Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum Of Compulsory Schooling

Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum Of Compulsory Schooling
By John Taylor Gatto
If John Taylor Gatto were introducing his book to us, he’s do us the favor of introducing himself first.  In order to do justice to Mr. Gatto and his eye-opening book, Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling, I must offer first of all a few words on the author himself.
Mr. Gatto taught for 26 years in New York City public schools, a number of these years in Harlem and Spanish Harlem.  But his “heart and habit,” he asserts, in his “Biographical Note,” are still in Monongahela, the small riverside town in Pennsylvania where he spent his early years.  He describes the town as “an altogether wonderful place to grow up, even to grow up poor,” a place where “independence, toughness, and self-reliance were honored,” and where, he says he “learned to teach from being taught by everyone in town.”

A year and a half ago, the public school system lost Mr. Gatto, and along with him it lost much of the smokescreen that had enabled it to remain so remarkably unchallenged over the years.  Just after receiving the 1991 New York State Teacher of the Year Award, Mr. Gatto announced he was going to quit because he didn’t want to “hurt” kids anymore.  “Government schooling,” he charged, “kills the family by monopolizing the best times of childhood and by teaching disrespect for home and parents.”

The publishers of Dumbing Us Down call Gatto’s ideas about education “not easily pigeon-holed,” which is an accurate observation. Who else would stand up and tell us that schooling, as we know it, is not education, but a “twelve-year jail sentence where bad habits are the only curriculum truly learned”?

According to Gatto’s observations, the seven lessons taught in public schools from Harlem to Hollywood Hills, are these:
  1. Confusion (The natural order of real life is violated by heaping disconnected facts on students.)
  2. Class Position (Children are locked together into categories where the lesson is that “everyone has a proper place in the pyramid.”)
  3. Indifference (Inflexible school regimens deprive children of complete experiences.)
  4. Emotional dependency (Kids are taught to surrender their individuality to a “predestined chain of command.”
  5. Intellectual dependency (One of the biggest lessons schools teach is conformity rather than curiosity.)
  6. Provisional self-esteem (“The lesson of report cards, grades, and tests, is that children should not trust themselves or their parents, but should instead rely on the evaluation of certified officials.”)
  7. One can’t hide (Schooling and homework assignments deny children privacy and free time in which to learn from parents, from exploration, or from community.)
Just what is Gatto suggesting by his assaults on government schooling?  Don’t children have to learn to read and do math? Clauses can be picked out of Dumbing Us Down to challenge the thinking of conservatives, liberals, libertarians, and anyone in between.  Truly Gatto’s theories are not readily pigeon-holed.  Some are radical, if not downright subversive.  That’s precisely why we find him so intriguing, and perhaps also why he’s booked for speaking engagements months ahead of time, and why we’re excited to hear he has another book forthcoming from Simon & Schuster
[NOTE: The book referred to here is actually The Underground History Of American Education]. 

Gatto exhibits great confidence in the ability of human beings to educate themselves.  But even if we agree that government schooling is the biggest impediment to this natural process, is it really the only problem? Why doesn’t a book as thought provoking as Dumbing Us Down address the other forms in which a centrally controlled society assaults the intellect of its members?  For example, learning how to survive, to get along in life, is a basic part of any person’s education.  In the modern American system, this process is sabotaged in welfare offices where people with material needs are taught that you don't have to earn the necessities of life, and in lawyers’ offices where people with problems getting along with each other are taught that litigation is the way to settle differences.  These are just samples of the myriad impediments, many in the form of regulations, which are shoved into the path of self-education.  And the age-segregated workplaces, along with lack of apprenticeship training, which Gatto rightfully deplores, are in my opinion as much the result of labor laws as is mandatory schooling.

Perhaps Gatto intended to challenge us into making our own observations on these issues.  Perhaps he also is right to imply that the root of such problems lies in government schooling.  If people’s minds were not propagandized and controlled from youth up, they might indeed find paths independent of those “institutions and networks” which says Gatto, constantly compete “for the custody of children and older people, for monopolizing the time of everyone else in between.”

He also contends that many of our modern society’s excesses, including the growth of commercial entertainment, such as television, the dependence on experts, and even parts of our economic structure (prepared-food industries, for example) would wither once people started truly thinking and acting for themselves.  The thought of people doing more things for themselves is exciting, but I hope Gatto doesn’t mean to say that working for pay is always dependency.  And although it’s true that most individuals would benefit from diversifying their skills, Gatto would have to admit that highly specialized professions also have their place a prosperous society.

The best thing about Gatto is he doesn’t seek to impose his version of desirable education on anyone else.  Neither can he be accused of being anti-civilization, and certainly not anti-education.  He speaks admiringly of early America’s prosperity (and literacy) through individual initiative, and even offers ideas toward the revival of better schools and communities in our current day.

As for solutions to the state of our educational system, Gatto at one point advocates a voucher, or school choice system, which would still be sadly deficient because of its dependence on government funds.  His real thrust, though, comes out beautifully on page 79” “Break up these institutional schools, decertify teaching, let anyone who has a mind to teach bid for customers, privatize this whole business—trust the free market system.  I know it’s easier to say than do, but what other choice do we have?”

Sure, it’s a radical proposal, and Gatto doubtless has his enemies. However, there’s a part of every one of us that thrills to his appeal to unleash the infinite possibilities within the human mind.  And most of us can’t help asking ourselves questions, such as, “Where did we ever get the idea that education means just the same thing to one person as it does to another?”  Even more relevant: “How did we ever come to accept that any one group’s version of education should be forcibly imposed on every American child?”

Reading Dumbing Us Down with an inquisitive mind is a whale of a learning experience, and it doesn’t take long to do.  The book is only 120 pages, every one of them delightfully original.

Reviewed by Hannah B. Lapp
source: http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/bookstore/dumbdnlapp.htm 


Friday, July 4, 2014

Vocabulary Cartoons, SAT Word Power

I just found out a book called, Vocabulary Cartoons, SAT Word Power. It sells for $12.95 and can be purchased through the publisher’s website http://www.vocabularycartoons.com/index.php or through Amazon.com.
According to the publisher, Vocabulary Cartoons boost verbal standardized test scores and students learn 72% more words with 90% retention.  These books use mnemonics, a nifty devise that aids in the memorization process. The vocabulary words are linked with a word that you would know by association and they also each have a silly cartoon drawing so you really see the picture in your head.
Here is a sampling of 243 words in the books.

abstruse
abut
abyss
accolade
adjunct
affidavit
affinity
aftermath
aggrandize
ajar
alienate
alleviate
allure
aloof
also-ran
altercation
alternative
ambiance
amenable
amplify
antecedent
anterior
appalling
aptitude
archaic
arduous
artisan
askew
aspire
assuage
astute
asunder
atrophy
atypical
austere
badger
ballistics
balm
beget
beleaguer
bereaved
beset
bizarre
blather
bleak
bludgeon
bucolic
bulwark
cache
cacophony
cajole
callous
callow
candor
capacious
castigate
catapult
catharsis
caucus
cerebral
certify
chasm
chattel
chide
chronic
circa
citadel
claimant
cloister
commodious
comprise
congenial
connoisseur
consensus
coterie
countenance
coup
couture
cower
cranny
craven
creditor
criterion
cubism
curtail
curvilinear
damper
dauntless
dearth
debacle
debase
decree
deduce
defame
deft
demagogue
demonic
demur
denounce
desiccate
dilemma
disparage
dispel
disperse
dissolution
divine
docile
doldrums
domain
dormant
draconian
dromedary
dulcet
duress
edifice
efface
egalitarian
elapse
elfin
embellish
embody
emit
emulate
endure
engulf
enrage
enrapture
ensemble
entice
entomb
entomology (etymology)
entreat
erudite
euphonious
evade
evoke
exhume
expunge
facilitate
fathom
fawn
feign
fester
fetish
fickle
fjord
fleece
forage
forbear
forsake
fortuitous
fraught
gamin
gazebo
generalize
giddy
gird
girth
gloat
glutton
gossamer
grandiloquent
grandiose
guile
guise
harangue
harrowing
herbicide
histrionic
hoard
hovel
husbandry
idiosyncrasy
impede
incite
incongruous
infamy
insouciant
intervene
inveigle
irascible
joust
karma
laconic
lament
languish
lassitude
laudable
lax
legacy
lesion
lethargy
lexicon
lieu
loiter
maim
marauder
marshal
martyr
masticate
melancholy
menagerie
migratory
milieu
mirage
misanthropy
misnomer
mode
mores
muse
muster
myriad
nepotism
noisome
noxious
oblique
obtuse
opportune
optimum
orthodox
ostracize
oust
paradox
paranoia
parry
partition
penitent
periphery
permeate
perverse
petulant
philanthropy
phobia
photogenic
pied
pillage
pique
plight
porcine
potentate
precarious
procrastinate
proficient
propulsive
prowess
quandary
queue
quirk
quixotic
ramification
relinquish
reminisce
remorse
resurgent
revere
rivet
roster
rudimentary
scapegoat
scrutinize
segregate
serpentine
somber
sonorous
spur
spurn
stupefy
sundry
supplant
surfeit
tether
torque
trenchant
truculent
truncate
tyro
ubiquitous
umbrage
unbridled 
volition
wane
wither
wrest
yore

H/T: Curriculum Choice

Monday, August 8, 2011

Curriculum - The 3 Little Pigs (pre-school and elementary level)

The storybook that’s setting on your shelf is a curriculum waiting to come alive!  Turn the story’s setting—village, town, hamlet etc.—into a 3-D simulation. Your child can build structures, and be motivated to learn new words while becoming enamored with some of his favorite characters. Let your little one use his imagination to expand his favorite scenes or change the story’s end.

SCIENCE
Use a large sheet of cardboard (a 20-by 30-inch or 32-by-40 inch piece) to make a topological map. Using a marker, section off the map into geographical areas, such as a residential neighborhood, business district or recreational site. Name the streets to reflect the storyline.  For example, if you select the Three Little Pigs, you may want to name the streets Straw Avenue, Stick Blvd., Brick Lane or Wolf Way. Add mountains by taking the cups out of egg cartons and placing them a round the edge of the village. For a seaside village, use salt to represent the beach.

ART
For the buildings, use small, corrugated boxes or milk cartons covered with construction paper. Paste pictures of windows and doors, cut from old magazines, to make openings, or let your child draw the windows and doors using a marker or crayons.

MATHEMATICS
In the business district, create retail spaces or grocery stores that relate to the theme of the story. Using the Three Little Pigs, for example, you may include a store that sells bricks. Let your child decide what types of items he wants to sell and help him price them. Then, using a cash register with real or play money let him pretend to purchase the items. This will give him opportunity to practice adding, subtracting and multiplying.

MOTOR SKILLS
If your child needs to transport goods, let him become the truck by crawling on his hands and knees. He can transport the cargo on his back.

LANGUAGE ARTS
Before reading the book, let your child do a “picture survey” and describe what he sees. Record his ideas on sticky notes and attach them to each page. After you read the story to him, discuss his recorded ideas. Ask your child to retell the story using his own words.

CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT
Throughout the story, the characters’ feelings will change. Encourage your child to identify each character’s feelings, and you can write each feeling—like happy, sad, friendly, or scared—on a card.  Put the cards in a box. Mix them up. Now your child should select a card and act out the feeling using both his body and face. Then, try to guess the feeling that your child is portraying.  Engage your child in a discussion about the importance of expressing how he feels and learning to read someone’s feelings so he can respond appropriately.



SOURCES
Curriculum Expansion Ideas

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Homeschool Connection Newsletter (August 2011)

Homeschool Connections Newsletter
e-Books and Textbooks for Catholics

In This Issue
Catholic Homeschooling Helps
FREE e-Books: Live Courses 2011/2012
Books and Texts: Recorded Courses
Catholic Homeschooling Publishers
Other Catholic Publishers
FREE Kindle and Nook Apps
Catholic Book Vendors

Relevant Articles




Greetings!

Did you know that you can download Barnes & Noble's Nook as well as Amazon's Kindle applications free to your computer, i-Pad, and more? Did you also know that an increasing number of Catholic and classic books are being made available as e-books? Many are offered at a percentage of the price of bound books and some are even offered free.

Did you also know that many public libraries now offer free lending of e-books? (Kindle to be available in a few months.)

Below are links to Catholic homeschooling books, Catholic classics, and homeschooling textbooks that are available free or inexpensively as e-books.

We also include some of the free e-books that can be used in Homeschool Connections's online courses. We hope you enjoy perusing all the possibilities.

God Bless,

Maureen Wittmann
Walter Crawford 

ACHTCatholic Homeschooling Helps 
(click on the book title for more information or to purchase)

Maureen Wittmann and Rachel Mackson
Originally published by Ignatius Press, this treasure is available again as a Kindle book for only $2.99.

The Catholic Homeschool Companion [Sophia Institute Press] Maureen Wittmann and Rachel Mackson

Designing Your Own Classical Curriculum [Ignatius Press] Laura Berquist





ManWhoWasThursdayFREE e-Books: Live Courses 2011/2012
Some instructors will provide free course materials to students via a PDF file. A few courses require the purchase of lab materials or texts. The following e-books for these courses can be found free. Click on the title to download.

Advanced Placement Literature & Composition with Laurie Gill, M.Ed.
Lord of the World by Robert Hugh Benson
The Last Man by Mary Shelley
Hamlet by William Shakespeare
Othello by William Shakespeare
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
Dracula by Brom Stoker
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
Emma by Jane Austin
The Count of Monte Christo by Alexander Dumont
A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
The Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad

The Man Who Was Thursday with Henry Russell, Ph.D.

Theology with Monica Ashour, MTS, MHum
Catechism of the Catholic Church
All of the papal encyclicals are available free directly from the Vatican .
Arthurian Literature with Dayspring Brock, MA
The Romance of Tristan and Iseult by Joseph Bedier
Idylls of King by Alfred Tennyson

Introduction to Law with Jason Negri, JD
I, Pencil by Leonard E. Read


Books and Texts: Recorded Courses (Subscription Service)

Ancient Greek History
Famous Men of Greece by John H. Haaren and Addison B. Poland 
The Odyssey for Boys and Girls by  Alfred J. Church

Ancient Roman History
Historical Tales: Roman by Charles Morris
FamousMenGreece

Mark Twain

Chesterton: Man of Letters

King Arthur
Le Mort d'Arthur: Volume 1 by Sir Thomas Malory
Le Mort d'Arthur: Volume 2 by Sir Thomas Malory 

The Catholic Shakespeare

Tolkien and Fairy Stories

Catholic Spiritual Writers
Imitation of Christ by Thomas aKempis
Story of a Soul by St. Therese of the Little Flower


Catholic Homeschooling Publishers
The following publishers are currently converting many of their books to Kindle and other e-reader formats.

Arx PublishingEcceHomoPress





IgnatiusPressCatholic Publishers
Most of the large Catholic publishers are converting their books for Kindle and Nook. Ignatius and Ascension Presses have been leaders in this area. You can buy e-books in several formats directly from their websites without ever having to visit Amazon or B&N.

Ignatius Press
Ascension Press
Sophia Institute




KindleBlackberryFree Kindle and Nook Apps

Free Kindle App (click on name to go to app)
Download to your i-Phone, i-Pad, Mac, Windows PC, Blackberry, Android or Windows Phone 7.

Free Nook App  (click on name to go to app)
Download to your i-Phone, i-Pad, Mac, Windows PC or Android.



materetmagistraCatholic Book Vendors
Several good Catholic catalog companies are in the process of adding e-books to their online catalogs including:

Aquinas and More
Emmanuel Books
Hillside Education
Sacred Heart Books

Look for this new feature in the future at their websites.

Friday, July 22, 2011

100 Free Online Books Everyone Should Read

By Caitlin Smith
Whether you want to learn more about business or read some the great works of literature, you’ll find more than enough material to keep you busy for months in collections of free ebooks.

Some books are released free of charge by their authors, while others have been around for so long that copyright laws no longer apply and they can be freely exchanged.

We’ve pulled together 100 of these free online books that are well worth your time to read, though this is by no means a comprehensive list of the great, free literature out there.

Classics
The Internet can be a great place to find some of the most important works of literature from the past few hundred years. Here are just a few works that have made must-read lists that you can access for free.
  1. The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer: Pilgrimages were a major part of medieval life and you can enjoy several different perspectives as Chaucer’s characters travel to Canterbury Cathedral.
  2. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain: This well-loved novel follows the hi jinks of young Tom Sawyer, full of humor, adventure and fun.
  3. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert: French bourgeois life in all of its soul-crushing triviality is explored through the character of Emma Bovary in this novel.
  4. Moby Dick by Herman Melville: Follow along with this book as Captain Ahab tracks down his arch-nemesis the legendary white whale.
  5. The Hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo: Full of tragic characters, this novel explores life from its beauty to its horror.
  6. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky: Is murder ever justified? This novel explores through its main character the student Raskolnikov.
  7. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne: This sci-fi novel is full of adventure as a group of sailors try to track down a deadly sea monster.
  8. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen: This story explores the many difficulties associated with marriage and morality in 18th century England.
  9. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte: Jane Eyre follows Jane, an orphan, throughout her life providing readers with a compelling story full of love, social criticisms and many elements characteristic of the Gothic novel.
  10. A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens: Get a more personalized tale of life during the French Revolution as the monarchy is replaced by a regime responsible for terror and numerous executions.
  11. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy: Many know little of this novel other than that its long, but the story takes readers through the impact of the Napoleonic invasion of Russia through a vast and varied cast of characters.
  12. The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas: Treachery and lost love form the basis for this novel by Three Musketeers author Dumas.
  13. Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad: This novella takes readers to the depths of the Congo to find the mysterious Kurtz, along the way exploring ideas of imperialism.
  14. Ulysses by James Joyce: The classical Modernist novel, Ulysses follows the story of the Odyssey through stream of consciousness writing that’s been called everything from brilliant to obscene.
  15. Siddhartha by Herman Hesse: This novel parallels the life of the Buddha, employing Eastern philosophy in a beautiful and poignant tale of a quest for enlightenment.
  16. This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald: Set in the years following WWI, this book explores the life of Princeton student Amory Blaine as he struggles with greed, morality, status and more.
  17. The Time Machine by H.G. Wells: When the Victorian scientist at the center of this story propels himself forward in time he discovers a world that may not be all that it’s cracked up to be.
  18. Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe: This abolitionist novel helped fuel the movement towards the end of slavery in the United States.
  19. Little Women by Louise May Alcott: Follow along with the young women in this novel who come of age in this 19th century setting.
  20. Don Quixote by Cervantes: This famous Spanish novel follows the often absurd travels of Don Quixote and his faithful squire Sancho Panza.
  21. The Devil’s Dictionary by Ambrose Bierce: Originally published in a magazine, this collection of definitions is entertaining, enlightening and controversial.
  22. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson: Readers will be familiar with the title character in this novel who leads a double life as the unpredictable Mr. Hyde.
  23. Dracula by Bram Stoker: With all the hubbub about vampires these days why not read the classic vampire novel about the most famous vampire of them all?
  24. The Turn of the Screw by Henry James: This psychological short story will have readers questioning their own judgment about what’s real and what’s imagined.
  25. Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka: The Metamorphosis is one of Kafka’s most famous short stories, transforming traveling salesman Gregor into a horrifying cockroach.
Philosophy and Religion
These famous works will help you get a better understanding of religious and philosophical theories from around the world and through many different periods of time.
  1. Voltaire’s Philosophical Dictionary: This series of essays is highly critical of French life during the 19th century and takes aim at the government, society and religious institutions.
  2. Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes: This 17th century book on social contract theory explores the nature of legitimate government and the structure of society.
  3. Thus Spoke Zarathustra by Friedrich Nietzsche: This book deals with ideas such as the "eternal recurrence of the same", the "death of God", and the "prophecy" of the Overman, themes expanded on from earlier writings.
  4. Beyond Good and Evil by Freidrich Neitszche: This work expands on Thus Spoke Zarathustra, attempting to move beyond traditional definitions of good and evil and tries to gain a better sense of the nature of knowledge and the condition of modern man.
  5. Discourse of a Method by Renee Descartes: This philosophical and mathematical work is essential to understanding modern science and thought.
  6. The Tao Te Ching by Laozi: Written in the 6th century, this text is fundamental to the Taoist school of Chinese thought and has had influence throughout the centuries since its creation.
  7. The Bible: Even if you’re not a Christian, the Bible will help inform your understanding of numerous aspects of Western society from great art to historical motivations.
  8. Martin Luther’s 95 Theses: Breaking with the Catholic Church of the Baroque era, this work marks the beginnings of Protestantism.
  9. The Critique of Pure Reason by Immanuel Kant: Regarded as the most important work by this German philosopher, The Critique of Pure Reason investigates the limitations reason itself.
  10. The Sayings of Confucius: With lessons on morality, social relationships, justice and society at large, these teachings form the foundation of Confucianism.
  11. The Problems of Philosophy by Bertrand Russell: This book is an attempt to create a more accessible guide to the issues of philosophy.
  12. Myths and Legends of Ancient Greece and Rome by E.M. Berens: The mythology of ancient Greece and Rome is a part of any complete reading of Western history.
  13. The Golden Bough by Sir James George Frazer: This study of mythology and religion takes a logical approach to understanding the place of these in modern society.
Politics, Economics and History
Check out these free books to learn more about some important political and economic ideas.
  1. The Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels: Even if you don’t agree with the tenets of socialism you can’t argue about the importance of this work that’s essential to understanding political and philosophical thought in the 19th and 20th centuries.
  2. Common Sense by Thomas Paine: Those looking to learn more about American history will appreciate this work that encouraged colonists to pursue freedom from British rule.
  3. The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith: Scottish economist Adam Smith’s well-known work explores the intricacies of the economics at the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.
  4. The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli: While today Machiavelli’s name bring negative connotations, this Italian work is essential reading for those interested in politics and the maintenance of political entities.
  5. The Jungle by Upton Sinclair: The burgeoning industries of the U.S. brought about many positive changes but some pretty negative ones as well, and this novel was one of the first to expose the seamy underbelly of turn of the century factory work.
Plays and Poems
While novels are a great source of learning, plays and poems shouldn’t be neglected if you want to be well-rounded in your knowledge of literature. These free selections can be a great place to start.
  1. Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson: Get a good background in the works of a great American poet though this free collection.
  2. The Complete Works of William Shakespeare: With this complete collection of works, you’ll be able to pick and choose the plays and poems you find most interesting.
  3. The Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley: Learn more about the works of this Romantic poet through this large collection of his works.
  4. Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw: While many people may have seen the film adaptation of this play in My Fair Lady, the written version is just as full of wit and charm.
  5. The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri: Explore the depths of hell through this highly important work of Italian literature.
  6. Paradise Lost by John Milton: This epic poem follows the fall of Lucifer and his subsequent seduction into sin of the human race.
  7. The Raven by Edgar Allen Poe: One of the most well-known poems ever written, this work by Poe is essential to any reading list.
  8. Hedda Gabler by Heinrich Ibsen: In this play, a bored housewife dabbles in the lives of others with disastrous results.
  9. The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde: With plot twists and turns about mistaken identities, love triangles and romantic affairs this play is an entertaining way to spend an afternoon.
  10. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth: The works of this English Romantic poet helped bring about a new style and approach to literature in 18th century England.
  11. The Waste Land by T.S. Eliot: This influential modernist work deals with death, grieving and coming to terms with loss.
Ancient Writings
Go old school with your reading by taking a look at these important texts. You’ll find ideas and stories that have influenced people in the thousand-plus years since they were written.
  1. The Iliad by Homer: This epic poem about the Trojan War is one of, if not the oldest, work of literature in the Greek language.
  2. The Odyssey by Homer: Homer’s other epic poem, the Odyssey tells the story of Odysseus and his long, problematic journey home.
  3. The Art of War by Sun Tzu: The Art of War was written in the 6th century and contains explanations about military strategy and tactics that can still be useful today in any competitive field.
  4. The Works of Aristotle: Aristotle’s writings influence writers in the centuries following his life and are still part of philosophy and liberal arts educations today.
  5. Symposium by Plato: These speeches by Plato explore love and passion.
  6. Apology, Crito, and Phaedo of Socrates by Plato: Socrates was executed for his supposed corruption of young minds, and Plato expands upon the ideas of this great thinker through this series of writings.
  7. Aesop’s Fables: From simple morality to classic tales you’ve likely heard before, this collection of fables is full of humor, wit and insight into human nature.
  8. Beowulf: This ancient epic work is full of manly fights, hideous, bloodthirsty monsters, revenge, action and adventure that is at your fingertips after you learn to get past the Old English writing.
  9. The Aeneid by Virgil: This epic poem tells the story of Aeneas, ancestor to the Romans, and his travels from Troy to Italy.
  10. Poetics by Aristotle: Aristotle’s theory of poetry is a classic work that lays out terms you may already be familiar with from catharsis to mimesis.
Technology and Business
Learn more about the basics of business online and off with these free online texts.
  1. How to Speak and Write Correctly by Joseph Devlin: Learn how to improve your communication skills from this book, helping you go further in many aspects of life.
  2. Professional Customer Service: If you own a business the customer is the real boss, so learn how to provide efficient, high-quality customer service from this ebook.
  3. Fail As Fast As You Can and Other Contrarian Business Secrets: Don’t want to run your business into the ground? Check out this online book to learn how to avoid that fate.
  4. Beginners Guide to the Internet: Whether you’re trying to get your business on the web or just want to learn to navigate it a little better, this text can give you the information you need.
  5. Web Marketing Success: Web marketing is an essential for most businesses today and you’ll get the basics from this ebook.
  6. Art and Science of Obtaining Venture or Angel Investor Capital: Need some capital to get your business off the ground? This text can help you find great investors in your business.
Finances
With an economy on the decline, you should be aware of where every cent you have is going. These free texts can help you make sound financial decisions even in tough times.
  1. What Women Need to Know About Retirement: This text is a great read for women who want to make sure they’re well-prepared for their golden years.
  2. ID Theft: What It’s All About: Worried you might have your identity stolen? This short book will help you understand what happens in ID theft and what you can do to prevent and recover from it.
  3. Estate Planning: Make sure your loved ones are well-provided for even if you’re not around with some careful estate planning. Check out this book for tips and advice.
  4. Savings Fitness: A Guide to Your Money and Your Financial Future: You worry about getting your body in shape why not your finances too? In this book you’ll find some ways to pump up your savings and investments.
  5. Get the Facts on Saving and Investing: This book will give you the basics on saving and investing for newbies in the financial field.
  6. Building a Better Credit Report: From getting the free credit report to which you’re entitled to helping improve your credit score, you’ll find loads of helpful advice in this government produced text.
  7. Consumer Action Handbook: If you feel like you’ve gotten ripped off you may be able to take action against the perpetrator. Find out more by reading this ebook from this government consumer action group.
  8. Taking Control of Your Finances: Feel like you’re going in financial down spin? This text can help you get a handle on your spending, increase saving and deal with a variety of other financial issues.
  9. Banking Basics: Learn how to use your bank the right way from this ebook.
  10. Know Before You Go: To Get a Mortgage: If you’re thinking of buying a new home this guide can help you make sure you don’t make any big blunders.
Not Just for Kids
While many of these books are today considered children’s literature, their enjoyment is hardly limited to the youthful.
  1. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll: Take a tumble down the rabbit hole into the topsy-turvy world of this classic book.
  2. The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams: The stuffed rabbit at the center of this story wants nothing more than to become real through the love of his owner.
  3. Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie: The iconic character of Peter Pan saw his beginnings in this well-received story.
  4. Grimm’s Fairy Tales: With evil witches, beautiful princes, enchantment, adventure and more, these stories will keep adults and children engaged for hours.
  5. Black Beauty by Anna Sewell: Anyone who’s ever really loved an animal will appreciate this simple, touching story of the life of a horse.
  6. Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame: The collection of animal characters that form the cast of this book wander about on the river, ultimately pursuing storylines that provide valuable moral lessons.
  7. Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson: From swashbuckling on the high seas to hidden treasures, this novel explores themes often uncommon in children’s literature like the ambiguity of morality making it a work that holds up for adult readers as well.
  8. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by Frank Baum: While many are familiar with the film version of this classic, the original book is well worth a read at any age.
  9. Beatrix Potter Collected Works: Beatrix Potter wrote and illustrated many well-loved children’s stories that appeal to adults and children alike in their simplicity and charm.
  10. Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift: From the diminutive Lilliputians to the giants of Brobdingnag this book provides plenty of adventure with a little satire on human nature as well.
Miscellaneous
From great biographies to essential historical writings, these varied books are well-worth your time to check out.
  1. The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin: One of the best loved founding fathers, this story tells about the life of Franklin in his own words.
  2. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: Here you’ll find an epic success story of the child of slaves who grew to be a great intellectual and public figure.
  3. The Education of Henry Adams: This book records the experiences of Henry Adams as he comes to terms with the changing and modernizing world in his old age.
  4. The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci: Explore the mind of one of the greatest artists and thinkers through his many notebooks.
  5. Concerning the Spiritual in Art by Wassily Kandinsky: This modernist painter explores how painting affects the viewer in this theoretical work.
  6. Lives of the Artists by Giorgio Vasari: Often regarded as the earliest art historian, Vasari writes about the lives of the artists that play an important role in the Renaissance and the years leading up to it.
  7. On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin: While it may not make for the most exciting reading, this book is essential for those who want to understand the origins of modern biology.
  8. Essays by Ralph Waldo Emerson: From advocating the rights of women to speaking about the joys of nature, this collection of essays is great non-fiction reading.
  9. Walden by Henry David Thoreau: Get some inspiration on moving closer to nature in this classic work.
  10. The Kama Sutra by Vatsyayana: Keep your relationships spicy by checking out this ancient text full of advice on the art of lovemaking.
SOURCE: Best Colleges Online

25 Biographies Everyone Should Read


By Lauren Bailey
 College is a tricky time: It’s a formative period that often shapes who you are and where you will go, but you don’t realize it until much later.

Because of that, it can often help to study the lives and deeds of famous men and women to see where they came from and better understand how a person’s course is created by the world around them.
Biographies let us understand people better, which in turn can help us figure out our own path.

Here are 25 fascinating biographies that every college student should read and remember.
  1. An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917-1963: Robert Dallek enjoyed amazing access to personal documents to create this compelling, masterful biography of one of the most compelling American presidents of all time.
  2. Lyndon Johnson and the American Dream: Author Doris Kearns Goodwin has many political volumes to her name, but this one is a cut above. As a member of Johnson’s White House staff, she had a front-row seat for his contentious administration, and her access makes for a gripping biography of a man thrust into the spotlight of leadership.
  3. Huey Long: Huey Long, aka "The Kingfish," was a divisive figure in Southern politics in the early 20th century, and would later inspire the central character in Robert Penn Warren’s All the King’s Men. This biography by T. Harry Williams won the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award for its fascinating profile of a man whose death remains a source of debate.
  4. Let it Blurt: The Life & Times of Lester Bangs, America’s Greatest Rock Critic: Arguably one of the best rock critics of all time, and certainly one of the most impassioned, Lester Bangs wrote for Rolling Stone and Creem among other outlets before dying of a drug overdose at 33. Jim Derogatis’ biography is a fantastic portrait of the man whose voice helped define 1970s rock.
  5. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: As told to Alex Haley (Roots), the autobiography of Malcolm X is a riveting look at the life and events of one of the biggest figures in the civil rights movement.
  6. Truman: David McCullough has won the Pulitzer Prize twice, and the first time was for this sprawling, landmark biography of President Harry Truman.
  7. John Adams: This fantastically detailed story of one of the nation’s founding fathers won author David McCullough his second Pulitzer and inspired an HBO miniseries.
  8. The Kid Stays in the Picture: Robert Evans racked up credits like The Godfather and Rosemary’s Baby during his peak as a Hollywood producer, and his autobiography is packed with wild and engaging stories about what it was like to get movies made.
  9. Peter the Great: His Life and World: This Pulitzer winner from Robert K. Massie takes college students and other readers through Russian history and the rule of one its most infamous rulers.
  10. Gandhi, an Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments With Truth: Gandhi’s autobiography is one of the best resources available for students looking to learn more about the leader who pioneered civil disobedience in his quest for social justice.
  11. The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York: Author Robert Caro offers a searing look at the life and practices of Robert Moses, an urban planner whose contributions and tactics in the shaping of New York City made him one of the most controversial figures there who never held elected office. A vital read for anyone looking to understand Moses and, by extension, modern New York.
  12. Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman! (Adventures of a Curious Character): This autobiography, by turns comic and serious, relates stories from the life of Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman, whose work included the Manhattan Project.
  13. Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy: Dietrich Bonhoeffer is a renowned theologian, but this biography highlights his formative years as well as his involvement in an attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler.
  14. Mother Jones: The Most Dangerous Woman in America: Mary Harris Jones’ biography details her exploits as one of the most famous union organizers of all time, and her work inspired a magazine that was named after her.
  15. Marie Antoinette: The Journey: Antonia Fraser writes about Marie Antoinette with a sharp eye, giving college students a fresh take on the elusive French ruler.
  16. Personal History: Katharine Graham led The Washington Post for more than 20 years, and her autobiography talks of her time there during some of the nation’s most difficult periods, including the Watergate scandal. The book won the Pulitzer Prize.
  17. The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr.: Arguably the most important figure in the struggle for civil rights in 20th century America, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. led a large life cut short by an assassin. This volume captures his works and thoughts better than almost any other.
  18. American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House: Newsweek editor Jon Meacham crafts a fantastic portrait of Andrew Jackson, a divisive but important president.
  19. The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt: Vanderbilt’s name is synonymous with capitalism and power, and this gripping biography shows how he got his start and played a role in everything from the Civil War to the transportation revolution.
  20. The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America: Douglas Brinkley writes about Teddy Roosevelt with flair, and this biography highlights his efforts to sustain the shrinking remnants of the American frontier.
  21. Churchill: Paul Johnson’s biography is an indispensable account of the life of one the most important figures in global politics of the past 100 years.
  22. On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft: Stephen King’s memoir is a great read for college students for two reasons: It’s a well-told autobiography as well as a fantastic primer in what it takes to be a writer.
  23. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly: Jean-Dominique Bauby’s autobiography is a stirring testament to resilience: He was left almost completely paralyzed after a car accident and wrote this book by dictating its words one letter at a time by blinking his left eye.
  24. Angela’s Ashes: Frank McCourt’s acclaimed autobiography creates a compelling portrait of his poverty-stricken childhood in Ireland.
  25. A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius: Dave Eggers burst onto the literary scene with this rule-breaking memoir about his parents’ death and his subsequent efforts to raise his younger brother. A beautiful, hilarious book.
SOURCE: Best Colleges Online
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