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Displaying 1-8 of 8 items.
 

5 Fun Summer Activities for Catholic Families
Excerpt: Summer is a great season to get outside and enjoy great weather and fun family time! Did you know that you can also enrich your family’s faith this summer, without sacrificing fun in the process?
 

A Brief Overview of Catholic Homeschool Curricula
Fran Rutherford


Excerpt: Are you new to homeschooling and don’t know which curriculum to choose? Before you choose a curriculum, you should ask yourself a couple of questions: How organized am I? How motivated am I to do this?
 

A Review of Catholic Heritage Curricula
Paula Rutherford


Excerpt: Catholic Heritage Curricula (CHC) offers complete lesson plans for Preschool/Kindergarten through fourth grade, a detailed lesson plan guide for middle school (fifth through eighth grades), and the flexible "High School of Your Dreams" program designed to fit the needs of your high school student, regardless of whether they plan on going to college or enter a trade upon graduation.
 
 

Homeschooling Resources at Aquinas and More
Excerpt: Confused about the array of Catholic homeschool material and curricula available? We've sorted out the mess.
 

Small Steps Photo Contest!
Excerpt: A couple of weeks ago we announced our Small Steps for Catholic Moms photo contest. We've already received some great entries. We'll keep adding new entries to this post.
 

Teaching Ninth Grade
Dr. Mary Clark


Excerpt: High school! As some parents begin home schooling in the early years, they cringe when they think about home schooling at the high school level. Yet the ones most successful in teaching high school students are those who started their home schooling when the children were in the elementary grades.
 

Top Ten Quotes from John Milton's Paradise Lost
Excerpt: In 1667 John Milton published the epic poem Paradise Lost. It stands alongside other pillars of literature such as the Iliad and the Divine Comedy and even seeks to surpass them all in prose, rhyme and subject. Rather than attempting to explain the merely human aspects of hubris or conversion, Milton addresses the chief source of our fallen nature and seeks to justify the ways of God to man. (PL 1:26) Although this book is primarily read by students in classical literature courses, its influence
 

Displaying 1-8 of 8 items.
 

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