Making it a Lifestyle:
Thankfully, learning is not relegated to merely the children. Learning is not only for children, but for all of us. As we actively participate in the learning process our lives become characterized by a lifestyle of learning. It is truly a family affair!
Developmentally Appropriate:
While we are all wired to learn, young children’s brains are wired differently than an older child or adult brain. Jean Piaget, Maria Montessori, Charlotte Mason, Rudolf Steiner, Raymond Moore in addition to countless modern developmental psychologists are all in agreement that how a child learns in the first 7 or so years is fundamentally different than for older children. They learn best primarily through play and in a more holistic, experience based way.
We live in a culture that is focused on producing ‘super-kids’ and there is incredible pressure to introduce formal academics in order to give your child an edge. Not only is there no research to back up this focus on formal academics in the early years, there is considerable evidence that it can indeed harm a child and crush their ability and interest in learning.
Adaptable:
Each child is unique. What works for one child, might not work for another. Taking an individualistic approach to education can really go a long way to engaging them in the learning process and helping them to succeed!
Hands-On:
“Without experiences, there are no concepts. Without concepts there is no attention. Without attention, they don’t know what you are talking about.”
~Jane Healy in Endangered Minds
Making learning hands-on helps in retaining information you are learning. Finding ways to get my children’s bodies involved, especially for my boys at this young age are vital. For some children (I was one of those) this hands on, whole-body approach is needed throughout their formal schooling years.
Philosophy and Science of Education
For the Children’s Sake: Foundations of Education for Home and School
This is one of those ‘wow’ books that really helped solidify my vision for a holistic approach to education and life in general! I reviewed it here.
Endangered Minds: Why Children Don’t Think and What We Can Do About ItThis is the book that got me started on my fascination with the science of how children learn. I even explored the option of going back to grad school to pursue this further… (Back in my post homeschool student, post biology undergraduate and pre-kid stage of life!) The review from amazon sums it up quite succinctly saying that this book is “a fascinating exploration of today’s much-deplored decline in school achievement….[Healy] clearly conveys the relationship between language, learning, and brain development, then explains why television viewing and present-day lifestyles sabotage language acquisition, thinking, and personal success. “
A Way to Holistically Homeschool
Thoughts on the Theology of the Child and how it relates to homeschooling and life.
Sow What? Seeds That Yield a Whole Mind
Reading Readiness
Reading Readiness Activities Download this list of ways to help your Pre-reader and Emerging reader be set to make the leap into fluent reading.
Teaching Our Children to Read, Write and Spell: A Developmental Approach. Written by a Behavioral and Developmental Pediatritian. She explains how the brain is wired and what needs to be in place for reading readiness and decreasing risks of later learning/reading problems.
Why Johnny Doesn’t Like to Read – Interesting article on the pitfalls of the whole language (meaning-based or sight word reading) approach.
Dyslexia and the Connection to Whole-Language Instruction. Many programs under the guise of ‘including’ phonics still have a lot of whole word instruction and have children memorizing lists of sight words. This excellent article calls for a return to extensive, intensive phonics and avoiding confusing the brain with sight reading.
Reading Comprehension: Constructing vs. Extracting Meaning ~ An article which makes the case for explicit over implicit phonics instruction.
Recent research showing no advantage to early reading instruction.
Preschool
Finding Balance in a Hurried World A great article that asks some great questions as parents pursue what and how much formal academics to do with young children.
Fun and Engaging Activities for Toddlers
Kindergarten
Crisis in the Kindergarten: Why Children Need to Play in School An intriguing article put out by the Alliance for Childhood.
Reclaiming Kindergarten: Making Kindergarten Less Harmful to Boys Not a homeschooling article, but a fascinating look at the research involving early, formal, ‘at a desk’ academics and boys at this age. Well worth a read if you are the parent of young boys or one of those very active girls!
High School
Transcripts – Simple and Effective
Learning by Doing
Laughter and Movement: Fertilizer for the Brain
Curriculum I Use
Here’s what a “typical” day looks like in our home.
Here’s our Curricula for this 2013-14
For EVERYONE:
KONOS A fabulous multi-level, hands-on unit study curriculum for k-8th grade! It focuses on learning thru the 5 D’s – discovery, dramatization, doing, dialogue and finally drill. According to co-author Jessica Hulcy, KONOS makes “the whole idea of school and learning becomes blurred with play. Imagination just takes over.”
For First and Third Grade:
Spell to Write and Read by Wanda Sanseri. This is a comprehensive, multi-sensory COMPLETE phonics program that teaches reading through spelling. I love how it fully equips the child to decode ANY word from the get-go. The English language is more than 95% phonetic and once you have the right tools, children can read just about anything. My time and money is limited. I love how it incorporates handwriting, spelling, reading and basic grammar instruction into one and it spans from kindergarten up through highschool! There is a learning curve to get started (for mom), but it is so easy once you get going. There is also a great yahoo group that provides so much support and information. Great review here. The only extra thing you need to order is either a primary learning log (k-2) or a black learning log (3grade+), plus an extra learning log for the parent.
Cursive First (Rationale from the book found here.)We made the switch to cursive this year and I couldn’t be more thrilled. This program is very developmentally appropriate and provides a multi-sensory approach to learning cursive first that utilizes gross-motor movements first before moving to the fine motor movement of utilizing a pencil and paper. The sandpaper letters that go with this set are phenomenal too! Excellent article by Sam Blumenfeld on why to teach cursive first.
For 3rd Grade:
McCall-Crabb Test Lessons in Reading – We do these three times a week!