Living Books
Living Books and Life
Experiences
The
Living Books and Life Experiences Approach is based on the writings of
Charlotte Mason, a turn -of-the-century British educator. Miss Mason was
appalled by several tendencies she noticed in modern education: (1) the
tendency to treat children as containers to be filled with predigested
information, instead of as human beings; (2) the tendency to break down
knowledge into thousands of isolated bits of information to be fed into
"container" children; and (3) the tendency to engineer artificial learning
experiences. She believed in respecting children as persons, in involving
them in real life situations, and in allowing them to read really good
books instead of what she called "twaddle"-worthless, inferior teaching
material. She considered education a failure when it produced children
able to "do harder sums and read harder books" who lacked "moral and
intellectual power." Children were to be involved in a broad spectrum of
real life situations and given ample time to play and create. They were
also to be taught good habit, for "a habit is ten natures." This means
that whatever the natural tendencies, a habit will be ten times more
powerful.
Mason's
approach to academics was to teach basic reading, writing, and math skills,
then expose children to the best sources of knowledge for all other
subjects. This meant giving children experiences like nature walks,
observing and collecting wildlife, visiting art museums, and reading real
books with "living ideas" for subjects such a geography, history, and
literature. She called such books "living books" because they made the
subject "come alive", unlike textbooks that tend to be dry and dull and
assume the reader cannot think for him/herself.
Mason also stressed narration and dictation of passages from books as well
as discussion of good books with the teacher. Mason's teaching philosophy
was "masterly inactivity." By this she meant giving children ample
opportunity to interface with art, literature, and nature and allowing
them to draw their own conclusions without
someone constantly telling them what meaning they should make of things.
Strengths
of Living Books and Life Experiences:
-
Treats children as capable of taking an active part in the learning
process and as capable of being interested in learning
-
Exposes children to the best sources of knowledge
-
Focuses on learning encounters with real objects and books, instead of
on "second hand" interactions with distilled information
-
Encourages curiosity, creative thinking, and a love of learning
-
Eliminates meaningless tasks, busywork
-
Developmentally appropriate
-
Stresses character development and formation of good habits
Weaknesses
of Living Books and Life Experiences:
-
Tends
to be very child centered
-
Very
little prepared curricula
-
May
neglect higher level studies because of its emphasis on art, literature,
and nature study
-
May
focus more on books than on applied knowledge
-
May
become too eclectic
Used by permission Elijah
Company
Related
Links:
http://www.gomilpitas.com/homeschooling/methods/Eclectic.htm
http://eho.org/
http://www.gomilpitas.com/homeschooling/methods/CharlotteMason.ht
Traditional |
Classic |
Units |
Living Books |
Eclectic |
Montessori
Waldorf |
Unschooling |
Delayed Academics |
Principles