Thursday, July 14, 2016

"Will they keep up?"

This question is often asked by those considering educational alternatives. But it makes some faulty assumptions, and the first one is that there is a "normal." The human brain is the most complicated structure in the universe that we know of, 100 billion of neurons with 100 trillion of connections--all in positions unique to that individual. Each brain develops on its own time schedule; first one area and then another, depending on the child. Pushing a child to catch up to where the teacher wants him to be is not helpful, and can be harmful.

Second, research has shown that everything a child learns under the age of 12 (or so) can be learned by a child over the age of 12 in nine month or less.  Which begs the question: why do they need to spend 1260 hours each year sitting in a classroom? They could be running through the wet grass and looking at bugs and following their own interest. They SHOULD be developing their own interests as they see fit.

Most parents worry about their children feeling dumb if they realize, at church or Scouts, that others have reading or math skills that they don't. By spending 1/2 hour per day in the young years on academics, you've still got 23 1/2 hours per day to play and explore. My children all responded well to this approach, gaining the skills to "keep up with the Jones's" while maintaining their love of learning. It's a pretty good trade-off.

Friday, November 27, 2015

The purpose of childhood

From a very important article: The most important competencies in young children can’t be tested—we all know this. Naming letters and numbers is superficial and almost irrelevant in relation to the capacities we want to help children develop: self-regulation, problem solving ability, social and emotional competence, imagination, initiative, curiosity, original thinking — these capacities make or break success in school and life and they can’t be reduced to numbers.

Monday, October 26, 2015

"It's about the process"

Just found this gem in my Artistic Pursuits book The Way They See It by Brenda Ellis (the wife of the art guy with the ponytail who comes to our LDSHE conference).

Children become quite focused when creating.  For the child, it's about the PROCESS not the RESULTS.  This is old news in children's art education, but not many art teachers or parents grasp the importance of allowing children to experiment and enjoy the process of working with the materials.  I hope you begin to ponder the idea now.  Watch your children.  Think about what they may be learning through the process of what they are doing when they create.  You can see that their minds are fully engaged, thinking, pondering, creating! You don't have to identify the benefits or explain the results of their time to others.  Just know that by allowing them to create you are giving them time to practice something good that they will be able so use for a lifetime. (my emphasis)

I really love this, and it applies equally well to the building and exploring that children do--which in essence is also creation--even if it's creating a new understanding of what's inside a flower (for example) in their own minds.

So how do we facilitate this?  In my mind there are several ingredients:

1 - Remove mindless or non-creative distractions (limit TV and video games, don't force a child to do academic work that he's not interested in/not ready for).

2 - Enrich the environment with the raw materials of art, building, and all forms of creation from cooking to playing in nature.

3 - Have a supportive attitude toward the child's inclinations to get things out and make messes... within reasonable limits.

4 - As in all areas of life, set an example.  Pursue forms of creation that are interesting to you, and share your enthusiasm with your children.

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Mentoring vs. Teaching

We live in a society in which we've been raised on teaching: in schools, in churches, at home. My mother was a school teacher for a few years until she was able to become a SAHM, and I fully recognize that many teachers seriously deserve their halos--they do a lot of good in the world.  Jesus Christ was the ultimate example of a perfect teacher, and we can learn a lot from how he went about it.

But there's a really important point that is so often missed: teaching and learning are very different things which we too often equate.  I hear people talking about having high state standards of learning, and I just shake my head; that’s nice, but learning is out of your control.  You can teach and teach, but how much the children learn is up to them.

And it’s not just up to them voluntarily to decide to learn, and then they can.  Learning is a process in which brain cells make new connections, and there’s no way that can be forced—by the teacher or by the individual.  Learning happens when the neural groundwork has been laid—when the brain is sufficiently developed--AND when a desire has been created to own a new piece of information or skill.   Both have to be present for learning to be achieved.  If the learner is not ready or not interested, the teacher will be like the voice of the adults on the Peanuts comics: “Wah wah, wah wah, wahwah” (although it seems like Charlie Brown understands his parents….  ;-)

What is the job of a teacher?  To present some new information which the learners will then learn.  Typical lesson plans involve a “hook” to spike interest, some leading questions, some new information, a class discussion, and wrapping up with a challenge: a very good system for classroom teaching.  But you’re still painting with a very wide brush—you have no way of telling if the participants’ brains are ready, of assuring that they remember the background information needed for context, and you can only attempt to generate a sufficient interest level.  Having the Spirit present in your Primary class can and does certainly help with this.

How is mentoring different than teaching?

Mentoring happens when a learner seeks out help to learn something that he has felt a desire to learn.  The learning is thus unique, not mass-produced, and leads to permanence.  The learner’s interest is already there; it doesn’t have to be created.  It may have been created through something he overheard a peer or family member talking about, something he saw or read about.  He is coveting, but not breaking the 8th commandment:  “Someone can do (or knows) this awesome thing and I can’t (don't), but I’m ready to try.”

In mentoring, the learner often does more talking than the mentor, as he explores his way through a topic and makes connections between things he already knows.  The mentor will answer questions with more questions, and make sure that the hard work of thinking is happening inside the learner's brain.   After all, it’s not the answers that are important, but the process that is going on inside the brain.

Mentors “lead, guide, walk-beside,” but don’t just tell.  As Hugh Nibley once said, “My only job as a teacher is to save my students time.”  In other words, by being a resource for them, he can save them from running down all the rabbit trails before they find the answers they seek—running a few empty trails is good exercise, but they don’t need to run them all and get discouraged.  That’s why it’s crucial for effective mentoring that the mentor have a decent grasp of the learner’s character: How will he respond to this?  What is his frustration level right now?   Should I step in or let him fail?

Mentors facilitate exploration, creation, and invention, encouraging the learner to challenge himself and helping the process along.  Much of this involves finding resources and providing the raw materials of learning, which, depending on age and interest, can be anything from brightly-colored stacking cups to a Greek dictionary and a copy of Homer.

So what does this look like in a real home?  It looks gentle, it looks earnest, it looks enjoyable.  You search the children’s faces, words, and actions for “interest sparks” and try to assure the sparks don’t get extinguished before they can be fanned to a flame.  You may find that giving occasional nudges can guide him to the outcome he's going for.  You ask for permission to give a suggestion.  You encourage a child to keep going on a process that he's chosen which is difficult.  You set an example of doing difficult things that expand your capacities, working through frustrations, and rejoicing in successes.

In the big picture, you trust that he has talents and gifts and help him develop them.  You enrich the environment, both inside and outside the home, so that he comes into contact with the best of the human and the natural worlds.  You respect his choices of how to use his time (within the parameters of a few commonsense requirements): HE owns his future, you do not.  Persuasion, not coercion.

Note: these are not my ideas--I've gleaned them from many smart people, mostly at LDSHE conferences over the years.  I do not implement them perfectly, but I've found them to be effective to raise children with their love-of-learning and, importantly, with our relationship intact, while having the smarts to deal with the world of adults.



Thursday, July 2, 2015

Why is Nature Study ideal for early childhood learning?

Learning requires several skills that are well taught through studies of nature.  The first is observation, which comes naturally to a child, since he has already learned a language this way.  If a child is moved too quickly into direct instruction (teachers telling you stuff, which then you parrot back to them) as the primary learning modality, the child may begin to doubt his ability to figure things out by himself.  He'll believe the fallacy that things must be taught by an "expert" and in a specific order; otherwise there may be "learning gaps" (horrors!).  Well, it's mostly the parents who buy into that nonsense, but attitudes are contagious, and though he couldn't elucidate why he has become a passive rather than an active learner, there's a good chance it's because he's been "taught at."

Observation is central to nature study, and it's beautiful because each person may discover something different.  Children are encouraged to draw and write about what they see; if they're too young for that, telling about what they see is also valuable.  And quite often they will have noticed something about the object that the adult hasn't seen yet.  Natural objects have an "infinite complexity" aspect which means that there is always more to discover.

This leads to the second valuable learning skill, and that is patience--lengthening the attention span.  Many things in nature move quite slowly: plants growing, flowers blooming, caterpillars creeping.  Then there are those that move very quickly, so you have to develop the skill of patiently watching to get a glimpse: birds, falling stars, etc.

A third beautiful thing about nature study is that it is a short-cut to so many other fields of learning.  It provides mental "hooks" to hang other pieces of information on--information about history and math and human society, along with the more formal study of chemistry, physics, anatomy and physiology, etc.

Last, nature is a great thing to become passionate about--after all, it is how we see the hand of God around us.  At our house we're all big nature geeks, and we get excited by interesting rock formations or a strange bump on a tree or an unfamiliar insect.  My second son taught himself to read and learned the number system all by himself at an early age because he developed a passion for birds.  We have several bird field guides, and he would carry them around and look at the photographs in the front, try to read the name, look out the window trying to see that bird, then look at the page number by the picture and search the book until he found that page so that he could look at the map and see whether that bird lived in our area.  Simple.  Beautiful.  No work on my part ;-)

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

So how does a "playschool" operate?

I'm hoping to gather a few like-minded families to form a cooperative group this fall for ages 4 to 6 (did you know Kindergarten is not mandatory in Virginia?).  I am thinking of Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10 to 1.  I would be happy to host the entire thing at my home, or we could rotate homes and teachers.  Depending on how many kids participate (I'm hoping for around 8), I'd like to have a teacher mom and an assistant each day.  Moms would be welcome to stay the whole time, or to drop off their kids.

The cost would be maybe $15 per month (to cover supplies and food for lunch) for all moms willing and able to take turns teaching.  If a family wants to do drop-off only, we would charge an extra fee, which would be split between the teaching families--just to make it fair. (This remains to be seen, but it would still be very inexpensive compared to commercial preschools).

The themes for the weeks and months would come from the world around them, along with a value we could focus on each month. I would like to include a field trip each month related to the theme.

The monthly themes will be:
September - Animals
National Zoo or Leesburg Animal Park

October - Birds and Trees
Huntley Meadow- Fairfax County park

November - Marine Life
National Aquarium - Baltimore (the big one) or DC (the little one)

December - Human Anatomy and Physiology

January - Physics: Heat, Light, Gravity, Magnetism, Electricity, Motion (this may spill over into February--so many fun things to do with these!)
Maryland Science Museum - $5 in January, Baltimore

February - Earth Science: Rocks, Volcanoes (may spill over into March)

March - Reptiles, Dinosaurs, Amphibians
Natural History Museum

April -  Astronomy, Weather
Maybe the Science Museum of Virginia–2 hours away so it would be an all-day affair (I'd like to do a Planetarium)

May - Bugs and Plants
State Arboretum of Virginia - 45 min away

The values will be things like honesty, respecting others, being kind, and these will be tied into the nature themes by a central book that we'll read several times during the month.  For example, we could do Make Way for Ducklings by Robert McCloskey when we do birds, and the value could be obedience--or something along those lines.  I've got several book lists that go along with these topics, so I'll have to go through them.  I'd also love suggestions.

A day at this playschool would look something like this:

Gathering time with either a game or group activity

Activity centers - children choose between puzzles, building toys (Tinkertoys, Duplos, K'Nex,  etc.) imaginative toys (kitchen, costumes), and logic games (Thinkfun, pattern blocks, attribute blocks, Mighty Mind, Cuisenaire rods, Memory).

Outdoor play (whenever possible) - running games, playset, riding toys, looking at nature and the changes that are happening through the year in our five acres of woods and stream.  When the weather isn't cooperating we can go in the basement and do some active games (races, throwing and catching, etc.)

Focus time - learn about the theme of the month from pictures, books, short science videos, and hands-on activities of all sorts (having taught science co-ops to homeschoolers for 15 years at least, I've got a million ideas  AND my home is full of interesting rocks and crystals, dinosaur bones, insect collections, math manipulatives, big posters on every topic under the sun, etc.)

Table time - art projects, sensory play, whatever we think is fun, which goes along with the unit--or not (this is a Waldorf thing).

Story time - several read-alouds on the unit topic (or not) with children taking an active part through narrating back sections of the story, guessing what happens next, etc. (this is a Charlotte Mason thing).

Lunch time - the children take turns preparing lunch and serving their peers (this is a Montessori thing).

Clean-up time, then a "clean" activity like music or a group game

Throughout the whole time there will be activities going on, but no child will be pressured to join in if he doesn't want to.  To as great an extent as possible, the adults will be in the background, letting the children be in charge. We may let an extrovert child lead the games after they learn them,  We will encourage the kids to share what they see in nature to the extent they are able (each will have a nature journal).  We will establish a few rules, but the pressure will be off.  Which may mean for some that there will be few art projects sent home.  Having had two foster kids in day care part of last year, I'm quite aware that many of the things that the child supposedly created were really no more than "Here, put your hand in this paint and then press it on the page and then run and play again."  Really a gift from the teacher to the parent--there will be very little of that dynamic.

Yes, we will work in some math, writing and reading, but it will not be readily apparent to the casual observer.  The math will focus mainly on logic, discovering the attributes of numbers, and making patterns (believe me, this is far more important to long-term math success than memorizing that 3+4=7).  Reading will be encouraged as we sound out words together in the stories we read.  If you'd like to work on academics at home to stay up with what the schools are doing, I'll point you to some things I've liked using in past years (like the Explode the Code series).  But I'd recommend that you read some of the articles I've linked in the side bar while considering what else you'd like to add to your child's days.

So if you want your young kids to have some new learning opportunities without being pressured by academic expectations (and quite possibly setting the stage for later academic excellence), this is the group for you.