The store will not work correctly in the case when cookies are disabled.
We use cookies to make your experience better.To comply with the new e-Privacy directive, we need to ask for your consent to set the cookies.Learn more.
These icons are designed to help you quickly understand and learn important information about our products.
Teaching Method
Traditional
Teacher-centered curriculum commonly used in classrooms that may include a text, teacher manual, tests, etc.
Charlotte Mason
A methodology based on the work of a 19th century educator who maintained that children learn best from literature (Living Books), not textbooks.
Classical
A methodology based on the Latin Trivium (three stages of learning), including the grammar stage (memorization and facts), logic stage (critical thinking), and rhetoric stage (developing/defending ideas).
Unit Study
A thematic or topical approach centered around one topic that integrates multiple subject areas.
Montessori (Discovery)
A methodology based on the work of a 20th century educator that emphasizes student and sensory-driven discovery learning and real-life applications.
Other
Other methodologies
Religious Content
Secular
Contains content contrary to common Christian beliefs (i.e. evolution).
Neutral
Avoids religious or theoretical topics or presents multiple viewpoints without preference.
Christian/Religious
Faith-based or including instructional religious content.
Learning Modality
Auditory
Learns through listening, talking out loud or reading out loud.
Visual
Learns through seeing, prefers written instructions and visual materials.
Kinesthetic/Tactile (Hands-On)
Learns through moving, doing and touching.
Multi-Sensory
Curriculum that employ a variety of activities/components.
Presentation
Sequential
Curriculum progresses through well-defined learning objectives. Emphasizes mastery before moving to the next topic.
Spiral
Topics and concepts are repeated from level to level, adding more depth at each pass and connecting with review.
Conceptual/Topical
Focus is on the “why,” often with a unifying concept as well as specific skills; coverage may be broader.
Teacher Involvement
Low Teacher Involvement
Student-led materials; parent acts as a facilitator.
Medium Teacher Involvement
A mix of teacher-led time and independent student work.
High Teacher Involvement
Teacher-led lessons; may utilize discussions, hands-on activities and working together.
Additional Materials Required
No other materials needed
Everything you need is included.
Other Materials Required
There are additional required resources that are a separate purchase.
Other Materials Optional
There are additional resources mentioned or recommended but are not absolutely necessary.
Cool, themed journal with weathered-looking pages looks like you’ve been carrying it around a bit. It is large and bound like a workbook (perfect binding). Each page has a scrawly border and dotted grid (not lines) to write upon. This is a more-free form way to journal! Inspiring quotes can be used as prompts to respond to if you don’t have a particular thought to jot down. It would make a good project for a student to complete while on an actual adventure, or perhaps they plan their dream trip and write about that! ~Sara
Publisher's Description of Adventures of Learning: Odyssey
The Odyssey student journal offers motivational quotations about life and learning from George Washington Carver, Madeleine L’Engle, Marie Curie, and many more. The adventure of learning doesn't belong only in school. Learning happens whenever a curious mind meets a new idea. As students write about their discoveries, they build deeper layers of understanding. The process of wrestling ideas into words forces them to pin down nebulous thoughts and decide what they really believe. Writing helps students develop a richer mathematical mindset.
This beautiful 110-page book is printed in full color with the luxurious feel of matte binding. The student pages look like parchment to make writing fun. The sturdy paper will stand up to repeated erasing, and it works great with gel pens, too. A light blue dot grid provides writing guidelines or the beginning of a geometry investigation—depending on your journaling prompt. Do you want to transform your child’s experience of learning math? Pick up Odyssey: The Adventure of Learning and launch your family’s creative journey today.
You
can use these journals in many ways. You can write about what you are learning,
use it for homework, or for recreational math investigations. Lonardo da Vinci
described his notebook as “a collection without order, drawn from many papers,
which I have copied here, hoping to arrange them later each in its place,
according to the subjects of which they treat.”
Writing
things down by hand helps them stick in your memory. The books are well made,
and the pages look old, like parchment paper, with dot grid journaling pages.
Each page has embellishments around the edge and there is a famous quote or
saying on every other page. Sc, 109 pages. ~Amber