Archive for the 'Homeschooling' Category

The Only Way To Learn

How do you learn?

            Some people say they learn best by listening to oral instructions, others say they like to read something for it to really stick. Other people say they learn by doing, and some need to hear it, read it, AND do it before it becomes ingrained knowledge. Most studies that analyze this sort of thing say you really learn how to do something by teaching it.

            As it turns out, they are all wrong.

            None of these methods actually provide the ideal learning experience.  Sadly, most of them are the only option given a child in a school setting with lots of other children vying for the single teacher’s attention. How often did your teacher have the time to do anything but lecture, assign reading, or assign an occasional writing assignment? I didn’t get the chance to teach a topic to other students until I was in college (an experience I enjoyed so much that I decided to get a master’s in education).

            No, we are not empty vessels that need filling—we are developing minds, bodies and spirits that need constant feeding, and we are hard-wired to seek out whatever knowing we need to become full fledged, self-actualized beings. It would be so nice and simple if having that knowledge handed to us on a silver platter all neatly packaged, illustrated and summarized got us to self-actualized adult… but we all know it can’t be that easy. And it shouldn’t be!

            The knowledge that means something to us and that sticks with us for a lifetime is the knowledge we acquire in our own way at our own time.

            Though we cannot learn for our children, we as parents serve an extremely important function in all this, albeit a constantly challenging one!  We provide circumstances that provide learning opportunities, who feed tantalizing bits without giving anything away, who avoid giving a straight answer to any question, and who seek new understanding ourselves and model the process for our children.

            I have to say, as someone who grew up in a public school setting where the teachers were supposed to know everything (and often claimed that they did), I’m having some difficulties following this path myself with my own children.   But I know the rightness of this way of teaching, and I experience justification for it regularly. I teach a writing circle with two eleven-year olds and a ten-year old, all girls, and we all write narratives together telling stories from our lives. As new writers, their stories tend to be full of “telling”, descriptions of what happened rather than having the action happen in the story. Over the last few weeks, I’ve hinted in various ways how their writing would be served by writing action, including dialogue and such. I was uniformly ignored… until today when I had them bring in their favorite books, read the opening pages, and discuss what made those pages draw in the reader. I said very little, but all of them on their own soon realized that the books described the action using rich detail and snappy dialogue, while their own writing simply told the reader what happened—the old “show, don’t tell” issue. One girl rewrote her opening immediately and read it for us. It was beautifully done, and we all told her so.

            And I KNOW you can’t tell anyone anything, but I keep trying it, not because I think it’s the best way, but because I haven’t quite figured out the sneaky way. But what power we give our children, when we leave them to discover the world for what it is—and then they can teach their newfound knowledge to US! How rich an experience for all of us!

Finding Meaningful Work for My Children as A Middle-Class Family

I was recently re-reading Teach Your Own by John Holt and A Different Kind of Teacher by John Gatto. [For those of us unfamiliar with John Holt,  he was a leading author and advocate for a different way of learning for children. He’s one of the primary influencers in the unschooling approach to homeschooling.  John Gatto is the former outstanding teacher from NY who won several awards and has since left the school system and is also an advocate for alternative approaches to teaching our children.]

Every time I read these books, I am able to understand and absorb more of what they mean.  One key theme I get from both books is the advantage of involving and exposing children to real work.  Children are incredibly smart and like to feel and know they are doing something meaningful and important.  When I think of involving children in a family’s work, I think of children helping their parents on their farms and in home businesses.  As I contemplate this, I get a bit antsy because it feels impossible for us to accomplish.  My husband is an engineer and works for a corporation and my work as an EFT practitioner doesn’t seem conducive to involving the children.  I think that maybe we can start raising chickens or some other “project” to get them involved.  [I hold the ideal of a farm-based family as one I should be aspiring to, I just haven’t gotten there yet. ]

And then when I look around the house and think of my to-do list, I notice how much work I already have and the thought of another project to involve the children feels overwhelming.  I am just now realizing the irony of the situation.  I already have too much to do;  why do I want to add another project just for the children to have something to do?

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The Craft Closet at our House

sage and kiya felting.JPGThis is a list of what I keep on hand for art and craft time at our house. We actually keep a special set of block and stick crayons and Ferby pencils just for school work, along with the expensive watercolors and paper. The rest is open for use as needed.

· Plain White drawing paper
· Cardstock- soft ivory and black, plus a color assortment
· Watercolor paper (the medium cheap stuff from Strathmore, save Arches cold press 300 lb. for our best work) I buy 50-20×30” sheets at the beginning of the year
· Recycled papers from wrappers, magazines, catalogs
· Old greeting cards and photos I’m not using for our scrapbook
· Tissue Paper- bleeding and non-bleeding types

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Creating my Homeschool Rhythm

This is the first year that I feel like Sage is really chomping at the bit to get started ‘learning’ officially. We’ve known since Sage was 6 months old that this was the path for our family, and I truly never doubt that homeschooling is the right thing for us both as a whole family unit and as individuals. This year though, I find myself on the cusp of discovery: what will it be like to balance our lives and truly ‘do school’.

We draw from two main educational pedagogies: Waldorf (based on Rudolf Steiner’s writings) and Enki Education (based on the work of Beth Sutton). I have spent the past six years immersing myself and the whole family in Waldorf and Enki methods, ideas, books, conversations, preparing to learn together in a way that will fit our family.

One of the most important concepts I ever learned was about finding our family rhythm. But rhythm is a funny thing- no one can sell you a rhythm, no one can tell you what your family’s rhythm should be, no one can really even tell you about their own rhythm… you have to live it to really feel it. When I first became a mother I was still in a phase of rejecting ‘routine’ and ’scheduling’. After being a witness to the extremes of both rigid scheduling of family life and the opposite style of complete chaos reigned in only by external constraints I had chosen to live much more in the chaos realm and had to learn my lessons the hard way.

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Reviews of our favorite Co-operative Games from Family Pasttimes

My two oldest kids have been interested in games since they were each just about 2 years old. Rhys, now 20 months, is also starting to show a general interest in just what is going on when we all gather around the big colorful board on the floor. And some days she doesn’t even try to eat all the game pieces!

When Sage first showed an interest in games at a playmate’s house I of course had to get the first game that I remembered loving as a child- Candyland! She was barely 22 months when she first began to ‘play’ this with us. It was more an exercise in parental patience than anything, but still it was fun. Then the reality hit when she turned three and really grasped the concepts of playing a game. She was in love! But, I was both bored to tears and unispired by the games we could find on our regular toy store shelves.

Don’t get me wrong, theris nothing wrong with a game from my own childhood… Candyland, Chutes and Ladders, Cooties. All are fine, but they just didn’t get me excited to get down on the floor and play with her.

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Summer School… I mean not school

I thought I’d give a bit of a look at what we have been doing for the summer.

Sage has taken an interest in Native American life and especially the horses. So, we have been reading about them and we just started a teepee project together. I am trying to figure out what to make the teepee out of, we’re brainstorming together. She has been making eleborate horse villages where the horses take on all the traits of real horses and combine them with some humna charachteristics.

The library has been our best friend lately, and the baby has even stopped ripping all the books off the shelves every visit! Today there were some new summer-help library staff in the children’s library. I was so greatful, since our library apparently has a policy to only hire the dour, rude or shy type of librarians. I especially like the ones who when they find out you homeschool, can no longer meet your gaze without disdain. At least the younger ones are nice and happy to help.

Torin found a book today called Captain Flinn and the Pirate Dinosaurs. It’s not our usual fare, but it cracked me up because the title was so obviously a draw for the “boys’ boy”. I mean pirate dinosaurs? why not just have them all collect bugs first and then fly into space… I think we’ll have covered all the ‘boy’ bases then. A sure best seller.

Rhys has even jumped on the book bandwagon this summer. Of course her interest is more of the obsessive “read..me…read..me….boooooooookkkkkk!” type. Her current favorite is One Moose Twenty Mice book from Barefoot Publishing. And it’s actually not a bad choice for reading oh, 100 times a day.

At least I can’t blamethe kids obsiession with books on anyone but myself. Tonight I’ll start a review list of Must-Reads. I’m a bit obsessed myself!

~jo

Homeschooling and gardening… the metaphor.

This summer is my time for planting seeds. Not the seeds you put in the ground, but the ones I plant in my head, in my journals and in my planning notebooks for homeschooling. I have three little ones, Sage (6.6 yrs) Torin (4 yrs) and Rhys(19 months), and our family uses an eclectic and holistic approach to learning at home and in the world rather than attending traditional schools and preschools. Although we are only just now finishing out first ‘official’ year of homeschooling, this journey began when our oldest was only 6 months old. Now, it is such an integral part of our lives, I can’t imagine not doing it.

Just like the cycle of planting, tending and harvesting a garden, our family’s homeschooling journey needs time to emerge into each new stage. Each day brings the unexpected which forces the plan to remain fluid and living, each child brings personality and being which forces the plan to be exciting and diverse. I collect the tools, research the techniques, plan, dream, then tend the garden everyday… It takes an entire year to play out, and some of the stages overlap or repeat, but in the end I feel like I’ve not only harvested a beautiful crop but also really enjoyed the process of creating a ‘garden of learning’. Wow- that is one drawn out metaphor- bedtime is certainly in order!This blog is going to serve several purposes. I’m hoping to use it as a journal of our learning, and my process of gathering and shaping the homeschool journey. I also want to share with you all the best and the worst of what I have found. If I plan a dismal failure of a lesson, take an amazing trip or find the best new creative game, you’ll be sure to read about it here. ~jo

Working through our first group math lesson

The number One. The Monad. The ONE. The purest form, the source and birth of all… without the one there is no ‘other’.

Esoteric enough for you?

I finally found my way into the number qualities block, and it was through a door I had no idea I would ever enjoy. Actually I’m not certain I knew it exsisted before a couple of years ago. The spiritual side of numbers, the beauty, the intrinsic Nature of Number. The correlation of the spiral, the circle, the line…considered the purest form of thought and acedamia in Plato’s age. Mathematics.

I found a book titled A Beginner’s Guide to Creating the Universe and it opened me up to the beauty and non-threatening nature of numbers. The author warmed my heart with his tales of being lost in the boredom and tediousness of math in school. This was EXACTLY what was causing all of my aprehension about teaching math. I too was bored, and then through learned apathy became a ‘bad’ math student. I want so much for my own children to feel at home with numbers and to feel their connection with the entire universe around them. The book has really helped me to find that spirit. I would not recommend actually using it with a child until after the age of 9 when the learning style changes to a more intellectual capability, but it would be a great asset for learning Artistic Geometry together with your older child. And I am finding that just reading it is giving me the depth I need to bring the kids into the sense of each number.

We have done number one, the kids realized quickly that they are each a ONE. The essence of the number being uniquness I would say that each child is the definition of a ONE. Nature never repeats herself exactly, each of these children with me is a completely unique expression of her heritage, birth, parenting, world….

If I can’t find beauty in that, then where could I?

Creating our Enki inspired learning circle, the first day.

PICT0028.JPGToday was the first day of our Enki-inspired Learning Circle. This is a two part group, the older kids are 6-9 years old and the younger kids (Little Enkis) are 9months to 4 years. I am \leading the older kids in a Main Lesson Story, Drawing related to the Story, games, Circle and Handwork or Recorder. In later months we will add in French with a Waldorf-trained French teacher who taught my own kids last year. The Little Enkis will be co-led by two dear friends, Kerrie and Stacy. They will have a Circle, Story puppet play, Free play and simple craft or art project.
So, today we met for the first time, though we were minus one family who only returned from vacation yesterday. The kids spent the day feeling out this new group, though most knew each other from previous activities the dynamic was completely different by having only kids of traditional ‘school age’ vs. a wide range from birth-teen. The group has only 1 boy right now, and I was concerned that he might feel singled out in some way, but as luck would have it two of the girls have very competitive, masculine energies and they work well together. The ages were also of concern, there is one almost 6, three 6.5, two 8.5 and one almost 10 year old. I am concerned with meeting all of these different developmental levels; the parents of the group though see this as more of a positive social experience, with any academic goals eing secondary to knowing that the kids will create lasting friendships with other home educated kids.
It was POURING rain today. We started with a circle that lasted for 45 minutes, repeating each song and verse three times so that they could really sink in. We didn’t do all of the seasonal autumn verses as it was a warm day, and will probably stay warm for a while yet. The kids all participated in circle, Sage had a bit of trouble sharing her space and her mom with everyone but came around to each activity in her time.
After circle I lit a candle, laid out a crystal, and knelt on my meditation cushion. I chose to read rather than tell stories to the group to relieve some of the pressure of preparation each week. I read the first half of the little Falcon story and they all sat on their cushions entranced. Afterwards, they all received their pouches from me. Next week I will continue and they will here the whole story start to finish so that the missing family will be up to speed.
We had a nice snack at the table, then cleared the table and they played for a few minutes to burn off energy. When they seemed ready, we moved back to the table to introduce block crayons- not all the kids had used them before. I had a big basket of them and asked each child to be sure to cover their paper completely (this encouraged them to use the wide edges of the crayons). They really absorbed in this, though most made just color patterns, some drew pictures.
As they finished coloring I led them through the origami folding of boats http://www.origami-instructions.com/origami-boat.html They each needed help with some steps, but overall they got it and everyone was excited when they finished with a boat. At this point it had stopped pouring and we went for a walk to the river. I quickly sewed little strings through the bow of each boat and we walked down and rolled up our pants and floated them in the water. The river was running so we couldn’t go far. The crayon wax coating was very helpful in keeping the boats afloat. We were walking down to the bridge at a neighbors when two of the kids were stung by bees- we stopped to pop jewelweed- so we ran into my mom’s house next door for some ice. The stung kids recovered very quickly, no allergies thank goodness!
By the time we reached home it was time for lunch together, then the Little Enkis were back with their moms to pick up the kids. All in all, I think it was a great first day!