Required Reading 2023-2024

Books are the most important thing in our homeschool. For me raising kids who read well, and love to read, has always been a top priority. I am a firm believer that if you can read, you can learn. Sadly statistics show that most people do not pick up a book again after high school. There are many many adults out there who chose to never read again. This is heartbreaking to me because I LOVE a good book. I have learned so much as an adult from the books I read. When I wanted to homeschool the kids, I read books for homeschoolers. I’ve read parenting books, gardening books, marriage books, all kinds of non-fiction books, and of course fiction. There is so much to learn and reading has helped me get there. This is something I want to instill in my children. Because of this, I try really hard every year to make sure we have really good books on hand. If I know my kids have an interest in a topic, I will spend hours researching books for them that include that topic. I am not always successful, but over the years we have read quite a few books that we still talk about today. Those books will stay with us for a long time, hopefully forever. With that in mind, I have started picking out our required reading for next year. I like to give them a few books that I want them to read over the school year, and then leave room for interest lead reading. I went to my bookshelf this morning and pulled four books each for my kids, as well as four for our read alouds. We will finish quite a few more than that, and I may add more as assigned reading, but this felt like a good place to start.

School Year Read Alouds

There are a few books that I have been wanting to get to for a couple of years and we just haven’t been able to get them read. The problem with great books is there are tons of them and you can’t read them all. So, this year I have added The War that Saved My Life and Esperonza Rising to our required reading lists. I have heard about both these books for the past few years and it’s time we make room for them. Every review I have seen about either of these books has been incredibly positive and they seem to come highly recommended. Thirst and Hello Universe are newer ones to me. I have recently seen both recommended on Booktube videos. Again, they got really great reviews. I have a ton of other books in mind for read alouds, but these four are going to be made a priority for our upcoming school year.

Esperanza Rising https://a.co/d/0goi7tm

The War that Saved My Life . https://a.co/d/caeRQQc

Thirst https://a.co/d/hSHdlFA

Hello Universe https://a.co/d/gniS7uo

7th Grade Required Reading

My son will be going into 7th grade this year. His main interests these days are space and video games. These can be tricky topics to find books on, or at least hard to find good quality books on. I did find a few good ones this past year, but he went through those pretty quickly. I do know he also tends to like things that are more realistic, almost like non-fiction, so I tried to keep that in mind for his choices. I also get suggestions from Read Aloud Revival and their book lists by age and gender. Here are his current four for the upcoming school year.

Edge of Extinction. He tried this once a few years back, but didn’t get into it. I want him to try again. https://a.co/d/dL2t6cL

Gone to the Woods. I read this and it was really good. I think he will enjoy it. https://a.co/d/9wpPyEN

Glitch https://a.co/d/2mSVl2k

The Jupiter Pirates https://a.co/d/49i2fQ2

5th Grade Required Reading

My daugher will be going into 5th grade this year, and she loves books that have animals in them. Last year she read Crenshaw and loved it. One of her other all-time favorites is Mr. Poppers Penguins. I kept that in mind when pulling books for her, but I also chose ones that I want her to read. A few of them are classics that are recommended on every list I have ever seen for children’s literature.

Caddie Woodlawn https://a.co/d/axGDuFk

Song for a Whale https://a.co/d/dk4ZcQS

The Trumpet of the Swan https://a.co/d/aX58sp1

Artermis Fowl (her request) https://a.co/d/0f0NPzy

Sourcing Books

Even though I added Amazon links, I do not tend to buy my books from Amazon. Where we lived previously, we participated in a homeschool program that gave us money each year for supplies, and I used that to fund quite a bit of our homeschool library. A lot of our original books came from our Bookshark curriculum and the others mostly from Barnes and Noble. That program also gave me a card saying I was a homeschool teacher which Barnes and Noble offers a teacher discount for. I no longer have that card, but I have seen that you can make one somehow. I may have to look into that for the future. Currently I order almost all my books from BookOutlet. You can’t always find everything you want, but they do have a really good selection most of the time. I get most of my classic books there, as well as some books that are newer on the recommendation lists. I do have a referal link that will get you $5 off, and me as well, if anyone would like to give them a try. They offer this referral code to everyone with an account. I am not working with them in any way. https://bookoutlet.com/loyalty/referral/N4bee5V5?c=url. Other than that I try and use our local library. I love having a good home library built up, but that can get pretty expensive. The library is a great option to help with that.

Recommendations

There are a few places that I get book recommendations. First is from the lists on Read Aloud Revivlas website https://readaloudrevival.com/recommends/. Sarah Mackenzie is the author of the Read Aloud Handbook and her entire website is dedicated to books. This is a great starting place if you need book options. Second I watch YouTube. My kids are mostly in the middle school years, so the videos about MiddleGrade March are really helpful to me. However, there are homeschool moms who make book videos, book influencers, and all kinds of options. I just find a few people I like and that seem to have similar tastes and values in books, and use those for recommendations. When I see a book recommended in multiple places I tend to try and find that one for our home library.

I hope this helps give you a few ideas for the upcoming school year, and encourages you to read and to get your children reading. It is a game changer for everyone when they find that first book that makes them fall in love with reading.