The Bridge of San Luis Rey: a free high school literature study guide

The Bridge of San Luis Rey: a free high school literature study guide

This is a free The Bridge of San Luis Rey study guide, designed to be used over four weeks in a homeschool co-op or tutorial. I first read Thornton Wilder's The Bridge of San Luis Rey in high school, and his beautiful, heady, aphoristic writing has stayed with me ever since. It is the story [...]

To Kill a Mockingbird: A free high school literature unit for homeschool

To Kill a Mockingbird: A free high school literature unit for homeschool

If our country had a required reading novel for high school students, it would be To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. People have been trying to ban the book since it was published in 1960, and it does contain racial slurs that make it problematic to read with children today. However, it is an [...]

How I taught high school Modern Literature at our homeschool co-op

How I taught high school Modern Literature at our homeschool co-op

This year we are taking on Modern Literature at our high school co-op English class, and it's been the most fun list for me to put together so far. There are so many books that students will thoroughly enjoy in this category (no offense, Victorian Lit). In fact, my co-teacher and I couldn't narrow it [...]

Things Fall Apart: A free high school literature unit for teachers

Things Fall Apart: A free high school literature unit for teachers

Chinua Achebe is the great Nigerian author of the 1900s, and Things Fall Apart deserves a spot in any high school world literature course. In my opinion, at least. I've put together a free curriculum unit for Things Fall Apart with weekly homework, quizzes, and teaching notes that I used at our once-per-week homeschool co-op. [...]

The Great Gatsby: A free high school literature unit for teachers

The Great Gatsby: A free high school literature unit for teachers

*This post includes a free high school literature teaching unit on The Great Gatsby. * Two lines of literature that I was required to read in high school have stuck with me until today...many years later. The first: "In the room the women come and go / talking of Michelangelo," from T. S. Eliot's classic [...]