Showing posts with label Homeschool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homeschool. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2016

Wendell Berry and A Sabbath Mood



The Angelus, by Jean-Francois Millet
 
 
Whatever is foreseen in joy
Must be lived out from day to day.
Vision held open in the dark
By our ten thousand days of work.
 
The hand must ache, the face must sweat.
And yet no leaf or grain is filled
By work of ours; the field is tilled
And left to grace. That we may reap,

Great work is done while we’re asleep.
When we work well, a Sabbath mood
Rests on our day, and finds it good.
 
-Wendell Berry, 1979, no. X

I read this poem a few years back on the blog that takes its title from this same poem. I was struck by the beauty and realism in this poem for us homeschooling families. We work hard and yet the growth is up to God. It is to Him we look. Yet we don't leave the fields unplowed. Indeed, "the hand must ache, the face must sweat." But it is God who gives the increase as the Apostle Paul says in his letter to the Corinthians. We are not in this alone and that should give us great comfort.

*************

A few weeks ago, in the library, I came across a book of poetry by Wendell Berry. I was eager to read it because of my experience with the above poem. So I have been reading my way through it and then this week I came across an article, on The Gospel Coalition, about our need for Wendell Berry's perspective on nurturing as opposed to exploitation. Read it here: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/wendell-berry-and-the-revitalized-pastor



Friday, February 06, 2015

Educating Image Bearers



Charlotte Mason's first principle of education is that children are born persons. This is the foundation of her educational philosophy. What does being born a person mean? At the least, it means that the child is a person already, not one in the making. A child from birth, or might we say from conception, is a person made in the image of God. This may seem natural and it is, but it is rarely if ever taken into account when educating a child. In our day, we label children as though they are products. We treat them as empty buckets to be filled or clay to be molded. Many educators believe children are no more than animals. Therefore, Charlotte Mason's foundational principle that children are born persons is really a colossal statement.

Our view of the child is of primary importance, for it will determine how we choose our curriculum, how we go about applying our methods of education, and how we treat our students. As Christians, we affirm that children are born persons. They are not animals or products, but persons made in the image of God. With this is mind, let us begin by asking, what sort of curriculum is fitting for a person?



 Anthony A. Hoekema's book, Created In God's Image, is a very thorough explanation of man being created in God's image. It explores the relevant biblical passages and discusses historical interpretations of the Imago Dei.  He makes many interesting points, but what stands out for us as educators, is his emphasis that, "The image must be seen in man's threefold relationship: toward God, toward others, and toward nature." (p.95) Charlotte Mason recognizes this threefold relationship and shows that the education of a person lay in these three areas. As a person the child ought to know about God, mankind, and the world in which he lives. Jack Beckman expounds on this idea in his essay, “Education is the Science of Relations.” He says,

"As the child enters this world of truth [the reality of the fall of man, the created order, and the redemptive work of Christ]...perspective of the world comes into view- a lens the child uses to evaluate and judge, peruse and wonder upon what she sees, hears, and reads. The worldview is developed as the child comes more and more into relationship with her primary Source found in the Savior and Scripture. And this worldview becomes the foundation for understanding and enjoying many other aspects of knowledge. Built upon this foundation is the knowledge of humankind as expressed through history, literature, citizenship, morals and ethics, composition, languages, art and music, as well as the knowledge of the universe through science, geography, mathematics, physical development, and handcrafts.... In fact, the curriculum of the school must be structured around these three relationships.... the knowledge of God, humankind, and the universe..." (When Children Love to Learn, ed. by Elaine Cooper, p. 120)

What we see is two fields of learning flowing from the first and foremost relationship, that of our relationship with our Creator and Savior. A comprehensive curriculum will be sure to include all three fields of study, for these are fitting for a person.


The threefold relationship determines the proper curriculum for a person, but one must not forget the three aspects of a person. A person is not just a physical mind, but he also has emotions and a will.  In the above mentioned book, Hoekema spent an entire chapter discussing the image as relating to the whole person. In this chapter he emphasizes the fact that we are more than physical. We are both physical and spiritual. He says, "The teacher should never forget that the pupil he or she is teaching is a whole person. The school therefore should not just train the mind, but should also appeal to the emotions and the will, since effective teaching should produce in the pupil both a love for the subject and a desire to learn more about it.” In reading this, one cannot help but think of CS Lewis', The Abolition of Man. Lewis makes the tongue-in-cheek comment that today many so-called educated people may seem as though they have large heads, but in reality it is just that they have no chests. His point is that modern education has abandoned trying to persuade the heart and has focused only on a non-emotional appeal to mind. Hoekema goes on to say, “Schools, further, should evidence a concern for the body as well as for the mind." (p.224) Sitting at a desk all day without giving thought to the needs of the body is a failure in many of our schools that can easily be remedied. Allowing children more time in the outdoors on a daily basis will certainly benefit the education of the whole person. This neglect of the body and emotions is due to a deficient view of who the child is. When we see the child as a person we see his needs and we are able to respond accordingly.




Let us, as Christian educators, not get pulled into a narrow vision of education, one that is only filling the mind with information or developing skills for a career. We are not educating products or animals.  We are seeking to educate persons made in the image of God. Therefore, we must remember this threefold relationship that is their inheritance and let us give them a robust education, an education for the whole person or as Miss Mason would say, let us lay before them a feast.






Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Our School Week


Here is a peak inside our school week.


Term 1

Day 1

Math- This year we are using Developmental Math: Book 8

History- Our Island Story By H E Marshall

Poetry- Walter De la Mare

Nature Walk and Observation


Day 2

Math

Poetry

Burgess Animal Book (this book is written in story form and tells about mammals)

Composer Study- Vivaldi

History Tale- The Little Duke by Charlotte Yonge


Day 3

Math

Poetry

Art Lesson/Nature Journal

Geography-Tree In the Trail by Holling C. Holling

Church History- Trial and Triumph by Richard Hannula (this does not happen every week, but about once every 3 weeks)


Day 4

Math

Poetry

Burgess Animal Book

Artist Study- Vincent van Gogh


Day 5

Math

Timeline (this is where we add to our timeline any new events or people we have read about during the week)

Art Lesson- Water Colors

Zoology- Birds


Added to all this my 2nd grader studies Latin and a Bible curriculum with his daddy each week and has a free reading time each afternoon. My Kindergarten student studies Phonics each day and joins his brother for Art, Nature, and Composer Studies.


For the most part we are finished with school by lunch time and the boys have the rest of the day to play and explore. This gives me the time to attend to meals and other homekeeping duties, not to mention my sweet 3 year old!


Thursday, February 28, 2008

Homeschool Research/Reading



I really don't remember how we decided to homeschool. It seems like we just always planned on it. Regardless of how we got the idea, we were certain we wanted to do whatever it took to educate our children outside of government schools. When our oldest was just a baby I began to ask homeschooling mothers, "What is your favorite homeschooling book?" In this way I began to read about different methods and models. My goal was to read one book per year. I have found this to be very helpful and I continue this practice even today.





Here is the list that I was given before I began homeschooling (and I think this is the order I read them)-
  1. Better Late Than Early, by Raymond Moore
  2. The Christian Homeschool, by Gregg Harris
  3. The Well-Trained Mind, by Susan Wise Bauer and Jessie Wise
  4. Educating the WholeHearted Child, by Clay and Sally Clarkson
  5. Homeschooling for Excellence, by David and Micki Colfax
    Books I have read since beginning to Homeschool:
  6. For the Children's Sake, by Susan Schaeffer MaCauley
  7. Recovering the Lost Tools of Learning, by Douglas Wilson
  8. Home Education, by Charlotte Mason

This has helped to both shape our homeschool and keep me inspired as a home educator.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Composer Study

A performance of Handel's Messiah was a treat after studying him for 12 weeks.


Once a week we take time for Composer study/music appreciation. Our school year is divided up into three 12 week terms. The ideal is to study a new composer each term. This year we are only studying two composers because that is simply all we could manage. Our first half of the school year we studied Handel, and currently we are studying J.S. Bach.

Ambleside Online has compiled a huge list of composers and their works to be studied. They have plenty of helps to get you started. We use much of their information, but shape it to fit our family.



This is all new to me. In my college days, I took a music appreciation class and was quite overwhelmed. I had never before studied anything like it. I grew up on Seattle grunge and Rock music. Thankfully, I am not passing that legacy onto the children. Rather, I am attempting to train their taste from a young age. This, like Nature Study, is giving us wholesome pleasures to pursue.