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Teaching Children: A Curriculum Guide to What Children Need to Know at Each Level Through Grade Six

Teaching Children: A Curriculum Guide to What Children Need to Know at Each Level Through Grade Six

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Author: Diane Lopez
Creators: Elizabeth Laraway Wilson, Susan Schaeffer Macaulay
Publisher: Crossway Books
Category: Book

List Price: $15.99
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
Sales Rank: 776586

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 0.9

ISBN: 0891074899
Dewey Decimal Number: 649.68
EAN: 9780891074892
ASIN: 0891074899

Publication Date: April 1989
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Also Available In:

  • Unknown Binding - Teaching children: A curriculum guide to what children need to know at each level through grade six

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

What does my child need to learn and when does he need to learn it?

Teaching Children, a unique curriculum guide for grad levels K through six, provides answers. An excellent educational approach which naturally integrates a Christian worldview and Scriptural principles, Teaching Children draws on noted English educator Charlotte Mason and the Child-Light approach to learning. Child-Light puts children in touch with fine literature and teaches them through the use of "living books." It applies a literary, written, and verbal approach to learning, presenting a logical sequence of skills, concepts, and content.

The result--an important resource for those who want to get away from preplanned curriculums. Teaching Children is for both classroom and home teachers, for public and Christian schools, for everyone who desires to enrich a child's learning experience!

An introduction written by Susan Schaeffer Macaulay, author of For the Children's Sake, explains how and why the Child-Light educational approach came about, and how this third Child-Light book fits into the Child-Light program.




Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars A somewhat useful book with a misleading title   August 13, 1999
 117 out of 120 found this review helpful

Out of the three Child-Light education books, this is the only one I own, but I'd recommend For the Children's Sake and Books Children Love over this one. Of the three, this is the least readable (it's mostly scope and sequence) and the least homeschool friendly (classroom teachers might find it more useful). It lists poems and books to read (mostly in the literature and history/geography sections--there is no booklist for science at all), but other books have more comprehensive lists (such as Laura M. Berquist's Designing Your Own Classical Curriculum). It does not draw at all on the resources currently available to and popular with Christian homeschoolers, even those that were available 10 years ago when the book was published. A very short chapter on using the curriculum in home schools ends up being only a plug for Calvert correspondence school. On the positive side, the breakdown of the steps in teaching reading and the related lists such as meanings of suffixes and prefixes are useful, especially for those teaching without a packaged curriculum. Some of the "alternate" social studies ideas (in an appendix) are more interesting and logical than the main sequence; for instance, third graders spend a year studying "The World Around Me", which involves local history, geography and nature study, branching out into local problems and areas in which children can serve others. The subject overviews, if you have not read For The Children's Sake or Karen Andreola's A Charlotte Mason Companion, which cover the same ideas in more depth, would be a good introduction to the educational principles of Charlotte Mason. For my money, though, I have gotten more practical use out of Ruth Beechick's You CAN Teach Your Child Successfully, which really does explain HOW to teach, and Laura Berquist's book, which pulls in currently available materials to create a curriculum probably more realistic and specifically for homeschoolers. (She doesn't include those phonics breakdowns, though.) If you can borrow this book, it's worth taking a look at; but if you have to spend money for it, there are others I'd go for first.

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