"The stories are fun and make the people memorable . . . I never knew history could be so intersting."
Student
"Not only does my class get started right away [but] all of my students are practicing higher level thinking skills."
9th Grade Teacher
"You'd be amazed at how good my students are at predicting this stuff!"
6th Grade Teacher
"I know I have told you this before, but I will tell you again. You guys are the best support system of any teaching resources! Thank you so much for making my job easier and better."
HS Teacher
The Renaissance . . . . page 7
The Medici family . . . They financed the Renaissance
Giotto . . . The first genius artist
Brunelleschi . . . The first master architect
Donatello . . . The first master sculptor
Leonardo da Vinci . . . The Last Supper
Michelangelo . . . The Sistine Chapel
Raphael . . . The School of Athens
Botticelli . . . The Birth of Venus
Jan Van Eyck . . . First to use oil-based paints
Durer . . . Woodblock prints
Hieronymous Bosch . . . Inspired surrealism
Hans Holbein . . . Painted portraits
Bruegel . . . Everyday life of peasants
Rembrandt . . . The Night Watch
El Greco . . . Influenced Picasso
Dante . . . The Divine Comedy
Petrarch . . . The poet laureate of Rome
Boccaccio . . . The Decameron
Chaucer . . . The Canterbury Tales
Machiavelli . . . The Prince
Thomas More . . . Utopia
Shakespeare . . . The world’s greatest playwright
John Milton . . . Paradise Lost
Rabelais . . . Gargantua & Pantagruel
Moliere . . . The Misanthrope
Cervantes . . . Don Quixote
The Reformation . . . . Page 35
John Wycliffe . . . Father of the English Bible
Jan Hus . . . Burned at the stake for heresy
Erasmus . . . In Praise of Folly
Gutenberg . . . Invented the printing press
Martin Luther . . . Launched the Protestant Reformation
John Calvin . . . Founder of the Puritan church
Catherine de Medici . . . Persecuted Protestants in France
John Knox . . . Founder of the Presbyterian Church
William Tyndale . . . Printed the English Bible
Henry VIII . . . Converted England to Protestantism
Anne Boleyn . . . Henry VIII had six wives
Bloody Mary . . . Persecuted Protestants in England
Elizabeth I . . . England’s greatest queen
Mary Queen of Scots . . . Imprisoned and beheaded
James I . . . Jamestown & Plymouth Rock
John Bunyan . . . Pilgrim’s Progress
John Wesley . . . Founder of the Methodist Church
The Scientific Revolution . . . . page 53
Copernicus . . . Founder of modern astronomy
Tycho Brahe . . . Mapping the solar system
Kepler . . . The laws of planetary motion
Galileo . . . Proved the heliocentric theory
Sir Isaac Newton . . . Universal gravitation
William Harvey . . . The circulation of blood
Robert Boyle . . . Founder of modern chemistry
Descartes . . . First modern philosopher
Francis Bacon . . . The scientific method
The Age of Exploration . . . . page 63
Prince Henry the Navigator . . . Explored the coast of Africa
Bartolomeu Diaz . . . The Cape of Good Hope
Vasco da Gama . . . Sea route to India
Columbus . . . Sea route to the Americas
Vespucci . . . Two continents named for him
Cabral . . . Sea route to Brazil
Ponce de Leon . . . First European to explore Florida
Balboa . . . First European to see the Pacific Ocean
Cortez . . . Conquered the Aztecs
Pizarro . . . Conquered the Inca
Magellan . . . First to circumnavigate the globe
John Cabot . . . Explored Canada
Jacques Cartier . . . Explored Canada
Champlain . . . First permanent settlement in Canada
Henry Hudson . . . Hudson River, Hudson Bay
Sir Francis Drake . . . England became a major seapower
A great way to begin class!
Have you ever herded bunnies?
Then you know how difficult it is to make students come to order at the beginning of class.
A gong works exceedingly well.
But how about a story?
71 stories!
Imagine your startled students - whether fifth graders or seniors - when you begin class with:
“Once upon a time . . .”
Storytelling
It’s hard to remember historical figures, much less why each became famous.
Storytelling can make each historical figure an individual and therefore memorable.
How it works
You tell a brief story about the person, then students predict why he or she became world famous.
Or, you tell about the problems the person faced and students predict the solutions he or she chose.
Childhood . . .
Around twelve, students begin to form their “world view.”
That is, they begin to shape their views on race and class, religion and politics.
The same is true for a boy or girl who grows up to become a famous person.
If you know about his or her childhood, you can predict what he or she will do as an adult.
Don’t take our word. Try it!
A fine summary
After hearing stories of the famous people, students will learn the historical era’s major concepts,
people and events, terms and definitions.
Great practice in Bloom’s taxonomy!
Students who practice critical thinking do exceedingly well on standardized tests.
These stories call upon students to exercise all six levels of Bloom’s taxonomy:
1. Recall The colorful stories help students recall the facts.
2. Interpret Listening to the stories, students learn how to read between the lines.
3. Apply Since the stories tell of each person’s childhood, students can easily relate.
4. Analyze Students can analyze the strengths and weaknesses of each historical figure.
5. Synthesize Students are called upon to add up the facts and predict. (This is pure synthesis.)
6. Evaluate After hearing story after story, students learn how to evaluate an historical figure.