Posts Tagged ‘ebooks’

Snips and snails and puppy dog tails – that’s what little boys are made of. It is true boys and girls are different. The same can be said for how they learn.

While many girls enjoy the audio-visual aspects of learning including reading, writing and storytelling, many boys prefer the kinesthetic, hands-on aspects of learning. Anyone who has been around an active little boy understands the struggle any teacher would have with making that boy sit still for lessons. Keeping them still and focused is a challenge for most of their education.

These boys (and sometimes girls) need to be offered education that keeps them moving, having fun and learning, all rolled into one. This can be accomplished through use of manipulatives, learning games, field trips and experiments. Making it a more enjoyable learning environment will help these boys learn better, and achieve higher results. Creating lessons around topics they enjoy can also add to a beneficial learning experience. Dirt and mud and gross things are often inspiring to little boys and can keep their attention through a lesson. Superheroes are characters of interest to many little boys (and big boys too) and so can be used to inspire creative writing, science experiments and even math problems.

Education with a BANG suggests that when teaching active boys, incorporate a subject they love and develop it into a lesson that will help them learn the basics of education like math, science, history, english and geography. Not only will it ease the stress on the teacher, but it will benefit the child who will then love to learn!

Exclusive Education with a Bang unit studies are available right now at www.homeeducationresourceemporium.com/unit-studies

Look for the unit studies on soldiers, pirates, spies and more and put some BANG into your lessons.

History of Fashion Through Textiles is a 4 module unit study covering cotton, silk, wool and flax. It describes the process from raw material to cloth, including the history of the use of the cloth. Activities within the unit study include math, history, science, art and more making it a cross-curricular unit of study.

Here is a sneak peek:

Module 3: Cotton

Cotton is a natural fiber that grows on cotton plants. It is one of the most widely used natural fibers. There are four main types of cotton: Gossypium arboretum (Asiatic cotton); Gossypium herbaceum (Arabian cotton); Gossypium barbandense (Sea island or American Pima) and Gossypium hirsutum (Upland cotton).
Fibers of the cotton plant are called raw cotton which is made into textiles and then clothing. Cotton plants grow in the sub-tropics which are warm areas of the world just north and south of the equator.  China is the biggest producer of cotton and the United States is the biggest exporter of cotton. India is the third largest producer of cotton but sells very little of its raw cotton to other countries. In fact, the textile industry in India is so large that they need to import raw cotton from other countries.
In the United States cotton is grown mostly in the southern states of Texas, Georgia, Mississippi, Arkansas, North Carolina and Louisiana.

On this United States map, colour in the states where cotton is grown.
download the entire unit study at www.homeeducationresourceemporium.com/unit-studies

Getting ready for back to school means having lesson plans ready to go. A great asset to you lesson plans is downloadable workbooks.

Ebooks are quick to download, ready when you are, no problems with out of stock or out of print resources. Ebooks are broad ranged or specific so they can be used for review or in a theme study. Downloadable workbooks let you print only the pages you need, as many times as you need them. There are thousands of titles available and even a chance to preview some of the pages before you buy!

All you need is internet access, a computer and a printer and you can have thousands of books, workbooks and theme units at your fingertips!

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Sneak Peak: Pirates Unit Study

26 July; Author: admin

Blackbeard – a reading comprehension activity

One of the most famous pirates to ever sail the seas was Edward Teach who is better known for his nickname, Blackbeard.
Teach began his pirate career as a teenager on board a ship captained by Benjamin Hornigold, a British privateer. Teach remained part of Hornigold’s crew throughout the War of the Spanish Succession (Queen Anne’s War). By the end of the war Teach had become an experienced sea robber. After the war he joined a group of fierce Caribbean pirates. Soon, he became captain of his own ship.

Teach, who then became known as Blackbeard gained a reputation as the most frightening pirate. His appearance was also fearsome. He was over six feet tall and always well armed. Across his chest he wore a sling that held three pairs of pistols. A cutlass and a few knives completed his attire. His long black beard was braided and often, before a fight, he would put smoking fuses in his hat to make him look menacing. Even his own crew thought him to be the devil himself.
Blackbeard’s ship was a French frigate called Concorde. When it was captured it held twenty-six guns (cannons). Blackbeard upgraded the ship to forty guns and renamed it “Queen Anne’s Revenge.” Blackbeard and his crew terrorized sailors in the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea from 1716 to 1718.
He would pull aside a merchant ship and raise his flag demanding surrender. Blackbeard’s flag was not the traditional skull and crossbones. His flag contained a skeleton with horns and hooves which symbolized that he was in league with the devil. The skeleton held an hour glass in one hand and a spear in the other. The spear was aimed at a red heart which dripped blood. These were to symbolize that time had run out and surrender or blood would be spilled. The sight of Blackbeard’s flag added to his fearsome reputation usually led to immediate surrender. In fact, there is not record of Blackbeard ever killing anyone.

In 1718, Blackbeard established a base in the British colonies at what is now North Carolina. From this base he pirated ships along the North American coast. He would steal their goods and sell them to the local townspeople. After Blackbeard decided to settle down, the governor granted him a pardon in June of 1718. But when Blackbeard began pirating again Lt. Robert Maynard of the Royal Navy was sent to stop Blackbeard once and for all. On November 22, 1718, Blackbeard and Maynard fought in hand-to-hand combard on board Maynard’s ship The Adventure. Blackbeard suffered twenty sword wounds and five gun shot wounds until he was finally killed by a slash to the throat.

Maynard hung Blackbeard’s severed head from the bow of his ship as a warning to other pirates. It was the end of Blackbeard’s reign of terror.

For the complete unit study go to www.homeeducationresourceemporium.com/unit-studies

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Instant Lessons!

25 January; Author: Home Educator

downloadable ebooksDownloadable ebooks are a great way to have instant lessons! Find the book, add it to your cart, download and print!

Downloading workbooks is time-saving, money-saving and paper-saving because you need only to print the pages you want.  It gives you a great opportunity to fill in lessons with ready-made worksheets, templates and more. Even novels can be downloaded which can be great when there is a hard to find or popular book to be read for that lesson. Sometimes it is worth downloading a book to see if it is worth buying it for keeps. Audiobooks can also be downloaded to a computer or MP3 player, allowing for stories on the go, or to help the audio learner. Downloadable ebooks make quick and easy lesson plans with just a couple of clicks of the mouse!

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Taking the fear out of reading

15 October; Author: Home Educator

scary-storyScary movies, suspenseful novels – we all love a good scare. But sometimes, the pictures in picture books are too scary for children to enjoy reading the book. The wicked stepmother in Snow White can make you shudder, the flying monkeys in The Wizard of Oz can make you scream.

If you want your children to read these stories, help take the fear out of them. Download the book and offer them just the text. Go chapter by chapter and after each chapter is read, have them draw a picture. By the end you have a fully illustrated version of the story, all drawn by your child. It is a great keepsake, and a great way to make the characters easier to handle!

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Green Schooling

11 September; Author: Home Educator

green schoolThe trend these days is to go green – reduce, reuse and recycle. This is a great lesson to teach children so that it becomes a habit that they don’t have to think twice about doing. One of the best ways to teach this lesson is by example.

Using green school supplies such as paper made from recyclable materials is one step. Having downloadable workbooks is another. By downloading the ebook you only print the pages you need, the ones suited to the lesson and learning style of the student. This greatly reduces the problem of half finished workbooks and saves how much paper needs to be used!

unit studiesA unit study, or thematic unit offers a comprehensive overview of a specific topic. It provides a variety of activities that cover science, math, language arts, social studies and fine arts. A unit on Vikings for example could contain a mapping activity for geography, a saga lesson for language studies, some math questions about how much a Viking ship can carry and more.

Not only do unit studies provide lessons and worksheets across the curriculum but they can also provide lessons for a variety of learning styles and levels. Unit studies are especially helpful for the reluctant learner because they can be about a topic that is a favorite and will therefore make them more willing to learn!

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E-Text

27 July; Author: admin

ebookWhen it comes time to hunt for home-based learning materials, you can save a trip to a dusty book shop by broadening your horizons. The Internet has opened up a whole new realm of possibilities by providing access to virtually unlimited sources of information. Whereas public schools have a tendency to indoctrinate children with the same old science textbooks and English reading lists, homeschooled kids have other options.

Electronic books, or eBooks, can be purchased online at minimal cost, and they are easily stored in electronic reading devices such as Amazon’s Kindle or Sony’s PRS-500. EBooks have been highly touted for their portability; you can fit the equivalent of 500 books in your pocket. These electronic books have revolutionized the publishing industry, and they could soon do the same for textbooks.