Do you ever find yourself stumbling into a unit study?
This recently happened in our home. Finding one sweet book about Benjamin Franklin at a used book store led to asking the librarian to help us find further Ben Franklin resources, which led us to more and more resources.
Unit studies often snowball like that and I LOVE it!
Our simple Ben Franklin Unit Study has been a lot of fun.
*This post contains affiliate links - please see my Disclosure Page for more details.
Ben and Me - This sweet book is told from the perspective of Ben's mouse, Amos. It's so informative, humorous, and satirical. I found that BOTH my sixth and second grader loved it. This is what started our interest in Ben Franklin.
Electric Ben - Our local librarian recommended this book to us - it had just arrived at the library. It is a picture book, but full of hundreds of details and appropriate for upper elementary and even some middle grade students. We read several pages each night and finished the book in a week.
Ben Franklin and His Magic Squares - One of the most fun things to do when studying Franklin is Magic Squares. This book shows what they are all about and tells why Franklin was led to develop them in the first place. This book was a thrift store find and I think it was a lucky find at that!
You can also find Magic Squares to play on the computer.
Kid Inventor, Basic Electronics Kit - This kit was handed down to us (by my same friend who initally loaned me all those great homeschool books!). I am so thankful for this. The kids have been having lots of fun with it.
Snap Circuits - Doesn't it seem like all homeschoolers should have a set of these? I think it's a law or something. We have two sets and use them often!
Using Notebooking Pages new copywork feature I am making copywork pages of Franklin's most famous quotes.
I have a great little book - Sayings of Poor Richard, but you can also find a lot of Franklin Quotes online.
There is also a nice set of Franklin copywork pages at Currclick.
These coloring pages of Franklin's quotes are great, too!
Of course we gravitate towards Franklin's musical invention, the Glass Armonica. We read a great article from PBS about his invention.
This is a wonderful video to watch, too:
We've been listening to Mozart, Beethoven, and Haydn - three composers who wrote music for the Glass Armonica.
You could continue to let this Benjamin Franklin unit study expand and expand.
There is a very nice full unit study (for Grades K-4) from Amanda Bennett that I would highly recommend if you want a COMPREHENSIVE STUDY of Benjamin Franklin. (search "Ben Franklin" if you follow the link)
For now, we have gotten our feet wet with Ben Franklin, and when we get around to that point in American History to study him we will be ready to go DEEPER.
At this young age I think it's about cultivating a curiosity and a love for great figures from history, so that one day my children will want to find out MORE and be able to converse intelligently about that person and their place in history.
Have your children studied Ben Franklin?