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Smrt Mama, a Handy Mama, Makes Venn Diagrams and Crosswords

Posted in History sure is...interesting, Homeschoolins, Smrt Stuff to Share by Smrt Mama
Sep 22 2009
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I’m also a Helpful Mama, so you can feel free to print and use this stuff if you find it useful in any way.

Captain Science has finished Ancient Egypt, and because I’m always in search of a way to quiz him without really quizzing him, I made a venn diagram for him to sort out a list of people and places from Ancient Egypt into the Old/Middle and New Kingdoms. I uploaded it to Scribd. Check out my awesomeness!

Ancient Egypt Venn Diagram

This is the crossword puzzle I made to review the various Mesopotamian cultures. Much more fun than a fill-in-the-blank quiz, even though that’s essentially what it is.

Mesopotamia Crossword and Answer Key

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Tagged as: ancient egypt, crossword puzzle, homeschool, homeschool activities, homeschool curriculum, homeschool quizzes, mesopotamia, venn diagram

Earnest Mom says, “Does Egypt sound rigorous enough to you?”

Posted in Earnest Mom is Earnest, History sure is...interesting, Homeschoolins, Smrt Curriculum, homeschoolin: ur doin it wrong by Smrt Mama
Sep 16 2009
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We’re wrapping up Egypt and I just feel like we didn’t cover enough. Old, Middle, and New Kingdom…how much is really relevant? How much does Captain Science need to know in 4th grade? Did we cover enough of it? What will he need for high school and college? How much more does he need to be an enriched and educated individual? I know he’s already learned more than he would in school, as I don’t think I ever learned there was more than one kingdom of Egypt. Still, is it enough?

He’s read the Kingfisher chapters on Ancient Egypt, learned Ancient Egypt-related vocabulary, wrote important Ancient Egyptian dates on the time line, and filled out maps of the Old and New Kingdoms. He read The Great Pyramid. He read The Golden Goblet and is currently reading Mara, Daughter of the Nile. We went to the Carlos Museum where he saw items from all three kingdoms firsthand. Today, he read through the section on Egyptian gods on the Children’s University of Manchester’s Ancient Egypt site. Tomorrow, on that same site (which has several great activities) I might let him use a virtual hook to scoop out virtual brains to make a virtual mummy. He did a keyword outline for each of the ten main gods listed and then wrote a short paragraph (upstairs, based only on his notes and memory) about each of the gods. Next week, we’re doing review and Officer Daddyman would like to build a pyramid with Captain Science. We’re considering Rice Krispy treats as an appropriate building block.

Is this enough? Will he learn every thing he needs to know (in this particular history cycle) about Egypt? How do I know? I know that, in theory, these are the building blocks for deeper study the next go-round, which will be 8th or 9th grade for us), but is our foundation strong enough to build upon? Will I really not know until I come around to it the next time?

I know we’ve covered it in greater depth than the public school. I know this. I really do. Captain Science had a piddlin’ little Egypt unit last year. I’m not just satisfied with “better than public school,” though. I want it to be enough. I want it all to be enough.

If it’s not, however, I’m not going to throw the baby out with the bathwater when it comes to planning, at least. I’ll just build a better scope and sequence. It’ll end up rigorous enough.

Right? Right?

ETA: Considering ditching Kingfisher and replacing it with the National Geographic Almanac of World History. Or maybe History: The Definitive Visual Guide (From The Dawn of Civilization To The Present Day), because it actually uses BCE, which I prefer. Timelines of World History looks nice as a supplemental, doesn’t it? Maybe I can sell the Kingfisher.

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Tagged as: ancient egypt, curriculum, homeschool, scope and sequence, secular homeschool

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