Monday 27 October 2014

Ambleside Online Year 7 in Review


The Lady of Shalott by J.W. Waterhouse, 1888


Bengy, our 14 year old, turning 15 later this year, has come to the end of AO Year 7. I've mentioned in other posts that the upper years of AO are sufficiently challenging for a students over a range of ages. It helps to think in terms of forms (as used in Charlotte Mason's schools) as opposed to grades for History and Literature in particular, while the content covered in a subject such as Maths is a separate consideration and more indicative of a student's 'grade' level.

For Year 7 we basically followed the schedule as it is written, omitting a few things, adding in others for various reasons, including the fact that we'd started before the new changes for Year 7 came in earlier this year. This year also included preparing for a Grade 7 AMEB piano exam which requires a lot of preparation. The Ambleside Online website states:

This is a collection of some of the best resources for this time period. Even Advisory members aren't able to cover all of these with every single one of their own students and have to be selective. Feel free to pick and choose from among these suggestions. The best choice may just be the book you already own, and the one from which your student can narrate.


What we didn't include:

The Once and Future King, by T. H. White - didn't have the book; had a look at a copy from the library & thought we could skip it.

We didn't use these books either, mainly because of the time factor, but plan to at some time:

How To Read a Book, by Mortimer Adler and Chares Van Doren 
The Fallacy Detective, by Nathaniel Bluedorn & Hans Bluedorn 
The Story of Painting, by H. W. Janson

Devotional:

* Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis
** The Pursuit of God by A.W. Tozer
Saints & Heroes - as scheduled

Literature & Poetry:

The Grammar of Poetry, by Matt Whitling - slowly going through this.
The Albatross Book of Verse
Poets: G.K. Chesterton & Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Easy Grammar Plus - completed this book a couple of months ago and since then has used his Latin studies for grammar.

Chaucer - we used one of the selections before the changes were made.

This is an interesting post with a variety of Chaucer resources and suggestions:
 
Shakespeare:

The Winter's Tale

We are going to see the Bell Shakespeare production of Henry V in a few weeks.



A narration from The Winter's Tale:


Plutarch:
Quintus Fabius Maximus - Some thoughts on our study of this man

I've linked to the study guides on the men below:
Nicias


Natural History

Life of the Spider by Henri Fabre

Warrigal the Warrior by C.K. Thompson - a fascinating insight into the Australian dingo as well as being a great story.

Bush Calendar by Amy Mack - we continue our monthly reading; free online.

Nature Study - we've been bush walking regularly and have had some good beach visits and a focus on rocks and clouds.

Maths

Saxon Algebra 2 with Art Reed's DVD

Latin

After finishing Getting Started with Latin by William Linney, (which I highly recommend) Bengy commenced Linney's Latin Class, a free online course by the same author.
The website has audio lectures/lessons which can be downloaded and uses an out of print book available on Google Books or at archive.org:





(Don't do what we did and start with the wrong book. There is another by the same author called Latin for the First Year.)
Each audio lasts from around 1/2 hour to an hour and includes explanations and instructions on when to do exercises in the book etc. An answer key is included on the website to go along with the lectures. We spread a lesson out over a week, sometimes two if it's a long one.


We aren't in the USA and we generally can't access Google Books so we usually go to archives.org to download books but we found that two pages were missing on our download. I emailed Mr. Linney who replied about an hour later. He was very helpful and sent us a link to Google Books Australia (which I didn't know about) but the pages were also missing in that so then he sent us a PDF of the missing pages. This man provides this course free of charge and then goes out of his way to help a random person on the other side of the world find two missing pages - I'm impressed and very grateful!
Here are those two pages in case you have the same problem:


 

There is enough material in this course to cover the equivalent of high school Latin I & II and it has been a good fit for this young man. He did try Henle Latin first and really disliked it so I was happy to find a Latin course to replace it that didn't cost me anything!

Science

The Human Body - see here.
Apologia General Science
Eric Sloane's Weather Book, by Eric Sloane 
Great Astronomers, by R.S. Ball (Ptolemy, Copernicus, and Brahe) 
Science Notebook & below an example of a narration in the form of a science quiz ie. set a list of questions to which he had to know the answers:

"The mind can know nothing save what it can produce in the form of an answer to a question put to the mind by itself." 
A Philosophy of Education pg.16


 

Fearfully & Wonderfully Made - we started this late so we are still going. It's a wonderful book.

Picture Study:

Jan Vermeer - I have a Pinterest board with the paintings we studied.
Marc Chagall
Diego Velasquez

Music Appreciation:

Chopin
Spanish Composers - we spent a few months listening to this wonderful music.
AMEB Grade 7 piano exam

Physical Education

Indoor Soccer
Swimming

Handicrafts/Manual Skills

Cooking
Fiddling around with electronics
Meccano:






Scottish folk songs - this is a post I did on these and other Scottish material that fits into this time period.

Free Reading

The Talisman by Sir Walter Scott
Lorna Doone by R. D. Blackmore (AO Year 9)
Safely Home by Randy Alcorn (AO Year 11) 
The Hunt for Red October by Tom Clancy (AO Year 11)

The following two books by Regina Doman:

The Shadow of the Bear
Black as Night




I'd recommend previewing these first; there are more in this series of modern day fairy tales but they're for an older age group. There is a parent's guide here and the two books above are recommended for ages 14 years and up.

The "D'Artagnan" Romances by Alexandre Dumas: (they're all here.)

The Three Musketeers
Twenty Years After
The Vicomte De Bragelonne
Ten Years Later
Louise de la Valliere
The Man in the Iron Mask

 
I asked Bengy to tell me which books were his favourites this year and these are the titles he gave me:

The Pursuit of God
Whatever Happened to Penny Candy
Ivanhoe
Watership Down
The Age of Chivalry
Eric Sloane's Weather Book
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy
The Talisman
Hereward the Wake
The Birth of Britain














11 comments:

Natasha said...

Thanks Carol!

Very helpful.

Karen said...

Every time I hear The Lady of Shalott, I think of Anne Shirley in Anne of Green Gables. :)

Carol said...

I thought the girl in the painting by Waterhouse might pass for Anne.

Carol said...

You're welcome :)

Sarah said...

Great review of your AO7 year. :)

Amy Maze said...

This looks like a wonderful course of study. Thanks for sharing!

Heather said...

So do I, Karen! :)

Heather said...

Thanks for sharing all of this, Carol.

Anonymous said...

I so enjoy reading your blogposts about teaching children! Tell Bengy I loved Ivanhoe and reviewed 27 August 2014!

Unknown said...

Hi Carol! I've been looking over you blog for some help with AO. This is our first year with AO but not with CM. I have a 14 year old boy that I'm putting into year 7. Science has been the hardest for me. In the US, science is not integrated (at least in high school) and I'm struggling with that aspect. I'm trying to get a book list for a general science year. I think he is lacking in science knowledge and just needs a good base. I see you listed that you used Apologia General Science. Can you give me more details on how you used this with the living books? Or just any encouragement for upper level science. : )

Carol said...

Hi Cassie,

Apologia General Science might be a good fit for your son as it covers a broad area & does it well - if you think he'd be ok with a less narrative approach - one of my sons didn't do well with Apologia. I just had Benj read the chapters & didn't bother with the tests. A couple of my other children weren't that keen on this book but preferred the Physical Science text, probably because it covered earth science which interested them more.
I skim the chapter headings & content & then think about what I'd like to add. I don't do this with every area but I like to use some videos or an interesting book & expand on areas of interest. Eg the last few modules are on the Human Body so I added Phineas Gage. I was also reading Fearfully & Wonderfully Made aloud so added some videos on the skin & burns. He also did a First Aid Course around that time. i get them to do some of the experiments & write them up in their Science Notebooks. This is where using Apologia has been really helpful - the experiments & what they need to have for them are all in one place.
Re integrated science - I like this if only for the fact that they get a broad look at many areas & it may spark an interest which could be covered in more depth later on. Also more interesting for someone who doesn't show much interest in science at the time.
Feel free to email me if I can help.