0
Skip to Content
home | school | life
home | school | life
Podcast
Curriculum
Books
Academy
Planner
Gear
About
home | school | life
home | school | life
Podcast
Curriculum
Books
Academy
Planner
Gear
About
Podcast
Curriculum
Books
Academy
Planner
Gear
About
Secular Homeschool Curriculum Reading Guide: Time Cat
MG-Time Cat.jpg Image 1 of
MG-Time Cat.jpg
MG-Time Cat.jpg

Reading Guide: Time Cat

$18.00

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

Lloyd Alexander’s Time Cat takes readers on an adventure with Jason and his cat Gareth through history, from ancient Egypt to Renaissance Italy and beyond. This 21-page reading guide guides you through a discussion of the novel with:

  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and analysis

  • Questions for discussion

  • Creative writing ideas

  • Cat-related rabbit trail studies

  • and more

    This reading guide works best for late elementary/early middle school students.

    There is no right way to read a book. So don’t think of this reading guide as a workbook to be completed or a checklist full of items to be crossed off. Think of it as a conversation starter, a project inspire-er, an idea generator. Doodle in the margins. Cut it up to make a collage. Grab props and act out different pages. Read it in the bathtub. Use it to create a diorama.

    If you’re having fun, you’re doing it right. If you’re not, try something different.

Add To Cart

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

Lloyd Alexander’s Time Cat takes readers on an adventure with Jason and his cat Gareth through history, from ancient Egypt to Renaissance Italy and beyond. This 21-page reading guide guides you through a discussion of the novel with:

  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and analysis

  • Questions for discussion

  • Creative writing ideas

  • Cat-related rabbit trail studies

  • and more

    This reading guide works best for late elementary/early middle school students.

    There is no right way to read a book. So don’t think of this reading guide as a workbook to be completed or a checklist full of items to be crossed off. Think of it as a conversation starter, a project inspire-er, an idea generator. Doodle in the margins. Cut it up to make a collage. Grab props and act out different pages. Read it in the bathtub. Use it to create a diorama.

    If you’re having fun, you’re doing it right. If you’re not, try something different.

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

Lloyd Alexander’s Time Cat takes readers on an adventure with Jason and his cat Gareth through history, from ancient Egypt to Renaissance Italy and beyond. This 21-page reading guide guides you through a discussion of the novel with:

  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and analysis

  • Questions for discussion

  • Creative writing ideas

  • Cat-related rabbit trail studies

  • and more

    This reading guide works best for late elementary/early middle school students.

    There is no right way to read a book. So don’t think of this reading guide as a workbook to be completed or a checklist full of items to be crossed off. Think of it as a conversation starter, a project inspire-er, an idea generator. Doodle in the margins. Cut it up to make a collage. Grab props and act out different pages. Read it in the bathtub. Use it to create a diorama.

    If you’re having fun, you’re doing it right. If you’re not, try something different.


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

Looking for decolonized secular homeschool curriculum and resources?

Eager to keep the homeschool magic all through in the homeschool home stretch?

You’re in the right place.

 

@home.school.life.now on Instagram

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.
You might want to save this.

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

Ask Amy   Terms & Privacy   Contact Us