This post was written for inclusion in the monthly Carnival of Natural Parenting hosted by Hobo Mama and Code Name: Mama. This month our participants have shared how their children learn at home as a natural part of their day. Please read to the end to find a list of links to the other carnival participants.
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My daughter is fascinated with school. She loves to look at pictures of children writing, reading, crafting, or playing in a colorful classroom. She loves to see the teacher sitting at the desk or writing on the board. She loves the equipment. She loves to watch the school buses go down the road, full of noisy, happy children. And when I ask her if she wants to go to school, she bursts in to tears and clings to me. This doesn't bother me in the least. Instead, she goes to school at our house.
School at our house is mud. It is seeds going into the ground and plants growing up from those seeds. It is baby chicks who grew into full sized hens and should start laying eggs any day now. It is a sand pit full of shovels, buckets, bins, and whatever else they find that looks like it belongs there. It is two swings hanging in a tree. It is finally being tall enough to climb into the little dogwood tree. It is dolls in strollers, wearing cloth diapers, on their way to the "grocery store". It is painting and doing special crafts. It is peeling hard boiled eggs. It is helping to build a playhouse, and getting the scrap lumber to use with their little hammers. It is reading good books, all cuddled up in a pile on the couch.
In other words, school at our house is living, growing and learning doing just what we would be doing anyway. They are learning Earth Science by watching the seasons go by from the actual out of doors. They are learning about life cycles and where food actually comes from by watching the plants and animals come and go. They are learning physics in the sand pit and on the swings. They are learning creativity in their play, nutrition in their kitchen, and a love of language from their songs, stories and books. My children are living and breathing their education. They are getting it all over their clothes. They are pouring it all over the dining room floor. They are carrying it around the grocery store with them. They are wearing it on their bodies. They are sharing it with their friends. The only thing they are not doing is reading about it at a desk.
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Visit Hobo Mama and Code Name: Mama to find out how you can participate in the next Carnival of Natural Parenting!
Please take time to read the submissions by the other carnival participants:
(This list will be updated September 14 with all the carnival links.)
- A is for Apple {But right now it's more fun to pick apples!} — Kat at Loving {Almost} Every Moment has a four-year-old who wisely knows she must forgo the worksheets for now and do things with her mother if she's going to learn.
- Baby Talks — Amy at Anktangle talks, talks, talks all day long to her preverbal baby, about simple things and complexities. (@anktangle)
- Baby University: Little Man, My Teacher — The ArtsyMama shares how her relaxed and patient "teaching" at home resulted in a confident little one when she returned to work.
- Creating a Sensory Garden — A sensory garden has given Marita at Stuff With Thing and her girls practice in math, science, budgeting, fine motor skills, and more. (@leechbabe)
- Despite the Big Yellow Bus — Seonaid at The Practical Dilettante has surprised many friends by sending her kids off to mainstream schooling — but their learning doesn't stop there. (@seonaid_lee)
- Down on the Farm — Megan at Purple Dancing Dhalias describes the multitude of skills her children learn by homeschooling on a farm.
- Early Childhood Education — First Do No Harm — Laura at Laura's Blog provides an incredible list of tips to facilitate learning at home.
- Education Starts At Home — Luschka at Diary of a First Child was happy to realize that learning at home isn't limited to older children. (@lvano)
- Every Day Is A School Day — Summer at Finding Summer lists the ways her family learns in this poem of a post. (@summerminor)
- hands on — the grumbles at grumbles and grunts read her little one Sherlock Holmes in utero. She'll continue to make learning fun now that he's on this side of the womb. (@thegrumbles)
- Have a Happy Heart — Erica at ChildOrganics has days of poop on the couch and oatmeal down the pants when sending her children to school seems like the perfect solution — until she regains her perspective. (@childorganics)
- Home Sweet Home Schooling — Check out CurlyMonkey's Blog for a photo montage of how her kids are learning anatomy, architecture, and more — all at home. (@curlymonkey_)
- Homeschooling — My Needs? — Do you homeschool for the kids, or do you do it for you? Read some thoughts from Home Grown Families. (@momtosprouts)
- Homeschooling: A Way of Life — Kimberly at Homeschooling in Nova Scotia has children who meet learning with enthusiasm and are becoming self-sufficient at a young age. (@UsborneBooksCB)
- How We Homeschooled — Deb at Living Montessori Now details in retrospect how her two lifelong learners spent their homeschooling years. (@DebChitwood)
- Learning at Home With a Preschooler and Toddler — Need some inspiration? Michelle at The Parent Vortex shares her tips and resources for lifelong learning. (@TheParentVortex)
- Learning at Home: Are We All Homeschoolers? — Kristin at Intrepid Murmurings incorporates homeschool ideas even though she plans to send her kids to school. (@sunfrog)
- Learning From Life — Mamapoekie at Authentic Parenting doesn't even have to think about how her daughter learns. She just does it. (@mamapoekie)
- Learning Through Play — What better way to learn at home than through play? Dionna at Code Name: Mama lists the many ways children learn through play, whether they know it or not. (@CodeNameMama)
- Learning With Savoury Pikelets — Deb at Science@Home breaks down how cooking facilitates learning. (@ScienceMum)
- Lessons Learned by Bowling (Yes, Bowling) — What life lessons can you learn from bowling? Ask Jessica from This is Worthwhile. (@tisworthwhile)
- Life is learning, learning is life. — Kristin, guest posting at Janet Fraser — Where birth and feminism intersect, defends the truth that children are hardwired to learn. (@JoyousLearning)
- life learning... — Mandy at Living Peacefully with Children found that structured schooling is about teaching, whereas unschooling is about learning, and her family resonated with the latter.
- Live to Learn Together — RealMommy at True Confessions of a Real Mommy knows that children learn in all different styles, so only one-on-one attention can do the trick.
- Natural Parenting and the Working Mom — Jenny from Chronicles of a Nursing Mom shares how natural parenting in the Philippines — and learning at home — includes "yayas" (nannies). (@crazydigger)
- Not Back to School: How We Learn at Home — Denise at This Holistic Life has learned to describe what unschooling is, rather than what it isn't.
- Our Learning Curve — Andrea of Ella-Bean & Co. has a special bookshelf set up where her daughter can explore the world on her own terms.
- School at Our House — Where is learning happening at Kellie at Our Mindful Life's house? It is pouring all over the floor. It is digging down deep in the earth. It is everywhere!
- Schooling Three Little Piggies — Despite the mess and the chaos, Melissa at White Noise lets her children into the kitchen.
- SuperMom versus The Comic Books of Doom! — Mommy Soup at Cream of Mommy Soup realized that if "getting the kids to read" was the goal, it didn't matter what the kids read. (@mommysoup)
- The joy of learning at home — Heather at Life, Gluten Free has a daughter who sees magic in the stars and understands the honeybees. (@lifeglutenfree)
- those who can't teach — Do you need a superiority complex to homeschool? Stefanie at Very, Very Fine wonders.
- Too lazy to unschool? — If unschoolers aren't lazy, Lauren at Hobo Mama wonders if she's too lazy to live her dream of free-form education. (@Hobo_Mama)
- Unschooling the School of Me — Rachael at The Variegated Life considers what she's teaching her son about work as a work-at-home mother — and the extreme work ethic she doesn't want him to emulate. (@RachaelNevins)
- What We Do All Day — Alison at BluebirdMama discovered that it's easier than she thought it would be to quantify how her child learns all day. (@childbearing)
- Who taught that kid ‘exoskeleton’? — Nervous about how you will facilitate learning at home? Don't be - they will absorb things on their own! Joni Rae at Tales of a Kitchen Witch Momma shares her story. (@kitchenwitch)
I LOVE the visuals you have created with this post - I can just see the word "learning" slipping and sliding through your kiddos' fingers, shining up from the dirt, sparking in the leaves. What a peaceful "school" environment :)
ReplyDeleteThat was supposed to read sparkling - not sparking. Sparks in the leaves might be dangerous ;)
ReplyDeleteSchool is living, yes! Love it!
ReplyDeleteAwesome post! I read those last few sentences over and over again. Very powerful words.
ReplyDeleteI love the visceral feeling of this post, and I'm beginning to understand that that is what homeschooling is all about.
ReplyDeleteThis is such a beautiful post!!! It sounds like your children are having a wonderful learning experience that is life!
ReplyDeleteThis is so beautiful!!! I love the way you wrote it. THIS is the way we were meant to learn. Doing life, and following logical streams of thought and curiosity and imaginative processes. And being together. So healthy. So full. Wonderful!
ReplyDeleteI love it! You described it all so lyrically. I can imagine being there and the joy and freedom your kids must experience. Thanks for giving me an image of what I want learning to be like for my little ones.
ReplyDelete