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Using The Story of The World as a Spine For Learning

Do you ever just wonder WHERE TO START in homeschooling?  

What can be the basis for all of your learning?

The Story of the World has been an integral part of our homeschool over the years - and served as the spine for our homeschool for many years.

I want to share how we use this basic history text and activity guide as a spine for learning in our homeschool. Along with those two things I got just a bit creative, did some research, and came up with engaging, memorable, and fun activities for my children.

Yes, we used the Story of the World at points for supplemental reading, listening, and just for fun, but his post will address how we used The Story of the World as a spine for learning in our homeschool.

Using the Story of the World as a Spine for Learning in Your Homeschool

The Story of the World was always a wonderful SPINE for all of our other learning. I pulled read-alouds, music selections, art study, science, and other subjects from our activities in Story of the World. 

Plus, this book is written by Susan Wise-Bauer. I have enormous respect for her and all of her curriculum pieces have worked well for my children. (We are fans of Writing With Ease and First Language Lessons.)

If you are on the beginning of your homeschool journey, or have never read The Well Trained Mind, I HIGHLY recommend this book. I read it before we started homeschooling and it shaped my philosophy then and continues to do so today, as well. 

The Story of the World presents the history of the world in a chronological manner that makes SENSE. I could see my children (and me!) learn about new events in history and relate them to many other events they have learned about in SOTW. They are learning history isn't isolated. Everything is connected.

Our Story

Our story (which I think is very similar to many other homeschoolers) is simple.

I was schooling my children at home without the aid of a co-op or structured program we would attend each week.I wanted a history curriculum that incorporated LIVING BOOKS, HANDS ON ACTIVITIES, and A CHRONOLOGICAL PRESENTATION.

We began  with Volume 1. Fast forward 5 years and we made it through Volume 4.

Yes, that means it is taking us more than a year to get through each volume.  Don't hyperventilate.  That's ok! )

We stop at points that are interesting. Sometimes one chapter will take us an entire week (or two).

We spent several weeks studying Robin Hood in a delight directed way.  What fun that was! It was all inspired by an edition of the book recommended in the SOTW Activity Guide.  

I know we have TIME, and as long as my children's interest is there I'm not worried about completing the volumes in a certain time period.

Examples

In this post I will use Volume 3 - Early Modern Times as an example.  I think this is because it was my personal favorite of all 4 volumes.

I always purchased the book and activity guide.

We pull most of our read-alouds and activities from the SOTW Activity Guide.

It's important to note I didn't do anything fancy.  We notebooked through the activity guide (more on that in a minute) and I chose some of the suggested read-alouds to share with my children.

Some of our favorite read-alouds from Volume 3 were:

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Take, for example, the above example from Chapter 3:  James, King of Two Countries.  

The student pages (included in the activity guide) include mapwork, coloring pages, and other activities. 

Example Lesson from Story of the World

  • Read the chapter aloud - have children take notes (more on that in a minute!), do narration questions and mapwork suggested in the guide. 

 

 

My son (who is 8 and in second grade) builds LEGO creations to along with our chapter, colors a coloring sheet from the activity guide, or draws while listening to the chapter. I require my daughter to take more extensive notes since she is middle grades now. 

  • Throughout the course of the week we had read-aloud to go with our chapter. This particular week it was Blood on The River, an excellent living book about a page working for Captain John Smith. 

 

I also know that Handel was living at this same time in Europe, so we completed the Handel lesson from SQUILT Volume 1.

We also had a book of Isaac Newton activities and chose a couple that interested the kids. 

One night we sat as a family and watched Nightmare in Jamestown on Netflix.

We read passages from the King James Version of the Bible.

 

  • You get the idea. Anything related to this period of time we were researching and enjoying. Use your imagination and let your children be your guide, too.

 

Yes, it took some legwork on my part. But, it's a lifestyle of learning that I believe is worth it.

The activity guide does a lot of the research for you, though, and after a while I came to enjoy the research. I am learned so much about history.


Notebooking

If you aren't familiar with notebooking, I would like to recommend my friend Jimmie's post: Getting Started With Notebooking is a great post to help you understand what it's all about!

When I put together the Volume 3 notebooks for my kids, I did the .pdf download of the student pages. Yes, I still ordered the physical Activity Guide (for the teaching notes and activity suggestions), but downloading the student pages allows me to print them for my kids, and only print what we need/want. It also keeps everything on the up and up with copyright.

Both of my children keep extensive history notebooks. They look back on them with pride and joy. It is something we will save for years to come.

This video might be helpful to you as you notebook through the curriculum.


Notebooking Pages

Since my daughter is in middle school now, I really wanted her to do a little more written work this year. With each chapter I require her to take notes. She records any terms she doesn't know, important dates, people, places, etc... 

My membership to Notebooking Pages has been such a tremendous help with notebooking. There are templates for every single event in history you can think of. There are blank templates that you can print and have the child customize. And, I don't even have time to go into how awesome the Notebooking Publisher App. is.

If you are considering using SOTW as your history curriculum, I believe the investment in a Notebooking Pages Membership is WORTH IT! 

I have printed  country pages, animal pages, and so much more - all to go with our studies in Story of the World. There are timeline pages, book of centuries pages, and pages to go with each era in history. If you need a notebooking page, Notebooking Pages has it.  I promise.

And if they don't, they will most likely make one for you upon request. 

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Here is a simple lined notebooking page I gave my daughter after our Jamestown chapter. She narrated back from the chapter and did a beautiful job. 

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She also completed a "Modern Times" notebooking sheet (I require one of these for each chapter!), which helps her take notes during the chapter.

Do you see why I love Story of the World so much?

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In the very first chapters of Volume 3 we were learning about the Incas in Peru. My son latched onto this. I was able to print a map of South America, and make another page all about Llams from the Notebooking Publisher Web App. We had a science study about Llamas for a week and it was such fun! 

 

Notebooking Pages LIFETIME Membership

 

Final Thoughts

The reasons we use Story of the World are simple:

  • Beautiful stories, in chronological order
  • Wonderful suggestions in the activity guide for extending learning
  • A Classical approach to history, which works well for my children - lots of narration and quality literature appeal to us
  • It provides a spine for all of our other learning - from science to music - from art to literature

If you're looking for a neat and simple history curriculum, The Story of the World is it.  You can do as little or as much as you want with it, and it is customizable for a wide age range. 


Story of The World Resources & More:

The Story of the World: History for the Classical Child: Volume 1: Ancient Times: From the Earliest Nomads to the Last Roman Emperor, Revised EditionThe Story of the World: History for the Classical Child: The Middle Ages: From the Fall of Rome to the Rise of the Renaissance (Second Revised Edition)  (Vol. 2)  (Story of the World)The Story of the World: History for the Classical Child, Volume 3: Early Modern TimesThe Story of the World: History for the Classical Child, Volume 4: The Modern Age: From Victoria's Empire to the End of the USSRThe Story of the World, Activity Book 1: Ancient Times - From the Earliest Nomad to the Last Roman EmperorThe Story of the World: History for the Classical Child, Activity Book 2: The Middle Ages: From the Fall of Rome to the Rise of the RenaissanceThe Story of the World Activity Book Three: Early Modern TimesThe Story of the World Activity Book Four: The Modern Age: From Victoria's Empire to the End of the USSRStory of the World Audiobook Collection, Volumes 1-4 Books on CDThe Kingfisher History Encyclopedia (Kingfisher Encyclopedias)

 

 

*Note:  Peace Hill Press publishes The Story of The World.  I did not receive any compensation or product for this post. I just love this curriculum and it has worked well for my children.  

Using the Story of the World as a Spine for Learning In Your Homeschool

Ancient Times - Simple, Effective Resources For Your Homeschool

Simple is best. 

Educating my children Classically has proven to me that using just a FEW beautiful resources faithfully and well makes our learning most effective.

As we prepare for Classical Conversations Cycle 1, I have been gathering a few things we LOVED during our last study of the Ancients, and I've added a couple new things, too.

Remember, I keep all to ONE BOOKSHELF, and by limiting myself in this way I am deepening our homeschool through SIMPLIFICATION! 

(I'm also trying to educate from a place of rest, so simplification is essential!)

Ancient Times: Simple, Effective Resources for Your Homeschool

*This post contains affiliate links. 

As my children have gotten older, our plan of attack for history has changed.

When they were younger we did many hands on projects and LOTS of reading aloud.  

Now that I have a 9th grader and a 5th grader, times are changing. Our homeschool is changing, too. We are more purely Classical than ever before, and in that spirit we are focusing on memorizing, conversations, and quality literature, along with an intensive study of Latin. 

I am having to spend more time redeeming MY OWN EDUCATION - therefore I need resources to be simple and meaningful.  

The following resources have been picked carefully to ensure success and retention in our homeschool next year. 


A New Approach to Learning History

The biggest change for next year (for my 10 year old) is that he will be learning the bulk of history through Veritas Press' Self Paced History Course

I have heard such good things, watched all of the promo videos, and asked my son if he would like it (I got a resounding YES!). 

I pulled the trigger and purchased the course (for $100 off -- only until May 25).  This course will cover Ancient History - it is self paced, includes tests and games, and will give him some much needed independence. 

I encourage you to check this out if you want a quality history course, taught on the computer, self-paced, and engaging. It also aligns closely with the CC timeline and history sentences! 



History Spines/Texts for Ancients

Next year during Cycle 1 I have not planned everything out WEEK BY WEEK.  I have done so in the past, and been lead quickly to disappointment when I fall behind or miss a resource I had put down for a certain week. 

Again -- my philosophy of LESS IS MORE is in the front of my mind as I pick just a few resources we will spend A LOT of time with during Cycle 1:

  • Pages of History Volume 1 - this history text (really full of great stories!) is so exciting to me! It is on the bookshelf just waiting for next year. This will be our family read aloud as time permits during the school year. 

  • The Story of the World  Volume 1 - We have used this extensively several years ago and my son wants to go through the book and activity guide again.  I imagine we will read this as a read aloud and pull activities from the activity guide as time permits - again --- not committing ourselves to anything, but having it available when we can use it.   (Have you seen my page dedicated to SOTW?  Lots of information there!)

  • The Story of the World Volume 1 Audio - We have this from the last time around, and it's particularly good for in the car, or for on those days when mom just wants to rest but the kids want to keep learning. I highly recommend these recordings by Jim Weiss! 


Resources for Studying Ancient History in Your Homeschool

A FAVORITE GAME FOR STUDYING ANCIENTS

We are big fans of the card games by The Classical Historian.

This cycle we will be using the Ancient History Go Fish  and the Ancient History Memory Game

That's it. Nothing more, I promise. 

(Well, if something out of the SOTW activity guide strikes my fancy we will create that game and play, but I'm not PURCHASING anything else!)

Add to this the memory work games that all Foundations students love to play and I think we will be set! 


Quality Read Alouds/Alones for Ancient Times

Again, I will keep it VERY simple. 

No fancy booklists - just a few tried and true resources that will take a special place in my son's memory.

I have these books on the shelf that I have committed to read aloud to Grant, and I am sure through library trips we will seek out other books for him to read alone. 


Notebooking the History Sentences in Foundations

During Cycles 2 and 3 my son would notebook each of the Foundations history sentences. 

This was just good practice in research skills, writing skills, and many times it was used as his presentation for the following week. 

I anticipate we will do the same thing again. I will read the History Highlights (found on CC Connected) to him, and - using our Notebooking Pages subscription - require him to write a page about the history sentence. 

 

Notebooking Pages LIFETIME Memberships

 

That's our SIMPLE plan for studying Ancients next year. 

I'm BEYOND excited about the ages of my children and the DEEP learning that will take place next year.  (I'm also pretty excited that this planning is done NOW, and I can relax a bit this summer in anticipation of a busy and rewarding year.)

 

Do you have any fun plans for studying Ancient times in your homeschool?  I'd love to hear about them!