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September 20, 2006

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Angela,Mother Crone

YOu are so on target with this! I agree that sharing your knowledge and active research in the field of educational theory will quickly diffuse any critic. The truth is that most people never consider learning theory, and just contentedly sent their children off. Once they realize that we have, they stop looking at us as someone a few marbles short, and become interested in what we have to say. Again, not that thye would agree, but at least they understand our thought process.

J

What do you say when people start talking about brain research and those crucial 'first five years?' I mean, people who really disagree with you can always turn around and say that Holt, Steiner, Montessori, Mason, Erikson all lived a long, long time ago before in a land before neuroscience. They can argue that Gatto was a high school teacher who didn't happen to have access to an MRI or preschool aged children. They can argue that had these early educators known these things, surely they would have all embraced these current high stakes philosophy.

coffeemamma

Happy hearts and happy faces,
Happy play in grassy places—
That was how, in ancient ages,
Children grew to kings and sages.

JoVE

My daughter went to school for the early years and though I didn't push her to read early she started anyway (writing, too). But her first school teacher was excellent and had a meeting with parents to discuss precisely those issues around getting them doing "real work" early. She didn't believe in it.

Her argument was basically that there is a whole lot of physical development that has to happen before kids can read and write and that a lot of the play that we do with them at a young age contributes to that physical development. Things like fine motor skills, focusing the eyes, distinguishing shapes within shapes, etc. I would add developing concentration.

There is substantial evidence out there that if you delay formal teaching of reading, kids advance more quickly so that within a couple of years they are at about the same level as kids who started earlier. I think in the Netherlands, they don't start teaching reading until kids are 8 (in the public system).

Queen of Carrots

If you read current brain research, it actually reinforces that the tremendous growth in brain power in the first few years is fueled by interaction with the real world, not by "academic" learning. A good modern resource is Jane Healy, *Your Child's Growing Mind*.

Karen E.

Melissa wrote:
"My aim in this kind of discourse is simply to show that there is thought behind my opinion. It's amazing how much that relaxes people and shifts the tone of the conversation from confrontation to exchange of ideas."

Yes, exactly. Perfect.

"J" commented:
"What do you say when people start talking about brain research and those crucial 'first five years?'"

This "relaxed" approach *is* crucial in those first five years. It is an approach that fosters learning and creativity, rather than squelching it, which early *academics* (which is not the same as early *learning*) can do. That's *exactly* what Holt, Mason, et al, understood.

Suzanne

Melissa,
What I great post! I have been struggling with this a bit lately. I have a 4 year old boy and often get asked when are you going to start homeschooling him? What curriculum are you going to use? Etc etc... I have read John Holt and Charlotte Mason and agree with them but have a hard time explaining that to people. Your post has inspired me to be a little more assertive about what I believe. Thanks so much. I love your blog! Good luck on the move!

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Our Family Rule of Six

  • Six Things to Include in Your Child's Day:

    • meaningful work
    • imaginative play
    • good books
    • beauty (art, music, nature)
    • ideas to ponder and discuss
    • prayer

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