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Science for High School Physical Science Review

July 14, 2013 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

As part of The Schoolhouse Review Crew, I received High School Physical Science In Your Home from Science for High School to review.

Science for High School was developed and written by a homeschooling mother of 5 with a degree in microbiology. All the Science for High School curriculum is written with the busy homeschool parent and the maturing high school student in mind.

 

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Science for High School Physical Science Review

High School Physical Science in Your Home contains all the subjects one would expect from a physical science course. They first learn about scientific method, then go on to study the atmosphere & weather, astronomy, motion, force, & simple machines, energy & electricity, chemistry, earth science, geology, along with rocks and mineralogy.

The teachers manual is divided into first semester & second semester sections, along with sections for quizzes & final exams, labs, and is spiral bound. The student manual is separate from the quizzes & final exams, and both are three hold punched to insert in your own notebooks.

The front of the Teachers Manual contains a Frequently Asked Questions section where it is explained how to use this course. Also included is a supply list for each semester. The supply list is listed by week. So you can tell at a glance the supplies you will need each week. I found this to be very convenient.

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The information in this course is presented in a different way than most students are used to. Instead of the student reading the text, then answering the questions, the lessons in the student book are all questions. Each lesson has anywhere from five to over twenty questions. The student must then research the answers for themselves, and write down their findings either in the student manual or, for longer answers, in their notebook.

A page from the student manual and my daughters notebook

 

There is no text book required for this course. The student can certainly use a text book you have to gather information. They can also use other books, dictionaries, encyclopedias, and the internet to gather information.

This is a very different way of learning. It took my daughter, 14 and going into 9th grade, about two weeks to stop asking what she had to write down, and feel comfortable with answering the questions herself. She does like working independently and setting her own pace. So once she got used to this new way of learning, she did very well.

Abby demonstrating Bernoulli's Principle, one of the labs, with a straw and colored water. See the green water in the straw? That means it worked. 🙂

 

If you follow the suggested schedule, students can take a week to do a lesson, including the lab. For example, the student can research and answer the questions Monday through Thursday, then on Friday the student and parent can meet to go over what was learned. The lab can also be done on Friday. There are also quizzes and tests that can be used weekly or biweekly. The answers to these are in the teachers manual.

I really liked High School Physical Science in Your Home. Having my students be able to look up information and put that information to use has been a priority for me. This course puts this goal into action. The research skills learned during this course will benefit the student in all subject areas. And in life once they graduate. I highly recommend High School Physical Science in Your Home. My daughter will be finishing this course for her 9th grade science.

Physical Science for High School is available on the website for $79.99. Extra student books are available for $24.99. Each extra student book comes with a set of quizzes & tests. Copyright does not allow the student manual or the quizzes & tests to be copied. A kit is also available with the materials required for the experiments. The materials required for the labs can be easily found, many in your own home, but they offer a kit to make it easier.

 

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Filed Under: Homeschool Reviews

Dig-It! Games – Mayan Mysteries Review

July 11, 2013 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

As part of The Schoolhouse Review Crew, I received online access to Mayan Mysteries Online Game from Dig-It Games. Dig-It Games was founded by a professional archaeologist and a former middle-school teacher. Dig-It! Games develops educational games that encourage kids to explore the world around them through historically accurate content. Mayan Mysteries is for students in fifth through ninth grades. My 12 year old, 7th grade son played this game. The Single User License is for one student. You can use it with more than one student, though. After the first child finishes the game, clicking the “Start New” option on the main menu will create a completely fresh game for another player.

 

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In Mayan Mysteries, kids help Professor Alex Quinn and his niece and nephew Fiona and Charlie solve the mystery of a looter that has been digging up Maya sites. While trying to solve the mystery, students will visit Maya sites, uncover & analyze artifacts, decode glyphs, explore the Maya calendar, learn the Maya math system, solve puzzles & gather clues to track the mysterious thief. While having fun solving the mystery, kids will learn geographic, scientific, and mathematical concepts.

 

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Dig-It! Games – Mayan Mysteries Review

My son, Zachary, had great fun with Mayan Mysteries. It’s very easy to sign in and get started with the game. No teacher or parent prep is required. I’d say he spent 10-12 hours playing this game. I wish I had thought to keep track of his time.  The only thing he needed help with was some of the Mayan math. I will say I’m glad we don’t use Mayan math. lol Once my son got used to using the Mayan math, he was able to keep up a steady pace in the game.

One of the things I really liked about the game was the adjustable volume settings. The music, that played through the game, and the characters audio both had separate volume settings. If your student works better without the distraction of the music, you can turn it all the way down. A plus for moms, too, that don’t want music playing all the time.

Zach said, “The game was good.  I liked when you had to find objects in different rooms. I liked answering the trivia questions, too. My goal was to make it through the temple gates, but I only made it there once. I didn’t like the Mayan Math. I already have enough math. I have math up to my ears.”

There is an ending to the game. After the kids have completed all the activities, a congratulations screen comes up. There is no way to see your progress in the game, so it’s really a surprise when they come to the final screen. Zach has asked me several times since finishing the game when Mayan Mysteries 2 is coming out.

You can watch the trailer below or play the Mayan Mysteries Demo

 

The Mayan Mysteries Single User License, like I received, is available for $21.99. The license is good for one year. There is also a class room license available.

 

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Filed Under: Homeschool Reviews

Teaching the Classics Review

July 8, 2013 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

As part of The Schoolhouse Review Crew I received Teaching the Classics from Institute for Excellence in Writing to review.

The Institute for Excellence in Write (IEW) offers literature, writing, spelling and grammar products for students of all ages.

 

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Teaching the Classics A Socratic Method for Literary Education is a literature seminar for parents and teachers. You can view video excerpts, and sample pages on the website. Teaching the Classics educates the teacher in how to teach literary analysis to their students. Students can work through the seminar at the same time as the teachers, if the teacher chooses to do it that way. I watched the videos, and worked in the workbook myself.

Teaching the Classics is amazing! No literature courses that I ever took taught how to analyze characters, plots, and themes like Teaching the Classics did. The DVDs show the instructor, Adam Andrews, in an actual seminar. So he is standing at a podium and whiteboard the whole time. He ask questions of those attending the seminar, and they ask him questions, also. Many times, someone in the seminar would ask a question that I had, also.  So even though your watching the seminar on dvd, it’s like you are there, too.

As he is talking, and showing examples on the white board, you can follow along in the workbook. Poems are included in the lessons in the workbook. You will have to purchase the books to use them with the course. I already have most of the books used in the course. Or better yet, just use the library! All of the books used are common books that should be available in all libraries.

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The seminar starts with the Five Elements of Fiction: Setting, Characters, Theme, Plot, and Conflict. Literary Style is then covered, including terms such as imagery, allusion, metaphor, simile, and foreshadowing. The instructor actually takes you through analyzing several poems and books during the seminar. Once you learn the Teaching the Classics method for studying literature, you can apply the techniques to any books you and your students read, from children’s books to novels, and anything in between.

Some of the books, poems, and authors covered are Longfellow, Paul Revere’s Ride, Peter Rabbit, Tom Sawyer, and Casey at Bat. There is a daily lesson plan guideline to help you get started using Teaching the Classics with your students. As well as, book lists, printable story charts, and more. There is a Scope & Sequence included, which lists 10 weekly lessons   Also included in the back of the workbook is The Socratic List. The Socratic List is a list of 21 questions that can be used with any book you are reading. Each one of these 21 questions has additional questions under it, some with as many as 17 questions. For example, the first question is Where does the story take place? There are then 10 questions below that question to be answered covering everything from the country, city, atmosphere, economic class, and any historical events that have taken place there. This is a very thorough list of questions that will take some time to get through for each book. These are not simple comprehension questions, but questions designed to help the reader get inside the characters and story.

I was very impressed with Teaching the Classics. Now that I have learned the techniques, I plan on using them with my students.

 

Teaching the Classics 4 DVD Seminar & Workbook sells for $89. on the IEW website. Extra workbooks are available for $29. There are also many free resources on the website.

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Filed Under: Homeschool Reviews

Classical Conversations PreScripts Cursive Passages and Illuminations Review

July 7, 2013 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

As part of the Schoolhouse Review Crew, I received PreScripts Cursive Passages and Illuminations from Classical Conversations to review.

Classical Conversations says on their website that  The purpose of education is to know God and to make Him known. I couldn’t agree more! Classical Conversations helps parents provide a classical education for their children. They recently introduced PreScripts. A new handwriting line for ages three through high school.

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PreScripts Cursive Passages and Illuminations, that I received, is for ages nine through high school. Students practice with passages of writing taken from American documents and speeches. Passages and Illuminations is for students that have mastered cursive writing. There are no instructions for writing cursive, just the passage for the student to copy.

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The practice of writing with illuminations comes from medieval manuscripts. You’ve probably seen illuminations in books before. They really dress up the printed page. Illuminations make students handwriting samples a work of art. Perfect for hanging on the wall, or giving to family and friends.

The picture below is from the book. As you can tell, it is a spiral bound book that lays flat while the student is working. All of the pages have the writing sample on the left, with a large illumination and space for the student to draw their own illumination on the right hand page.

I used Passages and Illuminations with my 14 year old daughter that just finished 8th grade. She averaged 3-4 lessons a week, completing 15 during the review period. You can see one of her practice sheets below with her illuminations. I also started my 12 year old son using the book. He has not mastered all the cursive letters yet, so was becoming very frustrated with the writings. So I pulled him off the book, and we’ll revisit it when he masters those letters.

With this book, the parent decides the pace of the book. A half a page a day for a younger student, or up to two to four a day for more experienced, older students. If you do one page a day, four to five pages a week, there are enough pages for a complete school year. There are also recommendations in the book for the number of pages to do if you are involved in a Classical Conversations community.

I had her use some handwriting paper that I had to practice the lessons on. This paper with a small rule, not kindergarten paper with wide lines. You can see she practiced the illuminations on these sheets, too. I liked all of the passages in the book. They include samples from Christopher Columbus “Appologia”, Patrick Henry, the Mayflower Compact, The Missouri Compromise, Abraham Lincoln, Ronald Reagan, and many more. You can view sample pages on the website. These passages from important historical documents give meaning to hand writing practice.

 

PreScripts Cursive Passages and Illuminations sells for $12.99 (at the time of this review) on the Classical Conversations website. PreScripts can be used as a consumable or non-consumable. The copyright gives permission to make copies for use in your family. Making this a perfect course for families with multiple children.

 

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Filed Under: Homeschool Reviews

Memoria Press Geography 1 Review

June 17, 2013 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

As part of The Schoolhouse Review Crew, I received Geography I from Memoria Press to review.

Disclosure: I received no other compensation for this review. My opinions are my own.

 

Memoria Press is a family run publishing company that has been producing classical education materials since 1994. I had never used anything from Memoria Press before, so I was excited to try this Geography 1 course.
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Geography 1 is written for grades 4th thru 8th. Included in the set are:

Geography I Text
Geography I Workbook
Geography I Teacher Guide
United States Review Student
United States Review Key, Quizes, and Tests

You can see samples of the Table of Contents, a text sample, and a workbook sample on the website. Geography 1 covers the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe, the area that constituted the ancient Roman Empire. Each country has a two page spread. The reading text and country information on the left, with a “History Headlines” section, and a “Tour of Today” section. A large map takes up the whole page on the right. In the Student Workbook, each country has one page with questions & fill in the blank answers on the top, and a map on the lower half of the page. There are also review pages through out the student workbook.

This Geography 1 set also includes The United States review books. These books don’t contain any lessons, just lists of info, maps to fill out, and questions to answer. What you would expect in a review book. It is very thorough, though, and can be used before or after the Geography 1 books.

 

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Memoria Press Geography 1 Review

I used Geography 1 with my 12 year old son that is going into the 7th grade.  He used both books at the same time, usually on the same days. Zach averaged 4 days a week with both books. He really loved these books, and would often do more than the one lesson a day that I required of him. On his own. Without my asking him to. Many days, he would go back later in the afternoon and get the books out again to do some more. I lost track of how many times he called out, “Mom! Did you know….?”  or “This says……I didn’t know that!”   He only has one page left to do in The United States Book, States and Capitals, which is 25 pages long. He is over halfway through the Geography 1 book, he has completed page 50 of the 90 back student workbook. He really liked the way the information was presented in this course, and if he continues to do well with the rest of the book like I think he will, I will get him the Geography 2 course next. We have other geography resources here, but he has done so well with this first book, I think he will benefit greatly from doing Geography 2.

memoria press geography 1

In the above picture, you can see a page from the Geography 1 Student Workbook on the left, and a page from The United States Student Workbook on the right. Both of these are a fair representation of what the rest of each book is like.

The Geography 1 set sells for $48 on the website at the time of this review. Books may also be purchased individually. Great if you are using this with more than one student & need extra books because these student workbooks are consumable with no permission to copy for family use.

 

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Filed Under: Homeschool Reviews

Christianity Cove Review

June 11, 2013 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

As part of The Schoolhouse Review Crew I received two eBooks, Bible Science Experiments and 100 Simple Service Projects,  from Christianity Cove to review.

Disclosure: I received no compensation for this review. My opinions are my own.


Christianity Cove has over 25 products for use in churches, other ministries and classrooms. All of their teaching products are digital, so you can download and get started right away.

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Bible Science Experiments contains 25 fun, hands-on, and easy science experiments that teach a Biblical truth. Bible Science Experiments is written for ages 5-12. I used this ebook with my 12 year old, 6th grade son. He thought the experiments were way to easy for him. I happen to agree. I think this would be better suited for lower elementary grades, Pre-K thru third.

Each experiment starts with a Bible verse, then lists the materials required. All  the materials are easy to find, you probably have them at home already. The section continues with the steps for the experiment, followed by the answer, and an explanation in scientific terms. Every experiment ends with an Understanding God section. Each experiment takes only 5-10 minutes, including the readings.

The experiments are divided into five groups – Light, Color, Motion, Magnetism, and Gravity. There are 5 experiments in each group.

Bible Science

The instructions are easy to follow, the experiments simple, with minimal clean up. My son’s favorite experiment was the Coins in Motion Show God’s Protection. The only materials required are a quarter and your student. The Bible verse for this experiment is Psalm 37:24 Though he fall, he shall not be utterly cast down: for the Lord upholds him with His hand.

In this experiment, you put a quarter on your elbow and put your arm down very fast to catch the quarter in your hand. Zach had never down this before, but it only took him a couple of tries to be able to catch the quarter. Here’s a video of him doing it. Sorry for the sideways video, I don’t usually take videos with this camera.

 

I also received 100 Simple Service Projects. This ebook contains 100 service project ideas for children in Pre-K-6th grade. 100 Simple Service Projects is divided into 5 sections, Service to the Family, Service To Those In The Neighborhood, Service to the Community, Service to Large Charities in America & Overseas, and Helping Kids Who Want to Start Their Own Charity.

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The Service to Family section has printable coupons for the kids to use for helping a parent, helping a sibling, and helping a grandparent.

The Service To Those In The Neighborhood is full of suggestions the children can use bless their neighbors. A list of work that the child can do, such as raking leaves, and walking a pet. Another list has lots of fun stuff for the neighborhood to do,  a block party, kids play, or a neighborhood walking tour.

In Service to the Community, there are lots of ideas for helping the elderly, children, animals & wildlife, and the environment. For this level of service, our family runs our church’s clothes closet. We spend 2-3 hours every week sorting donated clothing and opening it to the public. This is a great family ministry.

If you’ve been wanting to find a way to instill service to others in your children, 100 Simple Service Projects will help guide your family to find a ministry to work in together, or start our own ministry according to your children’s and family’s interest.

 

Bible Science Experiments sells for $25. and 100 Simple Service Projects sells for $19.95 on the website at the time of this review.

 

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To read other reviews, visit The Schoolhouse Review Crew

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Filed Under: Homeschool Reviews

Paperless Home Organization eBook Review

May 30, 2013 by Linda @ Linda's Lunacy

As part of the Schoolhouse Review Crew, I received the Paperless Home Organization ebook from Simplified Pantry to review. Paperless Home Organization is a how to guide that walks you through creating a digital homemaking binder. Once you have your homemaking binder in place, you can go paperless! I don’t know about you, but after 31 years of marriage, 6 kids, and 22 years of homeschooling (and still counting!), I’m ready to get rid of some paper!

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Paperless Home Organization eBook Review

The author, Mystie Winckler, tells you which programs she uses and takes you step by step through signing up, setting up, and filling up your binder. She uses Google Mail, Google Calendar, Evernote and Remember the Milk to organize everything. I was already using Google Mail and Calendar, but she had several tips that I hadn’t heard of before that enable me to make better use of them. The bulk of the book is about setting up and using Evernote and Remember the Milk.

Remember the Milk is where you keep your current to do lists. These can be sorted out, and assigned due dates, or marked not due so it is always on your list. I love that I can have my list on my Gmail page, or on my calendar, over on the right had side, so I can see it no matter what I’m doing. As we all know, a to do list that is seen is more likely to get done. I also have Remember the Milk on my Kindle, so can carry my to do list with me where ever I go. Remember the Milk can also be accessed online, or on your phone. I love that I can set it up to work for me. Since I hadn’t used Remember the Milk before, the authors tutorial was a great help.

Your digital home binder will mostly be stored on Evernote. I had never heard of Evernote before, so I took full advantage of the authors how to’s in this ebook to help me. She not only tells you what to do, she shows you with many screenshots. Seeing what everything should look like, made it so much easier for to to set it up. You can tell that the author has been using this program, and knows what she’s talking about. It would have taken me a very long time to figure out some of the steps that she included in the ebook. Instead of having to figure it all out by myself, I quickly and easily followed her directions and had my binder up and running.

One of the things that the author mentioned was that  you could get an Evernote Web Clipper extension for Chrome. Now when I’m online, and I see something I want to save, I can save it right to my notebook. All those great tips and recipes that come across my Facebook feed can be clipped and put into the correct notebook while I’m on Facebook. I don’t have to go open the Evernote program to copy and paste. I was also able to add the Evernote App to my Kindle. So I have access to my digital binder whenever I need it.

Here is a screenshot from my Evernote. You can see on the left, I’m working on my notebooks. I have my Recipe Notebook open, so the middle column shows those notes. And on the right, was the last note I had opened, a recipe I’m planning on making shortly.

 

You can read a sample of Paperless Home Organization.

Since I have many, many years to catch up on, this is going to take awhile. But I’m motivated, and this system is easy. Thanks to Paperless Home Organization I think I can go paperless!

 

I also received Simplified Dinners and Simplified Dinners Gluten Free/Dairy Free ebooks.

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I read through the Simplified Dinners Gluten Free/Dairy Free ebook. If your just starting out cooking gluten free or dairy free, you’ll find lots of great recipes to get you started. I was a little disappointed that there wasn’t more recipes for baked goods. Overall, though, this is a great recipe ebook. I found a few recipes I want to try.

 

The Paperless Home Organization ebook sells for $3.99. A must at that price!

The Simplified Dinners and Simplified Dinners Gluten Free/Dairy Free sell for $12.99 each.

Here is a TOS Review Crew exclusive discount: when you enter TOS2013 at checkout, you will receive 30% off! That discount will work on any or all three of the eBooks through June 3rd.

 

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Filed Under: Homemaking, Homeschool Reviews, Reviews

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