I have an idea

Below is a blog post originally published December 9, 2014. I’m sharing it here because it sums up, succinctly, I think - what education has looked like in my home.

In May of this year, in the midst of COVID lockdown, I started a podcast with a woman I have never met and a medium I have never used, and well. It took off. It takes off. I think it took off for the reasons given below as I outline what we do all day and why.

It’s attractive. It’s beautiful. It’s joyful. We want more of that for ourselves and our families. And so, on to the idea. I want to try to create support for this kind of life, this kind of education, this kind of quest. It’s important to me that it is attainable for anyone who wants to move this direction for their family.

So here’s what I’m proposing. A “support group” of sorts, like one might have for whatever educational paradigm they are in, even public school…where there is an ongoing conversation about the concerns and desires for our children’s education. In my ideal world, I would offer weekly live zoom get togethers, grouping people according to their stage in life. Families with young children only, families with 12 and under, families entering the high school years. I think that this would be a viable way to bring questions and concerns, gaining not just my own thoughts and experience, but that of others.

I haven’t worked out all the details, but the one thing on my mind mainly is “affordable.” What that means precisely I’m not certain yet, but I will pray on how to make this come to fruition. For those interested, I would ask you to email me HERE. I need your input, I need to know if this is something families could benefit from.

So… what does it look like, exactly?

Well, it looks pretty cozy.  We are sitting together, looking at language and discussing it.  For a few minutes.  Dictation for a high schooler looks more closely at the technical aspects of language, fine tunes understanding, finds ways to commit to memory words or concepts that are obtuse.  We are developing interest in an atmosphere of joy. 

A typical conversation might discuss the difference between affect and effect, or the root of psychological.  We might discuss the origin of the word, and develop a way to remember its unusual spelling.  We would probably discuss the suffix –ical.  We recognize that it changes the noun form *(psychology) of the word into an adjective.  By looking it up together, we’d find out that -ic and -al are actually two different suffixes that sometimes get joined together; –ic is a poetical suffix form and –al is a rhetorical form.  What do those terms mean…?   We discuss them, or look them up.  We’ve developing a brain in an atmosphere of joy.

We might discuss the moral truths presented in a piece of writing.  An excerpt from a book might lead to a discussion of the book’s theme, or its relevance to our own lives.  We might have opportunity to discuss a character’s actions and the level of their culpability.  When we dissect a poem, we uncover flaws or truths that might reflect the poet’s own biases or upbringing.  We are forming children in an atmosphere of joy.  

There is a lot of obtuseness in the English language.  But that’s okay, they seem to get it all eventually.  Dictation for a high schooler also starts to delve deeper into the beauty of language, what is the writer’s intent, what imagery is he using, what poetic devices does he employ? Are they effective?  IT IS SO INTERESTING.  It’s the SCIENCE of language. Asking questions, doing research, gathering data, constructing hypothesis, testing, analyzing, drawing conclusions, reporting results…these are the elements of every excellent discussion.  Discussion and reflection, every day, drip, drip, drip.  We are learning the scientific method, in a blessed atmosphere of joy.

Writing a sentence or a paragraph or an essay contains the same elements, except we are focusing on these same things within the context of their own writing instead of the writing of another.  And the GET the ideas because they’ve spent so much time discussing the purpose of writing, the strengths and weaknesses, and they’ve been fed the good, the true and the beautiful.

Literature study is family reading.  We read together around the kitchen table at breakfast and lunch.  We don’t just study the geography, history or culture of a place presented in our books.  We discuss plot, character, conflict, theme…it is the very natural outcome of people who are interested and have been led down the socratic path.

I love this life.

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Bonnie LandryComment