History

The Story of Saint Perpetua

Author(s): 
Mike Aquilina (script consultant)
Setting: 
Grade / Age level: 
Resource Type: 
Copyright: 
2009
Review: 

This short animated film (32 minutes) tells the story of Saint Perpetua and her companions, who were martyred in Carthage, in North Africa, in the year 203. The animation is good, the best of any Catholic animated films I've seen, though not reaching the quality of The Prince of Egypt. The storyline, however, is quite rich and historically detailed and skillfully brings to life the sorrows and fears, hopes and joys, present in the life and struggles of these martyrs, and the early Church in general. In particular, the concept that those awaiting martyrdom might fear pain, but do not fear death, is very helpful and hopeful!

The story is quite dramatic and might be difficult for more sensitive children, though the producers have skillfully avoided gore or some details that are unnecessary for children. In fact, for many children it might be a good introduction to the idea of martyrdom. The comic relief, provided by the devout pagan jailer (a real-life character who ends up converting and tells Perpetua's story to others!) and his attempts to communicate with his "gods", helps draw children into the story as well. My younger children (ages 5-11) have been entranced by this story and have consequently developed a real devotion to Saints Felicity and Perpetua thanks to this film.

I do recommend previewing the movie first before sharing it with younger or more sensitive children.

Mike Aquilina, a pre-eminent Catholic author and speaker on the Fathers of the Church (and a homeschool dad of six!) served as script consultant for this video.

The same company has also produced a 55 minute documentary entitled The Passion of Saint Perpetua: Martyr of the Faith which is also quite good and includes detailed commentary from Mike Aquilina. Although it has some content that is a little more mature than that found in the video, on the whole it's surprisingly family-friendly and is quite moving!

Publisher: 
Christian History Institute
Series: 
Catholic Heroes of the Faith
Perspective: 
Catholic
Additional notes: 

This animated DVD was donated for review by Catholic Heroes of the Faith. We were able to rent "The Passion of Saint Perpetua: Martyr of the Faith" through Amazon.com for a very reasonable fee.

Review Date: 
10-29-2009
Reviewed by: 
TitleSort: 
Story of Saint Perpetua

CHC Lesson Plan Guide: Middle School Years

Book cover: 'CHC Lesson Plan Guide: Middle School Years'
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
2005
Review: 

I have just finished planning the school year for my 5th and 8th graders using the new CHC Lesson Plan Guide for the Middle School Years, and I have never had such a productive and enjoyable time of it! Normally, I like to plan, but there never seemed to be enough time or information in one place to do it effectively or efficiently. I prefer a customized curriculum for each of my students, emphasizing their particular interests while shoring up their weaker subjects. With six students alongside little ones, planning the school year's curriculum is a very time-consuming process. CHC has made all the difference for me this year.

The Lesson Plan Guide is just that---a complete guide to designing your student's studies for each of the middle school (grades 5-8) years. There is structure within flexibility, and many options to appeal to a diversity of students with different gifts and talents. This is not a "school-in-a-box" that you can open and immediately put to work. You will need to spend a few hours for each grade level, looking over the courses that are detailed for you, and considering your student. But, this investment of a few hours will provide you, as the teacher, with a firm overview of the path you will take to meet the goals at the other end of the school year. Having that "big picture" helps tremendously when motivation lags. Using the CHC Lesson Planner (reviewed elsewhere) will simplify this customization further as they were designed to be used together.

Each of the four years is laid out with a plan for core subjects, non-core and elective subjects, enrichment materials, and parent resources. Sample schedules for each grade level are provided as an example of a balanced workload for a typical student. Unique to CHC are the Independent Study Charts that show the student which material he should be able to work on without direct teaching. Six detailed hands-on student courses are provided for up-to-date, beautiful Catholic textbooks in the areas of history, virtues, and Church history. As if that weren't enough value for the money, the Guide also offers wonderful teacher resources that provide the "what-you-need-to-know-to-teach" writing, science, and world history at these grade levels. Several authors contributed these resources, and the different approaches to these subjects are refreshing in their variety.

CHC has managed to produce a wonderful plan for middle-grade students that features the best characteristics that we have come to expect from them:

  • do-able projects that the children both anticipate and cheerfully complete;
  • a unique hands-on approach to most subjects that truly engage the student on several levels;
  • an underlying structure that the teaching parent becomes familiar with as the year goes on;
  • a progression in critical thinking, the ability to work independently for longer periods, and solid academics at a comfortable pace as the years pass.

All in all, this book is one of the best investments available for a Catholic homeschooling family who prefers to individualize their student's curriculum, within limits, while providing a thoroughly Catholic education utilizing multiple methods of learning

This book contains:

Planning Guides:

  • Fifth Grade: (18 pages)
  • Sixth Grade: (18 pages)
  • Seventh Grade: (18 pages)
  • Eighth Grade: (20 pages)

Hands-On Student Courses:

  • 5th Grade From Sea to Shining Sea Hands-On Study Guide (9 pages)
  • 6th Grade All Ye Lands Hands-On Study Guide (9 pages)
  • 7th Grade "The Virtue Tree" Student Course (44 pages)
  • 7th Grade "Timeline of the Republic" Guide (19 pages)
  • 8th Grade: 2000 Years of Christian History Study Guide (12 pages)
  • 8th Grade: "Timeline of the Ages" (19 pages)

Teacher Resources:

  • "Jump Start Your Writing" (26 pages)
  • "Science in a Nutshell" (24 pages)
  • "World History Timeline" (46 pages)
Publisher: 
Catholic Heritage Curricula
Series: 
CHC Lesson Plan
Binding: 
Spiralbound
Perspective: 
Catholic
Number of pages: 
308 pages
Review Date: 
8-23-05
Reviewed by: 
TitleSort: 
CHC Lesson Plan Guide: Middle School Years

Belles On Their Toes

Book cover: 'Belles On Their Toes'
Author(s): 
Frank Gilbreth
Ernestine Gilbreth
Subject(s): 
Copyright: 
1950
Review: 

This sequel to Cheaper by the Dozen is, if anything, even more hilarious. Both share a realism that only a true story can acquire. After Frank B. Gilbreth's death, his wife Lillian takes over his business as an efficiency engineer, traveling to conferences and teaching students in her home. The 11 Gilbreth children are growing up, and manage to find a hilarious situation in each new experiences. As usual, the Gilbreth family faces cigarettes, garden fertilizer, one piece bathing suits, and meetings with the president with equal aplomb and humor. This book is primarily the story of 'Mother', and the Gilbreths after their father's death. I recommend reading it after Cheaper By The Dozen for that reason. Both books contain examples of the prejudices and attitudes of the 'teens and 'twenties, and provide many opportunities for learning experiences.

Video/DVD: This book was made into a movie in 1952. It diverts more from the book than the Cheaper by the Dozen movie, and has taken the form of a musical. It is available on DVD.

Publisher: 
Perennial Classics
Series: 
Cheaper by the Dozen
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
240 pages
Review Date: 
1999
TitleSort: 
Belles On Their Toes

Cheaper by the Dozen

Book cover: 'Cheaper by the Dozen'
Author(s): 
Frank Gilbreth
Ernestine Gilbreth
Subject(s): 
Copyright: 
1948
Review: 

It's the Jazz Age, roadsters are the rage, and an engineer in Massachusetts is raising a vibrant family of 12 children. Welcome to the world of the Gilbreths, where everything comes 'cheaper by the dozen'.

Frank B. Gilbreth originated the science of 'motion study', to improve efficiency. He and his wife Lillian collaborated happily on books, factory layouts, and their large family. This book is essentially a family biography written by two of the Gilbreth children. Uproariously funny for families of any size, Cheaper By The Dozen will be particularly fun for homeschoolers to read. Mr. Gilbreth takes an active part in the children's education; painting glow-in-the-dark constellations on the ceiling and playing foreign language records during 'unavoidable delay' in the bathroom. Nuisance boyfriends, tonsil removal, and new babies are mundane occurrences at the Gilbreth home, and Father uses every event to teach science, and efficiency. The results are predictably hilarious.

Poignant, memorably funny, and always realistic, Cheaper By The Dozen can be read out loud or on its own. It is a genuine experience of life in the early 1900's, with all the attitudes and prejudices of that era, and will be a learning experience for your whole family.

Note: There is an instance of profanity in Chapter 2 which can easily be edited by a proofreading parent.

Video/DVD: This book was made into a movie in 1950 and is one of our family's favorites - a real classic. It is available on DVD.

Publisher: 
Perennial Classics
Series: 
Cheaper by the Dozen
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
224 pages
Review Date: 
1999
TitleSort: 
Cheaper by the Dozen

Survival in the Storm

The Dust Bowl Diary of Grace Edwards
Book cover: 'Survival in the Storm: The Dust Bowl Diary of Grace Edwards'
Author(s): 
Katelan Janke
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
2002
Review: 

My ten year old daughter has been enjoying the Dear America series from Scholastic. I believe that they've had a positive effect on her character (particular in the "complaint" department) as the stories focus on girls about her age living in difficult times. As they're written by a number of different authors, please don't take this review as an endorsement of all of the titles.

Survival in the Storm is the fictional story (in the format of a diary) of twelve-year old Grace Edwards who lives in Dalhart, Texas - a city near the center of the five-state area hardest hit by the infamous droughts and dust storms that plagued the Southwest for nearly a decade during the Great Depression.

The story provides a nice balance of family stability amidst hardships that give children today a fair look at the challenges of life in that time period. Grace volunteers at a hospital alongside her mother where the reader learns of the terrible illnesses associated with the dust storms. Families band together to help each other when hard times come and many leave for the "promised land" of California, only to be stuck in migrant camps where conditions are no better than at home. Throughout the story, virtues of perseverance and kindness are shown to be the things that "get people through" tough times.

Publisher: 
Scholastic
Series: 
Dear America
Binding: 
Sewn Hardcover
Number of pages: 
186 pages
Review Date: 
10-13-03
Reviewed by: 
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Survival in the Storm

Voyage on the Great Titanic

The Diary of Margaret Ann Brown
Subject(s): 
Setting: 
Copyright: 
1990
Review: 

A fictional diary of a young Irish-English girl who is raised in a Catholic orphanage in London and is hired as a companion to a wealthy lady for the duration of the Titanic's voyage to America (where she hopes to meet up with her older brother). Margaret, having lived on the streets with her brother for some time before coming to the orphanage, is wise beyond her years with a somewhat cynical streak. Her attitude toward the opulence of the Titanic and the lifestyle of her first class passengers gives the reader both a sense of the historical reality of the Titanic and the times in which this tragic event took place. It is within this context that mankind learned a severe lesson about his own limitations. I think it is a rather good way to illustrate these details of the Titanic - through the eyes of someone who, like us, is unaccustomed to such things.

The author attempts to treat the Catholic Church and Margaret's Irish-Catholic upbringing with respect. However, she betrays a lack of understanding of at least one rather significant detail... In the story, Margaret makes no distinction between a Catholic Mass and a "Mass" [according to the story] which is presided over by the ship's captain. In reality a girl who had spent five years in an orphanage (and become close friends with the nuns there) would have been familiar with these distinctions and considered them important. We also know that there was a Catholic Mass said aboard the Titanic that fateful Sunday (as explained on the website about Fr. Thomas Byles).
Margaret has a rather innocent romantic interest in one of the ship's stewards (although I imagine that the two of them spending time alone together would probably have been frowned upon) and receives a farewell kiss from him before he goes down with the Titanic.

It might make an interesting point of discussion to consider how Margaret (or someone in her position) might have turned to her Catholic faith in order to try to cope with her loss in this great tragedy.

Publisher: 
Scholastic
Series: 
Dear America
Review Date: 
7-7-2000
Reviewed by: 
TitleSort: 
Voyage on the Great Titanic

Gettysburg

Book cover: 'Gettysburg'
Author(s): 
MacKinlay Kantor
Subject(s): 
Setting: 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1952
Review: 

The Civil War Battle of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania (July 1 - 3, 1863) is a complex, multi-faceted piece of history that would be difficult to understand after reading just one book. If you ever find yourself in the South-Central Pennsylvania, I would recommend a visit. I've been there twice and it's very a moving, historically interesting site.

This book offers a glimpse into a number of aspects of the human side of the war. The author met with a number of Civil War veterans personally, and so the accounts contained within the book are very human and anecdotal. He tries to give us a sense of the flavor of life in that time period; the way people thought about each other - particularly those on opposite sides of the Potomac River.

Like many Landmark books, this probably isn't the first place you want to turn to in studying about Gettysburg - and this one isn't quite as cohesive as I would like. I think it would be most interesting and accessible to upper grade schoolers who had already become familiar with events in a general way from a textbook or from a visit to the battlefield. My 11 year old daughter tackled this independently this past year in the midst of other books on the civil war, bits and pieces of Ken Burns' Civil War Documentary and enjoyed and benefited from it.

Publisher: 
Random House
Series: 
Landmark
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
189 pages
Review Date: 
12-29-04
Reviewed by: 
TitleSort: 
Gettysburg

The Swamp Fox of the Revolution

Author(s): 
Stewart Holbrook
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1959
Review: 

Back in print! This interesting and entertaining story is a biography of Revolutionary War General Francis Marion and his significant but oft-forgotten role in winning our independence. Marion is a very interesting character I should have learned about in my history classes in grade school! He fought the British against what seemed like impossible odds (in the Southern Colonies) and ended up playing a very significant role in winning the British surrender. His courage and mercy (he allows his prisoners go free if they promise not to rejoin the other side) are admirable.

Publisher: 
Random House
Series: 
Landmark
Binding: 
Sewn Hardcover
Number of pages: 
180 pages
Additional notes: 

A Landmark book with complete index

Review Date: 
1999
Reviewed by: 
TitleSort: 
Swamp Fox of the Revolution

Little Britches

Father and I Were Ranchers
Book cover: 'Little Britches: Father and I Were Ranchers'
Author(s): 
Ralph Moody
Subject(s): 
Setting: 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1950
Review: 

Little Britches is the first book in an eight-book series by Ralph Moody and came so highly recommended that I was concerned about being disappointed. We shouldn't have waited; it is brilliant! This book is particularly well-suited to being read aloud and will be enjoyed by every age grouping. It would be a wonderful book to have "Daddy" read to the family.

The titles in the series are:

  • Little Britches
  • Man of the Family
  • The Home Ranch (overlaps in time with Man of the Family)
  • Mary Emma & Company
  • The Fields of Home
  • Shaking the Nickel Bush
  • The Dry Divide
  • Horse of a Different Color

Little Britches is the first part of the story of the author's life, set in the early years of the 1900s. When he was 8 years old, his family moved from New Hampshire to Colorado in an attempt to improve his father's health. Life around the turn of the century comes alive for the reader and listeners, and the descriptions of holiday meals, special treats, school days, cattle ranching, and the weather are fascinating. The family faces many challenges that are still faced in Colorado, and the lessons they learn are applicable to all of us. Mr. Moody's father is a wise, soft-spoken, religious man who teaches his son not only what it means to be a rancher, but also what it means to be a man.

We enjoyed this book tremendously, and only partly because we can identify with the weather challenges and the fight for water rights that are a part of modern-day Colorado. We enjoyed it mostly because of the picture of a loving family, living a simple life, and working for the good of all. This story gives a more accurate picture of life on the prairies than do the Little House books, and its appeal spans a wider age range. There area few spots of cowboy-type rough language that are easily ignored if the story is read aloud. We heartily recommend Little Britches!

Publisher: 
University of Nebraska Press
Series: 
Little Britches
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
260 pages
Review Date: 
1999
Reviewed by: 
TitleSort: 
Little Britches

Frost on the Windowpane

Author(s): 
Christine Coley
Margot Davidson
Subject(s): 
Resource Type: 
Copyright: 
2002
Review: 

"Art and Composition Activities for Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder"

This deceptively-simple supplement to Little House in the Big Woods packs a wallop of meaningful content into easy and fun art and writing assignments. Not only will it will help children understand the book better, but it provides full-fledged lessons in art appreciation and composition.

The bulk of this resource consists of "chapter activities" which generally include three segments:

1. "Discussion" - Simple discussion questions are intended to start conversations about the book and invite the child to compare their own life with Laura's life. Discussions such as these are excellent for reading comprehension, thinking skills, etc.

2. "Writing" - Assignments are simple and related to the story, suc as writing about a special gift you have received for Christmas. The unique thing about these assignments is that they each have a corresponding worksheet in the back of the booklet that help the child to collect his thoughts, organize ideas, and in the process learn to become a better writer.

3. "Art" - The simple art projects employ a process called "discipline based art education". Rather than simply assign a drawing based on the story, the child is presented with a famous work of art (such as Van Gogh's Bedroom by Vincent Van Gogh) which provides a good example of an artistic feature that they will use in their assignment. In the case of Van Gogh's Bedroom, the child sees how the artist made the picture three dimensional (simple instructions are included) and replicates that aspect of the painting into their own artwork (in this case a drawing of the attic). What a great way to apply art appreciation to the child's work (reminiscent of the Suzuki method in music). All of the artwork can be viewed online (websites are included) or purchased in postcard form from the publisher.

Rounding out the booklet are...

Activities before Reading, which includes projects about the four seasons and about the geography of Wisconsin

Activities after Reading, which includes instructions for making little books relating to the story, a three-dimensional diorama of a scene from the story, planning an evening "Little House Style", comparing the child's life to Laura's and some simple recipes.

I"m very pleased to recommend this very well-thought-out booklet as a worthwhile, family-friendly resource. Suitable for a wide age range, especially grades one thru five.

Publisher: 
Hillside Education
Series: 
Little House on the Prairie
Binding: 
Loose-leaf (binder-ready)
Number of pages: 
50 pages
Review Date: 
10-08-02
Reviewed by: 
TitleSort: 
Frost on the Windowpane