If you want to learn more about these incredible resources for your homeschool, join Tricia and I for an evening showcase this Sunday at 8 pm CST. We use Usborne books like crazy in our homeschool, and I want to share several of my favorites with you today! It’s what makes the non-fiction resources from Usborne so unique and sets them apart! The images engage and the information, while still presented in bite-sized chunks, is rich and smart and relatable to even the youngest readers. They were brightly colored and captivating and overflowing with little bits of fascinating information.Īs a child, it was the visual element that led me back to those pages full of colorful flags time and again, and it’s that same visual appeal that I see my own children gravitate toward today. My very favorite pages to hang out in were the ones that displayed all of the flags from around the world. Do you know where I spent the most time while exploring those books? The flags. Each had a different letter on its chest (some had 2 or 3), and the pages were full of small words (lots of them) with scant and scattered images giving my imagination the faintest nudge toward wondering what it was like “out there” in the world. When it was my turn to be young (before personal computers and internet were born) the holy grail of non-fiction in our home looked a little something like a set of 22 drably uniformed soldiers neatly lined up to fill the entire bottom bookshelf of the family entertainment center. Jessica Hager shares eight FUN Usborne and Kane Miller books to incorporate into your homeschool.
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