Showing posts with label ABC Blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ABC Blogging. Show all posts

Monday, April 16, 2018

YWAM Publishing (Blogging Through the Alphabet)

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YWAM Publishing (Blogging Through the Alphabet) on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

After so many years of homeschooling, I've had plenty of opportunities to try curriculum and explore all kinds of resources, so during this Blogging Through the Alphabet tour, I'm highlighting some of the many homeschooling resources that have been stand-outs. Sometimes it will be a walk down memory lane as I share something we enjoyed many years ago, and sometimes it will be something we're using currently. Sometimes I'll focus on a specific curriculum, and sometimes on a subject area. And I imagine I'll have to be a bit creative with a couple letters of the alphabet! This week I'm remembering biographies from YWAM Publishing.

YWAM Publishing

YWAM Publishing is the publishing arm of Youth With A Mission, with a focus on books that feature evangelism, prayer, discipleship, and ministry. Purchases from YWAM Publishing support their evangelism, training, and ministries all over the world. We've read and reviewed books from two of their series. The Christian Heroes: Then & Now series focuses on missionaries, Christian authors, and evangelists like Adoniram Judson, Brother Andrew, and Corrie ten Boom. The Heroes of History series highlights the stories of explorers, inventors, American presidents, and more (examples are Daniel Boone, John Adams, and Ronald Reagan.) A Unit Study Curriculum Guide series provides additional study materials for many of those titles. I had purchased several of the books to use in history studies many years ago (Christopher Columbus and Jim Elliott were a couple of the titles in that personal collection), and we also were able to review three titles. Most recently was the biography of Milton Hershey, and before that we reviewed books about Orville Wright and C.S. Lewis. Here are some brief summaries from those reviews!


YWAM Publishing

Since we live not too far from Hershey, Pennsylvania, we've been there and enjoyed the Hershey Chocolate World tour, and Kennady was interested to know more about the man who gave his name to not just a chocolate company, but to an entire community. So that's why she chose Milton Hershey - More Than Chocolate when this review opportunity came up. Also, we like to involve chocolate in our studies whenever possible! Kennady enjoyed reading this book about Hershey's life, learning how he persevered through many setbacks and apparent failures to reach his goals and become successful. During the time she was reading this book for the review, she updated me almost daily on what she was learning about Hershey's life and how he became interested in making chocolates and candy. We also used parts of the Unit Study Guide.
Kennady says that she's inspired by the fact that Milton Hershey never gave up. He learned from his mistakes and misfortunes and was determined to succeed and prove that he could do great things. And it wasn't just financial and personal success that he achieved, but he was committed to doing the right things and to  doing good for others as well.
Heroes of History from YWAM Publishing - Milton Hershey - A Homeschool Coffee Break Review for the Homeschool Review Crew on @kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

Heroes of History from YWAM Publishing - Milton Hershey - A Homeschool Coffee Break Review for the Homeschool Review Crew on @kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

Read our full review here: Heroes of History from YWAM Publishing - Milton Hershey

Heroes of History from YWAM Publishing - Milton Hershey - A Homeschool Coffee Break Review for the Homeschool Review Crew on @kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

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Heroes of History {YWAM Publishing Review}

An earlier choice for a review was Orville Wright: The FlyerAlthough the book tells the story of both Wright Brothers, it focuses on Orville. We learned about the brothers' childhood, their first business endeavors, and how they became determined to solve the problems of flight and come up with a reliable and safe Flyer. The book highlights Orville's positive character traits such as hard work, perseverance, creativity, and respect, while also telling about the setbacks the brothers faced, and about their mistakes and failings. They also demonstrated commitment to their goals, and persistence in achieving success although they had limited education and limited funds.

The study guide includes many prompts for writing assignments, some for creative writing and some ideas for essays or research. There are many ideas for hands-on projects, such as constructing a model airplane, making timelines or powerpoint presentations, designing postcards, and designing a NASA-style "mission patch" commemorating the first flight. There are a few reproducible activity sheets for map work, timelines, and a biography page. 

Orville Wright: The Flyer - Heroes of History - A Homeschool Coffee Break review of the book and unit study from YWAM Publishing @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com


Orville Wright: The Flyer - Heroes of History - A Homeschool Coffee Break review of the book and unit study from YWAM Publishing @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com


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C.S. Lewis: Master Storyteller (Christian Heroes, Then and Now from YWAM Publishing), a review on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

Our first review was C.S. Lewis: Master Storyteller. Kennady had long been a fan of the Chronicles of Narnia and did know something about the author, but was excited to find out more. 
She greatly enjoyed learning about his fascination with hearing and telling stories, and how he used the stories to talk about truth, faith, and life. Although we knew that Lewis had come to Christian faith as a young man, and that he was friends with J.R.R. Tolkien, we did not know that he had once professed to be an atheist, or that he and Tolkien were members of a small literary group called the 'Inklings'. Kennady and I both were very interested in how Lewis developed the ideas that became his best-known book, The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe. (The Narnia Chronicles are beloved books and movies in our home, by the way!) The image of a faun with an umbrella had originally come to Lewis when he was a teenager; he incorporated that image into a story of a group of evacuee children, and figured out how to work a large wardrobe (one his grandfather had built and carved) and a lion he named Aslan (he'd had recurring dreams about the lion) into the story. All this and so much more is included in the biography, and Kennady found it a fascinating read. 

C.S. Lewis: Master Storyteller (Christian Heroes, Then and Now from YWAM Publishing), a review on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com


C.S. Lewis: Master Storyteller (Christian Heroes, Then and Now from YWAM Publishing), a review on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

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With each of the books, we also received the study guides, and we did some picking and choosing as far as the activities we used. For families who enjoy unit studies, these guides would be a great fit with all the great ideas for hands-on activities, further studies, field trips, and more. We thought that many of the activities might be better suited to a classroom or to a family study, but were easily able to adapt the ones that interested us so that just one student could enjoy and learn from them.

I don't think there's a better biography series for young readers to be inspired and encouraged than these two sets from YWAM Publishing. I love to see these great stories of heroic men and women passed on to a new generation.
By the way, you can stop by the Homeschool Review Crew blog, and see ALL of the YWAM Publishing Reviews that Crew members have done over the past few years! In fact, there's another round of reviews of the YWAM series coming up in just a couple of weeks. There are so many titles to choose from that I recommend browsing the past reviews as well as those coming soon to see which Heroes you'd like to learn about in your homeschool.

Blogging Through the Alphabet again? Yes, I took the challenge, along with several other Crew members, including our three co-hosts for this round - Amanda at Hopkins Homeschool, DaLynn at Biblical Womanhood, and Kirsten at DoodleMom's Homeschooling Life. I think I am finished though, because at this point I have nothing in mind for the letter Z. It's been another wonderful trip through the alphabet, hasn't it? Please say a heartfelt thank you to these bloggers for hosting, and stay tuned because I've heard that Blogging Through the Alphabet will return soon with new hosts!

This post is linked at Blogging Through the Alphabet for Week 25, Letter Y.



This post will also be linked at the Homeschool Linky Party on the Homeschool Review Crew blog.

Homeschool linky party

 Don't miss a coffee break! Subscribe to Homeschool Coffee Break by Email!

 ©2006-2018 Homeschool Coffee Break. All rights reserved. All text, photographs, artwork, and other content may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form without the written consent of the author. http://kympossibleblog.blogspot.com/

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.



Monday, April 9, 2018

Institute for Excellence in Writing (Blogging Through the Alphabet)

This post contains affiliate links - using affiliate links from Homeschool Coffee Break helps fuel this blog and our homeschool - thank you!



After so many years of homeschooling, I've had plenty of opportunities to try curriculum and explore all kinds of resources, so during this Blogging Through the Alphabet tour, I'm highlighting some of the many homeschooling resources that have been stand-outs. Sometimes it will be a walk down memory lane as I share something we enjoyed many years ago, and sometimes it will be something we're using currently. Sometimes I'll focus on a specific curriculum, and sometimes on a subject area. And I imagine I'll have to be a bit creative with a couple letters of the alphabet! This week I had to take some liberties with spelling, as I feature resources from the Institute for Excellence in Writing for the letter X. 




We have been extremely lucky in being able to review curriculum from Institute for Excellence in Writing several times. And everything we've used from them has been excellent in every way. Our most recent review was last year, when we tried out the updated High School Essay Intensive. In this essay writing workshop, students focus on developing skills they'll need for college. Not just for college level writing, but also for writing the essay portions of the SAT and ACT, and even for writing the kinds of biographical essays that accompany college applications. Students continue to add to the  IEW Structure and Style writing model, adding more sophisticated writing tools to their toolbox, and building confidence in their ability to succeed. As usual, Andrew Pudewa's clear and engaging lecture style delivers lots of practical instruction in a very encouraging tone. It's easy to understand, and his sense of humor makes it enjoyable too. This Essay Intensive package came with the Essayist version of a wonderful invention called Portable Walls. The Essayist version has extra reference helps for high school and college-bound students. The general guidelines and strategies in Part One and the Personal Essay instruction in Part Four are valuable for all high school students, whether they are college bound or not. The video lessons specific to the ACT and SAT are also very practical, breaking down what can be an intimidating assignment into understandable parts so the student can feel well-prepared.

Institute for Excellence in Writing High School Essay Intensive

Read our full review here: High School Essay Intensive

High School Essay Intensive - A Homeschool Coffee Break Review for the Homeschool Review Crew @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com


Earlier in our homeschooling years, we reviewed and used the Student Writing Intensive Level B and Level C, as well as Fix-It! Grammar. When Landon was starting Grade 9 and Kennady was starting Grade 7, we got our first opportunity to try IEW curriculum by reviewing the Student Writing Intensive Level B

I saw significant improvement in their writing, and perhaps more importantly, in their attitude towards writing. With this method the students learn structure by making an outline of key words from a provided paragraph or sample, and then rewrite the essay or story in their own words using the outline they've made. It's great because the kid doesn't need to come up with something to say as well as say it in an interesting way. They can focus on one thing at a time. Landon learned to write solid and descriptive paragraphs without it taking all day. Kennady learned to stick to an outline and be more concise, but could still use her creativity to advantage. They both had fun challenging each other to come up with strong verbs and avoid the "banned words".

Read our full review here: Student Writing Intensive Level B

Then awhile later, we reviewed the Student Writing Intensive Level C, along with Fix-It! Grammar. By this time, Landon was finishing up Grade 10 and Kennady was finishing Grade 8. They both used the Writing Intensive course, and Kennady used Fix-It! Grammar.

IEW Review

The package included the Teaching Writing: Structure & Style DVD set and Seminar workbook for the teacher/parent. It's a set of twelve DVDs - nine are the TWSS seminar and three are student demo DVDs. The Student Writing Intensive DVD set Level C is for high school level students, and it made it so easy for us to do a quality writing class. Andrew Pudewa does the teaching via the DVD, which we all found entertaining, and obviously educational! Kennady liked using vocabulary effectively and structuring her writing well. Landon was always a reluctant writer, but was fine practicing his writing skills without having to come up with his own material all the time.

Institute for Excellence in Writing, A Schoolhouse Crew Review on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

We very quickly fell in love with the Fix-It! Grammar books, and Kennady continued to use them for all of the next school year. It's such a painless way to learn grammar, especially for story lovers. Students just look for the errors in the provided story, sentence by sentence, and correct them. Along the way they learn about parts of speech and their functions.

Read our full review here: Student Writing Intensive Level C and Fix-It! Grammar

Institute for Excellence in Writing, A Schoolhouse Crew Review on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com


And finally, we also reviewed something a little different - Linguistic Development through Poetry Memorization. This is an easy-to-use system of memorizing poetry, along with some excellent information about how and why to do so.

Linguistic Development through Poetry Memorization  IEW Review

Start by listening to or viewing Nurturing Competent Communicators, which is a workshop that explains why memorizing poetry can have a positive impact on a student's vocabulary and writing; and why memorization and recitation used to be such an effective educational tool.

 The program makes it easy for parents to help their children memorize poetry. There's a kid-friendly student book full of carefully selected poems, along with CDs of Andrew Pudewa reciting each one. Students learn by reading and by hearing the poems. Just being able to listen to poetry recited by Andrew Pudewa made this super appealing to us, and Kennady and I had a lot of fun memorizing the poems together and challenging each other to see who could learn faster or deliver the best recitation.

Read our full review here: Poetry Memorization with Institute for Excellence in Writing)


Poetry Memorization with IEW - A Schoolhouse Crew Review of Linguistic Development through Poetry Memorization on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com


Blogging Through the Alphabet again? Yes, I'm taking the challenge, along with several other Crew members, including our co-hosts for this round - Amanda at Hopkins Homeschool and Kirsten at DoodleMom's Homeschooling Life. The link is open from Thursday to Wednesday each week, so join in if you'd like!

This post is linked at Blogging Through the Alphabet for Week 24, Letter X.



This post is part of a #breakthrulinkup at Breakthrough Homeschooling - Join us! This post is also linked at the Encouraging Hearts & Home Blog Hop hosted by Apron Strings & Other Things; and at the Homeschool Linky Party on the Homeschool Review Crew blog.



 Homeschool linky party

 Don't miss a coffee break! Subscribe to Homeschool Coffee Break by Email!

©2006-2018 Homeschool Coffee Break. All rights reserved. All text, photographs, artwork, and other content may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form without the written consent of the author.http://kympossibleblog.blogspot.com/

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.



Thursday, March 29, 2018

Writing Fiction in High School (Blogging Through the Alphabet)

This post contains affiliate links - using affiliate links from Homeschool Coffee Break helps fuel this blog and our homeschool - thank you! 

Writing Fiction in High School (Blogging Through the Alphabet) on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com


After so many years of homeschooling, I've had plenty of opportunities to try curriculum and explore all kinds of resources, so during this Blogging Through the Alphabet tour, I'm highlighting some of the many homeschooling resources that have been stand-outs. Sometimes it will be a walk down memory lane as I share something we enjoyed many years ago, and sometimes it will be something we're using currently. Sometimes I'll focus on a specific curriculum, and sometimes on a subject area. And I imagine I'll have to be a bit creative with a couple letters of the alphabet! This week I'm looking ahead to a textbook we're going to be using next year - Writing Fiction [in High School]: Bringing Your Stories to Life! by Sharon Watson.

So I've already gone on and on about Writing by Sharon Watson, because we reviewed The Power in Your Hands and then decided to use it in our homeschool co-op. In fact, some co-op parents wanted me to teach the class again next year, although I'm concerned there's not enough student turnover to do the same one two years in a row. Hmmm. And my daughter really wants to write fiction. Light bulb moment: I could teach Writing Fiction [in High School] next year! Kennady gets to do a credit class on fiction writing, and the co-op gets a writing class. Plus I get paid a little something to teach said class. Win - win - and more win!

I went ahead and ordered the books so I'd have them available for prospective students and parents to preview at our co-op open houses, and so that I could start getting familiar and lesson planning.

Writing Fiction in High School (Blogging Through the Alphabet) on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

Kennady and I are excited. Of course it's still too early in the game to be able to give a full review of this curriculum, but I'm pretty confident it will get thumbs up. It's written in the same conversational and direct-to-the-student style as The Power in Your Hands, with grammar lessons and a bit of humor sprinkled among the solid teaching. The text covers:

Point of View
Fairy Tales
Characters and Characterization
Empathetic Lead
Character Motivation
The Antagonist
Conflict
Death
Tension
Character Arc
Dialogue
Subtext
Description
Settings
Audience
Connotations, Verb Tense, Parallelism
Theme
Plot
Scenes
Narrative Summary
Flashbacks
Mirror Scenes
Beginnings and Endings
Getting Published 


There are works of fiction read and discussed throughout the course, and there are several movies to watch as part of the lessons as well. I'm very excited about that, as the movies are some that are favorites already. One book, The Last Book In The Universe by Rodman Philbrick, is referred to often in the text so that one is recommended to purchase, but the others are fine to borrow from the library if we don't already own them. The text also offers a track for all writers to follow, and a manuscript track that is optional but is designed for students who have written a short story or novel or are working on one. The Teacher's Guide isn't as "full" as the one for The Power in Your Hands, and I am a little concerned about being able to grade fiction writing as easily. But overall, from what I've seen so far, the course will be easy to teach and follow, and I think it will be so much fun for all of us!

Kennady has already written quite a few short stories so she is interested in trying her hand at a longer work of fiction. Who knows? Anything is possible! And how fun if she winds up being published?!

   


I hope you'll check back in the next school year for some updates on how it's going!

Sharon Watson is a veteran homeschool mom and co-op teacher of literature and composition that has been sharing her relaxed and conversational teaching style with homeschoolers through resources like The Power In Your Hands Jump In!Writing Fiction [In High School, and Illuminating Literature: When Worlds Collide

The Power in Your Hands (Blogging Through the Alphabet) on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

      

Disclaimer: I am voluntarily providing this review and information about a product I have chosen to use. I received no compensation, nor was I required to write about or mention this product. All opinions expressed are my own or those of my family.

Read our full review of the non-fiction writing course here: The Power in Your Hands (A Schoolhouse Crew Review) and the update in the Blogging Through the Alphabet series here: The Power in Your Hands (Blogging Through the Alphabet).

The Power in Your Hands (Writing Non-Fiction in High School) from Writing with Sharon Watson - A Homeschool Coffee Break review for the Schoolhouse Review Crew on kympossibleblog.blogspot.com  The Power in Your Hands (Blogging Through the Alphabet) on Homeschool Coffee Break @ kympossibleblog.blogspot.com

Blogging Through the Alphabet again? Yes, I'm taking the challenge, along with several other Crew members, including our three co-hosts for this round - Amanda at Hopkins Homeschool, DaLynn at Biblical Womanhood, and Kirsten at DoodleMom's Homeschooling Life. The link is open from Thursday to Wednesday each week, so join in if you'd like!

This post is linked at Blogging Through the Alphabet for Week 23, Letter W.



This post is part of a #breakthrulinkup at Breakthrough Homeschooling - Join us! This post is also linked at the Encouraging Hearts & Home Blog Hop hosted by Apron Strings & Other Things; and at the Homeschool Linky Party on the Homeschool Review Crew blog.



 Homeschool linky party

 Don't miss a coffee break! Subscribe to Homeschool Coffee Break by Email!

 ©2006-2018 Homeschool Coffee Break. All rights reserved. All text, photographs, artwork, and other content may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form without the written consent of the author. http://kympossibleblog.blogspot.com/ 

 We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.