Gerstein

The Wailing Wall, Leonard E. Fisher

Dybbuk: A Story Made in Heaven, Francine Prose

King Solomon and His Magic Ring, Edie Wiesel

The Hanukkah Story, Marylin Hirsh

 

 

Week 8

Usborne Stories from Around the World, pg 51

The Waters of Life, pgs 6-9

The Crystal Pool, pg 8

Bronze Cauldron, pg 26, 58

Cities of Splendour pg. 18

Once a Mouse.... Marcia Brown - Liam read

Favorite Fairy Tales Told in India, Virginia Haviland

 

Write about Buddha (lit readings).

 

 

Week 9

The Paper Dragon, Marguerite Davol

The Treasure Chest: A Chinese Tale, Rosalind Wang

The Junior Thunder Lord, Laurence Yep

Usborne Stories from Around the World, pg 77

The Waters of Life, pgs 16-21

Sacred Skies, intro pg 4 and pgs 12-15

The Crystal Pool, pg 41, 115

Bronze Cauldron, pg 71

Mighty Mountains pg. 10

Fabulous Beasts pg 14

 

Choose one story to write about.

 

 

Week 10

Usborne Stories from Around the World, pgs 56, 62, 87, 99, 106

The Crystal Pool, pg 57, 71, 82, 102, 107, 113

Bronze Cauldron, pg 121

Ice Mummy, Dubowski

 

Write about the ice mummy.

 

Library Books:

Fat Cat: A Danish Folktale, Margaret R. Macdonald

 

 

Week 11

Nothing....

Do report on Crete (history reading).

 

 

Week 12

Why Spider Spins Tales, Palazzo-Craig

The Hunterman and the Crocodile, Diakite

Anansi, Brian Gleeson (Rabbit Ears cassette)

Usborne Stories from Around the World, pgs 72, 94

The Crystal Pool, pg 76, 91, 120, 128

Bronze Cauldron, pg 11, 45, 113

Mighty Mountains pg 20

Fabulous Beasts pg 6

 

Choose one myth to write about.

 

 

Week 13

Write Like an Ancient Egyptian!

The Silver Treasure, pg 103

 

Write about Egyptian hyroglyphics.

 

Library Books:

You Wouldn’t Want to be... David Stewart

 

 

Week 14

How Would You Survive as an Ancient Egyptian?

Ms. Frizzle’s Adventures: Ancient Egypt

 

Write about some aspect of New Kingdom

 

 

Week 15

A Children's Treasury of Mythology

Usborne Stories from Around the World, pg 19

Sacred Skies, pgs 16-19

The Waters of Life, pgs 26-end

Beneath the Earth, intro pg 4 and pgs 10-13

The Crystal Pool, pg 67

The Silver Treasure, pg 27, 70

Bronze Cauldron, pg 78

Mighty Mountains pg 6

The First Book of Ancient Greece, Robinson, begin - 9

 

Write report based on Robinson book read.

 

Week 16

The Arabian Nights, Illus. Jr. Library

Arabian Nights CD, Jim Weiss

Usborne Stories from Around theWorld, pg 11

 

Do book report on the Arabian Nights.

 

 

Week 17

Usborne Stories from Around the World, pgs 28, 45, 112

Sacred Skies, pgs 20-21

The Waters of Life, pgs 14-15

The Crystal Pool, pg 1, 32, 45, 88

Bronze Cauldron, pg 116

Fabulous Beasts pg 18, 24, 26

Cities of Splendour pg 10

Opossum and the Great Firemaker

How Night Came to Be: A Story from Brazil

 

Do report on stories in Legend of Lord Eight Deer (lit reading).

 

Library Books:

Gods and Godesses of the Ancient Maya, Leonard Everett Fisher

The Tale of Rabbit and Coyote, Tony Johnston

The Night the Moon Fell, Pat Mora

 

 

Week 18-19

Tree of Dreams, intro pg 7, and 53

The First Book of Ancient Greece, Robinson, pg 9 - end

Archimedes Takes a Bath, Lexau

Hercules and Other Greek Myths

The 12 Labors of Hercules, coloring book

Hercules and the Greek Gods, coloring book

Pegasus, Mayer

Usborne Tales of the Trojan War

The Iliad, retold by McCarty

from Ten Kings: Alexander the Great

The Librarian who Measured the Earth, Kathryn Lasky (simple, but we hadn't read it earlier)

 

Write about Archimedes one week and Socrates the next. Also do report on Alexander.

 

 

Week 20-21

Aesop’s Fables

Beneath the Earth, pgs 6-9

Bronze Cauldron, pg 20

Cities of Splendour pg 6

 

Write about Romulus one week and choose a Roman Myth to write about the next.

 

 

Week 22-23

Tree of Dreams, pgs 17, 81

The Crystal Pool, pg 95

The Silver Treasure, pg 86

 

Choose one myth to write about each week, drawing out literary elements.

 

Week 24-25

Tree of Dreams, pg 27, 35, 45, 75

 

Write about Confucius and choose one myth to write about.

 

 

Week 26-27

Nothing

Write reports each week related to non-fiction readings such as Cavalryman, Legionary, etc.

 

 

Week 28

Beneath the Earth, pgs 20-23 and 24-end

Sacred Skies, pgs 26-end

The Silver Treasure, pg 31, 53, 75, 98, 121

Bronze Cauldron, pg 14, 49

 

Write about Beowulf (lit selection).

 

 

Week 29-30

The Silver Treasure, pg 51

 

Write about Jesus (history) and Bronze Bow (lit).

 

 

Week 31

Tree of Dreams, pg 67

The Silver Treasure, pg 6

 

Write report on Africa based on history reading.

 

 

Week 32

Tree of Dreams, pg 59

The Silver Treasure, pg 1, 42, 114

Bronze Cauldron, pg 35, 63, 92

 

Write report on Enchanted Caribou or Story of Comock (lit selections).

 

Library Books:

Pyramid of the Sun, Pyramid of the Moon, Leonard Fisher

Land of the Five Suns (Aztecs), Kay McManus

 

 

Week 33

This Place is Lonely, Vicki Cobb

The Biggest Frog in Australia

Usborne Stories from Around the World, pgs 6, 32, 123

Sacred Skies, pgs 22-25

Beneath the Earth, pgs 14-17

The Crystal Pool, pg 24, 36, 79

The Silver Treasure, pg 14, 57, 81

Bronze Cauldron, pg 37, 82, 107

Fabulous Beasts, pg 10

Mighty Mountains, pg 26

 

Choose one myth to write about, bringing out literary elements.

 

 

Week 34

The Sea Maidens of Japan

Usborne Stories from Around the World, pg 118

Tree of Dreams, pg 9

Sho and the Demons of the Deep

Beneath the Earth, pgs 18-19

Sacred Skies, pgs 6-11

The Waters of Life, pgs 10-13

The Crystal Pool, pg 61

The Silver Treasure, pg 91

Bronze Cauldron, pg 97

Mighty Mountains, pg 24

 

Choose one myth and address literary elements.

 

 

Week 35-36

Usborne Reader: Pompeii

Cleopatra: The Queen of Kings, MacDonald

Usborne Roman Soldier’s Handbook

 

Write about Cleopatra and about Masada.

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Okay Karen,

 

I hope some of these ideas are helpful to you. When I was a classroom teacher, I discovered the benefits of doing literary study out loud. Even with my high schoolers, I got much better results and was able to assign more difficult works when we read them out loud. I would read out loud, stopping to explain difficult/archaic vocabulary or to point out something important. Then at natural stopping points, I would engage them in discussion. Later, after the book was completed, I would give writing assignments. I had much greater success doing it that way, rather than assigning the reading, expecting them to understand what they read and come prepared to discuss. I would spend so much time making sure that they understood what they read, that we would never get any real discussion. Reading out loud changed all that.

 

When I later moved to teaching elementary, I kept up the practice. It continued to work well and to allow me to assign more difficult works than they could read on their own.

 

In our homeschool, I have continued the practice. I started out trying to do 2 different literature classes, but it was way too time-consuming so I switched to one combined class. I read the book out loud and we discuss. For elementary, I have limited goals for literature study: (1)fill them up with good stories, (2) learn to think about what they are reading, particularly the worldview, (3) introduce very gentle literary analysis: basically plot, character, setting, theme.

 

That's it. We read out loud. Different years I've tried different things. Sometimes, I have a book for each of us and we team-read out loud; other times I read the whole thing out loud. We discuss as described above. I don't assign anything generally. If they can discuss the book with me, that's all I expect. We use CW, so I don't really feel the need to "write across the curriculum" in elementary school.

 

They do have independent reading selections. These are generally at or below their reading level (as opposed to the Studied Literature, which is well above their reading level), read completely independently. Sometimes there are narrations, sometimes not. Just depends. Last year, I required a Book Report a month. This year, I may do 1 per quarter. That's more reasonable. A book report can be a written narration or something about setting or character. I have some specific things that I'm looking for.

 

I don't really assign the independent reading. I have a very long designated shelf and book basket filled with books correlated to history. They chose which they are interested in. They also chose a Free Book (from any genre) to read and a Book Report book that is approved by me. In addition, they are big readers on their own. Their free reading is entirely unrestricted.

 

We are CM-influenced that way. They generally have several books going at once. Our literature approach is really low-stress, but I feel like the benefits are tremendous, and I'm very pleased with the level of discussion. I don't use literature guides, relying instead on Aristotle's Common Topics that were discussed at Circe. We use Socratic discussion so my questions can be applied to any book. Of course, I also have lots of experience teaching literature and I'm pretty good off the cuff, so YMMV. Use lit guides if they give you confidence or try something like Teaching the Classics. Seems like a lot of people like that course and it is the same basic idea that I use.

 

Does that answer your question?

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Thank you, Angelina, for your very detailed description! I think I'll try to do a couple extra read-alouds together for formal study, then.

 

We often have several books going at once, too. One read-aloud book and several independently-read books. I think we can do something like what you do...narrations on the independently-read books.

 

BTW, which Circe speaker talked about the Aristotle common topics? I must have missed that one.

 

(I tried to rep you, but I'll have to spread it around some more first. :))

 

Thanks again!

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This is my read-aloud list for my will be 7 and 9 year olds. I allow them to pick their own books for independent reading still. I also plan to read The Tale of Desperaux aloud before we see the movie. Nathan has already listened to it.

 

Five Children and It (Edith Nesbit)

The Family Under the Bridge (Natalie Savage Carlson)

Five Little Peppers and How They Grew (Margaret Sidney)

Mary Poppins (P. L. Travers)

Red Sails to Capri (Ann Weil)

The Twenty-One Balloons (William Pene Du Bois)

The Rescuers (4-book series) (Margery Sharp)

Aesop for Children (Milo Winter)

The Borrowers (Mary Norton)

 

Our science (vertebrates) and history (SOTW 2) selections are also listed on my blog.

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So far on the list for my 2nd grader:

 

Chapter Books (Read-Alouds):

Babe: The Gallant Pig, Dick King-Smith

Little House in the Big Woods, Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Little Pilgrim's Progress, Helen Taylor (second part, Christiana's journey -- we read Christian's journey last school year)

The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, Kate DiCamillo

The Princess and the Goblin, George Macdonald

 

Chapter Books Related to History:

The Door in the Wall, Marguerite de Angeli

Otto of the Silver Hand, Howard Pyle

The Sword in the Tree, Robert Clyde Bulla

Tales From Shakespeare, Charles and Mary Lamb or The Children's Shakespeare, Edith Nesbit

 

... and a whole lot of shorter (picture book) read-alouds corresponding to SOTW Middle Ages. :)

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Here is my dd's second grade reading list for the year. I am trying to keep the assigned reading short since my dd reads about an hour each day on her own and I don't want to discourage that. There are other books that we will use for history and literature, but we will be reading and studying those together.

 

Books she is planning to Read:

The Phoenix and the Carpet

The Enchanted Castle

Half Magic (again)

Seven Day Magic (again)

THe rest of the Little House series

 

Books I scheduled:

The Wizard of Oz

The Velveteen Rabbit

Charlotte's Web

McBroom's Wonderful One-Acre Farm

Twenty-one Balloons

Kildee House

Socks

Lumber Camp Library

 

Books for the additional reading book basket

 

The Boxcar Children

The Cabin Faced West

Misty

The Secret Garden

Pippi Longstocking

Winnie the Pooh

Peter Pan

The Toothpaste Millionaire

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