Are there any history museums or festivals in your area where you could visit? Or a reenactment? These bring history to life the best and can spark interests in reading on a related history topic. They can also spark a creative interest like sewing a costume from that time period or writing a story in that setting.
We also enjoy watching history documentaries. We recommend Drive Thru History. These are available on DVD or watch for free streaming through iTBN on their website or Roku channel.
I like to use a mix of history books of nonfiction, biographies, and historical fiction. SCM history modules do this too. Good living books help pull the reader into the topic of study. We limit time spent on each day’s history lesson. Can you go by a timed lesson instead of the assignment from the MFW guide? When the timer goes off, put a bookmark there. Allow some time for a narration and pick up where you left off the next day.
This year for 9th grade, we are using the curriculum retrofam mentioned. For Ancient Civilizations and the Bible, there are booklists for each of the nine units to choose books you want to read. We add in the appropriate Drive Thru History DVD for Egypt, Greece, and Rome. There is lots of Bible and archaeology you can study with it. For CM methods, I require a daily oral or written narration from the lesson.