Provide reading material your children will love. Your animal lover will love to read these engaging classic stories! Here are some books and series have delighted my own children and I know your kids will love them too!
It is such a blessing for a high school student to get to write a novel sometimes during their high school years. In our house, since we love cozy mysteries, we decided to write our own “Who Dun It” in the pattern of the “Golden Age of Mystery.”
I found a set of picture books that I think are wonderful! I want to share these delightful counting books with you. Not only will your little ones explore the world of numbers, this series takes children all over the world to different habitats. What fun!
I was so excited to review Milton Hershey: More Than Chocolate from YWAM Publishing, part of the Heroes of History series. Mr. Hershey is a true hero of American History!
What’s the big deal about archaeology? Well, it shapes so much of what we know about Ancient History and Ancient Peoples.
Book clubs are like a party with food, talking, and people who like each other. My children prefer them to book reports.
Yes, literature analysis can be simple and fun. Read the book and watch the movie. How is the movie different from the book? It’s a great way to analyze without anyone knowing they are learning a new literature skill.
Your children will love meeting Christian Super-Heroes through picture books! In our family, we love reading well-written, beautifully-illustrated picture books, especially if they are about inspiring church history men and women who changed the world.
Digging deeper into good literature is fun and made easier by Progeny Press with their literature study guides. I reviewed Little Women Study Guide for high school students (8th – 12th grades) and In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson Study Guide for upper elementary students (4th – 6th grades). The E-book…
Reading the old classics from the Greeks, Hebrews, Romans, and other ancient cultures is like going on an adventure to another time and place. And yet, it seems so familiar. Why is that?