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Many homeschool moms have questioned me lately about how we "do
school". After some quick thought, I would have to say we are heading
toward a unit study approach using a wide variety of resources including living
books, life experiences, and yes, even textbooks. I naturally gravitate toward
Amanda Bennett, Valerie Bendt, and Ruth Beechick.
Susan Simpson of Common Sense Press has written a brochure called "Choosing
Curriculum That's Right For You". She divides education into three approaches.
One called the Application or Applied Approach fits our family the closest.
"Let's look at the study of ducks…(it) may begin because the teacher has decided
that it is time to learn about ducks, whether the child has expressed interest
in them or not. The teacher will find books on ducks and maybe a read-aloud
novel that includes a duck character. A published curriculum on ducks may be
used. The teacher will present certain facts about ducks that she determines are
important.
Age-appropriate activities will be included to reinforce this information. The
family may visit a duck pond and then write Grandma a letter about the trip. The
student will be working on math, and language arts or reading while this
study is taking place. These subjects may or may not have anything to do with
ducks."
What is a Unit Study Anyway?
"A unit study is taking a theme or topic (a unit of study) and delving into it
deeply over a period of time, integrating language arts, science, social
studies, math, and fine arts as they apply."
- Definition from Elijah Company catalog.
"It is simply a study that focuses on one topic at a time…It can be a brief
topical study or a life-long quest. It can be tailored to meet the needs of
individual families." -
Valerie Bendt
"Unit study appears under many different names and disguises but can be
recognized by the presence of a unifying theme … In my experience, God's
direction is much more evident when we design our own unit studies than when we
use formal curriculum. As we choose topics and activities, we are more open to
God's leading than when we work with curriculum that has already been designed
by someone else."
- Cathy Duffy
"A unit study can be anything you want it to be…You get to decide. There are no
rules!"
- Jennifer Steward
There are three main ways to teach a unit study:
1) Purchase a complete unit study (Alta Vista, KONOS, Prairie Primer, Weaver)
2) Use a prepared topical guide (Amanda Bennett, Kathleen Julicher, Jennifer
Steward)
3) Create your own from scratch
We have used all three ways. When we create our own, we use a textbook or other
resource for a basis or starting point. Then we add hands-on projects, field
trips, lots of library books, written reports, and many times a book study
(especially historical fiction or biographies!). Our unit studies can cover
history, science, Bible, literature, art, music, some arithmetic, and other
elective subjects. We still use a "set" curriculum for arithmetic, grammar, and
other language arts to be sure to cover all the necessary skills.
Sometimes we study a subject the boys are interested in like space or computers.
Other times, it has been elections, gardens, birds, and slothfulness. Although
the boys thought the bird study would be boring, they were watching birds at the
bird feeder through the binoculars and trying to identify them with our "field
guide" for months afterwards. They also remember the nasty habits of the
sloth, but don't always remember to apply the life principles they learned. (I
have the same problem!)
This school year, Levi (6 years old) has studied dinosaurs, space, and currently
both gardening and the Civil War. For gardening, we started by reading a unit in
Bob Jones Science 2 and Your First Garden Book by Marc Brown. Levi has chosen
several projects to do from that book. We have already planted flowers in our
window boxes and vegetables in our garden. The study will continue as we water,
weed, and watch our garden grow. The older boys are also in on the
gardening project. All the boys are studying the Civil War, but at different
grade levels. Jesse and Jonah (high school) are using The War for Southern
Independence by Jeffrey
Murrah. It revolves around Christian biographies and a southern viewpoint. They
will create a unit study notebook including maps, reports, and other research
information. Levi has read several books including one on Robert E. Lee and the
ironclads. He is making a Civil War alphabet book and has already included a
map, flags, and drawings. The whole family watched the video "Gettysburg" (which
is Northern-biased). This summer we will have the privilege of sightseeing
in Virginia and other states where we plan on visiting Civil War sites.
With a unit study approach, school doesn't end in May. Although our formal
schoolwork stops, we continue our life learning experiences all summer long!
One of the unit studies we are planning next school year will use a new book by
Ruth Beechick; GENESIS: Finding Our Roots. The course consists of six units
organized around Genesis 1-11. Fields of study include theology, history,
geography, literature, linguistics, science, art, and even a bit of arithmetic.
Some of the interesting topics are dragons, dinosaurs, world myths, and star
constellations. This is a hardback book with beautiful ancient art prints.
Unit and Integrated Studies / Living Books Resources
Alta Vista - Bible-based science / social studies curriculum
Beautiful Feet - history guides
Valerie Bendt - The Frances Study Guide
How to Series: How to Create Your Own Unit Studies
Success with Unit Studies
The Unit Study Idea Book
For the Love of Reading
Amanda Bennett -Unit Study Journal
Unit Study Guides like Baseball; Dogs; Gardens
Biblical Holidays by Robin Scarlata
Books Children Love by Edith Wilson
Castle Heights Press - Kathleen Julicher
One Week Off series
My First Unit Study
The Classics series by Helping Hand
Classics At Home by Ann Ward
Common Sense Press book study guides
Considering God's Creation by Eagle's Wings
Five in a Row series by Jane Claire Lambert
For the Children's Sake by Susan Schaeffer Macaulay
GENESIS: Finding Our Roots by Ruth Beechick
Any other book by Ruth Beechick
Guide to History: Design-A-Study by Kathryn Stout
Homeschooling Today Magazine
Institute in Basic Life Principles- Character Booklets series
KONOS - character qualities and biographies
Learning Language Arts through Literature
Learning with Literature: Farmer Boy by Candace Seale
Let the Author Speak: A Guide to Worthy Books Based on
Historical Setting by Carolyn Hatcher
Life In America series by Ellen Gardner
Charlotte Mason - any books
The Prairie Primer by Margie Gray
Progeny Press book study guides
Steward Ship - Jennifer Steward
Everything You Need to Know About Unit Studies
Variety of unit study guides from Steward Ship
Total Language Plus book study guides
War for Southern Independence by Jeffrey Murrah
The Weaver Curriculum - chronological Bible-based curriculum
Written by Sue Schrowang
Russ and Sue Schrowang
HIS WAY Homeschool Resources
E-mail:hiswayhome@juno.com
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