banner

Period, yes, but
fun too

Historical atlas
Prehistory
Mesopotamia
Egypt
Greece
Rome
Middle Ages
Renaissance
Industrial age
Victorian times

Depression
WWII
Cold war
Information age
Future
King's mistress

Home


Out of millions and millions of books on education... which, of course, I never read, I picked up this short list of books I read and found useful.

chipmunk

The only education books that kids actually STOLE from me are from the "Core knowledge series" edited by E. D. Hirsch Jr and range from the kindergartner to sixth grader under the title " What your (for instance fourth grader) needs to know". Each book covers language, math, geography, art, natural sciences. It is very nice reading, it is uplifting and adults might learn a thing or two. Do not assume that if you give it to kids, they will just love it: you got to pick up a subject at a time and go over it with them.


pond view

The seven habits of highly effective teens by Sean Covey. The book is simple, well informed, healthy, fun to read, useful even for parents. I am not the only person to think so: the book got millions of copies sold.

You cannot beat Princeton on the preparation to the SAT. The book is fantastic, and most of the usual mistakes that kids usually do are explained. I like it so much, I constantly use it when I volunteer with kids that are still years away from high school: the basics are well covered, so you can benefit from it at any age. The last versions now come with a DVD.

Thomas Foster, How to Read Literature like a Professor. You read the first chapter and your mind goes "AAH!" Now I know how to read this (and also how to teach this).

David Lazear is an author who irritates me no end, but by lack of a better book, I have to cite Eight ways of teaching (the artistry of teaching with multiple intelligences). If you are a teacher/parent wanting to ask more of the brain of kids, this is useful, do not mind me.

Tom Stafford and Matt Webb, Mind hacks, Tips and tools for using your brain. Finally a useful book. I like it much better than the well known Owner's Manual for the brain, by Pierce Howard which is OK, but mixes up science and common sense in variable proportions, making you believe this is the edge.

You also need a very thick dictionary, such as the Oxford American College Dictionary(essential book). I wish it would be much much bigger, but it is the best I could find. Avoid Webster. Do not buy anything concise or pocket: it looks like it makes sense, but it is useless.

Splurge on a Reverse dictionary (essential book): instead of looking for synonyms, these dictionaries look for ideas. It is a fabulous help.

Try the best of real bookstores if you dislike virtual ones:

 

Top of page

 

Books by theme

AdventuresAdventures2
Biographies
Books by librarians
Books on books
Discovery and sea
Girls as heroes
Love stories
Mystery
Nature
School help
Science
Sports
Spy: WW2
Spy cold war etc
USA
Very young readers


Home