CC Reading Correlations: Story of the World, Mystery of History, Scholastic.World History & Geography Book List: Who Was… What Was… Where Was….Cycle 1 World History Magic Tree House & Imagination Station Book List.Cycle 1 World History and Science Leveled Readers.This is a “book buffet.” For other shorter booklists, refer to the following links: For more information, refer to my Terms of Use.Ī formatted pdf of this booklist is available in our Cycle 1 Planning Resource Packet. If you wish to share it with others, please send them a link to this blog post. Please do not copy, paste, or upload this list (or parts of this list) on other websites, in other documents, or on social media. We post it here in hopes that the work I’ve put into it will also benefit others in the longrun. I’ve invested many hours in putting this together (and maintaining it). For an open-and-go reading/curriculum plan that overlaps much of the memory work studied during Cycle 1 – along with an integrated study of world missions, world empires & geography, fine arts, and science, check out our Mission: World Wonders Curriculum Plan. In fact, we’ve designed a complete curriculum package ( Mission: World Wonders), which corresponds to Cycle 1 and includes these three resources.Ĭycle 1 with the Great Commission in MindĪfter designing curriculum plans for over a decade, we developed a Christian Classical Curriculum called Mission: Great Commission that integrates the study of the world and the ongoing fulfillment of the Great Commission, with a focus on loving God, His Word, and fellow mankind. For science we have preferred using the God’s Design for Science Series and A Child’s Geography. If you would like a great history narrative to read that gives you the best bang for your buck, I would just stick with Story of the World – not because it’s perfect, but because it’s simple and engaging. (There’s a ream of printed paper I reference along with an assortment of catalogs – along with recommendations from trusted friends – when I make my booklists.)ĭuring our years in Foundations, our family did not adhere to a strict correlation for reading, although we compiled reading correlations and booklists for reference. In compiling this list, I have sorted through book reviews and recommendations by others I trust, including (but not limited to) Sonlight, Tapestry of Grace, and Veritas Press, as well as the 1000 Good Books List, Gospel Coalition, Old-Fashioned Education, IEW’s Books for Boys and Other Children Who Would Rather Build Forts All Day, and Ambleside Online. After many hours + hours + hours, I’ve finally finished updating my booklist for Cycle 1.
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