The Healthful Journey

Home

Blog

Our Coops

PP Ordering

FNF Ordering Form

FNF Pricelist

Maple Syrup Ordering Form

FAQ's about our coops

Schedule for Coop

Coop Stations

Kitchen Store

Layaway Plan

Wondermill

Wondermill Videos

Wondermill Parts

MagicMill Assistent, DLX

MagicMill/DLX Attachments

Recipes

THJ Community

Streusel Coffee Cake

Sweet Potato Muffins

Vegetable Pasta

Italian Lentil Soup

Meatballs

Caramel Popcorn

Why Supplement

Juice Plus

Nordic Naturals

Sessions

Milling for Health

Dough for Many Recipes

Mixing it Up with the DLX

Steps to Healthy Living

Know What You Are Buying

Homeschooling

Method of Education

Support Forum

Local Meetings

About Us

Our Vision

Contact Us

"In this time of extraordinary pressure, educational and social, perhaps a mothers first duty to her children is to secure for them a quiet and growing time, a full six years of passive receptive life, the waking part of it for the most part spent out in the fresh air."

“But one who tries this method on himself will find that in the act of narrating every power of his mind comes into play."


“We cannot measure the influence that one artist or another has on the child’s sense of beauty, upon his power of seeing, as in a picture, the common sight of life..."


"Imagination does not stir at the suggestion of the feeble, much diluted stuff that is too often put into children’s hands."


"The peculiar value of geography lies in its fitness to nourish the mind with ideas and furnish the imagination with pictures."


"Children should be taught their duty toward God. It is their duty. That which they owe, to love Him "with all their heart, with all their mind, with all their strength" these things are seldom taught as they should be."


"Let children alone-...the education of habit is successful in so far as it enables the mother to let her children alone, not teasing them with perpetual commands and directions - a running fire of Do and Don’t ; but letting them go their own way and grow, having first secured that they will go the right way and grow to fruitful purpose."


"A child is a person in whom all possibilities are present - present now at this very moment - not to be educed after many years and efforts manifold on the part of the educator"


"The child must think, get at the reason-why of things for himself, every day of his life, and more each day than the day before. Children and paents both are given to invert this educational process. The child asks "Why?" and the parent answers, rather proud of this evidence of thought in his child.There is some slight show of speculation even in wondering "Why?" but it is the slightest and most superficial effort the thinking brain produces. Let the parent ask "Why?" and the child produce the answer, if he can. After he has turned the matter over in his mind, there is no harm in telling him - and he will remember it - the reason why. Every walk should offer some knotty problem for the children to think out - "Why does that leaf float on the water, and this pebble sink?" and so on."


                "The more we do for a child the less he will do for himself."
                                                   Charlotte Mason


In the homeschool community, we have many options to choose from for our curriculum, and many times it is these options that have cause the overwhelmed feelings many families have felt. These feelings have led to questions like these: 'Have I picked the right curriculum for my unique child?', 'Is Mary using a better program than I am using?', etc.


Charlotte Mason has only three things to consider when it comes to curriculum and planning your child's education, and it will work with whatever curriculum you choose for your family:

  1. Something or someone to love: this can include family members, pets and friends {this would be the social side that everyone is so worried that homeschoolers lack in}
  2. Something to do: of course with this it doesn't mean 'twaddle' things, but rather something that will grow the child's knowledge of something: like responsibilities around the house, building with legos, playing with dolls, exploring outside, a musical instrument or working on hobbies (she calls these handi-crafts) {these would be the activites in their free time or scheduled time}
  3. Something to think about: this should include nature, art, music, living books (a term you will grow to understand and love) and other people's thoughts and ideas, including the Bible. {cleverly disguised as a curriculum}


To understand Charlotte Mason' method you have to understand what she recommended for curriculum and why.

Here is a list of what her method includes*, and you can choose which ones or all of them, you would like to begin using with your child.

Living books

She is well known for her use of living books instead of dry, factual textbooks. Living books are usually written by one person who has a passion for the subject and writes in conversational or narrative style. The size of the book does not matter nearly as much as whether it is "alive" and engaging. Textbooks are allowed if they meet that criterion. "Twaddle" refers to books or information that is dumbed down and insults the child's intelligence. Living books should be used with as many subjects as possible.


Tip: A great tester of an unknown book is to open up to any page and read it for yourself. If the book grabs your attention and you desire to read more than you have probably found a great one!

Narration

Children are expected to tell about what they have read. The narration can be oral or written or drawn and should be performed after only one reading of the material. This method requires the child to synthesize all he has read, organize it in his mind, and determine how best to communicate all that he recalls in his own words.


Tips: This is a great way to implement evaluations of what a child has learn, in place of test that require fill in the blanks, multiple choice or predetermined answers. This give the child something to think about!

Habit training

Children need to learn how to govern themselves. Charlotte encouraged a child's learning the habits of attention, perfect execution, obedience, truthfulness, an even temper, neatness, kindness, order, respect, remembering, punctuality, gentleness, and cleanliness, among others. Usually, a child would work on a specific habit over a four to six week period.

Short lessons

Charlotte advocated short lessons for younger children, growing progressively longer as the child matures. Elementary-age children's lessons should be no longer than fifteen or twenty minutes on one particular subject before moving on to something else. In this way, the habit of full attention is encouraged and children receive a broad education filled with many varied subjects.

Dictation

Charlotte used prepared dictation to teach spelling and reinforce grammar and composition skills. In prepared dictation, the child is given a sentence or passage to study until he is sure he knows all the spelling, capitalization, and punctuation. The teacher then dictates the passage to him, one phrase at a time, watching carefully as he writes to catch any misspelled word and correct it immediately. In this way, spelling is taught within the context of great thoughts and rich language instead of static lists.

Copywork

Handwriting was also taught within the context of ideas, not isolated letters repeated over an entire line or page. For copywork, children are given a phrase, sentence, or paragraph to copy in their best handwriting. The exercise should take only a few minutes each day so as to encourage the habits of attention and perfect execution without becoming tiring.

Art appreciation

Art is another place where living ideas are found. The great ideas of men and women of history are revealed in their works, whether paintings or writings or music. Art appreciation is taught through Picture Study, which introduces the child to the works of a great artist one at a time, allows her to look at it undisturbed, then asks for a narration of what she has observed. Music Appreciation is taught in much the same way, listening to the works of great composers.

Nature study

In Charlotte's schools one afternoon each week was devoted to spending time outdoors. For nature study, children take along a sketchpad to draw and label the different aspects of nature they observe. Regular nature study paves the way for meaningful science instruction.

Math

Charlotte emphasized the importance of children's understanding math concepts before ever doing paper and pencil equations. They should be encouraged to use manipulatives and to think through the whys and wherefores of solving word problems -- in other words, how math applies to life situations.

Poetry

Poetry was an integral part of daily life in Charlotte's schools. However, poetry is not presented in order to be analyzed, criticized, and told what to think about it. Poetry, as in other subjects that introduce the child to great ideas of the past, is shared together and allowed to stand on its own, encouraging the child to develop his own relationship with that poet and his thoughts. Students in Charlotte's schools studied Shakespeare regularly, as well.

Grammar

Since grammar is the study of words, not of things, Charlotte thought it is a difficult concept for young children to grasp. She recommended postponing the formal study of grammar until the child reached the age of ten. Consistent practice in narration, dictation, and copywork lays the foundation for grammar study.

Bible

Charlotte's method of studying the Bible was simple: read it every day. She gave children credit for being able to understand passages directly from Scripture, and she assigned several large portions to be memorized and recited each school year.

History

History is considered most relevant to children through the use of living books, biographies, autobiographies, and narration. In addition, Charlotte's students kept a Book of Centuries that was similar to a personal time line in a notebook. They added people and events to the pages as they studied about them.

Geography

Just as history is the story of what happened to a person, geography is the story of where he was and how his surroundings affected what happened. Geography is best taught through living books, also. Short map drills can supplement.

Foreign language

Since Charlotte lived in England, her students learned French as a second language. Consistent with her philosophy, a foreign language is best taught in a living setting.

*taken from Wikipedia online



The Healthful Journey  © 2006 - 2010
6313 Cookes Farm Drive, Henrico VA 23231 (804) 795-5050

Website powered by Network Solutions®

Support is the key to a successful journey to health!