Countries and Culture Unit – Japan

Native American Indians Unit  – Making Cranberry Tea

Carol Krahn
phone:306.225.4355
carol@konos-canada.com
Western Rep: BC, AB, SK, MB, and Territories
Diane Geerlinks
phone: 905.877.3515
diane@konos-canada.com
Eastern Rep: ON, PQ, NB, NS, PEI, NFLD

K-8 Curriculum
Original KONOS Curriculum

Each original KONOS Character Curriculum manual offers creative ideas that spark learning and character building. Weekly lesson plans provide guidance without imposing strict structure. This allows students to use "the whole library as their textbook and the whole world as their curriculum."
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Classic KONOS Curriculum

Classic KONOS Character Curriculum is the next generation of unit studies curriculum. This user-friendly approach includes already prepared lesson plans complete with literature analysis and hands-on activities, all designed around Godly character traits taught in a multi-level family context.
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KONOS in a Box

KONOS in a Box allows mom to focus on teaching rather than research, library trips and supply gathering. The box is the new Classic KONOS Character Curriculum expands one character trait found in the Original KONOS volumes from 30 pages to 200 pages by adding complete literature analysis and complete writing instructions.
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Culture Curriculum Series

The new Cultural Curriculum Series focuses on a country or continent against a backdrop of a character trait. It is written in a user-friendly approach.
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KONOS in a Bag

KONOS in a Bag is a great way to sample the flavour of KONOS while exploring foreign culture. Each nine week study is a self-contained discovery unit, complete with relevant arts and crafts projects to make learning fun and exciting. Your kids will love the itinerary as they head "overseas" with each lesson!
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Timelines

The full KONOS curriculum includes our kid's timeline, the best history teaching tool we've ever seen. History is the story of God's work on earth. How can children adequately understand God's work? How can they appreciate the movement of history towards some meaningful goal? How can they learn from the successes and failures of historical figures? They must be able to see the "big picture" and a timeline provides that big picture.
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