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Morning Hope – Psalm 123
Psalm 123
To you I lift up my eyes,
O you who are enthroned in the heavens!
Behold, as the eyes of servants
look to the hand of their master,
as the eyes of a maidservant
to the hand of her mistress,
so our eyes look to the LORD our God,
till he has mercy upon us.
Have mercy upon us, O LORD, have mercy upon us,
for we have had more than enough of contempt.
Our soul has had more than enough
of the scorn of those who are at ease,
of the contempt of the proud.
ESV
Originally posted April 21, 2021
7Sisters Cinema Studies for Literature – High School Homeschool
For reasons I’ve covered elsewhere, Caroline and I do a lot of reading out loud in our high school homeschool. Because of this, getting through an ambitious high school reading list would be very challenging. Thankfully I learned about the 7Sisters Cinema Studies for Literature Learning a number of years ago so it gives us another option that works well for our family.
In this post, I’m simply going over the cinema studies in general. We’ve now completed two and I hope to write a separate post about each one we use.
7Sisters Homeschool Curriculum
I received some of these study guides six years ago when I wrote an iHN review of 7Sisters curriculum that you can see here: Sensible High School Curriculum – 7Sisters Homeschool. If you aren’t familiar with 7Sisters, I encourage you to read that post.
Because of this past opportunity, Caroline and I are using an older version of some of the cinema studies. Others I have purchased recently. I believe some of the curriculum has been updated over the past six years so my version may not match yours exactly if you purchase the same title. I don’t think it will matter, but I did want to offer that by way of full disclosure.
7Sisters Cinema Studies for Literature Learning
Here is how 7Sisters describes the cinema studies on their website:
Cinema Studies for Literature Learning Study Guides teach homeschool high schoolers the elements of good literature using the medium of movies.
Cinema Studies for Literature Learning is geared to:
- the visual learner in high school
- those who are reluctant readers
- or for whom reading is very time-consuming, and to those who love movies!
Good movies tell good stories, and good storytelling requires the use of traditionally respected literary devices and techniques. With a little help from a study guide, many movies introduce the viewer to excellent literature that is being presented in a visual medium.
There are approximately 30 titles available. Each study guide includes vocabulary and at least one literature focus such as satire, archetype, character development, anti-hero, redemption. etc. The cinema studies are flexible and can be adjusted to varying degrees of difficulty and challenge depending on the needs of your child and her transcript.
There are two options for purchasing these. If you would like a full credit course assembled for you, then you can purchase the Cinema Studies for Literature Learning Curriculum. It includes 15 titles (click link to see list). The other option is to simply purchase individual titles that interest you and your child.
Study Guides We’re Using
We have opted to pick and choose the ones we would like to use. Our list currently includes:
- The Wizard of Oz (completed)
- The Truman Show (completed)
- 12 Angry Men
- The 39 Steps
- A Christmas Carol (1984)
- Hoosiers
- Remember the Titans
I expect we may add a few more before we complete high school, but these are the first ones we will complete.
So that’s an introduction to 7Sisters Cinema Studies for Literature Learning. If these would be helpful in your homeschool, I hope you will check them out!
The Master and His Apprentices – Christian Art History for Homeschoolers
As we approached high school, I needed to find courses that would resonate with my creative daughter who loves both history and art. I had looked at The Master and His Apprentices for some time and chose it for our art history curriculum.
Caroline and I were both very happy with this choice. Although it is a course that can be used in high school or college, I took a chance that she would be able to handle it as a freshman because I knew she would be very interested in the topic. We had done almost no textbook work to that point, but I did want her to learn how to do such things if she was interested in college in the future. She definitely found the first few chapters challenging. But once we personalized a strategy for our situation, she moved forward with little difficulty after that. Caroline still pulls the book off the shelf for reference and often connects things we are currently studying to things we learned in this Art History.
So let’s take a look at some of the features and a few ways that it worked for us.
The Master and His Apprentices
First, it is Art History from a Christian Perspective. As the author, Gina Ferguson, writes on her website:
The Master and His Apprentices: Art History from a Christian Perspective textbook contains 600+ images across nearly 400 pages. Covering art history from Creation to today, this award-winning course brings art and history to life in a memorable visual context.
The Master and His Apprentices is designed for parents to easily and effectively teach a high school-level homeschool art history class.
The Master and His Apprentices is a FULL CREDIT elective written from a Christian perspective. Even with 600+ images, there is NO nudity.
This homeschool art history class systematically highlights art from the first day of Creation. Yes, it features GOD as the first and preeminent artist. Moreover, it covers all of the major artists and periods found in a college-level course. Nevertheless, it contains a reader-friendly layout that makes the information accessible and memorable.
If you’ve never considered Art History for your homeschool, the author has four strong reasons you should add it to your child’s experience: Why is Art History Important for Christians?
Homeschool Art History
I especially appreciated the fact that the first two chapters of the book set the tone for thinking about art from a Christian perspective. Chapter 1 focuses on God as the Master artist. This includes discussions about art in the Bible and tying art into the Biblical timeline. The second chapter highlights each day of creation and what the Master creator did each day.
The rest of the book looks at various time periods. The main sections include:
- Ancient Cultures
- Classical Antiquity
- Middle Ages
- Renaissance
- Baroque Era & Beyond
These sections include the following topics:
- Ancient Near East
- Egyptians
- Aegean
- Early Greek
- Etruscan
- Roman
- Early Christian & Byzantine
- Medieval & Islamic
- Romanesque
- Gothic
- Proto-Renaissance
- Early Italian Renaissance
- High Italian Renaissance
- Northern Renaissance
- Baroque
- Rococo to Today
- Global Highlights
There were things we enjoyed about all of the topics except the Etruscan. Not a favorite! LOL!
Here are a few photos that Caroline took from the hardcover book for this review. She selected a few different sample topics.
After some trial and error, we found it worked best if we completed the opening section of the chapters together. The first few pages often introduced new concepts and were written at a fairly high level. I read them aloud and we discussed them as we went.
The early part of each chapter also includes a timeline.
Caroline then completed the subsequent days featuring a different artist or topic on her own.
Each chapter has a one- or two-sided worksheet that comes in the Softcover Teacher’s Guide.
There are also four exams provided in the Teacher’s Guide. I opted to make them open book exams.
If there is one thing we wish was different it is the layout of the worksheets. They are compact and the lines are small. There is often extra blank space on the back of the sheet that could have been used to provide more room for writing. Caroline adapted, but a more generous layout would make this great curriculum even better.
The student book is available in both hardcover and digital format. I opted to purchase the physical book for a few reasons. One, we use computers and devices a lot already. I strongly preferred Caroline working from a book rather than spending more time on a device. I also thought that it would make a valuable reference book for the rest of our homeschooling time.
You can see more sample pages here on the website: Sample Pages.
The physical book is not cheap. If cost is an issue, there are sometimes dented books available at a substantial discount. Normally I like everything new and pristine, but I purchased a book with a dented cover which you can see here. It made a big difference in being able to afford the curriculum. I am very glad I purchased the hardcover book and would encourage others to do the same.
Overall, I highly recommend The Master and His Apprentices if you are looking for a Christian Art History curriculum for your homeschool. If you have any questions, feel free to leave a comment below and I’ll do my best to answer it. (A comment below is much more likely to get a response as opposed to an email so that’s why I invite you to leave a comment!)
Happy homeschooling!
Morning Hope – Psalm 101
Psalm 101
I will sing of Your loving devotion and justice;
to You, O LORD, I will sing praises.
I will ponder the way that is blameless—
when will You come to me?
I will walk in my house
with integrity of heart.
I will set no worthless thing
before my eyes.
I hate the work of those who fall away;
it shall not cling to me.
A perverse heart shall depart from me;
I will know nothing of evil.
Whoever slanders his neighbor in secret,
I will put to silence;
the one with haughty eyes and a proud heart,
I will not endure.
My eyes favor the faithful of the land,
that they may dwell with me;
he who walks in the way of integrity
shall minister to me.
No one who practices deceit
shall dwell in my house;
no one who tells lies
shall stand in my presence.
Every morning I will remove all the wicked of the land,
that I may cut off every evildoer from the city of the LORD.
Originally posted April 6, 2021