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Thursday, November 5, 2015

The Tower of Babel and The Ice Age ~ History of the World Study


"And the whole earth was of one language, and of one speech."
~ Genesis 11:1

In the last post of our "History of the World" homeschool study series, we left off on Noah and the World Wide Flood.  What major events comes next? Unfortunately, that is quite controversial. However, we believe that the earth is young and follow a literal account of Genesis in our home. Therefore, the next major event in history would be the Tower of Babel, followed by the infamous Ice Age. It is actually very fascinating to study this and put the pieces together in history which bring light to science and the Scriptures. Also keep in mind that studying this early in history makes for some guess work in timeline dates but we did our best.


To begin, we placed all our paperwork for this unit behind the "Tower of Babel/Ice Age" tab in our History of the World Student Work Binder (which is the divider section behind "Noah and the World Wide Flood"). We are making our own set of encyclopedias this way!

{Here is some clip art to copy and paste into your "Timeline Binder".}

We also pasted down two entries into our timeline notebook at approx. 3500-3000 B.C. for the Tower of Babel and 3500-2500 B.C. for the Ice Age (you will find more information on our timeline notebooks here(world history, Bible).  You could either type in a description of the Tower of Babel and the Ice Age and paste it underneath your timeline picture or simply write in "Tower of Babel"  and "The Ice Age" underneath each illustration. We chose to place a small summary (typing practice) underneath each one of our timeline entry clip arts so that we could go back in time and remember each event more vividly by our descriptions.


"All humans are descendants of Noah's three sons. After the flood, God commanded Noah's family to spread out and fill the Earth. Some of Noah's descendants disobeyed God's command. Under the leadership of a man named Nimrod, they banded together and built a tower that reached into the sky. God responded by causing groups of people to speak a different language. This was the beginning of many different nations."

The first item on the list was to link the last two time periods together in the mind of the student. We commenced with copy work found in the Draw and Write through History Book (Creation Through Jonah) and followed it by the drawing assignment of the Tower of Babel (Bible, art, language arts, world history).


Once that was established, we read the account of the Tower of Babel in Genesis (Bible, history). We also watched this short video clip about Babel from the Creation Museum DVD series (warning: it might scare toddlers). Doing a picture study on a painting of the Tower of Babel is also a nice addition. Here we show Pieter Bruegel the Elder - The Tower of Babel (art history).


This is also an excellent opportunity to share how the different people groups came to be. The Tower of Babel plays an important role in this. I recommend watching Only One Race by Answers in Genesis. Note: This movie is geared toward a more older audience.


We didn't have much resources on the Tower of Babel so once these activities were completed, we spent the remaining time on the major historical event that followed next, "The Ice Age".


"The flood was not just a local flood. It covered the whole earth... causing a dramatic climate change all over the world. In some areas there was an ice age. Wooly mammoths may have lived at this time. Scientists have found frozen wooly mammoths so well preserved that they could even tell what they had eaten!"


To begin the Ice Age Study, we drew pictures of the woolly mammoth for our notebooks and included the copy work shared above (art, language arts, world history, science).


Life in the Great Ice Age by Micheal and Beverly Oard was an excellent resource for this study and we used it as our read aloud title. I am not scientific minded so this book really simplified the Ice Age through a beautifully illustrated story (language arts, Bible, science, world history) and with a biblical perspective. Something we do splurge on is purchasing these types of books for our home library because this isn't something you will find in your local library.


We made a list of ice-age animals. You could also have your older students alphabetize this list when they are finished (science, basic skills).


We created a map based from the information from Life in the Great Ice Age which indicated where Ice Age fossils were found (geography).


Next we drew "cave men and women", using the Draw and Write Through History Series. We also did the corresponding copywork that these books provide (art, Bible, language arts). Cave men and women or the "Stone Age" people we learn about can simply be the malnourished people who lacked sunlight and fresh food during the challenging Ice Age.  Life in the Great Ice Age by Micheal and Beverly Oard goes into more detail on this. Very interesting topic!


"There are more references to cold, snow, ice, and frost in the Book of Job than any other book in the Bible. Is is possible that Job and his friends had heard tales of the glacial sheets bounding the northern lands even though they had not seen them."
~ Dr Henry Morris, The Remarkable Record of Job

We did some bible verse copy work from the Book of Job that corresponded with Ice Age weather. We used Job 37:9-10 and  Job 38:29-30 (Bible, language arts, science).


For a picture study concerning the Ice Age, you can study the Columbian Mammoth by the Victorian Era artist, Charles R. Knight (fine art).

We also made up poems about the Ice Age for some language arts fun.

Lastly, we found this song about the Tower of Babel and this song about being One Blood that your children may enjoy by Buddy Davis (from Answers in Genesis). You can download it and incorporate it into your study (Bible, history, music). It would be fun to play while the children are drawing or coloring. We enjoy learning through songs in our homeschool. Songs stick!


One field trip we recommend when studying Genesis topics is the Creation MuseumJonathan Park Audio Adventures are also a fun way to learn Creation Science in general. And if you would like more scientific information which is tied to the Scriptures, then I recommend visiting the Answers in Genesis website.

Though on the shorter side, this was a very fascinating study and opened up a lot of ideas of how history could have taken place with scientifically sound information and a Biblical worldview.  Ah, the joys of home education!


14 comments:

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    1. It was a very interesting and fun study! :)

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  2. Just as an interesting aside. Did you ever see the EU headquarters building in Brussels? It is modeled after the painting of the Tower of Babel by Bruegel.

    https://wdednh2.wordpress.com/2012/04/28/the-tower-of-babel-vs-the-eu-headquarters-in-brussels/

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    1. No, I have never heard of it. I followed your link though, very interesting! It does resemble the Bruegel painting. Quite an odd thing to emulate... Thank you for sharing.

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  3. I enjoyed this post. Learning is so much fun! So thankful to be able to home school my blessings! Love in Christ, Angela

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    1. It is a lot of fun! I remember "playing" teacher when I was younger... And this is even better as I am learning so much in our homeschool too! Nice to hear from you and thank you for sharing! :)

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  4. I love this study! I may get that video too! We just finished the tower of Babel in World History and I think we can add some of these ideas in to our day before moving on.

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    1. Nice to hear from you! Are you all studying history in order too?

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  5. Thank you for sharing this. It sounds so fun and interesting. My kids have learned allot on the flood and Ice Age from Kent Hovind's Creation videos.

    Blessings,
    Leslie

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    1. Thank you for sharing Leslie. We have those videos also and there is a lot of humor in them also which helps to keep the interest! :)

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  6. This looks like an interesting study. I like that you found artworks to use for picture study too. Thank you for the above DVD recommendation also, as I had not heard of them.

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    1. It was very interesting! And if you are referring to the Answers in Genesis DVD, you will love the ministry! They are our #1 choice for science based Christian tools for our home! :)

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  7. What an interesting study! On a side note, the handwriting in these pictures is excellent :). My son goes to public school and they don't teach cursive at all anymore. That's something I really need to work on with him at home.

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    1. Interesting! Thank you for the encouragement and kind comment Candace!

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