Thanks for the flip-through! We loved their books on economics but hesitate to get a history book as a multiethnic homeschool--- nearly a year on, do you feel the Tuttle Twins history volumes fairly represent the nuance of and contradictions present during the formation of our laws, states, and culture? I took AP and honors classes and recall slavery being about 2 weeks out non contextual info that was rarely connected to other events worldwide.
These books don’t come with all of the worksheets and tests, but they are available to print online. I don’t quiz/test my kiddos, we read and take in information and through conversations I know my kids are understanding material.
Great video hun!! We are going to be starting the first book this school year. Thank you for the link 🥰
Thank so much, hope y’all enjoy!
Thanks for the flip-through! We loved their books on economics but hesitate to get a history book as a multiethnic homeschool--- nearly a year on, do you feel the Tuttle Twins history volumes fairly represent the nuance of and contradictions present during the formation of our laws, states, and culture? I took AP and honors classes and recall slavery being about 2 weeks out non contextual info that was rarely connected to other events worldwide.
It’s very matter of fact, as in what happened and when, through discussion you would likely have to add in the perspective/nuance you are looking for.
@AmongStouts Thanks very much for answering, sounds like a solid jumping off point with few frills!
My question, is how do you grade for concepts or understanding. Does this curriculum have questions at the end of each chapter or anything like that
These books don’t come with all of the worksheets and tests, but they are available to print online. I don’t quiz/test my kiddos, we read and take in information and through conversations I know my kids are understanding material.