Train up a Child Publishing is literature based Charlotte Mason approach to homeschooling using the Bible and great children’s literature to teach Bible, History/Reading, Science, Language Arts, and Fine Arts together in one educational plan. A review from The Curriculum Choice.
Charlotte Mason
TruthQuest History
What’s taken me so long to try TruthQuest History??? I have had the mistaken impression that TruthQuest guides were only…
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Lollipop Logic
Many of you know that I’m a huge fan of teaching logic in the homeschool. For most people, the word…
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Arithmetic Village Review and Giveaway
I am always on the lookout for living math books, and when I stumbled upon Arithmetic Village, I knew I…
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Patricia St. John Books
I love sharing great authors with you – authors that you can almost always assume will provide a wonderful living…
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Story Starters
Story Starters by Karen Andreola is a life saver – for you and your children! Mom will never again have…
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Lessons in Manners for Copywork
Copywork should be easy. It should be related to the history lesson or pulled from the read-aloud selection. It can…
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The Royal Diaries Series
Since I was a little girl, I’ve been an avid reader. I remember coming home from the library, barely able…
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History Comes Alive
As a Charlotte Mason homeschooler, teaching with living literature is imperative to me. And considering that I like to package…
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Rod and Staff Grammar
When I was a child, my younger sisters studied grammar differently than I did. They learned something mysterious called ‘diagramming’…
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Greenleaf Guide to Old Testament History
Years ago, when we first started homeschooling, another veteran homeschooler recommended that I take a look at “the Greenleaf history…
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First Language Lessons and Language Lessons for the Very Young 1: A Comparison
It is confession time. We used First Language Lessons this year for our language study. We also used Language Lessons…
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