Posts Tagged ‘unit study’

Roman Sculpture

Thursday, May 26th, 2011

My 10-year-old son made a Roman sculpture with white self-hardening clay. I took pictures of each stage of his work:
Roman-sculptureRoman-sculpture-2Roman-sculpture-3Roman-sculpture-4Roman-sculpture-5Roman-sculpture-6

Don’t Study Latin

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

study-latinI grew up speaking Spanish, and because I know Spanish, I automatically know all the Latin root words. Latin is a dead language. It’s dead. Nobody speaks it. With the same amount of time you would use to study Latin, you can learn a language that you can use to communicate with other people. Millions of people, for example, speak Spanish.

At the risk of ticking people off (and the more you’re ticked off, the more it’s probably true), I would like to say that people who study Latin are snobs. Yep. Go on and throw tomatoes. I’m good at dodging.

Look, if you have a classical bent to your homeschool, you’re obviously a thinking person. You’ve chosen the most rigorous style of homeschooling, probably for the sake of your children having a better, higher education than you did. (I myself have a classical bent, since I was a literature major in college and was an English teacher for years. So don’t get mad that I don’t like the classical mind set, because this would not be true.)

All I’m saying is that the study of Latin is dreadfully boring. You’re punishing your children. Are you just checking off the boxes of what you should do for a classical education just to say you did it? Or worse, to boast about your children? Then refer to paragraph 2. (Ouch, that wasn’t a tomato. Keep reading. Maybe you’ll like me after all.)

If you absolutely must study a classical language, choose Greek. At least with the study of Greek you can understand the Word of God better. Plus, the people of Greece actually speak Greek. I’ve been to Greece, and I’ve heard Greek being spoken. It’s definitely a live language. So, you see, I’m not dissing all classical languages, just the ones that have no practical use.

The bottom line is this: our time is precious and limited. Don’t you want the greatest amount of good done in the least amount of time? If you can actually learn the Latin roots while at the same time learning a real live language that is the second language of our country, why not do it?

Ancient Rome Unit Study

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

ancient-rome-unit-study

This video shows you what I’ve planned to do for my Ancient Rome Unit Study. I show you: the books we are reading, the hands-on activities we will do, and the game we are playing to learn Latin roots.

Some of the hands-on learning activities are a Roman sculpture, mosaics, Colosseum bricks, and painting a mural. I show several varieties of mosaics, and which ones work better than others. Watch the video tutorial to see all the details!

Here are links to some of these activities:

For more unit study ideas, join the Unit Study Treasure Vault.

Greek Feast

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

greek-feast

The Greek Feast was the culminating activity for our Ancient Greece Unit Study. Here is the video footage of my children eating GreekĀ  food, dancing clumsily, and going out to get some baklava.