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Speak to Me is a 5 ½ x 8 ½ inch glossy
soft cover book of 230 pages, plus an "About the Author" page,
2 page "Table of Contents", 3 page "Introduction", and 3 pages
on "How to Use This Book." It includes excerpts or full text of
16 Historical and Political Documents broken down in terms today's
students can understand more easily. Readers gain vocabulary, learn
about the various authors of each text, and are given names of
a comparable person that students will recognize who might have
written the document if it were written today. Dates are provided
in color tabs for each of the sixteen sections and cartoon sketches
of individuals are included throughout the pages. Each section
includes a summary, portion of text or the entire text, and a brief
thought on "Who Would Write It Today". Extra information is spread
throughout the book in short "In Addition," and "What Others Have
Said" writings that provide interesting information. Each section
starts with a brief "In 50 Words or Less!" that offers a concise
explanation of the text. Provided in chronological order the sixteen
texts include: The Mayflower Compact, the Introduction to Thomas
Paine's Common Sense, The Declaration of Independence, Preamble
to the U.S. Constitution, The Bill of Rights, an Excerpt from Marbury
v. Madison, "The Star Spangled Banner," an Excerpt from the Monroe
Doctrine, Sojourner Truth's "Ain't I a Woman?" Speech, The Emancipation
Proclamation, the Gettysburg Address, an Excerpt from Mark Twain's
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, an Excerpt from Upton Sinclair's
The Jungle, an Excerpt from Brown v. Board of Education, President
John F. Kennedy's Inaugural Address, and President Ronald Reagan's
Remarks at the Brandenburg Gate. An Appendix, The People Behind
the Historical Texts, provides a one page explanation of the authors
and contributors of the sixteen texts. As many of the included
texts contain complicated language today's students may find difficult,
colorful illustrations and easy-to-understand explanations are
used to educate middle school students and those who love history,
regardless of age, as to the meaning behind the texts. Just as
our forefathers would never have understood text messaging comments
like LOL or TTYL, students today may misinterpret the meaning of "quartering" in
the Declaration of Independence, or may wonder why Lincoln used "four
score and seven years ago" rather than just saying 87, explanations
can be found in Speak To Me. Pages are presented for each
text with the actual piece to be studied on a blue background and
explanation of the text on white pages. Readers are able to completely
read a text all in blue before returning to the explanation of
it.
For use in gaining a better understanding of the included historical
texts, Speak To Me is suited for use by middle school
students, but may easily be used by parent teachers to prepare
for teaching in elementary years when children are first exposed
to these texts. The book provides an entertaining way to gain information
that includes an explanatory summary of each text appropriate for
middle school and high school students. The vocabulary is more
difficult than elementary grades, but this is more due to the included
texts than the writing of the book itself. We still prefer to memorize
The Preamble and The Gettysburg address in third or fourth grades,
certainly we should also better define the writing therein and
help our children truly grasp the information. Definitions are
provided within the explanation of each piece along with great
explanations for phrases and terms associated with the time frame
of each text. Students will be amused by the different choices
of comparable people to write similar documents today; Bill Gates
writing the Declaration of Independence or Katie Couric writing
the Star Spangled Banner will bring about further research on these
individuals and wonderful family discussion. Perhaps assigning
a report of comparison between the author and suggested possible
author of today will provide an interesting assignment. We found Speak
To Me to be incredibly informative. It contains just enough
material to better educate the reader on each text, without becoming
overwhelming or droning on and on about each piece or author. Further
research will easily expand any included text however a given home
school desires, allowing for the flexibility we enjoy in our home
school. The "In 50 Words or Less!" section is a wonderful way to
gain better understanding very quickly and would be ideal for high
school students to read through before ACT/SAT exams as a refresher.
We did miss biblical references or direct credit to God for many
of the works and the authors who wrote them, but as a piece coming
from a secular educational publishing entity it is not surprising,
just noted. Some of the suggestions about people today writing
some of the material seemed a little ridiculous to me and somehow
took away from the individualism of the fantastic authors who changed
our history with these pieces, but in an effort to keep today's
students connected to history's texts, I understand the idea. Unfortunately,
the use of Michael Moore, Homer Simpson, and television shows like "Survivor," led
me to rarely use that portion of the book.
Our family found Speak to Me to be an excellent addition to our library
and will use it extensively with a broad range of age groups in our home, from
upper elementary through high school. I found myself reading to gain a better
understanding of these texts myself. Although I learned about them in public
school, I was left with such a vague understanding of most that I find Speak
to Me to be a wonderful source of information. The sixteen included texts
are a wonderful range of material and include larger works we can include in
extended study in literature classes in higher grades. This book will be a reference
resource for government courses, language arts in lower grades and literature
study in upper grades, and social studies and history classes at the full range
of grade levels. Kaplan has been known for years as a leader in educational testing,
this addition to their offerings certainly shows desire to further education.
As careful parents, I encourage pre-reading any portion of this book before assigning
private reading, as there is much in political and social information that should
be screened to determine appropriateness for your home school. There is a guarantee
in the front of the book, so if you end up dissatisfied, you may return it with
receipt for a refund. From the Introduction, readers will find light humor and
an ease of reading for today's older students of the text messaging generation
that will draw them in to the material. The discussion of how times have changed,
while people are still similar today to you and I, is a wonderful beginning to
an excellent resource for readers of all ages to increase their knowledge of
the included texts. Our family always misses biblical references and an overall
respect for God in any book, but as this is a resource book and our government
and history curriculum we currently use includes the Christian Worldview we teach,
this book still makes an acceptable reference work for our family. Speak To Me,
Great American Texts Demystified is an excellent book for home libraries and
for use in home schools, either as a resource by teachers alone or for fantastic
reading by both teachers and students.
Product Review by Donna Campos, Senior
Product Reviewer, The Old Schoolhouse® Magazine,
LLC, February, 2009
Speak to Me: Great American Texts Demystified is an excellent book for any student, young or old, who is interested in history. Randy Howe takes the reader through 16 classic texts and helps demystify the complicated language used. He provides fun explanations and great illustrations, not to mention easy-to-understand discussions that help the student understand what the text really means. The texts included in the book are:
- The Mayflower Compact
- Thomas Paine's Common Sense
- The Declaration of Independence
- Preamble to the U.S. Constitution
- The Bill of Rights
- Excerpt from Marbury v. Madison
- "The Star Spangled Banner"
- The Monroe Doctrine
- The Gettysburg Address
- The Emancipation Proclamation
- Sojourner's Truth "Ain't I a Woman?" Speech
- Excerpt from Upton Sinclair's The Jungle
- Excerpt from Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn
- John F. Kennedy's Inaugural Speech
- Excerpt from Brown v. Board of Education
- Ronald Reagan's Remarks at the Brandenburg Gate
This is a book that should find a home on every homeschool family's shelf. Whether a student is learning about a period of history, studying a specific text written during that time, or preparing a speech that incorporates one of these classic texts, this is a great reference book. In our home, I found one of my boys lounging in a comfortable place reading the book. When asked if he was trying to look studious, he replied, "This is really a neat book." He proceeded to tell me what he was reading about. I don't think there's any better recommendation than that.
Product review by Dr. Heather W. Allen, Senior Analytical Consultant, The Old Schoolhouse® Magazine, LLC, January 2008
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