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How do you view yourself as an educator? That’s right. You are an educator, even if your classroom is your living room or your kitchen. I was a public school teacher for five years, and I considered myself an educator. Now I am an educator of my own children in our home. I just happen to be Mom, too! My most important and precious role is as Mom, but I do enjoy teaching and learning with my children, too.
I am able to educate my children more fully here at home than I was ever able to educate the children in my first grade classes at school.
I can influence them and their attitudes and behavior all through the day every day – and sometimes through the night!
But back to my original question – How do you view yourself as an educator?
I view myself as a “facilitator of learning”. This is a concept I learned about in teaching classes I took in college. I liked the idea of gathering resources for students and letting them interact with them and learn and discover a lot on their own. It seemed like a good way for children to learn thoroughly and enjoyably.
I have put these ideas into practice for many years now and have found them to be very effective.
When I first read about Charlotte Mason’s philosophy, I saw a correlation between what she called “self-education” and my belief in letting children interact with books, resources, manipulatives, etc. and discover what they could from them. Of course, I guide them as needed in using resources in respectful, appropriate ways, and I stay available to answer questions and to comment on their creations or to help them make connections, but I try to let them do a lot of exploring on their own.



One of the most vital aspects of Charlotte Mason’s philosophy is that our minds feed on ideas like our bodies feed on food. She taught that we learn mind to mind. She maintained that we should let children interact with “great” minds, as in great authors and inventors and leaders whose thoughts, ideas and stories are found in books. When we give too much information and interrupt their learning by asking too many questions, we interfere with their process of exploring and do more damage than good. By interjecting our own thoughts or trying to direct the child too much, we may turn off the natural curiosity that makes a child want to learn.
I believe the best, most thorough learning occurs when children want to know something, and then they seek to find the answer or experiment to see what will happen. Such learning experiences can be messy at times. As they get older, children will learn a lot more from the books that we provide for them. I believe we should provide a steady diet of good books for them to consume.
Charlotte was very concerned about order and abundant provision of good books. My main concern is abundant provision! I read many good books aloud to all of my children, even the older ones. My oldest son is 22 and still listens to the books that I read during “together school”. I read books about the great heroes of the faith, classics, books by George MacDonald, biographies and historical fiction. It is a great bonding activity for the family as well as feeding the minds of my children with great ideas.




You can read about Charlotte’s ideas about “self-education” in her book called “A Philosophy of Education” which is Volume 6 of The Original Homeschooling Series, which can be found here at Ambleside Online.
From the introduction on page 16, there is a quote that I like. “The mind can know nothing save what it can produce in the form of an answer to a question put to the mind by itself.” I allow lots of freedom for my children to mull over and think about what we are reading. Sometimes I will initiate a discussion. Sometimes I can’t hold back a comment on a scene or event in a story or an idea that is put forth, but, for the most part, I try to let them digest the material and process it themselves. Many times I use the narrating technique as a way to recap the story from the last time we read, so that they are ready for the new chapter. I have a child tell us what happened the last time we read. I don’t call it narration, but that’s what it is. Narration is another important aspect of the Charlotte Mason method.
Through providing lots of good books and resources (maps, charts, magazines, manipulatives, videos, documentaries, and hands-on activities), I believe that I am providing a means of learning through which my children may learn and assimilate knowledge thoroughly. They will always remember it, because they own it. They have interacted with the knowledge and information themselves and have pursued the answers to their own questions.
Therefore, I see myself as a facilitator of learning. And I love my job!
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Many homeschoolers enjoy the benefits of using dynamic unit studies to maintain a high interest level in their course of study. Here are the common types of unit studies you may wish to consider.
Integrated Unit Studies
Integrated unit studies organize the content of multiple subjects (such as English, Science, Social Studies) around one theme. For instance, if the unit was “Russia”, the study might include stories from Russia (Reading), Animals in Siberia (science), Geography of Russia, history of the Cold War (Social Studies). Multiple academic subjects can be pursued with this type of study: art, music, dance, theology, philosophy, poetry, etc. It takes multiple resources and either a lot of planning or the purchase of a curriculum that includes the different resources.
Literature Based Unit Studies
This type of homeschool unit study is great for children and families who love books. Often the unit is developed around a historical period or around a theme. Quality books and classical literature are read throughout the unit. Families using this type of unit study often construct time lines to display the big picture.
Hands-On Unit Studies
Hands on unit studies provide students with plenty of hands on projects. This is great the kinesthetic learners or young learners particularly. They can build models, write poems, create posters, and develop games and puzzles to reflect what they have learned. The completion of their unit study often includes a scrap book or unit study book which reflects their projects.
Learning Tree Unit Studies
This unit study uses a tree as its model. The student diagrams a tree with its roots as the resources used to study the topic (the trunk of the tree). The branches are the main objectives to be accomplished. The leaves are the books read; and the fruit are projects completed. Before the unit starts, parents set a minimum number of resources and projects that the student must complete. They are rewarded for doing more work than the minimum.
Interest Focused Unit Studies
This is a method of motivating a particular student in their study of difficult subjects by allowing them to focus on a favorite topic. For example, you have a student who struggles with reading and writing but is fascinated by dinosaurs. What kind of books do you want to get from the library? As you introduce any topic: geography, writing, science – tie it to dinosaurs. Students will be more interested in completing the writing assignments, learning geography, or studying the digestive system if it is tied to their interest. A topic of interest is often studied anywhere between 3 and 9 months.
Advanced Unit Studies
The advanced unit study takes the interest focused unit study to a deeper level. If a student has a long term interest in a particular topic, they can combine that topic with another topic to produce an in-depth study. For instance, a student who continued a fascination of ballet for years, might do a study on dance during the Renaissance, including costumes and music for different periods and nations. This type of unit study takes a lot of time and energy to pursue, but is a great way to culminate a long-term interest.
Karen Newell is the author of Write On: The Kid Friendly, Mother Pleasing, Gentle Way to Learn to Write. Read more about the Learning Tree Unit Studies at Kid-Friendly-Homeschool-Curriculum.com.
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The available definitions for Eclectic Homeschooling are as wide and varied as the possibilities it provides. Many non-homeschoolers imagine homeschooling to be very similar in structure to public schooling, although at home. They assume that homeschooled students sit at a desk all day, working their way through a set curriculum, as well as completing assignments and exams. Indeed, this is the way that some families choose to homeschool, and it can work very well.
Eclectic homeschooling, however, involves utilizing resources and information from anywhere and everywhere. Rather than be restricted to one set curriculum, they may utilize a variety of text books. But, eclectic homeschooling certainly doesn’t stop there. Eclectic homeschooling also includes using a variety of methods, tools and even locations, to educate your children, as well as letting their needs and desires determine what is taught and how. Many parents of special needs children homeschool their children in an eclectic fashion.
Eclectic homeschooling is a form of homeschooling that is simply bursting with potential, because your family’s educational journey is only limited by your imagination… and, perhaps, funding. Many parents will take a child interests and turn it into a fun school subject or use a variety of books to teach literature instead of buying a program or a boring anthology of works. Eclectic homeschooling families are often very talented at discovering what works. While some parents will buy a curriculum and persevere, following it to the letter, even if their kids are struggling, this should never be the case in homeschooling. Don’t be afraid to change! If the kids are struggling, and there is little progress, maybe its time to look into another way to doing things. This is where eclectic homeschooling really comes into its own. If it’s broke, definitely fix it. It’s your kids and their future, and they are the reason we are homeshooling in the first place!
Unschooling
Somewhat closely associated to Eclectic Homeschooling is the concept of unschooling. This method of education takes advantage of the fact that children are natural learners. Instead of setting a rigid structure, unschoolers allow their children’s interests to direct their education, with the parents, as homeschool teachers, acting as facilitators of the learning process, rather than directors/writers/dictators.
Unschooling can be surprisingly effective when well-guided, allowing the child to maintain an interest and some influence over his/her own learning materials, utilizing real life activities, as well of books and standard resources. Orthodox unschoolers believe that learners self-determine what is important to know in the world and, as there is more to learn than can ever be learned, the skills learned in self-directed learning will keep students in good stead throughout life. Also, they argue that there is no such thing as particular topics of study being critical to know, or more important than other subjects in the grand scheme of things. Therefore, whatever direction of study the student chooses is the right one for them. Critics of unschooling, however, express concern that unschoolers may avoid topics that are not of interest, and may therefore be lacking in particular aspects of education and/or social skills, including those deemed important for the workforce.
Regardless of the style of homeschooling adopted long-term, many homeschooling families make good use of unschooling as a transition from government schooling to homeschooling, allowing the child to create new educational associations, and slip into the new freedoms that homeschooling allows.
Melissa Murdoch has a passion for life span development and education, and believes wholeheartedly that a healthy society begins at home. For further information on how to get started in homeschooling, please visit YourHomeschoolCommunity.com.
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The Smithsonian Institution’s recipe for genius and leadership:
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Children should spend a great deal of time with loving, educationally minded parents;
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Children should be allowed a lot of free exploration; and
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Children should have little to no association with peers outside of family and relatives. –H. McCurdy
My husband and I have no qualms about our style of parenting, which is so tied up in home education. He grew up beside his father in a greenhouse. Our first apartment at 500 sq ft, had 31 houseplants in it. He now works as a landscape designer. So we understand this analogy: Children are like little plants. You take the seed and put it in a little cup of the best topsoil. You give it lots of light. You gently sprinkle it with drops of water so the delicate leaves aren’t broken. When it gets a decent root system, you transplant it to a bigger pot. You protect it from the wind and the hottest sun. You bring it in when there’s a freeze. You don’t put it out where the dog will trample it or a deer will eat the buds. When its well-established, and the season is right, you can transplant it finally to its place outside your home. Then it will do well on its own in the downpours and coldest winters.
So we plan to raise our children, protecting them and ensuring they are firmly established before they go out into the world. It is our hope that they do much better at surviving their relationships and careers with such a secure beginning. Our family follows the Classical Education model. I use the book, “The Well-Trained Mind” as the base for our curriculum. The basic premise of the classical method is the breakdown of education into three sections which each build on each other. First is the Grammar stage, generally 1st-4th grades, in which a child’s curiosity is encouraged by just stuffing them full of images and facts. The next stage is the Logic stage, generally 5th- 8th grades, where an adolescent begins to find the answers to the how and why of what they learned in the Grammar stage. Last is the Rhetoric stage, in which 9th -12th graders learn how to coherently express what they have learned. In Classical Education, all learning follows history as its base and the other subjects work around it. In addition, a student goes over the same material three times in his education (cycling through the material once in each stage).
An example of this is our reading material. Ideally, it should be exciting to entrance and interest the first grader, in-depth for the questioning fifth grader, and even more interesting and in depth for the ninth grader. In our home, I buy books on a fifth grade level to read to our first grader, and when we cycle back to the same material in the fifth grade, they read it for themselves, and in ninth grade they read source material. For example, I read The Trojan War and the 12 Labors of Hercules to my first grader. All of my children were enthralled. There were no pictures except those that streamed through their imaginations. Then, when we return to ancient history in the fifth grade, she will curl up on the couch and read about Hercules on her own. This time she’ll learn that mom edited out the reason why he was assigned the 12 tasks: he killed his wife and children in a drunken rage. Then, when she returns again to the ancients in the ninth grade, she won’t be intimidated by reading Homer’s Illiad itself in the poetic original version. What’s to be afraid of, when you’re already familiar with the times and places? Also, when she was taught astronomy in the second grade, she already knew the story behind the crab-shaped constellation, from last year when she saw Hercules toss him into the sky in her mind’s eye.
I was looking at a book from a series aimed at second-graders, called Junie B. Jones. It is listed on reading lists for this age group- yet it has sentences starting with conjunctions and fragments on every page. It has adjectives like bestest. It frequently says me and her. On a whim I looked up classical literature for this age group. I found rough breakdowns of classical literature by grade level. One example was The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams. The first five sentences in The Velveteen Rabbit had an average of 29.2 words in each sentence. The first five sentences of Junie B. Jones and her Big Fat Mouth had an average of 5.4 words per sentence.
An example of one of the more complex sentences which I found in JBJ & her Big Fat Mouth was “Eating things that you find on the ground is very, very dangerous.” I gave it another try and found “That’s because I had tingling excitement in me about Job Day.” In addition to using more complex sentence structure, Williams does not pare down her vocabulary to meet the child reader. Look how this sentence from The Velveteen Rabbit teaches the meaning of the word superior: “The mechanical toys were very superior, and looked down upon every one else; they were full of modern ideas, and pretended they were real.” JBJ is so full of incorrect grammar and simple sentences because it is written from the point of view of a modern first-grader, who would actually speak like that (unfortunately) and have simple interactions. However, there are quite a few older books, written in a different time, from the point of view of a five-year-old (Heidi, Little House series). They are also more complex and descriptive and are much preferred to modern books written for our young people.
Another difference found in the Classical Education model is the emphasis of the use of whole books instead of readers. In public schools today, segments of books are printed in textbooks with summary questions at the end. The publisher chops the most exciting or pertinent portions of a work out, puts it in the textbook, and asks directed questions which can be answered by that portion. Then we wonder later why kids can’t dig through a whole book and find themes when it is not spelled out to them!
I encourage you to challenge your child’s reading level by not feeding them Goosebumps or Sweet Valley High, Babysitter’s Club, or such books. Yes, your child is reading, but she is not really being challenged when she only reads about familiar locales in familiar phrasing. Always read what is a little difficult, not playground conversation in written form. When I was in middle school I really enjoyed the Sackett series by Louis L’Amour. A few of them are written from the point of view of a young girl. They give excellent images of early backwoods Eastern America. They encourage determination, hard work, overcoming obstacles, honesty, trustworthiness, gumption, and a host of other excellent qualities.
Those are virtues I would hope that any parent would like to see cultivated in their child. But because educating at home is solely the responsibility of the parents, these are especially crucial. As homeschoolers, we have great freedom to:
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Do our schoolwork wherever we want
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Wear whatever we want
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Go at whatever pace we choose
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Drop work we already know
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Spend extra time on topics we love
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Do our work whenever we want
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Take breaks or work through
but these freedoms give us responsibilities that families with children in regular schools don’t carry. They aren’t held accountable for what is (or isn’t) learned. They don’t have to be personally disciplined to cover the material or lessons themselves. They have an outside authority taking care of all that, who will be held accountable in a public forum. As home educators, we have to force ourselves take care of the objectives. We meet the goals which we set for ourselves, or we don’t. No one else will come in and check on us. We have to be responsible for our own education, and that means getting the work done and then doing the playing. So traits like persistence, responsibility, determination, honesty and the ability to do hard work are instilled in each work day, as much as math, science, history or English skills are. Unlike those who defer the education of their children to others, we are able and willing to drop the spelling lesson and address the poor attitude. We can put the multiplication drills on hold until the whining is under control. We can give time to grieve a lost grandparent before expecting academic performance to continue on uninterrupted. There are many, many reasons why we have chosen to educate our children at home. These are just a few.
Teresa Dear is a homeschooling mother of four. She and her husband of eleven years are not worried about the socialization of their children. You can follow the blog exploration of classical education in general and their homeschool lifestyle in particular at http://highereducation-mama4x.blogspot.com She divides her time between education, the house, the extra-curricular activities, shopping for curriculum, and stocking her http://www.mama4x.etsy.com storefront, where you can find handmade greeting cards and vintage ephemera.
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If you are looking for a way to homeschool a number of children of various age ranges, enjoy reading books with them, want to enhance their writing skills, delve into stories of historical figures and events, and minimize the use of textbooks, using Charlotte Mason’s methods may be just the right path for you to follow.
Charlotte Mason was an educator in England in the 19th century. She wanted children to learn from “living books” not textbooks. She felt children should go outside and experience nature, make observations, and record them in a nature journal. She advocated that children learned and retained information best when they listened to or read good literature and had the opportunity to narrate orally what they remembered from the reading. Their writing skills developed from reading good literature, studying it, and copying it into copy work journals, and writing down dictation. This is a simplified summary of her philosophy, but it gives you a starting point of her basic ideas. To fully understand and implement her methods you can read her original works or books that have been written summarizing her methods.
Using Charlotte Mason’s methods, you would teach history chronologically, and can include Bible instruction if you wish. Lessons are kept short so that the child does not dawdle and includes foreign language and art and music appreciation. There are suggested curriculum you can follow at the following websites: Ambleside Online and Simply Charlotte Mason.
Some homeschooling families combine the use of Charlotte Mason methods with unit study topics. They use notebooking pages to write their narrations, copy work, and dictation to document what they have learned about the theme they are studying. For example, if your family is studying the Middle Ages, you would read living books about the Middle Ages or stories set in the Middle Ages, provide copy work for your child from the book or written work from that time period, and tie in a science topic like disease (black plague) or any scientists’ biographies from that time. You would also include art and music appreciation of artists and musicians from that era. You can find ideas using a combination of Charlotte Mason’s ideas and unit study methods at the following site: http://charlottemasonhomeschooling.wordpress.com
This is just an introduction to the wonderful homeschooling experience you and your children can enjoy when implementing Charlotte Mason methods in your daily routine. For further information, read any of the following books: A Charlotte Mason Companion: Personal Reflections on the Gentle Art of Learning by Karen Andreola; A Charlotte Mason Education and More Charlotte Mason Education by Catherine Levison; and When Children Love to Learn: A Practical Application of Charlotte Mason’s Philosophy for Today by Elaine Cooper, Eve Anderson, Susan Schaeffer Macaulay, and Jack Beckman.
For free practical ideas in using Charlotte Mason methods, combining these with unit topics of study, and links to many educational resources, please visit Katie’s Homeschool Cottage at http://charlottemasonhomeschooling.wordpress.com
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The Charlotte Manson method of education started in the early 1900s by the British educator of the same name. Charlotte Manson brought about a change in the method of homeschooling at that time, focusing on access to a quality education for all classes of society irrespective of social class or gender.
One of the main aspects to Charlotte Manson’s approach was the introduction of ‘Living books’. These, unlike normal text books, were texts written in first person form by a single author with a lot of passion about the subject written. Living books were usually written in a narrative form, making them engaging to read as well as understandable and interesting. Children were then encouraged to cement their learning by providing a narrative on the subject just covered. This way, children and their parents could actually tell what the student had learned, making the results of studying more transparent.
Other features of the Charlotte Manson method to education include:
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The use of narration to bring about a new subject; Children find this easier to listen to and digest compared to normal ‘lectures’;
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The importance given to handwriting; Children are made to write short passages to improve their handwriting. Copy work is a daily activity in this method. Only one copy work should be done each day.
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Each child is made to write down a passage through the form of dictation. This allows them to improve their listening ability as well as writing ability. As children do this task, they are exercising multiple learning areas at the same time. The parents or the teacher is supposed to watch over the child writing the dictated passage to catch any mistakes and correct them immediately.
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Listening to songs and looking at paintings and other pieces of art is an important part of this method of education. This brings about a sense of art appreciation among the children. This is made even more productive by asking the children to narrate their observations.
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An emphasis on appreciating nature. Daily walks, outdoor studies, and visits to natural places are common. Children are made to carry a ‘Nature Notebook’ which they can use to write or draw anything they have seen.
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Habit training, including good manners, neatness, truthfulness, obedience and kindness, is practiced and reinforced in this method. These habits are best taught when the child is young.
The current idea of boy scouts and girl guides dates back to the time of Charlotte Mansion. This approach has a great emphasis on learning by experience and learning from nature. This tradition, bought about by Charlotte Manson’s ideas, is practiced all over the world.
The Charlotte Manson method is extremely effective for children as it utilises short books and narrative ways of teaching through its use of living books. This method places a lot of emphasis on learning by experience, and is very helpful in developing creative thinking and an artistic mind. The Charlotte Mason influence is also regarded by some as ‘heaven’ for youngsters with considerable interest in art, music and linguistics.
Melissa Murdoch has a passion for life span development and education, and believes wholeheartedly that a healthy society begins at home. For further information on how to get started in homeschooling, please visit YourHomeschoolCommunity.com.
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The available definitions for Eclectic Homeschooling are as wide and varied as the possibilities it provides. Many non-homeschoolers imagine homeschooling to be very similar in structure to public schooling, although at home. They assume that homeschooled students sit at a desk all day, working their way through a set curriculum, as well as completing assignments and exams. Indeed, this is the way that some families choose to homeschool, and it can work very well.
Eclectic homeschooling, however, involves utilizing resources and information from anywhere and everywhere. Rather than be restricted to one set curriculum, they may utilize a variety of text books. But, eclectic homeschooling certainly doesn’t stop there. Eclectic homeschooling also includes using a variety of methods, tools and even locations, to educate your children, as well as letting their needs and desires determine what is taught and how. Many parents of special needs children homeschool their children in an eclectic fashion.
Eclectic homeschooling is a form of homeschooling that is simply bursting with potential, because your family’s educational journey is only limited by your imagination… and, perhaps, funding. Many parents will take a child interests and turn it into a fun school subject or use a variety of books to teach literature instead of buying a program or a boring anthology of works. Eclectic homeschooling families are often very talented at discovering what works. While some parents will buy a curriculum and persevere, following it to the letter, even if their kids are struggling, this should never be the case in homeschooling. Don’t be afraid to change! If the kids are struggling, and there is little progress, maybe its time to look into another way to doing things. This is where eclectic homeschooling really comes into its own. If it’s broke, definitely fix it. It’s your kids and their future, and they are the reason we are homeshooling in the first place!
Unschooling
Somewhat closely associated to Eclectic Homeschooling is the concept of unschooling. This method of education takes advantage of the fact that children are natural learners. Instead of setting a rigid structure, unschoolers allow their children’s interests to direct their education, with the parents, as homeschool teachers, acting as facilitators of the learning process, rather than directors/writers/dictators.
Unschooling can be surprisingly effective when well-guided, allowing the child to maintain an interest and some influence over his/her own learning materials, utilizing real life activities, as well of books and standard resources. Orthodox unschoolers believe that learners self-determine what is important to know in the world and, as there is more to learn than can ever be learned, the skills learned in self-directed learning will keep students in good stead throughout life. Also, they argue that there is no such thing as particular topics of study being critical to know, or more important than other subjects in the grand scheme of things. Therefore, whatever direction of study the student chooses is the right one for them. Critics of unschooling, however, express concern that unschoolers may avoid topics that are not of interest, and may therefore be lacking in particular aspects of education and/or social skills, including those deemed important for the workforce.
Regardless of the style of homeschooling adopted long-term, many homeschooling families make good use of unschooling as a transition from government schooling to homeschooling, allowing the child to create new educational associations, and slip into the new freedoms that homeschooling allows.
Melissa Murdoch has a passion for life span development and education, and believes wholeheartedly that a healthy society begins at home. For further information on how to get started in homeschooling, please visit YourHomeschoolCommunity.com. Article Source
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Digital Scrapbooking to Learn
Here is a great example of using digital scrapbooking in school work. Digital scrapbooking can be very motivating. Reluctant writers do better journaling a scrapbook page over writing a book report and some children thrive on working in digital or art environment.

Not only is a biography like this is fun to make and share but the student is also learning design and layout that can be valuable in several areas in the work force or home business!

Here the journaling is a simple time line of Mark Twain’s life.

Students don’t need to write pages of information to learn. Summaries take thought and consideration. One must know how to coherently and succinctly identify the major points. A summary clarifies the main points of an idea, theory, plan, goal or event.
See Slide Show and Read
The quotes gives an idea of Twain’s personality.


More pages or more journaling could be added for more information. You could create an entire scrapbook on a person, event, or time period!
Imagine a scrapbook of pages like the one above documenting your child’s school work.
Where to Get the Supplies?
Free Photos and Clip Art
The art for this project came from a Google image search. Just right click on an image to save to your computer.There are also hundreds of free clip art sites available.
School reports come under the “Fair Use” doctrine.When using the photograph/image for a school report (non-commercial purposes) it is perfectly acceptable to reprint an image.
Free Digital Scrapbook Kits
There are dozens of Digital Scrapbook Stores online and hundreds of free downloads available. If you plan on adding digital scrapbooking to your homeschool you should start building a “stash” pf papers and embellishments.
Click Here to see what is available free right now.
Do a Google Search for "Free Digital Scrapbook" and you'll find a ton of neat kits. It is like going on a treasure hunt.
The Mark Twain page was made with Desert Sunrise kit. (not all papers shown)

Here is a Faithbooking example with the same papers

You can gt the Bible verse word art free here.
We are working on academic digital scrapbook kits now. Click for examples.
Software
You need a Photo Editing Program to digital scrapbook. Examples of these are Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Photoshop Elements, Corel Paint Shop Pro, Ulead Photoimpact, and Microsoft Digital Image Pro. Google’s Picasa is a great, free program to edit photos as well.
I recommend Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 (Win/Mac) it is $79 at Amazon. There are hundreds of video tutorials online that will teach you or your student how to digital scrapbook using Photoshop Elements.
Digital Scrapbooking with Photoshop Elements Video Tutorials
See video tutorials here.
Blessings,
Robin
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