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Showing posts with label Christian worldview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian worldview. Show all posts

Monday, October 27, 2014

New Liberty Videos - Review

One of the easiest ways to incorporate something new into our school day is through a video.  So, we were happy to try out New Liberty Videos DVD called Warriors of Honor - The Faith and Legacies of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson.



Videos are especially looked forward to because we are still (mostly) doing the no T.V. during the week thing.  This video is a  documentary and covers some of the major battles of the Civil War, but it also gives some personal insight into the lives of Confederate generals Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson, including the fact that they were both faithful Christians.
I will admit that is something that I had never thought of before.  I am not sure if it is because I grew up in the North (Minnesota), but there was always the mentality that the North were the good guys and that we were looking out for the slaves.  On the flip side, the South were the bad guys that thought slavery was perfectly acceptable.

But, some parts of this video made me question that belief.  (General Sherman was kind of a jerk.)
Warriors of Honor showed me that it wasn't quite that clear cut, or forgive me....black and white....nor is it meant to "whitewash" the sins of the North.....or the South. 
I watched this with my three youngest, A-man, S-girl, and V-girl.  It is about 80 minutes long, so we watched it in about 20 minute sections.  There was some pretty heavy material in this.  True, historical information, but, some was pretty heavy.
The videos are for "general" audiences.  So, there are probably some people that wouldn't want their children to watch this video, nor would they want to explain some of the content.
Since moving from Minnesota to Georgia, some of these things we have discussed.....in very general terms.....already.  But, I will admit, some of this documentary was difficult to watch....and....explain to the kids.
Once they figured out what were "real" pictures and what were re-enactments, (The still pictures were real and the movies were re-enactments) I had some difficult conversations to have.  There were quite a few disturbing scenes from the real pictures.

Dead men.

Some dead men that looked very, very young.

Not glamorized versions of war.  But, real pictures of the men that fought this fight.  Pictures of men that that were sons, brothers, and dads. 

That little fact right there sort of stopped the kids in their tracks.  That was a real person, not an actor pretending to be dead, but a man that was somebody's dad.....laying in the field....dead.....and was never going to go home and see his kids again. 

This documentary is probably more suited to an older audience, but I am still glad I watched it with the little ones.  They were shocked that there was a war, right at a church.  The Dunker Church in Sharpsburg, MD.  It was a horrible, bloody battle.  My kids couldn't believe that they were just standing outside a church and shooting each other.  The mind of a child, huh?  I had never thought of it that way before. 


Modern photo of Dunker Church with cannon
(The Dunker Church, photo courtesy of the National Park Service)

Yes, I had to have some difficult discussions about slavery, government involvement, and, even how Christians can be fighting a war on opposite sides....and still think they are doing the right thing. 

I found a lot of interesting items through this documentary that I either never learned....or forgot once I passed the test.  Things like the war was really more about a clash of cultures, not necessarily North vs. South.  That the South believed in independence and didn't want the government too involved in their lives, whereas, the North embraced the government. (hmmm....maybe I do belong in the South)

I found it sad that 17% of the soldiers from the North and 33% of those from the South died during the Civil War.  Sad.

I really enjoyed the narration, that shared their actual words.....usually from letters written to wives or children.  It really gave a glimpse into their hearts and thought processes during this historical time period...and made them very human.  It also made me sad for the loss of good, old fashioned letter writing!  (Make sure to pay attention to the end of the movie where a Union soldier describes his meeting with General Lee after the Battle of Gettysburg.)

This DVD also has bonus segments on Slavery (not just black people), Sam Davis (Brave...and the letter to his mother.....sigh....)and The Palmyra Incident (Uggg....horrible).

I have a confession to make.  We have lived in Georgia for 5 years.  We have lived in the same town for that whole time.  This statue has been there the whole time.  We were in our town for the scarecrow contest, just happily strolling along looking at the funny scarecrows local businesses had put together for the contest.  We had to walk through the center of the square, to get to some of the entries......and there he was. 

General Robert E. Lee.

I have noticed it, but never paid  much attention to it.

 


To our Confederate soldiers,
Those who fell in fiercest fighting and sleep beneath the sod of every Southern state.  Those who have passed away in the after years of peace, and whose ashes now hallow old Henry's Hill sides, Those who like a benediction, still limp in our our midst.  May God preserve forever in our hearts, their memory and in all minds, a knowledge of their motives and their cause.
It was interesting.  It sort of brought it all home that the Civil War was real.

That real battles happened near where we are living.

People died.

It was real.

It is real.

The Civil War wasn't such a black and white issue.

Warriors of Honor  was a good supplement to our school.  It would be a GREAT addition to a Civil War unit.  While it will be most greatly enjoyed by your older children, especially those truly interested in history, even the ones who are bored by history will be able to find items of interest in the movie.  It really made this Northern girl rethink a few things.  It really did.

You can get a copy of Warriors of Honor for $19.95.  
There are other videos available that other TOS reviewers watched.  Take a look at what they thought of the other New Liberty Videos.



This is the perfect movie for history buffs. 



Thursday, September 25, 2014

Goings On.....Summer 2014....Part 2

When we got back from our road trip up north, it was time to start school.  Literally, like, the next day.

This year, D-man and A-girl are both attending the local college prep high school that was started by homeschoolers.  The beauty of this school to me, is two-fold:  They only attend class 2-3 times a week (so I still get to see them a lot!), and it is a college prep school (hard classes with high expectations!).

D-man....11th grade......ignoring the woman who got up early and made him a hot breakfast for the first day of school, saying hello (and, I am sure, other mushy things) to J-girl on her first day back to school too.  (They don't attend the same school.....poor things.)


A-girl with her slightly nervous grin.....9th grade.

See?  She can look at the woman who got up early to make her a hot breakfast on the first day of school!

Off they went.....with their huge backpacks!

I had originally planned on starting our home school students on the same day....but we got home late Saturday night/early Sunday morning....Sunday was my birthday.....and I am just not that organized....so the other 4 got another week of summer break.  Really though, considering A-girl and D-man started school on August 4th, the other kids still started earlier than a lot of people!

Rainman was off on Monday, so we could co-teach on the first day of school.

L-girl, as usual, was very self-sufficient and hit the books hard while I was still sipping my coffee!


L-girl.....7th grade.
Look at her little coffee cup all full of freshly sharpened pencils!  Love this girl!


A-man....4th grade.


Captain America t-shirt made by L-girl for him.  Nice fake smile for me, dude!
 

 S-girl....2nd grade.

Must be the day for crazy smiles or something.....


And, you may have seen a preview of this in some of my other pictures....

V-girl.....

Yes, she started Kindergarten this year....how can that possibly be?  I also realize it is time to change her (and the other kids') picture on my sidebar...she is not really my baby anymore, is she?!?



I just love their diligent little faces as they do their school work.  

We have some days that don't go as well as others, but on the days that do go well....man, there is nothing like it.  

I still love, love, love that we can homeschool.  I love that I get to spend lots and lots of time with all 6 of my kids.  I really do.  I can't explain it to people.  

I love that I get to hug and snuggle with them during school hours, just because.....or, because they are struggling with reading or writing or arithmetic.  We snuggle.  We wipe away tears.  We try again, until we get it!

I love it.  I really do.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Wizzy Gizmo - A Review

We got the chance to listen to Wizzy Gizmo, just in time for our big road trip this summer.  It was an audio drama called Who Created Everything?

 

This was a quick, easy, and fun review for us to do this summer.  Who Created Everything? is an audio drama (radio theater) of the book of Genesis - Chapter 1.  The goal of Wizzy Gizmo is to give your kids....and you.....a fun option to learn more of the stories from the Bible.  Not that reading the actual stories are bad, this is just something....a little.....different.



(The crazy gray haired guy on the CD cover is Wizzy Gizmo....in case you hadn't guessed!  He also has his faithful assistants, a robot duck named  Qwacky, and his Mexican dog, Pepe.)

It was a fun listen.  The whole adventure only lasted a little over 30 minutes.  The recommended ages for this was 4 through 12, but since we were all on the road trip, we all listened.  The littles were disappointed when it ended and asked if we had the next CD.  The bigs didn't complain too much, so I will consider that a win.  I had fun listening.  Rainman was in league with the bigs and didn't complain (or make fun of it)....so, I know he didn't hate it. 

One of the ways that Wizzy Gizmo sets themselves apart in this genre of Bible based storytelling is their dedication to the factual representation of the Bible.  This also isn't just a narrator telling the Bible stories dramatically.  There are characters, like Wizzy Gizmo himself, an inventor, and others, that when the Bible gets plugged into the Gizmovision, go on an adventure to see what was really happening at the creation of the world.

Many times when you have audio dramas for kids to listen to, there is always at least that one kid that is a brat.  You know, what I mean......the one that you would be totally embarrassed, if they were yours.  Smart mouthed.  Disrespectful.  Mean.

The Wizzy Gizmo series didn't have that.  All the characters were nice, wholesome, curious kids.  Not a mean or sassy one in the bunch.  Some will call that unrealistic.  But, I call it a nice relief, that I don't have to teach another lesson after the audio drama was over.

You know the kind of lesson that starts the lecture something like this...... "Now, kids.  I know that was funny, but don't you ever say/do what (insert characters name here) said/did.  That is not okay.  Trust me, if you did that, you would get in a LOT of trouble!"

I used to love listening to radio drama when I was younger.  The old radio mystery theater ones, with squeaking doors and the sound of shoes walking away on the cobblestones.  I like them now, too.  Things like  Garrison Keillor and the Prairie Home Companion series.

I love the different actors.  I love the sound effects.  But, most of all, I love that audio dramas help you create a picture in your mind of the action.    Wizzy Gizmo has all of the great stuff I love.  Different actors....not just one actor using different voices.....although, I will say the narrator....has an AWESOME mysterious voice.  Sound effects.  Music.  And, most of all......it created pictures in my mind of creation.

There are 7 songs at the end of the CD, some of them are contemporary style music, like you would hear in church, others are orchestrated instrumental songs, with titles like:

Worthy Are You
Third Heaven
Everything
Let There Be Light
Sunrise to Space
Under Water Adventures
Creatures of the World
Go Forth

My kids didn't quite know what to do with these.....they wanted there to be action and kept expecting someone to talk.....nobody did.  So, as each instrumental song started, I would tell them the title of the song and asked them to create pictures in their head to match the music.  This is the point where I probably lost the big kids and Rainman, but, I think the littles and I thought it was kind of fun.

I have heard the creation story my whole life.  But, I have never....and I do mean, never....pictured what it looked like while it was happening.  Who Created Everything? got me to dream a little and imagine what it was like when there weren't animals roaming the earth or birds in the sky.  It was pretty cool.

Want to hear a little bit of Who Created Everything?  Here are some samples.  Check out Day Three.....one of my favorites.

Wizzy Gizmo's goal is to help families live out Deuteronomy 6:5-6:

You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. These words, which I am commanding you today, shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your sons and shall talk of them when you sit in your house and when you walk by the way and when you lie down and when you rise up.

This audio series was perfect for our family to take on our road trip to see our family this summer.  But, it could easily be used at bedtime or on shorter trips around town too....since they aren't super long.  If we get more in this series, we will probably use them at lunchtime.  Since, during the school year, we don't watch t.v. during the week (unless it is a special occasion or I am stressed out and need some quiet time Emoji).....this would be a nice alternative to the usual kids t.v. available.  Again, I love that this creates word pictures in our heads.....and requires a little imagination.

There are books of this series available also if you don't want to go the audio book route.  I can see those as being great bedtime reading. 

You can get the Wizzy Gizmo- Who Created Everything? adventures to listen to for $14.99.

See what other TOS Reviewers thought of their Wizzy Gizmos.




Thursday, May 29, 2014

Apologia - What On Earth Can I Do? - Review

Apologia Education Ministries is a company very well known in homeschooling circles.



But, even if you aren't a homeschooler, they have some awesome products that you can use with your kids.

This time around, we got a book called What On Earth Can I Do?.  This book is part of the What We Believe series that helps develop a Biblical worldview.   Whether you like it or not, everyone has some type of "worldview".  I am going with a Biblical worldview at our house.



I have now been lucky enough to review 3 of the books in this series.  In addition to the new book, What On Earth Can I Do?,

Check out my reviews on:

Who Am I?  What Am I Doing Here?

Who Is My Neighbor?

The first book in the series (and the only one I haven't read/reviewed) is:

Who Is God?

I will be honest, when the opportunity to review this latest book in the series, I was planning on passing.  I was busy.  It was for grades 1 through 6, so I knew I would have to "teach" it and not just assign it.  I knew the review would happen at the end of our school year.  I just wasn't interested.

But, for our reviews at The OldSchoolhouse (TOS), we have to fill our interest forms for all the available products.,...and to do that, you need to take a look at the product, so you really know your interest level....or, in this case, why I wasn't interested.

I was doomed from the moment I went over to their website and read the little synopsis of the book.

".....helps children understand what it means to be a “good and faithful servant” of God (Matthew 25:23). This study will help them choose to put God first in every area of their lives based on these biblical truths: God owns all things because He created and sustains all things; He has entrusted me with certain gifts and wants me to use these gifts for His glory; I can honor God by using my money and possessions wisely; I can glorify Him by investing my time and talents wisely; my body is not my own but has been bought at a price; God expects me to care for His creation; God will reward me for my faithfulness."

Then, I read the sample lesson, which is the first one from the book....and I was really hooked!  I was going to have to teach this, even though it was the end of our school year.

The reason I was so enthralled with this is because it seemed to be sending a message that is completely opposite of the one the world is sending to our children.  

The message of this book?

That they are not the center of the universe!

That is right.  You heard me correctly.

My children are NOT the center of the universe.  

Honestly, I tell them that all the time.  I just thought I was the only one who did that.

What On Earth Can I Do? tells kids, quite simply, that God has a plan, you are a part of that plan, your gifts and talents are from him and should be used for what HE wants, not what will make you feel good.

There are 8 lessons in the book, they recommend you take about  2-3 weeks to complete most lessons. This works out well, because the lesson are pretty long (50ish pages or so).  We went the 3 week route and had "class" 2 days a week.  Take a look at a sample lesson plan from the book.





The book also came with Notebooking Journals.  



We got a regular Notebooking Journal and Junior Notebooking Journal.  A-man used the regular one and S-girl used the Junior one.  Same basic information, just simplified for the Junior version.  

The lessons in What On Earth Can I Do? are:

Your Story or God's Story
Who Put You In Charge?
Will You Be Found Faithful?
Where Is Your Treasure?
Where Does Your Time Go?
Whose Life Is  It Anyway?
Why Isn't It Easy Being Green?
What Will Happen When the Master Returns?

Each lesson starts out with the "big idea" that covers the main idea of that section.  Then it moves into a short story that asks you to think.  It then moves on to "hiding it in your heart" which is the Bible or scriptural portion of the lesson.  There are also pre-written prayers and prayer starters in the book.  The book moves onto a "What Should I Do?" section where they can consider how what they are learning can actually apply to their lives.  

It then turns to the teachings of Jesus through parables, with discussion that requires you to go deeper in thinking about what the parables mean for us today and how we can become better stewards of Jesus's teaching.

As you can probably tell from what I just listed, these lessons cover A LOT of stuff.  

We also got a coloring book.  


A-man didn't enjoy using this much.  S-girl, on the other hand, loved it.  Sometime she would color while I read the stories aloud.

So, onto how we used this curriculum.  We normally did this 2 days a week.  Honestly, this is one of those books that it was best to read it aloud to the kids and show them the pictures as I went along.  There was one day that I was really busy, and A-man wanted to officially be done with school for the day.  On that day, he sat and read the lesson to himself.  Then later, I read to S-girl and asked them both a few questions.  I had to make sure that A-man didn't just skim.  He didn't.  

I really liked this book.  The way it was presented, was very interesting to me, and especially, A-man.  S-girl liked it, but didn't seem to fully grasp things like A-man did.

One of A-man's favorite subjects is history.  The thing he loved about this book is that there were so many history based stories and mini-biographies about real people from history.  I am going to go into quite a bit of detail about the first lesson to give you an idea of the depth and scope of how the lessons are woven together from many different directions.

The book started off on a really deep level, talking about supporting actor, Claude Rains and talked about how our role should be a supporting actor in God's story and that we should try to steal the spotlight.  It then moved into a little biography about Adolf Hitler.  Not just the Adolf Hitler of World War II fame, but who he was before that time in history.  It was interesting.  I learned some things that I didn't know about him either.

The next part of this lesson is a fictional story about King's Cross train station during World War II.  It told of a family of children who had to move out to the country and stay with people they didn't know in order to stay safe from all the bombings happening in London.

We were able to have a lot of discussion after this story.  We talked about how it reminded us of The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe.  We talked about the fact that kids really had to do this during wartime.  We talked about how hard it would be for the kids and for the parents.  


The lesson then moved into a little biography about Charlie Chaplin and how his movies may have helped America to enter the war against Germany.

The lesson then moved into a little story about Maria von Trapp, yes the Sound of Music lady, and then Corrie ten Boom, who wrote The Hiding Place.

We were able to discuss these ladies quite a bit too, because we love The Sound of Music and back in 2001, Rainman and I (and the kids that were around then, D-man and A-girl) lived in Amsterdam for a month and went to the watch shop and home where Corrie ten Boom lived and helped hide Jews.

I forget sometimes the things my kids have and haven't learned.  We hadn't really covered much about World War II yet, just in the most general terms.  This book helped us dig a little deeper, but not in a scary way.



You should have seen their mouths drop open when we started talking about concentration camps and what Hitler believed about people.  That people really did have to hide from the government, just because of their heritage.  They were shocked when we talked a bit about the concentration camps and how people were treated and how many died there.

This isn't necessarily a subject that I was planning to teach them at this age, but now that I have and we have had some of these discussions, I am glad I am starting out a little earlier with the kids.  Their hearts are tender and open right now.  This is the time to talk to them about how they can be an ordinary person that God can do extraordinary things through, or that their little piece of the world can be a beautiful thread in the tapesty that God is weaving.

A portion from the end of this lesson jumped out at me...

"Maybe no one has ever heard of you.  Maybe no one will ever interview your or ask for your autograph.  And yet you are in a position to  to introduce people to the God of all creation.  You are on a first-name basis with the King or kings!  He will never snub you or pretend He doesn't know you.  And He will always take your call, whether you're in trouble, you need advice, or you just want to talk "

Isn't that comforting and awesome?

We are going to be continuing to work through this book during the summer months.  Actually, it has already gotten easier for us to fit this into our days without all the other normal subjects too.  I would say out of the two kids, A-man likes the curriculum better than S-girl.  But she is learning things too, her vocabulary has improved too.  That is where the Notebooking Journal was nice, because it really went through the words and concepts from the books.  



They used word finds, crossword puzzles, and, fill in the blanks.  At the end of each lesson there is a Find Out More section.  This area gives you "Things To Do" to apply the lessons that you learned, other books you can read that cover the same stuff, and even songs to listen to/sing and videos to watch.  

For example, lesson one that I told you about, with Hitler, Maria von Trapp, Charlie Chaplin recommended you watch The Prince of Egypt and The Sound of Music.  Song recommendations include, "Take My Life and Let It Be", by Frances Ridley Havergal and Henri Abraham Cesar Malan (whew, that is a long name),  and "Lead Me to the Cross" by Brooke Fraser.

It is just another way that you can dig deeper and connect the lesson in a more personal way.  

We really had a lot of fun and interesting discussions between the 3 of us.  Like I said, I imagine that some people may not be thrilled with the book starting out with some pretty serious/disturbing history during wartime.....but, it wasn't presented in a salacious or disturbing way that would traumatize my kids.

The first thing I thought about when I started this book was that it would make a great Bible study at church.  It has so many different ways of looking at the world, that I would love to see this done in a group setting in Sunday School or a Wednesday night Bible Study.....even all the way up through middle school and high school, even though that isn't the intended audience for this book.

You can get a hard copy of What On Earth Can I Do" for $39.00, the Notebooking Journal is $24.00, and the coloring book is $8.00

You can connect to Apologia in all kinds of ways.

 Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/apologiaworld
 Twitter – https://twitter.com/apologiaworld 
 Google+ - https://plus.google.com/105053356034237782125/posts
 Pinterest – http://www.pinterest.com/apologia/


You can see what other TOS reviewers thought of What On Earth Can I Do?