Category Archives: Damaged Learners

Renewing the Minds of Damaged Learners

One of my flock graduated just before Christmas, and it has caused me to reflect on what those early days were like, and how far she has come. When she began homeschooling with me she was what I would call a “damaged learner”. A damaged learner, in my opinion, is a student who has shut down and turned away from any interest in learning. I’ll be real frank with you and say that I was a damaged learner before I was rehabilitated by homeschooling my children, and inadvertently myself, using Charlotte Mason’s methods. This new graduate is not the only damaged learner I have taught. There have been four of them, not counting myself.

Seeing the beauty in the world through this kind of education was difficult for my damaged learners at first. In fact, they found it abrasive, maybe even offensive. Classical music grated on their nerves and traditional hymns left them flat. Narrating was weird, and Plutarch was even weirder!

Charlotte Mason talks a lot about us spreading the bounty of the feast before the child, but I can only describe the condition of the damaged learner as one who has only ever eaten sugar and processed food. Vegetables do not taste good to them. The texture is not even pleasant. In this scenario, my first response would be to cease all sugar and tell them that when they are hungry, they will eat! But alas, that was not an option. Not only were these not my own kids, but not all of them were living in my own home, so I couldn’t control their environment. The adjustment had to be made slowly. I had to coax them along, entice them to join me in tasting a bit of the feast, a little at a time. Furthermore, it’s one thing to need calories of some kind to survive, but a person can certainly survive without beauty, without the feast Charlotte Mason suggests. A paltry existence it would be, no doubt, but my point is that we cannot starve them out.

That said, most of my damaged learners left public school with no hope. They were failing, or more honestly, the system was failing them. However, there was a huge blessing in that, because we knew what didn’t work, and therefore we could wholeheartedly embrace Mason’s methods.

Folk songs were an easy start. One of my kids happens to have the nickname Lizzie, and I will never forget us learning the folk song “Go Get the Ax”, which includes the line, “Go get the ax, there’s a fly in Lizzie’s ear.” Oh how they giggled! Lizzie wasn’t impressed at first, but she warmed up.

Picture study was easy enough too. I remember the first piece of art they encountered in public that we had previously studied. It was Night Watch by Rembrandt. There is such a sense of confidence and pride that shines in a child’s eyes when they come upon a picture that has been made their friend. I don’t think my kids had any idea that they had made that friend until they walked into a children’s museum and saw it there. It was just a little reproduction, but recognition dawned on their faces, and it was a beautiful thing.

Hymn was a little trickier. For a long time I would seek out a modern version of the current hymn, which was more comfortable to them. Eventually we undertook to learn our hymns in traditional form. There was much groaning and difficulty. Frankly, we did not sound good for weeks, but amazingly, by the end of the month we had the thing down, and wonder of wonders, we sounded pretty good. It was sort of like creating something ourself. That may sound odd, but the broken, maybe even ugly thing we started with had been practiced and honed into something lovely.

Handicrafts were…well, ok, they loved handicrafts from the beginning.

Reading living books for subjects like history, science, geography, was a relief to them, but narrating on these things was like asking an old dog to do a new trick! I remember my own initial attempts to narrate. It was a similar experience to learning to write left-handed in the fourth grade, because I’d broken my right hand. I’m thankful that I knew how hard it was to learn when you didn’t start out that way, because it helped me to take it slow and teach them the art of attending and narrating. Sometimes line by line.

One huge blessing with regard to living books is that they don’t have to be at a high reading level to be worthy. Even to this day my kids read books that range from a fifth or sixth grade level up to graduate level. Of course, I needed to read aloud any that were beyond their reading level, but that was fine, because I found that the skill of listening and narrating was as important as the skill of reading to themselves and then narrating.

Interestingly, I also found that they preferred to do written narrations over oral narration. It’s so odd, because we know that all areas of language arts have an order of attainment the same as a baby learns to roll, pull up, crawl, and then walk. But I’ve heard that those babies that skip crawling and go straight to walking have the potential for learning difficulties later. Frequently their parents have to get down on the ground with them, and teach them to crawl for the sake of their brain development. I think somehow this relates to a lot of what Mason suggest we do, and in what order. So, I constantly asked for oral narrations over written narrations despite their preferences.

They had never heard any Shakespeare, so we started with Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare by Edith Nesbit and then moved onto Tales from Shakespeare by Charles Lamb before listening to an actual Shakespeare play. I remember having a big white board where we tried to keep track of all the characters and their various names and love triangles! And a few years later two of them participated in an actual production of The Taming of the Shrew!

Plutarch took much longer, but I’m happy to say that before they each graduated, they were able to understand, narrate and converse about several of Plutarch’s lives.

One thing that had to be kept in mind was their level in all things. Forget what they should be doing in grades 6, 7 and 8. What they needed to be doing was just above what they could do. What I mean is that they needed to be challenged, but they couldn’t skip whole steps in the process for the sake of being on grade level. For instance, all of them started math at about a fifth grade level, and I worked with them daily through all parts of their math work. None of them have turned out to be math wizards, but they have the basics down very well. In fact, my recent graduate was asked to be a math tutor at her new technical school!

It was also important that I be very deliberate about alternating subjects as is done in the lower forms. In fact, maybe I should mention that I started them, all of them middle schoolers, in what would be the equivalent to AO’s level 4. It was plenty hard enough for them, and the fact is that attaining some specific standard was never my goal with these children. Just consistently moving forward was. Building confidence in their ability to learn was. Hopefully fostering a lifelong love of learning was.

In the end though, all education is self education, and the Holy Spirit is the teacher. Therefore, our identity cannot be wrapped up in their success or their failure, in their motivation to learn or their lack thereof. We must be committed to doing our part in the process, and step by step their knowledge base builds, and the number of things they know about increases. But just as you can share the gospel with someone, and they can still reject Jesus. You can share the blessing of learning, and the student has the choice to refuse. I wish I could say that all of my damaged learners have gone on to embrace the feast, to continue their education, to fill their souls with the beautiful things, but not all of them have. I console myself by remembering that those who haven’t embraced this lifestyle are at least far, far better off than they would have been.

Why your “good” student needs to be homeschooled

Frequently people think that it is the child who is doing poorly in school that needs to be homeschooled. But what about the child that is doing well in school? Do they need to be homeschooled? My answer is a resounding yes!

1. Public School does not teach a child to think, so your “smart” child may not be equipped to reach their potential.

I homeschool one child that went to public school until 6th grade, and I can assure you that she was a very “good” student. All A’s.

The problem was that she was one of those kids of whom you could ask, “What color was King Arthur’s white horse?” and she was unlikely to recognize the answer. In other words, she hadn’t learned to think.

She has amazing potential, and a desire to be something big in life, but public school was going to fail her. Through homeschooling, which in our house includes lots of living books and narration, she has learned to think. She is not just answering a list of multiple choice questions; now she is contemplating things, and asking her own questions.

2. Good students are frequently the ones who know and do what is expected of them.

Well now, that doesn’t sound like a problem, does it? Actually it is, because in many cases the student does exactly what is expected of them, in order to get the grade they want. Then they are done. My “good” student got all A’s in public school, so the first time I asked her to repeat math problems similar to those she had missed, she was not impressed. In her mind, her overall grade was good enough.

But really, isn’t that the question: what is good enough? Is the public school’s standard for an A grade good enough?

I was a very “good” student – top grades in advanced classes – but I’m here to tell you that I was not nearly as smart as I thought I was. I might even modify that to say, I was not nearly as smart as I was lead to believe. Unfortunately, when I finally came up against a very hard class in college, I was devastated to learn that I was unprepared! I had goals that I couldn’t reach, because I had never learned how to deal with any work that didn’t come fairly easy.

It is not going to benefit your child to get straight A’s in public school if it comes easy. When things come easy to our children, it’s time to challenge them a little more. If public school cannot do that, then it’s time to homeschool.

It will be said with truth that most children delight in school; they delight in the stimulus of school life, in the social stir of companionship; they are emulous, eager for reward and praise; they enjoy the thousand lawful interests of school life, including the attractive personality of such and such a teacher; but it seems doubtful whether the love of knowledge, in itself and for itself; is usually a powerful motive with the young scholar. The matter is important, because, of all the joyous motives of school life, the love of knowledge is the only abiding one; the only one which determines the scale, so to speak, upon which the person will hereafter live. Charlotte Mason, Volume 3 – School Education, pg 245-246

When Children Hate Reading – There is Hope

When the big kids left public school and began homeschooling with me they hated to read. It’s not surprising at all, because it was 1) HARD for them, and 2) they hadn’t read anything enjoyable.

My first task was proving to them that books could be fun and enjoyable, so I didn’t dare put anything to them that I didn’t know was going to be great. Everything had to be highly recommended, or come from a source I trust, like AmblesideOnline.

The first thing I did was start reading to them. This way they had a chance to really get into a story without the pain of reading it themselves. If a person gets emotionally involved with a character in a book, then they will never forget what they have read. That’s the premise behind the term “living books”. So can they become emotionally involved with Abagail Adams (Witness to a Revolution), or Benjamin Franklin (Poor Richard)? The answer is that they can, and they did.

The next thing was to assign them a book to read for themselves. One that I knew they would love. I considered their interests, and what we were learning, and I only gave them books that I had read before, or that, again, had come HIGHLY recommended. I also made sure the book would be just the right reading level for them. I didn’t want them to struggle through it, but it also couldn’t be so easy that their brains would get board.

An easy book can be more of a strain to the brain than a harder, more engaging book. Think about it – you have to work harder to pay attention to an easy, boring book. In contrast, when you read a good book that dives right in, rather than being dumbed down, your brain engages and you plow through it without even realizing that time has passed.

I also had them narrate on every chapter of the book. This caused them to think about what they were reading. As they told the story, it became “their own” and they felt a connection to the characters. Also, as we listened to their narration, they felt proud of the quality of “their story” and the fact that we all wanted to know what happened next.

After they finished a book, I gave them another, and we kept on this way, as they warmed up to the idea that between those two covers, there just might be a whole other, very entertaining world. I will never forget the day that I handed one of them a new book and they began reading it immediately, forsaking everything else! I knew then that this child was hooked! These days I just direct them to a stack of about 10 preselected books and let them pick one for themselves.

Of course, the other problem, that reading was HARD, was solved with the working out of the first problem. Once they had gotten through a few books, they had become considerably better at it.

It’s about baby steps. They have spent most of their life learning that school (a.k.a. learning) is hateful. Maybe the biggest gift we can give them is to lead them, one step at a time, to the realization that there is good stuff out there, and grow their curiosity about it.