Great Games for Family Fun April 14, 2010
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool, Homeschool Product Reviews.Tags: eclectic, education, family fun, games, Homeschool, homeschooling, math games, relaxed schooling, word games
add a comment
Since most families are struggling financially these days, many are seeking alternative forms of entertainment that won’t cost a fortune. Additionally, it seems that a lot of people are re-evaluating their priorities and realizing that they would like more family time. While there are lots of great activities for family time – going on hikes, riding bikes, passing ball, etc. – one of the best ways to have great family entertainment, save money, and spend time together is to play games. Some people do Family Game Night.
We play games several times per week and on the weekends, we typically spend several hours playing games. ANY family can and should have terrific fun playing games, but as homeschoolers, we count most of our game time toward mandatory school hours. Many of these games are quite educational.
I’ve divided the games into categories for board games, dice games, card games and action games. I’ve also added the games from my previous “game list” so that you’ll have them all in one place. There are also notes about the difficulty of the games, recommended ages, recommended number of players, which skills are necessary to play the games (reading, counting, etc.), etc.
I hope you’ll find the following list useful as you decide which games to play with your family. There are definitely some great suggestions!
Have fun!
Sonya
Dice Games
Yatzhee
Ages 8 and up
For one or more players
Time: time increases depending on how many players. It takes about 10 minutes for one player and add an additional 5 minutes for each player.
Yes, this is the classic we played as kids! It’s still a great game. Younger children can learn to play, but they will need help filling in their score pad. I prefer to wait until the child is a “reader” before letting them play Yatzhee. We do, however, let younger children participate by pairing up with an older player and being the “dice roller.”
Backgammon
Any age, but it’s a complex game – recommended for 8 and up
2 players
This is a strategy game that many people play before transitioning to chess. Daniel (8) says it involves “strategy and luck.” It encourages thinking skills. It’s actually on a “board,” but it’s more of a dice game.
Farkle
Just about any age if player can roll dice and make decisions based on their roll.
Players – two or more (We’ve played with almost a dozen people at a time. You can go up as high as you want.)
Time: depends on the number of players you have.
This is a true dice game. You get scores based on the combination of dice you roll. The tricky part of the game is that you have to make choices (gamble) about whether to KEEP your score or continue rolling and risk losing ALL your points for that round (that’s called a Farkle). This is a very fun game! We especially enjoy it since even the oldest of us enjoy it and even the youngest are able to play it. As a matter of fact, she usually gambles less and ends up beating us!
Card Games
Set
Basically any age could play if they’re able to match cards.
Various numbers of players, most fun with two to three players
This is almost like the old “matching games” for little kids, but it’s a more adult version. The matches are VERY difficult to make. Also, the cards are face UP where you can see them, but you have to match three colors with different shapes, all the same shape and color or all different colors… There are several combinations you can make, but I never play this game well. Our kids almost always find the sets before Chris and I can find them. Christopher (10) says this game is “the funnest game on earth.”
Zigity
Ages 7 and up (need to be able to read)
Best with three to four players
a Cranium game
This is somewhat like Uno, but you have various “activities” to do while you play: Creative Cat, Star Performer, Data Head, and Word Worm. You have to match items on the cards and try to make sets to get rid of all your cards first.
Uno
Ages 7 to adult
2 to 10 players
Time: 15 minutes
I think most everyone has heard of or played Uno at some point in time. This is a classic card game. Younger players can practice identifying numbers and trying to use beginning strategy skills to get rid of all your cards first.
In a Pickle
Ages 10 and up
2 to 6 players
Time: 20 to 30 minutes
Gamewright
Maya Madness
Ages 10 and up
2 to 4 players
Time: about 20 minutes
Gamewright
This is a card game that encourages math skills. My two youngest boys especially enjoy it. Players have to add and subtract the right combination of cards to claim the secret number token. If you’re not careful, you’ll end up in the world of “negative numbers.” You collect tokens to win. (My only caution about this game is that the game is based around “the ancient world of Maya numerology.” This isn’t
Mille Borne
Ages 6 and up (Players need to be able to read.)
2 to 5 players
Time: approx. 15 to 20 minutes
This is a very fun game that involves a lot of luck, but also strategy. Basically, the premise of the game is that you’re “traveling” and the cards tell you what to do. For example, if you have a flat tire or other thing that would stop you, you have to wait for a gasoline card, a “go” card, and a mileage card. The objective of the game is to get to “mille borne” – a “thousand miles.” For families interested in bringing in an educational component, many of the cards use French words and the very basis of the game is centered around stone mile markers used every thousand miles on French roads. Chris and I have had this game since before we had children. We enjoyed playing it alone and then taught the children to play as soon as they could read. It’s a great game.
Ruckus
Ages 7 to adult
2 to 4 players
Time: “less than 4 minutes per hand”
This is a game that involves taking other players’ cards and trying to take matches, but then other players can take those cards back if they have another card to play on the set. It’s a fast paced game that involves luck and paying attention. There are also beginning strategy skills and patience since you have to learn to wait before you take cards.
Rook
Ages 8 and up
2 to 6 players
Time: 15 minutes
This is a great game to practice “strategy” skills. You have to be careful not to bid to high or too low so you have to pay attention to the cards and learn to play it safe.
Dutch Blitz
Ages 8 and up
Two to four players
Time: approx. 5 to 10 minutes per round, but you’ll play several rounds to a pre-set winning point based on how many points each player receives.
Some friends of ours introduced us to this card game a few years ago. It’s a terrific game, although I’ve come away from many games with scrapes and scratches across my hands. It’s a difficult game to describe in writing, but basically your goal is to get as many cards as possible before everyone else gets them. The game is multi-tasking to the extreme and teens/preteens seem to particularly enjoy it.
Hoopla
Adults and teens
Two or more players (more fun with more players than two)
Time: 20 minutes
Board Games
Sorry
Ages 6 to adult
2 to 4 players
Time: 30 minutes
Hasbro
This is another classic from when we were young. This is another game that younger children can play as long as they have a little help reading the cards (which aren’t very difficult). This is a great game to reinforce counting skills in younger children.
Go to the Head of the Class
Ages 7 to adult
2 to 5 players
Time: approx. 45 minutes
Hasbro
This is an older classic and you’d probably have to find it at yard sales or on e-bay. My children love to play this game. This is the kind of thing we would do in lieu of schoolwork. The premise of the game is that you start at “kindergarten” and work your way through each grade level to the head of the class. There are three different levels of
Cadoo
Ages 7 and up
2 or more players
Cranium Game
Blockus
Ages 5 and up
2 to 4 players
Time: 15 minutes
Mattel
I love this game! It’s a strategy game where you try to put down pieces in such an arrangement to block your opponents, but allow yourself an “escape route” so that you can go to other areas of the board. It’s a lot of fun and requires you to think. I enjoy brain games best.
Mancala
Ages 6 and up (Younger could play if they could count well enough.)
Two players
Time: 25 minutes
This is an old game that Chris and I started playing when we were dating. It’s an African stone counting game and it will really test your math skills. Even though it’s a very simple game, it requires strategy and counting.
Apples to Apples, Jr.
Ages 9 and up
Four to ten people
Time: less than 30 minutes
Mattel Games
You play cards with vocabulary words or “concepts” on them and then each player tries to play other cards that are similar to the other card. For example, if one person plays “cloud,” another player might play “storm” or “puddle” for a comparison card. It helps kids learn vocabulary and have fun at the same time.
Apples to Apples
Ages 12 and up
Four to ten players
Time: less than 30 minutes
Mattel Games
This is an “adult” version of the kids Apples to Apples game. I do like the premise of this game – have fun with vocabulary words, but I prefer the younger kids’ version. This edition, even though it’s supposed to be for ages 12 and up, has material that we would consider inappropriate for a 12-yr-old. For example, some vocabulary cards have “sexy,” “sultry,” “AIDS,” etc. That’s just not something we want exposure to when we’re playing a GAME. Even my oldest children prefer the Junior version.
Othello
Ages 8 and up
Two players
Time: 10 or 15 minutes
Chris plays Othello with our children all the time and they love it. I do know it is a strategy game and also encourages math skills. It reminds me of a precursor to chess or something like that, but my children just love it.
Monopoly
Ages 8 to adult
2 to 8 players
Time: 2 days (according to my son! LOL)
Parker Brothers
I’m sure everyone has heard of this family favorite. Monopoly is a terrific game for teaching math skills, taking turns, dealing with stocks and money, buying and selling, and money-related terminology such as stocks, bonds, bank, bankrupt, and mortgage. We love to play Monopoly when time isn’t a factor and we can just sit around for hours and have fun.
Stay Alive
Ages 8 to adult
2 to 4 players
Time: 10 to 15 minutes
I used to play this game when I was a child. It’s a great game. You have to put marbles on a game board that has holes under it. As you pull the sticks on the game board back and forth, marbles MIGHT stay on the board or they might fall through the holes, depending on the placement of your marbles. It is a relatively quick game, but requires a lot of strategy. It’s great fun!
Life
Recommended for ages 8 and up (We play with children as young as five and just read for them.)
2 to 6 players (more fun with more players)
Time: 60 minutes
I remember playing Life when I was a young girl. I LOVED getting as many children as I could. I would fill up my car and then if anyone else didn’t want their children, I would pile their kids in my car as well. The cars seat 6 people – 2 adults and 4 children. I would always put the mom in the driver seat, dad in the passenger seat, then I’d end up with about 8 children in the back. They don’t have seatbelts for Life so inevitably my little plastic children would fall across the board each time I moved my vehicle.
Anyway, this is another great game to practice using math skills. You also have the opportunity to bring up discussions about goals, family, occupations, and how choices affect your real life. Like many of these great board games, let even your youngest family members roll their own dice or (in the case of Life), spin the spinner themselves, count their spaces, etc.
Cranium for Kids
Ages 4 and up
2 to 4 players
Time: 20 minutes
Cranium Games
This is a cooperative game (meaning everyone is playing against the game to open the “treasure chest”). Children pull cards, which then allow them to open doors and you might or might not get a ball behind the doors. Once all six balls are found, you win the game.
Clue
Ages 8 and up
3 to 6 players
Time: 45 minutes
Parker Brothers
Children learn to use skills of discernment while trying to figure out who murdered whom with what weapon. Reading and writing skills are also used in Clue. This was another one of my favorite games when I was a child and my own children enjoy it now. For some reason, this hasn’t received good online ratings in recent years. I wonder if people just don’t have the patience any more to play a game that requires much more mental skill and less physical activity (other than drawing cards and rolling dice). Anyway, we really enjoy it!
Risk
Ages 10 and up
2 to 6 players
Time: 2 hours
This is a very complex game. It’s a war game that involves cards, dice and placing your pieces on the board strategically. Our boys sometimes just play with the board (that’s like a huge map) and the pieces (little soldiers) and make up their own game.
Whoonu
Ages 8 to adult
3 to 6 players
Time: 30 minutes – more if you have a lot of people
The point of this game is to try to guess things about the other people playing the game and win little token chips. You’ll be surprised what you find out about those you think you know best, thus the name “Whoono.” You use cards to identify what you think the other person (who is “it” for that round) likes. For example, when I play, someone might give me a card for books and reading, but someone might also give me a card for “shopping.” That person wouldn’t get any tokens, though, because I would put “shopping” at the BOTTOM of my list! This is a wonderful ice breaker game or a good game to play with people when you just need to renew relationships and learn how to have fun together again.
Scrabble
Ages 10 and up
2 to 4 players
Time: 90 minutes
Even my youngest children enjoy playing Scrabble! Everyone knows you can learn vocabulary by playing this game, but did you know that you can also change the rules and allow dictionary use to encourage spelling skills, vocabulary skills, and reference skills? We also allow foreign words when we play so that also reinforces any foreign language vocabulary that your child may be learning.
Upwards
Ages 6 and up (Players need to know how to read and have the ability to spell.)
2 to 4 players
Time: approx. 30 minutes
This is a very fun spin-off of Scrabble. You put words on the board, just like you do in Scrabble, but then the fun starts. You can CHANGE the words that are already on the board by building UP. For example, if the word “box” is on the board and you have the letters f, e, s, t, q, b, you could change the “b” to an “f” and end up with “fox,” then add the “e” and “s” and end up with “foxes.” Then you could play your “b” in the next round and you’d have “boxes.” It’s a lot of fun. We always keep a dictionary handy so that we can verify spellings. When we play as a family, we also allow foreign words.
Scattegories
Two to four players
Ages 8 and up
Time: 45 minutes
I just love this game. You are given a category (let’s say “kitchen gadgets”) and a letter (S for this example). Then you have to list words in that category, preferably with the given letter (you get points for words that start with other letters, but not as many points. Also, you don’t get ANY points if someone else guesses the same word as you. So I would guess spatula for this example and if no one else got that, then I’d get points.
Cranium
Ages 13 and up (Our younger children play this with no problem. Public votes give recommendations of ages 10 and up.)
4 to 16 players (You can play on teams.)
Time: 60 minutes
This is a hands-on, fun-filled, intellectually stimulating game for older children and adults. It’s meant for ages 12 and up, but we’ve played it with our middle children as well. It’s loads of fun and requires you to use many different skills to create clay sculptures, decide whether a statement is true or false, answer a trivia question, act out a clue, sketch a clue, imitate a famous person, etc.
Cranium Family Fun
Ages 8 to adult
Recommended 4 players teams
Cranium game
This is much like the regular Cranium games, where families build, sketch, sculpt, guess, etc. to get the correct answers.
Trivial Pursuit
Ages 8 and up
Two to four players or teams
Can be very long games – from one to two hours
Hasbro
There are a whole bunch of varieties of this game – including versions for particular years, versions for younger children, games that cover particular topics (like music, art, specific television shows, etc.), and other specialized games. We play the general Trivial Pursuit game, which includes questions on various categories. Players can play individually or break into teams. You try to get all the little wedges for each category before the other players / teams. When you get all the wedges, you win. This is a great game to test facts and knowledge.
Settlers of Catan
Ages 10 and up
3 to 4 players
Time: 50-60 minutes
You collect resource cards and try to “settle” on the board with roads, buildings, settlements, etc. You earn victory points when you make settlements or do some other good thing. If you have larger armies or develop your area better, you get special cards and more points. When you have ten victory points, you win.
Pandemic
Two to four players (We play this as an entire family. You can play with individual players or you can even have some groups. One “team” can have one player while another team has two players. It really doesn’t matter since everyone is fighting against the board.)
Ages 10 plus
Time: 45 minutes
Z-Man Games
Everyone playing the game is trying to keep diseases from rampaging the earth. This is a VERY difficult game and if you don’t like to lose, you shouldn’t play it. Christopher (10) says it’s “the hardest game on earth.” We’ve played numerous times and we’ve only beat the game one time so far! And you can play repeatedly because you have different diseases attacking different areas at different times so it’s always a new challenge.
Ticket to Ride
Ages 8 and up
2 to 5 players
Time: 30 to 60 minutes
You are supposed to get points by building train routes. We haven’t been incredibly impressed with this game.
Checkers
2 players
Even young children can play
Chinese Checkers
This is a lot like regular checkers, except that you have a board with holes and you play with marbles.
Action Games
Hullabaloo
Ages 4 and up
2 to 6 players, but it can be played with ONLY ONE
Time: 10 minutes
This fun action game is meant for younger players. Our children have most enjoyed this game between ages four and ten, but older children enjoy playing sometimes, too. Players have to wiggle, dance, hop, step, etc. to a colored pad. Players can share pads and while they are learning to share, there is also an element of cooperative play. Colors, shapes, and names of animals, foods, and musical instruments are reinforced during this action-filled game. I like the fact that children can play this game with friends, siblings or even alone!
Twister
Ages 6 and up
2 to 4 players (more fun with three or four!)
Time: ten minutes
This is an easy game most of you are probably familiar with. There is a mat on the floor with various colored dots. You choose a person to be in charge of the spinner – who does not play the game – and they will tell you where to put your hands and feet. As you try to find a place to put your hands and feet, you become tangled with the other players. It’s a great game for families.
Life of Washington – book review March 6, 2010
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool Product Reviews.add a comment
If you’re looking for an absolutely terrific history book that hasn’t been modified to satisfy the liberals trying to force “political correctness,” then you need to read this book!
Originally published in 1842, the reprint has retained original spelling and vocabulary (a GREAT way to build vocabulary skills). It shares stories from George Washington’s life that integrate his faith and character.
This should be essential reading for all students of American History. It would be especially beneficial for homeschool families (or other educators) who want to integrate original, classic works into their studies.
Sonya Haskins
Publisher: Attic Books / New Leaf Publishing Group (Another wonderful option from New Leaf PG!)
Format: Hardcover
Retail Price: $16.99
Publication Date: reprint of 1842 vintage original text (reprinted in 2
Living Fossils Teacher’s Manual July 20, 2009
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool Product Reviews.Tags: curriculum, Darwin, evolution, home education, Homeschool, homeschooling, science
add a comment

With so much confusion today about how life originated, Living Fossils, by Dr. Carl Werner, brings a ray of light into the educational community with non-biased scientific data to explore Darwin’s theory of evolution, present prejudices in the scientific community, and the significance of fossils. The author does a fabulous job of helping the student develop discernment in regards to how we interpret fossilized remains. It’s wonderful to find a book that examines this material in detail for students from junior high to college level that actually pays attention to the data rather than trying to adhere to a politically correct myth.
The teacher’s manual provides chapter objectives, class discussion questions and tests and answers that complement the textbook perfectly. Now students can test their knowledge through true/false, fill-in-the-blank, and short answer questions.
In addition, there are other teacher-friendly tools such as a test record and perforated pages that can be easily removable if you want to administer tests outside the paperbound book.
Since I believe everyone should have to take a science course that includes the Living Fossils textbook, I recommend the Living Fossils Teacher’s Manual highly enough!
Sonya Haskins
Knowing – movie review March 21, 2009
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool Product Reviews.add a comment
We usually check the movie reviews on Plugged In (www.pluggedinonline.com) before we rent or watch movies. I did NOT read the review for Knowing before we went to see it tonight, but I can tell you that even if I had, I completely disagree with the way they’ve reviewed this movie. I’ve posted before that we only go to one or two movies a year because it’s so expensive. The only thing Sarah wanted for her birthday was a night at the movies alone with me so she and I went tonight and saw Knowing.
I’ve always been a huge Nicolas Cage fan, but unfortunately I was hugely let down by this film. In case any of you were considering watching it – with or without your teenagers – I thought you might find some advance warning helpful. First off, I would positively, absolutely NOT take children to this movie. Honestly, if I had it to do over again, I wouldn’t take a young teen either and I told Sarah this after the movie.
For starters, since the movie is PG-13, the previews before the movie were absolutely horrible. I found them completely unacceptable. The first preview that came on started showing these girls in a fraternity and it honestly looked like they were having a good time, they were joking around, and even though there was inappropriate behavior (boys and girls having sex at a party, boy who cheated on his girlfriend, etc.), I was totally not expecting what came next. The joke got out of hand, and it actually showed the boy killing another girl with a tire iron. It was so unexpected and horrible that I told Sarah we might have to leave if this is what was to come. To her credit, when I started to tell her, she already had her ears covered and her head lowered. She was not watching any of it. Now this was just in the PREVIEWS!!!
I think the next preview was the one that had a horribly violent movie about a bunch of robots who are killing everyone Earth. It was very violent. I told Sarah just to keep her head down the whole time during the previews. It’s good because the next preview had two girls KISSING… It just got worse and worse. These previews are approved for ALL AUDIENCES (meaning children, too). I’m seriously going to be checking into who rates previews and doing some articles about that on my website when I return from Washington DC. I couldn’t believe the content of the previews.
So on to the movie… I don’t want to take up too much space on the digest, but in a nutshell, this is the worst example of New Ageism combined with UFO-logy and “Christianity” that I’ve ever seen. I put Christianity in quotes because it is so convoluted that there is no Christianity left in it. Basically, the premise of the movie is that this little girl knows when the end of the world is coming – the exact date. Not only that, but she writes numbers on a paper in 1959 that predict ever major disaster that happens until 2009. She couldn’t finish writing her numbers on the paper before the teacher snatches the paper away so the little girl finds a closet and scratches more numbers into a door there until her fingers are bloody and torn to pieces. The paper is put in a time capsule and opened in 2009 at the elementary school where the little girl went and also Nicolas Cage’s little boy. His little boy starts hearing voices and it’s all linked together so that (DO NOT CONTINUE TO READ FROM HERE IF YOU DON’T WANT TO KNOW THE END OF THE STORY) he and a whole bunch of other little chosen children are taken to a “new world” with a “tree of life” by aliens with angel wings in spaceships that look like things described in Ezekiel in the Bible.
The problem is that the Bible makes it clear that NO ONE knows the time when the end will come. Other problems include the fact that Cage’s dad, who is a pastor, says to them as they die at the end of the movie (the whole earth is destroyed – how’s that for uplifting?!?), “Don’t worry son, there will be life after this” or something of that nature. The problem with that is that the Cage character is not a Christian and he will not have life after death – the Bible makes that clear. The children are not going to be taken up and chosen to start a new Garden of Eden. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.
There is one scene where someone refers to a woman’s breast size. There is a LOT of drinking – Cage drinks a lot of whiskey and is so drunk in one scene that he is asleep and doesn’t pick his son up from school at the end of the day. There is cursing and using the Lord’s name in vain. Prophecy is rampant and made to look “Biblical” because it’s so closely tied to prophecy in Ezekiel, but they’ve convoluted it. There is violence, lots of people killed, animals on fire running out of a forest (in prophecy), and the total destruction of the whole earth.
I’m displeased with the Plugged In review because it almost makes it sound like “some Christians will like it and some won’t.” Gee, that’s ok and that’s all… I’m telling you – this movie is NOT ok. Sarah and I spent the whole trip home discussing everything that was wrong with it and I’m so sorry I took her to see it. I told her we would even have to pray to get some of the scenes out of her head. (The little girl’s bloody fingers, for example, was totally unexpected.)
I’m stepping out on a limb here to even share my thoughts. I don’t want anyone to think I’m a horrible parent because I took Sarah to see this. I told her that this would be the LAST movie we watch in a movie theater. Even Horton Hears a Who turned out to have some things in it we disagreed with and I really don’t mind little things that I can discuss with the children later, but it was obvious even from the previews and every single thing presented in this movie that we are in such a huge battle here for people’s spirits. I heard people coming out of the theater even contemplating that the end of the earth could happen this way – with aliens coming down to save us from environmental doom or natural disaster. This is not what the Bible says, people!!! Do not be drawn into it.
If you were planning to go see this movie, don’t. I like Nicolas Cage, too, but it’s not worth it. And whatever you do, please do NOT let your teenagers go see this movie, especially alone. You will need to talk with them about EVERYTHING in the entire movie (and the previews).
Sonya Haskins
Your Guide to the Grand Canyon – book review March 2, 2009
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool Product Reviews.Tags: book review, Grand Canyon, Homeschool, homeschooling, travel
add a comment

I would give anything if we’d had this book when we visited the Grand Canyon on our trip out west in 2007. It is the most amazing book! It has full-color photographs, covers every area of the Grand Canyon, has an in-depth look at the geography of the canyon, contains photographs and discussion of canyon wildlife and animal life, shares historical perspectives, etc. Students will also have a clearer understanding of how the evolutionary view of the canyon was forced upon scientists while a foundation for the creationist view of a massive flood is a more likely scenario. This should be a required purchase for every parent who actually wants their children to be interested in science.
Obviously, I would highly recommend this for everyone, whether they homeschool or not. It would make an excellent schoolbook and is a must-have if you are going to visit the Grand Canyon in the future! The book would also make a wonderful gift.
Reading Level: Although the material is probably geared toward middle or high school age students, elementary age students would love the photographs and, with a parents help, could understand much of the text as well. Adults will find the material quite engaging and the photographs stunning.
Price: $15.99 retail
Publisher: Master Books, a division of New Leaf Publishing Group
Copyright date: June 2008
Authors: Tom Vail, Mike Oard, Dennis Bokovoy, Dennis Hergenrather
Christian Liberty Press Nature Readers January 12, 2009
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool Product Reviews.add a comment

When we first discovered the Christian Liberty Press Nature Readers a few years ago, through the recommendation of a friend, I initially envisioned having the children read them aloud or by themselves as part of their schoolwork. One day, I read a chapter aloud and since then, I certainly would not miss an opportunity to use these as a read aloud for science. They are written so that beginning readers should have no difficulty reading these independently or aloud, but they are so interesting and well-written that I want to read the stories myself so I read them to the children myself. We’ve been using them for several years now and frequently I’ll see the children in the yard afterwards trying to investigate some of the facts that are shared in the books. These are absolutely fabulous science books for children in all preschool and elementary grades.
Sonya
www.thehomeschooladvocate.com
Daily Focus – homeschool product review October 4, 2008
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool, Homeschool Product Reviews.Tags: Alpha Omega, Daily Focus, devotions, meditations, prayer
add a comment
Lately there have been many things heavy on my heart. The devotions in my copy of the Daily Focus have reminded me to keep my focus on the Rock. This book is a must-have for all homeschool moms. You will be rejuvenated in Christ!
You can purchase the Daily Focus here: http://www.homeschoolstore.com/details/?id=9780740314759
Sonya Haskins
Spears, Sabers & Catapults – homeschool product review October 4, 2008
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool, Homeschool Product Reviews.Tags: Catapults, history, Homeschool, Sabers, Spears, Visoin Forum, weapons
add a comment
I found this audio CD by Vision Forum a little advanced, but I discovered that it was simply my lack of knowledge rather than a fault in the content of the CDs. My ten-year-old son is very much into history, war, the dynamics of weapons and weaponry, etc. He has listened to the CDs several times and he thoroughly enjoys them even though they are really more like lectures. This set would be very useful for anyone wanting to supplement history curriculum with a study of war, weapons, strategic development, etc.
You can find Spears, Sabers & Catapults here: http://www.homeschoolstore.com/details/?id=9781934554142
Sonya Haskins
Bob Books!! – homeschool product review October 2, 2008
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool Product Reviews.Tags: Bob Books, Homeschool, phonics, teach your child to read
1 comment so far
A few years ago, I wanted to find a more interesting reading program for my youngest homeschooled children so I bought some Bob Books. I sat down with my five-year-old on my lap and my three-year-old looking over my shoulder and to my great surprise, within a month BOTH of my youngest sons were reading Bob Books with great enthusiasm! They are now 9 and 7 and still love books. I give much of the credit to a phonics program that made reading fun from the very beginning!
You can find Bob Books at this website: http://www.homeschoolstore.com/find/?searchType=keyword&keyword=bob+books&search_only=title
Sonya Haskins
Latin Flashcards on a Ring – homeschool product review October 2, 2008
Posted by sonyahaskins in Homeschool Product Reviews.Tags: flashcards, foreign languages, Homeschool, index cards, Latin
add a comment
When I began studying foreign languages at the age of 14, I spent many hours writing out Latin words on index cards. Fortunately for today’s Latin students, they can buy pre-printed flashcards with a convenient carry-around ring! If you are studying or teaching Latin, this is one “extra” tool that you don’t want to pass up. You can buy the different levels of Flashcards on a Ring (published by Greek-N-Stuff) here: http://www.homeschoolstore.com/find/?searchType=keyword&keyword=flashcards%20on%20a%20ring&searched_all=Y
Sonya




