Saturday, October 1, 2011
The Boy's Book of Heroes/Project Gutenberg
Contents:
HEREWARD—LAST OF THE SAXONS 1
THE CID 17
LOUIS IX., KING OF FRANCE 49
GUSTAVUS VASA, KING OF SWEDEN 82
BERTRAND DU GUESCLIN 110
CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS 144
THE CHEVALIER DE BAYARD 192
SIR MARTIN FROBISHER 225
SIR WALTER RALEIGH 242
SIR PHILIP SIDNEY 257
Click here.
Saturday, September 24, 2011
The Natural Speller: Higher Grades(Early Middle School)/Google Books
Title The Natural Speller: Higher Grades
Authors Augustus Hill Kelley, Herbert Leonard Morse
Publisher C. Scribner's Sons, 1912
Length 153 pages
Click here.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Third Grade Reader/Google Books
Author Maude Parmly
Publisher American Book Co., 1914
Click here.
Parmly Method Teacher's Manual
Monday, September 19, 2011
Summers Readers, Second Reader /Google Books
Title Summers readers, second reader
Author Maud Summers
Publisher F.D. Beattys, 1909
Length 186 pages
Click here
Sunday, September 11, 2011
The Children's First Reader(more like third grade)/Google Books
This is an advanced first reader. It would probably suit a second grade level reader.
Title The Children's First
Author Ellen M. Cyr
Publisher Ginn & co., 1892
Click here
Saturday, September 10, 2011
The Sciences: A Reading Book for Children : Astronomy, Physics--Heat, Light, Sound, Electricity, Magnetism-Chemistry, Physiography, Meteorology
Author Edward Singleton Holden
Publisher Ginn, 1902
Length 224 pages
Click here.
Monday, September 5, 2011
Bird Stories/Google Books
Author Edith Marion Patch
Publisher The Atlantic Monthly Press, 1921
Length 211 pages
Overview
That is the prize that has been offered for a nesting pair of Passenger Pigeons. No one has claimed the money yet, and it would be a great adventure, don't you think, to seek that nest? If you find it, you must not disturb it, you know, or take the eggs or the young, or frighten the father- or mother-bird; for the people who offered all that money did not want dead birds to stuff for a museum, but hoped that someone might tell them where there were live wild ones nesting.
You see the news had got about that the dove that is called Passenger Pigeon was lost. No one could believe this at first, because there had been go very many — more than a thousand, more than a million, more than a billion. How could more than a billion doves be lost?
They were such big birds, too — a foot and a half long from tip of beak to tip of tail, and sometimes even longer. Why, that is longer than the tame pigeons that walk about our city streets. How could doves as large as that be lost, so that no one could find a pair, not even for one thousand dollars to pay him for the time it took to hunt?
Their colors were so pretty — head and back a soft, soft blue; neck glistening with violet, red, and gold; underneath, a wonderful purple red fading into violet shades, and then into bluish white. Who would not like to seek, for the love of seeing so beautiful a bird, even though no one paid a reward in money?
Friday, September 2, 2011
Little Folks of North America/Project Gutenburg
CONTENTS:
I. Little Folks of Iceland 13
II. Little Folks of Greenland 26
III. Little Folks of Alaska 55
IV. Little Folks of Canada 80
V. Little Folks of Labrador 116
VI. Little Folks of Newfoundland 120
VII. Little Folks of the United States 128
VIII. Little Folks of Mexico 179
IX. Little Folks of Central America 206
X. Little Folks of the West Indies 214
Click here
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Monday, August 29, 2011
The Squirrel's Pilgrim's Progress/Google Books
Author J. D. Williams
Illustrated by H. Wood
Publisher Laird & Lee, inc., 1915
Length 174 pages
Click here.
Excerpt:
Not far from the city of ants, Tiny halted to refresh himself with an acorn. "This country is delightful," he said to himself.
"A squirrel does not often see such a beautiful scene. He has little knowledge of the great world. I was discontented not long ago, but now I am happy. I am glad that I saw the ants and their city. They are very industrious creatures. All have much work to do, yet they do it willingly. They don't seem to wish to be idle. Ants never before were interesting to me, but now I admire them very much. You have taught me a lesson, friend ant." He sat still for a few moments gazing around him. Suddenly he saw a spider busy at work upon her country home. She wore a snuff-brown jacket dashed with purple, and her legs were striped like those of a tiger.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Indians and Pioneers: An Historical Reader for the Young/Google Books
Two features in these stories are introduced, in the confident hope that they will be found both interesting and practical; one is the study of the glacial and rough stone periods, which is, of late, made more attractive and intelligible to young readers, because taught through "simplified mineralogy" and clay-modeling; the other feature is the large use of quotations [from the sources, giving the original wording and quaint spelling of the narratives of the European pioneers to America.
Title Indians and Pioneers: An Historical Reader for the Young
Authors Blanche Evans Hazard, Samuel Train Dutton
Length 266 pages
Click here.
Sunday, August 21, 2011
Carpenter's geographical reader: Europe
Author Frank George Carpenter
Publisher American Book Co., 1912
Length 456 pages
Click here.
This book aims to give the children a plain and simple description of the countries of Europe as they are to-day. The method is by taking the little ones on a personally conducted tour over the continent. It is the children themselves who cross the Atlantic Ocean, steam over the Baltic and the Mediterranean seas and down the historic Rhine and the Danube. It is they who climb the Alps and stand on the North Cape watching the sun shine at midnight. It is they who go from city to city, from farm to farm, and factory to factory, seeing how the various peoples live and what they are doing in the work of the world. It is they who are admitted to the palaces, parliaments, and public offices where they learn how each nation is governed and something as to its civilization, commerce, and trade.
It is not intended that these travels should take the place of the school geographies, but that they should be used with such books as supplementary reading. As in the volumes describing similar tours in North America, South America, and Asia, the text-books on geography may be regarded as the skeleton and this reader as the flesh and blood which will clothe the dry bones and make the countries a living whole in the minds of the pupils.
A glance at the table of contents will give some idea of the scope and character of the work. The children, having crossed the Atlantic on one of the big ocean greyhounds, begin their tour in the United Kingdom. landing at Queenstown, they explore Ireland, visiting Cork, Killarney, Limerick, and Galway. They cross the bog lands and plains to Dublin, and thence go to the Giant's Causeway and Belfast, where they learn how linen is made. From Belfast, they sail to Glasgow, and after spending a while in the Lowlands or Industrial Scotland go to Edinburgh by the Trossachs. They make a hunting trip to the Highlands, and visit the homes of Robert Burns and Walter Scott before crossing the border to England...
Saturday, August 13, 2011
K- Elementary Topic: Homes/Children Around the World
Elementary Geography, 1915, pages 1-17 Mid-elementary reading level, but could be read to child.
Primary Education, Building Homes
St. Nicholas: A Monthly Magazine for Boys and Girls,1907
The Kindergarten for Teachers and Parent(ideas to expand on)
Teachers Magazine, 1909: The Eskimo Home and the Shepherds of Tibet
Child Life in Many Lands, 1903
The Lands of the Rising Sun: A Talk with English Boys and Girls about China, Korea and Japan, 1895
Child Life in All Lands, 1906
Big People and Little People of Other Lands, 1900
The Wide Awake Reader, 3rd grade
Little People Everywhere Series
Child Life in Many Lands: A Third Reader, Book 3
The Seven Little Sisters, 1887
Big People and Little People of Many Lands, 1900
Homes of Many Lands printable paper doll cut-outs - Arab tent and Plains Indian tepee.
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Real Things in Nature: A Reading Book of Science for American Boys and Girls/Google Books
Title Real Things in Nature: A Reading Book of Science for American Boys and Girls
Author Edward Singleton Holden
Publisher The Macmillan co., 1910
Length 443 pages
Click here
Saturday, August 6, 2011
A Syllabus(Outline) of United States History, 1492-1920
An outline originally intended for the first year college student.
Title A Syllabus of United States History, 1492-1920
Authors Homer Carey Hockett, Arthur Meier Schlesinger
Published 1921
Length 93 pages
Click here.
Thursday, August 4, 2011
An Introduction to Science
Author Bertha May Clark
Publisher American Book Co., 1915
Original from Harvard University
Digitized Mar 9, 2007
Length 494 pages
Click here.
Laboratory Manual
Monday, August 1, 2011
Shore and Sea; or, Stories of Great Vikings and Sea Captains/Google Books
Title Shore and Sea; or, Stories of Great Vikings and Sea Captains
Author William Henry Davenport Adams
Publisher Hodder and Stoughton, 1883
Click here
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Landmarks of History/Google Books
Author Charlotte Mary Yonge
Publisher Walter Smith, 1882
Click here
Title Landmarks of Recent History, 1770-1883
Author Charlotte Mary Yonge
Publisher Walter Smith, 1883
Click here
Title Questions on history, ancient, middle ages, and modern, to be answered from the Landmarks of History
Authors Mary Marsh HARRIS, Charlotte Mary Yonge
Published 1861
Click here
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Astronomy with an Opera-glass /Project Gutenburg
Astronomy with an Opera-glass
A Popular Introduction to the Study of the Starry Heavens with the Simplest of Optical Instruments
by Garrett Putman Services, 1890
"Being convinced that whoever will survey the heavens with a good opera-glass will feel repaid many fold for his time and labor, I have undertaken to point out some of the objects most worthy of attention, and some of the means of making acquaintance with the stars.
First, a word about the instrument to be used. Galileo made his famous discoveries with what was, in principle of construction, simply an opera-glass. This form of telescope was afterward abandoned because very high magnifying powers could not be employed with it, and the field of view was restricted. But, on account of its brilliant illumination of objects looked at, and its convenience of form, the opera-glass is still a valuable and, in some respects, unrivaled instrument of observation."
Click here.
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Saint Nicholas Children's Magazine: Short Stories for July/Project Gutenberg
Monday, July 18, 2011
The Keepers of the Trail: A Story of the Great Woods/Google Books
Author Joseph Alexander Altsheler
Publisher Appleton, 1916
Length 323 pages
Click here.
Part of The Young Trailers Series
* The Young Trailers, a story of early Kentucky (1907)
* The Forest Runners, a story of the great war trail in early Kentucky (1908)
* The Keepers of the Trail, a story of the great woods (1916)
* The Eyes of the Woods, a story of the ancient wilderness (1917)
* The Free Rangers, a story of the early days along the Mississippi (1909)
* The Riflemen of the Ohio, a story of early days along "the beautiful river" (1910)
* The Scouts of the Valley, a story of Wyoming and the Chemung (1911)
* The Border Watch, a story of the great chief’s last stand (1912)
Historical children's fiction about frontier life in Kentucky.
I'll fill in links to the other books soon.
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Gunpowder Treason And Other Stories for Boys/Project Gutenberg
Gunpowder Treason and Plot by Harold Avery, R. B. Townshend, and Fred Whishaw, 1901, Thomas Nelson & Sons.
Late elementary-middle school, exciting and adventurous short stories for boys. Click here.
Friday, July 15, 2011
Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern/Project Gutenberg
"The plan of this Work is simple, and yet it is novel. In its distinctive features it differs from any compilation that has yet been made. Its main purpose is to present to American households a mass of good reading. But it goes much beyond this. For in selecting this reading it draws upon all literatures of all time and of every race, and thus becomes a conspectus of the thought and intellectual evolution of man from the beginning. Another and scarcely less important purpose is the interpretation of this literature in essays by scholars and authors competent to speak with authority."
Click here.
Remaining volumes here.
Friday, July 8, 2011
The Basket of Flowers/Google Books
Authors Johann Christoph von Schmid, Mary Martha Sherwood
Editor Gregory Townsend Bedell
Published 1882
Click here.
Synopsis from Lamplighter Press(CBD):
"James, the king's gardener, teaches his 15-year-old daughter Mary all the principles of godliness through his flowers. She is falsely accused of stealing, banished from the village, and left homeless. Mary remembers her father's lessons and continues to trust her life to God's care. A remarkable tale of recompense and redemption."
Thursday, July 7, 2011
WORLD WAR STORIES BY
JOHN GILBERT THOMPSON
PRINCIPAL OF THE STATE NORMAL SCHOOL
FITCHBURG, MASS.AND INEZ BIGWOOD
INSTRUCTOR IN CHILDREN'S LITERATURE
STATE NORMAL SCHOOL FITCHBURG, MASS.
1918, by SILVER, BURDETT AND COMPANY
Preface:
"This volume of stories of the World War is prepared to meet this important need, and to set before the pupils the war's unparalleled deeds of heroism, with the aims and ideals which have inspired them, and which have led American youth to look upon the sacrifice of life as none too high a price to pay for the liberation of mankind.
It may be used as a reading book or as an historical reader for the upper grammar grades. While great care has been employed to secure accuracy of fact and to select material of permanent value, the stories are written in a manner that will appeal to children."
Click here.
Four American Naval Heroes Paul Jones, Admiral Farragut, Oliver H. Perry, Admiral Dewey/Project Gutenberg
Title: Four American Naval Heroes
Paul Jones, Admiral Farragut, Oliver H. Perry, Admiral Dewey
Author: Mabel Beebe
Commentator: James Baldwin
Click here.
Advice to Sunday School Children/Project Gutenberg
Covers twelve topics:
1. Be early and constant in your attendance at School.
2. Be very attentive to instruction.
3. Be silent in your Class.
4. Be thankful to your Teachers.
5. Honour and obey your parents.
6. Love your Brothers and Sisters.
7. Reverence the Lord's day.
8. Read daily in the Bible.
9. Pray to God constantly.
10. Take a cheerful part in the praises of God.
11. Abhor Swearing.
12. Avoid bad company
The British Museum for Young People(Ancient History)/Other
Chapter 1 - Prehistoric Times pg 5-30
Chapter 2 - Britain--A Roman Province pg 31-44
Chapter 3 - Greece and the Greeks (pt 1) pg 45-57
Chapter 4 - Greece and the Greeks (pt 2) pg 58-74
Chapter 5 - Greece and the Greeks (pt 3) pg 75-92
Chapter 6 - Egypt (pt 1) pg 93-109
Chapter 7 - Egypt (pt 2) pg 110-125
Chapter 8 - Egypt (pt 3) pg 126-142
Chapter 9 - Babylonia and Assyria (pt 1) pg 143-157
Chapter 10 - Babylonia and Assyria (pt 2) pg 158-176
Chapter 11 - Babylonia and Assyria (pt 3) pg 177-188
Chapter 12 - How Britain Became England pg 189-212
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
John Muir's Our National Parks/Google Books
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Golden Numbers: A Book of Verse for Youth/Google Books
Title Golden Numbers: A Book of Verse for Youth
Author Nora Archibald Smith
Compiled by Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin
Publisher Doubleday, Page & Co., 1902
Length 686 pages
See here.
Friday, June 17, 2011
American History: for Use in Secondary Schools/Google Books
Author Roscoe Lewis Ashley
Publisher Macmillan, 1907
Length 557 pages
Click here.
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Picture Readings/Google Books
Author Edgar Packard
Publisher Public school publishing company, 1918
Length 135 pages
Click here.
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Science for Beginners/Google Books
Title Science for Beginners: An Introduction to the Method and Matter of Science
New-world Science Series
Author Delos Fall
Publisher World Book Co., 1918
Length 388 pages
Click here.
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Nature Year Book [Short Daily Poetry]/Google Books
Editor Esther Matson
Publisher T.Y. Crowell, 1906
Length 155 pages
Click here.
For adults and young people.
Saturday, May 28, 2011
Plants and Their Children/Google Books
Title Plants and Their Children
Author Frances Theodora Parsons
Publisher American Book Company, 1896
Length 272 pages
Click here
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Thursday, May 19, 2011
The Little Gleaner(Christian Character Education)/Goolge Books
Excerpt from The Seasons:
The four seasons of the year in their turn change the face of nature, affording varied work for the husbandman, and giving the manufacturer and tradesman diversified opportunities of buying and selling goods; and every shrewd merchant and tradesman watches for and embraces the season most favourable for business, just as the mariner does the wind and tides.
No doubt many of you are so favoured and indulged that the varying seasons bring to you suitable recreation and employment; to boys, hoops, peg-tops, and marbles; and girls, hoops, shuttlecock, and skipping-rope, with out-door and in-door employment of a far more intellectual and useful character; so that each change in the year has for you its charm.
But the dream of riper age flits before your eyes at times with such radiance, causing you to think some childish trials very hard to bear. But, remember, dear young ones, you will never have less cares than now. You imagine increased years will give you advanced pleasures, not considering that these things will bring their share of trouble. Ah! far more than you now have, when, with choking sobs and brimful eyes, you hang over a difficult sum, or sigh over a broken toy. Don't forget that behind the blushing rose you may find a pricking thorn, and a bitter sediment may be at the bottom of a sweet cup.
But we would not needlessly cloud your cheerful brows with the hardships of future years. Do your best to improve your home and schooldays, that they may bring you a good return, for we get but the theory of learning at school—the practice of it is acquired later on. This is now the springtime of your life, when the seed is sown that will afterwards spring up of whatever kind it may be. But some of you may be passing the primrose of your days: your character is being fully developed; you may long have been beneath a parent's roof, and have hung on to props and dependencies, just as the ivy clings to and climbs around the oak ; now you are left to your own resources, you may no longer have a father's counsel or a mother's care, but are thrown into the wide world among companions vain and vile. You have to shoulder your way amidst designing men and deceitful women. Oh, may the God of Jacob bless you and keep you, so that, as you ripen into the summer season of your life, it may/be with the prospect of securing a harvest of spiritual as well as of temporal profit! And that you may prosper, abhor an and beware of sloth; both will do you harm, although you may shake off me latter and increase the former. In all things look to the Lord for help; He /can cause you to steer clear where others strike upon the rock and suffer shipwreck. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will direct your pathway. Many flowery and mossy paths may open invitingly to you, like the various rows Bunyan speaks of in Vanity Fair, where honours, profits, pleasures, and pastimes may be presented to your view in their best garb, to attract your mind and ensnare your feet—offered too at so cheap a rate that you may say, "Why should I deny myself this which costs me so little?" But oh, remember the reckoning day is to come; "for the end of all these things is death" (Rom.vi. 21).
Title The Little Gleaner
Publisher Houlston, 1879, London
Click here.
Monday, May 9, 2011
How to be a Lady for Girls/Google Books
Author Harvey Newcomb
Published 1850
Original from the University of Michigan
Click here.
Chapter 18, Indolence:
The indolent dread all exertion. When requested to do any thing, they have something else to do first, which their indolence has left unfinished; or they have some other reason to give why they should not attempt it. But if nothing else will do, the sluggard's excuse, " I can't" is always at hand. Were it not for the injury to them, it would be far more agreeable to do, one's self, what is desired of them, than to encounter the painful scowls that clothe the brow, when they think of making an effort. Solomon has described this disposition to the life : —" The slothful man putteth his hand in his bosom: it grieveth him to take it out again"
Friday, May 6, 2011
The Giant Crab and Other Tales from Old India/Project Gutenberg
THE GIANT CRAB And Other Tales from Old India Retold by W. H. D. ROUSE Illustrated by W. Robinson, London, 1897.
See here.
Elementary Spanish-American Reader/Google Books
Macmillan Spanish series
Editor Frederick Bliss Luquiens
Publisher The Macmillan company, 1917
Length 224 pages
Click here
Preface:
It is the purpose of this book to furnish material for translation for students who wish to begin reading at a very early stage of their study of Spanish. With this purpose in view, the notes are both elementary and exhaustive, and the vocabulary contains all verb forms whose stems differ from the stem of the infinitive, and all other words which might give trouble to the beginner, such as combinations of verbs and pronouns, and irregular plurals.
It is hoped that teachers will like the literal translations in the notes. In no case have free translations of difficult passages been given which do not show, at the same time, what the individual words mean. If teachers will require students to learn the literal, as well as the free translation of such passages, accuracy in translation will soon be attained.
The notes of a beginning book should not only help the student in translation, but also afford him an opportunity of reviewing the rules he has learned in his grammar or composition book. This has been kept in mind in the preparation of the present notes. Grammatical rules are stated in full at their first occurrence in the text, and thereafter attention is repeatedly recalled to those rules by cross-references. If teachers who use this book will insist on the use of the cross-references, their students will not forget the fundamental rules of grammar. For convenience of reference, a statement of the uses of the subjunctive and a table of numerals have been added to the notes.
To each selection have been added exercises for oral and written work. The Spanish questions are to be used orally. If students prepare their answers in advance, teachers will find it easy to make them the basis of general conversation on the lesson which will be both interesting and valuable. The composition exercises contain no words, phrases, or constructions which the student will not be able to find in the Spanish pages immediately preceding. He will be able, therefore, to write a little Spanish based on models rather than on rules, thus supplementing the necessary, but rather artificial, exercises of composition books. Such work, moreover, being based on the very passages which have perhaps been difficult to translate, will give him a clearer insight into the correct method of translating Spanish into English.
Finally, this Reader is intended to fill a very great need in the teaching of Spanish in this country. There are many readers which introduce students to Spain, but none which gives him a real introduction to Spanish America. One of the objects of this book is to teach some Spanish American geography and history. Such information will not only be valuable to the student, but will, as experience has shown, arouse his interest, and this cannot but quicken his progress in the mastery of the language itself. The selections of this Reader all deal with Latin-American subjects, and are supplemented by footnotes containing fundamental information about Latin America. These footnotes have been put into very easy Spanish and included in the vocabulary, notes, and exercises. They should be included in the assignments for translation.
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
How to Know the Ferns/Google Books
Title How to Know the Ferns: a guide to the names, haunts, and habits of our common ferns
Author Frances Theodora Parsons
Publisher C. Scribner's sons, 1902
Length 215 pages
Click here
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
How to Study Birds/Google Books
Author Herbert Keightley Job
Publisher A.L. Burt, 1910
Length 272 pages
Click here
The purpose of this book is to give, simply, clearly, and thoroughly, every possible suggestion and bit of practical information which may be useful to those who are beginning the fascinating study of birds in their native haunts.
Very many are undertaking it in these days — men who crave the excitement of the chase and yet dislike to kill, or who seek relaxation from the strain of business; women who are tired of being hothouse plants, or whose nerves are at the breaking-point from an unnatural sedentary life; boys and girls in the schools who are finding that delight in the animal creation does not cease when they are no longer little children; teachers who realize the importance and interest of the subject for the young, and desire to fit themselves to interest their pupils in the birds. But it is all new and perplexing, and there are a multitude of things they want to ask about, all sorts of inquiries as how to go to work to study the birds afield. It is hoped that this book placed in their hands may prove a ready friend to answer these questions to their satisfaction and to start them upon a happy career of outdoor delights among the wild birds.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
World Stories Retold for Modern Boys and Girls/Google Books
Author William James Sly
Publisher The Griffith & Rowland Press, 1914
Length 294 pages
Click here.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
The life of Johannes Brahms/Google books
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Fifteen Thousand Useful Phrases/Google Books
Title Fifteen Thousand Useful Phrases: a practical handbook of pertinent expressions, striking similes, literary, commercial, conversational, and oratorical terms, for the embellishment of speech and literature, and the improvement of the vocabulary of those persons who read, write, and speak English
Author Grenville Kleiser
Publisher Funk & Wagnalls company, 1917
Length 453 pages
Click here.
Friday, April 15, 2011
Course of Study in History and Literature(Grades One - Eight)
Author Emily J. Rice
Publisher A. Flanagan, 1898
Length 185 pages
Click here
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Great Speeches and How to Make Them/Google Books
Author Grenville Kleiser
Publisher Funk & Wagnalls Company, 1911
Length 391 pages
Click here.
Also by Kleiser:
How to Speak in Public
Model Speeches for Practise
Speeches for Study and Suggestions for Speech-making
Monday, April 11, 2011
Word-power, How to Develop It/Google Books
Title Word-power, How to Develop It
Author Grenville Kleiser
Publisher Funk & Wagnalls company, 1920
Length 172 pages
Click here.
Saturday, April 9, 2011
Minerals, and How to Study Them: A Book for Beginners in Mineralogy/Google Books
Author Edward Salisbury Dana
Publisher J. Wiley & sons, 1903
Length 380 pages
Click here.
How to Be a Man: A Book for Boys: Containing Useful Hints on the Formation of Character/Google Books
Author Harvey Newcomb
Publisher Gould and Lincoln, 1856
Length 224 pages
Click here.
"A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver."
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Multigrade Composition Lessons
The Progressive Composition Lessons: 7th and 8th Years, by Ida M. Brautigam;Silver, Burdett and Co., 1914
Practical Lessons in the Use of English by Mary F Hyde, D.C. Heath & Co., 1887
Composition for Elementary Schools, James Fleming Hosic, Cyrus Lauron Hooper, and Rand, McNally & Company, 1916
Pinneo's Guide to Composition: A Series of Practical Lessons: Designed to Simplify the Art of Writing Composition: for Beginners, by Timothy Stone Pinneo, Sargent, Wilson & Hinkle, 1864
New Composition and Rhetoric for Schools by Robert Herrick, Lindsay Todd Damon; Scott, Foresman and Company, 1911; 508 pages(middle school-high school)
English Composition for College Freshmen, by Wilbur Owen Sypherd, 1915.
More to come....
Sunday, April 3, 2011
English Composition & Essay-writing/Google Books
Author J.W. Miller
Publisher Longmans, Green & co., 1910
Length 113 pages
Click here.
Saturday, April 2, 2011
Brooks's Readers: Sixth, Seventh and Eighth Years/Google Books
Author Stratton Duluth Brooks
Publisher American book co., 1907
See here.
Thursday, March 31, 2011
City and Town: A Third Reader/Google Books
Author Pauline Frost Rafter
Publisher B.H. Sanborn, 1912
Length 292 pages
Click here.
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Monday, March 28, 2011
The Whole Year Round/Google Books
Author Dallas Lore Sharp
Publisher Houghton Mifflin company., 1915
Length 503 pages
Click here.
INTRODUCTION
"THE writer of this book has four children of his own, and not so very long ago (he can remember it) he was a child himself, and roamed the fields, as still he does, with all the child's love of freedom and joy in the companionship of wild things
— wild lives, wild winds, wild places, and the wild hours along the edge of dusk and dawn. And if he has any right to ask other children than his own to . tramp the wild places with him through the pages of this book it is because he is still a child and cannot outgrow his love of Saturdays and skates and deep woods and the ways of the wild folk, great and small; and because, again, he has tramped the wild places (for his home is in the woods) more than most of his readers, perhaps, and tramped them the seasons round
— stormy nights and lazy autumn days, and summer and winter; and he has seen — only what his readers; have seen, no doubt, — the ordinary things, but he has often felt, as all children do at times feel, strange deep things, things more wonderful than anybody ever saw. And yet the ordinary things, ordinary only because we have not watched them and thought about them, are really what we are going out to see; and we are going out in an ordinary way — upon our two feet..."
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
The Art-literature Readers, Book 4/Google Books
Title The Art-literature readers, Book 4
Authors Eulalie Osgood Grover, Frances Elizabeth Chutter
Publisher Atkinson, Mentzer & Grover, 1909
Click here.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Elementary geography: a text-book for children/Google Books
Title Elementary Geography: A Text-book for Children
King's Geographies
Author Charles Francis King
Publisher C. Scribner's Sons, 1904
Length 220 pages
Click here.
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Little Gardens for Boys and Girls/Google Books
Author Myrta Margaret Higgins
Publisher Houghton Miffin, 1910
Length 152 pages
Click here.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
The Wide Awake Fourth Reader/Google Books
Author Etta Austin Blaisdell McDonald
Publisher Little, Brown and Co., 1913
Click here.
Very sweet story selections, especially for spring.
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Puppy Dogs' Tales and Stories of Other Animal Friends /Google Books
Title Puppy Dogs' Tales and Stories of Other Animal Friends
Editor Frances Kent
Publisher The Macmillan company, 1922
Length 258 pages
Click here.
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
The Spring of the Year /Google Books
The Dallas Lore Sharp Nature Series
May G. Quigley collection
Author Dallas Lore Sharp
Publisher Houghton Mifflin Company, 1909
Length 148 pages
Click here.
Monday, March 7, 2011
Famous Men of Science/Project Gutenberg
AUTHOR OF "POOR BOYS WHO BECAME FAMOUS," "GIRLS WHO
BECAME FAMOUS," "FAMOUS AMERICAN AUTHORS,"
"FAMOUS AMERICAN STATESMEN," "SOCIAL
STUDIES IN ENGLAND," "STORIES
FROM LIFE," "FROM HEART
AND NATURE," ETC.
1889
Preface:
Garfield said, "No page of human history is so instructive and significant as the record of those early influences which develop the character and direct the lives of eminent men."
These sketches show how young men have overcome difficulties, sometimes poverty, sometimes illness; how they have made failures before finding their true vocation. They show the results of energy, perseverance, and untiring devotion; how a cheerful face and a hopeful spirit like Agassiz's, or a gentle and kindly nature like Darwin's, can win its way against opposition.
Click here.
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Young Children's Lesson Plan Ideas for March
I'll try to fill this out with links and cut-and-paste March images in the next few days. From a 1915 Primary Education periodical:
Poems
Signs of the Seasons — Hathaway.
The Wind. Sun's Travels — Stevenson.
Written in March — Wordsworth.
March — H. H. Jackson.
March. Little Gustava(very sweet!). Song of Easter — Thaxter.
One Bird — Van Dyke.
The Swallows — Arnold.
Little White Lily — Macdonald.
The Little Plant — Kate Brown.
Stories
The Ugly Duckling, Little Ida's Flowers — Andersen
The Foolish Weather Vane — Published by Rand, McNally & Company.
The Winds — Burnham.
March's Call, Half a Hundred Stories — Published by Milton Bradley Company.
Legends — Proserpine, Wind and Sun, Sleeping Beauty, Siegfried and Brunhilde; What Annie Saw — Published by Educational Publishing Company.
Pictures For Study
St. Anthony of Padua — Murillo.
He is Risen — Plockhorst.
Spring — Corot.
Chorister Boys — Anderson.
Robin Redbreast — Munier.
Swallows. A Resting Place — Laux.
Sparrows — Laux.
Morning Talks And Occupation Work
Signs of spring; color of sky; position of sun; the brook waking up; frogs; turtles; woodchucks; returning birds.
Make chart. Upon it note arrival of first robin; bluebird; blackbird; barn swallow; chipping sparrow; song sparrow;woodpecker; meadow lark. Take time each morning throughout the month to hear about any bird that has returned.
Keep descriptions of birds in little booklets. If possible, illustrate each page with picture of bird in color.
Winds; use of; what each brings.
Use sand table to model things which the wind does. Have a large weather vane in the center modeled by one of the older boys. Around it have miniature sailboats, windmills, kites, lines of clothes, etc.
Poem for illustration with charcoal or by paper cutting:
Twilight of mad March evening
Wee Robert was snug in bed.
"And what has the wind been doing?"
To mamma he sleepily said.
The pine trees outside were singing,
She heard their wild lullaby.
"The wind has been busy since morning,"
She said, "when we heard it pass by.
"It turned every wind mill it came to,
It speeded the boats on the sea,
It fluttered the clothes on the clothesline
Until they were dry as could be.
"It caught a man's hat and whirled it
Away down the long white street.
And everyone laughed and wondered
If man or March wind would beat.
"It came where some boys were flying
Their kites of every hue
And carried one up to cloud land.
Did that kite belong to you?
"It turned the proud vane on the steeple.
It tossed roaring waves on the shore;
Then gently it sang at twilight
For my babe when the day was o'er."
Trees and buds.
Study twigs. Force sprigs of lilac, cherry, willow, beech, and horse chestnut by placing in fresh water in the sunshine.
Maple trees; sap; sugar. How trees are tapped; how sap is carried to sugar house; sap making in olden time.
Make brush drawings of twigs. Cut barn from dark red paper. Take the silver gray pussies from the twigs and paste in position about barn as if a whole family of kittens were at play there. Add heads and tails with pencils.
In connection with study of maple sugar, cut sap buckets, sugar house, boiling kettle and pans.
Friday, March 4, 2011
The Herald of Spring: Spring:The Hyacinth(Multi-grade Lessons)/Google Books
Nature Study in Elementary Schools: First Reader(Hyacinth Bulb)
Outlines of Lessons in Botany(elementary - middle school)
Gardening For Children(The Hyacinth)
When Mother Lets Us Garden; A Book for Little Folk Who Want to Make Gardens(Hyacinths in Water)
The World Book
The Spartan, Myth of the Hyacinth(Elementary - Middle school)
School and Home Gardens
More coming soon....
Image from my garden.
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Wednesday, March 2, 2011
The Naval History of the United States: Blue Jackets of '76/Google Books
Title The Naval History of the United States: Blue Jackets of '76
Author Willis John Abbot
Publisher Peter Fenelon Collier, 1890
Click here.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Friday, February 25, 2011
Stories of the Civil War/Google Books
Author Albert Franklin Blaisdell
Publisher Lee and Shepard, 1890
Length 245 pages
Click here.
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Suggested History Readings for February, Grades Three and Four
SUGGESTED READINGS
"Young George Washington," and "Early Life of Abraham Lincoln," Eggleston's First Book of American History.
"The American Flag,"' Joseph R. Drake, Moore's "Songs and Ballads of the Revolution."
"Story of Washington," "Boyhood of Washington," "Story of Lincoln," F. A. Owen Co.'s Five Cent Classics.
Abbot's "Blue Jackets of '76."
Extracts from Preble's "History of the Flag."
Lossings "Pictorial History of the Civil War."
Blaisdell's "Stories of the Civil War."
Extracts from Henty's "With Lee in Virginia."
Moore's "Lyrics of Loyalty."
Simm's "War Poetry of the South."
Friday, February 18, 2011
The New Civics: A Textbook for Secondary Schools/Google Books
Author Roscoe Lewis Ashley
Publisher The Macmillan company, 1917
Length 420 pages
Read here.
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Early European Civilization: a Textbook for Secondary Schools(Prehistory to Reformation)
Author Roscoe Lewis Ashley
Publisher Macmillan, 1916
Length 719 pages
See here.
Monday, February 14, 2011
St. Valentine's Day Children's Stories, Songs, Crafts, and Activities
In the Child's World:Kindergarten - elementary school level story.
Kindergarten at Home. Story.
Child-garden Story: Four Letters, a St. Valentine's Day Story. Early elementary read-aloud. Read-alone: advanced elementary level reader.
"Tell it Again" Stories: Elaine's Valentine's - reading level about third grade.
Read-aloud story: Elementary School
Elementary school poem.
Beginning Reader: The Story of St. Valentine.
The story of St. Valentine from the third grade Standard Catholic reader , and another from the The Haliburton Second Reader.
St. Valentine Story with comprehension questions. About a third grade reading level, and another for about a second or third grade reading level.
Three Valentine's Day Stories (read-aloud)
Click and print Valentine's Day poem for little girls.
A Book of Programs - St. Valentine's Day Lesson Plan - Kindergarten and up , and here as well.
Crafts:
Suggestions for Handwork in School and Home(crafts) Blackline templates for cupid angel card and more. This is the best! Many designs with instructions and card greetings.
More templates for St. Valentine's Day Cards.
Manual Training - Occupations(crafts)
Blacklines for cupid and little girl with heart, pages 84-85.
Bumped up from 2008.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave(Audiobook)/Other
Click here to FreeAudio.org. This link includes background history for students. Audio comes in three parts and a zip file with all is available. At the link, Click on audio in order to listen online and/or right click, and "save file as" to download.
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Chandra in India/Google Books
Title Chandra in India(A Geographical Reader)
Little People Everywhere
Author Etta Austin Blaisdell McDonald
Publisher Little, Brown, and Company, 1916
Length 111 pages
See here.
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Wild Flowers Every Child Should Know/Google Books
Title Wild Flowers Every Child Should Know: Arranged According to Color, with Reliable Descriptions of the More Common Species of the United States and Canada
Author Frederic William Stack
Publisher Doubleday, Page and Company, 1914
Length 411 pages
See here.
Monday, February 7, 2011
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Natural History Object Lessons: A Manual for Teachers
Author George Ricks
Publisher D.C. Heath, 1891
Length 352 pages
Click here
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Saints and Festivals of the Christian Church/Google Books
Author H. Pomeroy Brewster
Publisher F. A. Stokes, 1904
Length 558 pages
Click here.
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
How Our Grandfathers Lived/Google Books
Authors Albert Bushnell Hart, Annie Bliss Chapman
Publisher Macmillan, 1916
Length 371 pages
Click here.
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Broad Stripes and Bright Stars: Stories of American History /Google Books
for the Children's Hour Series
May G. Quigley collection
Author Carolyn Sherwin Bailey
Publisher Milton Bradley company, 1919
Length 240 pages
Click here.
Monday, January 31, 2011
Stories of the Nibelungen(Germanic/Old Norse Tales) for Young People/Project Gutenberg
Read and download here.
Excerpt:
YOUNG SIEGFRIED
In the good old days of Long Ago, when kings had absolute power over all their subjects, even in the matter of life and death, there dwelt in the city of Santum, on the beautiful Rhine River, a great and good king named Siegmund.
He was very powerful, and ruled over the kingdom of Niederland so wisely and so well that he was[8] loved and honored by all his people. He shared his throne with Siegelinda, his beautiful wife, who also was noble and kind of heart.
Sunday, January 30, 2011
The Recollections of a Drummer-Boy(Civil War)/Google Books
Author Harry M. Kieffer
Published 1911
Here.
From the preface:"Several years ago the writer prepared a brief series of papers for the columns of St. Nicholas, under the title of "Recollections of a Drummer-Boy." It was thought that these sketches of army life, as seen by a boy, would prove enjoyable and profitable to children in general, and especially to the children of the men who participated in the great Civil War, on one side or the other; while the belief was entertained that they might at the same time serve to revive in the minds of the veterans themselves long-forgotten or but imperfectly remembered scenes and experiences in camp and field. In the outstart it was not the author's design to write a connected story, but rather simply to prepare a few brief and hasty sketches of army life, drawn from his own personal experience and suitable for magazine purposes. But these, though prepared in such intervals as could with difficulty be spared from the exacting duties of a busy professional life, having been so kindly received by the editors of St. Nicholas, as well as by the very large circle of readers of that excellent magazine, and the writer having been urgently pressed on all sides for more of the same kind, it was thought well to revise and enlarge the "Recollections of a Drummer-Boy," and to present them to the public in permanent book form. In the shape of a more or less connected story of army life, covering the whole period of a soldier's experience from enlistment to muster-out, and carried forward through all the stirring scenes of camp and field, it was believed that these "Recollections," in the revised form, would commend themselves not only to the children of the soldiers of the late war, but to the surviving soldiers themselves; while at the same time they would possess a reasonable interest for the general reader as well."
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
A Mother's List of Books for Children/Project Gutenberg
Click here. HTML version is the easiest to work of off with searches - quick copy and paste.
Stories of Art and Artists/Google Books
Author Clara Erskine Clement Waters
Publisher Ticknor and company, 1887
Length 357 pages
Click here.
This book pairs well with Garden of Praise's free art appreciation lessons(scroll all the way down to bottom at the link). This is for younger children, and has color high definition images of the many of the paintings mentioned in Clara Water's book. There are also online quizzes, worksheets, etc. and helpful links.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Rolf in the Woods/Project Gutenberg
I have especially dwelt in detail on the woodland and peace scouting in the hope that I may thus help other boys to follow the hard-climbing trail that leads to the higher uplands. "
Rolf in the Woods by Ernest Thompson Seton
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Two Indian Children of Long Ago/Project Gutenberg
See here.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Friday, January 21, 2011
Stories of Chivalry Retold from the St. Nicholas Magazine/Google Books
Publisher The Century co., 1909
Length 192 pages
Overview
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Theodore Roosevelt, Patriot and Statesman/Google Books
Author Robert Cornelius V. Meyers
Publisher P. W. Ziegler & Co. [c1902], 1902
Length 621 pages
See here.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Free Word Processor: Jarte
"Jarte \jär · 'tay\ noun (est. 2001) 1. A free word processor based on the Microsoft WordPad word processing engine built into Windows. 2. A fast starting, easy to use word processor that expands well beyond the WordPad feature set. 3. A small, portable word processor whose documents are fully compatible with Word and WordPad." See more here.
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Bow-wow and Mew-mew(Easy Reader)/Google Books
Title Bow-wow and Mew-mew
Author Georgiana Marion Craik
Publisher Beckley-Cardy, 1914
Length 95 pages
Click here
Bow-Wow And Mew-mew is one of the few books for beginners in reading that may be classed as literature. Written in words of mostly one syllable, it has a story to tell, which is related in so attractive a manner as to immediately win the favor of young children. It teaches English and English literature to the child in the natural way: through a love for the reading matter. It is the character of story that will, in the not distant future, replace the ordinary primer or reader with detached sentences, and which seldom possesses any relation to literature.
The ultimate objects of any story can only be effected through the love for a story. The prominent point in this story is development of good character, which may well be regarded as the highest purpose of education. The transformation from bad to good traits in the dog and cat cannot but have a desirable effect on every child that reads the story. Bow-Wow and Mew-Mew become dissatisfied with their home and their surroundings, and ungrateful toward their benefactress. As the story tells, "They did not find good in any thing." But after running away and suffering hunger, neglect, and bad treatment, their characters begin to change. They naturally come to reflect their mistress's goodness. They learn the value of companionship and friendship, and the appreciation of a home. However, the ethical thoughts in the story are presented without a moral. The child really lives the scenes described. He has the emotions of the characters and feels their convictions. And this determines the worth of a story as an agent in character development.
The narrative furnishes, further, the proper kind of exercise for the imagination. It affords abundant opportunity for the play of the dramatic instinct in the child, and effects a happy union of the "home world" and the " school world." The illustrations, drawn by Miss Hodge, have been planned and executed with considerable care. J. C. S.
On the Edge of Winter(Colonial Historical Fiction)/Google Books
Author Richard Markham
Publisher Dodd, Mead, and Company, publishers, 1881
Length 236 pages
Click here.
Wherein may be read how Five Boys and Five Girls ate their Thanksgiving Dinner at an Old Farm House in the Hudson Highlands. The Book records further sundry of their Doings, and some Stories and Ballads of the Early Days of our Country.
Companion books:
Around the Yule Log
Aboard the Mavis
Friday, January 14, 2011
Our Winter Birds[N.E. USA]: How to Know and How to Attract Them/Google Books
Title Our Winter Birds: How to Know and How to Attract Them
Author Frank Michler Chapman
Publisher D. Appleton and Company, 1918
Length 180 pages
Click here.
Five Hundred Years of Chaucer Criticism and Allusion(1357-1900)/Google Books
Chaucer Society publications
Editor Caroline Frances Eleanor Spurgeon
Publisher Pub. for the Chaucer society by K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & co., ltd and by H. Frowde, 1908
Click here.
More books on Chaucer:Chaucer Society Publications
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Dooryard Folks: and, A Winter Garden/Google Books
Title Dooryard Folks: and, A Winter Garden
Author Amanda Bartlett Harris
Publisher D. Lothrop, 1883
Length 207 pages
Click here.