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Secular Homeschool Curriculum Reading Guide: Elatsoe
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Reading Guide: Elatsoe

$18.00

This is a digital product. It will be delivered via email as a PDF.

Elatsoe — nicknamed Ellie — is a young Lipan Apache woman who inherited her family’s ability to raise the ghosts of dead animals. When her much-loved cousin is murdered, Ellie is determined to find out the truth about his death. Elatsoe is on our middle grades reading list because it’s a compelling mystery with a supernatural element and a deep connection to Lipan Apache culture and traditions. (The author is a member of the Lipan Apache nation.) One of our priorities for middle school humanities is amplifying historically marginalized voices: One way to do this is by reading books like Elatsoe that reflect the deep roots and history of Native nations but that also clearly show them existing and thriving in the present day. We read this (along with The Birchbark House, Summer of the Mariposas, and Cemetery Boys) as part of a semester focused on Native nations, but it also works well as a stand-alone novel.

This 16-page reading guide breaks Elatsoe down into a 6-week literature unit, including a week of preliminary research and a final project that asks students to create an Indigenous Land Acknowledgment for their homeschool. This unit is designed for middle grades student at the Academy, but it could also work for a high school level unit.

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This is a digital product. It will be delivered via email as a PDF.

Elatsoe — nicknamed Ellie — is a young Lipan Apache woman who inherited her family’s ability to raise the ghosts of dead animals. When her much-loved cousin is murdered, Ellie is determined to find out the truth about his death. Elatsoe is on our middle grades reading list because it’s a compelling mystery with a supernatural element and a deep connection to Lipan Apache culture and traditions. (The author is a member of the Lipan Apache nation.) One of our priorities for middle school humanities is amplifying historically marginalized voices: One way to do this is by reading books like Elatsoe that reflect the deep roots and history of Native nations but that also clearly show them existing and thriving in the present day. We read this (along with The Birchbark House, Summer of the Mariposas, and Cemetery Boys) as part of a semester focused on Native nations, but it also works well as a stand-alone novel.

This 16-page reading guide breaks Elatsoe down into a 6-week literature unit, including a week of preliminary research and a final project that asks students to create an Indigenous Land Acknowledgment for their homeschool. This unit is designed for middle grades student at the Academy, but it could also work for a high school level unit.

This is a digital product. It will be delivered via email as a PDF.

Elatsoe — nicknamed Ellie — is a young Lipan Apache woman who inherited her family’s ability to raise the ghosts of dead animals. When her much-loved cousin is murdered, Ellie is determined to find out the truth about his death. Elatsoe is on our middle grades reading list because it’s a compelling mystery with a supernatural element and a deep connection to Lipan Apache culture and traditions. (The author is a member of the Lipan Apache nation.) One of our priorities for middle school humanities is amplifying historically marginalized voices: One way to do this is by reading books like Elatsoe that reflect the deep roots and history of Native nations but that also clearly show them existing and thriving in the present day. We read this (along with The Birchbark House, Summer of the Mariposas, and Cemetery Boys) as part of a semester focused on Native nations, but it also works well as a stand-alone novel.

This 16-page reading guide breaks Elatsoe down into a 6-week literature unit, including a week of preliminary research and a final project that asks students to create an Indigenous Land Acknowledgment for their homeschool. This unit is designed for middle grades student at the Academy, but it could also work for a high school level unit.


Feeling a little nervous-cited about homeschooling middle and high school?

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Last week before fall break! We only have two weeks when we get back, so I thought the students would appreciate getting their history final out of the way. There was a little moment of panic (“surprise final!”), but they had a ton of fun
How is the semester almost over!?!

There’s so much stuff happening behind the scenes, as students work on final projects and we start to weave together all the various threads of learning into something that we can’t wait to talk about.
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I love big, dense, complicated texts that tackle the hard stuff — but sometimes I need something a little gentler, something that reminds me that humans have just as much capacity for goodness as for evil.

So I pu

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