Early Learning – Character

Greetings from Me and My House,

Probably one of the top 10 misunderstandings of the “Better Late than Early” philosophy is that if you aren’t “doing school” (i.e. traditional academics) with your young children then you aren’t teaching them anything. We all know that nothing is further from the truth.

One aspect that we highly focus on during these years (anywhere from toddler to preteen) is character development. One excellent tool we can use as part of our “character curriculum” that also covers “doing school” is the reading aloud of biographies of those of great Christian character. We have and use several resources for this.

One of our favorites for the younger crowd is the 3 book series of Hero Tales. In these books are short stories from the lives of several “famous” Christians – 3 stories per person. These are by Dave and Neta Jackson, the authors of the Trailblazers series – which are also excellent stories of missionaries’ lives, though told through a fictional story. For the little bit older children (and adults :-), the new Then and Now series of Christian biographies by Janet and Geoff Benge is excellent.

The stories in Hero Tales are short enough that you can finish them in one setting with little ones. After reading and narrating a story, we discuss what godly character was in the life of the person and how we can be like them. This is just one tool we can to help our children develop godly character in their lives.

At Jesus’ feet,
Lisa

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Giving Thanks

What are you doing on the computer, instead of spending time with your family? OK, perhaps like here, the guys are “bonding” in a quick round of golf and the kids are getting ready to go to Grandmas, so you’re just sneaking in a few moments.

I just wanted to send a quick note to encourage you all to, if you haven’t yet, spend a few minutes relating the Story of Thanksgiving to your children. Let them know this isn’t just turkey and football day. It isn’t a day of gorging themselves, or even just a day to be with relatives. It is a day set apart for expressing our thankfulness to God.

Tell them how the Pilgrims sought religious freedom to not only worship God as set forth in His Word, but to raise their children in an environment conducive to them developing their own rightful walk with the Lord – we must take a stand to follow God no matter where it leads and we must take our children there with us. How many lost their lives, but not their souls, in taking the risk to be trailblazers for those to come after (half of the people on the Mayflower died that first winter) – sometimes the costs are high to be the first one to do what is right, but someone must step out. How God’s provision came from the help of one “outside” (Squanto) – we can’t remain in the huddle of “us 4 and no more”; we must reach out to the world, to those different than us; perhaps God will use them as instrumental in our blessing. How they were thankful in lack as well as in plenty – whether we are abased or abound, God is there and to be praised. How in their preparations of their Feast, their own efforts proved “inadequate” (although God had brought a great harvest, their Feast would not provide for all the extra people that came,) but – God provides above and beyond what we can see, think, or even dream of. We must never trust in our own efforts but always trust in the One who alone is Trustworthy and Faithful.

Tell your children of a country founded on the belief and faith in Yahweh God the Creator and Redeemer, a country fought for and forged on those beliefs. Tell them how it was a President 240-some years later who proclaimed this memorial Feast day begun by those Pilgrims as a National annual Holiday. Tell them how we are Pilgrims sent by God to uphold His truth in this land that has largely forsaken Him.

Above all tell them to give thanks to the Lord for He is good. No matter what they feel they lack, they have so much to be thankful for. Give them each 5 kernals of corn, the daily provisions of the Pilgrims before that harvest came in, and tell them to “Count their blessings, name them one by one. Count their many blessings, see what God has done.” Give thanks to the Lord who satisfies your mouth with good things, as you enjoy the abundance He has provided for you today.

Give thanks to the Lord for the ability to educate our children at home without having to disobey man in order to obey God. Give thanks to our Lord for your husband, for each and every child He has blessed your union with, for extended family, for spiritual family, for friends and neighbors – for relationship is everything. People are the only thing that lasts forever. Cherish each of these and let them know today that you are thankful to God for them. Most of all for Salvation from our sin through the death and resurrection of His very own Son; for Reconciling us to Himself in the most awsome Relationship for Eternity. Halalu Yah!!! Praise Him!

 

In the Beginning …

Some people (maybe you) may still be saying, “Lisa, I still don’t get it. Just exactly what do you do, and how do you do it? Tell me simply , what does L.E.D. consist of.” You’ll find this information spelled out in our L.E.D. Seminar, R Road “how to” guide and other books, but we’ve reduced it to its simplest form here.


In the Beginning …
The concepts and methods of Lifestyle Education through Discipleship™ may be so totally foreign to you that you look at the philosophy here and say, “I don’t have a clue how to start, where do I begin?” If that’s you–you agree with what we’re saying, but need to see it spelled out simply, this page is for you.

Sola Scriptura — Everything we do is based on Scripture alone. That doesn’t mean the Bible is the only book we use in our home. It does mean that the “earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof.” We do not study anything without looking at it from God’s point of view and looking for His hand in it.

Journaling — We record what God is doing in our lives. This isn’t just a diary or log, but anything He’s laying on our hearts and minds–what we are thinking about and what we are learning.

Phillipians 4:8 Life-changing Literature — Family read-aloud time is the foundation of our learning. In addition to the Bible, we read real interesting stories of faith and virtue–biographies, historical narratives, even historical and virtuous fiction, to learn of God, His World, His Plan and Ways in this world and in our lives.

Copywork and Dictation — We Copy the great writing of those that have gone before us–to learn both content and how to write.

Narration — We re-tell the stories we read–to learn to be good speakers and writers.

Notebooks — We compile our loves and our learning to create records and presentations of our Life Message.

It really is that Simple, and really brings much Freedom.

 

** This comes from the L.E.D. Freedom and Simplicity™ Seminar – a 7 session seminar presenting not only the Philosophy, Principles, and Practical Application of L.E.D., but also Times of Refreshing, Relection, and Renewing the Mind. Hands-on Discipleship yoU! exercises will help you integrate L.E.D. into your own life. Sessions include:
“Times of Refreshing”
“All your children Shall be Taught By the Lord” – Introduction to L.E.D.
“The Fear of the Lord is the Beginning of Wisdom” – 8 Principles of L.E.D.
“I Show You a More Excellent Way” – 7 Pillars of Excellence
“Wisdom Has Built Her House” – 7 Pillars of Learning
“When You Rise Up and When You Lie Down” – An L.E.D. Day in the Life of Me and My House
“In the Beginning …” – Getting Started with L.E.D.

[Note: Seminar sessions have been revamped. Same information, just rearranged and sessions renamed.]

Would you like to arrange a seminar for your group?

 

If there be any Virtue

I have much on my heart to write to you about Literature – so much more than I have time to get down on paper. The topic of Reading has been one of my dearest for my whole life. To actually WRITE about READING from a Literature perspective, rather than a learning to read perspective has been on my heart for several months. Ideas have been stirring, how to get my heart on paper – well in type on screen anyhow – is the hard part. God has put several more resources before me, and I have re-read and re-listened to several others. I’m really trying to get the “Lifestyle Curriculum – Excellence without Textbooks” book done, but it has a ways to go before it’s copyready. Baby, Husband, Children, and Teaching comprise most of my time right now – and these short articles when I can slip them in.


“If there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.” Philippians 4:8Virtue is a word rarely heard anymore, nor even seen for that matter. In our society of situational relativism, few are trained in it and few personally aspire to it. True Virtue seems to have pretty much gone the way of the horse and buggy. It’s an interesting relic from the past, but of little value today, only possessed by those that are a little out of step with the world. A recent movie illustrated just this point. All the ladies were intrigued over Leopold’s chivalry, but in the end, “come on Leopold get with it, that just doesn’t work out in real life”.

Truly! “Who can find a virtuous woman?” and are there any virtuous men out there? What is Virtue? The lexical aids in my Bible state that Virtue is the “force or energy of the Holy Spirit”, which easily explains why it’s not found in Godless society. Virtue is strength of moral excellence. It is “in a moral sense, what gives man his worth.”‘ In our society where everyone is looking to find their worth in selfish vain glory, we need only to return to strong moral excellence to find our worth waiting.

God sees Virtue as so important that He tells us to “give all diligence” to add to our Faith, Virtue. It won’t come naturally. It is only developed by diligence. Christian home educator’s seem to be on the forefront in giving diligence to returning to the training of Virtue in their children’s and their own lives. It seems to be one of the most sought after resource areas after the main academics, and in many families even more important than the academics, in following 2 Peter 1:5, to begin with Faith, then add Virtue, and then Knowledge. But regardless of all the programs to teach Virtue available, it only comes by the power of the Holy Spirit at work to transform us as we diligently renew our minds. To renew our minds we must think on such things that are true, honest, just, pure, lovely, and of good report, that are virtuous and praiseworthy, as Philippians 4:8 instructs us, because “as a man thinks in his heart, so is he” Proverbs 23:7. For us to be affected by transforming power, the renewing of the mind must touch more than just our mental thoughts, it must reach our hearts. The mind is renewed when the heart is touched. The God-centered Judeo-Christian philosophy of education demonstrates this in it’s focus on relationships. Where a humanistic Greek philosophy of education focuses on knowledge – the teaching the material to instruct the mind, a Biblical philosophy focuses on teaching the student and to instruct his heart through relationship.

The Hebrew term Mashal encompasses the core method of this philosophy, used much throughout God’s instruction to us in His Word. Mashal carries the original sense of “superiority in mental action,” coming from the primary root, meaning “to rule,” indicating the superiority of teaching by this method. It conveys teaching by likeness, through the use of maxims, comparative and figurative language-metaphors, parables, allegories, proverbs, and through poetry and song. Mashal doesn’t compare only within itself, but forces us to compare ourselves to the story, “compelling the hearer or reader to form a judgement on himself, his situation, or his conduct” (A.S. Herbert), as excellent Storytelling does.

When this comparison is made to the usual fare of worldly stories (in books, movies, or television) that most people read (and watch) today, the tendency is to judge ourselves as “not too bad,” as we (particularly if we’re Christians) “don’t do those things.” We can read and watch these stories and never be moved from our comfort zone–nor be changed into the image of Christ, as we compare ourselves to the lowest depravity of man present in these depictions of “life” and pride ourselves on being “better than that.” It is only when we fill our minds with the excellence of Philippians 4:8, in the form of the Mashal, that our hearts are reached and changed.

Mark Hamby, of Lamplighter Publishing, has a term for these kinds of stories–Life Transforming Literature, stories that touch our hearts with Philippians 4:8 values and transform our lives to the image of Christ. As you probably already know, there is not an abundance of this type of literature being written today. Much on the shelves, even in the realm of “Christian books” by “Christian” authors is written to amuse the flesh and “tickle the ear,” not to challenge the soul. Also much of what is written to challenge the soul, is not written as Mashal, but in the more Greek method of reasoning with the mind.

But there are Christian authors and publishers committed to providing training in Virtue, based on Mashallic literature. Lamplighter Publishing has a series of books called Rare Collector’s featuring over 40 captivating stories of Virtue, republished from the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. We doubt that anyone can read them without being touched. Contemplate this segment from A Basket of Flowers.

One beautiful morning which succeeded a two days’ rain, Mary and her father went into the garden, and found the first lilies in bloom. They were in an ecstasy of admiration. The flowers were beautiful, but as the garden had long been neglected, Mary’s relentless care had not been able to subdue the weeds. Her beautiful lilies were indeed lilies among thorns. “And so is His church”, said James; “those who have been washed clean, have put on His righteousness; and rising upward like the straight stem of the lily, must grow through the crooked and twisted mass around them. Notice, my child, the reflection of the sun on this petal. So are we to reflect the Sun of Righteousness. The bright lily has no kindred among thorns. It is evidently a plant of a different kind; and one day God will transplant His lily to bloom in the garden where thorns are unknown.”

These stories with the language of times gone by and deep meaning imbedded in the words, that many would say “will go over the heads of children, so won’t hold their interest” are captivating the hearts of our children. They perhaps don’t know every meaning of every word, nor perhaps understand the deeper hidden meanings, but their hearts are enthralled and being changed as they beg for just one more chapter.

As home educator’s, we, with our own humanistic Greek education background, find it difficult to believe that we can teach our children by “just reading or telling them stories,” yet this is the primary way that God has chosen to instruct us. The proof is in the outcome. Lives are changed by Relationships of the heart whether through people directly or through books. Charlie “Tremendous” Jones, the great Christian speaker and proponent for great Christian literature, in particular biographies of the Heroes of the Faith, is known for saying, “You’ll be the same today as you were five years ago except for the people you meet and the books you read.”

In one of my latest favorite parenting books, Romancing Your Child’s Heart, Monte Swan, home educator from CO, gets to the heart of this issue and captures your own heart as you read, (although you may not agree with every specific application–we don’t, you’ll find it hard to disagree with his philosophy and conclusions). I’ll begin here as Monte quotes from theologian Vigen Guroian, “‘Our children are in jeopardy and so is the future of virtue and human goodness as well.’ (Monte continues,) The solution to this crisis is not more religious education, with the goal of indoctrinating a child by hammering home yet more dry tenets of orthodox thinking. Nor is the solution to offer more courses, and at a younger age, in “values clarification.” Children do not need a shopping list of character qualities or values from which to pick and choose. They need adult guidance in knowing how to live well.

…. We must keep in mind that children learn almost nothing from abstractions and almost everything from stories. Abstractions are impersonal and detached. Stories are practical and personal. Children learn through stories because they internalize them. …. When the characters live happily ever after, the child is connected, if only for an instant, with the larger Story ….– the Story that promises eternal happiness for those who come to God by faith. ….Stories are our primary method for romancing our child’s heart, first to ourselves, and then to God.

…. Children who grow up hearing and seeing stories are far better prepared to step into our culture. …. However–and this is crucial–we as parents need to select carefully the stories to which our children are exposed. The challenge is to find stories through which the larger Story runs like a thread. …. For children raised this way, their whole childhood and adolescence has been a rehearsal for living as adults in our culture. They are practiced in the art of living in story. ….They do not need to search for meaning–they have found it already. They become preoccupied, enthralled, fascinated, captivated by the larger Story, like deer panting after the water brooks–people after God’s own heart.

…. This desire and ability to live in the larger Story is described in the Proverbs as “the way wisdom.” …. The ability and passion to live in the way of wisdom are best taught to children through stories. Stories bring biblical knowledge, doctrine, character, and virtue to life–they are the process of applying these to life according to God’s will. ….The way of wisdom is not a stuffy, boring religious concept. It is the literal and spiritual path that almighty God has designed for each of us to walk through this life.

…. Everyone has a story. We all live in a story in one way or another. And all our stories are part of the larger Story ….–and all are connected at the heart. The only thing we can do wrong is not try.”

 

Thoughts on “Public” School

I don’t usually talk much about the government schools, because our focus is in doing what God has called us to do. I prefer to talk about what we are doing and why we are doing it, as opposed to what we aren’t in this area.

This article will probably be considered quite strong. I feel very strongly about this. It is not my intention to offend anyone. We do not educate our children at home because of “how bad” the government schools are, but because we have been given a job to do by God. But learning about the government school system (as well as what God has to say) was a part of our realizing what that job is, and why it is so important that we obey Him in this. If reading anything negative about this system offends you, PLEASE don’t read on.

For our new readers, I promise my articles are usually not this “heavy”.

It is only by His grace that I stand at all, and I humbly present the following.


What will become of the “public schools” if all Christians start home educating their families? What will become of the government schools system is exactly what it already is, an anti-God, anti-family, anti-absolutes, amoral, ad infintum … system of passing on that corrupt culture and its values to our nation’s children. It is an unsafe place spiritually, socially, and emotionally, and for many, also physically. I personally see no problem with the schools “not getting enough money” due to lower student numbers. They should need far less money then anyhow. Shouldn’t they? In addition, it is not the responsibility of the government to provide “free education” at the forced expense of all. Already many without children in the system are paying for those that are in the system, those whose children have already completed their education are still paying, those of us with no children in the system are still paying, and the price just keeps getting higher and higher and the results keep getting lower and lower. The system is NOT working (except in the sense of indoctrinating students in anti-God and anti-scriptural philosophies – their true goal). Academic achievement is extremely down (see John Gotto’s book “Dumbing Us Down”). Yet the cost keeps getting higher, even as more and more children leave the system, they just increase our taxes – and keep adding more “provisions” to take more responsibility (authority) away from the parents. (Younger ages, before and after school programs, and more and more and more. It isn’t about literacy – reading, writing, and arithmetic.)

If all that ends up being left is the “rotten kids”, praise God! most parents will have once again taken interest and responsibility for their own children. Then very little money will be needed to finance these schools, right? Well, we all know better than that, as the “rotten” ones always cost the most (and many times get the best benefits – don’t our jail systems prove that?) (It is because we are forced to pay such high taxes to pay for the system, that we can’t afford to offer our own children at home the same “benefits” the government schools can.)

As for the “good” teachers leaving, I think that’s a good point in all of this. The American government school system is a God-less place, a dark place, a very hostile place to Christianity – perhaps a MISSION field for some, a very harsh, and combative mission field – not a place to send our partially trained youngsters alone without our shelter right there over them (more on this later). Even as a mission field for adults there is the problem that it is illegal to evangelize there, but just as Christians go in and evangelize in other “illegal” places, so I have known Christians that feel called into this place as teachers, hoping to make a difference in the lives of these kids whose parents don’t take their own responsibility. These people would not leave because of the “rotten kids”. They are there because of them. They do not believe in the system; they see it for what it is. There is also the problem that their employer is the system. The system is paying them to do a job that will achieve the system’s goals. Yet, as a Christian they cannot do what the system has employed them to do. Yet, on the other hand, as a Christian they are to be loyal to their employer, an impossibility in this situation. Perhaps within certain local jurisdictions, they are able to do what they have been hired to do without violating Biblical principles or God’s mandates. This is a hard one.

Along these lines of Christian children in the system, I really liked the analogy given by someone else on this, that children, like growing plants that are beyond the “2 leaf stage” can be recognized for what they are becoming, but they aren’t bearing fruit yet, they cannot reproduce themselves. Reproduction requires maturity. What a great argument against those that throw their children into this God-less system to be “salt and light”. These children are not mature enough to go into such a hostile battlefield in enemy territory and fight against it. Most of these children with Christian parents are not getting a daily focus on Biblical Christian training at home, certainly not in the same quantity of the opposite they are getting in the system. But even if they are, they are not mature and fully developed – mature fruit is not in their own lives yet, let alone the ability to reproduce it in others. (I will not argue against God, in His own Sovereignty has used kids in government schools to lead others of their friends to the Lord. Yes, it happens, but it is not the norm, and growth and good fruit is not the necessarily the end result.)

I can’t emphasize enough that if people are sending their kids to these schools, it is for the purpose of the children being educated by this system!!! They claim they are sending them in to be “salt and light”, but that isn’t the reason they are there. They are there to receive an education. Then parents get mad that their children receive the education that is offered there – amoral, anti-God, anti-parent, anti-any AUTHORITY and absolutes, anti-family, etc……

How many adult Christians are, in their work place, turning the place upside down through evangelism and Christian discipleship? Yet, that environment – the workplace, is not a place that was formed for shaping the beliefs and teaching the philsophies of life – and we still as mature adult Christians aren’t making vast inroads into the American workplace – evangelizing fathers to put God first, live by Biblical principles, and take repsonsibility for and leadership in their families for Christ; evangelizing mothers, and discipling them to their proper role in the family, and turning the hearts of both moms and dads fully to their children and what is best for the family, not what they WANT to do as individuals.

We are failing in the evangelism of men, the leaders of the family, yet we expect kids to go into an environment that is set up to shape the impressionable minds of children, and to shape them against God, and parents put them in to be “salt and light”? Where is our thinking??!!! Salt cannot preserve something that is already rotten. And our nation’s Christian children are the victims of this illogical thinking. The goal of many of the founders of government education as we know it today was to take away the authority of Christian parents and replace and undermine it with their teaching of secular humanism. The founders of this system were not Godly men. Such men as Horace Mann, John Dewey, G. Stanley Hall had a ungodly agenda, and it is being carried out in the government school system today.

Some recent statistics from Promise Keepers (I’m not sure where the research came from, if it was from Barna research stats – that’s my guess, but I didn’t ask. And I’m not positive of the exact numbers, but these are within the “decade” anyhow.) 60-some percent (or maybe it was higher) of over age 65 Americans consider themselves Christians. 40-some percent of middle aged (I forgot the exact ages), something like 18% of young adults, and only 6% of those aged 6- 18!!! This tells me that Christian parents are not doing a good job of passing on their faith to their kids, and I fully believe that the anti-God government schools they are sending their kids to are the major reason. These kids are being totally trained in the world’s values and very few Christian parents are countering that at all – outside of making them go to church an hour a week – well, at least until they are teens, and rebel and won’t go anymore.

Even the parents that are trying to disciple their children in God’s ways at home, but still are putting their kids in the government schools are passing the unspoken message that the system is the expert, that they (the parents) aren’t capable of teaching their own children but that’s the system’s job with its educational experts. You can’t tell your kids that the teacher (in the system) is there to teach them, that they need to go to the system to be taught, and then tell them not to believe what they are taught. I see it over and over, and statistics bear it out, these kids do not keep the faith of their parents most of the time. Many (most!) rebel, some come back after a time – but very few have a Biblical way of life and thinking. They mix their “Christianity” with their worldly beliefs creating a lukewarm, nominal “Christian” who lives and thinks just like the world and wanders through life confused and without purpose – putting God and Christianity along with their belief in the Bible into their Sun. morning box; and living the rest of their week in relative humanism and evolutionistic beliefs. They don’t train their children in God’s ways because they don’t know them to be True themselves. They live a fragmented life – as a double-minded man, not knowing what to believe.

Another statistic. This comes from the Nehemiah Institute, on the PEERS test, an evaluation of Biblical Worldview and thinking in Politics, Economics, Education, Religion, and Social Issues. (See the earlier post entitled “Testing, Testing” for more info on the PEERS test.) These stats are for Christian adults and Christian School students (I don’t know if there are stats for government school students, none are given in the paper I have.) I would gather that the people taking this test are people that are interested in having a Biblical Worldview – that want to live and think and make decisions based upon the Truth that scripture gives us for all of life, as they are “Christians”, yet here are the results. The categories being: Biblical Theism, then Moderate Christian, then Secular Humanism, then Socialism. Christian adult’s average score is in the middle of the “Moderate Christian” worldview (in the combined score of the 5 areas tested). All of this group’s individual 5 area scores are within the “Moderate Christian” category. Christian School students score just barely into the “Moderate Christian” category, only 2% away from “Secular Humanism” in their thinking. This is their overall score in the 5 areas combined. They score well into the “Secular Humanism” category in Politics (the lowest of their percentages, 1/2 way down into this category), as well as in Economics and Education. Only in Religion do they make it midway into the “Moderate Christian” category, and their thinking on Social Issues is in the bottom 1/4 of the “Moderate Christian” category. Over 5% of Christians, (ministry leaders, adults, and Christian School students) that are interested in assessing their Worldview thinking, score in the Socialism category, and nearly 20% do not score up into either of the “Christian” categories (Biblical or Moderate). Nearly two-thirds of Christians (that are interested in having a Biblical Worldview) do not have a way of thinking that lines up with the Bible they claim to follow.

Our children are not just statistics, and none of us want to be categorized with status quo (I hope), but these statistics do point out that Christian adults aren’t raising their children in Christian values and worldview in this society we live in. It is difficult to instill those Christian values when all of society around us is combatting against them. It is also difficult because many Christian parents were not raised with those values intact. We were raised in a more “Christian professing” society, but even by our generation Christianity had taken on a nominal status and was being mixed with the world’s views. We as parents have had to learn Biblical Theism (belief in what the Bible says and living our lives accordingly) as adults. Although, from these results most Christian adults have not done this themselves, and even the moderate beliefs that most Christian adults have, are not being passed on intact to their children, even for their children in Christian schools where the Bible is not only allowed but is taught, these Biblical beliefs are deteriorating.

One more closing statistic (this one from Promise Keepers again) on where our evangelistic efforts have the greatest return. If a man comes to Christ there is a 92% chance that the family will come to Christ. For the remaining 2 stats about this I am unsure of which is which, I heard both ways and have been unable to verify which way it is yet. But the point is, there is a vast difference in outcome between leading a man to Christ, and another member of the family. The other percentages are: If the woman (wife/mom) (or perhaps it was teen, but I don’t think so) comes to Christ there’s a 31% chance of the family coming to Christ. If the teen comes to Christ there’s an 18% chance of the family coming to Christ. The point is there is a *FAR* greater impact of leading a man (head of a family) to Jesus, than leading the children or mother.

This is NOT to say that we shouldn’t lead moms and kids to the Lord. By all means, reach who you can, and by God’s grace they will reach others!! But another startling statistic is 82% of all Christian kids lose their faith when they go to college. Even by college age they are not strong enough to withstand the pressure of an educational system and the peer pressure there, to live their faith, let alone stand up for it. We have got to do *everything* we can to strengthen our children’s faith and give them a solidly Biblical worldview while they are under our care, that when they become adults and have to stand on their own, they will have the Rock Solid foundation of Jesus and His Word – the full teaching of the Bible that gives us all things that pertain to life and godliness – to stand on, and they will not slip and fall.

One closing comment on looking out for our own family and “not others” – as sometimes home educators are accused of “selfishly” doing. If all the other children are in the burning arms of Molech will you (any of us) put your children there too – unknowingly is bad enough, but purposely!? Do you not first care for your own children, then when their well-being is secure (and as that security is continually protected) you reach out to help others as you can. *But* you cannot rescue all the other children. God did not give you all the other children to care for. He gave you yours. He gave the others to their parents, and *they alone*, Christian or not, will be accountable for how they cared for them. Our hearts go out to those kids whose parents continue to try to defy God and His Word, and refuse to listen to and obey His council, for their children are being greatly harmed by it. They are the victims of their parents defiance of God and His Word. We must do what we can, but what we cannot do is usurp the authority of those parents over their own children.

I want to close with the opening paragraph of a book that I haven’t re-read in a long time, “Is Public Education Necessary?” by Samuel Blumenfeld (who also wrote “NEA Trojan Horse in American Education”). “It has been four years since the first publication of this book and everything that has happened in public education since then has proven my thesis to be correct: that not only is public education not necessary, but its continued existence makes true education for the vast majority of American children an impossibility, and it poses a threat to this country’s future freedom and security.”

 

The Resource Bug is Biting – Part 3

AFTER the CONVENTION:
1. If you’ve held off your purchases and not bought at the convention, PRAY (and research more if needed) until you feel sure, then ORDER. If you were unable to see something at the convention, but you still feel it may be best, order it. Don’t choose what you feel is going to be second best just because you haven’t seen what you really wanted to try. Most companies have return policies, on curriculum type things anyhow, and it is better to look and pay a return fee if it isn’t going to work, than to keep trying other things, and always wondering if this other would have been better.

2. Realize that mistakes WILL be made! It is part of learning and growing – and learning and growing involve COSTS. Don’t throw out an *apparent* mistake at the first sign of difficulty. Pray about how (if) it can be adapted to fit your goals/methods, or if it is indeed what God wants but is going to require you to STRETCH and GROW. Give it some time, and really try to utilize it, especially if it fits into your “guidelines”.

3. If you truly make a mistake, repent, spend more time – prayer and research – finding the replacement. Sell the old on a curriclum swap e-list or local used book fair. Chalk it up to experience. But be careful not to get in the rut of always jumping from one thing to another, and never truly implementing ANYTHING, always jumping to the newer, better resource, in looking for THE answer. If this is happening, go back to the beginning and spend more time Renewing Your Mind and getting God’s direction.

4. Also realize that as you grow, the *PERFECT RESOURCE* that is perfect this year, may not be *PERFECT* NEXT YEAR or 5 years from now. You will be growing and continually renewing and adapting. Start where you’re at and grow from there. Sell, give or throw away, whatever no longer fits into your philosophy and goals and move on. But try to purchase things you won’t “outgrow”, like the Real Resources/ Living Books things the guidelines below suggest.
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As I said above, Renewing our Mind to God’s purposes and plans for our family’s education is the primary factor in determining what resources will work for us. Having a well developed personal Philosophy of Education – which is just another way of saying, knowing how God wants you to teach your children – will keep you from making mistakes more than anything else. We have developed a set of guidelines that help us stay within our philosophy. There are so many tempting things out there that sound SOOOOO GOOD, we can easily get distracted and buy things that don’t “fit” our family.

We try to follow each of these resource qualifications for every learning resource purchase, although #3 and #4 don’t always apply, #1, 2, and 5 are musts! We use almost all Real Resources – Living Books (great literature) as well as Skills Resources for teaching “how to” (whether that be math, sewing, phonics, cooking, writing, car repair, etc.) Only resources that fit these guidelines are worth spending our hard earned, many times hard-to-come-by, dollars on. Other things – such as an occasional “fluff” or extra resource/book “just for fun” must come out of extra money (a rare thing) or from the library. I really don’t like spending money on something that isn’t worth keeping in our own family library. They aren’t worth the money or space they take up, let alone the time wasted on them. We do all really need to be watchful that we Redeem that Time that the Lord has given us, and not waste it on vanity.

Here’s the qualifications I think through when deciding what resources to buy. They are a part (the *5th* principle) of the “8 Principles of L.E.D.” (which you can receive on tape from us). They should be applicable for anyone following a Lifestyle Education through Discipleship.
5 Qualifications for L.E.D. Resources:

1. Relational & Relative – (individualized vs. canned) It must be something that speaks into OUR lives, not just the “latest, greatest everyone is raving about it” resource. Does it further the goals God has given us for OUR family’s education? (not just what someone else says we should be learning.) Is it based on premises we believe in? (Biblical worldview.) Does it follow the way WE believe teaching and learning are best accomplished? (not textbooks/
workbooks.) Does it promote adaptation to individual circumstances? (or is it written to be used in a lock-step way – daily, scripted lessons, etc.?) Does it fit OUR LIFESTYLE?

2. Multi-level – Is it something that can be used by many different ages? (or is it “grade leveled”?) Most Living Books fit into this. A timeless, living book can be enjoyed by EVERYONE in the family, but even Skills Resources should cover all aspects of the topic, not just 1st grade, 2nd grade. We don’t use grade levels in our family’s education and don’t like resources that are written as such. Some resources may contain only “Introductory” level information, etc. but this isn’t the same as “grade level” resources.

3. Multi-disciplinary – Is it something that crosses the “subject” lines? (or does it only cover one “subject”?) Many Real Resources are TOPICAL, they only cover one topic, but that doesn’t mean they only cover one “school SUBJECT”. Obviously all “Living Books” fit into this category. Even resources like dictionaries and such will be used in all of learning. Most non-textbook resources don’t have to be pegged into a “subject” hole. But, just as obvious, things like a Math book will only cover Math.

4. Multi-sensory – Does it teach through more than one sense? If it’s a Skill-learning Resource or teaching guide, does it give ideas for presenting material in more than one way, to reach learners of various types?

5. Re-usable – Will it be able to be re-used by others, as well as the original student? (or will it be consumed and
thrown away when done with?) Real resources are ones that will be used over and over and are worth saving and using again. Even better yet, they will promote the student producing something worth saving. Recently, I heard a quote, from ages gone by, that any book worth reading once is worth reading 3 times. And, that we need to read them (or listen, if it’s a tape – in these modern times) at least 3 times before we really “get” it. I really believe it. I don’t think a resource is a good one, if it’s something I’m going to turn around and get rid of as soon as we’ve “gone
through it”. It should be worth saving for future reading and reference.

 

The Resource Bug is Biting – Part 2

Conventions Shopping Tips
Here are my tips for buying resources at a Convention.

BEFORE the Convention:
1. THROUGH PRAYER – make a list of the TYPES of things you think you’ll need. i.e. “History resources covering _____ time periods. A hands on way to teach math, covering all levels. A mom’s “how-to” guide for teaching _____ in a relaxed way. A few interesting read-alouds on ______. A drawing program for _____. …..” This will help keep you from looking at things that you don’t need this year/ yet. If you’ve already got somewhat of a plan down, through prayer, AND have talked to your children about some interests they’d like to pursue, you’ll know things like ” there’s no use looking at _____ this year, because I KNOW that isn’t the direction we’re going and we won’t get to it. It will sit on the shelf and I’ll feel guilty for spending the money and for not using it.”

2. Get as many catalogs and visit as many websites as you can, so you will have an idea of what you particularly want to check out. Make a list under those “types of things” needed, of possible resources to fulfill that need. There will be plenty of other things at the convention that you haven’t heard of before to choose from, that you may also want to look at, but this pre-looking will at least narrow it down some. You will have, through the catalogs and websites, eliminated many choices. You can walk right past those booths with no condemnation or questioning for ignoring them.

AT the convention:
1. Go only to those booths that have your predetermined resource possibilities. WOULDN’T it be great if we could stop there? NO, DON’T DO THIS! There will be other good things to check out. But DO go to those pre-determined booths FIRST – and do some more eliminating.

2. DON’T buy anything on your first round. Make it a “skimming” tour. Make note of any other resources (or booths) that fit into your “types of things needed” that you’d like to further check out.

3. If something looks REALLY interesting, TALK to the vendor about it. Go to WORKSHOPS by that vendor that cover that resource (if possible) or at least give you an idea of that vendor’s philosophy (it determines the philosophy behind the books that vendor carries). This is more true of the smaller specialized vendors than those that carry a little of everything (who usually don’t do workshops, and may not even know much about their books. In fact they may just be a local “hired hand” to help “ring up” customers. Small vendors and especially those that have authored the resources are USUALLY the most helpful.

4. Buy ONLY when you have God’s Peace about a resource. If you still aren’t sure as the convention nears completion, DON’T rush or be pressured into buying ANYTHING. It will well be worth any extra you have to pay in shipping to get the right thing. Spend the time you need praying about it and getting God’s direction and peace. Don’t let a vendor (or others there) talk you into something that doesn’t fit your “litmus test” (see our guidelines below) unless you really sense God leading in that new direction. Perhaps it IS HIM giving clearer revelation, but PERHAPS it’s an expensive (in money AND TIME) rabbit trail.

5. This is personal opinion – as in what *I* do, and therefore carries emotional sentiment and may not fit as “good advise” :- ) IF you have been hs-ing a long time and you know the direction you’re going, and you already have all your basic resources – buy what you find that will fill-in for the future, even if you may not use it THIS year. I really don’t NEED anything for “THIS YEAR” anymore, but I do know what I plan for the future AND I ENJOY filling in and buying when I find a resource that is just right for what I know is upcoming, when it is something I really feel God’s Peace about.

There have been years that I haven’t been able to go to convention OR order any resources and I have been grateful for God’s advance promptings that have led me to purchase ahead and provide for future (at the time, but now current) needs. It’s a good feeling when Mark says, “Sorry I don’t see how we can squeeze anything out right now,” and I can reply, “We’re OK. We already have all we need for now.” This is especially true because we use “Real Resources” such as timeless Living Books.

We may not be studying Early America this year, BUT I know it’s coming up and I know we want to read Charles Coffin’s “Sweet Land of Liberty” and William Bradford’s “Plymouth Plantation” when we get there. I know they are living resources that won’t be not applicable/ out of our philosophy when I get there. OR, perhaps we are collecting G.A. Henty books, or those character classics reprinted by “Lamplighter”, we have the ones we’re going to read this year, but I find others to add to our collection. These are timeless resources that I’d like to have, just to have in our library and read ANYTIME!, not just the year we “study” their topic. If I find them at the convention, and I have the money to buy them, after getting anything I need for this year, I get them.

This could get me on a whole other rabbit trail of building a good and timeless library. I want to have books on our shelves that tempt our kids to “read ahead”, meaning they see these books as being valuable to our family, and are intrigued to just pull them off and start reading at anytime, not just because they were “assigned”. That is part of creating a Love for Learning. And, I will save the rest of this rabbit trail for the Environment of Excellence article in our forthcoming “Lifesytle Curriculum” book.

6. Another good question to add for us book junkies that are deviating from “this year’s needs” list is: Do I already have something that teaches/covers this in a way that is do-able for us? Does this NEW resource do that much BETTER of a job, and fit our QUALIFICATIONS that much better, that I am willing to REPLACE the other one? It’s easy for me to duplicate things, because there’s MORE than ONE good thing out there. BUT since we already have a library of thousands of books, we don’t need to keep adding, just for the sake of adding. A verse that “speaks” to me is “Of the making of books, there is no end.” from Ecclesiastes. AND I DON’T NEED TO OWN *ALL* OF THEM!!!!!

Continued in Part 3

 

The Resource Bug is Biting

This is the time of year when Home Education Conventions, Conferences, Retreats, Seminars, Workshops and Curriculum Fairs begin. Everyone is beginning to focus on what we “need” for “next year”. Even if you believe, as we do, that learning is a lifestyle that continues year-round, if you have any state requirements for academics, those probably “come due” at the beginning of the government (so-called, public) school year, and it is time to start planning and ordering.

Making choices as to what resources to buy isn’t near as limited as it was when we began teaching our children at home 15 years ago, and only knew of the traditional curriculum/ subjects viewpoint we had grown up with. As those choices expand yearly – DAILY! – it can get easy to be tossed about by every wind of new and great things out there that EVERYBODY’S using.

Although Home Education Conventions/Curriculum Fairs are REALLY TEMPTING places, and CAN BE VERY OVERWHELMING, I DON’T believe we should stay away from them. They are where we can best get the information we need to make right resource choices, as well as help deepen our philosophy of education. In fact, I think every mom (and dad too, if possible) needs to go EVERY YEAR to some type of hs mom’s (parent’s) retreat, convention, etc. for her (their) own renewal and refreshment. We all need encouragement and support. Sometimes we can seem so isolated in our own world of home educating. We need to get out and see the “big picture” just for a better perspective. God has given us such great mentors to help us along, we need to utilize the resources He’s provided for us. No homeschool home is an island. Don’t try to make yours one.

IF you already have a solid “philosophy”, the specialized retreats/conferences can be the best place for you to go, for it encourages you in YOUR way. But general conventions are good too, as they open the doors for greater thought, and different perspectives. I’d love to encourage you all to attend/ host an L.E.D. seminar, but our baby’s due next week, so we aren’t planning on doing any this year. :- ( I love to do them and miss them greatly when I’m not able, but this list will have to suffice for this year for those of you who aren’t local. I do still plan to do some things locally this year. But there are many things L.E.D. can glean from other philosophies. If you’ve attended our workshop or listened to the tape “Introduction to Lifestyle Education through Discipleship”, you know how our philosophy compares with some of those others. Your own personal philosophy may glean more or less from each of the others. If your philosophy is quite similar to Charlotte Mason’s then a CM Conference would be great for you to go to. If you are more enthralled by the Principal Approach, go there. If Sally Clarkson’s “Wholehearted Child”, or Cindy Rushton’s “Easy Way” really interests you, go to one of their mom’s retreats. Many of us don’t have that many options near us, and a general “state convention” is our only choice. Perhaps, we have the blessing of at least MORE THAN ONE to choose from. For these, search out the vendors and workshops that are closest to YOUR “philosophy” and pick and choose that convention – or those workshops and booths at your only choice.

If you are new to looking at education through any perspective other than the world’s view that we grew up with, DO – DO -DO, AT LEAST go through (or at least begin) your season of Renewing Your Mind BEFORE going to a Convention. The more we have developed our personal Philosophy of Education (found God’s direction for our family’s education) – the easier it becomes to make those choices in a place where endless resources are calling “Buy Me!” When we sit at the Lord’s feet and get His direction for our family we will find that many things “out there” just don’t fit US. This makes them much easier to pass up when they (and all your friends) are calling “NEW, GREAT, THE BEST, WOW, JUST WHAT YOU NEED!” It is SOOOO TRUE that we should NOT BUY until AFTER we’ve gotten direction from the Lord.

IF you don’t take (have) time before the convention to Renew Your Mind, and you’re only “looking into this”, determine to NOT BUY at the convention. Just soak up information, that will help you make your decision later. But I warn you, it may be confusing. There are many conflicting voices out there calling for our attention. If you’ve read our website and this L.E.D. e-list’s posts, and you know that your philosophy is akin to ours, I recommend that you order our “Introduction to Lifestyle Education through Discipleship” workshop audio and syllabus to see how L.E.D. compares to other philosophies so you will know which ones may be compatible with your thoughts, and not just add contrary confusing advise.

See part 2

 

Truth vs. Reason

This article continues my thoughts (and probably overlaps some) on Thinking Skills.

Truth vs. Reason

What do we mean when we say we want our children to have/develop “thinking skills”? For most Christians, I would think we mean we want our children to be able to discern right from wrong, and be able to apply that and communicate it persuasively. That is, to be able to figure out, on their own (after being trained), what is the right answer or conclusion and then act on that, whether that means making a personal life decision, or coming to a correct solution to a math problem. This is what the Bible calls having Understanding and Wisdom.

I would venture to say that is not necessarily what the world we are living in means by “thinking skills.” In general definition, probably; in application, doubtful. As the Word tells us, “The wisdom of man is foolishness to God.” Man’s wisdom is based upon the reasoning of the mind. And we know that the mind can very easily be deceived.

In a recent conversation with our college-attending daughter, she told me that there is a class on “Critical Thinking” at the college (local community college, not Christian). There are no right or wrong answers. The professor only grades the student’s papers based on how their answers were thought out. Did they follow a “logical” thought process to come to this conclusion? If so, they get a good grade, regardless of their conclusion. This is not to say that there aren’t some secular materials out there that really want people to learn to come to the right conclusion. But our world has embraced a humanistic, evolutionist philosophy that “right” is situational and individual.

This class seems to me the ultimate in situational relativism, and the epitome of “There is a way that seems right to man, but the end there of is death.” The saddist part of all is that this isn’t just natural, uneducated man arriving at his own conclusions, but that this is being taught as “higher learning.” This is college level thinking skills.

As Christians, we know that what is right is not based upon our own individual thought processes and conclusions. What our minds think and what seems to be reasonable and logical to us, no matter how much thought and “logical reasoning” goes into it, is not right unless it aligns with God’s absolute Truth. There is no Truth apart from God. He tells us that the “Fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom, and knowledge of the Holy brings discernment.” It is through knowing and having respectful fear of Him and His absolute and unchanging ways that we learn to discern what is right and what is wrong. Yes, Virginia, there is a right and wrong, and you don’t determine what that is. You can only learn to discern what it is.

Understanding, that the Bible speaks of as “discernment”, comes from “exercising our senses” by meditating on God’s Word (Joshua 1:8) to give us knowledge of the Holy (Pro. 9:10). It is the ability to arrive at and communicate Truth. What the world considers “logical thinking”, yet coming up with its own individual answers, is not what I think any of us desire for our children. Rather, we would have them desire Truth, seek for Truth, know how to find Truth, recognize Truth, and communicate Truth.

For an education of Freedom and Simplicity™, I believe our focus needs to be on teaching our children how to discern Truth, by teaching them the fear of the Lord and how to meditate on His Word to “know the Holy”, rather than on trusting his mind to be the valid source of reason because he learned some “thinking skills”. It is when he knows the Truth that he will be set Free, and when he is able to convey the Truth to others that they can be set Free. The logic and reason of man will never bring Freedom to man, but the Truth always will.

 

On Writing Topical Studies

I just replied on another list to a question about writing Unit Studies. As most of you probably know, we don’t write “Unit Studies” per se, but we do base our planning on Topical Studies. My answer includes some of the differences (as I see them) – mostly having to do with the amount of structure and mom burn-out, and includes how we believe Topical Studies can be written within the context of the Freedom and Simplicity of education LED by the Spirit, through Lifestyle Education through Discipleship. It obviously is not as thorough as our publications on this, but it gives a simple overview. I feel the post is appropriate to send to this list, and hope you can glean more about L.E.D. through it. God is ever impressing me to mentor other moms/parents in MORE than just the philosophy of L.E.D. and pass on, in a practical way, what I have learned.

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Dear —–,

Writing a unit study is a trade-off like anything else. Which do you have more of – free time or money? Is your only motivation to save money, or do you have other philosophical reasons for writing your own study? How structured do you want your family’s education to be? How old are your children and how many do you have? How in-depth do you want to go? Are you looking at writing a complete – several years, covers everything – curriculum or one unit on a topic of interest?

Trying to write a completely integrated (all subjects), full curriculum (one year or several, to cover everything, for all children) is a LOT of work and probably not worth it, if you don’t have philosophical reasons and it’s not a love and burning desire for you to do it. Burn out is a common result for mom’s who try to do this. IOW, $70 is a small price to pay for such a thing.

OTOH, pulling together topical studies for the whole family (even for their ENTIRE curriculum), in a family that has a “relaxed” approach needn’t be a big deal. It all depends on whether MOM is up to doing a whole lot of studying and writing and planning herself (the previous paragraph’s way) or if she’s going to facilitate the children doing the learning, yet provide some direction (this paragraph’s way).

For philosophical reasons, I write our own Topical Studies. Because I have teens, I base our whole family’s studies on them, and utilize a cycle approach to make sure that everything (that *I* deem necessary for high school) is covered within that cycle. Our younger children’s approach to this is much more relaxed, and I probably wouldn’t have even the stucture that I do in it if I had ONLY little ones. Since this list is about Hi-School, I’ll try to keep things geared toward it (and try not to veer from [list name’s book] principles :- ), but the principles apply for the whole family – using [list name’s book] or not. I think, [list name’s book] is a good way to pull it all together for documentation, credits, etc. [note to l.e.d. list = I DO NOT feel this book is NECESSARY for this in a L.E.D. education.]

What I have learned over the years in writing Topical Studies, to prevent stress and burn out is:

1) I don’t try to force every subject to integrate into each study. If they fit in naturally, they are included. If it’d cause me to have to spend much time and stress trying to figure out how to get a certain subject to “fit in”, I don’t force it. I believe many published unit studies REALLY STRETCH to try to create a relationship between things, just because they “have to” cover all the subjects, and all areas of each subject, throughout the curriculum, and they want it to all be integrated. LIFE is integrated and not fragmented into “subjects”, but it is also RELATIONAL not forced.

EXAMPLE: Learning about a certain composer and his music during the time period he lived is relational. Learning how to cook the meals that our family eats can be learned quickly on its own without “integrating” it into a History or whatever unit, although if a child WANTS to cook some time-period/ethnic food that relates to the study, they are free to do it.

2) I don’t stress out trying to rack my brain for a list of endless activities for my children to do related to the study. IF there is something that comes to me as important and relative that I want them to do, I include it. If not, they think of their own activities, if any. They are usually required to do certain TYPES of projects within the study, but not certain ACTIVITIES themselves – especially, to use a C. Mason term, “twaddly” ones. Again, most published unit studies have long overwhelming lists of activities, but many are irrelevant to learning the material and time wasters. IOW, an activity must produce something worthwhile (not a project to be trashed when done, because it has no future relavence) OR it must be something that the child just WANTS to do, because it is relevant to him from this study.

EXAMPLE: They are not required to “write a fictional journal of a girl that came to America on the Mayflower”. They ARE to write various narrations, summaries, essays, etc. and to keep a Book of Time (timeline) …. They ARE required to demonstrate certain science principles, but not to do SPECIFIC experiments. Communication skills (language arts/English) is NATURALLY integrated into EVERY Topical Study, through Notebooking, and other natural methods.

3) I don’t spend weeks/months? covering a topic with the above activities and rehashing things over and over and reading EVERYTHING we can find on the topic, when it can be done in a short amount of time through a few EXCELLENT books, resources and projects. NEVER drag anything out. IF our children are interested in learning more and deeper things about the topic we continue as long as interest AND new, deeper learning is taking place – but we don’t continue just because I planned for it to last a certain amount of time. IF interest has waned and we’ve used some EXCELLENT resources to learn the important things, we move on. Our children don’t have to know EVERYTHING about EVERY topic.

4) I don’t think that EVERYTHING that our highschoolers “need” or want to know can be learned through “integrated unit studies” – at least through ones that all the subjects aren’t forced into irrelevant places. They will undoubtable have outside (the topical studies) interests (and perhaps even “needs”) that they pursue.

5 – ?) I’m sure I haven’t remembered everything.

Here’s one way to plan a complete curriculum based on Topical Studies:
Working from the “Big Picture” perspective – i.e. you have a list (loose or detailed) of what you want your child to “cover” in high school and the credits you want them to earn. You begin with the “Big Picture” and work your way down to the details, in your planning.

BIG PICTURE PLANNING (based on Pro. 24:3-4):
1) Determine what courses you require and how many credits in each for their total high school requirements. (Other, teen chosen, courses can be electives.) EXAMPLE: History/Social Studies – 1 credit US, 1 credit World, 1/2 credit Government/Civics.

2) Break each course down into Topics (usually 3-7 main areas or so). EXAMPLE: Divide World History into 5-7 time period Topics. Divide Life Science/Biology into Plant and Animal and Human Topics.

TO PLAN THE TOPICAL STUDIES THEMSELVES:
1) Write a “Learning Map” (outline) for each Topic of what points you think are important for high-school “coverage”. Some teens can do this for themselves and can just be given a list of “topics” and your “required” book/resource list. Others want more structure and like having this guide. Some could even be just given a list of required courses and could design their own Topical Studies and Learning Maps and Resource Lists, BUT in our home we believe it is OUR job to teach and train our children and have some guidelines and requirements, even through high school. This is guided preparation for their own future self-directed studies and home educating their own children.

2) Search out EXCELLENT Living Literature/Real Resources (books, places, people, and experiences) that present the Topic in an interesting, godly (Biblical WorldView) way. (Every resource may not have a Biblical Worldview, but the foundation for the topic must be presented through it in a Christian education. i.e. a field trip may not be to a place with a “Christian Worldview” but it is not the foundational source of their study.) We usually have some *required* resources, some *optional* resources, and of course, they are free to add other resources (within our guidelines – such as not ungodly, not “twaddly”/dumbed down).

3) Find enough of these resources to cover the topic as thoroughly as you think it needs to be covered, (or require them to find other resources.)

4) As the Topic is covered, you will branch out across “subject” lines. Document each part of the Topical Study under the proper “Course”. Don’t get too stressed out about this; they can be moved around later, if need be.

5) As Topics naturally integrate you may find that you don’t have to “do” a certain Topic because you have already covered it through its natural relationships with other Topics. That how “credits” add up in [list name’s book] [AND L.E.D.].

Having said all that, I do believe that there are good published unit studies – complete curriculum – for even high school. I have only used one of them (several years ago), but I’ve seen others that look good. All that I’ve seen have had some of the drawbacks I’ve mentioned, but IF you are looking for a complete, stuctured integrated curriculum [rather than creating a Lifestyle Education through Discipleship]- and you are not a HIGHLY CREATIVE WRITER with a BURNING DESIRE, and MUCH TIME to do this, I think they are worth the money.

If you are comfortable with the relaxed approach [of L.E.D.] and want more info on writing your own – from MY perspective anyhow – (I’m sure I haven’t covered this thoroughly) I invite you to check out our website: [website updated] and ed blog here or join our elist [elist changed and blog sites added]. You are invited to ask questions.