On Saturday, May 20, 2017, Cornerstone Academy graduated its 5th and final student.
This year has been tough, emotionally. I have been grieving the "lasts" - last first day of school, last Eagles basketball season, last Liberty basketball tournament, last semester as a homeschool.... and on and on. I have tried to savor the moments and appreciate the goodness. My head knows that this is the end of one chapter, but the beginning of a brand new one that has fresh potential for growth and new experiences and joys. But my heart still hurts. My years of actively mothering and teaching a child under my roof and under my care are over.
I have grieved other stages of life as well. I remember feeling sadness when my youngest started kindergarten, and I realized that I would never again be a mother of a preschooler. Sounds silly, but it felt like a physical blow. Similar to the when my oldest turned 20, and suddenly I was old enough to have a child in his twenties. And when the baby turned double digits, and then became a teenager, and ALL my children had left behind those tender years of childhood.
I shed many tears this past week, even as I look forward to seeing what the future holds for my baby boy. I am proud as punch of him, and of his older brothers and sisters as well. I LIKE my kids. They are good people. I am FULL of gratitude that they all still seem to like being around me and their dad and each other. I don't take that blessing lightly!
Our support group graduation ceremony featured 43 homeschools presenting diplomas to their seniors. As always, it was a lovely, moving ceremony. As I told him when I presented him his diploma, I am extremely thankful for the opportunity and blessing of being able to homeschool all 5 of my children. It has been challenging, tiring, and frustrating at times, but most of all, it has been my joy and my privilege.
SLIDE SHOW
Retired Homeschool Mom (formerly Learning Together) ~ thoughts on home, family, friendship, creating, homeschooling, marriage, faith and life in general now that my nest is empty but my days are still full!
Showing posts with label homeschooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeschooling. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 24, 2017
Thursday, August 4, 2016
Jesus Feeds the 5000 for Homeschool Moms
Have you ever found yourself reading a very familiar
passage, a well-known story in the Bible, and suddenly God illuminates the page? Suddenly the words take on a whole new
meaning, even though you've read them a dozen times before?!
This is a story for you, homeschool
moms!
Matthew 14:13-21
Now when Jesus heard this, he withdrew from there in a boat to a desolate place by himself. But when the crowds heard it, they followed him on foot from the towns. 14 When he went ashore he saw a great crowd, and he had compassion on them and healed their sick. 15 Now when it was evening, the disciples came to him and said, “This is a desolate place, and the day is now over; send the crowds away to go into the villages and buy food for themselves.” 16 But Jesus said, “They need not go away; iyou give them something to eat.” 17 They said to him, “We have only five loaves here and two fish.” 18 And he said, “Bring them here to me.” 19 Then he ordered the crowds to sit down on the grass, and taking the five loaves and the two fish, looked up to heaven and said a blessing. Then he broke the loaves and gave them to the disciples, and the disciples gave them to the crowds. 20 And they all ate and were satisfied. And they took up twelve baskets full of the broken pieces left over. 21 And those who ate were about five thousand men, besides women and children.
So, I
imagine it going something like this:
[Disciples] Hi... Jesus. Ummmm. I don't know if you've
noticed but { tapping watch ) it's
getting kind of late. It's been a long
day; I think it's time to tell these people to go back home for dinner. I
know we're getting kind of hungry and could use a little rest....
[ Jesus
] No, they don't have to go home. You feed them.
[ Disciple
] What?
[ Jesus
] You do it. You feed them.
[ Disciple
] With what?! There have to be at least 5000 men here,
never mind all the women and children with them! We don't have anything to feed them
with! It would take , I don't know.... 8 months wages to buy enough food for all
these people. I mean, we have ... like 1, 2, 3, ... 4, 5, loaves of bread and a couple of fish!
[Jesus] Bring that here to me.
[ Disciple
] What?
[ Jesus
] Bring me that little bit of food you
have there.
Jesus gives thanks and
blesses the food.
[
Jesus] Okay, here, now take it and feed
them.
[ Disciple
] What?
But... but.... how? There is still only 5 loaves of bread and 2 fish.... and all those people look really hungry! I don't understand. This is just an IMPOSSIBLE thing you are asking us to do!
But... but.... how? There is still only 5 loaves of bread and 2 fish.... and all those people look really hungry! I don't understand. This is just an IMPOSSIBLE thing you are asking us to do!
[ Jesus
] Trust Me.
Verse 20 : They all ate and were satisfied, and the
disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken pieces that were left over.
Now, we are
going to change the characters a little.
[ Mom
] You know, this has been great. But she's
school-age now sooooo..... it's time to send her off to school. I'll miss the little booger, but... she'll be
fine. Right? I'm sure the teachers are great
and she'll make lots of friends and....
[ Jesus
] Don't send her away.
You do it.
[ Mom
] Wait.
What?
[Jesus
] Keep her home with you and homeschool her.
[ Mom] Hahaha! Me? I
don't know how to do that. Wait... you're serious? No. I'm not patient enough for that.... or smart enough... or creative enough. Never mind that we don't have a lot money and I really need to get a job... you know, to help my husband out and pull my weight. Have you seen the prices at the grocery store? No, really. There's no way. I'm not equipped for that.
[ Jesus
] Bring me what you have.
[ Mom]
what?
[Jesus] I know all those things about you. Bring me the little that you have.
Jesus gives
thanks and blesses her.
[Jesus] Okay, now you're ready.
[
Mom] But nothing has changed! I'm still unorganized, stretched thin, tired,
poor.... how will this work? Where do I
get curriculum? How do I know what to
teach? What if I ruin my kids? What will my mother say?
[Jesus] Trust me.
Take a deep breath.
Take baby steps.
I have placed helpers around you.
You have more resources at your disposal than you even know.
This isn't about how much you are bringing
to the table, but about how I can bless and multiply what you have when you
give it to me and TRUST ME.... and then step out in faith. We'll do this together .... side by side.
Do you know
what my favorite part of that story is?
The 12 basketfuls of broken pieces gathered up at the end.
Jesus didn't
just provide enough. He didn't JUST
satisfy. He provided ABUNDANTLY. MORE THAN ENOUGH. MORE THAN THEY COULD EVER ASK OR IMAGINE!
The people
were well-fed. Your children will be
well-educated, in line with the unique gifts and abilities God has placed in
them.
Jesus cared about the hungry people, and he cares about your children. But think about this. He could have said to the disciples, "Sit back and watch what I can do!" and just had the food appear. But instead he said, "You do it", and he handed the food TO the disciples and THEY gave it to the people. Why? Because the real blessing was as much for them as for the hungry people.
The people really had no idea that there was so little food to
begin with...but the disciples...
THE FAITH OF
THE DISCIPLES HAD TO HAVE BEEN INCREASED
IMMEASURABLY!! They witnessed a miracle.
No, they didn't just WITNESS a miracle, they
TOOK PART in a miracle. God used them
and the little bit of lunch they had, and made a feast for thousands and thousands
of people!
Just as he can use you and the little bit of knowledge, organization skills, patience, desire, time, money, space that you have and multiply it in ways you cannot imagine.
Prayer - Father, thank you for your Word, which shows
us so clearly that you are ready and able to provide ABUNDANTLY for our
children, for our families, if we will just set aside fear, set aside disbelief
and uncertainty, give thanks for what we DO have, and trust you.
We are thankful for the freedom that we have to homeschool. We are
thankful for the freedom that we have to read your Word and pray
together and encourage one another. We are thankful for the families you have
blessed us with, for the friends you have placed in our lives, for the
abundance of resources all around us, for the many good gifts we enjoy each and
every day. We pray in the name of Jesus
our Savior. Amen

Sunday, July 3, 2016
Homeschool Vlog
I found a YouTube channel that I wanted to share. It is called The Encouraging Homeschool Mom (the name alone makes you feel welcome and encouraged, doesn't it?) and it is a vlog(video blog) by a mama of 7 who shares homeschool life, meal planning and recipes, household management tips, family travel, and more. I have enjoyed the bits I've watched so far. Enjoy!
Have you found a vlog that you really like?
Sunday, May 15, 2016
Homeschool Prom, Take 7
Our theme this year was "INVINCIBLE", inspired by superheroes. Although it got the most committee votes for 2016 theme, there were several doubters who couldn't envision a "Superhero" prom being elegant and not cheesy birthday party-ish. I think they were convinced. My core team of decorator/planners had a vision of an urban "corporate gala" atmosphere, lots of black and white with pops of color, focusing on the inspirational "hero" aspect of the superheroes, not the villains or the darkness sometimes associated with them.
Every year we choose a Benefit Project, and this year, in keeping with the theme, we chose a charity that benefits the families of fallen first responders, Carolina Brotherhood. We donated $2 from every ticket sold, plus some additional donations that were brought to Prom, for a total of $850.
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
There Must Be Something in the Water: Thoughts on Homeschool Mamas and Teen-age Boys
Last night I spoke to about 60 people at our homeschool support group meeting about homeschooling through high school. I covered a lot of different topics - touching on things like graduation requirements, high school testing, credits, transcripts, etc. and then busting some of the myths surrounding homeschooling through high school, such as "parents aren't qualified to teach high school subjects", "homeschooled students cannot get good jobs or go to college" and "they'll miss out on Prom". But it was the final topic I discussed that got the most response and comments after the meeting ended, and that was Homeschool Mamas and Teen-age Boys.
I have raised 3 boys of my own, and have talked with many, many mothers of sons about this topic, and it seems to be pretty universal and disconcerting! Somewhere around the age of 12, they discover that we moms have lost part of our brains. We go from being very smart, even brilliant, people who can solve almost any problem and fix almost anything, to suddenly not being very smart at all and also somewhat annoying. We don't know the answers, we don't know the best way to do things, and we don't have the right opinion on anything. In addition to losing our minds, we have also lost our looks. We were once beautiful and the women our little boys wanted to marry one day. Now they are embarrassed to be seen with us.
It must be something in the water, because we aren't the only ones who have changed. Our little boys who were once cuddly, enthusiastic, eager to please, and obedient ( okay, okay, that's a stretch - but true at least part of the time? ) suddenly become withdrawn, emotional, distracted, and disrepectful. They don't want to do their schoolwork. They talk back. They sleep all the time. They challenge your authority, your wisdom, and your fairness.
"Who are you and what did you do with my son?"
Some boys only show glimpses of this hijacking, but for others it is quite prominent. Suddenly our sons are taller than us, stronger than us, and they don't seem to like us or take us seriously. This is tough, uncharted territory for all moms, and for homeschooling moms it can cause a quite dramatic reaction. "I can't do this! He isn't doing his work. He isn't listening to me. He needs to go to real school because of course he will listen to someone else."
I do not have an answer and I don't know of a cure. But my encouragement to you is that it doesn't last forever. A few years. But not forever. This is a period of time when our little boys are growing into men, and for a while they just don't know what to do with themselves! They want to be treated like grown ups one minute, and the next they are crying, "I can't do that! I'm just a kid!" One minute they cringe when you give them a hug, and the next minute all 5'10" of them is crawling into your lap. Their bodies are changing, their brains are changing. Hormones make them crazy.
I think it is different with our daughters, because we can sympathize with them! We were young girls once, and remember the angst and the cramps and the discomfort and the uncertainty that those years brought, and can identify with them better. But young men are different creatures entirely; and that just reminds us that we don't understand our husbands half the time either, and now we have TWO men to deal with.
DON'T PANIC!
Maybe it's time for Dad to take son out for a burger and a talk about manhood, respect for those in authority, humility, God's order, and possible consequences for bad behavior.
Beyond that, I think we moms need to dish out heaps of GRACE! (unmerited favor) We need to be calm and consistent in reminding our boys of their boundaries and their responsibilities. Let me emphasize the word CALM.
We can perhaps let go and give them some of the control they crave. Let him stay up late and sleep later in the morning, or go outside without a jacket in the middle of the winter, or eat pizza and Doritos for lunch every day, or take a 45 minute shower. Ask if there is something he would really like to study this year, or let him choose between math curriculum A or math curriculum B.
We need to continue to be their cheerleader and biggest fan, because their disdain is really a mask. Our boys desperately want to know they are loved and accepted.
Don't stop pointing them to God and his Word. Remind him that God allows us to struggle so that we can be refined and grow stronger and closer to Him.
Read lots of biographies of good role models and watch movies that teach solid messages about character. Teach Godly character. Model Godly character.
Don't be stingy with hugs, backrubs, and smiles. Remind them that you like them.
Maintain a sense of humor. Laugh with them. ( not at them. never at them.) Sometimes they are really funny.
Feed them a lot. Their favorite meal or some warm brownies, even after a tough couple of days of banging heads, sends a strong message.
Encourage physical activity as an outlet for some of that aggressive energy. Team sports, running, biking, tae kwon do, swimming, rock climbing, jumping jacks!
These are just some suggestions. Pray and ask God to show you the best way to parent your child. Anger, insults, and a hard-nosed strictness are probably not the best reaction to this stage of your child's development. And my answer to "If they won't listen to me and respect me, won't they be better off learning from somebody else?" [ meaning "in school"] is "Is it more important that he get the essay written and the geometry lesson done or that he feel loved and hear about righteousness and character and Truth and God's plan for us? Are you okay that strangers, whose worldviews you know nothing about, walk with him through this time of his life and mold him and direct him? Whose voice do you want him to hear on a daily basis?"
Don't give up! They do come out on the other side.
Galatians 6:9 Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.
2 Corinthians 4:17-18 For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary ,and what is unseen is eternal.
I have found these resources to be very helpful.
Raising Real Men
Hal and Melanie Young are Christian homeschool parents who understand boys. They have written a book, and their website and blog also contain lots of helpful articles and information.
Homeschooling Boys
This site does not seem to have been updated in a while, but still has some helpful articles by a number of authors, including Mark Hamby, Barbara Shelton, and Terri Camp.
Homeschool-Your-Boys
This is a newer blog, but I've read a couple of articles here that are very good.
Saturday, September 12, 2015
Homeschool Preschool :Let Them Play
My teenager and I stopped at Chick-Fil-A for lunch after his orthodontist appointment the other day, and I ran into a young homeschool mom I know who was there with her twin 4-year-old boys. Before she stepped up to the counter to order her food, she gave me one of those smiles that was part "Hi, nice to see you!" and part "Help me, I'm dying!", and simply said, "It's really hard some days".
Enough said.
I understood immediately where this mommy was coming from. Exhaustion. Frustration. Isolation. Guilt. So after finishing lunch with my son, I asked him if he would mind watching a couple of 4-year-olds in the play area while I visited with their mom for a few minutes.
We had a nice chat and I shared what I hope was some encouragement with her about relaxing and maybe adjusting some of her expectations. One of her stresses is that she has started "homeschool preschool" with them, and... it was a struggle. Although she kept saying things like "I know that academics isn't the most important thing right now" , she was stressed over not knowing if they "measured up" against other kids their age; if they were learning the right skills at the right time. She has friends with kids in preschool or kindergarten at this age, and said that she knows her boys are "behind" in some areas. The boys weren't loving "school time", when she had them sit down to do the workbooks she had purchased, and she was wondering how she was ever going to handle homeschooling them as they grew older. In other words, she was feeling defeated before she had even started!
My mother taught public school kindergarten for over 20 years, before getting a masters degree in computer education and moving up to teach high school for the remainder of her teaching career. Something she used to say was "After the first month or so of school, I can no longer tell the difference between those children who went to preschool and those who didn't. What I can tell, is those whose parents spent time doing things with them and those whose parents did not." She was referring to things like reading stories together, coloring, going on nature walks, playing board games, working in the garden, matching socks while folding the laundry together, learning to use scissors to cut up construction paper into strips for paper chains, singing songs, baking cookies, etc. This was usually in response to a stay-at-home mom who was nervous that she was depriving her child of a good start by not sending him to preschool. My mother's professional opinion was that preschool can fill in for a mom who cannot be in the home with her little ones, but it isn't BETTER than a mom. As a longtime home educator who has homeschooled 4 of my children all the way through high school, I can say the same of school in general. It can do what parents don't have the time or resources to accomplish, but that doesn't necessarily make it BETTER, especially if the parent is ready and willing to take on the role of educator. But I digress. Back to preschool.
In large part because of my mother's influence, the thought of sending my little ones off to preschool never crossed my mind. I was a stay-at-home mom and this was my domain. We had a craft closet that held boxes of crayons and coloring books and stacks of colored paper and safety scissors and glue sticks and yarn and colored pipe cleaners and popsicle sticks and yes... even glitter! From the time my first child was born, I started collecting children's picture books, and also started visiting the public library on a regular basis with my children, and storytime was a daily occurrence, usually before naps as well as before bedtime.
We had a wooden playset in the yard with swings, ladders, a climbing rope, and fort, as well as a sandbox with plastic shovels, buckets, scoops, and toy dump trucks, and in the summer a small plastic pool filled with water and water toys. Balls of all sizes - tennis balls, plastic kickballs, rubber balls, inflatable beach balls - were in a bin in the garage. Bubbles were a staple, as was homemade playdough and face paint. We had a dress-up box filled with superhero capes, wooden swords, a variety of hats, boas, flower wreaths and fairy wands, elbow length gloves, vests, costume jewelry, and assorted Grammy-sewn costumes.
I played a million games of Candy Land and Chutes and Ladders and UNO and Go Fish. I do not have a green thumb - at all - but I did attempt a small garden at one point, which the kids loved. When I went to the grocery store, the kids came along and were my "helpers". We got out when we could, for walks around the neighborhood, to the playground, to storytime at the library or to a friend's house to play. We had a stack of Disney tapes (these were the days of VHS, friends) and those along with PBS shows like "Magic School Bus", "Arthur", "Wishbone", "Sesame Street" ( not my favorite) and "Mr. Rogers Neighborhood" (my favorite!) gave me a chance to clean the bathroom, start dinner, or lay down on the couch with my eyes closed for "just a minute". If it sounds like my children spent their days playing... well, that is exactly right!
I never once thought that I needed a curriculum for this. I was just playing with my children, teaching them the ABC song as we sat on the couch together, counting out forks for the dinner table, finding the letter "A" or "S" on street signs, catching bugs, reminding them to say "please" and "thank you" and "excuse me".
You will notice when your child shows readiness for learning more.
"Mommy, what does that word say?"
"How do I write my name?"
"Mommy, how many Cheerios are in my bowl?"
"Daddy, how does that work?"
"Show me!"
"Tell me!"
"Let me!"
As a homeschooler, you can respond to your child's readiness instead of following some generic schedule of what to teach when. You can look at lists of preschool or kindergarten skills for ideas, but don't make it a checklist that must be accomplished by a certain date!
Edward Thorndike, a psychologist who spent his career at the Columbia University Teacher's College in New York in the early 1900's studying learning theory, came up with these Laws of Learning.
Reading this list, you can see that introducing traditional academic work too early will result in frustration for both the parent and the child. You can also see how a home environment seems like an ideal place for learning to occur. ( I wonder who planned it that way?)
#playmatters
Enough said.
I understood immediately where this mommy was coming from. Exhaustion. Frustration. Isolation. Guilt. So after finishing lunch with my son, I asked him if he would mind watching a couple of 4-year-olds in the play area while I visited with their mom for a few minutes.
We had a nice chat and I shared what I hope was some encouragement with her about relaxing and maybe adjusting some of her expectations. One of her stresses is that she has started "homeschool preschool" with them, and... it was a struggle. Although she kept saying things like "I know that academics isn't the most important thing right now" , she was stressed over not knowing if they "measured up" against other kids their age; if they were learning the right skills at the right time. She has friends with kids in preschool or kindergarten at this age, and said that she knows her boys are "behind" in some areas. The boys weren't loving "school time", when she had them sit down to do the workbooks she had purchased, and she was wondering how she was ever going to handle homeschooling them as they grew older. In other words, she was feeling defeated before she had even started!
My mother taught public school kindergarten for over 20 years, before getting a masters degree in computer education and moving up to teach high school for the remainder of her teaching career. Something she used to say was "After the first month or so of school, I can no longer tell the difference between those children who went to preschool and those who didn't. What I can tell, is those whose parents spent time doing things with them and those whose parents did not." She was referring to things like reading stories together, coloring, going on nature walks, playing board games, working in the garden, matching socks while folding the laundry together, learning to use scissors to cut up construction paper into strips for paper chains, singing songs, baking cookies, etc. This was usually in response to a stay-at-home mom who was nervous that she was depriving her child of a good start by not sending him to preschool. My mother's professional opinion was that preschool can fill in for a mom who cannot be in the home with her little ones, but it isn't BETTER than a mom. As a longtime home educator who has homeschooled 4 of my children all the way through high school, I can say the same of school in general. It can do what parents don't have the time or resources to accomplish, but that doesn't necessarily make it BETTER, especially if the parent is ready and willing to take on the role of educator. But I digress. Back to preschool.
In large part because of my mother's influence, the thought of sending my little ones off to preschool never crossed my mind. I was a stay-at-home mom and this was my domain. We had a craft closet that held boxes of crayons and coloring books and stacks of colored paper and safety scissors and glue sticks and yarn and colored pipe cleaners and popsicle sticks and yes... even glitter! From the time my first child was born, I started collecting children's picture books, and also started visiting the public library on a regular basis with my children, and storytime was a daily occurrence, usually before naps as well as before bedtime.
We had a wooden playset in the yard with swings, ladders, a climbing rope, and fort, as well as a sandbox with plastic shovels, buckets, scoops, and toy dump trucks, and in the summer a small plastic pool filled with water and water toys. Balls of all sizes - tennis balls, plastic kickballs, rubber balls, inflatable beach balls - were in a bin in the garage. Bubbles were a staple, as was homemade playdough and face paint. We had a dress-up box filled with superhero capes, wooden swords, a variety of hats, boas, flower wreaths and fairy wands, elbow length gloves, vests, costume jewelry, and assorted Grammy-sewn costumes.
I played a million games of Candy Land and Chutes and Ladders and UNO and Go Fish. I do not have a green thumb - at all - but I did attempt a small garden at one point, which the kids loved. When I went to the grocery store, the kids came along and were my "helpers". We got out when we could, for walks around the neighborhood, to the playground, to storytime at the library or to a friend's house to play. We had a stack of Disney tapes (these were the days of VHS, friends) and those along with PBS shows like "Magic School Bus", "Arthur", "Wishbone", "Sesame Street" ( not my favorite) and "Mr. Rogers Neighborhood" (my favorite!) gave me a chance to clean the bathroom, start dinner, or lay down on the couch with my eyes closed for "just a minute". If it sounds like my children spent their days playing... well, that is exactly right!
I never once thought that I needed a curriculum for this. I was just playing with my children, teaching them the ABC song as we sat on the couch together, counting out forks for the dinner table, finding the letter "A" or "S" on street signs, catching bugs, reminding them to say "please" and "thank you" and "excuse me".
You will notice when your child shows readiness for learning more.
"Mommy, what does that word say?"
"How do I write my name?"
"Mommy, how many Cheerios are in my bowl?"
"Daddy, how does that work?"
"Show me!"
"Tell me!"
"Let me!"
As a homeschooler, you can respond to your child's readiness instead of following some generic schedule of what to teach when. You can look at lists of preschool or kindergarten skills for ideas, but don't make it a checklist that must be accomplished by a certain date!
Edward Thorndike, a psychologist who spent his career at the Columbia University Teacher's College in New York in the early 1900's studying learning theory, came up with these Laws of Learning.
·
Law of readiness. Students learn more
easily when they have a desire to learn. (mentally and physically ready) Conversely, students learn with
difficulty if they're not interested (not mentally or physically ready)
·
Law of effect. Learning will always be
much more effective when a feeling of satisfaction, pleasantness, or reward is
part of the process.
·
Law of relaxation. Students learn best
and remember longest when they are relaxed. Reducing stress increases learning
and retention.
·
Law of association. Learning makes sense
(comprehension) when the mind compares a new idea with something already known.
·
Law of involvement. Students learn best
when they take an active part in what is to be learned.
·
Law of exercise. The more often an act is
repeated or information reviewed, the more quickly and more permanently it will
become a habit or an easily remembered piece of information.
·
Law of relevance. Effective learning is
relevant to the student's life.
·
Law of intensity. A vivid, exciting,
enthusiastic, enjoyable learning experience is more likely to be remembered
than a boring, unpleasant one.
·
Law of challenge. Students learn best
when they're challenged with novelty, a variety of materials, and a range of
instructional strategies.
·
Law of feedback. Effective learning takes
place when students receive immediate and specific feedback on their
performance.
·
Law of recency. Practicing a skill or new
concept just before using it will ensure a more effective performance.
·
Law of expectations. Learners' reaction
to instruction is shaped by their expectations related to the material (How
successful will I be?).
·
Law of emotions. The emotional state (and
involvement) of students will shape how well and how much they learn.
·
Law of differences. Students learn in
different ways. One size does not fit all!
Reading this list, you can see that introducing traditional academic work too early will result in frustration for both the parent and the child. You can also see how a home environment seems like an ideal place for learning to occur. ( I wonder who planned it that way?)
#playmatters
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