No name
Catholic Suppliers
Adoremus Books
All Catholic Books
Aquinas and More
By Way of the Family
Catholic Heritage Curricula
Catholic Home Schooler's Book Shelf
Catholic Montessori
Emmanuel Books
Family-Centered Press
Illuminated Ink
MacBeth's Opinion
Our Father's House
RC History
Sacred Heart Books and Gifts
St. John Fisher Forum
Stella Maris Books
Christmas Novena
To be said 15 times daily from the feast of St Andrew (Nov. 30) until Christmas Day (Dec. 25)
Educating the Whole Child
Academic, spiritual, social and physical aspects of development are closely interrelated. Discipline gained from playing sports on a team can carry over into academic habits. Questions about Church teaching that come up in a social setting can help reinforce the child’s faith. Academic assignments are an excellent place to practice important virtues.
Academics:
Formation vs. Information
Solid interior development is more important than learning a great deal of information.
- Self-discipline
- Virtues
- Thinking skills
- Interest in learning
- Habits
You certainly want solid academic content, but there are many areas of academics that you catch up on later in life more easily than the above mentioned habits and virtues.
Integration of Faith and Academics
This is what makes a Catholic education…Catholic. A “Religion only” mentality doesn’t
work.
Math Example (in addition to more practical considerations):
- develops and disciplines the mind
- provides a sense of order (which we learn to see in God’s creation)
- presents the opportunity to practice virtues such as patience, neatness and perseverance (for both children and their parents!!!)
Training the Will (Self-Discipline)
- forming habits (start young and build in small steps)
- the will needs exercise just like the body does
- stories of St. Therese and other Saints / Morning Offering – rely on God
- parents need to know the difference between laziness and difficulty with the subject matter
Spiritual Formation
The moral virtues grow through education, deliberate acts, and perseverance in struggle. Divine grace purifies and elevates them. Catechism of the Catholic Church 1839
The spiritual nature of the child must be considered at all times.
Prayer, the Sacraments, family life, parental example and academic studies are essential.
History, literature and science can help reinforce the faith.
Socialization
Schools provide “automatic” socialization – for better or for worse.
Homeschoolers have to plan socialization – this is important, but not difficult.
Like many other things, some children need more practice than others.
Consider social goals for your children – particularly as they get to adulthood - such as: good manners, working well with others, sensitivity to others needs.
Ideally your children should socialize with homeschoolers and non-homeschoolers.
Important considerations:
- age and maturity
- protect their innocence, especially in the early years
- know activities are safe and supervised by trustworthy adults
- be available to talk about experiences, questions
- develop strengths and encourage growth in weaker areas
Isolationism vs. Controlled Exposure
Social possibilities (and examples of what they can provide)…
- Classes (e.g. art, gymnastics, dance) - respect authority, classroom decorum, comfort level around non-family members
- Sports – physical exercise and discipline, being a team player (Parish teams, soccer clubs, local recreation department programs and summer sports camps at the local high school are some possibilities.)
- Volunteer work – experience challenges and solutions, self-esteem, joy in helping others
- Have whole families over to visit – support and camraderie for children and parents
- Group activities such as academic clubs, nature outings
- Interaction with other adults – mentors
Physical Education and Motor Skills
To a certain extent - if the body isn’t happy, the mind isn’t happy.
Work in physical areas carries over to school subjects – confidence, self-discipline, perseverance, etc.
Fine motor skills can be a big issue in academics – find creative ways to develop in this area – such as legos, artwork, stringing beads, making rosaries and doing paper mazes.
Homeschooling can be great for balancing these needs – you can let your children run around between subjects, do artwork during read-alouds, chew gum (helpful for very active or noisy children who otherwise distract their siblings), etc.
What use is it to pile task on task and prolong the days of labor, if at the close the chief object is left unattained? It is not the fault of the teachers--they work only too hard already. The combined folly of a civilization that has forgotten its own roots is forcing them to shore up the tottering weight of an educational structure that is built upon sand. They are doing for their pupils the work which the pupils themselves ought to do. For the sole true end of education is simply this: to teach men how to learn for themselves; and whatever instruction fails to do this is effort spent in vain. (Dorothy Sayers "the Lost Tools of Learning")
Educational Theory: Ideas that Matter
This page (and its sub-pages) are presently under construction.
- "Age Quod Agis" ("Do What You Are Doing")
- Beauty
- Educating the Whole Child
- Freedom
- Getting Started: Homeschooling from Day One
- Goodness
- How to Learn
- Love
- Pope Benedict XVI on Education
- Truth
- Twenty-Five Ways to Inspire a Love of Learning in your Children
- Virtues of a Homeschool Parent
- What is Catholic Education?
- Papal Documents of Interest
- Quotes to Ponder on Children and Education
Educational Theory: Ideas that Matter - "Age Quod Agis"
A quote by Fr. Thomas Dubay:
Little children live intensely in the present moment, neither in the past nor in the future. As the French writer La Bruyre once put it, ‘Children have neither past nor future, but they have something we seldom have—they rejoice in the present.’
This is the child-like trait which the New Testament would have us imitate. Age quod agis—literally, ‘do what you are doing’…The future does not yet exist and the past is gone forever. What we have is the present moment. By it we are fashioning our eternity.… Fr. Thomas Dubay, SM, LIVING FAITH, Sept. 30, 2002
From The Virtue-Driven Life by Fr. Benedict Groeschel:
Part of temperance is taking care of ourselves. Obsessive-compulsive workaholism is obviously not a sign of temperance. Even if we enjoy our work, we need to practice temperance and get adequate rest. Careful, Benedict!
Enjoy what's going on while it's going on. If you go to the supermarket, enjoy it. Don't make it drudgery. Talk to the cashier. Speak to the people at the fruit counter. Chat with a neighbor. Try to get to know people, get them to talk to you, and make your passage through life pleasurable. If you are a private person and find it a chore or somewhat difficult to speak to strangers, at least smile. As an old extrovert, I deeply appreciate a quiet person with a genuine smile; in addition, such a person listens to us, which practically no one else does.
Slow down. Smell the flowers as you go by, and then you won't need too much of this world's goods. Enjoy your work and you won't need too much time off. Enjoy being at home and you won't have to go away so much.
Many people are intemperate because they are miserable and suffering. Their life is a big long misery, so they decide to brighten it up with mountains of potato chips. They're addicted to potato chips or sweets or even beer. Look at your own intemperateness and see if unhappiness is causing it.
Related Links:
In A Spacious Place: Age quod Agis -- Logistics in the Homeschool
Karen Edmisten: Visiting Others
Love2learn Moments: Age Quod Agis
Educational Theory: Ideas that Matter - Beauty
MESSAGE OF THE HOLY FATHER BENEDICT XVI FOR THE 41st WORLD COMMUNICATIONS DAY
Theme: "Children and the Media: A Challenge for Education"
Children exposed to what is aesthetically and morally excellent are helped to develop appreciation, prudence and the skills of discernment. Here it is important to recognize the fundamental value of parents’ example and the benefits of introducing young people to children's classics in literature, to the fine arts and to uplifting music. While popular literature will always have its place in culture, the temptation to sensationalize should not be passively accepted in places of learning. Beauty, a kind of mirror of the divine, inspires and vivifies young hearts and minds, while ugliness and coarseness have a depressing impact on attitudes and behaviour.
From The Order of Things by Fr. James Schall (Ignatius Press, 2007)...
"For Plato," Joseph Ratzinger wrote, to make the same point in another way, "the category of the beautiful had been definitive. The beautiful and the good, ultimately the beautiful and God, coincide. Through the appearance of the beautiful we are wounded in our innermost being, and that wound grips us and takes us beyond ourselves; it stirs longing into flight and moves us toward the truly Beautiful." What is orderly and beautiful leads to what is order and beauty in itself. We are made in such a way that, on first beholding what this beauty is, in any of its forms or wordly manifestations, we cannot rest without an explanation and, indeed, without a possession of it after its own manner.
From Cardinal Ratzinger's Feast of Faith:
Thomas says that through the praise of God man ascends to God. Praise itself is a movement, a path; it is more than understanding, knowing and doing - it is an "ascent", a way of reaching him who dwells amid the praises of the angels. Thomas mentioned another factor: this ascent draws man away from what is opposed to God. Anyone who has ever experienced the transforming power of great liturgy, great art, great music, will know this. Thomas adds that the sound of musical praise leads us and others to a sense of reverence. It awakens the inner man...
Related Links: