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	<title>Texas Home School Coalition &#187; Diana Johnson</title>
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		<title>Nurturing Our Youngest Learners</title>
		<link>http://thsc.org/2006/08/preschoolers-nurturing-our-youngest-learners-2/</link>
		<comments>http://thsc.org/2006/08/preschoolers-nurturing-our-youngest-learners-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Aug 2006 13:55:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Diana Johnson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Preschoolers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thsc.org/?p=649</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>In my work managing the home school department at a Christian bookstore, one type of mom always draws my attention. Anticipation lights her face. While the eyes of another shopper solemnly studies curriculum choices, this mom wears the eager look of a child in a candy shop. She is the mother of a preschooler about&#8230;</p><p>The post <a href="http://thsc.org/2006/08/preschoolers-nurturing-our-youngest-learners-2/">Nurturing Our Youngest Learners</a> appeared first on <a href="http://thsc.org">Texas Home School Coalition</a>.</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In my work managing the home school department at a Christian bookstore, one type of mom always draws my attention. Anticipation lights her face. While the eyes of another shopper solemnly studies curriculum choices, this mom wears the eager look of a child in a candy shop. She is the mother of a preschooler about to begin her home school adventure.</p>
<p>Teaching a preschooler is a delightful time, with a strong touch of nostalgia. Am I really teaching my little darling, or am I reliving my favorite childhood game of school? Perhaps it is a little of both. Enjoy the fun. Enjoy the sweetness. Enjoy the meandering exploration of preschool schooling. The more directed academics of later education will come soon enough.</p>
<p>While the path of preschool education may meander, there are clearly some directions which offer more promise than others. The paths to academic readiness and spiritual tenderness are the ones most worth exploring. Let us peek down them one at a time.&gt;</p>
<p>Academic readiness is as important as the academics themselves. God has gifted us with wonderful sensory capabilities. It is through these senses that learning takes place. Our sight, hearing, touch, and even smell and taste equip us for understanding the world around us. Preschool teachers strengthen sensory skills in their little learners, readying them for the academic challenges ahead.</p>
<p>Fortunately or unfortunately—depending on your personal viewpoint—preschoolers do not achieve academic readiness neatly. It is found on a cluttered path strewn with games, colorful books, wide-eyed conversations, and cuddly moments. Fun plays a prominent role in sensory development.</p>
<p>Visual skills are sharpened by “hide and find” games or looking for the baby’s pacifier. Visual memory card games are played, using enough cards to be fun, but not enough to be frustrating. The board game “Guess Who?” is a fun visual memory game.</p>
<p>Auditory skills are heightened with the gentle comfort of reading aloud. Naptime and bedtime are visited by literary friends via tape recorder or CD. “Listen, then do” games require your preschooler’s careful attention to your instructions—touch your toes, wiggle your nose, then turn around—before he may attempt the silly commands.</p>
<p>Motor skills are developed through messy and boisterous activities. Cutting, coloring, pasting, gluing, and forming worms out of Play-Doh refine fine motor skills. Large motor skills find expression through jumping, hopping, climbing, bouncing balls, and all the other childhood activities often forgotten in our modern technological world.</p>
<p>Invite different tastes and smells into your preschooler’s life. Feast your eyes, ears, and nose with a crisp fall walk. Savor the crunch of several apple varieties. Side by side, it is amazing how different they can taste. Visit a garden. Take time to smell the roses—literally. Then listen interactively to your little one’s thoughts on the experience, whether halting or rambling, as he shares his excitement with you.</p>
<p>But what about workbooks, flashcards, and other school paraphernalia? Should not we be stocking up on these? It is fine to take time for these activities, providing a light introduction to letter sounds and numbers. The culmination of preschool—kindergarten—most often includes a solid move into beginning reading. Picture books read aloud can explore science topics and famous men from our country’s history. Consider time spent in these pursuits the “playing school” part of preschool. They are fun in limited doses, but they are not the genuine adventure.</p>
<p>While the academic readiness path provides a vital foundation for future academics, eternal rewards are found on the path to spiritual tenderness. In Matthew 18 we learn that thekingdom of God is made up of those with childlike faith. What does that mean?</p>
<p>At the least it means that love and trust come naturally to little children. Our preschoolers love us without complication. Family—and parents in particular—is the center of their small world. We are there to love and care for them, and they love and trust us in return. In like fashion, we desire them to love and trust God—simply, without complication, securely resting in His faithful love and care.</p>
<p>Nurture this tender faith by sharing your own faith in terms your preschooler can understand. Pray with your child. Commit his small cares to God together. Hide God’s Word in both your hearts, with the memorization of verses that speak of God’s love and care. Read aloud to your child from colorful Bible storybooks. A rocking chair and Bible storybook are the perfect companions for a young child in a loving parent’s arms. Include your child in household tasks. Sorting socks, alerting mom when the baby cries, or picking up sticks before Daddy mows the lawn train the heart for service. Walk and talk your love for God with natural simplicity.</p>
<p>This simplicity is a key ingredient in our preschoolers’ lives—simple activities and simple assurances that they are loved, by their families and by their God. The paths of academic readiness and spiritual tenderness, well trod, are an excellent start for any preschooler.</p>
<p>The post <a href="http://thsc.org/2006/08/preschoolers-nurturing-our-youngest-learners-2/">Nurturing Our Youngest Learners</a> appeared first on <a href="http://thsc.org">Texas Home School Coalition</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Facing the High School Challenge</title>
		<link>http://thsc.org/2002/11/facing-the-high-school-challenge/</link>
		<comments>http://thsc.org/2002/11/facing-the-high-school-challenge/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 Nov 2002 19:36:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Diana Johnson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Help for Home Schooling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teens]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://thsc.org/?p=1985</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>“We will be starting high school next year.” These words can scare the most seasoned and effective home schoolers. They can lead to anxious discussions and endless catalog searching. Most serious of all, these words can end our home school journey altogether if we become daunted by the responsibility and decide it is time for&#8230;</p><p>The post <a href="http://thsc.org/2002/11/facing-the-high-school-challenge/">Facing the High School Challenge</a> appeared first on <a href="http://thsc.org">Texas Home School Coalition</a>.</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“We will be starting high school next year.” These words can scare the most seasoned and effective home schoolers. They can lead to anxious discussions and endless catalog searching. Most serious of all, these words can end our home school journey altogether if we become daunted by the responsibility and decide it is time for the professionals and real school to take over.</p>
<p>Undoubtedly, home schooling on the high school level presents challenges quite different from teaching elementary-aged students. During those early years, we enjoyed our freedom. We planned activity-laden unit studies, had long cuddles on the couch while we read interesting books together, and breathed easily knowing we had years to accomplish our goals. Then high school hit.</p>
<p>We may at first find ourselves asking, “Are the relaxed times gone for good?” Next a line of formidable courses parades before us. Can we teach subjects we never took ourselves in high school or, worse yet, teach that dreaded course we passed only through the mercy of a compassionate instructor? Finally, we become increasingly aware that only four more years are left before our prodigies are turned out into the world; but are they prodigies? Or will they be failures? The validity of our entire home school experience and the effort of years hang in the balance. As all of these questions tie us in knots, let us untangle them one by one and perhaps gain some confidence in the process.</p>
<p>First of all, are the relaxed times gone for good? As I finish bringing my third child through his high school program, I have to give a yes-and-no answer to that question. Yes, unit studies and the excitement of reading relevant and well-written books can continue; but now our meander down the path of learning follows a more carefully considered path and includes rockier terrain. Now we need a carefully designed plan that never loses sight of college preparation. How do we accomplish that?</p>
<p>In planning our high school program, we should always consider what is best for our child’s future. Although we have no magical vision into the future, we can see strengths and weaknesses in our children’s abilities. Our goal, then, should be to strengthen and challenge in the areas of greatest ability and prop and support the areas of weakness.</p>
<p>When I plan my high school program for each child, I take these natural abilities into consideration. My current high schooler loves literature and history. Since this bent may represent a future career direction, we work hard on composition and follow an in-depth, home-designed program that combines reading in literature, history, theology, philosophy, original documents, etc. This is a labor of love and far exceeds a textbook presentation.</p>
<p>However, the math that is so dreaded by this child is designed to prepare him for the college algebra that most liberal arts degrees require, and no more. We do not see a career that requires a lot of higher-level math likely for this student and prefer to spend the majority of his time increasing his competency in areas of future importance to him. In contrast, our firstborn son, who is now pursuing a degree in computer science, had a high school program filled with math, a thorough composition and grammar program since it is important in all fields, and a competent but less extensive study of history and literature. An exception to this approach would be the student vying for scholarships at highly competitive universities. In that circumstance, a rigorous program in all academic areas will most likely be necessary.</p>
<p>Regardless of what a student’s current career thoughts are, I believe we should plan a high school program that meets college admission standards. Even students planning to bypass college can change their minds; it would be unfortunate if an insufficient high school program hindered new goals. With these thoughts in mind, begin collecting college catalogs. Most catalogs contain the core high school program they want their applicants to have taken. Eighth grade is not too early to begin collecting so you can map a four-year high school program that meets normal college requirements. Meeting these standards does not mean all your home school creativity is at an end. A high school government course can be planned primarily around a textbook, or it can be planned around an active involvement in a political campaign, using a textbook or other reading to fill in the gaps. A very creative course can be hidden under the mundane title, American Government, on a high school transcript. The difficulty for the home schooling parent lies in creating objective standards to grade and to credit these non-traditional approaches.</p>
<p>Second, what about the difficulty of courses that we feel unprepared to teach? With the expansion of Internet and video courses and the existence of junior college dual credit or early enrollment, these challenges can be met. I was happy for my eldest son to get the advanced math courses he needed from our junior college during his senior year of high school. I had no competency in those areas nor any desire or ability to acquire it! Look for help to cover your areas of weakness. Create a division of labor, and let others do what you cannot. Your student’s academic program will be stronger for it, and you will be able to turn your attention more profitably to other areas.</p>
<p>Finally, what will the future hold for our home schooled students? Will we have done our jobs well? As home schoolers, we have kept our children more closely by our sides than most parents. The growth in independence that begins gradually when most children are left at the kindergarten door can hit us almost overnight, as our high schooler finishes his home school program. Despite after-school jobs, summer camps, and other wing-testing opportunities, the break can be more sudden for home school parents. Will we like what we see?</p>
<p>The last seventeen years of my life have been consumed with teaching my five children. As two have entered adulthood and a third will soon, I have often found myself on a roller coaster of emotions. Every right decision they make can leave me in triumph, justified in my labor of love. Unfortunately, every wrong decision can leave me wondering how they could forget the lessons we worked so hard to instill. Many home school friends share similar struggles. How do we gain a biblical perspective?</p>
<p>Primarily, we must give our children the same opportunity to grow in grace that God gives us. God’s work of sanctification in the Christian’s life unfolds over a lifetime, and a newly graduated home schooler is continuing in that process, not completing it. Secondarily, we must remember that home schooling does not create perfect homes, perfect parents, or perfect children. That is the life work of Jesus Christ. While home schooling can contribute greatly to the nurturing of our children in the Lord, it does not cause the problem of sin to disappear. In fact, as we live closely with each other, sometimes it seems that our sin abounds! Keep home schooling in perspective. A God-honoring, home schooled upbringing is a wonderful gift to any child. But let us not tarnish our efforts by placing expectations on them that only God can fulfill. As your child completes high school, your home schooling may be over; but God’s work in the heart of your young adult continues faithfully and undiminished.</p>
<p>The post <a href="http://thsc.org/2002/11/facing-the-high-school-challenge/">Facing the High School Challenge</a> appeared first on <a href="http://thsc.org">Texas Home School Coalition</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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