the missionary's wife

Oct. 6, 2007

History

We are studying Early American History this year, and in my quest to save money on curriculum, I did not buy one for history.  I have to admit, I had quite a collection of materials from my 10 years of homeschooling, and I was helped by my sweet friend, Jennifer Steward .

I have so far been reading The Light And The Glory For Children,  A Childs Story of America, (borrowed from Kate ) and Calico Bush, as story of Colonial Maine.  It has been great to read aloud more, do oral and written narration and use my collection of coloring books for coloring pages.  I had been using Story of The World, which I liked, except felt we missed a view of God's providence in history.  It is important to be discerning, one view of God's will and work, might not match with another one, (could Jamestown really be called a Christian settlement?) but I don't want to leave God out of history.

We are having fun, the children drew pictures of Indian homes, built a log cabin out of sticks, and we had a Mayflower day where we ate pea soup and crackers for lunch aboard our boat(the living room rug).

Teaching my children history is one of my favorite reasons to homeschool

 

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Oct. 6, 2007 - Untitled Comment

Posted by drewsfamilytx
Sounds like something my boys would like as well-- except for the pea soup! I think that would cause a mutiny in my house.
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Oct. 12, 2007 - How Creative!

Posted by Jaynee
What special times you must be having not only learning about early US history, but making memories with your children. I just made split pea soup for the first time in our marriage the other day...Daniel always said he'd never eat the stuff...he did NOT like it at all as a youngster. Since the weather has gotten cooler (well, from the 100's to the 80-90's) I've felt like soup. I made some pea soup the other day, but didn't say anything...I made it with a tomato broth, thinner than usual with lots of veggies (potatoes, garlic, onions, carrots)...both he and the children ate their whole bowls and asked for seconds. After lunch was over, I asked, "So, what did you think of the split pea soup?" He thought I was being funny, so I showed him the empty split pea bag and had him closely examine the little bit of left-overs. He said he thought he was eating lentils and he really liked it...he said it was NOTHING like the pea soup he ate as a child...thick, green and pea like :)
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