Friday 10 August 2012

A Charlotte Mason timeline for the early years of history

This year I'm going to start teaching history the Charlotte Mason way!  I didn't realize how much I was leaving out before when all I required was a verbal narration.  After reading more about it here (scroll down to page 292, "Dates"), I found out I need a century timeline. 

"In order to give definiteness to what may soon become a pretty wide knowledge of history––mount a sheet of cartridge-paper and divide it into twenty columns, letting the first century of the Christian era come in the middle, and let each remaining column represent a century B.C. or A.D., as the case may be.  Then let the child himself write, or print, as he is able, the names of the people he comes upon in due order, in their proper century.  We need not trouble ourselves at present with more exact dates, but this simple table of the centuries will suggest a graphic panorama to the child's mind, and he will see events in their time-order."  ~Charlotte Mason (emphasis mine)


Ding Ding Ding Ding!  We have a winner!  This is exactly the kind of timeline I need. 

Here's how I'm accomplishing this:
1.  Purchase Ghostline Poster Kit at my local AC Moore (where it is half the price of Amazon!) 
2.  Attach 3 pieces together to form a long line
3.  Mark off century lines every 3 squares, to create a very long table running from 21st century BC to 21st century AD (did you know there is no year 0?!) - that's 42 centuries in all. 
4.  Write titles across the top
5.  Repeat so each child has his/her own chart.  

That's it!  Now, I'm going to have my two sons (one in AmbleSide Online Year 1, the other in Year 3) write the names of key people & events in the appropriate column with each narration.





I LOVE this approach to a timeline!  No pictures to find & cut out, no coloring.  Nothing to purchase except some poster board.  My kids despise all of that busywork (and those of you who have kids who love that, count yourself lucky!)  But the main benefit remains - getting the big picture of history over time as the child learns, automatic mental review of who & what we have already covered, & kinesthetic/visual reinforcement of important names & dates by the child writing down just that much limited information (not his whole narration).

I'm excited about implementing this in a few weeks!

Sunday 5 August 2012

The Rock that is Higher than I, AO's August Hymn

This month's Ambleside Online Hymn is The Rock that is Higher than I.  I had never heard this hymn before, but it is lovely & definitely worth memorizing!  (Especially for those of us home educating Moms who get burned out sometimes.)  I paced it a tiny bit slower than the recommended tempo, which I felt was more sing-able.

BTW, please comment this month on how these recordings are working for you!  Would it be helpful to anyone if I added an alto line, or separate recording with the alto, so you can start working on parts in your family?

Credits:  Thanks to Cyber Hymnal for use of their Midi file in this recording!  Don't forget to print out their PDF hymn sheet for your family worship time. 

My Recording:  https://docs.google.com/open?id=0Bzn5JnBFIS3TY2MzTXBISkpwalE

You Tube links:  This song was scarce on You Tube!  There must be a lot of people who, like me, had never heard it before.  :) 

Copyright: I claim copyright for my voice in the recording.  However, you're welcome to download & use it for your own personal use, education, or church!  Please contact me if you would like to use it for commercial purposes, or on your own website (a link to the recording on my website is always allowed!).  Thanks!