The
Basic Tool: Timelines in History
What is Involved in Timeline Building?
Timeline building offers students a chance to get to know the flow of
history by recording dates and events into a timeline book. Students
write in their timeline book as they learn key events and their significance
in their main program. They can also write in dates important to them
personally, such as family events or things they learn in their own
reading time. Timeline figures are a fun way to add to the color and
flavor of a timeline book. WinterPromise provides colored timeline figures
for students to cut out and paste into their own timeline book. We also
provide a week-by-week schedule of when to use each figure, and additional
dates to write in, along with the historical significance of the event.
The Basic Tool: Timelines in History
WinterPromise also offers you a unique timeline resource, our "Timelines
in History." It is copied on heavy-duty cardstock and should last
a student throughout their school years. Each student usually enjoys
having his own, as it is a personal journal in which they can record
any information they'd like to.
Our timeline differs from other similar resources in two key ways that
help you with introducing "notebooking" into your studies.
First, each page doesn't just contain endless rows of meaningless numbers;
instead, at the top of each page are 2-3 descriptors of major movements,
civilizations or events in history. From the "Middle Kingdom of
Egypt" or "The Age of Exploration" to "World War
II" or "The Industrial Revolution," these descriptors
aid your student in true understanding of how history flows and relates
to real events. Click
here to see
a sample.
The second distinctive feature is its loose-leaf nature; it is three-hole
punched and copied on only one side. This feature provides a blank spread
in between each date spread. This means your student can file "Make-Your-Own"
history pages, artwork, reports and more in between their timeline pages.
Year after year, they'll collect "Make-Your-Own" pages and
their own work in this one resource. They'll literally "Make-Their-Own"
history book that will serve as a scrapbook of homeschool memories they'll
never want to part with.
How Many Do I Purchase?
Our “Timelines in History” resource is copied onto heavy
cardstock, and designed for a student to enjoy throughout his school
years. You should purchase one per student, but you never need purchase
another for that student. We usually recommend waiting to introduce
notebooking until a student is ready to write on his own, usually around
1st or 2nd grade. This is when notebooking begins for our history-based
theme programs.
WinterPromise
Exclusive
“Timelines in History”
#TIME - $24
Timeline
Figures >