Friday, March 14, 2014
Home Training
"Parents, remember that your home is a training school, in which your children are to be prepared for the home above. Deny them anything rather than the education that they should receive in their earliest years. Allow no word of pettishness. Teach your children to be kind and patient."
Ellen White, Child Guidance, Chapter 17
Educating for Higher Service and Greater Joy
"More than human wisdom is needed by parents at every step, that they may understand how best to educate their children for a useful, happy life here, and for higher service and greater joy hereafter."
The Review & Herald, September 13, 1881
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Active Learning Solidifies Knowledge
"Children learn best by physical, hands-on experimentation. Active learning is needed to discover and solidify knowledge. It is said that we remember 10 percent of what we hear, 50 percent of what we see, 75 percent of what we say, and 90 percent of what we do. This is true of everyone, but particularly of young children who actually need physical, hands-on experimentation. Passive learning such as educational television seldom produces creative scholars."
Raymond Moore
Home Style Teaching p. 64
Labels:
active learning,
hands-on,
higher level learning
Monday, January 20, 2014
Bless our School
Bless our school, Dear Lord, I pray
And close within it always stay.
Guide us by your Precious Hand
Grant us Truth to understand.
Teach this teacher, make her wise
Give her focused, Spiritual eyes.
And please remind her now and then
That “less than perfect” isn’t sin.
In every lesson of this school
May kindness be the teaching tool.
And when frustration starts to trickle
Reach and give our ribs a tickle!
Bless these students, Lord, I ask
Be their Partner in each task.
Create an appetite for learning
And for knowledge, keep them yearning.
Bless the dad whose hands provide
The tools we need and the place we abide.
Help us remember and never forget
The example of sacrifice he has set.
So much to learn, so much to teach
Bless our school, Lord, bless us each.
I know someday we’ll learn Up There
But for today, Lord, hear my prayer.
By Gwen S@2014
Friday, January 10, 2014
The Legend of the First Robin
This story is an opportunity to teach children about the lessons found in legends. First, study what a legend is an discuss why they are an effective means of learning. Then, enjoy the story below.
One day, long ago, a little bird in Galilee saw a large crowd gathered around a Man carrying a heavy wooden cross. On the Man's head was a crown made from a thorn branch. The thorns were long a sharp. The little bird saw that the thorns were hurting the Man. It wanted to help Him, so it flew down and took the longest, sharpest thorn in its tine beak. The bird tugged and pulled until the thorn snapped from the branch. Then a strange thing happened. A drop of blood fell onto the bird's breast, staining it bright red. The stain never went away. And so today the robin proudly wears a red breast, because it helped a Man named Jesus...
Author unknown
Thursday, September 5, 2013
The Crayon Apron

Did you ever have a crayon apron? They were popular in the 60's as a sweet apron for children. My mother made one for me and one for my sister. I remember how special we felt wearing our very utilitarian, yet very pretty aprons. There was a narrow pocket for each crayon in our coloring set. A larger pocket could hold a notepad, scissors, a roll of Scotch tape, or some paste for gluing. Sister and I would fill our pockets and then spend hours creating art projects or pretending we were teachers in a school. The pretending must have influenced our future choices, as sister and I both grew up to become classroom teachers. The apron shown in these pictures are not of our aprons, but rather of a vintage one I purchased recently. Mom made ours out of a tiny floral print. If there was any embellishment, it would have been embroidery or something done in fabric paints. I was excited, though, to find this vintage children's apron. It's exactly the same pattern as the one Mother made for me, just in different fabrics. This was truly an apron that inspired the imagination! Perfect for your homeschool!

Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Encouragement & Child Behavior
"Encouragement is more important than any other aspect of child rearing. It is so important that the lack of it can be considered the basic cause for misbehavior. A misbehaving child is a discouraged child. Each child needs continuous encouragement, just as a plant needs water. He cannot grow and develop and gain a sense of belonging without encouragement."
Rudolf Dreikurs, child psychiatrist
A Child's Contact with Nature
Edith Schaeffer has always been one of my favorite authors. Recently I discovered that her gift for writing was passed along to her daughter, Susan. In her book For the Children's Sake she reminds us to give our children many opportunities to spend time in nature. And I love how she says it!
"Although we should give a child access to varied creative work by other people, how about seeing that he grows up with as much daily access as possible to his Lord's created works? The Bible is a direct verbal word. But we have a place also for other ways of knowing Him, for "the heavens declare the glory of God."
"Do the children know the feel of dew-fresh grass on their bare feet, and lush freshness of the shade of a leafy tree on a hot afternoon? Do they know the fun of autumn leaves, and the fairy-tale beauty of an icy morning? Wherever the child lives in the world, we should consider his contact with nature as part of his life."
Susan Schaeffer Macaulay, For the Children's Sake
page 85
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)