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January 13, 2008 - by Terri Johnson,
author
of Homeschooling ABCs (www.homeschoolingabcs.com
) -
dedicated to helping new homeschoolers gain the
confidence and the necessary skills to successfully teach
their children at home.
Living Books
Why and How You Should Use Them
It is now January and New Year's Day is officially behind us.
This means that most of you have started back with school by
now, and the rest of you are not too far behind. There is
something exciting about getting back to school, back into a
solid routine. Eventually though, comfort of routine wears off
and monotony settles in. How can you keep your children excited
about learning? The answer is to supply them with "living
books."
So, what are "living books" and why should you use them for
teaching your children? Here are some definitions of a living
book:
A living book is written by
a single person, a real and knowable person.
A living book is
a literary expression of the author's own ideas and love of the
subject.
A living book is
personal in tone and feel. It touches the heart and emotions,
and the intellect.
The author of a living
book addresses the reader as an intelligent and
capable thinker.
In a living
book, ideas are presented creatively in a way that
stimulates the imagination.
This idea of a living book stands in stark contrast to a
textbook. So what then is a textbook? Read on:
A textbook is a non-literary
expression of collected facts and information.
A textbook is
impersonal in tone and feel. It touches only the
intellect.
In a textbook,
facts are presented without creativity in a way that deadens
the imagination.
[Excerpted from Educating the WholeHearted Child (copyright
1994, 1996 Clay Clarkson). Used by permission. For more
information, contact Whole Heart Ministries (P.O. Box 3445,
Monument, CO 80132, 719-488-4466) or visit their website at
www.wholeheart.org.]
Charlotte Mason, a British educator from England in the
previous century, whose ideas are currently experiencing a
rebirth among American home schools, wrote this in her volume 1
of The Original Homeschooling Series, "The fatal mistake is in
the notion that he (the student) must learn 'outlines' of the
whole history... just as he must cover the geography of all the
world. Let him, on the contrary, linger pleasantly over the
history of a single man, a short period, until he thinks the
thoughts of that man, is at home in the ways of that period.
Though he is reading and thinking of the lifetime of a single
man, he is really getting intimately acquainted with the
history of a whole nation for a whole age."
Have you ever experienced this in your home schooling
adventures? You set out to cover a certain amount of history in
a particular year, just to find out that your child becomes
fascinated by a single character or time in history. This
happened to us a couple of years ago. We were studying modern
history with the goal of getting through the years 1850 to the
present. I had allotted 4-5 weeks for studying the Civil War,
which I thought was plenty. What I didn't realize was how
fascinated my children were to become with not only this event
in history, but the general time period as well.
After 6 weeks of reading the books I had planned to read and
doing the activities I had planned to do, my children were
begging for more. I reluctantly gave in and let them guide
their own education for a while. They chose more library books
from the time period. My daughter sewed some period clothing,
complete with snood and gloves. My son converted some cast-off
clothing we found at Goodwill into a union soldier's uniform.
We went to a Civil War reenactment, made a soldier's meal of
hard tack and goober peas, and talked Dad into crafting some
wooden rifles in the shop.
We stayed on this topic for probably a total of 9-10 weeks.
Since that time, I have realized that learning does not follow
a set pattern. In fact, more learning often takes place when
allowed to progress naturally rather than on a set schedule.
Last year, we studied the medieval time period. We were
supposed to get to the year 1600, but only studied through a
portion of the 15th century. And we did not get to all of the
historical figures that I would have liked. But those events
and people that my children gravitated toward allowed them to
soak in the particular time period in history and gain more
depth than if I had pushed them through on my schedule.
I am not saying that a schedule is bad. A schedule is a
wonderful and necessary tool, but let it be your slave and not
your master. Take the time to slow down and read "living
books". Read the first part of this article once again to
remind yourself what a "living book" is and learn to identify
them when browsing your library's shelves.
I would like to conclude with a couple more quotes. Karen
Andreola, author of A Charlotte Mason Companion, writes, "If we
want the mind of a child to come alive, we feed him living
ideas. Ideas reside in living books,..."
I am a rather eclectic homeschooling mom and do not follow the
Charlotte Mason method completely. Still, I would like to end
with a final word from Charlotte Mason herself:
"...the
only vital method of education appears to be that children
should read worthy books, many worthy
books." ~Charlotte
Mason
For a list of great books to read, I would recommend that you
check out these books from your library:
Honey for a Child's Heart by Gladys Hunt
Books Children Love by Elizabeth Wilson
and visit this website: ValeriesLivingBooks.com, a ministry to
homeschooling families, which provides an active online
discussion list as well as over 100 pages of free book lists,
reviews, and practical helps.
Valerie writes, "I have chosen Living Books as my primary
curriculum because I want to see my children loving learning
rather than enduring an education! In this, my interest has
never been in books and resources designed to entice reluctant
kids with short attention spans, but rather in materials
carefully written with an evident passion to challenge
children, encouraging them to reason carefully and respond
wholeheartedly."
And finally, if you are studying the Ancient time period,
the Middle Ages, or the Colonial time period this
year, do check out our book series entitled, "What
Really Happened..." The authors who contributed to these books
are passionate about their subject and this delight gets
transferred to the student. This is a great way to introduce
your children to amazing individuals from these time periods
who changed the course of our world. For more details, go to:
Historical
Biographies.
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