Guest Hollow’s Little Kids’ Modern American History with Integrated Science

Guest Hollow’s Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum is filled with engaging books, videos, hands-on activities, recipes, and more. It brings modern American history to life for students and even includes optional science topics that connect directly to the history lessons. Our curriculum is designed to engage and inform in a way to help students retain and enjoy what they are learning.

Guest Hollow’s Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum tracks with our Jr. Modern American History Curriculum and our High School Modern American History Curriculum, so you have the option to teach your students ‘family-style‘, (aka ‘multi-level’), if you wish!

See the FAQ lower down the page for information on how to choose between the Little Kids’ and the Jr. level.

Prerequisites: None
Approximate Daily Time Commitment:
1 hour depending on activities that are chosen

$47.00

Guest Hollow materials are downloadable/online. There are no physical copies.
Already a customer? Go to “My Account” to log in and access your downloads and your online schedule membership. Need help logging in? Check out our help page.

Grade Level / Age

Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum is suggested for:
● Grades K-3 (can be used with some younger 4th graders)
● Approximate ages
5-8 (can be used with some 9-year-olds)



What You Get

Little Kids’ Modern American History comes with:
✔ A printable PDF schedule
✔ An editable schedule in Microsoft Word format
✔ Access to an online version of the schedule*
✔ A beautiful hybrid activity/textbook in PDF format
✔ A coupon code for 50% off the Big Bad Beautiful Booklist

*Access to the online version of Guest Hollow’s Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum schedule is provided as a courtesy and is not guaranteed due to various potential circumstances.

I’d like to see the book & resource list!

Click here to see the required books and resources for Guest Hollow’s Little Kids’ Early American History Curriculum.

Why choose Guest Hollow’s Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum?




We’ve picked out timeless stories and paired them with optional readers, science related to the history topics presented, and lots of hands-on activities to engage young learners.

We’ve put together an exciting year of modern American history for ALL types of learners. Our customizable schedule makes it so you can plan with your student’s needs in mind. You aren’t stuck with just one way of learning history. You and your student will love the choices and the ability to focus on what is most appealing and/or important to your family.

Along with history, you also receive a built-in science curriculum! Students do not just read about events of the past; they explore optional connected science concepts through carefully chosen books, hands-on experiments, and engaging activities. This integrated approach helps them make meaningful cross-curricular connections and see how history and science work together in the real world.

Have fun learning history and science!

We’ve hand-picked books your students will love.

Our modern American history curriculum schedules in fiction and non-fiction books that will ignite your student’s love for history (and optional science). Get cozy on the couch and build memories with timeless stories!

Videos add a visual and sometimes musical component.

We scour YouTube to find the best educational videos to make history something to actually see & hear and not just read about. It’s one thing to read about a bison, it’s another to see one!

We work hard to engage ALL types of learners.

You’ll find a buffet of projects and hands-on activities you can pick-and-choose from to help your students retain what they are learning like recipes, music, projects, art, easy science experiments, and more!

Students and parents love Guest Hollow!

Our customers have shared over and over how Guest Hollow curricula has changed their homeschool and sparked a love for learning!

Beowulf's Modern American History Adventure and Activity Book

Click here to go to Beowulf’s Modern American History Adventure and Activity Book product page to see samples!

You get a beautiful 185 page book in PDF format with your purchase of the curriculum: Beowulf’s Modern American History Adventure and Activity Book.

After your purchase, you will find it in your downloads. This special book is used as a *spine book for the curriculum. *A spine book is used as a launching point (or backbone) for your studies.

Read about modern American history in this lavishly illustrated book full of true stories.

Each week has copywork (often just a single sentence or phrase), a cut-and-paste picture that represents the week’s main lesson, a book rating graphic (to rate the weekly books scheduled in the curriculum), and fun activities. Some of the activities include easy drawing lessons, simple cut and paste crafts, mazes, simple writing (or telling) assignments, and coloring pages.

Beowulf makes history understandable, memorable, and fun!

a workbook/textbook?
Yes! Beowulf’s Modern American History Adventure and Activity Book isn’t a traditional ‘workbook’. It is more of a hybrid textbook with fun activities and cut & paste items. You get a PDF copy. We also provide a link after your purchase where you can buy a physical copy, or you can print it yourself at home or through a print service like Lulu.com. Check your curriculum downloads after purchase for a link and instructions.

There are also lots of other printables linked in the schedule!

other books?
No, you need to purchase the other scheduled history books separately. Learn more.


a printable book list?
Yes. We provide a ranked book list with a handy checklist to help you plan what you want to buy or borrow and in what format. We also let you know when each book is scheduled in, so you can arrange to check out books from the library before you need them!


a schedule?
Yes. You get the same weekly schedule in 3 different formats: PDF, Microsoft Word, and online*. Just open it up and you are ready to learn!
*Access to the online version of the curriculum schedule is provided as a courtesy and is not guaranteed due to various potential circumstances on our end and yours including but not limited to various computer, device, and internet configurations.


a supply list?
Yes. Recipe ingredients, art supplies, and more are listed at the beginning of your schedule week-by-week.


a teacher’s manual?
No. The history schedule is all you need! There are some notes for the teacher included in the schedule.


tests?
No. There are no tests with this curriculum. You can read our philosophy about testing here.


Click or tap to see a sample!

Take a look at a sample of the printable schedule here (with a visual guide on how to use it and cull activities):

Want to know how to use the Guest Hollow PDF Schedule or the editable Microsoft version of our schedule? Go here! (This page gives lots of insight as to how our schedules work!)

F.A.Q. for our Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum

This curriculum can be used for grades K-3, although it may also be appropriate for some younger or struggling 4th graders. The easiest way to choose which level is to look at the booklists for both levels and see which books are most appropriate for your student. Please click on the following links to compare the booklists:

Little Kids’ Modern American History Book and Resource List

Jr. Modern American History Book and Resource List

Also, here are some other differences between the two:

Little Kids’ (grades K-3) LevelJr. Level (grades 4-8)
Easy crafts and hands-on projects are scheduled. There are project choices included that are more appropriate for younger children with less motor skills.Crafts and projects may require more skill to make.
Easy readers are scheduled in to give young students optional reading practice.Chapter books, graphic novels, and other longer books are included for the students to read.
The content is more gentle (with a few noted exceptions). There may be more difficult topics mentioned in the content, such as more ‘conflict/violence’, etc.
Beowulf’s Modern American History Adventure and Activity Book has been specifically tailored to be a gentle, easy read. The text is simple enough to be read by confident young readers (or read aloud by a parent). It is read once a week and has activities this age group enjoys such as easy drawing lessons, simple cut and paste crafts, mazes, simple writing (or telling) assignments, and coloring pages. The graphics are very kid-friendly.The book for this level is Beowulf’s Marvelous Book of Modern American History. It is a 789 page book with longer text that is read (sometimes) multiple times a week. There are no activities in it. It is lavishly illustrated but uses more period piece paintings, real photographs, more detailed maps, etc.
The videos are generally for the younger crowd: simpler and shorter explanations, cartoons, etc. There are also fewer videos overall, especially because it’s difficult to find modern history topic videos that are appropriate for this age group (no violence and such). The videos are more appropriate for older kids. They may contain reenactment violence, etc.

How do I use this with different ages?

Younger grades may need more parental involvement. It’s assumed that a parent will read most of the books out loud (or use YouTube read-alouds, etc.). Parents will also need to do most of the cooking for recipes, etc.

We scheduled in some readers. A parent may choose to read some of those out loud to non or emerging readers. You may want to put the readers in a book basket for an older child to choose from as desired.

Choose whichever crafts are more appropriate for your student. Kindergarteners may not be ready for more intricate cut-and-paste activities, etc.

If you have a student on the older end of the spectrum using Little Kids’ Modern American History, you may want to look at the booklist for the Jr. level and sub a few of those books in.

We strongly suggest that you view every item linked or used in this curriculum to make sure it meets with your approval.

If you have an older student joining in, you may want to consider using our Jr. Modern American History Curriculum and/or High School Modern American History Curriculum, so that everyone can learn family style. If you can use all three levels, we have a bundle deal that provides all three at a significant discount!

Yes! They are designed to track together and cover similar topics and/or time periods during the same weeks. We call this teaching ‘family style’ or ‘multi-level’ teaching. When you start both curriculums at the same time topics will be presented on the same weeks. We also offer a bundle discount if you want to purchase all three curriculums at the same time.

You can see how the levels track together with the following chart.

Please note that every single topic, event, and person is NOT listed in the chart below. These are just VERY general topics for each week (that barely scratch the surface). These are very rich curriculums, and it would be difficult to list all the people and events that are covered. When it comes to the Jr. and High School levels (especially the High School level), if you don’t see something that is commonly taught in U.S. history mentioned in the chart, it’s still likely covered. ?
Some topics span across multiple weeks and that is not reflected in this chart (slavery, Native American studies/issues, etc.)

Note: There are a few sections in the high school level that don’t match the other two levels perfectly (like a book about the Alamo) due to timing differences in the spine book. The 3 levels still track as far as the main time period when this occurs.

Science topics in the Little Kids’ and Jr. levels are not listed here. See the individual curriculum product page FAQs for those topics.

Little Kids' Modern American History Curriculum
Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum (grades K-3)
Jr. Modern American History
Jr. Modern American History Curriculum (grades 4-8)
Modern American History Curriculum
High School Modern American History Curriculum (grades 9-12)
Week 1Life in the early 1900s, tenement buildings, immigrants and Ellis Island, the invention of crayonsAmericans at the turn of the century, immigration, tycoons and monopolies, life in the big city tenements, muckrackers, the Progressive EraAmericans at the turn of the century, 
McKinley, 
the Triangle Shirtwaist fire,
immigration,
muckrakers, the Progressive Era
Week 2Theodore Roosevelt, how the teddy bear got its name, John Muir and the creation of the national parks, Harry HoudiniTheodore Roosevelt, John Muir and the National Parks, the Panama CanalTheodore Roosevelt, National Parks, Houdini, John Muir, The Panama Canal, more about the Progressive Era
Week 3The Wright BrothersThe First Cross-Country Road Trip, San Fransisco earthquake,  Pure Food and Drug and the Meat Inspection Acts, Model T, Taft, Triangle Shirtwaist fire, child labor, Wright BrothersBooker T. Washington,
blacks settling in Harlem,
Jim Crow laws,
Taft,
Henry Ford,
Wright Brothersy
Week 4Henry Ford and the Model T, World War I, Stubby the dog soldier, Woodrow WilsonWilson, Great Molasses Flood, 16th amendment, WW1, sinking of the Lusitania, The Zimmerman Telegram, the Panama Canal is finished1918 flu,
Wilson,
the Monopoly game, WW1,
16th amendment
Week 5World War I, Cher Ami (a WW1 messenger pigeon)WW1, 1918 flu, 19th amendment, Treaty of Versailles, sufferageWW1, Prohibition
Week 6Life in the 1920s, women won the right to vote, Louis Armstrong, Warren G. Harding, the true story of the puppeteer of Macy’s ParadeTulsa Race Massacre (in a child friendly book), the 1920s, Prohibition, The Election of 1920, HardingSuffrage, women’s voting rights, the 1920s, Scopes Monkey Trial, Harding
Week 7Charles Lindbergh’s flight across the Atlantic, Balto, the invention of the popsicle and Band-Aids, Coolidgethe 1920s, Harlem Renaissance, Teapot Dome Scandal, Coolidge, Scopes Monkey Trial, Charles Lindbergh, Amelia Earhart, The Jazz SingerCoolidge, 
Charles Lindbergh,
Amelia Earhart, 
radio,  
motion pictures, 
crime and prohibition, 
bull market 
Week 8The stock market and the Wall Street crash, Hoover, FDR, the Civilian Conservation CorpsHoover, stockmarket crash, Great Depression, the kidnapping of baby Lindbergh, Prohibition endsStock market crash and the Depression, Hoover, FDR
Week 9The Great Depression, Hoover, FDR and the New Deal, the Dust BowlDust bowl, Oakis, FDR and the New Deal, leaving the gold standard, deflation, New deal programsDust bowl, FDR, the New Deal and New Deal programs, labor unions, leaving the gold standard, other various topics that apply to the time period
Week 10WPA and the packhorse librarians, more about life during the Great Depression, the invention of the chocolate chip cookieDust bowl & Depression continued, New deal programs continued, some world history to set the stage for WW2Dust bowl continued, social changes, motion picture industry, radio shows, some world history to set the stage for WW2
Week 11Saving money during the Great Depression, how people coped during hard timesFDR wanted to pack the court, isolationism, motion picture industry and radio shows, more world history to set the stage for WW2FDR continued, isolationism, more world history to set the stage for WW2
Week 12World War 2 (what was happening in Europe and Asia), Pearl HarborWW2, Pearl Harbor, the U.S. in the PhilippinesWW2, Pearl Harbor
Week 13World War 2 homefront efforts and rationing, Japanese American incarceration camps, the invention of day-glo colorsJapanese interment, Bataan, Battle of Midway, Operation Torch, Battle of Guadalcanal, Spam, American homefront (life in the 40s)Manhattan Project,
Doolittle Raid,
Bataan,
Battle of Midway,
SPAM
Week 14D-Day, Harry Truman’s childhood, Gertie (a duck during WW2)D-Day, Mendez et al v. Westminster School District, Battle of the BulgeD-Day,
Battle of the Bulge,
fighting in Europe and Africa,
defeat of Germany,
life in the 40s
Week 15Hiroshima and Nagasaki (in a gentle child-appropriate way), the end of World War 2, more about Truman’s lifeTruman, Yalta Conference, the O.S.S. partners with Vietnam, Truman, defeat of Germany, Manhattan Project, Hiroshima and NagasakiHolocaust and American Jews,
fighting the Japanese in the Pacific,
Atomic Bomb.
Israel formed
Week 16The Cold War, finishing learning about Truman, Jackie RobinsonKorean War, the Cold War begins, Stalin and related topics, Truman Doctrine, Marshall Plan, Berlin Blockade and the Candy Bombers, McCarthyism and the red scare, Arms RaceTruman,
the Cold War begins, Korean War,
Marshall Plan
Week 17The Korean War, Sgt. Reckless the HorseKorean war, Brown v. Board of Education (part 1), Atomic age, Eisenhower, Sgt. Reckless, Jackie RobinsonSoviet espionage in America,
Eisenhower,
Atomic age,
McCarthyism
Week 18Life in the 1950s, President Eisenhower, the Baby Boom, fast food (McDonalds), Brown vs. Board of Education, Rosa Parks, Ruby BridgesLife in postwar America, Brown vs. Board of Education (part 2), Rosa Parks, Ruby Bridges, Montgomery Bus Boycott, McDonalds, Sputnik, Alaska joined the UnionLife in postwar America, Brown vs. Board of Education, Rosa Parks, Civil Rights Movement
Week 19JFK, Cuban Missile Crisis, John Glenn1960s, JFK, Bay of Pigs, Alan Shepherd, Cubin Missile Crisis1960s, JFK, Civil Rights Movement continued, Bay of Pigs, Cuban Missile Crisis, space race heats up
Week 20The Children’s Crusade (civil rights), Martin Luther King Jr., Rachel CarsonChildren’s Crusade of 1963, Martin Luther King Jr., Kennedy’s assassination, LBJ, civil rights continued, Alaska earthquakeKennedy assassination,
origins of Vietnam,
LBJ,
Domino Theory,
Apollo,
cold war in Asia
Week 21The Domino Theory, Vietnam War, LBJVietnam War, protest, Summer of Love (no s*xual content), MLKJ’s assassinationSit ins ,
Freedom Riders ,
Malcom X, 
MLKJ,
1964 Civil Rights Act, 
Tet Offensive 
Week 22Apollo 11, Katherine JohnsonNikon, Operation Menu, Apollo 11, Detente, NixonStudent protest movement, 1960s culture, Robert F. Kennedy assassination, Nixon
Week 23Nixon, Watergate, Temple Grandin, Gerald Ford1970s, U.S. involvement in Cambodia, Kent State shootings, Pentagon Papers, Energy crisis, Watergate, Operation Babylift, Vietnam War ends, FordKeynesian economics, Kent State shootings, Watergate, 1970s culture, Vietnam War ends
Week 24Jimmy Carter, Ford, Jim HensonCarter, economic crisis, Jim Henson, Equal Rights AmendmentCarter, economic crisis
Week 25Life in the 1970s, computers and early video games, 1970s gas shortage, Mt. St. Helens eruptionEnd of Détente, NYC blackout of 1977, Carter continued, Iran Hostage Crisis, Mt. St. HelensFeminist movement,
Roe vs Wade,
Carter,
Chappaquiddick
Week 26Ronald Reagan, life in the 1980s1980s, Reagan, IBM’s launch, rise of the graphical interface, Challenger disaster, Iran-Contra Affair, Star Wars missiles, Cold War ends1980s Reagan, Iran Hostage Crisis, microprocessors and Apple computers, Star Wars missiles, Chicago Housing Project
Week 27George H. W. Bush, taxes, early video gamesGeorge H. Bush, Berlin Wall fell, computersGeorge H. Bush, Cold War ends, Iran-Contra Affair, 1989 San Francisco earthquake, video games, Berlin Wall fell
Week 28Operation Desert Storm, birth of the internet, Bill Gates, life in the 90s, computers1990s, Operation Desert Shield, Operation Desert Storm (Gulf War) World Wide Web went public, LA riots, Ruby RidgeGulf War, LA riots, Ruby Ridge
Week 29Bill Clinton, GoogleClinton, 1993 World Trade Center Attack, Waco siege, Oklahoma City bombing, Internet expands across AmericaClinton, 1990s culture, 1993 World Trade Center Attack, Waco siege, Oklahoma City bombing, Whitewater scandal, O.J. Simpson, browser wars
Week 309/11, search and rescue robots and dogsClinton’s impeachment, Google, Steve JobsBrady bill, Clinton’s impeachment, Bin Laden, Columbine
Week 319/11 continuedGeorge W. Bush, 2000-2010, 2000 election, Y2K bug, 9/11, Afghanistan War beginsGeorge W. Bush, 2000 election, Y2K bug, 9/11
Week 32George W. Bush and the 2000 election, life in the early 2000s, Hurricane KatrinaU.S. Invasion of Iraq, Hurrican KatrinaIraq War
Week 33Hurricane KatrinaHousing bubble, Obama, the iPad debutsHousing bubble, Hurricane Katrina, Obama
Week 34Hurricane Katrina continued, ObamaObamacare, Snowden, Flint Michigan water, Joplin TornadoObamacare, Snowden, celebrity culture, Flint Michigan water
Week 35Trump’s first election, COVID, CA wildfires of 2018Trump, COVID, Abraham AccordsOsama bin Ladin mission, Trump
Week 36Joe Biden, Trump’s reelection and early 2nd presidencyBiden, 2020 election and aftermath, withdrawal from AfghanistanFinishing up a book from a previous week.

You can get an idea of many of the topics covered in Little Kids’ Modern American History by looking at the curriculum booklist.

Some of the history topics covered this year are (scroll down to see science topics):
This does not cover every single history topic covered in all the materials and videos. This is just a quick overview.

  • Week 1: Life in the early 1900s, tenement buildings, immigrants, the invention of crayons
  • Week 2: Theodore Roosevelt, how the teddy bear got its name, John Muir and the creation of the national parks, Harry Houdini
  • Week 3: The Wright Brothers,
  • Week 4: Henry Ford and the Model T, World War I, Stubby the dog soldier, Woodrow Wilson
  • Week 5: World War I, Cher Ami (a WW1 messenger pigeon)
  • Week 6: Life in the 1920s, women won the right to vote, Louis Armstrong, Warren G. Harding, the true story of the puppeteer of Macy’s Parade
  • Week 7: Charles Lindbergh’s flight across the Atlantic, Balto, the invention of the popsicle and Band-Aids, Coolidge
  • Week 8: The stock market and the Wall Street crash, Hoover, FDR, the Civilian Conservation Corps
  • Week 9: The Great Depression, Hoover, FDR and the New Deal, the Dust Bowl
  • Week 10: WPA and the packhorse librarians, more about life during the Great Depression, the invention of the chocolate chip cookie
  • Week 11: Saving money during the Great Depression, how people coped during hard times
  • Week 12: World War 2 (what was happening in Europe and Asia), Pearl Harbor
  • Week 13: World War 2 homefront efforts and rationing, Japanese American incarceration camps, the invention of day-glo colors
  • Week 14: D-Day, Harry Truman’s childhood, Gertie (a duck during WW2)
  • Week 15: Hiroshima and Nagasaki (in a gentle child-appropriate way), the end of World War 2, more about Truman’s life
  • Week 16: The Cold War, finishing learning about Truman, Jackie Robinson
  • Week 17: The Korean War, Reckless the Horse
  • Week 18: Life in the 1950s, President Eisenhower, the Baby Boom, fast food (McDonalds), Brown vs. Board of Education, Rosa Parks, Ruby Bridges
  • Week 19: JFK, Cuban Missile Crisis, John Glenn
  • Week 20: The Children’s Crusade (civil rights), Martin Luther King Jr., Rachel Carson
  • Week 21: The Domino Theory, Vietnam War, LBJ
  • Week 22: Apollo 11, Katherine Johnson
  • Week 23: Nixon, Watergate, Temple Grandin, Gerald Ford
  • Week 24: Jimmy Carter, Jim Henson
  • Week 25: Life in the 1970s, computers and early video games, 1970s gas shortage, Mt. St. Helens eruption
  • Week 26: Ronald Reagan, life in the 1980s
  • Week 27: George H. W. Bush, taxes, early video games
  • Week 28: Operation Desert Storm, birth of the internet, Bill Gates, life in the 90s, computers
  • Week 29: Bill Clinton, Google
  • Week 30: 9/11, search and rescue robots and dogs
  • Week 31: 9/11 continued
  • Week 32: George W. Bush and the 2000 election, life in the early 2000s, Hurricane Katrina
  • Week 33: Hurricane Katrina
  • Week 34: Hurricane Katrina continued, Obama
  • Week 35: Trump’s first election, COVID, CA wildfires of 2018
  • Week 36: Joe Biden, Trump’s reelection and early 2nd presidency

Some of the weekly science topics:
This does not cover every single science concept covered in all the materials and videos. This is just a quick overview of topics.

  • Week 1: Mixing colors/color in art
  • Week 2: Trees
  • Week 3: Flight
  • Week 4: Dogs and puppies
  • Week 5: Birds
  • Week 6: Balloons
  • Week 7: Various experiments from The Boy Who Invented the Popsicle book and topics about freezing
  • Week 8: Erosion
  • Week 9: Dirt/soil and erosion
  • Week 10: Chemical changes in cooking
  • Week 11: Seeds grow into plants
  • Week 12: Continue using Gail Gibbons’ From Seed to Plant Workbook, sinking and floating, what is an engineer
  • Week 13: Continue using Gail Gibbons’ From Seed to Plant Workbook
  • Week 14: Continue using Gail Gibbons’ From Seed to Plant Workbook, ducks
  • Week 15: Finish up Gail Gibbons’ From Seed to Plant Workbook, A Tree is a Plant book, growing bean seeds project
  • Week 16: Science, Matter and the Baseball Park book
  • Week 17: Horses and ponies
  • Week 18: Forces
  • Week 19: Solar system, earth’s orbit, day and night, Mercury, Venus, Mars, meteors
  • Week 20: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, asteroids and comets, Pluto
  • Week 21: Stars and constellations, rockets
  • Week 22: The moon
  • Week 23: Neurodivergence
  • Week 24: Shadows
  • Week 25: Volcano science experiment, 1970s lava lamp science experiment, how Shrinky Dinks work
  • Week 26: Volcanoes continued
  • Week 27: DKfindout! Coding
  • Week 28: DKfindout! Coding, computers
  • Week 29: Finish reading DKfindout! Coding
  • Week 30: Search and Rescue Robots 
  • Week 31: DKfindout! Robots, the science behind slime, robotics kit
  • Week 32: Finish reading DKfindout! Robots, senses
  • Week 33: Hurricanes and natural disasters
  • Week 34: Wind and tornadoes
  • Week 35: Wildfires, what a pandemic is
  • Week 36: There are no science topics for this week.

We do not provide or offer a formal ‘scope and sequence’ document.

There are 36 weeks in this curriculum.

You can keep your files forever, if you save your initial downloads!

Once you’ve downloaded the schedule to your computer or device, you are licensed to use the downloaded copy forever. Make sure you download, save, and back up your items immediately after your purchase! You can click directly on the links in the schedule from a computer or other device and can use your materials with younger students years later.

2 Years to Access Additional Downloads & the Online Schedule*

Additional downloads (after your initial purchase) and access to the online version of the schedule are provided as a courtesy and are not guaranteed due to various potential technical and business (and life!) circumstances. It is our intention to continue to provide access for a period of 2 years from the date of purchase. After the 2-year period, you will have the opportunity to repurchase your access at a substantial discount.

Please note, if you have problems, we have a liberal policy of providing extra, free access for unusual circumstances (at our discretion). Just contact us: guesthollow@memorableplaces.com.

*Access to the online version of the curriculum schedules and additional downloads is provided as a courtesy and is not guaranteed due to potential various circumstances on our end and yours including but not limited to various computer, device, and internet configurations.

Yes, on a case-by-case basis depending on the amount of paperwork they require and the bureaucracy that needs to be navigated. 😉

No, you may NOT resell, share, or distribute any of Guest Hollow’s digital products (or printed out copies of our digital products) which includes but is not limited to schedules, workbooks, printables, and other materials.

Our materials are licensed for a single family’s use only. You may print out as many copies as you reasonably need for siblings or others living in your home.

Please contact us if you wish to use our materials in a co-op or school: guesthollow@memorableplaces.com. We have a fantastic co-op discount program!

Yes. Every family in a co-op or school needs to purchase a copy of our materials (one item per family). We offer a fantastic co-op discount program! Contact us for information about the discount.

Schools need to contact us for school pricing and payment options.

Contact us at: guesthollow@memorableplaces.com.

No. We only offer a digital version at this time. You can print out your materials at home or have them printed via a printing service. The curriculum is also available as an online version.

We are Christians, but Guest Hollow’s Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum is not intended to be a “Christian resource”. However, there may be infrequent (or what we consider to be) minor references, notes, or links to resources that mention Christian ideas, values, or sectarian topics even in our secular/non-religious/neutral curriculums. There are a few notes in the schedule specifically adressing Christians. Those notes are marked and easily skipped and/or can be deleted by secular parents.

All the books scheduled in Guest Hollow’s Little Kids’ Modern American History Curriculum are secular. If you want some Christian books to sub in or add, you can always check out the Big Bad Beautiful Booklist -History Edition for ideas!

Christians and non-Christians should preview the scheduled books and all other resources such as videos, etc. to make sure they are compatible with your beliefs, philosophies, and values.

After purchasing a curriculum, you’ll see that the item you just bought shows that it is discounted 50% in our store. The reason you are seeing this is because we give you the opportunity to repurchase the schedule and your downloads at a substantial discount before they expire (2 years from date of purchase).

Please note: You do NOT need to repurchase your schedule in order to use the files you originally purchased and downloaded. You can use your downloaded schedule forever and can click on the links just as you can the online version of the schedule. You just won’t have access to any updates after your online access expires.

Why does access expire? Every year we go through all our curriculum schedules and update broken links and/or replace books that have gone out of print. This is a very time-intensive process that keeps our curricula up-to-date. Your repurchase helps fund this process and provides you with a schedule that has all the new additions or changes.

You need to repurchase your access BEFORE it expires in order to get the 50% discount due to the way our “membership” software works. If for some reason you miss the deadline, let us know why. We may give you a coupon code for the 50% off at our discretion.

*It is our intention to provide access for a period of 2 years, however, access to the online version of the curriculum schedules and additional downloads is provided as a courtesy and is not guaranteed due to potential various circumstances on our end and yours including but not limited to various computer, device, and internet configurations.

We are happy to answer your questions!!! Just email us at: guesthollow@memorableplaces.com

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