Thursday, November 18, 2010

My teaching philosophy

So far,  Elliot is responding to our home school with great enthusiasm and a happy attitude.  Because he loves it so far, a part of me wants to get everything "right," and is intimidated when thinking about the long road ahead.  Will he learn all he needs to know?  Home school experts claim that one of the first steps to success is to develop a personal teaching philosophy.

The following is subject to change as I gain experience.  For now, this is what I believe:

The driving force behind my teaching philosophy is love.  I love to teach and learn.  I love my son.  I care about his mind, his spirit and his healthy body.  I believe in our ability to provide a great education from home.  I believe learning happens through trial and error and by learning to ask questions, and questions on top of questions.  I believe we learn through writing, which forces us to imagine and construct thought.  I believe in practice, repetition and reaching for big goals.  I believe in the practice of silence for inner understanding.
I believe that much of what we learn comes to us indirectly and from hands on experience.  Children learn by doing.  They also learn from their peers and their loved ones.

Ensuring that Elliot has regular interaction with other children is one of the big issues we face. I am confident that our home will be filled with friends and that he will continue to be invited to participate in his friend's lives as time goes forward. In the few days before starting our school, I worried he would feel the absence of his public school classmates.  I wondered if a cloud of loneliness would hang over our heads.   So far, that has not happened.  In fact, one day this week he said, "I hope I never have to go back to those bunch of tattle talers".
Perhaps the unexpected delight of being in a classroom of one can be explained by Sociologist Elise Boulding, author of A Small Plot of Heaven.  She writes,

  "It is possible to drown children and adults in a constant flow of stimuli, forcing them to spend so much energy responding to the outside world that inward life and the creative imagination which flowers from it becomes stunted or atrophied."

  After discussing the benefits of solitude for children, she goes on to ask,

"what is happening to our children as a result of the fact that their time is so heavily scheduled both in and out of school, and even increasingly in summer---that once golden time of inner ripening for the child...dare we leave space of time?  Dare we have faith in the workings of the spirit-illuminated intellect?"

 Elliot builds a labyrinth as part of a lesson on the ancient Minoan Civilization.

Elliot makes his first stop motion animation short film.

And so we're moving forward in this new decision with joy.  Our sweet boy is hugging us more.  There seems to be a shift taking place within me as I reconstruct my role from mom to "teacher mom." 

5 comments:

  1. I wish I could homeschool my (future) kids, but unfortunately this is not possible in Germany.
    I think you're doing a great job.

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  2. Jenny-you are awesome and I am so proud of you!I absolutely love your website-look forward to reading often! Love, Aunt DeeDee-4th Grade Teacher/my students are God's gifts and I pray everyday for guidance!

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  3. I'm so moved by your teaching philosophy :) You're so brave, and I'm so inspired by you. I'm sure your son will look back on his homeschooling days with such fondness!

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  4. Wonderful post, My parents pulled my sisters and I out of public school when I was getting ready to start jr high, many moons ago. It was before it was legal in our state and we spent a lot of the first year learning about the laws and how one goes about getting them changed. By the time I was 15 I had started college, was not extra smart I just knew what I wanted to do. When I became a mom I decided to teach my children at home and did until the oldest one was ready for jr high, I wish I had held on to the younger ones a bit longer but it all turned out ok. If you ever want to chat homeschooling I am always around. I have experience on both sides :)

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  5. I enjoyed reading about your homeschool. You're off to a good start. Hope things are still going well. I like your idea of having a teaching philosophy. That helps to give focus and direction. One of our fundamental reasons for homeschooling is my husband feels strongly that he wants our kids to be kids as long as they can be kids. Seems like kids in a public school environment grow up sooner than their homeschool counterparts. Socialization was never an issue for our kids. In fact, we've usually had to limit their activities because they'd do stuff all the time if they could. Thanks for sharing your journey. Hope you had a nice Thanksgiving.

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