No name

Language of God Level E

Author(s): 
Christine Schintgen
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Resource Type: 
Copyright: 
2008
Review: 

We love CHC English workbooks, this one is no exception. From details such as being spiralbound and nice, white paper, an uncluttered layout, to the pictures and Catholic content, these books offer a superior choice!

This is the first middle school level of the series and the first no longer written by Nancy Nicholson but by Christine Schintgen, an English college professor, who happens to be the grandaughter of Hilda Van Stockum! This level has a part dedicated to writing skills that is taken more in-depth than previous levels: paragraph format, the Writing Process, pre-writing, drafting, transitions, editing, proofreading, five-paragraph essay, thesis statement, etc

As with the rest of the series, the book has the right amount of information and exercises--we do a page or two a day in our homeschool. The Catholic content makes this book a wondeful choice for Catholic families!

Publisher: 
Catholic Heritage Curricula
Series: 
Language of God
Binding: 
Spiralbound
Perspective: 
Catholic
Number of pages: 
170 pages
Review Date: 
9-12-2009
Reviewed by: 
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Language of God Level E

The Big Dipper

Book cover: 'The Big Dipper'
Author(s): 
Franklyn M. Branley
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1991
Review: 

A very simple science book for children with cartoon-like pictures (nice cartoon, not cheezy-cartoon) that introduces some basic concepts about the stars. The very simple story line discusses looking at the night sky, that you see different stars in the summer and winter, where the big dipper got it's name, the names of the stars that make up the big dipper, how people can find direction from the North Star and the traditional constellation Ursa Major that the Big Dipper belongs to. The language is very simple, but not at all dumbed down - especially appropriate for preschool.

Publisher: 
Harper Collins
Series: 
Let's Read and Find Out Science
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Additional notes: 

Copyrights 1962/1991

Review Date: 
1-29-01
Reviewed by: 
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Big Dipper

The Moon Seems to Change

Book cover: 'The Moon Seems to Change'
Author(s): 
Franklyn M. Branley
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1987
Review: 

This book, through simple illustrations and very readable text, gives young children (approximately Kindergarten thru third grade) an excellent explanation of the moon and the changes we can easily observe in it during a month. What often seem like complex concepts - the phases of the moon and its movement relative to the earth - are made very understandable through the text and a very simple experiment involving an orange stuck onto a pencil (a styrofoam ball stuck onto a chopstick worked quite well for us with less mess) and a flashlight. Naturally, it's recommended to do some real observations along with the book.

Publisher: 
Harper Collins
Series: 
Let's Read and Find Out Science
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Additional notes: 

Copyrights 1960/1987

Review Date: 
12-2-99
Reviewed by: 
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Moon Seems to Change

What Makes a Magnet?

Book cover: 'What Makes a Magnet?'
Author(s): 
Franklyn M. Branley
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1996
Review: 

What Makes a Magnet? constitutes a fairly substantial introduction to magnets for children approximately ages 5 to 9. They are invited to do a little discovery for themselves by doing some "fishing" with a magnet in a box of miscellaneous objects and see what things the magnet will pick up. The book goes on to explain that magnets pick up, not everything made of metal, but objects which contain iron in particular. Also explained are how to make your own magnet and compass, the poles of magnets and the earth, and the history of the discovery of the first magnets (lodestones) and how they were used for early navigation. This is a very nice early science book (despite a few "corny" pictures) because of the rich content in a simple format and how the book actively involves the child in the learning process.

Publisher: 
Harper Collins
Series: 
Let's Read and Find Out Science
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
12-27-99
Reviewed by: 
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What Makes a Magnet?

Elephant Families

Book cover: 'Elephant Families'
Author(s): 
Arthur Dorros
Subject(s): 
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1994
Review: 

This book focuses on elephant's care for and interaction with each other with a significant emphasis on elephants being killed by poachers.

Unlike the interesting scientific information designed to impart facts and help children develop an interest in science (as I've come to expect from the Let's Read-and-Find-Out Science Series) this book gets lost in the mediocrity of environmentalism by giving children a sort of emotional attachment to elephants (by over-emphasizing their slight similarities with people) and shocking them with details about how and why people kill elephants and a somewhat gruesome (relative to the age-level) picture of a truck filled with blood-stained elephant tusks. Rather disappointing altogether.

Publisher: 
HarperTrophy
Series: 
Let's Read-and-Find-Out Science
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
32 pages
Review Date: 
4-4-01
Reviewed by: 
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Elephant Families

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: 
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Little Britches

Little Britches

Book Cover for "Little Britches"
Author(s): 
Ralph Moody
Grade / Age level: 
Copyright: 
1950
Review: 

We are now in the middle of the Little Britches series, written by Ralph Moody. I cannot speak for Ralph Moody's later books, or his fiction. I am referring to his series of books for children which are also his autobiography. The books have all of the elements you would expect in a good story and more! Family love, courage, disappointments and celebrations, birth, death, creativity and adventures galore.

Little Britches is what his cowboys friends call the author when he is young, and learns to ride, to become quite the young cowboy. The story begins as the family moves to Colorado to see if Father gets better from his tuberculosis. What follows is the story of their very difficult life as ranchers. But behind the story is the quality of people they were. The author so beautifully writes about the virtues in his parents and how they taught him to be a person of integrity and character--most importantly by being people of integrity and character themselves, not to mention unbounded generosity.

The writing is engaging, interesting, and we have such a hard time turning the iPad off when we arrive at our destinations! So there are trials, but also exciting, rewarding and celebratory times. There are inner struggles and frustrating episodes, there is patience, sacrifice, and love, lots of respecting love.

I mean it. I have seldom read a book when the sacrificial decisions made because of Love were so excruciatingly difficult, and yet made with a heart who unflinchingly wants to do what is right. Yet in these books what emerges as the most beautiful episode so far is one that has me me pondering at night: Mother, after having enduring what is of hardest in this life--the loss of a husband while expecting their sixth child, incredibly hard physical work so as to feed and clothe her children--and finally finding a stable income and a little security in the community, makes the ultimate choice. She gives up everything they have achieved there, their relationships, their place in the community, their income, everything--so as to protect a man from being convicted. It is a long story, but she ends up being the only witness against him, and if she leaves the state he cannot be convicted of a crime she believes him "morally innocent" of. She does ask the two older children to help her make this incredibly difficult, heart-breaking decision, and perhaps it is the best scene of the book: the two teenagers tell her, confidently, that they do not have to think of what Father would want them to do, they know: you put the Other's life before yours. The second book of the series ends with the mother and children, their hearts broken into pieces, exhausted and frightened, leaving everything they love behind, not even having had the chance to say goodbye.

That is what Love is. No matter the cost, we Love. Would I have done it? I doubt it very much. A widow with six kids? For a man who is half-crazy, a drunkard, who may never even know I did it for him? No, I doubt it. I'd find so many reasons to stay, and they would be excellent reasons. No one would ever blame me.

Had she acted like I probably would, and admittedly most everyone would, I don't think the delightful series Little Britches would have been written. It is exactly because he had such a Mother, and Father, and learned at home of Faith and Love, that Ralph Moody told himself he would write his story one day.

Series: 
Little Britches
Review Date: 
3-6-2013
Reviewed by: 
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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: 
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Frost on the Windowpane

Little House Country, A Photo Guide to the Home Sites of Laura Ingalls Wilder

Book cover: 'Little House Country, A Photo Guide to the Home Sites of Laura Ingalls Wilder'
Author(s): 
William T. Anderson
Subject(s): 
Illustrator(s): 
Leslie A. Kelly (photography)
ISBN: 
961 008 881
Resource Type: 
Copyright: 
1989
Review: 

My family and I may never be able to visit the "Little House" country in person, but this photo-filled book makes us feel as if we were there. This is a picture book in the most literal sense of the word! Each of the full-color, professional photographs has a caption of several sentences describing the photograph and some interesting details about the scenes in them.

The photographer traveled through Wisconsin, Kansas, Minnesota, Iowa, South Dakota, Missouri, and New York to take these pictures. We can see the footbridge over Plum Creek in the summer time and the sun rising over a wintry Silver Lake. We are taken inside Laura's prairie schoolhouse and into the writing study she used as an adult. We are shown a picture of the Ingalls' family Bible with Ma's beautiful handwriting and another of Pa's fiddle. These photographs truly reinforce the idea that the "Little House" books are telling the story of a real family. This book is a "Must Read" for any fan of the series!

Publisher: 
Terrell Publishing
Series: 
Little House on the Prairie
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
48 pages
Review Date: 
9-3-02
Reviewed by: 
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Little House Country, A Photo Guide to the Home Sites of Laura Ingalls Wilder

The Little House Cookbook

Book cover: 'The Little House Cookbook'
Author(s): 
Barbara M. Walker
Subject(s): 
Resource Type: 
Copyright: 
1979
Review: 

For all those of you whose mouths were watering at all the descriptions of food in the Little House Books (particularly Farmer Boy!), Barbara Walker (inspired by the requests of her own children) has done a great deal of research in compiling lots of recipes (over 100) and other background information on the meals from these books.

Publisher: 
HarperCollins Publishers
Series: 
Little House on the Prairie
Binding: 
Softcover
Number of pages: 
240 pages
Review Date: 
3-15-01
Reviewed by: 
TitleSort: 
Little House Cookbook