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Five In a Row - Literature-Based Unit Studies for young children

Grade / Age level: 
Review: 
Five in a Row is a literature based guide to expand learning from tried and true children's books. Anyone who loves cuddling up on the couch with their 3-8 yo would be attracted to this guide(s). The title Five In A Row is the premise of the curriculum guide.........the story is read 5 days in a row. With each reading the child absorbs new details of the story, anticipates favorite passages, notes illustrations in more detail. An example of a lesson is probably the easiest explanation of how it works.

The Story of Ping by Marjorie Flack:
On Monday after reading the story you give a Social Studies lesson. We found China on the world map, and the Yangtze River. The curriculum guide points out that the Yangtze is the 3rd longest River after the Nile and Amazon; locate those on the map. Nearly one third of China's population live on or near the Yangtze River, in fact 1 of every 15 people in the world live along the Yangtze River. The children color a story disk (small picture of Ping) and place it on the world map along the Yangtze River. I expanded this to also making the flag of China from construction paper, discussing Chinese food, going to a Chinese restaurant and eating with chopsticks, and had the waiter speak Chinese and sign our placemat in Chinese. Another lesson under social studies is the lesson of discernment. The child is asked to describe Ping's lesson about discernment: " everything that looks good is not necessarily good". We went on to discuss never taking candy from strangers, whether they should go along with friends' decisions even if it doesn't seem quite right and how mom and dad help train good decisions, sometimes even with a spank like Ping received.

On Tuesday, after reading the story, you teach Literature: define a classic, find the publishing date, explain that the Story of Ping was written when your Grandmother was your age. The authors suggest starting a Literature notebook with a section for literary terms, and a section for vocabulary, (using index cards is the alternative suggestion). Define and write the definition of a classic and fiction in your notebook. Teach the literary device of repetition and show how it is used in the story, bringing it "full circle". Add repetition to your notebook. We expanded this to adding the title of other books we had read under each definition, which qualified as an example.

On Wednesday, after reading the story, teach art. What medium does the illustrator use? (colored pencils) Use colored pencils to draw your favorite illustration. Learn to draw water. Look at how the illustrator draws the suns reflection on the water and try it. Learn to draw water movement around an object in the water, growing concentric circles, and try it. Create the illusion of motion in the water with squiggly lines trailing behind the boat and practice it. Teach about viewpoint. The illustrator uses viewpoint (and they point out examples throughout the book) and how this changes how we see a scene or the world around us. Teach composition and the author again points out examples of good composition with illustrations throughout the book.

On Thursday, after reading the story, have a Math lesson counting Ping's sisters, brothers, aunts and uncles. [math in this program is too contrived to stand alone]. I also have the Christian supplement to FIAR so we did that here. This gives 2-4 scripture verses or bible stories which parallel the FIAR story and give a great basis for more discussion on character training, godly behavior, etc.

On Friday, after reading the story, teach science. Concepts related to this story are...where are ducks placed in the animal classification system, bouyancy, health and safety concerning water (children are not bouyant like ducks!), and reflection of light off water. The author suggests other literary imagery of reflection in the poem "The Mirror" in The World of Christopher Robin (Milne), which one could use as memory work or copywork.

We never spent just one week on most stories. I think this book ended up being 3 weeks long because we chased down bunny trails to study China in more detail, bouyancy and experiments took several days and learning more about ducks, their habitat, diet, etc. was a week. We culminated the week with a trip to the duck pond and decided it was a good idea to start swimming lessons.

The author of FIAR has chosen solid children's literature. My only critique is that some books are out of print and a little difficult to find. The FIAR web site used to sponsor a list for people interested in using this guide. People would share ideas on expanding the books, resources, and trade/sell each other some of the harder to find books. Each FIAR volume contains lesson guides for about 16-20 books. The authors have also written a preschool version called Before Five In A Row and a Beyond Five In A Row, using chapter books. I believe booklists for each of these volumes is available at their web site.

How is this helpful for Catholic homeschoolers? Well, it is one way to introduce children to tried and true, good children's literature. It has taught me a whole lot about analyzing a story and illustrations. It is a great method for teaching story composition, introducing new vocabulary, and isolating literary devices. I recommend it whole heartedly to the Pre-Grammar stage, for developing attentiveness to details, introducing them to art, geography, science and reviewing math skills.

Also, the guide is user friendly. Anyone who has enlisted the help of an older child to help teach their younger children could hand this to a 12+ yo and they could probably manage fine, as well as learn some new things, as I have!

Reviewed by: 
First reviewed: 
1998-99

Flight into Spring

Book cover: Flight into Spring
Author(s): 
Bianca Bradbury
Number of pages: 
184 pages
Copyright: 
1965
ISBN: 
9781932350012
Publisher: 
Bethlehem Books
Binding: 
Softcover
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Review: 

This is a sweet, but challenging story about a 16 year old girl from pro-Confederate Maryland who marries a Union soldier from Connecticut just after the Civil War. The story presents the conflicts of hard feelings and the need for healing between North and South in the context of family relationships. It seems quite unusual as stories usually lead up to an unknown "happily ever after." Here, the emphasis is on this young bride's married life. Cultural and religious differences as well as bitterness from the war make life quite difficult for this young bride living with her husband on his parents' farm. The story makes an interesting backdrop to consider ideas about developing relationships, the give-and-take necessary in marriage and the idea of love and commitment. Appropriate for ages 12 and up.

Reviewed by: 
First reviewed: 
6-24-05

Flower Gardening for Our Lady Chart

Publisher: 
Little Flower Family Apostolate
Binding: 
Other
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Resource Type: 
Review: 
Perspective: 
Catholic
Additional notes: 

These are reprints from 1947-1955. The pictures and text are very "old-fashioned". For members of a Tridentine Mass community, these can be very handy. All of the references to the Holy Mass and liturgical season refer to the Tridentine rite and the old liturgical calendar.

Reviewed by: 
First reviewed: 
2-24-07

Follow the Line Around the World

Author(s): 
Ljungkvist, Laura
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Copyright: 
2008
Publisher: 
Viking Juvenile
Grade / Age level: 
Resource Type: 
Review: 
We love geography in our house! And I love it when I find books that bring geography to little ones! This picture book invites the young child to follow an imaginary line around the world, highlighting interesting facts about different places in every continent. [This review is still under construction.]
Reviewed by: 
First reviewed: 
5-13-2010

For the Beauty of the Earth

A Science Supplement for Catholic Elementary Schools
Book cover
Author(s): 
James Leek
Kenneth Klassen
Diane Dickerson
Anne Patrick
Publisher: 
St. Paul Publishing Co.
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Resource Type: 
Review: 

Like many Catholic Home schooling families, providing a Catholic education was number one on the list of reasons my husband and I wanted to home school. In addition, we wanted a rigorous education, and one that emphasized the beauties of truth and love. Translating these goals into a curriculum is an on-going challenge. Sometimes the books that do a good job presenting a particular subject do it without the light of the Faith. Other times, books that are "solidly Catholic" are also unattractive and uninspiring. We have had to compromise in a lot of areas.

Two that we have not had to compromise in are science and history, and this is largely due to the Catholic school supplements produced by James Leek. These two are among the most excellent resources I have come across in home schooling. They include interesting material for study and careful explanation of an approach to education that is beautifully in keeping with our holy faith. In themselves, these explanations are worth reading and incorporating into your teaching.

In science, for example, Mr. Leek explains the integrating principles for a Catholic science education. Ultimately, our aim is to better know the Creator of everything. Science study also has remote ends: that we develop a respect for God's creation, and learn to contemplate and reflect on it, and that we exercise our minds to improve life and serve our fellow men. At the same time, science has its proximate and immediate ends: to learn how the world works and to take in sensory data of the physical reality around us.

These principles are very well realized in Leek's science supplement. For the Beauty of the Earth includes a textbook with literary selections organized around the common subject matter of science. The lyrics of the beautiful hymn from which this program draws its title provide the organizing system. In addition to "the beauty of the earth" (weather, metals, energy), we have chapters on "the glory of the skies" (stars, the sun), "hill and vale and tree and flower" "the mystic harmony linking sense to sound and sight" (insects, spiders, mammals), and "the joy of human love" (the senses, emotions, the will.)

The corresponding teacher's guide builds on the readings with questions and activities that take the student from considering the text, to observing the natural world, to admiring God's handiwork, and finally, to the religious analogy. An example to illustrate this progression would be the reading of "Phaeton and Apollo." After the selection is read, the student is asked a series of questions on the text: Who was Phaeton? Describe the court of the sun, etc. Next, students are asked to make some observations about the sun: Where does it rise and set? Does it actually move? What makes it appear to move? Then they are asked to consider the sun's role in life on our planet, and finally, to how the sun is like God, how its marvelous working points to the existence of God.

Questions and activities are broken into grade levels so that this program can be used throughout the elementary years. My first reaction when I looked at For the Beauty of the Earth was to think that this was a liberal arts soft-pedaling of the hard subject of science. But after I carefully read the author's introduction, I decided it could be so much more than that, and it more than met those expectations. We used it alternately with our regular science text, allowing the literary selections and projects to set the tone for our textbook's coverage. Along with enjoying some good stories, memorizing poems and scriptures, doing some fun projects (like building a humane mousetrap), I found that the sense of wonder created through the program carried into the rest of our textbook consideration of each topic. The course is cross-referenced with many of the most popular school science text series from the time it was published (early 1980s).

Perspective: 
Catholic
Additional notes: 

Out of print.

Reviewed by: 
First reviewed: 
3-10-2000

For the Children

Words of Love and Inspiration from His Holiness Pope John Paul II
Book cover: For the Children
Author(s): 
Pope John Paul II
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Copyright: 
2000
ISBN: 
978-0439149020
Publisher: 
Scholastic Press/Callaway
Binding: 
Sewn Hardcover
Subject(s): 
Review: 

This is a lovely book with color photos of the Holy Father with children and quotes from speeches and letters that the Holy Father has addressed to children throughout the world. I was so pleased to find such an appealing Catholic book with color pictures and solid text.

The Pictures: Besides photos of the Pope holding and hugging children, there are: a large first communion class pictured with the Pope, a bishop and a number of nuns (in full habit); children from around the world praying (these are very beautiful and quite reverent - such as a group of girls from South Korea in traditional costume in addition to lace chapel veils singing); a picture of the Pope in a classroom looking at a young boy's schoolwork, children stopping their play by a river to look up and wave at the Pope driving by in the "popemobile", two young children receiving their First Holy Communion from the Holy Father (on the tongue!), a baby being baptized by the Pope, and a vintage picture of the Holy Father at his own First Holy Communion (along with a few paragraphs of his remembrance of the occasion).

The Text: Even better than the pictures is the text. Rather than someone else's interpretation of the Pope, we have the Pope himself, appealing to children to pray for him and for the world, to remember Jesus in the Eucharist even in their play and on vacation, renounce violence and learn to love peace in the way the Lord teaches us. They are very thoughtful and powerful passages to read and reflect upon for children of all ages The quotes are well-chosen and are so beautiful and revealing and contain so much truth about children that they would also make excellent meditations for newly-married couples and expectant mothers (and really all parents - even the best parents can use a healthy reminder of the great gifts God has given us in our children - particularly when the house is torn apart, the two year old is wreaking havoc and the baby is crying!!).

Perspective: 
Catholic
Additional notes: 

Binding details: padded hardback

Reviewed by: 
First reviewed: 
8-10-2000

For the Children's Sake

Foundations of Education for Home and School
Book cover: 'For the Children's Sake: Foundations of Education for Home and School'
Author(s): 
Susan Schaeffer McCauley
Number of pages: 
165 pages
Copyright: 
1984
Publisher: 
Crossway Books
Review: 

The information in this book is mostly gleaned from the writings of Charlotte Mason, a 19th century educator who has had a great deal of influence on the homeschooling movement of the late 20th century.

This book will help you look at your child's educational needs and potentials outside the realm of the "school system." The ideas and suggestions are fresh and creative (and especially helpful for the early years). I especially like her focus on introducing children to great art, great music and great literature. After reading her book, I put on a Mozart CD especially for my three year old daughter to listen to - and was delighted to discover that she loved it! A trip we made to an art museum became a treat for her and much more enjoyable for my husband and I because of some other ideas we tried from the book.

Her description of "twaddle" (books and materials that are inferior, "cheezy", - especially many books "written down" to a child's level. etc.) and why to avoid it is so refreshing. Some of these ideas could well be applied to Catholic books - which should not only be Catholic in content, but intelligent and beautiful in presentation. We live in a culture that encourages us to fill our lives with loads and loads of cheap clutter that's usually made in China. I'm trying to buy things more carefully. When choosing new materials for school or even toys for Christmas I'm trying to find things that are beautiful and lasting. This also forces me to buy fewer things because the quality can be more expensive. I believe this is better for my children and my sanity!

Perspective: 
Judeo-Christian
Reviewed by: 
First reviewed: 
1998-99

Foyle's War

Copyright: 
2008
Publisher: 
BBC
Subject(s): 
Setting: 
Grade / Age level: 
Resource Type: 
Review: 
This is a war series, set in England during WWII. The series centers around an aging detective, with a dry English wit, and an unassuming manner. Each episode (there are five sets in the Foyle’s War series and each set has four episodes in it) involves a murder mystery. There is an assortment of likable characters that appear throughout the series. Some of the British dialect is at times difficult to decipher. The movies would also have appeal for history students. There is much gentle humour in the series, not a little war-time pathos. Much attention has been paid to the historical details of the time, and this adds greatly to the enjoyment of the movie. The main attraction, however, is the honesty and integrity of Christopher Foyle, the main character. Well-recommended.
Some readers have cautioned that some material in the series may not be suitable for children. Parental discretion advised.
Additional notes: 

Guest review by the Hogan Family

First reviewed: 
1-15-2009

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