Judging From His Tracks

"Judging from his tracks, Boo was about six and a half feet tall, dined on raw squirrels and any cats he could catch. There was a long, jagged scar that ran across his face. His eyes popped and he drooled most of the time." Jem describing Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird

"Facts are stubborn things." Tobias Smollett

Monday, December 10, 2007

History Teacher Dot Net AP quizzes

Jeffersonian Age quiz

World War II

Truman and Beginnings of the Cold War

American Presidents

Presidents 2

Presidents 3

Presidents 4
Posted by Dinged Corners at 9:58 AM
Labels: AP history, homeschool history
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Emma's homeschool year and beyond

Emma's homeschool year and beyond
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Our approach.

Our approach.
Read, and then read more. There is no agenda here except to learn.

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homeschool quiz study guide Philip Pullman desert quiz essay questions geography quiz social studies lesson plans Lisa Yee Newbery Oliver Twist Project GUTS civics civil disobedience fossil lesson plan geography lesson plan homeschooling immigration lesson plan lesson plan lesson plans middle school reading comprehension roald dahl seventh grade seventh grade lesson plan unschool 1840s A Tree Grows in Brooklyn A.A. Milne Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian Amber Spyglass Balto Bent's Old Fort Blitz Bridge to Terabithia Call of the Wild Catcher in the Rye quiz Charles Dickens Chronicles of Narnia Civil War Cranford Cynthia Lord DeWitt Clinton literary magazine E.H. Shepard Ernest H. Shepard Gary Paulsen George Cruikshank George Selden Golden Compass lesson plan Green Glass Sea HG Wells Hatchet His Dark Materials quiz Iditarod lesson plan Industrial Revolution lesson plan J.D. Salinger Jack London Jan Scruggs Jane Austen Jem Joshua Chamberlain Junior Ranger program Kenneth Grahame Killer Angels Lewis and Clark Math U See Maya Lin Meals on Wheels Merriam-Webster sites Miracle Worker quiz My Boy Jack Pete Seeger Romeo and Juliet Rudyard Kipling Sandra Day O'Connor Santa Fe Trail study questions Scout Sea Legs Second World War Sherman Alexie Sliding Into Home Stratego Subtle Knife Summer's End Supreme Court The Raven Time Machine To Kill a Mockingbird quiz Turn Turn Turn; adapting lyrics from Bible Vietnam War War of the Worlds Western William Shakespeare Wind in the Willows quiz abolitionism allegory animal farm lesson plan ap tests artist trading cards bette bao lord bildungsroman children during wartime computer modeling corps of discovery cynthia ryland diary of anne frank ecosystems edgar allan poe final project harmony camp here comes science cd in the year of the boar and jackie robinson japanese american internment japanese internment josiah gregg labor movement lesson plan development lewis carroll living history meter millicent min quiz Call of the Wild reading list red menace rhythm richard peck stanzas study guide Call of the Wild study guide link study guide sites subject verb agreement sudoku symbolism they might be giants thin wood walls vase painting water lesson plan world geography world war ii

Lesson Plan and Subject Idea Links

  • Art of Renaissance Europe (via The Metropolitian)
  • Arrow Book Club (study guide for many books)
  • China Geography
  • Control the Spread of Rift Valley Fever
  • Core Knowledge Lesson Plans, Grade 7
  • The Dark Frigate
  • Galileo (NEH site)
  • Geography
  • History and Social Science
  • Immigration Lesson Plan
  • Immigration Novels
  • Leonardo da Vinci
  • Leonardo's Window (a lesson in perspective)
  • Magna Carta
  • Norton Anthology of World Literature companion - excellent quizzes and discovery modules
  • Postcards From Buster (U.S. geography workable for middle schoolers)
  • The Printing Press
  • Science, Rockingham County
  • The Silk Road (San Bernadino Public Schools)
  • The Silk Route (Montgomery County Public Schools)
  • Storm Word Search
  • Taking a Stand (Civil Rights movement)
  • Three Branches of Government
  • Vincent Van Gogh lesson plan

Other Links We Like

  • Books For Kids Blog
  • Brush Up on Arithmetic Skills (Timed)
  • City Different Home Learners
  • Chaparral and Fire
  • eThemes, 1930-1939
  • Gardening for Kids
  • Kids' News from Scholastic
  • Kidstorm Sky Diary
  • Library Thing (Keep Track of Your Library)
  • Life Hacker
  • Lightning Explained
  • The Manhattan Project and the Second World War
  • Mapman Game (geography from Scholastic)
  • National Gallery of Art for children
  • Osmosis (Spineless Potatoes)
  • Panorama of the Mountains
  • Plant Biology
  • Plants Database, USDA
  • Project GUTS
  • Santa Fe Public Library catalog
  • Science Fair Projects.
  • The Structure of Flowers
  • Vincent Van Gogh
  • Why Leaves Change Color
  • WordNet
  • Words Without Borders (World Literature)

Don"t Forget Music

We make music part of the homeschool curriculum through a local progressive and inclusive church, where E. sings in the youth choir (the Que Choir). She's very lucky to work with Director of Choral Ministries Catherine Robinson, who has performed with the Desert Chorale, Canticum Novum, Pro Musica, and the NM Symphony Orchestra chorus. Catherine truly does help our kids "get" the joy of music.

The Que Choir practices once a week.

Growing Up Thinking Scientifically

It's good to admit limits, and our limits include teaching science. So E. is participating in a National Science Foundation-funded program called Project GUTS, held at the Santa Fe Institute. The staff is outstanding, the location beautiful, and we will make the most of it. If you live nearby, your homeschooler can participate.

Science News Links

  • National Weather Service Warnings
  • PBS Science for Kids
  • Weather Satellite Images

Blog Archive

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    • ►  September (1)
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  • ►  2008 (53)
    • ►  December (1)
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    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (7)
    • ►  April (10)
    • ►  March (7)
    • ►  February (10)
    • ►  January (14)
  • ▼  2007 (51)
    • ▼  December (12)
      • We begin the new year studying the concept of civ...
      • World geography puzzle....completed.
      • What's ahead?
      • Learning the art of abstract strategy.
      • Meals on Wheels was a special experience today. E...
      • Rules by Cynthia Lord.
      • Making do. Surviving.
      • Hm. What IS "Social Studies," anyway?
      • History Teacher Dot Net AP quizzes
      • Girls and science.
      • Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
      • Project GUTS meet-up
    • ►  November (13)
    • ►  October (11)
    • ►  September (14)
    • ►  August (1)

E"s Favorite Books (This Changes)

  • A Wrinkle in Time
  • Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
  • All Roald Dahl Books
  • Bud, Not Buddy
  • Everything on a Waffle
  • Goodnight, Mr. Tom
  • Island of the Blue Dolphins
  • Matilda
  • Pippi Longstocking
  • The Egyptian Game
  • The Halloween Tree
  • To Kill a Mockingbird

Life in...

...Santa Fe.
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Consider home learning...

...so your middle schooler can stop:
Breaking up the day into learning time and play time.
Shifting topics according to an externally-imposed schedule.
Being told what to care about and when to care about it.
Being told what is good enough.
Being part of a hierarchy with students at the bottom.
Having to supply "acceptable" excuses for absence or lateness.
Standing in lines, waiting for everything: food, water, attention of the teacher, time on the computer, etc.
Having individual gifts or problems neglected.
Moving at the sound of a bell.
Being segregated by chronological age.
Being separated from the family.
Feeling isolated from the working world.
Experiencing schedule rigidity--who wants to miss the World Series? Or the lunar eclipse because you have to get up early?

The natural curiosity of a healthy child, given access to a rich environment, will lead the child to learn what he or she needs to know. Eric Anderson