free home school resources for unit study, history, science and art. Created by a home school mom of many with a variety of learning styles, hands on activities for students
We are embarking on a new study of World History using Diana Warning's History Revealed! Here are some of the resources I have gathered for my students to help them start out their own research 'rabbit trails' so that they too can get excited about history.
OUR UNIT STUDIES for 1790-1850 World Studies
Geography Study
India
Research and Reporting Mini Unit Studies:
Explore one of more of these ares to discover and share with the group. The links below will get you started. Each page is a mini unit study on these topics. There are resources to help you create a lapbook, a presentation with powerpoint/multimedia or any other way to get your audience excited about your topic.
Location: India is a large country in southern Asia. India is bordered by Pakistan, China, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar (Burma), and Bangladesh.
Capital: New Delhi is the capital of India.
Size: India covers about 3,287,590 square kilometers. India is the 7th country in the world (after Russia, Canada, the USA, China, Brazil, and Australia).
Population: India has the second largest population of any country in the world (after China). The population of India is about 1,129,866,000.
India is divided into 28 states and 7 union territories.
Flag: The Indian flag has three equal horizontal bars (saffron, white and green) with a blue Dharma Chakra (the wheel of law) in the center. The wheel has 24 spokes, representing the 24 hours in a day (at the end of each spoke is a dark blue half-moon).
Climate: India's climate ranges from tropical monsoon (in the south) to temperate (in the north).
Major Rivers: The major rivers in India are the Ganges (with its tributaries Yamuna, Gomti, and Chambal), Bramhaputra, Mahanadi, Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri.
Mountain Ranges: The highest mountain range in the world, the Himalayas, is in northern India, bordering Nepal and China.
Highest Point: The highest point in India is Mt. Kanchenjunga (8,598 m or 28,169 feet tall), in the Himalayas (along the India-Nepal border). Mt. Kanchenjunga is the third highest mountain in the world (after Mount Everest and K-2).
Lowest Point: The lowest point in India is the Indian Ocean, at sea level.
Teresa of Calcutta: Serving the Poorest of the Poor - D. Jeanene Watson
William Carey: Obliged to Go - Janet & Geoff Benge
Free Printables
Resources from our favorite free printables site: Homeschool Creations Additional printable: Currency of IndiaIf you'd like to see more detailed blog posts with day-by-day plans and additional links/resources, here are the links:
A bridge between classical styles of music (haydn, Mozart) and the romantic style (Schubert, Belioz, Medelssohn, Chopin, Tchaikovsky) I have never thought of writing for reputation and honor. What I have in my heart must out; that is the reason why I compose. Ludwig van Beethoven Remark to Carl Czerny
Background:
Born in Bonn, Germany on December 17, 1770 (or perhaps a day earlier according to some records), Beethoven had a miserable childhood. He was one of seven children, only three of whom survived to adulthood. Although he loved his gentle mother, Maria, he feared his hard‐ drinking, demanding father, Johann. Johann had no great talent, but he gave music lessonsto the children of the nobility. From the time Ludwig was a small boy, turning the iron handle of window shutters to hear the musical noise, the child had been absorbed by music. His father recognized the boy’s ability and nurtured it, possibly because he saw it as a source of income.
In 1787, when he was seventeen, Beethoven made his first trip to Vienna, the city that would become his home. There, he was quickly immersed in the life of Europe’s cultural capital, even playing the piano for Mozart. Mozart’s prediction was: “You will make a big noise in the world.” Beethoven’s stay was cut short by a series of family tragedies. He returned to Bonn to his dying mother. Shortly after, his infant sister died. When hisfather lost his job, Beethoven had to take responsibility for the family. After his father’s death in 1792, Beethoven returned to Vienna for good. The serious boy had grown into a man who was by turns rude and violent, kind and generous. He helped raise money forthe only surviving child of Johann Sebastian Bach, who was living in poverty, and he donated new compositionsfor a benefit concertin aid ofUrsuline nuns. Despite his temper, Beethoven attracted friends easily. He studied piano with composer Franz Joseph Haydn. And even though the student‐teacher relationship failed, the two remained friends. In Vienna, Beethoven also met Mozart’s rival, Antonio Salieri – the man rumoured to have poisoned Mozart. Salieri was kind to Beethoven and, in return, Beethoven dedicated three violin sonatasto him. <From Arts Alive in Canada -read the full article the biography starts at page 10>
Classical Music
The classical period of music occurred from about 1730 to 1820. In addition to
Beethoven, other well-known composers from this period include: Bach,
Stamitz, Haydn, Salieri, Mozart, and Schubert. Most of the famous composers
of that period were from Europe.
Beethoven composed nine symphonies. Lots of other composers wrote more
than that, but Beethoven’s Symphonies are very famous and have some
distinguishing characteristics. His Third Symphony, for example, was the
longest symphony ever written at that time. The beginning of the second
movement of Beethoven’s Eighth Symphony imitates a metronome. (see the
definition in the vocabulary section).
Beethoven's Ninth was the first symphony to use voices and his Fifth Symphony
may be the most famous piece of music ever written.
Beethoven, the great composer, was ill for much of his adult life. He was also totally deaf when he created some of his best work. Before he died, he wrote a letter to his brothers, begging them to find out why he had been in such poor health. That letter is referred to as the Heiligenstadt Testament. Locks of the maestro’s hair, snipped from his head at the time of his death, have provided the answer Beethoven sought for so long. He had lead poisoning!
1761-1834 English Baptist missionary to India. Born in England in 1761. Pastor before going to the mission field, he spent an active forty-one years serving the Lord in India, including translating the Scriptures. Candle In The Dark The true story of William Carey shows dramatically how a life dedicated to God and obedient to His calling can make a profound difference in the world. He stayed over 40 years in India and became the revered "Friend of India;Father of Modern Missions; He influenced the abolition of sati - the burning alive of widows when their husbands died. He oversaw many translations of the Bible.
***
If we forget our history, we lose our heritage. And if we have no heritage from the past, there is no legacy for the future. Philip Schaff, the church historian, once wrote, "How shall we labor with any effect to build up the church if we have no thorough knowledge of her history? History is, and must ever continue to be, next to God's Word, the richest foundation of wisdom, and the surest guide to all successful activity."
William Carey persevered in India for seven years before he saw his first convert. Look up the word “perseverance” in a dictionary or online (Wordsmyth, Dictionary). Add the definition to your notebook as well as other forms of the word.
William Carey never took a furlough, and never returned to England. He stayed in India for 41 years, dying there at age 73. When all was said and done, he had translated the complete Bible into six languages, and portions of the Bible into 29 others. He had founded over 100 rural schools for the people of India. He had founded Serampore College, which is still training ministers to this day. In introduced the concept of a savings bank to the farmers of India. He published the first Indian newspaper. He wrote dictionaries and grammars in five different languages. He so influenced the nation of India that, largely through is efforts, the practice of sati was outlawed. And, most importantly, he launched the modern era of missions and laid the foundations for the modern science of missiology. One biographer, Mary Drewery, wrote: "The number of actual conversions attributed to him is pathetically small; the number indirectly attributable to him must be legion."
E-books and Articles to download and read
Download to read - Biography Article on William Carey. When asked who William Carey is to a group of India's college students here are the answers you might receive. Very insightful and easy to read.
Baptist Missions Portraits by John Allen Moore (A look at the lives of William Carey, Luther Rice, Lott Cary, William Knibb, Adoniram Judson, and John Everett Clough; Ages 14+)
Father was an unbeliever and George grew up a liar and a thief, by his own testimony.44His mother died when he was 14, and he records no impact that this loss had on him except that while she was dying he was roving the streets with his friends “half intoxicated.”45 He went on living a bawdy life, and then found himself in prison for stealing when he was 16 years old. His father paid to get him out, beat him, and took him to live in another town (Schoenbeck). Mueller used his academic skills to make money by tutoring in Latin, French, and mathematics. Finally his father sent him to the University of Halle to study divinity and prepare for the ministry because that would be a good living. Neither he nor George had any spiritual aspirations. Of the 900 divinity students in Halle, Mueller later estimated that maybe nine feared the Lord. 46
Then on a Saturday afternoon in the middle of November, 1825, when Mueller was 20 years old, he was invited to a Bible study and, by the grace of God, felt the desire to go. “It was to me as if I had found something after which I had been seeking all my life long. I immediately wished to go.”47 “They read the Bible, sang, prayed, and read a printed sermon.”48 To his amazement Mueller said, “The whole made a deep impression on me. I was happy; though, if I had been asked, why I was happy I could not have clearly explained it. “I have not the least doubt, that on that evening, [God] began a work of grace in me. . . . That evening was the turning point in my life.”49
...God became the foundation of Mueller's confidence in God to answer his prayers for money. He gave up his regular salary.56 He refused to ask people directly for money.57 He prayed and published his reports about the goodness of God and the answers to his prayer.58 These yearly reports were circulated around the world, and they clearly had a huge effect in motivating people to give to the orphan work.59 Mueller knew that God used means. In fact, he loved to say, “Work with all your might; but trust not in the least in your work.”60 But he also insisted that his hope was in God alone, not his exertions and not the published reports. These means could not account for the remarkable answers that he received.
Mueller's faith that his prayers for money would be answered was rooted in the sovereignty of God. When faced with a crisis in having the means to pay a bill he would say, “How the means are to come, I know not; but I know that God is almighty, that the hearts of all are in His hands, and that, if He pleaseth to influence persons, they will send help.”61 That is the root of his confidence: God is almighty, the hearts of all men are in his hands,62and when God chooses to influence their hearts they will give.
California Unit Study with Art, Geography and History woven together
California Missions FREE Unit Study for Home school
From their humble, thatch-roofed beginnings to the stately adobes we see today, the missions represent a dynamic chapter of California's past. The California Mission study is generally geared for fourth graders. However in our home school all the children do history lessons as a group. We created this unit study to focus on the missionary efforts of the Spanish in California.
Mission Settlement (1769-1833)
The missions of California were established as part of Spain's need to control their growing land holdings in the New World. The Spanish believed that their colonies needed a literate population base that they could not supply. The government worked with the Catholic Church to form a network of missions to convert the Native Americans to Christianity and to make them tax paying citizens. The natives were taught the Spanish language and vocational skills with the Christian teachings. Unfortunately in addition to bringing new skills, plants and seeds to the area; the soldiers and missionaries brought new diseases to the native people that resulted in a huge death toll and eventually an almost complete annihilation of their way of life and family groups. This, of course, wasn't the intention however it was the sad reality.
UNIT STUDY RESOURCES:
Here are the resources that we used. These were books that were purchased used and are a part of our home school library. The Internet resources were discovered by the teacher and students during the lessons.
Foundation for the preservation and restoration of the California missions. If you would like to make a donation towards the "Save the Missions Campaign," this is the place to do it.
Contains both a short and an in-depth history for each mission. Site also has authentic mission music and links to other mission history sites. Also has links to more general Spanish colonial history. Historical photographs are temporarily unavailable.
Mr. Missions has visited every mission and compiled a large number of photographs. Photographs are organized by mission. Also has useful travel tips for visiting the missions.
A very well put together, professionally designed site about the missions. Highly recommended are the Mission Visual Journeys and the Mission Timeline. Ask the Experts is also a great section to help you in your research. The site also has a very extensive links page.
FREE WORKSHEETS, COLORING PAGES
Mission Coloring Page from Raising Our Kids.com - I like this simple image that provides a nice example of perspective for older students to create their chalk pastel mission seen in our ART section
Here is a coloring page the compliments our reading of the Song of the Swallows
(scroll to the bottom)
Background Commentary on the Padres and Native populations Fr Junipero Serra was born 300 years ago. (2013)
"Junípero Serra was a remarkable man who had a talent for dramatizing the California missionary effort and, at the same time, emphasizing Spain's responsibility to continue the evangelization of this last frontier. He was a forceful and articulate advocate. In the final analysis, though, Serra's own piety and religious commitment inspired even his critics, and enabled him to ask so much of others." - California Mission Foundation Biography Resources California Mission Foundation
We are learning to read primary source documents to better understand the heart and mind of the people of this time period. Here is a great resource of Father Junipero Serra primary source documents from the San Francisco Museum.
Background Commentary on the Padres and Native populations
When founding a mission, the priests gained the natives’ confidence with gifts of food, cloth and other items. We discovered that Father Serra spent 9 years living with the Native group ( ) to learn their language. The Indians were also attracted by the pageantry of the Mass—held out of doors until a chapel could be built. Indians who chose to become part of the mission were taught Catholic catechism, farming and other skills (weaving, tanning, carpentry, etc.). They built and decorated the mission church and other buildings. Many became highly skilled artists, musicians or singers. Sometimes the soldiers mistreated the Indians, but the friars dealt with such behavior harshly, and Spanish law set forth penalties for infringing on the rights of the natives. Father Serra was a particularly vocal defender of the Indians, and traveled on foot to Mexico City several times (in spite of his painful, chronically-infected leg) to complain about abuses by soldiers and government officials. He returned from one trip with a bill of rights for the Indians. According to the California Missions’ original charter, they were eventually to have become self-sufficient Christian Indian towns, with ownership of the land and business enterprises reverting to the Indians. However, Mexico declared independence from Spain in 1810. The missions were secularized in 1834, and the Spanish priests were deported. Most of the missions fell into decay. The mission Indians, badly treated by Mexican colonists, dispersed. The United States took control of California after the Mexican-American war. Unfortunately, the Americans treated the natives even worse. The new California legislature passed laws permitting forced indenture of natives and denying them citizenship. These laws were finally overturned in 1867, four years after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued. (A portion of the text/information is from Mission Unit Study free download found here)
Mission Life
This is an excerpt from our history lessons: "Native Americans were taught the basics of the Catholic faith. They were baptized and called a neophyte or new believer. The padres decided the neophytes could no longer freely move around the country. They had to work and worship at the mission. The fathers and overseers kept a strict reign over them and actually led them to daily masses and work."
We were amazed that so many of our history books portray the Padres of the Missions as task masters. Even the text above gives us the indication that those who lived in the Missons were prisoners to a faith they may not have even voluntarily chosen. However, here is a story that contradicts that scene from The remarkable story of Fr. Antonio Peyri of San Luis Rey at CaliforniaMissions.com "The San Luis Rey's neophytes were so upset at the prospect of losing Fr. Peyri that they vowed to prevent him from leaving. Fr. Peyri had to steal out of the mission secretly in darkness. When the Indians discovered he had gone scores of them rode to San Diego to beg him to return. They arrived on January 17, 1832 just as the Pocahontas, set sail. Many swam towards the ship as Fr. Peyri blessed them from the deck. Read the entire story at: Please Don't Go "
Mission Life Continued...
The daily routine began with sunrise Mass and morning prayers, then instruction of the natives in the teachings of the Catholic faith. Next was breakfast, followed by all able-bodied men and women working at their assigned jobs. Women's jobs were knitting, weaving, dressmaking, embroidering, laundering, and cooking. The stronger girls were grinding flour or carrying adobe bricks to the men building adobe houses. All skills were taught to the men by the missionaries. These tasks included plowing, sewing, irrigating, cultivating, reaping, threshing, and gleaning the crops. Additional skills were shearing sheep, weaving rugs and clothing from wool, tanning leather, making soap, paint, and ropes.
There was a six hour work day, interrupted by lunch at 11:00 a.m. and a two-hour siesta, the evening prayers and the rosary, supper, and social activities. Approximately 90 days per year were designated as religious holidays that were free from manual labor. Indians were considered free laborers and were not paid wages.
Independent Project Ideas for Upper Elementary Students:
Build the Last Mission Imagine that you were there as the last California Mission was being completed. You have to determine a place to build one more mission. You are given plenty of Internet linked resources on geography and local native groups. Determine where to place this last California Mission.
Chalk Pastels on Black Paper provide a
dramatic illustration of the Missions
The missions were generally designed as a walled city, in the shape of a quadrangle. The church was on one side, and the fort and town on two other sides, with a large open square in the center.
The picture of life in one of these missions during their period of prosperity is unique and attractive. The whole place was a hive of industry: trades plying indoors and outdoors; tillers, herders, vintagers by hundreds, going to and fro; children in schools; women spinning; bands of young men practicing on musical instruments; music, the scores of which, in many instances, they had themselves written out; at evening, all sorts of games of running, leaping, dancing, and ball-throwing, and the picturesque ceremonies of a religion which has always been wise in availing itself of beautiful agencies in color, form, and harmony.
Example of an Deakin artwork
At every mission were walled gardens with waving palms, sparkling fountains, groves of olive trees, broad vineyards, and orchards of all manner of fruits; over all, the sunny, delicious, winter less California sky. *hardly the prison picture described by many of those who write our current history books and openly oppose to the conversion of the local natives to Catholicism. However we can't ignore the Spanish Government's desire to convert the natives to the peasant class of citizens. We also don't want to discount the fact that the Padres and other religious leaders came not to destroy the natives but to bring the message of the 'good news' of Christ. They brought however disease and sickness that resulted in the death of those whom they intended on serving. I can't help but think that those who left their country and suffered hardships for the sake of the 'lost' also suffered intense heartbreak as each of the thousands of native peoples died from sickness.
Chalk Pastel Mission Drawing this project is inspired by Deep Space Sparkles Chalk Adobe Project Artists of the 18th and 19th centuries, including Englishman Edwin Deakin (1838-1923), Henry Chapman Ford (1828-1894), and Alexander Harmer (1856-1925), left invaluable likenesses of the Missions, and their artworks serve as important historical records. A small selection of Mission Images can be found at here. Mission Painting by Henry Chapman Ford painting of the Mission reproductions of Deakin's work that can be zoomed in for better view Alexander Harmer has a beautiful Mission image filled with people Please feel free to share free unit study resources you have found on this topic. You are welcome to share your lap books, blogs and Internet quests with students by leaving comments below! With your help and additional resources we can make this unit study the BEST UNIT STUDY EVER! *These resources are available for purchase via my Amazon affiliate link. I receive a small compensation for providing this information. I only share those resources that I found helpful.