Thursday, April 2, 2009

Young Homeschoolers

When I was homeschooling Ashlyn through the early elementary grades, I did everything just as the instructor guide told me to. I didn't use any other curricula in my mix, I just did what I was told to do.

And it worked-Ashlyn is a great student.

However, with Hope now at this stage, I'm doing things a little differently. Not because the first way was wrong or ineffective, that's not it at all. It mostly has to do with two factors:

*More confidence that just comes with experience
*Less time (more children).

I now have no trouble at all using my favorite science curriculum (Apologia elementary science) instead of Sonlight's science. It works best with my style & our family. I also use Math U See after trying several other math programs. While I'm not a curriculum junkie, I now have the confidence to try out other methods or curricula if I need to.

But the less time thing is what I specifically want to address today. I realized as I brought out our Core 1 for Hope this year that much to my dismay, Ashlyn doesn't even remember a big part of what we studied back then. Even our favorite books were forgotten. I was both saddened and enlightened. If Ashlyn doesn't even recall our beloved stories, then why am I even doing this?

We do it to build a foundation. To teach our young ones that learning is satisfying and good. It's not content mastery we're after, it's familiarity. Working through an introduction to World History with an eight year old is about building concepts of a much larger world than our little town, a time period before us, people who lived--and live--differently than us. It's about introducing words like Europe, Asian, dynasty, and Pharaoh. We're also training learning habits and listening skills.

What's all this mean in terms of hitting every topic and book on the schedule?

Don't sweat it. So we skipped Henry Huggins for lack of time (we may add it as a book on CD though since I found it at the library). We switched out history spines but are not stressing about how the order falls, as long as we're generally in the same time period.

There is a place for more precise schooling (and that place may very well only be with the first born!) but early elementary is not it (exceptions may be with math & handwriting to a degree). Until then, teach good habits, enjoy learning, dig into the good books and don't beat yourself up about a skipped lesson or two...or an entire book or two!

4 comments:

Luke Holzmann said...

I like what I heard someone say: Sonlight is a feast table... take what you want, and you'll have more than enough.

And I hear it's good not to worry too much too, even if it's a lesson I have yet to learn [smile].

And you're absolutely right: It's much more about learning general ideas than specifics... though I think great literature has the highest chance of helping with both [smile].

Keep up the great work!

~Luke

Brandi in TX said...

I couldn't agree with you more!

I remember 9 years ago going through ever single pain staking lesson of Saxon kindergarten math because I not dare deviate from the lesson plan. "T" knew the answers to the final exam on day one of the school year, yet I made him do 36 weeks of lessons anyway. We never used Saxon math again after that year and I am pretty sure I will never use it again! I will have to say that was the biggest mistake and the biggest lesson learned in utilizing a curriculum.

I loved Sonlight and it is a feast table. My children treasured so many of those books. There are a select few from 2002 that they remember. That was our first core using Alt 1/2.

Ambleside online it the same way. They are being introduced to so many wonderful books. There are a few they are less than satisfied with, but they are learning to endure and finish what they start and someday they will appreciate the fact they were exposed to a couple of these classics that perhaps aren't a joy to read. (Think Genghis Khan style book from core 5 lol)

Unknown said...

I love that.. Charlotte Mason talks about laying down rails like for a railroad. You are laying down the pattern for their learning life. :) Not rot memorization. :)

Unknown said...

Can I tell you that I've read and reread this post several times? Thanks again...