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Transcript
Week 14
Notes
Day 1
Bible
Leading Little Ones to God | Lesson 32, pp. 69–70
“Jesus Came from Heaven”
The focus of Leading Little Ones to God this week is on
the birth of Christ (Lesson 32) and Christ’s obedience to
God the Father despite Satan’s temptations (Lesson 33).
Reading | John 3:16–17
Memorization | John 10:15
Sing the Word: A New Commandment | Track 7
Listen to this track the entire week.
History/Geography
Core B
Czechoslovakia to a German puppet state. British Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain certainly was mistaken when
he stepped off a plane and declared that he and government leaders from France and Italy had acquired “peace
for our time“ from Hitler by giving Hitler permission to
take over southern Czechoslovakia [the “Sudetenland“].
The Nazi army entered the Sudetenland on October 1st
that year. [chap. 7]
To Discuss After You Read
Q:
A:
Why did Miss Agnes teach the children arithmetic? Can
you think of other reasons to learn it? [chap. 7]
so no one could cheat them; for various professions, to
keep house hold accounts, to understand science, etc.
Q:
A:
Describe how Miss Agnes taught Bokko, the deaf girl.
[chap. 8]
she had sign language books so Bokko could talk with her
hands and listen by spelling out what other people signed
to her
From Akebu to Zapotec | “Hrusso” p. 13
Timeline and Map Activities

Timeline and Map Activities
The Aleutian Islands (I1); the Yukon Territory (H5);
Fairbanks (H4); Anchorage (H3) (map 4) [chap. 7]
Yugoslavia [chap. 7]
India (Please use the map on p. 4 of your book)

Usborne Book of World History | pp. 33–35
Note: Yugoslavia is a country that existed from 1918 to
2003 and brought together various ethnic groups. Fighting
between these ethnic groups and the collapse of Communism in the early 1900s broke up Yugoslavia into individual
countries. These individual countries have continued to
change as the ethnic groups fight. Currently, the countries
of the former Yugoslavia are: Slovenia, Macedonia, Croatia,
Serbia, Montenegro, Kosovo, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. The
following map shows the area of Yugoslavia when it was
united as one country.
Note to Mom or Dad: These pages contain pictures
of violence and of people who are rather undressed by
Western standards.
To Discuss After You Read
Q:
A:
Why was this time period called the New Kingdom
in Egypt?
the powerful Pharaoh’s conquered other land
Read-Alouds
The Year of Miss Agnes | Chapters 7–8
1
2
AUSTRIA
A
3
Solvenia
World War II: World War II is normally remembered as running from 1939 to 1945—from the time that England and
France declared war against Germany till Germany and
Japan gave up. However, on page 69 you will find that Miss
Agnes says the War began in 1938. It’s unclear whether
the author made a mistake, or whether she is deliberately
referring to the beginning of Germany’s hostilities. In
1938, Hitler annexed Austria in what is now called the
“Anschluss“; that was also the year that Hitler reduced
6
7
8
ROMANIA
YUGOSLAVIA
Bosnia and
Serbia
Herzegovina
B
C
D
5
Croatia
Vocabulary
Athabascan: a group of related North American Indian
languages including the Apache and languages of Alaska,
northwest Canada, and coastal Oregon and California.
[chap. 7]
4
HUNGARY
Adriatic Sea
Macedonia
ITALY
70 Section
Two | Intro to
World
History,
Year 1Year
of 2 1 of 2
70 | | Week
Intro14 to| the
World:
Cultures
Intro
to World
History,
BULGARIA
Montenegro
ALBANIA
GREECE
©2012 by Sonlight Curriculum, Ltd. All rights reserved.
“Hrusso,” Hindu
Week 18
Notes
Day 1
Bible
Core B
Timeline and Map Activities
d
Phoenician Civilization (ca. 1000 BC)
Phoenicia (shaded areas below)
1
Leading Little Ones to God | Lesson 40, pp. 81–82
“Jesus Died for Us”
Reading | John 19:11–18
Memorization | 2 Corinthians 5:17
History/Geography
From Akebu to Zapotec | “Kulango” p. 16
“Kulango,” Tribal
Timeline and Map Activities

Ivory Coast (Please use the map on p. 4 of your book)
A Child’s History of the World | Chapter 13
To Discuss After You Read
Q:
A:
The Phoenicians invented the alphabet, how many letters did they have? How many do we have?
they had 22 letters; we have 26
3
4
5
6
7
8
A
B
C
D
AFRICA


Strait of Gibraltar (D5) (map 1)
Mediterranean Sea (E4); Tyre (E8); Sidon (E8); Carthage
(D2) (map 2)
Read-Alouds
Understood Betsy | “The New Clothes Fail“
pp. 121–130
Vocabulary
condescended: to be on the same level as one considered
inferior.
whelp: a person that others look down upon.
Barbara Frietchie: there is a poem by that name by John
Greenleaf Whittier. :
preternaturally: even more than what would be normal.
The phrase (“Sometimes we have the best laid
plans …“): we can make lots of plans, but sometimes
things happen to change those plans that are out of
our control.
To Discuss After You Read
Q:
The title of the chapter is “The New Clothes Fail.“ Do you
think they failed? How did everything work out?
Favorite Poems of Childhood | “The Walrus“
pp. 40–43
Day 2
Bible
Reading | John 19:19–27
Memorization | 2 Corinthians 5:17
88 Section
Two | Intro to
World
History,
Year 1Year
of 2 1 of 2
88 | | Week
Intro18 to| the
World:
Cultures
Intro
to World
History,
©2012 by Sonlight Curriculum, Ltd. All rights reserved.
This week you and your children will read about Jesus’
death (Lesson 40) and resurrection (Lesson 41).
How important is the resurrection to Christianity? Does
it matter whether or not it really happened? Paul the apostle answers this question in 1 Corinthians 15. In short, the
bodily resurrection of Christ is foundational to Christianity.
If God exists, miracles are possible. The resurrection is the
best explanation for what happened, especially since all
alternative explanations fall short. Did the disciples steal
the body? Why would they do this then knowingly die for
a lie? Did they visit the wrong tomb? Then why didn’t the
authorities simply produce the body? Did the disciples
hallucinate the appearances of Christ? If so, then how did
so many people have the same hallucination at the same
time? Did Christ not really die on the cross, but merely
pass out then seemingly come back to life three days later? Based on the New Testament record of his sufferings,
as well as the diligence the Romans placed on making
sure an executed criminal was really dead, this explanation
lacks force. Also, are we supposed to believe that a severely beaten and injured Christ somehow escaped his tomb
by moving a heavy boulder by himself, then somehow got
past the Roman guards, then appeared as a risen glorified
savior to his followers? What happened to him after all
this? Did he just move to another part of the world? Given
the many problems with alternative explanations, the best
explanation is that Christ really did die, came back to life,
and appeared to many people.
2