Description
One Nation Under God begins with the conviction that God is sovereign over history and that His providence has guided the American story from its earliest foundations. Students explore the spiritual, philosophical, and cultural forces that shaped the United States—from the roots of Western civilization through colonization, revolution, nation-building, and America’s emergence as a global leader.
What This Course Covers
One Nation Under God moves chronologically through the defining eras of American history: colonization, revolution, nation-building, westward expansion, the Civil War, the World Wars, and America’s rise to global leadership. Students examine the spiritual, philosophical, and cultural forces behind each era, exploring how faith, ideology, geography, and remarkable individuals shaped the nation’s path.
Key topics include the Great Awakening, the Constitution, Reconstruction, the Civil Rights Movement, and twenty-first century America. Difficult subjects like slavery and religious persecution are addressed with honesty and biblical grounding.
What Students Will Learn
This course combines historical narrative with primary sources, biographies, maps, and cultural analysis. Students will:
- Examine pivotal events and the people who shaped them, including lesser-known contributors often left out of standard textbooks.
- Analyze primary source documents, speeches, and firsthand accounts.
- Study how geography and cultural movements influenced America’s development in government, religion, language, and economy.
- Explore the diversity that forms America’s melting pot identity through dedicated Melting Pot features.
- Develop academic vocabulary through context-based definitions built into each lesson.
- Think critically and write analytically through end-of-lesson review and application prompts.
Academic and Spiritual Outcomes
One Nation Under God equips students to evaluate history by asking how faith, morality, and worldview shaped outcomes. Students come to understand that liberty requires virtue, freedom depends on responsibility, and history unfolds within God’s greater plan. This course prepares students for college-level academics and for thoughtful citizenship grounded in truth, informed by history, and anchored in faith.
The Student Book at a glance:
- Chronological, full-color lessons covering U.S. history from Western foundations to the modern era.
- Integrated biblical worldview analysis woven throughout every unit.
- Primary source excerpts from historical documents, speeches, and writings.
- Biographies and focus features highlighting influential and often-overlooked historical figures.
- Maps, timelines, charts, and visuals clarifying geography, movement, and cause-and-effect.
- Cultural development sections examining government, religion, economy, and society.
- Melting Pot features exploring America’s diverse peoples and influences.
- Vocabulary support with context-based definitions for building academic literacy.
- End-of-lesson review and application prompts for critical thinking.
- Unit summaries and historical takeaways to reinforce key themes.
The Teacher Guide has an open-and-go design that supports independent student work with minimal teacher oversight thanks to these curriculum features:
- Student worksheets for each lesson and exercise.
- Weekly schedules that organize the course into a clear, day-by-day plan, including built-in cumulative review days and study days.
- Extra projects for optional extension or enrichment.
- Answer keys for all exercises and activities.
- Five exercises per week, structured to guide students through reading, comprehension, analysis, and application.
- Glossary and vocabulary work to reinforce key terms from the Student Book.
- Comprehension questions drawn directly from the reading: short answer, fill-in-the-blank, true/false, and multiple choice.
- Critical thinking sections that go beyond recall: investigative-style questions and analysis.
- Writing and essay prompts for extended responses, historical analysis, and reflection.
- Mapwork and visual analysis activities to connect geography with historical events.
- Discussion questions.
- Biblical worldview analysis integrated throughout lessons, including Scripture-based questions and reflection.
When completed as outlined in the Teacher Guide, this course meets or exceeds the requirements for one credit of high school American history or social studies, making it fully transcript-ready for homeschool families.
*Recommended for 9th – 12th grade.
























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