Charlotte Mason Philosophy

Joy

Inspired by a recent blog post over at Ambleside Reflections, our topic of discussion at this month’s meeting was JOY. Regarding joy, Charlotte Mason wrote: The happiness of the child is the condition of his progress; that his lessons should be joyous, and that occasions of friction in the schoolroom are greatly to be deprecated. […]

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Book of Centuries

One of the classes offered at the Childlight Conference we attended earlier this year was a class called “Paper Trails, CM Ways with Student Work” by Laurie Bestaver. The description of the class followed… You know about the nature notebook but what is a “fortitude list,” “a commonplace,” a “century chart?”… Kristine and I agreed

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Revisiting Math

Euclid in the School of Athens, Raphael Sanzio Some call it an ‘aha’ moment. I can’t think of it as anything other than Divine Providence. In any case, it happened today after finding this gem of a Parent’s Review Article entitled “Home Arithmetic” by Ms. May Everest Boole, written for our discovery no less than

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Reflections on AmblesideOnline YR2 – An Intelligent, Sequential, Integrated Curriculum

On the Bank of the Seine, Bennecourt, 1868, Claude Monet I first heard of an ‘sequential, integrated curriculum’ earlier this year when I read an article titled, Is Sequencing and Ordering the Curriculum Important for Scaffolding Learning? by Dr. Carol Smith in a back issue of the Winter 2007 Parents Review. The article is long

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A Disciplined Will

His thoughts are wandering on forbidden pleasure, to the hindrance of his work; he pulls himself up, and deliberately fixes his attention on those incentives which have most power to make him work, the leisure and pleasure which follow honest labour, the duty which binds him to the fulfilling of his task. His thoughts run

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Great Recognition

I attended Deani Van Pelt’s workshop at the Childlight conference on Charlotte Mason’s Great Recognition and its possible implications for education today and have been chewing on it ever since. Here is a little background on Mason’s Great Recognition in case it is new to you: In 1893, the year following the opening of the

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Awakening

This was my first year attending the Childlight Conference. It was an amazing experience and there is much to tell, but for this post, I must tell you some of what Carroll Smith said on Thursday morning in discussing A Framework for a Mason Curriculum. I am hoping they will make the mp3 available immediately

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Games Kids Play

When you hear children talking about games, you can usually expect it is something indoor and played on an electronic screen. But some kids will still play simple outdoor games when you give them the opportunity and let them be. Like chase. At Peter’s Canyon in Orange, after admiring a sundog in the sky, enjoying

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