Course Details:
- 1 live class every other week
- Subscription continues until paused or cancelled
- Live Class Length: 45 minutes
- 12 seats per section
- Homework is assigned
- Teacher feedback given during class
- Materials
Each student will need a copy of the books listed in the schedule. Look at your library. 🙂
Keepers of the Kingdom: Christian Book Club
$19.00 every 2 weeks
Readers will embark on an epic journey through unknown worlds, familiar places, mysterious creatures, daring battles, or a realistic struggle. In each class, we discuss a different book and explore more elements of Christian literature.
Section Options / Enroll:
- Description
- Lesson Schedule
- Class Intro Video
- A Biblical Worldview
- The Lemons-Aid Way
- Teacher Bios
- Outschool
- Request a Section
- Reviews (0)
- Philosophy of Teaching: English Language Arts
Description
In his 1956 essay on writing for children, C. S. Lewis asked, “But supposing that by casting [the abstract truths of God that demand our reverence] into an imaginary world, stripping them of their stained-glass and Sunday school associations, one could make them for the first time appear in their real potency? Could one not thus steal past those watchful dragons?” He believed they could, in the form of a great Lion who lays down His life on a Stone Table, an Emperor across the sea who keeps His every word, a wardrobe that opens onto a country we have always somehow known. Christian families have read these seven books to their children for three generations because Lewis succeeded.
Some Christian families hesitate at the word “magic” in any children’s story, and the caution is honest. Scripture forbids occult practice, divination, and sorcery in language no faithful believer would set aside. The imaginative “magic” of a Christian fantasy belongs to a different category altogether. The “Deep Magic from before the dawn of time” that Aslan invokes at the Stone Table is the unalterable law of the Emperor across the sea, a picture of God’s own ordering of creation. Aslan himself is a Christ-figure, a great Lion who lays down His life and takes it up again because it was the only way to fulfill the law. The Christian fairy story tradition runs from J. R. R. Tolkien and Lewis to modern authors, and the Bible itself draws on imaginative imagery in Daniel’s visions, Revelation’s symbols, and Christ’s own parables. Children who read these books with discerning eyes learn to recognize the shape of the Gospel when they meet it elsewhere.
Kingdom Keepers is the bi-weekly book club where students read in Lewis’s tradition all year long. Each season we make our way through a fantasy or adventure series by a self-professed Christian author, one book every two weeks, with the careful attention these books deserve. The summer 2026 reading is the full Chronicles of Narnia. Other series, by other believing authors who learned from Lewis’s example, follow each season.
Joshua 1:9, our anchor verse, gives us the call that runs through every series we read. “Be strong and courageous. Do not be frightened, and do not be dismayed, for the LORD your God is with you wherever you go.” Lucy needs that courage when she steps through the wardrobe alone. Edmund needs it when he must face Aslan after his betrayal. Caspian needs it when he raises the old standard against his uncle. Every hero in every book we read together faces some version of the same call. We analyze characters and explore themes carefully, reading these Christian authors with the same care we would give any writer. Trusting an author is no excuse for a passive reader.
𝐖𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐘𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐒𝐭𝐮𝐝𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐖𝐢𝐥𝐥 𝐋𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐧:
✅ How to follow extended character arcs across multiple books in a series
✅ Themes of courage, sacrifice, betrayal, repentance, and faithful service
✅ Allegory, symbolism, and the difference between a Christ-figure and Christ Himself
✅ How to read a beloved Christian author with care, holding his words to the light of Scripture
✅ Discussion skills: sharing thoughtful opinions, asking real questions, supporting ideas with the text
𝐖𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐒𝐞𝐭𝐬 𝐓𝐡𝐢𝐬 𝐂𝐥𝐮𝐛 𝐀𝐩𝐚𝐫𝐭:
💎 Bi-weekly rhythm. Every other week the club meets, giving each reader two full weeks to enjoy the next book at a sustainable pace, with no class on the weeks between.
💎 The reading list rotates by season. Each season the club takes on a new fantasy or adventure series by a self-professed Christian author, building a robust reading life across the year.
💎 Christian authors are read with the same care as secular ones. Students learn to ask real questions about Lewis’s choices, his theology, and his craft, rather than passively absorbing because the author is a believer.
𝐏𝐞𝐫𝐟𝐞𝐜𝐭 𝐅𝐨𝐫:
– Fourth through sixth graders ready for full-length novels
– Christian families who want classic literature read through a biblical lens
– Readers who love fantasy and mythic storytelling
– Families looking for a steady, peer-rich summer reading rhythm
Book Club Schedule
✅ The week of May 24, 2026: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe
🌴 The week of May 31, 2026: NO CLASS
✅ The week of June 7, 2026: Prince Caspian
🌴 The week of June 14, 2026: NO CLASS
✅ The week of June 21, 2026: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
🌴 The week of June 28, 2026: NO CLASS
✅ The week of July 5, 2026: The Silver Chair
🌴 The week of July 12, 2026: NO CLASS
✅ The week of July 19, 2026: The Horse and His Boy
🌴 The week of July 26, 2026: NO CLASS
✅ The week of Aug 2, 2026: The Magician’s Nephew
🌴 The week of Aug 9, 2026: NO CLASS
✅ The week of Aug 16, 2026: The Last Battle
Class Introduction Video
Coming soon…
✨ 🍋 ✨ Why Lemons-Aid? ✨ 🍋 ✨
A BIBLICAL WORLDVIEW: The Bible, infallible and inerrant, is the very written word of God, who has revealed Himself to man. The Bible is like the light we cast on all content areas in order to understand it, whether that be literature, physical science, history, or geometry. Students learn all content through a Biblical lens. Theology is important for understanding all subject areas. We carefully curate courses that capture learners’ imagination while pointing them to God through sound doctrine. THIS is most important!
RICH CONTENT / CORE KNOWLEDGE: While other schools and systems try to align their content to broad standards that are vague and open to wild interpretations, we focus our content on what students should know and be able to do so they see the world biblically and head into their adult lives filled with knowledge, wisdom, and mastery of skill such as computing and writing. For over a century, progressive education reform has been “anti-content,” which means they de-emphasize rich content and focus instructional time on things such as self-esteem and “skills” they hope will benefit a learner in the future. This is why American kids do so poorly in testing compared to nations with content-rich curricula. We want our learners to increase in knowledge and grow in wisdom, which our content-area experts foster while teaching.
EXPLICIT TEACHING: We understand the skills and concepts students need to learn and know how to teach them. Lemons-Aid’s materials are top-notch, organized, and clear for students and parents to understand. We are especially skilled at breaking down a complicated process into understandable parts. Further, explicit instruction is “a structured, systematic, and effective methodology for teaching academic skills. It is called explicit because it is an unambiguous and direct approach to teaching that includes both instructional design and delivery procedures. Explicit instruction is characterized by a series of supports or scaffolds, whereby students are guided through the learning process with clear statements about the purpose and rationale for learning the new skill, clear explanations and demonstrations of the instructional target, and supported practice with feedback until independent mastery has been achieved.”
- Explicit Instruction: Effective and Efficient Teaching by Anita L. Archer and Charles A. Hughes.
Anita Archer trained Mrs. Lemons in workshops, and it changed her teaching. Read a little more about the research behind explicit teaching here and here.
STUDENT ACCOUNTABILITY = ACHIEVEMENT: Students master skills with us and make gains. We have a high degree of accountability. Since we make promises here and parents are paying good money, we understand you trust us to work! Students have to work too, and let’s be honest: they’re kids and don’t always want to. We push it. We teach them how to stay engaged, we cold-call on kids, we tell them to use the chatbox, and we want them to use emojis! If they are resistant, we contact the student through the teacher tab first. If that doesn’t work, we call in the big guns–Mom and Dad. We want kids to learn. We don’t want them to pass through our classes without gaining skills and doing great learning.
DO HARD THINGS. Boost your confidence, master new skills, learn new concepts. This takes a commitment to do hard things. Like the standards we have for our teachers, we also expect our learners to do hard things, whether that means they stand firm in their convictions, learn geometry, write an essay, or give an oral presentation. You can do hard things!
HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS: To balance our high expectations for their learning and behavior, we build relationships with them. We want them to know we care about and know them. We’ll ask about their play last weekend or the new trick they’re trying to master on the skateboard. We also want students to get to know each other and encourage community engagement.
DEPENDABLE: Multiple teachers are teaching this class, and we have an entire year of lessons planned and scheduled. Since we are a mission-driven organization, we protect our brand and the relationships with our families. We are accountable to our learners. When things come up for teachers, we work to get substitutes and do everything we can before canceling a class. We do not like canceling or changing, and we often teach classes at a loss to give others a chance to join. We have limits, of course, but we are not flippant or irresponsible about canceling! When things come up for students, since we have multiple sections, they can transfer from section to section. All our teachers teach the same content the same week, giving families even more flexibility!
TEACHER FEEDBACK: The back-and-forth work between a student and teacher significantly benefits a student if done well. We follow best practices in designing class time, assignments, and routines. According to Pennington Publishing, effective writing feedback (or grading) is:
- Specific, not general
- Immediate, not postponed
- Routine with a revision / feedback cycle
- Explanatory
- The right amount
- Targeted to the most critical issues
- Varied (written, audio, and video comments)
- Holding students accountable
WORKSHOP TIME: We use “workshop time” so students will work while the teacher answers questions, gets them started, and holds them accountable. In a writing class, the teacher “visits” learners on their Google Documents and watches and helps them write. The immediacy of the feedback/revision cycle with the instructor allows writers to improve rapidly. Additionally, once we started using this method in writing classes, we saw nearly a 100% completion rate in student essays!
GRAPHIC ORGANIZERS: Students need graphic organizers to help them see the structure and breakdown of a concept or process. For example, we use them to help learners understand how to write a paragraph or essay and to use the writing process. This is how they learn to develop coherent ideas. They don’t figure out how to do this magically; the graphic organizers and the intentional, explicit teaching help them learn the skills!
STUDENT MASTERY: Each class includes explicit, direct instruction with teacher modeling. Students are guided toward mastery of skills and understandings to grasp the concepts and become independent. Students are held to a high standard of academic work, including often ignored skills like the use of grammar and neatness in math.
STUDY THE BEAUTIFUL
We are surrounded by the mediocre, which is not good! We see this in expectations at some schools, the poor customer service at a store, and even architecture like in a gray, uninspiring complex of high-occupancy housing.
In contrast, we are surrounded by the beautiful, which is good! We see the beautiful in classic literature, music, and beautiful architecture like pictured here.
The mediocre demoralizes learners while the beautiful inspires.
At Lemons-Aid Learning, we study the beautiful: classic literature, artful sentence construction, art, poetry, maths, God’s hand in all of history, and God’s very creation. His creation glorifies Him, and in our study of all content areas, we learn about who God is.
We do not compromise. This means we don’t choose a graphic novel of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. We read the original play. We know how to make the complexity and beauty of classic study approachable and understandable to a modern audience. It’s more difficult, but worth the effort!
CUSTOMER SERVICE
We serve the Lord and we work hard for families. We work to give quick responses to questions, authentic and careful feedback, and to solve any conflict. As home educators ourselves, familiar with the joys and struggles of teaching our own children, we can relate! We are supporting families, equipping learners, and serving Christ. We are 100% devoted to Him and to you!
To read more about our teaching and learning methods, read our blogs, written by our teachers and staff.
The Lemons-Aid Team
Lemons-Aid teachers have a few things in common.
❤️ They love their students and value each of their unique strengths and personalities that make our classes special. Our classes can be described as fun, personal, academic, challenging, and supportive.
🤩 We work to keep learners engaged, so there is always a degree of student accountability for their attention and focus, whether that be through asking them direct questions or by using the chatbox.
💭 We know all kids can learn, but sometimes things are hard! To support students, we teach them how to develop effective thinking and learning habits that will bring them success in class and in life.
🌟 Building relationships with students so they know we care about them helps us balance the high expectations we have for them regarding their effort, work quality, and behavior. Our students are encouraged, cared for, and they achieve!
𝙆𝘼𝙍𝙀𝙉 𝙇𝙀𝙈𝙊𝙉𝙎: English Language Arts
#High-Energy #Skilled #Experienced #Relational #Fun #Faithful
Karen is the Founder of Lemons-Aid. She has a bachelor’s degree in English, a minor in Education, and a master’s degree in Education Administration from Liberty University. With a teaching certificate and a principal’s license in both Washington and Colorado, she has many years of experience teaching English Language Arts and History / Social Studies at the middle school and high school levels. Additionally, she is TESOL and TEFL certified and enjoys teaching English Language Learners from all over the world. She has worked in private and public schools at every level and is currently an affiliate faculty member at Colorado Christian University, supervising teacher candidates in their undergraduate and graduate teacher education programs. She is a teacher of teachers. A homeschool mom herself, she admits that teaching other people’s kids is easier than teaching her own teenage boys! She lives in the Denver, Colorado area where she cheers on the Broncos, Avs, and the Rockies, but her favorite athletes are her own kids who play hockey and baseball!
𝑱𝑬𝑵𝑵 𝑹𝑰𝑨𝑳𝑬: English Language Arts
#Experienced #Knowledgeable #Empowering #Patient #Rises Above the Ordinary.
As a certified English teacher, Jenn has taught in some capacity over the course of the past twenty-five years. She has taught middle school and high school English classes in both private and public school settings, tutored international ESL students online, developed and taught literature and public speaking classes for a local homeschool co-op, and homeschooled her own two children. Jenn has a bachelor’s degree in English Education. A strong believer in lifelong learning, Jenn has also taken several graduate-level courses related to teaching. Jenn enjoys spending time with her husband, Mark, and their two teenagers. She enjoys taking day trips close to where they live in upstate New York. In her spare time, Jenn enjoys singing and performing in plays. Additionally, she enjoys curling up on the sofa to read a good book. More than likely, one of her four cats will be curled up at her feet.
Christian Teachers on Outschool
Lemons-Aid Coupon Code:
We want to serve you on Lemons-Aid! For first-time learners on Lemons-Aid, you can use the coupon code Newbie20 to get $20 off your first class.
Outschool Coupon Code:
If the schedule on this platform doesn’t work for you, we will happily teach you on Outschool, but we can’t talk about Jesus. Use this referral code and get $20 off your first class on Outschool: LEMONSA2020
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Request a New Section
Want to see this class offered at another time? Send a request, and we’ll see what we can do!
ENGLISH:
The most essential reason people must become competent readers is to read the word of God. This is how God communicates with His people, and literacy is critical for developing a biblical worldview. Competent readers can engage in the Word of God and other texts with much thinking and reflection. Readers should be able to decode, understand, remember, analyze, synthesize, evaluate, make inferences, make connections, and apply learning from reading to other subject areas and the rest of life. Readers grow in knowledge and wisdom and can let the Word of God renew their minds and transform their hearts, becoming thinkers who can engage the world for Christ.
When writing, we are turning ideas into words that communicate. Written communication should be functional, truthful, orderly, coherent, creative, and beautiful, all traits present in God’s written words in the Bible, which we want to emulate.
Communication skills are essential for believers. The communication skills taught in English will help learners communicate with others and to be confident public speakers. These skills are essential when sharing the gospel message. Our voices are tools that help us show Jesus to others as we witness to the world through what we say–and what we don’t say (see Colossians 4:6, James 1:19-20, Ephesians 4:29, and Proverbs 10:19). We serve a creative God who has given us all kinds of tools to help communicate His message.
LITERATURE:
Stories often serve as powerful vehicles for truth. For example, the prophet Nathan used a parable to reveal King David’s sin in 1 Samuel 12:1-4. Similarly, Jesus frequently used parables to teach profound spiritual lessons. Literature clearly offers timeless insights that reflect the complexities of life, guiding us toward His wisdom and understanding.
All truth is God’s truth. Even unbelievers use universal themes in their writing that clearly point to deeper truths about life and the human condition. For example, authors often use theme concepts related to justice, love, or integrity. These concepts reveal a glimpse of God’s truth– whether the author acknowledges it or not–because all truth originates from God (John 17:17).
Throughout English and literature courses, learners will read about individuals who made flawed decisions. As Romans 3:23 reminds us, “For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” Literature provides a window into humanity’s fallen nature, allowing students to learn from the mistakes and successes of characters. By engaging with literature, students will gain timeless insights into the complexities of life, as reflected in Proverbs 2:6: “For the Lord gives wisdom; from His mouth come knowledge and understanding.”



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